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Riftwar 1
Magician Tenth Anniversary Edition
Book 1 of
The Riftwar Saga
By
Raymond
E. Feist
Fresh scan & proofing by
Allflippedup 20-01-04
Updated by Allflippedup 13-03-04
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Many people have provided me with incalculable aid in bringing this
novel into existence. I would like to offer my heartfelt thanks to:
The Friday Nighters: April and Stephen Abrams; Steve Barett; David
Brin; Anita and Jon Everson; Dave Guinasso; Conan LaMotte; Tim LeSelle; Ethan
Munson; Bob Potter; Rich Spahl; Alan Springer; and Lori and Jeff Velten, for
their useful criticism, enthusiasm, support, belief, wise counsel, wonderful
ideas, and most of all, their friendship.
Billie and Russ Blake, and Lilian and Mike Fessier, for always being
willing to help.
Harold Matson, my agent, for taking a chance on me.
Adrian Zackheim, my editor, for asking rather than demanding, and
for working so hard to build a good book.
Kate Cronin, assistant to the editor, for having a sense of humor
and for so gracefully putting up with all my nonsense.
Elaine Chubb, copy editor, for having such a gentle touch and for
caring so much about the words.
And Barbara A. Feist, my mother, for all of the above and more.
RAYMOND E. FEIST
San Diego, California
July 1982
ACKNOWLEDGMENT TO THE REVISED
EDITION
On this occasion, the publication of the author’s preferred edition,
I would like to add the following names to the preceding list, people who,
though not known to me at the time I made the foregoing acknowledgment, proved
invaluable aid to me in bringing Magician to the public and contributed
materially to my success:
Mary Ellen Curley, who took over from Katie and kept us all on
course. Peter Schneider, whose enthusiasm for the work gave me a valued ally
within Doubleday and a close friend for the last decade. Lou Aronica, who
bought it even when he really didn’t want to do reprints, and for giving me the
chance to return to my first work and “rewrite it one more time.”
Pat Lobrutto, who helped before it was his job, and who took over at
a tough time, and whose friendship endures beyond our business relationship.
Janna Silverstein, who despite her short tenure as my editor has
shown an uncanny knack for knowing when to leave me alone and when to stay in
touch.
Nick Austin, John Booth, Jonathan Lloyd, Malcolm Edwards, and
everyone at Granada, now HarperCollins Books, who made the work an
international bestseller.
Abner Stein, my British agent, who sold it to Nick in the first
place. Janny Wurts, for being my friend, and who, by working with me on the
Empire Trilogy, gave me a completely different perspective on the Tsurani; she
helped turn. The Game of the Council from a vague concept to a murderously real
arena of human conflict. Kelewan and Tsuranuanni are as much her inventions as
mine. I drew the outlines and she colored in the details.
And Jonathan Matson, who received the torch from a great man’s hand
and continued without faltering, for wise counsel and friendship. The acorn
fell very close to the tree.
And most of all, my wife Kathlyn S. Starbuck, who understands my
pain and joy in this craft because she toils in the same vineyard, and who is
always there even when I don’t deserve to have her there, and who makes things
make sense through her love.
RAYMOND E. FEIST
San Diego, California
April 1991
FOREWORD TO THE REVISED EDITION
It is with some hesitation and a great deal of trepidation that an
author approaches the task of revising an earlier edition of fiction. This is
especially true if the book was his first effort, judged successful by most
standards, and continuously in print for a decade.
Magician was all this, and more. In late 1977 I decided to try my hand at
writing, part-time, while I was an employee of the University of California,
San Diego. It is now some fifteen years later, and I have been a full-time
writer for the last fourteen years, successful in this craft beyond my wildest
dreams. Magician, the first novel in what became known as. The
Riftwar Saga, was a book that quickly took on a life of its own. I hesitate
to admit this publicly, but the truth is that part of the success of the book
was my ignorance of what makes a commercially successful novel. My willingness
to plunge blindly forward into a tale spanning two dissimilar worlds, covering
twelve years in the lives of several major and dozens of minor characters,
breaking numerous rules of plotting along the way, seemed to find kindred souls
among readers the world over. After a decade in print, my best judgment is that
the appeal of the book is based upon its being what was known once as a
“ripping yarn.” I had little ambition beyond spinning a good story, one that
satisfied my sense of wonder, adventure, and whimsy. It turned out that several
million readers—many of whom read translations in languages I can’t even begin
to comprehend—found it one that satisfied their tastes for such a yarn as well.
But insofar as it was a first effort, some pressures of the
marketplace did manifest themselves during the creation of the final book.
Magician is by anyone’s measure a large book. When the penultimate manuscript
version sat upon my editor’s desk, I was informed that some fifty thousand
words would have to be cut. And cut I did. Mostly line by line, but a few
scenes were either truncated or excised.
While I could live out my life with the original manuscript as
published being the only edition ever read, I have always felt that some of the
material cut added a certain resonance, a counterpoint if you will, to key
elements of the tale. The relationships between characters, the additional
details of an alien world, the minor moments of reflection and mirth that act
to balance the more frenetic activity of conflict and adventure, all these
things were “close but not quite what I had in mind.”
In any
event, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the original publication of Magician,
I have been permitted to return to this work, to reconstruct and change, to add
and cut as I see fit, to bring forth what is known in publishing as the
“Author’s Preferred Edition” of the work. So, with the old admonition, “If it
ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” ringing in my ears, I return to the first work I
undertook, back when I had no pretensions of craft, no stature as a bestselling
author, and basically no idea of what I was doing. My desire is to restore some
of those excised bits, some of the minor detail that I felt added to the heft
of the narrative, as well as the weight of the book. Other material was more
directly related to the books that follow, setting some of the background for
the mythic underpinning of the Riftwar. The slightly lengthy discussion of lore
between Tully and Kulgan in Chapter Three, as well as some of the things
revealed to Pug on the Tower of Testing were clearly in this area. My editor
wasn’t sold on the idea of a sequel, then, so some of this was cut. Returning
it may be self-indulgent, but as this was material I felt belonged in the
original book, it has been restored.
To
those readers who have already discovered Magician, who wonder if it’s
in their interests to purchase this edition, I would like to reassure them that
nothing profound has been changed. No characters previously dead are now alive,
no battles lost are now won, and two boys still find the same destiny. I ask
you to feel no compulsion to read this new volume, for your memory of the
original work is as valid, perhaps more so, than mine. But if you wish to
return to the world of Pug and Tomas, to rediscover old friends and forgotten
adventure, then consider this edition your opportunity to see a bit more than
the last time. And to the new reader, welcome. I trust you’ll find this work to
your satisfaction.
It is
with profound gratitude I wish to thank you all, new readers and old
acquaintances, for without your support and encouragement, ten years of
“ripping yarns” could not have been possible. If I have the opportunity to
provide you with a small part of the pleasure I feel in being able to share my
fanciful adventures with you, we are equally rewarded, for by your embracing my
works you have allowed me to fashion more. Without you there would have been no
Silverthorn, A Darkness at Sethanon, Faerie Tale, and no Empire
Trilogy. The letters get read, if not answered—even if they sometimes take
months to reach me —and the kind remarks, in passing at public appearances,
have enriched me beyond measure. But most of all, you gave me the freedom to
practice a craft that was begun to “see if I could do it,” while working at the
Residence Halls of John Muir College at UCSD.
So,
thank you. I guess “I did it.” And with this work, I hope you’ll agree that this
time I did it a little more elegantly, with a little more color, weight,
and resonance.
RAYMOND E. FEIST
San Diego, California
August 1991
BOOK I
PUG AND TOMAS
A boy’s will is the wind’s will,
And the
thoughts of youth are
long, long
thoughts.
—LONGFELLOW, My Lost Youth
1
STORM
The storm had broken.
Pug danced along the edge of the rocks, his feet finding scant
purchase as he made his way among the tide pools His dark eyes darted about as
he peered into each pool under the cliff face, seeking the spiny creatures driven
into the shallows by the recently passed storm. His boyish muscles bunched
under his light shirt as he shifted the sack of sandcrawlers, rockclaws, and
crabs plucked from this water garden.
The afternoon sun sent sparkles through the sea spray swirling
around him, as the west wind blew his sun-streaked brown hair about Pug set his
sack down, checked to make sure it was securely tied, then squatted on a clear
patch of sand. The sack was not quite full, but Pug relished the extra hour or
so that he could relax Megar the cook wouldn’t trouble him about the time as
long as the sack was almost full Resting with his back against a large rock,
Pug was soon dozing in the sun’s warmth.
A cool wet spray woke him hours later. He opened his eyes with a
start, knowing he had stayed much too long. Westward, over the sea, dark
thunderheads were forming above the black outline of the Six Sisters, the small
islands on the horizon. The roiling, surging clouds, with rain trailing below
like some sooty veil, heralded another of the sudden storms common to this part
of the coast in early summer To the south, the high bluffs of Sailors Grief
reared up against the sky, as waves crashed against the base of that rocky pinnacle.
Whitecaps started to form behind the breakers, a sure sign the storm would
quickly strike. Pug knew he was in danger, for the storms of summer could drown
anyone on the beaches, or if severe enough, on the low ground beyond.
He picked up his sack and started north, toward the castle. As he
moved among the pools, he felt the coolness in the wind turn to a deeper,
wetter cold. The day began to be broken by a patchwork of shadows as the first
clouds passed before the sun, bright colors fading to shades of grey. Out to
sea, lightning flashed against the blackness of the clouds, and the distant
boom of thunder rode over the noise of the waves.
Pug picked up speed when he came to the first stretch of open beach.
The storm was coming in faster than he would have thought possible, driving the
rising tide before it. By the time he reached the second stretch of tide pools,
there was barely ten feet of dry sand between water’s edge and cliffs.
Pug hurried as fast as was safe across the rocks, twice nearly catching
his foot. As he reached the next expanse of sand, he mistimed his jump from the
last rock and landed poorly. He fell to the sand, grasping his ankle. As if
waiting for the mishap, the tide surged forward, covering him for a moment. He
reached out blindly and felt his sack carried away. Frantically grabbing at it,
Pug lunged forward, only to have his ankle fail. He went under, gulping water.
He raised his head, sputtering and coughing. He started to stand when a second
wave, higher than the last, hit him in the chest, knocking him backward. Pug
had grown up playing in the waves and was an experienced swimmer, but the pain
of his ankle and the battering of the waves were bringing him to the edge of
panic. He fought it off and came up for air as the wave receded. He half swam,
half scrambled toward the cliff face, knowing the water would be only inches
deep there.
Pug reached the cliffs and leaned against them, keeping as much
weight off the injured ankle as possible. He inched along the rock wall, while
each wave brought the water higher. When Pug finally reached a place where he
could make his way upward, water was swirling at his waist. He had to use all
his strength to pull himself up to the path. He lay panting a moment, then
started to crawl up the pathway, unwilling to trust his balky ankle on this
rocky footing.
The first drops of rain began to fall as he scrambled along,
bruising knees and shins on the rocks, until he reached the grassy top of the
bluffs. Pug fell forward exhausted, panting from the exertion of the climb. The
scattered drops grew into a light but steady rain.
When he had caught his breath, Pug sat up and examined the swollen
ankle. It was tender to the touch, but he was reassured when he could move it:
it was not broken. He would have to limp the entire way back, but with the
threat of drowning on the beach behind him, he felt relatively buoyant.
Pug would be a drenched, chilled wretch when he reached the town. He
would have to find a lodging there, for the gates of the castle would be closed
for the night, and with his tender ankle he would not attempt to climb the wall
behind the stables. Besides, should he wait and slip into the keep the next
day, only Megar would have words for him, but if he was caught coming over the
wall, Swordmaster Fannon or Horsemaster Algon would surely have a lot worse in
store for him than words.
While he rested, the rain took on an insistent quality and the sky
darkened as the late-afternoon sun was completely engulfed in storm clouds. His
momentary relief was replaced with anger at himself for losing the sack of
sandcrawlers. His displeasure doubled when he considered his folly at falling
asleep. Had he remained awake, he would have made the return trip unhurriedly,
would not have sprained his ankle, and would have had time to explore the
streambed above the bluffs for the smooth stones he prized so dearly for
slinging. Now there would be no stones, and it would be at least another week
before he could return. If Megar didn’t send another boy instead, which was
likely now that he was returning empty-handed.
Pug’s attention shifted to the discomfort of sitting in the rain,
and he decided it was time to move on. He stood and tested his ankle. It
protested such treatment, but he could get along on it. He limped over the
grass to where he had left his belongings and picked up his rucksack, staff,
and sling. He swore an oath he had heard soldiers at the keep use when he found
the rucksack ripped apart and his bread and cheese missing. Raccoons, or
possibly sand lizards, he thought. He tossed the now useless sack aside and
wondered at his misfortune.
Taking a deep breath, he leaned on his staff as he started across
the low rolling hills that divided the bluffs from the road. Stands of small
trees were scattered over the landscape, and Pug regretted there wasn’t more
substantial shelter nearby, for there was none upon the bluffs. He would be no
wetter for trudging to town than for staying under a tree.
The wind picked up, and Pug felt the first cold bite against his wet
back. He shivered and hurried his pace as well as he could. The small trees
started to bend before the wind, and Pug felt as if a great hand were pushing
at his back. Reaching the road, he turned north. He heard the eerie sound of
the great forest off to the east, the wind whistling through the branches of
the ancient oaks, adding to its already foreboding aspect. The dark glades of
the forest were probably no more perilous than the King’s road, but remembered
tales of outlaws and other, less human, malefactors stirred the hairs on the
boy’s neck.
Cutting across the King’s road, Pug gained a little shelter in the
gully that ran alongside it. The wind intensified and rain stung his eyes,
bringing tears to already wet cheeks. A gust caught him, and he stumbled off
balance for a moment. Water was gathering in the roadside gully, and he had to
step carefully to keep from losing his footing in unexpectedly deep puddles.
For nearly an hour he made his way through the ever growing storm.
The road turned northwest, bringing him almost full face into the howling wind.
Pug leaned into the wind, his shirt whipping out behind him. He swallowed hard,
to force down the choking panic rising within him. He knew he was in danger
now, for the storm was gaining in fury far beyond normal for this time of year
Great ragged bolts of lightning lit the dark landscape, briefly outlining the
trees and road in harsh, brilliant white and opaque black. The dazzling
afterimages, black and white reversed, stayed with him for a moment each time,
confusing his senses. Enormous thunder peals sounding overhead felt like
physical blows. Now his fear of the storm outweighed his fear of imagined
brigands and goblins. He decided to walk among the trees near the road, the
wind would be lessened somewhat by the boles of the oaks.
As Pug closed upon the forest, a crashing sound brought him to a
halt. In the gloom of the storm he could barely make out the form of a black
forest boar as it burst out of the undergrowth. The pig tumbled from the brush,
lost its footing, then scrambled to its feet a few yards away. Pug could see it
clearly as it stood there regarding him, swinging its head from side to side.
Two large tusks seemed to glow in the dim light as they dripped rainwater. Fear
made its eyes wide, and it pawed at the ground. The forest pigs were
bad-tempered at best, but normally avoided humans. This one was panic-stricken
by the storm, and Pug knew if it charged he could be badly gored, even killed.
Standing stock-still, Pug made ready to swing his staff, but hoped
the pig would return to the woods. The boar’s head raised, testing the boy’s
smell on the wind. Its pink eyes seemed to glow as it trembled with indecision.
A sound made it turn toward the trees for a moment, then it dropped its head
and charged.
Pug swung his staff, bringing it down in a glancing blow to the side
of the pig’s head, turning it. The pig slid sideways in the muddy footing,
hitting Pug in the legs. He went down as the pig slipped past. Lying on the
ground, Pug saw the boar skitter about as it turned to charge again.
Suddenly the pig was upon him, and Pug had no time to stand. He
thrust the staff before him in a vain attempt to turn the animal again. The
boar dodged the staff and Pug tried to roll away, but a weight fell across his
body. Pug covered his face with his hands, keeping his arms close to his chest,
expecting to be gored.
After a moment he realized the pig was still. Uncovering his face,
he discovered the pig lying across his lower legs, a black-feathered,
cloth-yard arrow protruding from its side. Pug looked toward the forest. A man
garbed in brown leather was standing near the edge of the trees, quickly
wrapping a yeoman’s longbow with an oilcloth cover. Once the valuable weapon
was protected from further abuse by the weather, the man crossed to stand over
the boy and beast.
He was cloaked and hooded, his face hidden. He knelt next to Pug and
shouted over the sound of the wind, “Are you ‘right, boy?” as he lifted the
dead boar easily from Pug’s legs. “Bones broken?”
“I don’t think so,” Pug yelled back, taking account of himself. His
right side smarted, and his legs felt equally bruised. With his ankle still
tender, he was feeling ill-used today, but nothing seemed broken or permanently
damaged.
Large, meaty hands lifted him to his feet. “Here,” the man
commanded, handing him his staff and the bow. Pug took them while the stranger
quickly gutted the boar with a large hunter’s knife. He completed his work and
turned to Pug. “Come with me, boy. You had best lodge with my master and me.
It’s not far, but we’d best hurry. This storm’ll get worse afore it’s over. Can
you walk?”
Taking an unsteady step, Pug nodded. Without a word the man
shouldered the pig and took his bow. “Come,” he said, as he turned toward the
forest. He set off at a brisk pace, which Pug had to scramble to match.
The forest cut the fury of the storm so little that conversation was
impossible. A lightning flash lit the scene for a moment, and Pug caught a
glimpse of the man’s face. Pug tried to remember if he had seen the stranger
before. He had the look common to the hunters and foresters that lived in the
forest of Crydee: large-shouldered, tall, and solidly built. He had dark hair
and beard and the raw, weather-beaten appearance of one who spends most of his
time outdoors.
For a few fanciful moments the boy wondered if he might be some
member of an outlaw band, hiding in the heart of the forest. He gave up the
notion, for no outlaw would trouble himself with an obviously penniless keep
boy.
Remembering the man had mentioned having a master, Pug suspected he
was a franklin, one who lived on the estate of a landholder.
He would be in the holder’s service, but not bound to him as a
bondsman. The franklins were freeborn, giving a share of crop or herd in
exchange for the use of land. He must be freeborn. No bondsman would be allowed
to carry a longbow, for they were much too valuable—and dangerous. Still, Pug
couldn’t remember any landholdings in the forest. It was a mystery to the boy,
but the toll of the day’s abuses was quickly driving away any curiosity.
After
what seemed to be hours, the man walked into a thicket of trees. Pug nearly
lost him in the darkness, for the sun had set some time before, taking with it
what faint light the storm had allowed. He followed the man more from the sound
of his footfalls and an awareness of his presence than from sight. Pug sensed
he was on a path through the trees, for his footsteps met no resisting brush or
detritus. From where they had been moments before, the path would be difficult
to find in the daylight, impossible at night, unless it was already known. Soon
they entered a clearing, in the midst of which sat a small stone cottage Light
shone through a single window, and smoke rose from the chimney. They crossed
the clearing, and Pug wondered at the storm’s relative mildness in this one
spot in the forest.
Once before the door, the man stood to one side and said, “You go
in, boy. I must dress the pig.”
Nodding dumbly, Pug pushed open the wooden door and stepped in.
“Close that door, boy! You’ll give me a chill and cause me my
death.”
Pug jumped to obey, slamming the door harder than he intended.
He turned, taking in the scene before him. The interior of the
cottage was a small single room. Against one wall was the fireplace, with a
good-size hearth before it. A bright, cheery fire burned, casting a warm glow.
Next to the fireplace a table sat, behind which a heavyset, yellow-robed figure
rested on a bench. His grey hair and beard nearly covered his entire head,
except for a pair of vivid blue eyes that twinkled in the firelight. A long
pipe emerged from the beard, producing heroic clouds of pale smoke.
Pug knew the man. “Master Kulgan . . . ,” he began, for the man was
the Duke’s magician and adviser, a familiar face around the castle keep.
Kulgan leveled a gaze at Pug, then said in a deep voice, given to
rich rolling sounds and powerful tones, “So you know me, then?”
“Yes, sir. From the castle.”
“What is your name, boy from the keep?”
“Pug, Master Kulgan.”
“Now I remember you.” The magician absently waved his hand. “Do not
call me ‘Master,’ Pug—though I am rightly called a master of my arts,” he said
with a merry crinkling around his eyes. “I am higher-born than you, it is true,
but not by much. Come, there is a blanket hanging by the fire, and you are
drenched. Hang your clothes to dry, then sit there.” He pointed to a bench
opposite him.
Pug did as he was bid, keeping an eye on the magician the entire
time. He was a member of the Duke’s court, but still a magician, an object of
suspicion, generally held in low esteem by the common folk. If a farmer had a
cow calve a monster, or blight strike the crops, villagers were apt to ascribe
it to the work of some magician lurking in nearby shadows. In times not too far
past they would have stoned Kulgan from Crydee as like as not. His position
with the Duke earned him the tolerance of the townsfolk now, but old fears died
slowly.
After his garments were hung, Pug sat down. He started when he saw a
pair of red eyes regarding him from just beyond the magician’s table. A scaled
head rose up above the tabletop and studied the boy.
Kulgan laughed at the boy’s discomfort. “Come, boy. Fantus will not
eat you.” He dropped his hand to the head of the creature, who sat next to him
on his bench, and rubbed above its eye ridges. It closed its eyes and gave
forth a soft crooning sound, not unlike the purring of a cat.
Pug shut his mouth, which had popped open with surprise, then asked,
“Is he truly a dragon, sir?”
The magician laughed, a rich, good-natured sound. “Betimes he thinks
he is, boy. Fantus is a firedrake, cousin to the dragon, though of smaller
stature.” The creature opened one eye and fastened it on the magician “But of
equal heart,” Kulgan quickly added, and the drake closed his eye again. Kulgan
spoke softly, in conspiratorial tones. “He is very clever, so mind what you say
to him. He is a creature of finely fashioned sensibilities.”
Pug nodded that he would. “Can he breathe fire?” he asked, eyes wide
with wonder. To any boy of thirteen, even a cousin to a dragon was worthy of
awe.
“When the mood suits him, he can belch out a flame or two, though he
seems rarely in the mood. I think it is due to the rich diet I supply him with,
boy. He has not had to hunt for years, so he is something out of practice in
the ways of drakes. In truth, I spoil him shamelessly.”
Pug found the notion somehow reassuring. If the magician cared
enough to spoil this creature, no matter how outlandish, then he seemed somehow
more human, less mysterious. Pug studied Fantus, admiring how the fire brought
golden highlights to his emerald scales. About the size of a small hound, the
drake possessed a long, sinuous neck atop which rested an alligatorlike head.
His wings were folded across his back, and two clawed feet extended before him,
aimlessly pawing the air, while Kulgan scratched behind bony eye ridges. His
long tail swung back and forth, inches above the floor.
The door opened and the big bowman entered, holding a dressed and
spitted loin of pork before him. Without a word he crossed to the fireplace and
set the meat to cook. Fantus raised his head, using his long neck to good
advantage to peek over the table. With a flick of his forked tongue, the drake
jumped down and, in stately fashion, ambled over to the hearth. He selected a
warm spot before the fire and curled up to doze away the wait before dinner.
The franklin unfastened his cloak and hung it on a peg by the door
“Storm will pass afore dawn, I’m thinking.” He returned to the fire and
prepared a basting of wine and herbs for the pig. Pug was startled to see a
large scar that ran down the left side of the man’s face, showing red and angry
in the firelight.
Kulgan waved his pipe in the franklin’s direction. “Knowing my
tight-lipped man here, you’ll not have made his proper acquaintance. Meecham,
this boy is Pug, from the keep at Castle Crydee.” Meecham gave a brief nod,
then returned to tending the roasting loin.
Pug nodded back, though a bit late for Meecham to notice. “I never
thought to thank you for saving me from the boar.”
Meecham replied, “There’s no need for thanks, boy. Had I not
startled the beast, it’s unlikely it would have charged you.” He left the
hearth and crossed over to another part of the room, took some brown dough from
a cloth-covered bucket, and started kneading.
“Well, sir,” said Pug to Kulgan, “it was his arrow that killed the
pig. It was indeed fortunate that he was following the animal.”
Kulgan laughed. “The poor creature, who is our most welcome guest
for dinner, happened to be as much a victim of circumstance as yourself.”
Pug looked perplexed. “I don’t follow, sir.”
Kulgan stood and took down an object from the topmost shelf on his
bookcase and placed it on the table before the boy. It was wrapped in a cover
of dark blue velvet, so Pug knew at once it must be a prize of great value for
such an expensive material to be used for covering Kulgan removed the velvet,
revealing an orb of crystal that gleamed in the firelight. Pug gave an ah of
pleasure at the beauty of it, for it was without apparent flaw and splendid in
its simplicity of form.
Kulgan pointed to the sphere of glass. “This device was fashioned as
a gift by Althafain of Carse, a most puissant artificer of magic, who thought
me worthy of such a present, as I have done him a favor or two in the past—but that
is of little matter. Having just this day returned from the company of Master
Althafain, I was testing his token. Look deep into the orb, Pug.”
Pug fixed his eyes on the ball and tried to follow the flicker of
firelight that seemed to play deep within its structure. The reflections of the
room, multiplied a hundredfold, merged and danced as his eyes tried to fasten
upon each aspect within the orb. They flowed and blended, then grew cloudy and
obscure. A soft white glow at the center of the ball replaced the red of
firelight, and Pug felt his gaze become trapped by its pleasing warmth. Like
the warmth of the kitchen at the keep, he thought absently.
Suddenly the milky white within the ball vanished, and Pug could see
an image of the kitchen before his eyes. Fat Alfan the cook was making
pastries, licking the sweet crumbs from his fingers. This brought the wrath of
Megar, the head cook, down upon his head, for Megar considered it a disgusting
habit. Pug laughed at the scene, one he had witnessed before many times, and it
vanished. Suddenly he felt tired.
Kulgan wrapped the orb in the cloth and put it away. “You did well,
boy,” he said thoughtfully. He stood watching the boy for a moment, as if
considering something, then sat down. “I would not have suspected you of being
able to fashion such a clear image in one try, but you seem to be more than you
first appear to be.”
“Sir?”
“Never mind, Pug.” He paused for a moment, then said, “I was using
that toy for the first time, judging how far I could send my sight, when I
spied you making for the road. From your limp and bruised condition, I judged
that you would never reach the town, so I sent Meecham to fetch you.”
Pug looked embarrassed by the unusual attention, color rising to his
cheeks. He said, with a thirteen-year-old’s high estimation of his own ability,
“You needn’t have done that, sir. I would have reached the town in due time.”
Kulgan smiled. “Perhaps, but then again, perhaps not. The storm is
unseasonably severe and perilous for traveling.”
Pug listened to the soft tattoo of rain on the roof of the cottage.
The storm seemed to have slackened, and Pug doubted the magician’s words. As if
reading the boy’s thought, Kulgan said, “Doubt me not, Pug This glade is
protected by more than the great boles. Should you pass beyond the circle of
oaks that marks the edge of my holding, you would feel the storm’s fury.
Meecham, how do you gauge this wind?”
Meecham put down the bread dough he was kneading and thought for a
moment. “Near as bad as the storm that beached six ships three years back.” He
paused for a moment, as if reconsidering the estimate, then nodded his
endorsement. “Yes, nearly as bad, though it won’t blow so long.”
Pug thought back three years to the storm that had blown a Quegan
trading fleet bound for Crydee onto the rocks of Sailor’s Grief. At its height,
the guards on the castle walls were forced to stay in the towers, lest they be
blown down. If this storm was that severe, then Kulgan’s magic was impressive,
for outside the cottage it sounded no worse than a spring rain.
Kulgan sat back on the bench, occupied with trying to light his
extinguished pipe. As he produced a large cloud of sweet white smoke, Pug’s
attention wandered to a case of books standing behind the magician. His lips
moved silently as he tried to discern what was written on the bindings, but
could not.
Kulgan lifted an eyebrow and said, “So you can read, aye?”
Pug started, alarmed that he might have offended the magician by
intruding on his domain. Kulgan, sensing his embarrassment, said, “It is all
right, boy. It is no crime to know letters.”
Pug felt his discomfort diminish. “I can read a little, sir. Megar
the cook has shown me how to read the tallies on the stores laid away for the
kitchen in the cellars. I know some numbers, as well.”
“Numbers, too,” the magician exclaimed good-naturedly. “Well, you
are something of a rare bird.” He reached behind himself and pulled out one
volume, bound in red-brown leather, from the shelf. He opened it, squinting at
one page, then another, and at last found a page that seemed to meet his
requirements. He turned the open book around and lay it upon the table before
Pug. Kulgan pointed to a page illuminated by a magnificent design of snakes,
flowers, and twining vines in a colorful design around a large letter in the
upper left corner. “Read this, boy.”
Pug had never seen anything remotely like it. His lessons had been
on plain parchment with letters fashioned in Megar’s blunt script, using a
charcoal stick. He sat, fascinated by the details of the work, then realized
the magician was staring at him. Regaining his wits, he began to read.
“And then there came a sum . . . summons from . . .” He looked at
the word, stumbling over the complex combinations that were new to him. “. . .
Zacara.” He paused, looking at Kulgan to see if he was correct. The magician
nodded for him to continue. “For the north was to be forgot . . . forgotten,
lest the heart of the empire Ian . . . languish and all be lost. And though of
Bosania from birth, those soldiers still were loyal to Great Kesh in their
service. So for her great need, they took up their arms and put on their armor
and quit Bosania, taking ship to the south, to save all from destruction.”
Kulgan said, “That’s enough,” and gently closed the cover of the
book. “You are well gifted with letters for a keep boy.”
“This book, sir, what is it?” asked Pug, as Kulgan took it from him.
“I have never seen anything like it.”
Kulgan looked at Pug for a moment, with a gaze that made him
uncomfortable again, then smiled, breaking the tension. As he put the book
back, he said, “It is a history of this land, boy. It was given as a gift by
the abbot of an Ishapian monastery. It is a translation of a Keshian text, over
a hundred years old.”
Pug nodded and said, “It all sounded very strange. What does it tell
of?”
Kulgan once more looked at Pug as if trying to see something inside
of the boy, then said, “A long time ago, Pug, all these lands, from the Endless
Sea across the Grey Tower Mountains to the Bitter Sea, were part of the Empire
of Great Kesh. Far to the east existed a small kingdom, on one small island
called Rillanon. It grew to engulf its neighboring island kingdoms, and it
became the Kingdom of the Isles. Later it expanded again to the mainland, and
while it is still the Kingdom of Isles, most of us simply call it ‘the
Kingdom.’ We, who live in Crydee, are part of the Kingdom, though we live as
far from the capital city of Rillanon as one can and still be within its
boundaries.
“Once, many long years ago, the Empire of Great Kesh abandoned these
lands, for it was engaged in a long and bloody conflict with its neighbors to
the south, the Keshian Confederacy.”
Pug was caught up in the grandeur of lost empires, but hungry enough
to notice Meecham was putting several small loaves of dark bread in hearth
oven. He turned his attention back to the magician. “Who were the Keshian Con—
. . . ?”
“The Keshian Confederacy,” Kulgan finished for the boy. “It is a
group of small nations who had existed as tributaries to Great Kesh for
centuries. A dozen years before that book was written, they united against
their oppressor. Each alone was insufficient to contest with Great Kesh, but
united they proved its match. Too close a match, for the war dragged on year
after year. The Empire was forced to strip its northern provinces of their
legions and send them south, leaving the north open to the advances of the new,
younger Kingdom.
“It was Duke Borric’s grandfather, youngest son of the King, who
brought the army westward, extending the Western Realm. Since then all of what
was once the old imperial province of Bosania, except for the Free Cities of
Natal, has been called the Duchy of Crydee.”
Pug thought for a moment, then said, “I think I would like to travel
to this Great Kesh someday.”
Meecham snorted, something close to a laugh. “And what would you be
traveling as, a freebooter?”
Pug felt his face flush. Freebooters were landless men, mercenaries
who fought for pay, and who were regarded as being only one cut above outlaws.
Kulgan said, “Perhaps you might someday, Pug. The way is long and
full of peril, but it is not unheard of for a brave and hearty soul to survive
the journey. Stranger things have been known to happen.”
The talk at the table turned to more common topics, for the magician
had been at the southern keep at Carse for over a month and wanted the gossip
of Crydee. When the bread was done baking, Meecham served it hot, carved the
pork loin, and brought out plates of cheese and greens. Pug had never eaten so
well in his life. Even when he had worked in the kitchen, his position as keep
boy earned him only meager fare. Twice during dinner, Pug found the magician
regarding him intently.
When the meal was over, Meecham cleared the table, then began
washing the dishes with clean sand and fresh water, while Kulgan and Pug sat
talking. A single scrap of meat remained on the table, which Kulgan tossed over
to Fantus, who lay before the fire. The drake opened one eye to regard the
morsel. He pondered the choice between his comfortable resting place and the
juicy scrap for a moment, then moved the necessary six inches to gulp down the
prize and closed his eye again.
Kulgan lit his pipe, and once he was satisfied with its production
of smoke, he said, “What are your plans when you reach manhood, boy?”
Pug was fighting off sleep, but Kulgan’s question brought him alert
again. The time of Choosing, when the boys of the town and keep were taken into
apprenticeship, was close, and Pug became excited as he said, “This Midsummer’s
Day I hope to take the Duke’s service under Swordmaster Fannon.”
Kulgan regarded his slight guest. “I would have thought you still a
year or two away from apprenticeship, Pug.”
Meecham gave out a sound somewhere between a laugh and a grunt. “Bit
small to be lugging around sword and shield, aren’t you, boy?”
Pug flushed. He was the smallest boy of his age in the castle.
“Megar the cook said I may be late coming to my growth,” he said with a faint
note of defiance. “No one knows who my parents were, so they have no notion of
what to expect.”
“Orphan, is it?” asked Meecham, raising one eyebrow, his most
expressive gesture yet.
Pug nodded. “I was left with the Priests of Dala, in the mountain
abbey, by a woman who claimed she found me in the road. They brought me to the
keep, for they had no way to care for me.”
“Yes,” injected Kulgan, “I remember when those who worship the
Shield of the Weak first brought you to the castle. You were no more than a
baby fresh from the teat. It is only through the Duke’s kindness that you are a
freeman today. He felt it a lesser evil to free a bondsman’s son than to bond a
freeman’s. Without proof, it was his right to have you declared bondsman.”
Meecham said in a noncommittal tone, “A good man, the Duke.”
Pug had heard the story of his origin a hundred times before from
Magya in the kitchen of the castle. He felt completely wrung out and could
barely keep his eyes open. Kulgan noticed and signaled Meecham. The tall
franklin took some blankets from a shelf and prepared a sleeping pallet. By the
time he finished, Pug had fallen asleep with his head on the table. The large
man’s hands lifted him gently from the stool and placed him on the blankets,
then covered him.
Fantus opened his eyes and regarded the sleeping boy. With a wolfish
yawn, he scrambled over next to Pug and snuggled in close. Pug shifted his
weight in his sleep and draped one arm over the drake’s neck. The firedrake
gave an approving rumble, deep in his throat, and closed his eyes again.
2
APPRENTICE
The forest was quiet.
The slight afternoon breeze stirred the tall oaks and cut the day’s
heat, while rustling the leaves only slightly. Birds who would raise a raucous
chorus at sunrise and sundown were mostly quiet at this time of morning. The
faint tang of sea salt mixed with the sweet smell of flowers and pungency of
decaying leaves.
Pug and Tomas walked slowly along the path, with the aimless weaving
steps of boys who have no particular place to go and ample time to get there.
Pug shied a small rock at an imagined target, then turned to look at his
companion. “You don’t think your mother was mad, do you?” he asked.
Tomas smiled. “No, she understands how things are. She’s seen other
boys the day of Choosing. And truthfully, we were more of hindrance than a help
in the kitchen today.”
Pug nodded. He had spilled a precious pot of honey as he carried it
to Alfan, the pastry cook. Then he had dumped an entire tray of fresh bread
loaves as he took them from the oven. “I made something of a fool of myself
today, Tomas.”
Tomas laughed. He was a tall boy, with sandy hair and bright blue
eyes. With his quick smile, he was well liked in the keep, in spite of a boyish
tendency to find trouble. He was Pug’s closest friend, more brother than
friend, and for that reason Pug earned some measure of acceptance from the
other boys, for they all regarded Tomas as their unofficial leader.
Tomas said, “You were no more the fool than I. At least you didn’t
forget to hang the beef sides high.” Pug grinned. “Anyway, the Duke’s hounds
are happy.” He snickered, then laughed. “She is angry, isn’t she?”
Tomas laughed along with his friend. “She’s mad. Still, the dogs
only ate a little before she shooed them off. Besides, she’s mostly mad at
Father. She claims the Choosing’s only an excuse for all the Craftmasters to
sit around smoking pipes, drinking ale, and swapping tales all day. She says
they already know who will choose which boy.”
Pug said, “From what the other women say, she’s not alone in that
opinion.” Then he grinned at Tomas. “Probably not wrong, either.”
Tomas lost his smile. “She truly doesn’t like it when he’s not in
the kitchen to oversee things. I think she knows this, which is why she tossed
us out of the keep for the morning, so she wouldn’t take out her temper on us.
Or at least you,” he added with a questioning smile. “I swear you’re her
favorite.”
Pug’s grin returned and he laughed again. “Well, I do cause less
trouble.”
With a playful punch to the arm, Tomas said, “You mean you get
caught less often.”
Pug pulled his sling out from within his shirt. “If we came back
with a brace of partridge or quail, she might regain some of her good temper.”
Tomas smiled. “She might,” he agreed, taking out his own sling. Both
boys were excellent slingers, Tomas being undoubted champion among the boys,
edging Pug by only a little. It was unlikely either could bring down a bird on
the wing, but should they find one at rest, there was a fair chance they might
hit it. Besides, it would give them something to do to pass the hours and
perhaps for a time forget the Choosing.
With exaggerated stealth they crept along, playing the part of
hunters. Tomas led the way as they left the footpath, heading for the watering
pool they knew lay not too far distant. It was improbable they would spot game
this time of the day unless they simply blundered across it, but if any were to
be found, it most likely would be near the pool. The woods to the northeast of
the town of Crydee were less forbidding than the great forest to the south.
Many years of harvesting trees for lumber had given the green glades a sunlit
airiness not found in the deep haunts of the southern forest. The keep boys had
often played here over the years. With small imagination, the woods were
transformed into a wondrous place, a green world of high adventure. Some of the
greatest deeds known had taken place here. Daring escapes, dread quests, and
mightily contested battles had been witnessed by the silent trees as the boys
gave vent to their youthful dreams of coming manhood. Foul creatures, mighty
monsters, and base outlaws had all been fought and vanquished, often
accompanied by the death of a great hero, with appropriate last words to his
mourning companions, all managed with just enough time left to return to the
keep for supper.
Tomas reached a small rise that overlooked the pool, screened off by
young beech saplings, and pulled aside some brush so they could mount a vigil.
He stopped, awed, and softly said, “Pug, look!” Standing at the edge of the
pool was a stag, head held high as he sought the source of something that
disturbed his drinking. He was an old animal, the hair around his muzzle nearly
all white, and his head crowned by magnificent antlers.
Pug counted quickly. “He has fourteen points.”
Tomas nodded agreement. “He must be the oldest buck in the forest.”
The stag turned his attention in the boys’ direction, flicking an ear
nervously. They froze, not wishing to frighten off such a beautiful creature.
For a long, silent minute the stag studied the rise, nostrils flaring, then
slowly lowered his head to the pool and drank.
Tomas gripped Pug’s shoulder and inclined his head to one side. Pug
followed Tomas’s motion and saw a figure walking silently into the clearing. He
was a tall man dressed in leather clothing, dyed forest green. Across his back
hung a longbow and at his belt a hunter’s knife. His green cloak’s hood was
thrown back, and he walked toward the stag with a steady, even step. Tomas
said, “It’s Martin.”
Pug also recognized the Duke’s Huntmaster. An orphan like Pug,
Martin had come to be known as Longbow by those in the castle, as he had few
equals with that weapon. Something of a mystery, Martin Longbow was still well
liked by the boys, for while he was aloof with the adults in the castle, he was
always friendly and accessible to the boys. As Huntmaster, he was also the
Duke’s Forester. His duties absented him from the castle for days, even weeks
at a time, as he kept his trackers busy looking for signs of poaching, possible
fire dangers, migrating goblins, or outlaws camping in the woods. But when he
was in the castle, and not organizing a hunt for the Duke, he always had time
for the boys. His dark eyes were always merry when they pestered him with
questions of woodlore or for tales of the lands near the boundaries of Crydee.
He seemed to possess unending patience, which set him apart from most of the
Craftmasters in the town and keep.
Martin came up to the stag, gently reached out, and touched his
neck. The great head swung up, and the stag nuzzled Martin’s arm.
Softly Martin said, “If you walk out slowly, without speaking, he
might let you approach.”
Pug and Tomas exchanged startled glances, then stepped into the
clearing. They walked slowly around the edge of the pool, the stag following
their movements with his head, trembling slightly. Martin patted him
reassuringly and he quieted. Tomas and Pug came to stand beside the hunter, and
Martin said, “Reach out and touch him, slowly so as not to frighten him.”
Tomas reached out first, and the stag trembled beneath his fingers.
Pug began to reach out, and the stag retreated a step. Martin crooned to the
stag in a language Pug had never heard before, and the animal stood still. Pug
touched him and marveled at the feel of his coat—so like the cured hides he had
touched before, yet so different for the feel of life pulsing under his
fingertips.
Suddenly the stag backed off and turned. Then, with a single
bounding leap, he was gone among the trees. Martin Longbow chuckled and said,
“Just as well. It wouldn’t do to have him become too friendly with men. Those
antlers would quickly end up over some poacher’s fireplace.”
Tomas whispered, “He’s beautiful, Martin.”
Longbow nodded, his eyes still fastened upon the spot where the stag
had vanished into the woods. “That he is, Tomas.”
Pug said, “I thought you hunted stags, Martin. How—”
Martin said, “Old Whitebeard and I have something of an
understanding, Pug. I hunt only bachelor stags, without does, or does too old
to calve. When Whitebeard loses his harem to some younger buck someday, I may
take him. Now each leaves the other to his own way. The day will come when I
will look at him down the shaft of an arrow.” He smiled at the boys. “I won’t
know until then if I shall let the shaft fly. Perhaps I will, perhaps not.” He
fell silent for a time, as if the thought of Whitebeard’s becoming old was
saddening, then as a light breeze rustled the branches said, “Now, what brings
two such bold hunters into the Duke’s woods in the early morning? There must be
a thousand things left undone with the Midsummer festival this afternoon.”
Tomas answered. “My mother tossed us out of the kitchen. We were
more trouble than not. With the Choosing today . . .” His voice died away, and
he felt suddenly embarrassed. Much of Martin’s mysterious reputation stemmed
from when he first came to Crydee. At his time for the Choosing, he had been
placed directly with the old Huntmaster by the Duke, rather than standing
before the assembled Craftmasters with the other boys his age. This violation
of one of the oldest traditions known had offended many people in town, though
none would dare openly express such feelings to Lord Borric. As was natural,
Martin became the object of their ire, rather than the Duke. Over the years
Martin had more than justified Lord Borric’s decision, but still most people
were troubled by the Duke’s special treatment of him that one day. Even after
twelve years some people still regarded Martin Longbow as being different and,
as such, worthy of distrust.
Tomas said, “I’m sorry, Martin.”
Martin nodded in acknowledgment, but without humor. “I understand,
Tomas. I may not have had to endure your uncertainty, but I have seen many
others wait for the day of Choosing. And for four years I myself have stood
with the other Masters, so I know a little of your worry.”
A thought struck Pug and he blurted, “But you’re not with the other
Craftmasters.”
Martin shook his head, a rueful expression playing across his even
features. “I had thought that, in light of your worry, you might fail to
observe the obvious. But you’ve a sharp wit about you, Pug.”
Tomas didn’t understand what they were saying for a moment, then
comprehension dawned. “Then you’ll select no apprentices!”
Martin raised a finger to his lips. “Not a word, lad. No, with young
Garret chosen last year, I’ve a full company of trackers.”
Tomas was disappointed. He wished more than anything to take service
with Swordmaster Fannon, but should he not be chosen as a soldier, then he
would prefer the life of a forester, under Martin. Now his second choice was
denied him. After a moment of dark brooding, he brightened: perhaps Martin
didn’t choose him because Fannon already had.
Seeing his friend entering a cycle of elation and depression as he
considered all the possibilities, Pug said, “You haven’t been in the keep for
nearly a month, Martin.” He put away the sling he still held and asked, “Where
have you kept yourself?”
Martin looked at Pug as the boy instantly regretted his question. As
friendly as Martin could be, he was still Huntmaster, a member of the Duke’s
household, and keep boys did not make a habit of questioning the comings and
goings of the Duke’s staff.
Martin relieved Pug’s embarrassment with a slight smile. “I’ve been
to Elvandar. Queen Aglaranna has ended her twenty years of mourning the death of
her husband, the Elf King. There was a great celebration.”
Pug was surprised by the answer. To him, as to most people in
Crydee, the elves were little more than legend. But Martin had spent his youth
near the elven forests and was one of the few humans to come and go through
those forests to the north at will. It was another thing that set Martin
Longbow apart from others. While Martin had shared elvish lore with the boys
before, this was the first time in Pug’s memory he had spoken of his
relationship to the elves. Pug stammered, “You feasted with the Elf Queen?”
Martin assumed a pose of modest inconsequence. “Well, I sat at the
table farthest from the throne, but yes; I was there.” Seeing the unasked
questions in their eyes, he continued. “You know as a boy I was raised by the
monks of Silban’s Abbey, near the elven forest. I played with elven children,
and before I came here, I hunted with Prince Calin and his cousin, Galain.”
Tomas nearly jumped with excitement. Elves were a subject holding
particular fascination for him. “Did you know King Aidan?”
Martin’s expression clouded, and his eyes narrowed, his manner
suddenly becoming stiff. Tomas saw Martin’s reaction and said, “I’m sorry,
Martin. Did I say something wrong?”
Martin waved away the apology. “No fault of yours, Tomas,” he said,
his manner softening somewhat. “The elves do not use the names of those who
have gone to the Blessed Isles, especially those who have died untimely. They
believe to do so recalls those spoken of from their journey there, denying them
their final rest. I respect their beliefs.
“Well, to answer you, no, I never met him. He was killed when I was
only a small boy. But I have heard the stories of his deeds, and he was a good
and wise King by all accounts.” Martin looked about. “It approaches noon. We
should return to the keep.”
He began to walk toward the path, and the boys fell in beside him.
“What was the feast like, Martin?” asked Tomas.
Pug sighed as the hunter began to speak of the marvels of Elvandar.
He was also fascinated by tales of the elves, but to nowhere near the degree
Tomas was. Tomas could endure hours of tales of the people of the elven
forests, regardless of the speaker’s credibility. At least, Pug considered, in
the Huntmaster they had a dependable eye witness. Martin’s voice droned on, and
Pug’s attention wandered, as he again found himself pondering the Choosing. No
matter that he told himself worry was useless: he worried. He found he was
facing the approaching of this afternoon with something akin to dread.
The boys stood in the courtyard. It was Midsummer, the day that
ended one year and marked the beginning of another. Today everyone in the
castle would be counted one year older. For the milling boys this was
significant, for today was the last day of their boyhood. Today was the
Choosing.
Pug tugged at the collar of his new tunic. It wasn’t really new,
being one of Tomas’s old ones, but it was the newest Pug had ever owned. Magya,
Tomas’s mother, had taken it in for the smaller boy, to ensure he was presentable
before the Duke and his court. Magya and her husband, Megar the cook, were as
close to being parents to the orphan as anyone in the keep. They tended his
ills, saw that he was fed, and boxed his ears when he deserved it. They also
loved him as if he were Tomas’s brother.
Pug looked around. The other boys all wore their best, for this was
one of the most important days of their young lives. Each would stand before
the assembled Craftmasters and members of the Duke’s staff, and each would be
considered for an apprentice’s post. It was a ritual, its origins lost in time,
for the choices had already been made. The crafters and the Duke’s staff had
spent many hours discussing each boy’s merits with one another and knew which
boys they would call.
The practice of having the boys between eight and thirteen years of
age work in the crafts and services had proved a wise course over the years in
fitting the best suited to each craft. In addition, it provided a pool of
semiskilled individuals for the other crafts should the need arise. The
drawback to the system was that certain boys were not chosen for a craft or
staff position. Occasionally there would be too many boys for a single
position, or no lad judged fit even though there was an opening. Even when the
number of boys and openings seemed well matched, as it did this year, there
were no guarantees. For those who stood in doubt, it was an anxious time.
Pug scuffed his bare feet absently in the dust. Unlike Tomas, who
seemed to do well at anything he tried, Pug was often guilty of trying too hard
and bungling his tasks. He looked around and noticed that a few of the other
boys also showed signs of tension. Some were joking roughly, pretending no
concern over whether they were chosen or not. Others stood like Pug, lost in
their thoughts, trying not to dwell on what they would do should they not be
chosen.
If he was not chosen, Pug—like the others—would be free to leave
Crydee to try to find a craft in another town or city. If he stayed, he would
have to either farm the Duke’s land as a franklin, or work one of the town’s
fishing boats. Both prospects were equally unattractive, but he couldn’t
imagine leaving Crydee.
Pug remembered what Megar had told him, the night before. The old cook
had cautioned him about fretting too much over the Choosing. After all, he had
pointed out, there were many apprentices who never advanced to the rank of
journeyman, and when all things were taken into account, there were more men
without craft in Crydee than with. Megar had glossed over the fact that many
fishers’ and farmers’ sons forsook the choosing, electing to follow their
fathers. Pug wondered if Megar was so removed from his own Choosing he couldn’t
remember that the boys who were not chosen would stand before the assembled
company of Craftmasters, householders, and newly chosen apprentices, under
their gaze until the last name was called and they were dismissed in shame.
Biting his lower lip, Pug tried to hide his nervousness. He was not
the sort to jump from the heights of Sailor’s Grief should he not be chosen, as
some had done in the past, but he couldn’t bear the idea of facing those who
had been chosen.
Tomas, who stood next to his shorter friend, threw Pug a smile. He
knew Pug was fretting, but could not feel entirely sympathetic as his own
excitement mounted. His father had admitted that he would be the first called
by Swordmaster Fannon. Moreover, the Swordmaster had confided that should Tomas
do well in training, he might be found a place in the Duke’s personal guard. It
would be a signal honor and would improve Tomas’s chance for advancement, even
earning him an officer’s rank after fifteen or twenty years in the guard.
He poked Pug in the ribs with an elbow, for the Duke’s herald had
come out upon the balcony overlooking the courtyard. The herald signaled to a
guard, who opened the small door in the great gate, and the Craftmasters
entered. They crossed to stand at the foot of the broad stairs of the keep. As
was traditional, they stood with their backs to the boys, waiting upon the
Duke.
The large oaken doors of the keep began to swing out ponderously,
and several guards in the Duke’s brown and gold darted through to take up their
positions on the steps. Upon each tabard was emblazoned the golden gull of
Crydee, and above that a small golden crown, marking the Duke a member of the
royal family.
The herald shouted, “Hearken to me! His Grace, Borric conDoin, third
Duke of Crydee, Prince of the Kingdom; Lord of Crydee, Carse, and Tulan; Warden
of the West; Knight-General of the King’s Armies; heir presumptive to the
throne of Rillanon.” The Duke stood patiently while the list of offices was
completed, then stepped forward into the sunlight.
Past fifty, the Duke of Crydee still moved with the fluid grace and
powerful step of a born warrior. Except for the grey at the temples of his dark
brown hair, he looked younger than his age by twenty years. He was dressed from
neck to boot in black, as he had been for the last seven years, for he still mourned
the loss of his beloved wife, Catherine. At his side hung a black-scabbarded
sword with a silver hilt, and upon his hand his ducal signet ring, the only
ornamentation he permitted himself.
The herald raised his voice. “Their Royal Highnesses, the Princes
Lyam conDoin and Arutha conDoin, heirs to the House of Crydee; Knight-Captains
of the King’s Army of the West; Princes of the royal house of Rillanon.”
Both sons stepped forward to stand behind their father. The two
young men were six and four years older than the apprentices, the Duke having
wed late, but the difference between the awkward candidates for apprenticeship
and the sons of the Duke was much more than a few years in age. Both Princes
appeared calm and self-possessed.
Lyam, the older, stood on his father’s right, a blond, powerfully
built man. His open smile was the image of his mother’s, and he looked always
on the verge of laughter. He was dressed in a bright blue tunic and yellow
leggings and wore a closely trimmed beard, as blond as his shoulder-length
hair.
Arutha was to shadows and night as Lyam was to light and day. He
stood nearly as tall as his brother and father, but while they were powerfully
built, he was rangy to the point of gauntness. He wore a brown tunic and russet
leggings. His hair was dark and his face clean-shaven. Everything about Arutha
gave one the feeling of quickness. His strength was in his speed: speed with
the rapier, speed with wit. His humor was dry and often sharp. While Lyam was
openly loved by the Duke’s subjects, Arutha was respected and admired for his
ability, but not regarded with warmth by the people.
Together the two sons seemed to capture most of the complex nature
of their sire, for the Duke was capable of both Lyam’s robust humor and
Arutha’s dark moods. They were nearly opposites in temperament, but both
capable men who would benefit the Duchy and Kingdom in years to come. The Duke
loved both his sons.
The herald again spoke. “The Princess Carline, daughter of the royal
house.”
The slim and graceful girl who made her entrance was the same age as
the boys who stood below, but already beginning to show the poise and grace of
one born to rule and the beauty of her late mother. Her soft yellow gown
contrasted strikingly with her nearly black hair. Her eyes were Lyam’s blue, as
their mother’s had been, and Lyam beamed when his sister took their father’s
arm. Even Arutha ventured one of his rare half smiles, for his sister was dear
to him also.
Many boys in the keep harbored a secret love for the Princess, a
fact she often turned to her advantage when there was mischief afoot. But even
her presence could not drive the day’s business from their minds.
The Duke’s court then entered. Pug and Tomas could see that all the
members of the Duke’s staff were present, including Kulgan. Pug had glimpsed
him in the castle from time to time since the night of the storm, and they had
exchanged words once, Kulgan inquiring as to his well-being, but mostly the
magician was absent from sight. Pug was a little surprised to see the magician,
for he was not properly considered a full member of the Duke’s household, but
rather a sometime adviser. Most of the time Kulgan was ensconced in his tower,
hidden from view as he did whatever magicians do in such places.
The magician was deep in conversation with Father Tully, a priest of
Astalon the Builder and one of the Duke’s oldest aides. Tully had been adviser
to the Duke’s father and had seemed old then. He now appeared ancient—at least
to Pug’s youthful perspective—but his eyes betrayed no sign of senility. Many a
keep boy had been impaled upon the pointed gaze of those clear grey eyes. His
wit and tongue were equally youthful, and more than once a keep boy had wished
for a session with Horsemaster Algon’s leather strap rather than a tongue-lashing
from Father Tully. The white-haired priest could nearly strip the skin from a
miscreant’s back with his caustic words.
Nearby stood one who had experienced Tully’s wrath upon occasion,
Squire Roland, son of Baron Tolburt of Tulan, one of the Duke’s vassals. He was
companion to both Princes, being the only other boy of noble birth in the keep.
His father had sent him to Crydee the year before, to learn something of the
management of the Duchy and the ways of the Duke’s court. In the rather rough frontier
court Roland discovered a home away from home. He was already something of a
rogue when he arrived, but his infectious sense of humor and ready wit often
eased much of the anger that resulted from his prankish ways. It was Roland,
more often than not, who was Princess Carline’s accomplice in whatever mischief
she was embarked upon. With light brown hair and blue eyes, Roland stood tall
for his age. He was a year older than the gathered boys and had played often
with them over the last year, as Lyam and Arutha were frequently busy with
court duties. Tomas and he had been boyish rivals at first, then fast friends,
with Pug becoming his friend by default, because where Tomas was, Pug was
certain to be nearby. Roland saw Pug fidgeting near the edge of the assembled
boys and gave him a slight nod and wink. Pug grinned briefly, for while he was
as often the butt of Roland’s jokes as any other, he still found himself liking
the wild young Squire.
After all his court was in attendance, the Duke spoke. “Yesterday
was the last day of the eleventh year of the reign of our Lord King, Rodric the
Fourth. Today is the Festival of Banapis. The following day will find these
boys gathered here counted among the men of Crydee, boys no longer, but
apprentices and freemen. At this time it is proper for me to inquire if any
among you wishes to be released from service to the Duchy. Are there any among
you who so wish?” The question was formal in nature and no response was
expected, for few ever wished to leave Crydee. But one boy did step forward.
The herald asked, “Who seeks release of his service?”
The boy looked down, clearly nervous. Clearing his throat, he said,
“I am Robert, son of Hugen.” Pug knew him, but not well. He was a netmender’s
son, a town boy, and they rarely mixed with the keep boys. Pug had played with
him upon a few occasions and had a sense the lad was well regarded. It was a
rare thing to refuse service, and Pug was as curious as any to hear the
reasons.
The Duke spoke kindly. “What is your purpose, Robert, son of Hugen?”
“Your grace, my father is unable to take me into his craft, for my
four brothers are well able to ascend to the craft as journeymen and masters
after him, as are many other netmender’s sons. My eldest brother is now married
and has a son of his own, so my family no longer has room for me in the house.
If I may not stay with my family and practice my father’s craft, I beg your
grace’s leave to take service as a sailor.”
The Duke considered the matter. Robert was not the first village boy
to be called by the lure of the sea. “Have you found a master willing to take
you into his company?”
“Yes, Your Grace. Captain Gregson, master of the ship Green Deep
from Margrave’s Port is willing.”
“I know this man,” said the Duke. Smiling slightly he said, “He is a
good and fair man. I recommend you into his service and wish you well in your
travels. You will be welcomed at Crydee whenever you return with your ship.”
Robert bowed, a little stiffly, and left the courtyard, his part in
the Choosing done. Pug wondered at Robert’s adventuresome choice. In less than
a minute the boy had renounced his ties with his family and home and was now a
citizen of a city he had never seen. It was custom that a sailor was considered
to owe his loyalty to the city that was his ship’s home port. Margrave’s Port
was one of the Free Cities of Natal, on the Bitter Sea, and was now Robert’s
home.
The Duke indicated the herald should continue.
The herald announced the first of the Craftmasters, Sailmaker Holm,
who called the names of three boys. All three took service, and none seemed
displeased. The Choosing went smoothly, as no boy refused service. Each boy
went to stand next to his new master.
As the afternoon wore on and the number of boys diminished, Pug
became more and more uncomfortable. Soon there were only two boys besides Pug
and Tomas standing in the center of the court. All the Craftmasters had called
their apprentices, and only two of the Duke’s household staff beside the
Swordmaster had not been heard from. Pug studied the group on the top of the
steps, his heart pounding with anxiety. The two Princes regarded the boys, Lyam
with a friendly smile, Arutha brooding on some thought or another. The Princess
Carline was bored by the entire affair and took little pains to hide the fact,
as she was whispering to Roland. This brought a disapproving look from Lady
Marna, her governess.
Horsemaster Algon came forth, his brown-and-golden tabard bearing a
small horsehead embroidered over his left breast. The Horsemaster called the
name of Rulf, son of Dick, and the stocky son of the Duke’s stableman walked
over to stand behind the master. When he turned, he smiled condescendingly at
Pug. The two boys had never gotten along, the pock-scarred boy spending many
hours taunting and tormenting Pug. While they both worked in the stable under
Dick, the stableman had looked the other way whenever his son sprang a trap on
Pug, and the orphan was always held responsible for any difficulty that arose.
It had been a terrible period for Pug, and the boy had vowed to refuse service
rather than face the prospect of working next to Rulf the rest of his life.
Housecarl Samuel called the other boy, Geoffry, who would become a
member of the castle’s serving staff, leaving Pug and Tomas standing alone.
Swordmaster Fannon then stepped forward, and Pug felt his heart stand still as
the old soldier called, “Tomas, son of Megar.”
There was a pause, and Pug waited to hear his own name called, but
Fannon stepped back and Tomas crossed over to stand alongside him. Pug felt
dwarfed by the gaze of all upon him. The courtyard was now larger than he had
ever remembered it, and he felt ill fashioned and poorly dressed. His heart sank
in his chest as he realized that there was no Craftmaster or staff member
present who had not taken an apprentice. He would be the only boy uncalled.
Fighting back tears, he waited for the Duke to dismiss the company.
As the Duke started to speak, sympathy for the boy showing clearly
in his face, he was interrupted by another voice. “Your Grace, if you would be
so kind.”
All eyes turned to see Kulgan the magician step forward. “I have
need of an apprentice and would call Pug, orphan of the keep, to service.”
A wave of murmuring swept through the assembled Craftmasters. A few
voices could be heard saying it wasn’t proper for a magician to participate in
the Choosing. The Duke silenced them with a sweep of his gaze, his face stern.
No Craftmaster would challenge the Duke of Crydee, the third-ranking noble in
the Kingdom, over the standing of one boy. Slowly all eyes returned to regard
the boy.
The Duke said, “As Kulgan is a recognized master of his craft, it is
his right to choose. Pug, orphan of the keep, will you take service?” Pug stood
rigid. He had imagined himself leading the King’s army into battle as a
Knight-Lieutenant, or discovering someday he was the lost son of nobility. In
his boyish imaginings he had sailed ships, hunted great monsters, and saved the
nation. In quieter moments of reflection he had wondered if he would spend his
life building ships, making pottery, or learning the trader’s skill, and
speculated on how well he would do in each of those crafts. But the one thing
he never thought of, the one dream that had never captured his fantasies, was
that of becoming a magician.
He snapped out of his shocked state, aware the Duke patiently
awaited his response. He looked at the faces of those before him. Father Tully
gave him one of his rare smiles, as did Prince Arutha. Prince Lyam nodded a
slight yes, and Kulgan regarded him intently. There were signs of worry upon
the magician’s face, and suddenly Pug decided. It might not be an entirely
proper calling, but any craft was better than none. He stepped forward and
caught his own heel with his other foot, and landed face down in the dust.
Picking himself up, he half scrambled, half ran to the magician’s side. The
misstep broke the tension, and the Duke’s booming laughter filled the
courtyard. Flushing with embarrassment, Pug stood behind Kulgan. He looked
around the broad girth of his new master and found the Duke watching, his
expression tempered by a kind nod at the blushing Pug. The Duke turned back to
those who stood waiting for the Choosing to end.
“I declare that each boy present is now the charge of his master, to
obey him in all matters within the laws of the Kingdom, and each shall be
judged a true and proper man of Crydee. Let the apprentices attend their
masters. Until the feasting, I bid you all good day.” He turned and presented
his left arm to his daughter. She placed her hand lightly upon it and they
passed into the keep between the ranks of the courtiers, who drew aside. The
two Princes followed, and the others of the court. Pug saw Tomas leave in the
direction of the guard barracks, behind Master Fannon.
He turned his attention back to Kulgan, who was standing lost in
thought. After a moment the magician said, “I trust neither of us has made a
mistake this day.”
“Sir?” Pug asked, not understanding the magician’s meaning. Kulgan
waved one hand absently, causing his pale yellow robe to move like waves
rippling over the sea. “It is no matter, boy. What’s done is done. Let us make
the best of things.”
He placed his hand on the boy’s shoulder. “Come, let us retire to
the tower where I reside. There is a small room below my own that should do for
you. I had intended it for some project or another, but have never managed to
find the time to prepare it.”
Pug stood in awe. “A room of my own?” Such a thing for an apprentice
was unheard of. Most apprentices slept in the workrooms of their master, or
protected herds, or the like. Only when an apprentice became a journeyman was
it usual for him to take private quarters.
Kulgan arched one bushy eyebrow. “Of course. Can’t have you
underfoot all the time. I would never get anything done. Besides, magic
requires solitude for contemplation. You will need to be untroubled as much as
or perhaps more than I will.” He took out his long, thin pipe from a fold of
his robe and started to stuff it full of tabac from a pouch that had also come
from within the robe.
“Let’s not bother with too much discussion of duties and such, boy.
For in truth, I am not prepared for you. But in short order I will have things
well in hand. Until then we can use the time by becoming acquainted with one
another. Agreed?” Pug was startled. He had little notion of what a magician was
about, in spite of the night spent with Kulgan weeks ago, but he readily knew
what Craftmasters were like, and none would have thought to inquire whether or
not an apprentice agreed with his plans. Not knowing what to say, Pug just
nodded.
“Good, then,” said Kulgan, “let us be off to the tower to find you
some new clothes, and then we will spend the balance of the day feasting. Later
there will be ample time to learn how to be master and apprentice.” With a
smile for the boy, the stout magician turned Pug around and led him away.
The late afternoon was clear and bright, with a gentle breeze from
the sea cooling the summer heat. Throughout the keep of Castle Crydee, and the
town below, preparations for the Festival of Banapis were in progress.
Banapis was the oldest known holiday, its origins lost in antiquity.
It was held each Midsummer’s Day, a day belonging to neither the past nor the
coming year. Banapis, known by other names in other nations, was celebrated
over the entire world of Midkemia according to legend. It was believed by some
that the festival was borrowed from the elves and dwarves, for the long-lived
races were said to have celebrated the feast of Midsummer as far back as the
memory of both races could recall. Most authorities disputed this allegation,
citing no reason other than the unlikelihood of humans borrowing anything from
the elven or dwarven folk. It was rumored that even the denizens of the
Northlands, the goblin tribes and the clans of the Brotherhood of the Dark
Path, celebrated Banapis, though no one had ever reported seeing such a
celebration.
The courtyard was busy. Huge tables had been erected to hold the
myriad varieties of foods that had been in preparation for over a week. Giant
barrels of dwarven ale, imported from Stone Mountain, had been hauled out of
the cellars and were resting on protesting, overburdened wood frames. The workmen,
alarmed at the fragile appearance of the barrel ricks, were quickly emptying
some of the contents. Megar came out of the kitchen and angrily shooed them
away. “Leave off, there will be none left for the evening meal at this rate!
Back to the kitchen, dolts! There is much work to be done yet.”
The workers went off, grumbling, and Megar filled a tankard to
ensure the ale was at proper temperature. After he drained it dry and satisfied
himself that all was as it should be, he returned to the kitchen.
There was no formal beginning to the feast. Traditionally, people
and food, wine and ale, all accumulated until they reached a certain density,
then all at once the festivities would be in full swing.
Pug ran from the kitchen. His room in the northmost tower, the
magician’s tower as it had become known, provided him with a shortcut through
the kitchen, which he used rather than the main doors of the keep. He beamed as
he sped across the courtyard in his new tunic and trousers. He had never worn
such finery and was in a hurry to show his friend Tomas.
He found Tomas leaving the soldiers’ commons, nearly as much in a
hurry as Pug. When the two met, they both spoke at once.
“Look at the new tunic—” said Pug.
“Look at my soldier’s tabard—” said Tomas.
Both stopped and broke into laughter.
Tomas regained his composure first. “Those are very fine clothes,
Pug,” he said, fingering the expensive material of Pug’s red tunic. “And the
color suits you.”
Pug returned the compliment, for Tomas did cut a striking figure in
his brown-and-gold tabard. It was of little consequence that he wore his
regular homespun tunic and trouser underneath. He would not receive a soldier’s
uniform until Master Fannon was satisfied with his worthiness as a man-at-arms.
The two friends wandered from one heavily laden table to another.
Pug’s mouth watered from the rich fragrances in the air. They came to a table
heaped with meat pies, steam rising from their hot crusts, pungent cheeses, and
hot bread. At the table a young kitchen boy was stationed with a shoo-fly. His
job was to keep pests from the food, whether of the insect variety or the
chronically hungry apprentice variety. Like most other situations involving
boys, the relationship between this guardian of the feast and the older
apprentices was closely bound by tradition. It was considered ill-mannered and
in poor taste merely to threaten or bully the smaller boy into parting with
food before the start of the feast. But it was considered fair to use guile,
stealth, or speed in gaining a prize from the table.
Pug and Tomas observed with interest as the boy, named Jon,
delivered a wicked whack to the hand of one young apprentice seeking to snag a
large pie. With a nod of his head, Tomas sent Pug to the far side of the table.
Pug ambled across Jon’s field of vision, and the boy watched him carefully. Pug
moved abruptly, a feint toward the table, and Jon leaned in his direction. Then
suddenly Tomas snatched a puff-pastry from the table and was gone before the
shoo-fly lash began to descend. As they ran from the table, Pug and Tomas could
hear the distressed cries of the boy whose table they had plundered.
Tomas gave Pug half the pie when they were safely away, and the
smaller apprentice laughed. “You’re the quickest hand in the castle, I bet.”
“Or young Jon was slow of eye for keeping it on you.”
They shared a laugh. Pug popped his half of the pie into his mouth.
It was delicately seasoned, and the contrast between the salty pork filling and
the sweet puff-pastry crust was delicious.
The sound of pipes and drums came from the side courtyard as the
Duke’s musicians approached the main courtyard. By the time they had emerged
around the keep, a silent message seemed to pass through the crowd. Suddenly
the kitchen boys were busy handing out wooden platters for the celebrants to
heap food upon, and mugs of ale and wine were being drawn from the barrels.
The boys dashed to a place in line at the first table. Pug and Tomas
used their size and quickness to good advantage, darting through the throng,
snagging food of every description and a large mug of foamy ale each.
They found a relatively quiet corner and fell to with ravenous
hunger. Pug tasted his first drink of ale and was surprised at the robust,
slightly bitter taste. It seemed to warm him as it went down, and after another
experimental taste he decided that he liked it.
Pug could see the Duke and his family mingling with the common folk.
Other members of his court could also be seen standing in line before the
tables. There was no ceremony, ritual, or rank observed this afternoon. Each
was served as he arrived, for Midsummer’s Day was the time when all would
equally share in the bounties of the harvest.
Pug caught a glimpse of the Princess and felt his chest tighten a
little. She looked radiant as many of the boys in the courtyard complimented
her on her appearance. She wore a lovely gown of deep blue and a simple,
broad-brimmed hat of the same color. She thanked each author of a flattering
remark and used her dark eyelashes and bright smile to good advantage, leaving
a wake of infatuated boys behind.
Jugglers and clowns made their appearance in the courtyard, the
first of many groups of traveling performers who were in the town for the
festival. The actors of another company had set up a stage in the town square
and would give a performance in the evening. Until the early hours of the next
morning the festivities would continue. Pug knew that many of the boys the year
before had to be excused duty the day following Banapis, for their heads and
stomachs were in no condition for honest work. He was sure that scene would be
repeated tomorrow.
Pug looked forward to the evening, for it was the custom for new
apprentices to visit many of the houses in the town, receiving congratulations
and mugs of ale. It was also a ripe time for meeting the town girls. While
dalliance was not unknown, it was frowned upon. But mothers tended to be less
vigilant during Banapis. Now that the boys had crafts, they were viewed less as
bothersome pests and more as potential sons-in-law, and there had been more
than one case of a mother looking the other way while a daughter used her
natural gifts to snare a young husband. Pug, being of small stature and
youthful appearance, got little notice from the girls of the keep. Tomas,
however, was more and more the object of girlish flirtation as he grew in size
and good looks, and lately Pug had begun to be aware that his friend was being
sized up by one or another of the castle girls. Pug was still young enough to
think the whole thing silly, but old enough to be fascinated by it.
Pug chewed an improbable mouthful and looked around. People from the
town and keep passed, offering congratulations on the boys’ apprenticeship and
wishing them a good new year. Pug felt a deep sense of Tightness about
everything. He was an apprentice, even if Kulgan seemed completely unsure of
what to do with him. He was well fed, and on his way to being slightly
intoxicated—which contributed to his sense of well-being. And, most important,
he was among friends. There can’t be much more to life than this, he thought.
3
KEEP
Pug sat sulking on his sleeping pallet.
Fantus the firedrake pushed his head forward, inviting Pug to
scratch him behind his eye ridges. Seeing that he would get little satisfaction,
the drake made his way to the tower window and with a snort of displeasure,
complete with a small puff of black smoke, launched himself in flight. Pug
didn’t notice the creature’s leaving, so engrossed was he in his own world of
troubles. Since he had taken on the position of Kulgan’s apprentice fourteen
months ago, everything he had done seemed to go wrong.
He lay back on the pallet, covering his eyes with a forearm; he
could smell the salty sea breeze that blew in through his window and feel the
sun’s warmth across his legs. Everything in his life had taken a turn for the
better since his apprenticeship, except the single most important thing, his
studies.
For months Kulgan had been laboring to teach him the fundamentals of
the magician’s arts, but there was always something that caused his efforts to
go awry. In the theories of spell casting, Pug was a quick study, grasping the
basic concepts well. But each time he attempted to use his knowledge, something
seemed to hold him back. It was as if a part of his mind refused to follow
through with the magic, as if a block existed that prevented him from passing a
certain point in the spell. Each time he tried he could feel himself approach
that point, and like a rider of a balky horse, he couldn’t seem to force
himself over the hurdle.
Kulgan dismissed his worries, saying that it would all sort itself
out in time. The stout magician was always sympathetic with the boy, never
reprimanding him for not doing better, for he knew the boy was trying.
Pug was brought out of his reverie by someone’s opening the door.
Looking up, he saw Father Tully entering, a large book under his arm. The
cleric’s white robes rustled as he closed the door. Pug sat up.
“Pug, it’s time for your writing lesson—” He stopped himself when he
saw the downcast expression of the boy. “What’s the matter, lad?”
Pug had come to like the old priest of Astalon. He was a strict
master, but a fair one. He would praise the boy for his success as often as
scold him for his failures. He had a quick mind and a sense of humor and was
open to questions, no matter how stupid Pug thought they might sound.
Coming to his feet, Pug sighed. “I don’t know, Father. It’s just
that things don’t seem to be going right. Everything I try I manage to make a
mess of.”
“Pug, it can’t be all black,” the priest said, placing a hand on
Pug’s shoulder. “Why don’t you tell me what is troubling you, and we can
practice writing some other time.” He moved to a stool by the window and
adjusted his robes around him as he sat. As he placed the large book at his
feet, he studied the boy.
Pug had grown over the last year, but was still small. His shoulders
were beginning to broaden a bit, and his face was showing signs of the man he
would someday be. He was a dejected figure in his homespun tunic and trousers,
his mood as grey as the material he wore. His room, which was usually neat and
orderly, was a mess of scrolls and books, reflecting the disorder in his mind.
Pug sat quietly for a moment, but when the priest said nothing,
started, to speak. “Do you remember my telling you that Kulgan was trying to
teach me the three basic cantrips to calm the mind, so that the working of
spells could be practiced without stress? Well, the truth is that I mastered
those exercises months ago. I can bring my mind to a state of calm in moments
now, with little effort. But that is as far as it goes. After that, everything
seems to fall apart.”
“What do you mean?”
“The next thing to learn is to discipline the mind to do things that
are not natural for it, such as think on one thing to the exclusion of
everything else, or not to think of something, which is quite hard once you’ve
been told what it is. I can do those things most of the time, but now and again
I feel like there are some forces inside my head, crashing about, demanding
that I do things in a different way. It’s like there was something else
happening in my head than what Kulgan told me to expect.
“Each time I try one of the simple spells Kulgan has taught me, like
making an object move, or lifting myself off the ground, these things in my
head come flooding in on my concentration, and I lose my control. I can’t even
master the simplest spell.” Pug felt himself tremble, for this was the first
chance he had had to speak about this to anyone besides Kulgan “Kulgan simply
says to keep at it and not worry.” Nearing tears, he continued. “I have talent.
Kulgan said he knew it from the first time we met, when I used the crystal.
You’ve told me that I have talent. But I just can’t make the spells work the
way they’re supposed to I get so confused by it all.”
“Pug,” said the priest, “magic has many properties, and we
understand little of how it works, even those of us who practice it. In the
temples we are taught that magic is a gift from the gods, and we accept that on
faith. We do not understand how this can be so, but we do not question. Each
order has its own province of magic, with no two quite alike. I am capable of
magic that those who follow their orders are not. But none can say why.
“Magicians deal in a different sort of magic, and their practices
are very different from our practices in the temples Much of what they do, we
cannot. It is they who study the art of magic, seeking its nature and workings,
but even they cannot explain how magic works. They only know how to work it,
and pass that knowledge along to their students, as Kulgan is doing with you.”
“Trying to do with me, Father. I think he may have misjudged me.”
“I think not, Pug I have some knowledge of these things, and since
you have become Kulgan’s pupil, I have felt the power growing in you Perhaps
you will come to it late, as others have, but I am sure you will find the
proper path.”
Pug was not comforted. He didn’t question the priest’s wisdom or his
opinion, but he did feel he could be mistaken “I hope you’re right, Father. I
just don’t understand what’s wrong with me.”
“I think I know what’s wrong,” came a voice from the door. Startled,
Pug and Father Tully turned to see Kulgan standing in the doorway. His blue
eyes were set in lines of concern, and his thick grey brows formed a V over the
bridge of his nose. Neither Pug nor Tully had heard the door open. Kulgan hiked
his long green robe and stepped into the room, leaving the door open.
“Come here, Pug,” said the magician with a small wave of his hand
Pug went over to the magician, who placed both hands on his shoulders “Boys who
sit in their rooms day after day worrying about why things don’t work make
things not work. I am giving you the day for yourself. As it is Sixthday, there
should be plenty of other boys to help you in whatever sort of trouble boys can
find.” He smiled, and his pupil was filled with relief “You need a rest from
study Now go.” So saying, he fetched a playful cuff to the boy’s head, sending
him running down the stairs. Crossing over to the pallet, Kulgan lowered his
heavy frame to it and looked at the priest. “Boys,” said Kulgan, shaking his
head. “You hold a festival, give them a badge of craft, and suddenly they
expect to be men. But they’re still boys, and no matter how hard they try, they
still act like boys, not men.” He took out his pipe and began filling it
“Magicians are considered young and inexperienced at thirty, but in all other
crafts thirty would mark a man a journeyman or master, most likely readying his
own son for the Choosing.” He put a taper to the coals still smouldering in
Pug’s fire pot and lit his pipe.
Tully nodded. “I understand, Kulgan. The priesthood also is an old
man’s calling. At Pug’s age I still had thirteen years of being an acolate
before me.” The old priest leaned forward “Kulgan, what of the boy’s problem?”
“The boy’s right, you know,” Kulgan stated flatly. “There is no
explanation for why he cannot perform the skills I’ve tried to teach. The
things he can do with scrolls and devices amaze me. The boy has such gifts for
these things, I would have wagered he had the makings of a magician of mighty
arts. But this inability to use his inner powers . . .”
“Do you think you can find a solution?”
“I hope so I would hate to have to release him from apprenticeship.
It would go harder on him than had I never chosen him.” His face showed his
genuine concern. “It is confusing, Tully I think you’ll agree he has the
potential for a great talent. As soon as I saw him use the crystal in my hut
that night, I knew for the first time in years I might have at last found my
apprentice. When no master chose him, I knew fate had set our paths to cross.
But there is something else inside that boy’s head, something I’ve never met
before, something powerful. I don’t know what it is, Tully, but it rejects my
exercises, as if they were somehow . . . not correct, or . . . ill suited to
him. I don’t know if I can explain what I’ve encountered with Pug any better.
There is no simple explanation for it.”
“Have you thought about what the boy said?” asked the priest, a look
of thoughtful concern on his face.
“You mean about my having been mistaken?”
Tully nodded. Kulgan dismissed the question with a wave of his hand
“Tully, you know as much about the nature of magic as I do, perhaps more. Your
god is not called the God Who Brought Order for nothing. Your sect unraveled
much about what orders this universe. Do you for one moment doubt the boy has
talent?”
“Talent, no. But his ability is the question for the moment.”
“Well put, as usual. Well, then, have you any ideas? Should we make
a cleric out of the boy, perhaps?”
Tully sat back, a disapproving expression upon his face. “You know
the priesthood is a calling, Kulgan,” he said stiffly.
“Put your back down, Tully. I was making a joke.” He sighed. “Still,
if he hasn’t the calling of a priest, nor the knack of a magician’s craft, what
can we make of this natural ability of his?”
Tully pondered the question in silence for a moment, then said,
“Have you thought of the lost art?”
Kulgan’s eyes widened. “That old legend?” Tully nodded. “I doubt
there is a magician alive who at one time or another hasn’t reflected on the
legend of the lost art. If it had existed, it would explain away many of the
shortcomings of our craft.” Then he fixed Tully with a narrowed eye, showing
his disapproval. “But legends are common enough Turn up any rock on the beach
and you’ll find one. I for one prefer to look for real answers to our
shortcomings, not blame them on ancient superstitions.”
Tully’s expression became stern and his tone scolding. “We of the
temple do not count it legend, Kulgan! It is considered part of the revealed
truth, taught by the gods to the first men.”
Nettled by Tully’s tone, Kulgan snapped, “So was the notion the
world was flat, until Rolendirk—a magician, I’ll remind you—sent his magic
sight high enough to disclose the curvature of the horizon, clearly
demonstrating the world to be a sphere! It was a fact known by almost every
sailor and fisherman who’d ever seen a sail appear upon the horizon before the
rest of the ship since the beginning of time!” His voice rose to a near shout.
Seeing Tully was stung by the reference to ancient church canon long
since abandoned, Kulgan softened his tone “No disrespect to you, Tully. But
don’t try to teach an old thief to steal. I know your order chops logic with
the best of them, and that half your brother clerics fall into laughing fits
when they hear those deadly serious young acolytes debate theological issues
set aside a century ago. Besides which, isn’t the legend of the lost art an
Ishapian dogma?”
Now it was Tully’s turn to fix Kulgan with a disapproving eye. With
a tone of amused exasperation, he said, “Your education in religion is still
lacking, Kulgan, despite a somewhat unforgiving insight into the inner workings
of my order.” He smiled a little. “You’re right about the moot gospel courts,
though. Most of us find them so amusing because we remember how painfully grim
we were about them when we were acolytes.” Then turning serious, he said, “But
I am serious when I say your education is lacking. The Ishapians have some
strange beliefs, it’s true, and they are an insular group, but they are also
the oldest order known and are recognized as the senior church in questions
pertaining to interdenominational differences.”
“Religious wars, you mean,” said Kulgan with an amused snort.
Tully ignored the comment. “The Ishapians are caretakers for the
oldest lore and history in the Kingdom, and they have the most extensive
library in the Kingdom I have visited the library at their temple in Krondor,
and it is most impressive.”
Kulgan smiled and with a slight tone of condescension said, “As have
I, Tully, and I have browsed the shelves at the Abbey of Sarth, which is ten
times as large. What’s the point?”
Leaning forward, Tully said, “The point is this: say what you will
about the Ishapians, but when they put forth something as history, not lore,
they can usually produce ancient tomes to support their claims.”
“No,” said Kulgan, waving aside Tully’s comments with a dismissive
wave. “I do not make light of your beliefs, or any other man’s, but I cannot
accept this nonsense about lost arts. I might be willing to believe Pug could
be somehow more attuned to some aspect of magic I’m ignorant of, perhaps
something involving spirit conjuration or illusion— areas I will happily admit
I know little about—but I cannot accept that he will never learn to master his
craft because the long-vanished god of magic died during the Chaos Wars! No,
that there is unknown lore, I accept. There are too many shortcomings in our
craft even to begin to think our understanding of magic is remotely complete.
But if Pug can’t learn magic, it is only because I have failed as a teacher.”
Tully now glared at Kulgan, suddenly aware the magician was not
pondering Pug’s possible shortcomings but his own. “Now you are being foolish.
You are a gifted man, and were I to have been the one to discover Pug’s talent,
I could not imagine a better teacher to place him with than yourself. But there
can be no failing if you do not know what he needs to be taught.” Kulgan began
to sputter an objection, but Tully cut him off. “No, let me continue. What we
lack is understanding. You seem to forget there have been others like Pug, wild
talents who could not master their gifts, others who failed as priests and
magicians.”
Kulgan puffed on his pipe, his brow knitted in concentration.
Suddenly he began to chuckle, then laugh. Tully looked sharply at the magician.
Kulgan waved offhandedly with his pipe. “I was just struck by the thought that
should a swineherd fail to teach his son the family calling, he could blame it
upon the demise of the gods of pigs .”
Tully’s eyes went wide at the near-blasphemous thought, then he too
laughed, a short bark. “That’s one for the moot gospel courts!” Both men
laughed a long, tension-releasing laugh at that Tully sighed and stood up.
“Still, do not close your mind entirely to what I’ve said, Kulgan. It may be
Pug is one of those wild talents. And you may have to reconcile yourself for
letting him go.”
Kulgan shook his head sadly at the thought. “I refuse to believe
there is any simple explanation for those other failures, Tully. Or for Pug’s
difficulties, as well. The fault was in each man or woman, not in the nature of
the universe. I have often felt where we fail with Pug is in understanding how
to reach him Perhaps I would be well advised to seek another master for him,
place him with one better able to harness his abilities.”
Tully sighed. “I have spoken my mind of this question, Kulgan Other
than what I’ve said, I cannot advise you Still, as they say, a poor master’s
better than no master at all. How would the boy have fared if no one had chosen
to teach him?”
Kulgan bolted upright from his seat. “What did you say?”
“I said, how would the boy have fared if no one had chosen to teach
him?”
Kulgan’s eyes seemed to lose focus as he stared into space. He began
puffing furiously upon his pipe. After watching for a moment, Tully said, “What
is it, Kulgan?”
Kulgan said, “I’m not sure, Tully, but you may have given me an
idea.”
“What sort of idea?”
Kulgan waved off the question. “I’m not entirely sure Give me time
to ponder. But consider your question, and ask yourself this: how did the first
magicians learn to use their power?”
Tully sat back down, and both men began to consider the question in
silence. Through the window they could hear the sound of boys at play, filling
the courtyard of the keep.
Every
sixthday, the boys and girls who worked in the castle were allowed to spend the
afternoon as they saw fit. The boys, apprentice age and younger, were a loud
and boisterous lot. The girls worked in the service of the ladies of the
castle, cleaning and sewing, as well as helping in the kitchen. They all gave a
full week’s work, dawn to dusk and more, each day, but—on the sixth day of the
week they gathered in the courtyard of the castle, near the Princess’s garden.
Most of the boys played a rough game of tag, involving the capture of a ball of
leather, stuffed hard with rags, by one side, amid shoves and shouts, kicks and
occasional fistfights. All wore their oldest clothes, for rips, bloodstains,
and mud-stains were common.
The girls would sit along the low wall by the Princess’s garden,
occupying themselves with gossip about the ladies of the Duke’s court. They
nearly always put on their best skirts and blouses, and their hair shone from
washing and brushing. Both groups made a great display of ignoring each other,
and both were equally unconvincing.
Pug ran to where the game was in progress. As was usual, Tomas was
in the thick of the fray, sandy hair flying like a banner, shouting and
laughing above the noise. Amid elbows and kicks he sounded savagely joyous, as
if the incidental pain made the contest all the more worthwhile. He ran through
the pack, kicking the ball high in the air, trying to avoid the feet of those
who sought to trip him. No one was quite sure how the game had come into
existence, or exactly what the rules were, but the boys played with battlefield
intensity, as their fathers had years before.
Pug ran onto the field and placed a foot before Rulf just as he was
about to hit Tomas from behind. Rulf went down in a tangle of bodies, and Tomas
broke free. He ran toward the goal and, dropping the ball in front of himself,
kicked it into a large overturned barrel, scoring for his side While other boys
yelled in celebration, Rulf leaped to his feet and pushed aside another boy to
place himself directly in front of Pug Glaring out from under thick brows, he
spat at Pug, “Try that again and I’ll break your legs, sand squint!” The sand
squint was a bird of notoriously foul habits—not the least of which was leaving
eggs in other birds’ nests so that its offspring were raised by other birds.
Pug was not about to let any insult of Rulf’s pass unchallenged. With the
frustrations of the last few months only a little below the surface, Pug was
feeling particularly thin-skinned this day.
With a leap he flew at Rulf’s head, throwing his left arm around the
stockier boy’s neck. He drove his right fist into Rulf’s face and could feel
Rulf’s nose squash under the first blow. Quickly both boys were rolling on the
ground. Rulf’s greater weight began to tell, and soon he sat astride Pug’s
chest, driving his fat fists into the smaller boy’s face.
Tomas stood by helpless, for as much as he wanted to aid his friend,
the boys’ code of honor was as strict and inviolate as any noble’s. Should he
intervene on his friend’s behalf, Pug would never live down the shame. Tomas
jumped up and down, urging Pug on, grimacing each time Pug was struck, as if he
felt the blows himself.
Pug tried to squirm out from under the larger boy, causing many of
his blows to slip by, striking dirt instead of Pug’s face. Enough of them were
hitting the mark, however, so that Pug soon began to feel a queer detachment
from the whole procedure. He thought it strange that everybody sounded so far
away, and that Rulf’s blows seemed not to hurt. His vision was beginning to
fill with red and yellow colors, when he felt the weight lifted from his chest.
After a brief moment things came into focus, and Pug saw Prince
Arutha standing over him, his hand firmly grasping Rulf’s collar. While not as
powerful a figure as his brother or father, the Prince was still able to hold
Rulf high enough so that the stableboy’s toes barely touched the ground. The
Prince smiled, but without humor “I think the boy has had enough,” he said
quietly, eyes glaring “Don’t you agree?” His cold tone made it clear he wasn’t
asking for an opinion. Blood still ran down Rulf’s face from Pug’s initial blow
as he choked out a sound the Prince took to mean agreement. Arutha let go of
Rulf’s collar, and the stable-boy fell backward, to the laughter of the
onlookers. The Prince reached down and helped Pug to his feet.
Holding the wobbly boy steady, Arutha said, “I admire your courage,
youngster, but we can’t have the wits beaten out of the Duchy’s finest young
magician, can we?” His tone was only slightly mocking, and Pug was too numb to
do more than stand and stare at the younger son of the Duke. The Prince gave
him a slight smile and handed him over to Tomas, who had come up next to Pug, a
wet cloth in hand.
Pug came out of his fog as Tomas scrubbed his face with the cloth,
and felt even worse when he saw the Princess and Roland standing only a few
feet away as Prince Arutha returned to their side. To take a beating before the
girls of the keep was bad enough, to be punished by a lout like Rulf in front
of the Princess was a catastrophe.
Emitting a groan that had little to do with his physical state, Pug
tried to look as much like someone else as he could Tomas grabbed him roughly.
“Try not to squirm around so much. You’re not all that bad off. Most of this
blood is Rulf’s anyway. By tomorrow his nose will look like an angry red
cabbage.”
“So will my head.”
“Nothing so bad. A black eye, perhaps two, with a swollen cheek
thrown in to the bargain On the whole, you did rather well, but next time you
want to tangle with Rulf, wait until you’ve put on a little more size, will
you?” Pug watched as the Prince led his sister away from the site of battle
Roland gave him a wide grin, and Pug wished himself dead.
***
Pug and
Tomas walked out of the kitchen, dinner plates in hand. It was a warm night,
and they preferred the cooling ocean breeze to the heat of the scullery. They
sat on the porch, and Pug moved his jaw from side to side, feeling it pop in
and out. He experimented with a bite of lamb and put his plate to one side.
Tomas watched him. “Can’t eat?”
Pug nodded “Jaw hurts too much.” He leaned forward, resting his
elbows on his knees and chin on his fists. “I should have kept my temper. Then
I would have done better.”
Tomas spoke from around a mouthful of food. “Master Fannon says a
soldier must keep a cool head at all times or he’ll lose it.”
Pug sighed. “Kulgan said something like that I have some drills I
can do that make me relax. I should have used them.”
Tomas gulped a heroic portion of his meal “Practicing in your room
is one thing Putting that sort of business into use while someone is insulting
you to your face is quite another. I would have done the same thing, I
suppose.”
“But you would have won.”
“Probably. Which is why Rulf would never have come at me.” His
manner showed he wasn’t being boastful, merely stating things as they were.
“Still, you did all right. Old cabbage nose will think twice before picking on
you again, I’m sure, and that’s what the whole thing is about, anyway.”
Pug said, “What do you mean?”
Tomas put down his plate and belched. With a satisfied look at the
sound of it, he said, “With bullies it’s always the same: whether or not you
can best them doesn’t matter. What is important is whether or not you’ll stand up
to them Rulf may be big, but he’s a coward under all the bluster. He’ll turn
his attention to the younger boys now and push them around a bit I don’t think
he’ll want any part of you again. He doesn’t like the price.” Tomas gave Pug a
broad and warm smile “That first punch you gave him was a beaut. Right square
on the beak.”
Pug felt a little better. Tomas eyed Pug’s untouched dinner “You
going to eat that?”
Pug looked at his plate. It was fully laden with hot lamb, greens,
and potatoes. In spite of the rich smell, Pug felt no appetite. “No, you can
have it.”
Tomas scooped up the platter and began shoving the food into his
mouth Pug smiled. Tomas had never been known to stint on food.
Pug returned his gaze to the castle wall. “I felt like such a fool.”
Tomas stopped eating, with a handful of meat halfway to his mouth.
He studied Pug for a moment. “You too?”
“Me too, what?”
Tomas laughed. “You’re embarrassed because the Princess saw Rulf
give you a thrashing.”
Pug bridled. “It wasn’t a thrashing. I gave as well as I got!”
Tomas whooped. “There! I knew it. It’s the Princess.”
Pug sat back in resignation. “I suppose it is.”
Tomas said nothing, and Pug looked over at him. He was busy
finishing off Pug’s dinner. Finally Pug said, “And I suppose you don’t like her?”
Tomas shrugged. Between bites he said, “Our Lady Carline is pretty
enough, but I know my place. I have my eye on someone else, anyway.”
Pug sat up. “Who?” he asked, his curiosity piqued.
“I’m not saying,” Tomas said with a sly smile.
Pug laughed. “It’s Neala, right?”
Tomas’s jaw dropped. “How did you know?”
Pug tried to look mysterious. “We magicians have our ways.”
Tomas snorted. “Some magician. You’re no more a magician than I am a
Knight-Captain of the King’s army. Tell me, how did you know?”
Pug laughed. “It’s no mystery. Every time you see her, you puff up
in that tabard of yours and preen like a bantam rooster.”
Tomas looked troubled “You don’t think she’s on to me, do you?”
Pug smiled like a well-fed cat “She’s not on to you, I’m sure.” He
paused. “If she’s blind, and all the other girls in the keep haven’t pointed it
out to her a hundred times already.”
A woebegone look crossed Tomas’s face. “What must the girl think?”
Pug said, “Who knows what girls think? From everything I can tell,
she probably likes it.”
Tomas looked thoughtfully at his plate “Do you ever think about
taking a wife?”
Pug blinked like an owl caught in a bright light. “I . . . I never
thought about it. I don’t know if magicians marry. I don’t think they do.”
“Nor soldiers, mostly. But Master Fannon says a soldier who thinks
about his family is not thinking about his job.” Tomas was silent for a minute.
Pug said, “It doesn’t seem to hamper Sergeant Gardan or some of the
other soldiers.”
Tomas snorted, as if those exceptions merely proved his point. “I
sometimes try to imagine what it would be like to have a family.”
“You have a family, stupid. I’m the orphan here.”
“I mean a wife, rock head.” Tomas gave Pug his best “you’re too
stupid to live” look “And children someday, not a mother and father.”
Pug shrugged. The conversation was turning to provinces that
disturbed him. He never thought about these things, being less anxious to grow
up than Tomas. He said, “I expect we’ll get married and have children if it’s
what we’re supposed to do.”
Tomas looked very seriously at Pug, so the younger boy didn’t make
light of the subject. “I’ve imagined a small room somewhere in the castle, and
.I can’t imagine who the girl would be.” He chewed his food. “There’s something
wrong with it, I think.”
“Wrong?”
“As if there’s something else I’m not understanding . . . I don’t
know.”
Pug said, “Well, if you don’t, how am I supposed to?”
Tomas suddenly changed the topic of conversation. “We’re friends,
aren’t we?”
Pug was taken by surprise. “Of course we’re friends. You’re like a
brother. Your parents have treated me like their own son. Why would you ask
something like that?”
Tomas put down his plate, troubled. “I don’t know. It’s just that
sometimes I think this will all somehow change. You’re going to be a magician,
maybe travel over the world, seeing other magicians in faraway lands. I’m going
to be a soldier, bound to follow my lord’s orders I’ll probably never see more
than a little part of the Kingdom, and that only as an escort in the Duke’s
personal guard, if I’m lucky.”
Pug became alarmed. He had never seen Tomas so serious about
anything. The older boy was always the first to laugh and seemed never to have
a worry. “I don’t care what you think, Tomas,” said Pug “Nothing will change.
We will be friends no matter what.”
Tomas smiled at that. “I hope you’re right.” He sat back, and the
two boys watched the stars over the sea and the lights from the town, framed
like a picture by the castle gate.
Pug tried to wash his face the next morning, but found the task too
arduous to complete. His left eye was swollen completely shut, his right only
half-open Great bluish lumps decorated his visage, and his jaw popped when he
moved it from side to side. Fantus lay on Pug’s pallet, red eyes gleaming as
the morning sun poured in through the tower window.
The door to the boy’s room swung open, and Kulgan stepped through,
his stout frame covered in a green robe. Pausing to regard the boy for a
moment, he sat on the pallet and scratched the drake behind the eye ridges,
bringing a pleased rumble from deep within Fantus’s throat. “I see you didn’t
spend yesterday sitting about idly,” he said.
“I had a bit of trouble, sir.”
“Well, fighting is the province of boys as well as grown men, but I
trust that the other boy looks at least as bad. It would be a shame to have had
none of the pleasure of giving as well as receiving.”
“You’re making sport of me.”
“Only a little, Pug. The truth is that in my own youth I had my
share of scraps, but the time for boyish fighting is past. You must put your
energies to better use.”
“I know, Kulgan, but I have been so frustrated lately that when that
clod Rulf said what he did about my being an orphan, all the anger came boiling
up out of me.”
“Well, knowing your own part in this is a good sign that you’re
becoming a man. Most boys would have tried to justify their actions, by
shifting blame or by claiming some moral imperative to fight.”
Pug pulled over the stool and sat down, facing the magician Kulgan
took out his pipe and started to fill it “Pug, I think in your case we may have
been going about the matter of your education in the wrong way.” Searching for
a taper to light in the small fire that burned in a night pot and finding none,
Kulgan’s face clouded as he concentrated for a minute; then a small flame
erupted from the index finger of his right hand. Applying it to the pipe, he
soon had the room half-filled with great clouds of white smoke. The flame
disappeared with a wave of his hand “A handy skill, if you like the pipe.”
“I would give anything to be able to do even that much,” Pug said in
disgust.
“As I was saying, I think that we may have been going about this in
the wrong way. Perhaps we should consider a different approach to your
education.”
“What do you mean?”
“Pug, the first magicians long ago had no teachers in the arts of
magic. They evolved the skills that we’ve learned today. Some of the old
skills, such as smelling the changes in the weather, or the ability to find
water with a stick, go back to our earliest beginnings I have been thinking
that for a time I am going to leave you to your own devices. Study what you
want in the books that I have. Keep up with your other work, learning the
scribe’s arts from Tully, but I will not trouble you with any lessons for a
while I will, of course, answer any question you have. But I think for the time
being you need to sort yourself out.”
Crestfallen, Pug asked, “Am I beyond help?”
Kulgan smiled reassuringly. “Not in the least. There have been cases
of magicians having slow starts before. Your apprenticeship is for nine more
years, remember. Don’t be put off by the failures of the last few months.
“By the way, would you care to learn to ride?”
Pug’s mood did a complete turnabout, and he cried, “Oh, yes! May I?”
“The Duke has decided that he would like a boy to ride with the
Princess from time to time. His sons have many duties now that they are grown,
and he feels you would be a good choice for when they are too busy to accompany
her.”
Pug’s head was spinning. Not only was he to learn to ride, a skill
limited to the nobility for the most part, but to be in the company of the
Princess as well! “When do I start?”
“This very day. Morning chapel is almost done.” Being Firstday,
those inclined went to devotions either in the Keep’s chapel, or in the small
temple down in the town. The rest of the day was given to light work, only that
needed to put food on the Duke’s table. The boys and girls might get an extra
half day on Sixthday, but their elders rested only on Firstday “Go to
Horsemaster Algon, he has been instructed by the Duke and will begin your
lessons now.”
Without a further word, Pug leaped up and sped for the stables.
4
ASSAULT
Pug rode in silence.
His horse ambled along the bluffs that overlooked the sea. The warm
breeze earned the scent of flowers, and to the east the trees of the forest
swayed slowly. The summer sun caused a heat shimmer over the ocean. Above the
waves, gulls could be seen hanging in the air, then diving to the water as they
sought food. Overhead, large white clouds drifted.
Pug remembered this morning, as he watched the back of the Princess
on her fine white palfrey. He had been kept waiting in the stables for nearly
two hours before the Princess appeared with her father. The Duke had lectured
Pug at length on his responsibility toward the lady of the castle Pug had stood
mute throughout as the Duke repeated all of Horsemaster Algon’s instructions of
the night before. The master of the stables had been instructing him for a week
and judged him ready to ride with the Princess—if barely.
Pug had followed her out of the gate, still marveling at his
unexpected fortune. He was exuberant, in spite of having spent the night
tossing and then skipping breakfast.
Now his mood was changing from boyish adulation to outright
irritation. The Princess refused to respond to any of his polite attempts at
conversation, except to order him about. Her tone was imperious and rude, and
she insisted on calling him “boy,” ignoring several courteous reminders that
his name was Pug. She acted little like the poised young woman of the court
now, and resembled nothing as much as a spoiled, petulant child.
He had felt awkward at first as he sat atop the old grey dray horse
that had been judged sufficient for one of his skills. The mare had a calm
nature and showed no inclination to move faster than absolutely necessary.
Pug wore his bright red tunic, the one that Kulgan had given to him,
but still looked poorly attired next to the Princess. She was dressed in a
simple but exquisite yellow riding dress trimmed in black, and a matching hat.
Even sitting sidesaddle, Carline looked like one born to ride, while Pug felt
as if he should be walking behind his mare with a plow between. Pug’s horse had
an irritating tendency to want to stop every dozen feet to crop grass or nibble
at shrubbery, ignoring Pug’s frantic kicks to the side, while the Princess’s
excellently trained horse responded instantly to the slightest touch of her
crop. She rode along in silence, ignoring the grunts of exertion from the boy
behind, who attempted by force of will as much as horsemanship to keep his
recalcitrant mount moving.
Pug felt the first stirring of hunger, his dreams of romance
surrendering to his normal, fifteen-year-old’s appetite. As they rode, his
thoughts turned more and more to the basket of lunch that hung from his saddle
horn. After what seemed like an eternity to Pug, the Princess turned to him.
“Boy, what is your craft?”
Startled by the question after the long silence, Pug stammered his
reply. “I . . . I’m apprenticed to Master Kulgan.”
She fixed him with a gaze that would have suited her had an insect
been found crawling across a dinner plate. “Oh You’re that boy.” Whatever brief
spark of interest there had been went out, and she turned away from him. They
rode awhile longer, then the Princess said, “Boy, we stop here.”
Pug pulled up his mare, and before he could reach the Princess’s
side, she was nimbly down, not waiting for his hand as Master Algon had
instructed him she would. She handed him the reins of her horse and walked to
the edge of -the cliffs.
She stared out to sea for a minute, then, without looking at Pug,
said, “Do you think I am beautiful?”
Pug stood in silence, not knowing what to say. She turned and looked
at him. “Well?”
Pug said, “Yes, Your Highness.”
“Very beautiful?”
“Yes, Your Highness. Very beautiful.”
The Princess seemed to consider this for a moment, then returned her
attention to the vista below. “It is important for me to be beautiful, boy.
Lady Mama says that I must be the most beautiful lady in the Kingdom, for I
must find a powerful husband someday, and only the most beautiful ladies in the
Kingdom can choose. The homely ones must take whoever will ask for them. She
says that I will have many suitors, for Father is very important.” She turned,
and for a brief moment Pug thought he saw a look of apprehension pass over her
lovely features. “Have you many friends, boy?”
Pug shrugged. “Some, Your Highness.”
She studied him for a moment, then said, “That must be nice,”
absently brushing aside a wisp of hair that had come loose from under her
broad-brimmed riding hat. Something in her seemed so wounded and alone that
moment, that Pug found his heart in his throat again. Obviously his expression
revealed something to the Princess, for suddenly her eyes narrowed and her mood
shifted from thoughtful to regal In her most commanding voice she announced,
“We will have lunch now.” Pug quickly staked the horses and unslung the basket.
He placed it on the ground and opened it.
Carline stepped over and said, “I will prepare the meal, boy. I’ll
not have clumsy hands overturning dishes and spilling wine.” Pug took a step
back as she knelt and began unpacking the lunch. Rich odors of cheese and bread
assailed Pug’s nostrils, and his mouth watered.
The Princess looked up at him “Walk the horses over the hill to the
stream and water them. You may eat as we ride back. I’ll call you when I have
eaten.” Suppressing a groan, Pug took the horses’ reins and started walking. He
kicked at some loose stones, emotions conflicting within him as he led the
horses along. He knew he wasn’t supposed to leave the girl, but he couldn’t
very well disobey her either. There was no one else in sight, and trouble was
unlikely this far from the forest. Additionally he was glad to be away from
Carline for a little while.
He reached the stream and unsaddled the mounts, he brushed away the
damp saddle and girth marks, then left their reins upon the ground. The palfrey
was trained to ground-tie, and the draft horse showed no inclination to wander
far. They cropped grass while Pug found a comfortable spot to sit. He
considered the situation and found himself perplexed. Carline was still the
loveliest girl he had ever seen, but her manner was quickly taking the sheen
off his fascination. For the moment his stomach was of larger concern than the
girl of his dreams. He thought perhaps there was more to this love business
than he had imagined.
He amused himself for a while by speculation on that. When he grew
bored, he went to look for stones in the water. He hadn’t had much opportunity
to practice with his sling of late, and now was a good time. He found several
smooth stones and took out his sling. He practiced by picking out targets among
the small trees some distance off, startling the birds in residence there. He
hit several clusters of bitter berries, missing only one target out of six.
Satisfied his aim was still as good as always, he tucked his sling in his belt.
He found several more stones that looked especially promising and put them in
his pouch. He judged the girl must be nearly through, and he started toward the
horses to saddle them so that when she called, he’d be ready.
As he reached the Princess’s horse, a scream sounded from the other
side of the hill. He dropped the Princess’s saddle and raced to the crest and,
when he cleared the ridge, stopped in shock. The hair on his neck and arms
stood on end.
The Princess was running, and close in pursuit were a pair of trolls
Trolls usually didn’t venture this far from the forest, and Pug was unprepared
for the sight of them. They were humanlike, but short and broad, with long,
thick arms that hung nearly to the ground. They ran on all fours as often as
not, looking like some comic parody of an ape, their bodies covered by thick
grey hide and their lips drawn back, revealing long fangs. The ugly creatures
rarely troubled a group of humans, but they would attack a lone traveler from
time to time.
Pug hesitated for a moment, pulling his sling from his belt and
loading a stone, then he charged down the hill, whirling his sling above his
head. The creatures had nearly overtaken the Princess when he let fly with a
stone It caught the foremost troll in the side of the head, knocking it for a
full somersault. The second stumbled into it, and both went down in a tangle
Pug stopped as they regained their feet, their attention diverted from Carline
to their attacker. They roared at Pug, then charged. Pug ran back up the hill.
He knew that if he could reach the horses, he could outrun them, circle around
for the girl, and be safely away. He looked over his shoulder and saw them
coming—huge canine teeth bared, long foreclaws tearing up the ground. Downwind,
he could smell their rank, rotting-meat odor.
He cleared the top of the hill, his breath coming in ragged gasps.
His heart skipped as he saw that the horses had wandered across the stream and
were twenty yards farther away than before. Plunging down the hill, he hoped
the difference would not prove fatal.
He could hear the trolls behind him as he entered the stream at a
full run. The water was shallow here, but still it slowed him down.
Splashing through the stream, he caught his foot on a stone and
fell. He threw his arms forward and broke his fall with his hands, keeping his
head above water. Shock ran up through his arms as he tried to regain his feet.
He stumbled again and turned as the trolls approached the water’s edge. They
howled at the sight of their tormentor stumbling in the water and paused for a
moment. Pug felt blind terror as he struggled with numb fingers to put a stone
in his sling. He fumbled and dropped the sling, and the stream carried it away
Pug felt a scream building in his throat.
As the trolls entered the water, a flash of light exploded behind
Pug’s eyes. A searing pain ripped across his forehead as letters of grey seemed
to appear in his mind. They were familiar to Pug, from a scroll that Kulgan had
shown him several times. Without thinking, he mouthed the incantation, each
word vanishing from his mind’s eye as he spoke it.
When he reached the last word, the pain stopped, and a loud roar
sounded from before him. He opened his eyes and saw the two trolls writhing in
the water, their eyes wide with agony as they thrashed about helplessly,
screaming and groaning.
Dragging himself out of the water, Pug watched while the creatures
struggled. They were making choking and sputtering noises now as they flopped
about. After a moment one shook and stopped moving, lying facedown in the
water. The second took a few minutes longer to die, but like its companion, it
also drowned, unable to keep its head above the shallow water.
Feeling light-headed and weak, Pug recrossed the stream. His mind
was numb, and everything seemed hazy and disjointed. He stopped after he had
taken a few steps, remembering the horses. He looked about and could see
nothing of the animals. They must have run off when they caught wind of the
trolls and would be on the way to safe pasture.
Pug resumed his walk to where the Princess had been. He topped the
hillock and looked around. She was nowhere in sight, so he headed for the
overturned basket of food. He was having trouble thinking, and he was ravenous.
He knew he should be doing or thinking about something, but all he could sort
out of the kaleidoscope of his thoughts was food.
Dropping to his knees, he picked up a wedge of cheese and stuffed it
in his mouth. A half-spilled bottle of wine lay nearby, and he washed the
cheese down with it. The rich cheese and piquant white wine revived him, and he
felt his mind clearing. He ripped a large piece of bread from a loaf and chewed
on it while trying to put his thoughts in order. As Pug recalled events, one
thing stood out. Somehow he had managed to cast a magic spell. What’s more, he
had done so without the aid of a book, scroll, or device. He was not sure, but
that seemed somehow strange. His thoughts turned hazy again. More than anything
he wanted to lie down nd sleep, but as he chewed his food, a thought pushed
through the crazy quilt of his impressions. The Princess!
He jumped to his feet, and his head swam. Steadying himself, he
grabbed up some bread and the wine and set off in the direction he had last
seen her running. He pushed himself along, his feet scuffing as he tried to
walk. After a few minutes he found his thinking improving and the exhaustion
lifting. He started to call the Princess’s name, then heard muted sobbing
coming from a clump of bushes. Pushing his way through, he found Carline
huddled behind the shrubs, her balled fists pulled up into her stomach. Her
eyes were wide with terror, and her gown was soiled and torn. Startled when Pug
stepped into view, she jumped to her feet and flew into his arms, burying her
head in his chest. Great racking sobs shook her body as she clutched the fabric
of his shirt. Standing with his arms still outstretched, wine and bread
occupying his hands, Pug was totally confused over what to do. He awkwardly
placed his arm around the terrified girl and said, “It’s all right. They’re
gone. You’re safe.”
She hung on to him for a moment, then, when her tears subsided, she
stepped away. With a sniffle she said, “I thought they had killed you and were
coming back for me.”
Pug found this situation more perplexing than any he had ever known
Just when he had come through the most harrowing experience of his young life,
he was faced with one that sent his mind reeling with a different sort of
confusion. Without thinking, he held the Princess in his arms, and now he was
suddenly aware of the contact, and her soft, warm appeal. A protective,
masculine feeling welled up inside him, and he started to step toward her.
As if sensing his mood change, Carline retreated. For all her
courtly ways and education, she was still a girl of fifteen and was disturbed
by the rush of emotions she had experienced when he had held her. She took
refuge in the one thing she knew well, her role as Princess of the castle.
Trying to sound commanding, she said, “I am glad to see you are unhurt, boy.”
Pug winced visibly at that. She struggled to regain her aristocratic bearing,
but her red nose and tearstained face undermined her attempt. “Find my horse,
and we shall return to the keep.”
Pug felt as if his nerves were raw. Keeping tight control over his
voice, he said, “I’m sorry, Your Highness, but the horses have run off. I’m
afraid we’ll have to walk.”
Carline felt abused and mistreated. It was not Pug’s fault any of
the afternoon’s events had taken place, but her often-indulged temper seized on
the handiest available object. “Walk! I can’t walk all the way to the keep,”
she snapped, looking at Pug as if he were supposed to do something about this
matter at once and without question.
Pug felt all the anger, confusion, hurt, and frustration of the day
surge up within him. “Then you can bloody well sit here until they notice
you’re missing and send someone to fetch you.” He was now shouting. “I figure
that will be about two hours after sunset.”
Carline stepped back, her face ashen, looking as if she’d been
slapped. Her lower Up trembled, and she seemed on the verge of tears again. “I
will not be spoken to in that manner, boy!”
Pug’s eyes grew large, and he stepped toward her, gesturing with the
wine bottle. “I nearly got myself killed trying to keep you alive,” he shouted.
“Do I hear one word of thanks? No! All I hear is a whining complaint that you
can’t walk back to the castle. We of the keep may be lowborn, but at least we
have enough manners to thank someone when it’s deserved.” As he spoke, he could
feel the anger flooding out of him. “You can stay here if you like, but I’m
going . . . ” He suddenly realized that he was standing with the bottle raised
high overhead, in a ridiculous pose. The Princess’s eyes were on the loaf of
bread, and he realized that he was holding it at his belt, thumb hooked in a
loop, which only added to the awkward appearance. He sputtered for a moment,
then felt his anger evaporate and lowered the bottle. The Princess looked at
him, her large eyes peeking over her fists, which she held before her face Pug
started to say something, thinking she was afraid of him, when he saw she was
laughing. It was a musical sound, warm and unmocking. “I’m sorry, Pug,” she
said, “but you look so silly standing there like that. You look like one of
those awful statues they erect in Krondor, with bottle held high instead of a
sword.”
Pug shook his head. “I’m the one who’s sorry, Your Highness I had no
right to yell at you that way Please forgive me.”
Her expression abruptly changed to one of concern. “No, Pug. You had
every right to say what you did I really do owe you my life, and I’ve acted
horribly.” She stepped closer to him and placed a hand on his arm. “Thank you.”
Pug was overcome by the sight of her face. Any resolutions to rid
himself of his boyhood fantasies about her were now carried away on the sea
breeze. The marvelous fact of his using magic was replaced by more urgent and
basic considerations. He started to reach for her; then the reality of her
station intruded, and he presented the bottle to her. “Wine?”
She laughed, sensing his sudden shift in thought. They were both
wrung out and a little giddy from the ordeal, but she still held on to her wits
and understood the effect she was having on him. With a nod she took the bottle
and sipped. Recovering a shred of poise, Pug said, “We’d better hurry. We might
make the keep by nightfall.”
She nodded, keeping her eyes upon him, and smiled. Pug was feeling
uncomfortable under her gaze and turned toward the way to the keep “Well, then.
We’d best be off.”
She fell into step beside him. After a moment she asked, “May I have
some bread too, Pug?”
Pug had run the distance between the bluffs and the keep many times
before, but the Princess was unused to walking such distances, and her soft
riding boots were ill suited to such an undertaking. When they came into view
of the castle, she had one arm draped over Pug’s shoulder and was limping
badly.
A shout went up from the gate tower, and guards came running toward
them. After them came the Lady Marna, the girl’s governess, her red dress
pulled up before her as she sprinted toward the Princess. Although twice the
size of court ladies—and a few of the guards as well—she outdistanced them all.
She was coming on like a she-bear whose cub was being attacked. Her great bosom
heaved with the effort as she reached the slight girl and grasped her in a hug
that threatened to engulf Carline completely. Soon the ladies of the court were
gathered around the Princess, overwhelming her with questions. Before the din
subsided, Lady Marna turned and fell on Pug like the sow bear she resembled.
“How dare you allow the Princess to come to such a state! Limping in, dress all
torn and dirty. I’ll see you whipped from one end of the keep to the other.
Before I have done with you, you’ll wish you’d never seen the light of day.”
Backing away before the onslaught, Pug was overwhelmed by confusion, unable to
get a word in. Sensing that somehow Pug was responsible for the Princess’s
condition, one of the guards stepped up and seized him by the arm.
“Leave him alone!”
Silence descended as Carline forced her way between the governess
and Pug. Small fists struck at the guard as he let go of Pug and fell back with
a look of astonishment on his face. “He saved my life! He almost got killed
saving me.” Tears were running down her face. “He’s done nothing wrong. And I
won’t have any of you bullying him.” The crowd closed in around them, regarding
Pug with newfound respect. Hushed voices sounded from all sides, and one of the
guards ran to carry the news to the castle. The Princess placed her arm around
Pug’s shoulder once more and started toward the gate. The crowd parted, and the
two weary travelers could see the torches and lanterns being lit on the wall.
By the time they had reached the courtyard gate, the Princess had
consented to let two of her ladies help her, much to Pug’s relief. He could not
have believed that such a slight girl could become such a burden. The Duke
hurried out to her, having been told of Carline’s return. He embraced his
daughter, then started to speak with her. Pug lost sight of them as curious,
questioning onlookers surrounded him. He tried to push his way toward the
magician’s tower, but the press of people held him back.
“Is there no work to be done?” a voice roared.
Heads turned to see Swordmaster Fannon, followed closely by Tomas.
All the keep folk quickly retired, leaving Pug standing before Fannon, Tomas,
and those of the Duke’s court with rank enough to ignore Fannon’s remark. Pug
could see the Princess talking to her father, Lyam, Arutha, and Squire Roland.
Fannon said, “What happened, boy?”
Pug
tried to speak, but stopped when he saw the Duke and his sons approaching.
Kulgan came hurrying behind the Duke, having been alerted by the general
commotion in the courtyard. All bowed to the Duke when he approached, and Pug
saw Carline break free of Roland’s solicitations and follow her father, to
stand at Pug’s side. Lady Marna threw a besieged look heavenward, and Roland
followed the girl, an open expression of surprise upon his face. When the
Princess took Pug’s hand in her own, Roland’s expression changed to one of
black-humored jealousy.
The Duke said, “My daughter has said some very remarkable things
about you, boy. I would like to hear your account.” Pug felt suddenly
self-conscious and gently disengaged his hand from Carline’s. He recounted the
events of the day, with Carline enthusiastically adding embellishments. Between
the two of them, the Duke gained a nearly accurate account of things. When Pug
finished, Lord Borric asked, “How is it the trolls drowned in the stream, Pug?”
Pug looked uncomfortable. “I cast a spell upon them, and they were
unable to reach the shore,” he said softly. He was still confused by this
accomplishment and had not given much thought to it, as the Princess had pushed
all other thoughts aside. He could see surprise registered on Kulgan’s face.
Pug began to say something, but was interrupted by the Duke’s next remark.
“Pug, I can’t begin to repay the service you’ve done my family. But
I shall find a suitable reward for your courage.” In a burst of enthusiasm
Carline threw her arms around Pug’s neck, hugging him fiercely. Pug stood in
embarrassment, looking frantically about, as if trying to communicate that this
familiarity was none of his doing.
Lady Mama looked ready to faint, and the Duke pointedly coughed,
motioning with his head for his daughter to retire. As she left with the Lady
Marna, Kulgan and Fannon simply let their amusement show, as did Lyam and
Arutha. Roland shot Pug an angry, envious look, then turned and headed off
toward his own quarters. Lord Borric said to Kulgan, “Take this boy to his
room. He looks exhausted. I’ll order food sent to him. Have him come to the
great hall after tomorrow’s morning meal.” He turned to Pug. “Again, I thank
you.” The Duke motioned for his sons to follow and walked away. Fannon gripped
Tomas by the elbow, for the sandy-haired boy had started to speak with his
friend. The old Swordmaster motioned with his head that the boy should come
with him, leaving Pug in peace. Tomas nodded, though he was burning with a
thousand questions.
When they had all left, Kulgan placed his arm around the boy’s
shoulder. “Come, Pug. You’re tired, and there is much to speak of.”
Pug lay back on his pallet, the remains of his meal lying on a
platter next to him. He couldn’t remember ever having been this tired before
Kulgan paced back and forth across the room. “It’s absolutely incredible.” He
waved a hand in the air, his red robe surging over his heavy frame like water
flowing over a boulder. “You close your eyes, and the image of a scroll you saw
weeks before appears. You incant the spell, as if you were holding the scroll
in your hand before you, and the trolls fall. Absolutely incredible.” Sitting
down on the stool near the window, he continued. “Pug, nothing like this has
ever been done before. Do you know what you’ve done?”
Pug started from the edge of a warm, soft sleep and looked at the
magician. “Only what I said I did, Kulgan.”
“Yes, but do you have any idea what it means?”
“No.”
“Neither do I.” The magician seemed to collapse inside as his
excitement left, replaced by complete uncertainty. “I don’t have the slightest
idea what it all means. Magicians don’t toss spells off the top of their heads.
Clerics can, but they have a different focus and different magic. Do you
remember what I taught you about focuses, Pug?”
Pug winced, not being in the mood to recite a lesson, but forced
himself to sit up. “Anyone who employs magic must have a focus for the power he
uses. Priests have power to focus their magic through prayer; their
incantations are a form of prayer Magicians use their bodies, or devices, or
books and scrolls.”
“Correct,” said Kulgan, “but you have just violated that truism.” He
took out his long pipe and absently stuffed tabac into the bowl. “The spell you
incanted cannot use the caster’s body as a focus It has been developed to
inflict great pain upon another. It can be a very terrible weapon. But it can
be cast only by reading from a scroll that it is written upon, at the time it’s
cast. Why is this?”
Pug forced leaden eyelids open. “The scroll itself is magic.”
“True. Some magic is intrinsic to the magician, such as taking on
the shape of an animal or smelling weather. But casting spells outside the
body, upon something else, needs an external focus Trying to incant the spell
you used from memory should have produced terrible pain in you, not the trolls,
if it would have worked at all! That is why magicians developed scrolls, books,
and other devices, to focus that sort of magic in a way that will not harm the
caster. And until today, I would have sworn that no one alive could have made
that spell work without the scroll in hand.”
Leaning against the windowsill, Kulgan puffed on his pipe for a
moment, gazing out into space. “It’s as if you have discovered a completely new
form of magic,” he said softly. Hearing no response, Kulgan looked down at the
boy, who was deeply asleep. Shaking his head in wonder, the magician pulled a
cover over the exhausted boy. He put out the lantern that hung on the wall and
let himself out. As he walked up the stairs to his own room, he shook his head.
“Absolutely incredible.”
Pug waited as the Duke held court in the great hall. Everyone in the
keep and town who could contrive a way to gain entrance to the audience was
there. Richly dressed Craftmasters, merchants, and minor nobles were in
attendance. They stood regarding the boy with expressions ranging from wonder
to disbelief. The rumor of his deed had spread through the town and had grown
in the telling.
Pug wore new clothing, which had been in his room when he awoke In
his newfound splendor he felt self-conscious and awkward. The tunic was a
bright yellow affair of the costliest silk, and the hose were a soft pastel
blue. Pug tried to wiggle his toes in the new boots, the first he had ever
worn. Walking in them seemed strange and uncomfortable. At his side a jeweled
dagger hung from a black leather belt with a golden buckle in the form of a
gull in flight. Pug suspected the clothing had once belonged to one of the
Duke’s sons, put aside when outgrown, but still looking new and beautiful.
The Duke was finishing the morning’s business: a request from one of
the shipwrights for guards to accompany a lumber expedition to the great
forest. Borric was dressed, as usual in black, but his sons and daughter wore
their finest court regalia. Lyam was listening closely to the business before
his father Roland stood behind him, as was the custom. Arutha was in rare good
humor, laughing behind an upraised hand at some quip Father Tully had just
made. Carline sat quietly, her face set in a warm smile, looking directly at
Pug, which was adding to his discomfort—and Roland’s irritation.
The Duke gave his permission for a company of guards to accompany
the craftsmen into the forest. The Craftmaster gave thanks and bowed, then
returned to the crowd, leaving Pug alone before the Duke. The boy stepped
forward as Kulgan had told him to do and bowed properly, albeit a little
stiffly, before the Lord of Crydee. Borric smiled at the boy and motioned to
Father Tully. The priest removed a document from the sleeve of his voluminous
robe and handed it to a herald. The herald stepped forward and unrolled the
scroll.
In a loud voice he read: “To all within our demesne: Whereas the
youth Pug, of the castle of Crydee, has shown exemplary courage in the act of
risking life and limb in defense of the royal person of the Princess Carline,
and; Whereas the youth, Pug of Crydee, is considered to hold us forever in his
debt; It is my wish that he be known to all in the realm as our beloved and
loyal servant, and it is furthermore wished that he be given a place in the
court of Crydee, with the rank of Squire, with all rights and privileges
pertaining thereunto. Furthermore let it be known that the title for the estate
of Forest Deep is conferred upon him and his progeny as long as they shall
live, to have and to hold, with servants and properties thereupon. Title to
this estate shall be held by the crown until the day of his majority. Set this day
by my hand and seal. Borric conDoin, third Duke of Crydee; Prince of the
Kingdom; Lord of Crydee, Carse, and Tulan; Warden of the West; Knight-General
of the King’s Armies; heir presumptive to the throne of Rillanon.”
Pug felt his knees go slack but caught himself before he fell. The
room erupted in cheers. People were pressing around him, offering their
congratulations and slapping him on the back. He was a Squire and a landholder
with franklins, a house, and stock. He was rich. Or at least he would be in
three years when he reached his majority. While he was considered a man of the
Kingdom at fourteen, grants of land and titles couldn’t be conferred until he
reached eighteen. The crowd backed away as the Duke approached, his family and
Roland behind. Both Princes smiled at Pug, and the Princess seemed positively
aglow. Roland gave Pug a rueful smile, as if in disbelief.
“I’m honored, Your Grace,” Pug stammered. “I don’t know what to
say.”
“Then say nothing, Pug. It makes you seem wise when everyone is babbling.
Come, and we’ll have a talk.” The Duke motioned for a chair to be placed near
his own, as he put an arm around the boy’s shoulders and walked him through the
crowd. Sitting down, he said, “You may all leave us now. I would speak with the
Squire.” The crowd pressing around muttered in disappointment, but began to
drift out of the hall. “Except you two,” the Duke added, pointing toward Kulgan
and Tully.
Carline stood by her father’s chair, a hesitant Roland at her side.
“You as well, my child,” said the Duke.
Carline began to protest, but was cut off by her father’s stern
admonition: “You may pester him later, Carline.” The two Princes stood at the
door, obviously amused at her outrage, Roland tried to offer his arm to the
Princess, but she pulled away and swept by her grinning brothers. Lyam clapped
Roland on the shoulder as the embarrassed Squire joined them. Roland glared at
Pug, who felt the anger like a blow.
When the doors clanged closed and the hall was empty, the Duke said,
“Pay no heed to Roland, Pug My daughter has him firmly under her spell, he
counts himself in love with her and wishes someday to petition for her hand.”
With a lingering look at the closed door, he added almost absently, “But he’ll
have to show me he’s more than the rakehell he’s growing into now if he ever
hopes for my consent.”
The Duke dismissed the topic with a wave of his hand. “Now, to other
matters. Pug, I have an additional gift for you, but first I want to explain
something to you.
“My family is among the oldest in the Kingdom. I myself am descended
from a King, for my grandfather, the first Duke of Crydee, was third son to the
King. Being of royal blood, we are much concerned with matters of duty and
honor. You are now both a member of my court and apprentice of Kulgan. In
matters of duty you are responsible to him. In matters of honor you are
responsible to me. This room is hung with the trophies and banners of our
triumphs. Whether we have been resisting the Dark Brotherhood in their
ceaseless effort to destroy us, or fighting off pirates, we have ever fought
bravely. Ours is a proud heritage that has never known the stain of dishonour.
No member of our court has ever brought shame to this hall, and I will expect
the same of you.”
Pug nodded, tales of glory and honor remembered from his youth
spinning in his mind. The Duke smiled. “Now to the business of your other gift.
Father Tully has a document that I asked him to draw up last night. I am going
to ask him to keep it, until such time as he deems fit to give it to you. I
will say no more on the subject, except that when he gives it to you, I hope
you will remember this day and consider long what it says.”
“I will, Your Grace.” Pug was sure the Duke was saying something
very important, but with all the events of the last half hour, it did not
register very well.
“I will expect you for supper, Pug. As a member of the court, you
will not be eating meals in the kitchen anymore.” The Duke smiled at him.
“We’ll make a young gentleman out of you, boy. And someday when you travel to
the King’s city of Rillanon, no one will fault the manners of those who come
from the court of Crydee.”
5
SHIPWRECK
The breeze was cool.
The last days of summer had passed, and soon the rams of autumn
would come. A few weeks later the first snows of winter would follow. Pug sat
in his room, studying a book of ancient exercises designed to ready the mind
for spell casting. He had fallen back into his old routine once the excitement
of his elevation to the Duke’s court had worn off.
His marvelous feat with the trolls continued to be the object of
speculation by Kulgan and Father Tully. Pug found he still couldn’t do many of
the things expected of an apprentice, but other feats were beginning to come to
him. Certain scrolls were easier to use now, and once, in secret, he had tried
to duplicate his feat.
He had memorized a spell from a book, one designed to levitate
objects. He had felt the familiar blocks in his mind when he tried to incant it
from memory. He had failed to move the object, a candleholder, but it trembled
for a few seconds and he felt a brief sensation, as if he had touched the
holder with a part of his mind. Satisfied that some sort of progress was being
made, he lost much of his former gloom and renewed his studies with vigor.
Kulgan still let him find his own pace. They had had many long
discussions on the nature of magic, but mostly Pug worked in solitude.
Shouting came from the courtyard below. Pug walked to his window.
Seeing a familiar figure, he leaned out and cried, “Ho! Tomas! What is afoot?”
Tomas looked up.
“Ho! Pug! A ship has foundered in the night. The wreck has beached
beneath Sailor’s Grief. Come and see.”
“I’ll be right down.”
Pug ran to the door, pulling on a cloak, for while the day was
clear, it would be cold near the water. Racing down the stairs, he cut through
the kitchen, nearly knocking over Alfan, the pastry cook. As he bolted out the
door, he heard the stout baker yell, “Squire or not, I’ll box your ears if you
don’t watch where you’re going, boy!” The kitchen staff had not changed their
attitude toward the boy, whom they considered one of their own, beyond feeling
proud of his achievement.
Pug shouted back with laughter in his voice, “My apologies,
Mastercook!”
Alfan gave him a good-natured wave as Pug vanished through the
outside door and around the corner to where Tomas was waiting. Tomas turned
toward the gate as soon as he saw his friend.
Pug grabbed his arm. “Wait. Has anyone from the court been told?”
“I don’t know. Word just came from the fishing village a moment
ago,” Tomas said impatiently. “Come on, or the villagers will pick the wreck
clean.” It was commonly held that salvage could be legally carried away before
any of the Duke’s court arrived. As a result, the villagers and townsfolk were
less than timely in informing the authorities of such occurrences. There was
also a risk of bloodshed, should the beached ship still be manned by sailors
determined to keep their master’s cargo intact so that they would get their
fair sailing bonus. Violent confrontation, and even death, had been the result
of such dispute. Only the presence of men-at-arms could guarantee no commoner
would come to harm from lingering mariners.
“Oh, no,” said Pug. “If there is any trouble down there and the Duke
finds out I didn’t tell someone else, I’ll be in for it.”
“Look, Pug. Do you think with all these people rushing about, the
Duke will be long in hearing of it?” Tomas ran his hand through his hair.
“Someone is probably in the great hall right now, telling him the news. Master
Fannon is away on patrol, and Kulgan won’t be back awhile yet.” Kulgan was due
back later that day from his cottage in the forest, where he and Meecham had
spent the last week. “It may be our only chance to see a shipwreck.” A look of
sudden inspiration came over his face. “Pug, I have it! You’re a member of the
court now. Come along, and when we get there, you declare for the Duke.” A
calculating expression crossed his face. “And if we find a rich bauble or two,
who’s to know?”
“I would know.” Pug thought a moment. “I can’t properly declare for
the Duke, then take something for myself . . .” He fixed Tomas with a
disapproving expression. “. . . or let one of his men-at-arms take something
either.” As Tomas’s face showed his embarrassment, Pug said, “But we can still
see the wreck! Come one!”
Pug was suddenly taken with the idea of using his new office, and if
he could get there before too much was earned away or someone was hurt, the
Duke would be pleased with him. “All right,” he said, “I’ll saddle a horse and
we can ride down there before everything is stolen.” Pug turned and ran for the
stable Tomas caught up with him as he opened the large wooden doors. “But, Pug,
I have never been on a horse in my life. I don’t know how.”
“It’s simple,” Pug said, taking a bridle and saddle from the tack
room. He spied the large grey he had ridden the day he and the Princess had
their adventure. “I’ll ride and you sit behind me. Just keep your arms around
my waist, and you won’t fall off.”
Tomas looked doubtful. “I’m to depend on you?” He shook his head
“After all, who has looked after you all these years?”
Pug threw him a wicked smile. “Your mother. Now fetch a sword from
the armory in case there’s trouble. You may get to play soldier yet.”
Tomas looked pleased at the prospect and ran out the door. A few
minutes later the large grey with the two boys mounted on her back lumbered out
the main gate, heading down the road toward Sailor’s Grief.
The surf was pounding as the boys came in sight of the wreckage.
Only a few villagers were approaching the site, and they scattered as soon as a
horse and rider appeared, for it could only be a noble from the court to
declare the wreck’s salvage for the Duke. By the time Pug reined in, no one was
about.
Pug said, “Come on. We’ve got a few minutes to look around before
anyone else gets here.”
Dismounting, the boys left the mare to graze in a little stand of
grass only fifty yards from the rocks Running through the sand, the boys
laughed, with Tomas raising the sword aloft, trying to sound fierce as he
yelled old war cries learned from the sagas. Not that he had any delusions
about his ability to use it, but it might make someone think twice about
attacking them—at least long enough for castle guards to arrive.
As they neared the wreck, Tomas whistled a low note. “This ship
didn’t just run on the rocks, Pug. It looks like it was driven by a storm.”
Pug said, “There certainly isn’t much left, is there?”
Tomas scratched behind his right ear. “No, just a section of the
bow. I don’t understand. There wasn’t any storm last night, just a strong wind.
How could the ship be broken up so badly?”
“I don’t know.” Suddenly something registered on Pug. “Look at the
bow. See how it’s painted.”
The bow rested on the rocks, held there until the tide rose. From
the deck line down, the hull was painted a bright green, and it shone with reflected
sunlight, as if it had been glazed over Instead of a figurehead, intricate
designs were painted in bright yellow, down to the waterline, which was a dull
black. A large blue-and-white eye had been painted several feet behind the
prow, and all the above-deck railing that they could see was painted white.
Pug grabbed Tomas’s arm. “Look!” He pointed to the water behind the
prow, and Tomas could see a shattered white mast extending a few feet above the
surging foam.
Tomas took a step closer. “It’s no Kingdom ship, for certain.” He
turned to Pug. “Maybe they were from Queg?”
“No,” answered Pug. “You’ve seen as many Quegan ships as I have.
This is nothing from Queg or the Free Cities. I don’t think a ship like this
has ever passed these waters before. Let’s look around.”
Tomas seemed suddenly timid. “Careful, Pug. There is something
strange here, and I have an ill feeling. Someone may still be about.”
Both boys looked around for a minute, before Pug concluded, “I think
not, whatever snapped that mast and drove the ship ashore with enough force to
wreck it this badly must have killed any who tried to ride her in.”
Venturing closer, the boys found small articles lying about, tossed
among the rocks by the waves. They saw broken crockery and boards, pieces of
torn red sailcloth, and lengths of rope Pug stopped and picked up a
strange-looking dagger fashioned from some unfamiliar material. It was a dull
grey and was lighter than steel, but still quite sharp.
Tomas tried to pull himself to the railing, but couldn’t find a
proper footing on the slippery rocks. Pug moved along the hull until he found
himself in danger of having his boots washed by the tide; they could board the
hulk if they waded into the sea, but Pug was unwilling to ruin his good
clothing. He walked back to where Tomas stood studying the wreck.
Tomas pointed behind Pug. “If we climb up to that ledge, we could
lower ourselves down to the deck.”
Pug saw the ledge, a jutting single piece of stone that started
twenty feet back on their left, extending upward and out to overhang the bow.
It looked like an easy climb, and Pug agreed. They pulled themselves up and
inched along the ledge, backs flat to the base of the bluffs. The path was
narrow, but by stepping carefully, they ran little risk of falling. They reached
a point above the hull; Tomas pointed. “Look. Bodies!”
Lying on the deck were two men, both dressed in bright blue armor of
unfamiliar design. One had his head crushed by a fallen spar, but the other,
lying facedown, didn’t show any injuries, beyond his stillness Strapped across
that man’s back was an alien-looking broadsword, with strange serrated edges.
His head was covered by an equally alien-looking blue helmet, potlike, with an
outward flaring edge on the sides and back. Tomas shouted over the sound of the
surf, “I’m going to let myself down. After I get on the deck, hand me the
sword, and then lower yourself so I can grab you.”
Tomas handed Pug the sword, then turned around slowly. He knelt with
his face against the cliff wall. Sliding backward, he let himself down until he
was almost hanging free. With a shove he dropped the remaining four feet,
landing safely Pug reversed the sword and handed it down to Tomas, then
followed his friend’s lead, and in a moment they both stood on the deck. The foredeck
slanted alarmingly down toward the water, and they could feel the ship move
beneath their feet.
“The tide’s rising,” Tomas shouted “It’ll lift what’s left of the
ship and smash it on the rocks. Everything will be lost.”
“Look around,” Pug shouted back “Anything that looks worth saving we
can try to throw up on the ledge.”
Tomas nodded, and the boys started to search the deck. Pug put as
much space as he could between the bodies and himself when he passed them. All
across the deck, debris created a confused spectacle for the eye. Trying to
discern what might prove valuable and what might not was difficult. At the rear
of the deck was a shattered rail, on either side of a ladder to what was left
of the main deck below: about six feet of planking remaining above the water.
Pug was sure that only a few feet more could be underwater, or else the ship
would be higher on the rocks. The rear of the ship must have already been
carried away on the tide.
Pug lay down on the deck and hung his head over the edge. He saw a
door to the right of the ladder. Yelling for Tomas to join him, he made his way
carefully down the ladder. The lower deck was sagging, the undersupports having
been caved in. He grasped the handrail of the ladder for support. A moment
later Tomas stood beside him, stepped around Pug, and moved to the door. It
hung half-open, and he squeezed through with Pug a step behind. The cabin was
dark, for there was only a single port on the bulkhead next to the door. In the
gloom they could see many rich-looking pieces of fabric and the shattered
remnants of a table. What looked like a cot or low bed lay upside down in a
corner. Several small chests could be seen, with their contents spread around
the room as if tossed about by some giant hand.
Tomas tried to search through the mess, but nothing was recognizable
as important or valuable. He found one small bowl of unusual design glazed with
bright colored figures on the sides, and he put it inside his tunic.
Pug stood quietly, for something in the cabin commanded his
attention. A strange, urgent feeling had overtaken him as soon as he had
stepped in.
The wreck lurched, throwing Tomas off balance. He caught himself on
a chest, dropping the sword. “The ship’s lifting. We’d better go.”
Pug didn’t answer, his attention focused on the strange sensations
Tomas grabbed his arm. “Come on. The ship’ll break up in a minute.”
Pug shook his hand off. “A moment. There is something.” His voice
trailed off. Abruptly he crossed the disordered room and pulled open a drawer
in a latched chest. It was empty. He yanked open another, then a third. In it
was the object of his search. He drew out a rolled parchment with a black
ribbon and black seal on it and thrust it into his shirt.
“Come on,” he shouted as he passed Tomas. They raced up the ladder
and scrambled over the deck. The tide had raised the ship high enough for them
to pull themselves up to the ledge with ease, and they turned to sit.
The ship was now floating on the tide, rocking forward and back,
while the waves sent a wet spray into the boys’ faces. They watched as the bow
slid off the rocks, timbers breaking with a loud and deep tearing sound, like a
dying moan. The bow lifted high, and the boys were splashed by waves striking
the cliffs below their ledge.
Out to sea the hulk floated, slowly leaning over to its port side,
until the outward surging tide came to a halt.
Ponderously, it started back toward the rocks Tomas grabbed at Pug’s
arm, signaling him to follow. They got up and made their way back to the beach.
When they reached the place where the rock overhung the sand, they jumped down.
A loud grinding sound made them turn to see the hull driven onto the
rocks Timbers shattered, and separated with a shriek. The hull heaved to
starboard, and debris started sliding off the deck into the sea.
Suddenly Tomas reached over and caught Pug’s arm. “Look.” He pointed
at the wreck sliding backward on the tide.
Pug couldn’t make out what he was pointing at. “What is it?”
“I thought for a moment there was only one body on deck.”
Pug looked at him. Tomas’s face was set in an expression of worry.
Abruptly it changed to anger. “Damn!”
“What?”
“When I fell in the cabin, I dropped the sword. Fannon will have my
ears.”
A sound like an explosion of thunder marked the final destruction of
the wreck as the tide smashed it against the cliff face. Now the shards of the
once fine, if alien, ship would be swept out to sea, to drift back in along the
coast for miles to the south over the next few days.
A low groan ending in a sharp cry made the boys turn Standing behind
them was the missing man from the ship, the strange broadsword held loosely in
his left hand and dragging in the sand. His right arm was held tightly against
his side; blood could be seen running from under his blue breastplate, and from
under his helmet. He took a staggering step forward. His face was ashen, and
his eyes wide with pain and confusion. He shouted something incomprehensible at
the boys. They stepped back slowly, raising their hands to show they were
unarmed.
He took another step toward them, and his knees sagged. He staggered
erect and closed his eyes for a moment. He was short and stocky, with
powerfully muscled arms and legs. Below the breastplate he wore a short skirt
of blue cloth. On his forearms were bracers, and on his legs, greaves that
looked like leather, above thonged sandals. He put his hand to his face and
shook his head. His eyes opened, and he regarded the boys again. Once more he
spoke in his alien tongue. When the boys said nothing, he appeared to grow
angry and yelled another series of strange words, from the tone seemingly
questions.
Pug gauged the distance necessary to run past the man, who blocked
the narrow strip of beach. He decided it wasn’t worth the risk of finding out
if the man was in a condition to use that wicked-looking sword. As if sensing
the boy’s thoughts, the soldier staggered a few feet to his right, cutting off
any escape. He closed his eyes again, and what little color there was in his
face drained away. His gaze began to wander, and the sword slipped from limp
fingers Pug started to take a step toward him, for it was now obvious that he
could do them no harm.
As he neared the man, shouts sounded up the beach Pug and Tomas saw
Prince Arutha riding before a troop of horsemen. The wounded soldier turned his
head painfully at the sound of approaching horses, and his eyes widened. A look
of pure horror crossed his face, and he tried to flee. He took three staggering
steps toward the water and fell forward into the sand.
Pug stood near the door of the Duke’s council chamber. Several feet
away a concerned group sat at Duke Borric’s round council table. Besides the
Duke and his sons, Father Tully, Kulgan, who had returned only an hour before,
Swordmaster Fannon, and Horsemaster Algon sat in assembly. The tone was
serious, for the arrival of the alien ship was viewed as potentially dangerous
to the Kingdom.
Pug threw a quick glance at Tomas, standing on the opposite side of
the door Tomas had never been in the presence of nobility, other than serving
in the dining hall, and being in the Duke’s council chamber was making him
nervous. Master Fannon spoke, and Pug returned his attention to the table.
“Reviewing what we know,” said the old Swordmaster, “it is obvious
that these people are completely alien to us.” He picked up the bowl Tomas had
taken from the ship. “This bowl is fashioned in a way unknown to our
Masterpotter. At first he thought it was simply a fired and glazed clay, but
upon closer inspection it proved otherwise. It is fashioned from some sort of
hide, parchment-thin strips being wound around a mold—perhaps wood—then
laminated with resins of some type. It is much stronger than anything we know.”
To demonstrate, he struck the bowl hard against the table. Instead
of shattering, as a clay bowl would have, it made a dull sound. “Now, even more
perplexing are these weapons and armor.” He pointed to the blue breastplate,
helmet, sword, and dagger. “They appear to be fashioned in a similar manner.”
He lifted the dagger and let it drop. It made the same dull sound as the bowl.
“For all its lightness, it is nearly as strong as our best steel.”
Borric nodded. “Tully, you’ve been around longer than any of us.
Have you heard of any ship constructed like that?”
“No.” Tully absently stroked his beardless chin. “Not from the
Bitter Sea, the Kingdom Sea, or even from Great Kesh have I heard of such a
ship I might send word to the Temple of Ishap in Krondor. They have records
that go further back than any others. Perhaps they have some knowledge of these
people.”
The Duke nodded “Please do. Also we must send word to the elves and
dwarves. They have abided here longer than we by ages, and we would do well to
seek their wisdom.”
Tully indicated agreement. “Queen Aglaranna might have knowledge of
these people if they are travelers from across the Endless Sea. Perhaps they
have visited these shores before.”
“Preposterous,” snorted Horsemaster Algon. “There are no nations
across the Endless Sea. Otherwise it wouldn’t be endless.”
Kulgan took on an indulgent expression. “There are theories that
other lands exist across the Endless Sea. It is only that we have no ships
capable of making such a long journey.”
“Theories,” was all Algon said.
“Whoever these strangers are,” said Arutha, “we had best make sure
we can find out as much as possible about them.”
Algon and Lyam gave him a questioning look, while Kulgan and Tully
looked on without expression. Borric and Fannon nodded as Arutha continued.
“From the boys’ description, the ship was obviously a warship. The heavy prow
with bowsprit is designed for ramming, and the high foredeck is a perfect place
for bowmen, as the low middle deck is suitable for boarding other vessels when
they have been grappled. I would imagine the rear deck was also high If more of
the hull had survived, I would guess we would have found rowers’ benches as
well.”
“A war galley?” asked Algon.
Fannon looked impatient. “Of course, you simpleton.” There was a
friendly rivalry between the two masters, which at times degenerated to some
unfriendly bickering. “Take a look at our guest’s weapon.” He indicated the
broadsword. “How would you like to ride at a determined man wheeling that toy?
He’d cut your horse right out from under you. That armor is light, and
efficiently constructed for all its gaudy coloring. I would guess that he was
infantry. As powerfully built as he is, he probably could run half a day and
still fight.” He stroked his mustache absently. “These people have some
warriors among them.”
Algon nodded slowly. Arutha sat back in his chair, making a tent of
his hands, fingertips flexing. “What I can’t understand,” said the Duke’s
younger son, “is why he tried to run We had no weapons drawn and were not
charging. There was no reason for him to run.”
Borric looked at the old priest. “Will we ever know?”
Tully looked concerned, his brow furrowed. “He had a long piece of
wood embedded in his right side, under the breastplate, as well as a bad blow
to the head. That helmet saved his skull. He has a high fever and has lost a
great deal of blood. He may not survive. I may have to resort to a mind
contact, if he regains enough consciousness to establish it.” Pug knew of the
mind contact; Tully had explained it to him before. It was a method only a few
clerics could employ, and it was extremely dangerous for both the subject and
the caster. The old priest must feel a strong need to gain information from the
injured man to risk it.
Borric turned his attention to Kulgan. “What of the scroll the boys
found?”
Kulgan waved a hand absently. “I have given a preliminary, and
brief, inspection. It has magical properties without a doubt. That is why Pug
felt some compulsion to inspect the cabin and that chest, I think. Anyone as
sensitive to magic as he is would feel it.” He looked directly at the Duke. “I
am, however, unwilling to break the seal until I have made a more involved
study of it, to better determine its purpose. Breaking enchanted seals can be
dangerous if not handled properly. If the seal was tampered with, the scroll
might destroy itself, or worse, those trying to break it It wouldn’t be the
first such trap I’ve seen for a scroll of great power.”
The Duke drummed his fingers on the table for a moment. “All right.
We will adjourn this meeting. As soon as something new has been learned, either
from the scroll or from the wounded man, we will reconvene.” He turned to
Tully. “See how the man is, and if he should wake, use your arts to glean
whatever you can.” He stood, and the others rose also “Lyam, send word to the
Elf Queen and the dwarves at Stone Mountain and the Grey Towers of what has happened.
Ask for their counsel.”
Pug opened the door. The Duke went through and the others followed
Pug and Tomas were the last to leave, and as they walked down the hall, Tomas
leaned over toward Pug.
“We really started something.”
Pug shook his head. “We were simply the first to find the man. If
not us, then someone else.”
Tomas looked relieved to be out of the chamber and the Duke’s
scrutiny “If this turns out badly, I hope they remember that.”
Kulgan went up the stairs to his tower room as Tully moved off toward
his own quarters, where the wounded man was being tended by Tully’s acolytes.
The Duke and his sons turned through a door to their private quarters, leaving
the boys alone in the hallway.
Pug and
Tomas cut through a storage room, and into the kitchen Megar stood supervising
the kitchen workers, several of whom waved greetings to the boys. When he saw
his son and fosterling, he smiled and said, “Well, what have you two gotten
yourselves into, now?” Megar was a loose-jointed man, with sandy hair and an
open countenance. He resembled Tomas, as a rough sketch resembled a finished
drawing. He was a fair-looking man of middle years, but lacked the fine
features that set Tomas apart.
Grinning, Megar said, “Everyone is hushed up about that man in
Tully’s quarters, and messengers are dashing from here to there, one place to
another. I haven’t seen such a to-do since the Prince of Krondor visited seven
years ago!”
Tomas grabbed an apple from a platter and jumped up to sit on a
table. Between bites he recounted to his father what had taken place.
Pug leaned on the counter while listening. Tomas told the story with
a minimum of embellishment. When he was done, Megar shook his head. “Well,
well. Aliens, is it? I hope they’re not marauding pirates. We have had peaceful
enough times lately. Ten years since the time the Brotherhood of the Dark
Path”—he gestured spitting—”curse their murderous souls, stirred up that
trouble with the goblins. Can’t say as I’d welcome that sort of mess again,
sending all those stores to the outlying villages. Having to cook based on what
will spoil first and what will last longest. I couldn’t make a decent meal for
a month.”
Pug smiled. Megar had the ability to take even the most difficult
possibilities and break them down to basics: how much inconvenience they were
likely to cause the scullery staff.
Tomas jumped down from the counter. “I had best return to the
soldiers’ commons and wait for Master Fannon. I’ll see you soon.” He ran from
the kitchen.
Megar said, “Is it serious, Pug?”
Pug shook his head. “I really can’t say I don’t know. I know that
Tully and Kulgan are worried, and the Duke thinks enough of the problem to want
to talk to the elves and dwarves. It could be.”
Megar looked out the door that Tomas had used. “It would be a bad time
for war and killing.” Pug could see the poorly hidden worry in Megar’s face and
could think of nothing to say to a father of a son who had just become a
soldier.
Pug pushed himself away from the counter. “I’d better be off, as
well, Megar.” He waved good-bye to the others in the kitchen and walked out of
the kitchen and into the courtyard. He had little temper for study, being
alarmed by the serious tone of the meeting in the Duke’s chambers. No one had
come out and said as much, but it was obvious they were considering the
possibility that the alien ship was the vanguard of an invasion fleet.
Pug wandered around to the side of the keep and climbed the three
steps to the Princess’s small flower garden. He sat on a stone bench, the
hedges and rows of rosebushes masking most of the courtyard from sight. He
could still see the top of the high walks, with the guards patrolling the
parapets. He wondered if it was his imagination, or were the guards looking
especially watchful today?
The sound of a delicate cough made him turn. Standing on the other
side of the garden was Princess Carline, with Squire Roland and two of her
younger ladies-m-waiting. The girls hid their smiles, for Pug was still
something of a celebrity in the keep. Carline shooed them off, saying, “I would
like to speak with Squire Pug in private.” Roland hesitated, then bowed
stiffly. Pug was irritated by the dark look Roland gave him as he left with the
young ladies.
The two young ladies looked over their shoulder at Pug and Carline,
giggling, which seemed only to add to Roland’s irritation.
Pug stood as Carline approached and made an awkward bow She said, in
short tones, “Oh, sit down. I find that rubbish tiring and get all I need from
Roland.”
Pug sat. The girl took her place next to him, and they were both
silent for a moment. Finally she said, “I haven’t seen you for more than a
week. Have you been busy?
Pug felt uncomfortable, still confused by the girl and her mercurial
moods She had been only warm to him since the day, three weeks ago, when he had
saved her from the trolls, stirring up a storm of gossip among the staff of the
castle. She remained short-tempered with others, however, especially Squire
Roland.
“I have been busy with my studies.”
“Oh, pooh. You spend too much time in that awful tower.”
Pug didn’t consider the tower room the least bit awful—except for
being a bit drafty. It was his own, and he felt comfortable there.
“We could go riding, Your Highness, if you would like.”
The girl smiled. “I would like that. But I’m afraid Lady Mama won’t
allow it.”
Pug was surprised. He thought that after the way he had protected
the Princess, even the girl’s surrogate mother would allow that he was proper
company. “Why not?”
Carline sighed. “She says that when you were a commoner, you would
keep your place. Now that you are a courtier, she suspects you of having
aspirations.” A slight smile played across her lips.
“Aspirations?” Pug said, not understanding.
Carline said shyly, “She thinks that you have ambitions to rise to
higher station. She thinks you seek to influence me in certain ways.”
Pug stared at Carline. Abruptly comprehension dawned on him, and he
said, “Oh,” then, “Oh! Your Highness.” He stood up “I never would do such a
thing. I mean, I would never think to . . . I mean . . .”
Carline abruptly stood and threw Pug an exasperated look. “Boys!
You’re all idiots.” Lifting the hem of her long green gown, she stormed off.
Pug sat down, more perplexed than before by the girl. It was almost
as if . . . He let the thought trail away. The more it seemed possible that she
could care for him, the more anxious the prospect made him. Car-line was quite
a bit more than the fairy-tale Princess he had imagined a short time back. With
the stamp of one little foot, she could raise a storm in a saltcellar, one that
could shake the keep. A girl of complex mind was the Princess, with a
contradictory nature tossed into the bargain.
Further musing was interrupted by Tomas, dashing by. Catching a
glimpse of his friend, he leapt up the three steps and halted breathlessly
before him. “The Duke wants us. The man from the ship has died.”
They hastily assembled in the Duke’s council chamber, except Kulgan,
who had not answered when a messenger knocked at his door. It was supposed he
was too deeply engrossed in the problem of the magic scroll.
Father Tully looked pale and drawn Pug was shocked by his
appearance. Only a little more than an hour had passed, yet the old cleric
looked as if he had spent several sleepless nights. His eyes were red-rimmed
and deep-set in dark circles. His face was ashen, and a light sheen of
perspiration showed across his brow.
Borric poured the priest a goblet of wine from a decanter on a
sideboard and handed it to him. Tully hesitated, for he was an abstemious man,
then drank deeply. The others resumed their former positions around the table.
Borric looked at Tully and said, simply, “Well?”
“The soldier from the beach regained consciousness for only a few
minutes, a final rally before the end. During that time I had the opportunity
to enter into a mind contact with him. I stayed with him through his last
feverish dreams, trying to learn as much about him as I could. I nearly didn’t
remove the contact in time.”
Pug paled. During the mind contact, the priest’s mind and the
subject become as one. If Tully had not broken contact with the man when he
died, the priest could have died or been rendered mad, for the two men shared
feelings, fears, and sensations as well as thought. He now understood Tully’s
exhausted state: the old priest had spent a great deal of energy maintaining
the link with an uncooperative subject and had been party to the dying man’s
pain and terror.
Tully took another drink of wine, then continued “If this man’s
dying dreams were not the product of fevered imaginings, then I fear his
appearance heralds a grave situation.” Tully took another sip of wine and
pushed the goblet aside. “The man’s name was Xomich. He was a simple soldier of
a nation, Honshom, in something called the Empire of Tsuranuanm.”
Borric said, “I have never heard of this nation, nor of that
Empire.”
Tully nodded and said, “I would have been surprised if you had. That
man’s ship came from no sea of Midkemia.” Pug and Tomas looked at each other,
and Pug felt a chilling sensation, as, apparently, did Tomas, whose face had
turned pale.
Tully went on. “We can only speculate on how the feat was managed,
but I am certain that this ship comes from another world, removed from our own
in time and space.” Before questions could be asked, he said, “Let me explain.”
“This man was sick with fever, and his mind wandered.” Tully’s face
flickered with remembered pain. “He was part of an honor guard for someone he
thought of only as ‘Great One.’ There were conflicting images, and I can’t be
sure, but it seems that the journey they were on was considered strange, both
for the presence of this Great One and for the nature of the mission. The only
concrete thought I gained was that this Great One had no need to travel by
ship. Beyond that, I have little but quick and disjointed impressions. There
was a city he knew as Yankora, then a terrible storm, and a sudden blinding
brilliance, which may have been lightning striking the ship, but I think not.
There was a thought of his captain and comrades being washed overboard. Then a crash
on the rocks.” He paused for a moment “I am not sure if those images are in
order, for I think it likely that the crew was lost before the blinding light.”
“Why?” asked Borric.
“I’m ahead of myself,” said Tully. “First I’d like to explain why I
think this man is from another world.
“This Xomich grew to manhood in a land ruled by great armies. They
are a warrior race, whose ships control the seas. But what seas? Never, to my
knowledge, has there been mention of contact with these people. And there are
other visions that are even more convincing. Great cities, far larger than
those in the heart of Kesh, the largest known to us. Armies on parade during
high holiday, marching past a review stand; city garrisons larger than the
King’s Army of the West.”
Algon said, “Still, there is nothing to say they are not from”—he
paused, as if the admission were difficult—”across the Endless Sea.” That
prospect seemed to trouble him less than the notion of some place not of this
world.
Tully looked irritated at the interruption. “There is more, much
more I followed him through his dreams, many of his homeland. He remembers
creatures unlike any I have heard of or seen, things with six legs that pull
wagons like oxen, and other creatures, some that look like insects or reptiles,
but speak like men. His land was hot, and his memory of the sun was of one
larger than ours and more green in color. This man was not of our world.” The
last was said flatly, removing from all in the room any lingering doubts. Tully
would never make a pronouncement like that unless he was certain.
The room was silent as each person reflected on what had been said.
The boys watched and shared the feeling. It was as if no one were willing to
speak, as if to do so would seal the priest’s information forever in fact,
while to stay silent might let it pass like a bad dream. Borric stood and paced
over to the window. It looked out upon a blank rear wall of the castle, but he
stared as if seeking something there, something that would provide an answer
for the questions that spun in his mind. He turned quickly and said, “How did
they get here, Tully?”
The priest shrugged. “Perhaps Kulgan can offer a theory as to the
means. What I construct as being the most likely series of events is this: the
ship foundered in the storm; the captain of the ship and most of its crew were
lost. As a last resort this Great One, whoever he is, invoked a spell to remove
the ship from the storm, or change the weather, or some other mighty feat. As a
result, the ship was cast from its own world into this, appearing off the coast
at Sailor’s Grief. With the ship moving at great speed on its own world, it may
have appeared here with the same movement, and with the westerly blowing
strong, and little or no crew, the ship was driven straight onto the rocks. Or
it simply may have appeared upon the rocks, smashed at the instant it came into
being here.”
Fannon shook his head. “From another world. How can that be
possible?”
The old priest raised his hands in a gesture of mystification. “One
can only speculate. The Ishapians have old scrolls in their temples. Some are
reputed to be copies of older works, which in turn are copies of still older
scrolls. They claim the originals date back, in unbroken line, to the time of
the Chaos Wars. Among them is mention of ‘other planes’ and ‘other dimensions,’
and of concepts lost to us. One thing is clear, however. They speak of lands
and peoples unknown and suggest that once mankind traveled to other worlds, or
to Midkemia from other worlds. These notions have been the center of religious
debate for centuries, and no one could say with certainty what truth there was
in any of them.” He paused, then said, “Until now. If I had not seen what was
in Xomich’s mind, I would not have accepted such a theory to explain this day’s
occurrences. But now . . .”
Borric crossed to his chair to stand behind it, his hands gripping
each side of the high back. “It seems impossible.”
“That the ship and man were here is fact, Father,” said Lyam.
Arutha followed his brother’s comment with another. “And we must
decide what the chances are that this feat may be duplicated.”
Borric said to Tully, “You were right when you said this may herald
a grave situation. Should a great Empire be turning its attention toward Crydee
and the Kingdom . . .”
Tully shook his head. “Borric, have you so long been removed from my
tutelage that you miss the point entirely?” He held up a bony hand as the Duke
started to protest. “Forgive me, my lord. I am old and tired and forget my
manners. But the truth is still the truth. A mighty nation they are, or rather
an empire of nations, and if they have the means to reach us, it could prove
dire, but most important is the possibility that this Great One is a magician
or priest of high art. For if he is not one alone, if there are more within
this Empire, and if they did indeed try to reach this world with magic, then
grave times are truly in store for us.”
When everyone at the table still appeared not to comprehend what he
was alluding to, Tully continued, like a patient teacher lecturing a group of
promising but occasionally slow students. “The ship’s appearance may be the
product of chance and, if so, is only a cause for curiosity. But if it was by
design that it came here, then we may be in peril, for to move a ship to
another world is an order of magic beyond my imagining If these people, the
Tsurani as they call themselves, know we are here, and if they possess the
means to reach us, then not only must we fear armies that rival Great Kesh at
the height of its power, when its reach extended to even this remote corner of
the world, we must also face magic far greater than any we have known.”
Borric nodded, for the conclusion was obvious, once pointed out. “We
must have Kulgan’s counsel on this at once.”
“One thing, Arutha,” said Tully. The Prince looked up from his
chair, for he had been lost in thought. “I know why Xomich tried to run from
you and your men. He thought you were creatures he knew in his own world,
centaurlike creatures, called Thьn, feared by the Tsurani.”
“Why would he think that?” asked Lyam, looking puzzled.
“He had never seen a horse, or any creature remotely like it. I
expect these people have none.”
The Duke sat down again. Drumming his fingers on the table, he said,
“If what Father Tully says is true, then we must make some decisions, and
quickly. If this is but an accident that has brought these people to our
shores, then there may be little to fear. If, however, there is some design to
their coming, then we should expect a serious threat. Here we are the fewest in
number of all the Kingdom’s garrisons, and it would be a hard thing should they
come here in force.”
The others murmured agreement, and the Duke said, “We would do well
to try to understand that what has been said here is still only speculation,
though I am inclined to agree with Tully on most points. We should have
Kulgan’s thoughts upon the matter of these people.” He turned to Pug. “Lad, see
if your master is free to join us.”
Pug nodded and opened the door, then raced through the keep. He ran
to the tower steps and took them two at a time. He raised his hand to knock and
felt a strange sensation, as if he were near a lightning strike, causing the
hair on his arms and scalp to stand up. A sudden sense of wrongness swept over
him, and he pounded on the door. “Kulgan! Kulgan! Are you all right?” he
shouted, but no answer was forthcoming. He tried the door latch and found it
locked. He placed his shoulder against the door and tried to force it, but it
held fast. The feeling of strangeness had passed, but fear rose in him at
Kulgan’s silence. He looked about for something to force the door and, finding
nothing, ran back down the stairs.
He hurried into the long hall. Here guards in Crydee livery stood at
their post. He shouted at the two nearest, “You two, come with me. My master is
in trouble.” Without hesitation they followed the boy up the stairs, their
boots pounding on the stone steps.
When they reached the magician’s door, Pug said, “Break it down!”
They quickly put aside spear and shield and leaned their shoulders against the
door. Once, twice, three times they heaved, and with a protesting groan the
timbers cracked around the lock plate. One last shove and the door flew open.
The guards stopped themselves from falling through the door and stepped back,
amazement and confusion on their faces. Pug shouldered between them and looked
into the room.
On the floor lay Kulgan, unconscious. His blue robes were
disheveled, and one arm was thrown across his face, as if in protection. Two
feet from him, where his study table should have stood, hung a shimmering void.
Pug stared at the place in the air. A large sphere of grey that was not quite
grey shimmered with traces of a broken spectrum. He could not see through it,
but there was nothing solid there. Coming out of the grey space was a pair of
human arms, reaching toward the magician. When they touched the material of his
robe, they stopped and fingered the cloth. As if a decision had been made, they
traveled over his body, until they identified Kulgan’s arm. The hands took hold
of him and tried to lift his arm into the void. Pug stood in horror, for
whoever or whatever was on the other side of the void was trying to pull the
stout magician up and through. Another pair of hands reached through and picked
up the magician’s arm next to where the first held him, and Kulgan was being
pulled toward the void.
Pug turned and grabbed one of the spears from against the wall where
the shocked guards had placed them. Before either of the men-at-arms could act,
he leveled it at the grey spot and threw.
The spear flew across the ten feet that separated them from Kulgan
and disappeared into the void. A brief second after, the arms dropped Kulgan
and withdrew. Suddenly the grey void blinked out of existence, with a clap of
air rushing in to fill it. Pug ran to Kulgan’s side and knelt by his master.
The magician was breathing, but his face was white and beaded with
sweat. His skin felt cold and clammy. Pug ran to Kulgan’s sleeping pallet and
pulled off a blanket. As he was covering the magician, he shouted at the
guards, “Get Father Tully.”
Pug and Tomas sat up that night, unable to sleep. Tully had tended
to the magician, giving a favorable prognosis. Kulgan was in shock but would
recover in a day or two.
Duke Borric had questioned Pug and the guards on what they had
witnessed, and now the castle was in an uproar. All the guards had been turned
out, and patrols to the outlying areas of the Duchy had been doubled. The Duke
still did not know what the connection between the appearance of the ship and
the strange manifestation in the magician’s quarters was, but he was taking no
chances with the safety of his realm. All along the walls of the castle,
torches burned, and guards had been sent to Longpoint lighthouse and the town
below.
Tomas sat next to Pug on a bench in Princess Carlme’s garden, one of
the few quiet places in the castle. Tomas looked thoughtfully at Pug. “I expect
that these Tsurani people are coming.”
Pub ran a hand through his hair. “We don’t know that.”
Tomas sounded tired. “I just have a feeling.”
Pug nodded. “We’ll know tomorrow when Kulgan can tell us what
happened.”
Tomas looked out toward the wall. “I’ve never seen it so strange
around here. Not even when the Dark Brotherhood and the goblins attacked back
when we were little, remember?”
Pug nodded, silent for a moment, then said, “We knew what we were
facing then. The dark elves have been attacking castles on and off as far back
as anyone can remember. And goblins . . . well, they’re goblins.”
They sat in silence for a long time; then the sound of boots on the
pavement announced someone coming Swordmaster Fannon, in chainmail and tabard,
halted before them. “What? Up so late? You should both be abed.” The old
fighter turned to survey the castle walls. “There are many who find themselves
unable to sleep this night.” He turned his attention back to the boys. “Tomas,
a soldier needs to learn the knack of taking sleep whenever he can find it, for
there are many long days when there is none. And you, Squire Pug, should be
asleep as well. Now, why don’t you try to rest yourselves?”
The boys nodded, bade the Swordmaster good night, and left. The
grey-haired commander of the Duke’s guard watched them go and stood quietly in
the little garden for a time, alone with his own disquieting thoughts.
Pug was awakened by the sound of footsteps passing his door. He
quickly pulled on trousers and tunic and hurried up the steps to Kulgan’s room.
Passing the hastily replaced door, he found the Duke and Father Tully standing
over Kulgan’s sleeping pallet. Pug heard his master’s voice, sounding feeble,
as he complained about being kept abed. “I tell you, I’m fine,” Kulgan
insisted. “Just let me walk about a bit, and I’ll be back to normal in no
time.”
Tully, still sounding weary, said, “Back on your back, you mean. You
sustained a nasty jolt, Kulgan. Whatever it was that knocked you unconscious
packed no small wallop. You were lucky, it could have been much worse.”
Kulgan noticed Pug, who stood quietly at the door, not wishing to
disturb anyone. “Ha, Pug,” he said, his voice regaining some of its usual
volume. “Come in, come in. I understand I have you to thank for not taking an
unexpected journey with unknown companions.”
Pug smiled, for Kulgan seemed his old, jovial self, in spite of his
wan appearance. “I really did nothing, sir. I just felt that something was not
right, and acted.”
“Acted quickly and well,” said the Duke with a smile. “The boy is
again responsible for the well-being of one of my household. At this rate I may
have to grant him the title Defender of the Ducal Household.”
Pug smiled, pleased with the Duke’s praise. Borric turned to the
magician. “Well, seeing as you are full of fire, I think we should have a talk
about yesterday. Are you well enough?”
The question brought an irritated look from Kulgan. “Of course I’m
well enough. That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you for the last ten
minutes.” Kulgan started to rise from the bed, but as dizziness overtook him,
Tully put a restraining hand on his shoulder, guiding him back to the large
pile of pillows he had been resting on.
“You can talk here quite well enough, thank you. Now, stay in bed.”
Kulgan made no protest. He shortly felt better and said, “Fine, but
hand me my pipe, will you, please?”
Pug fetched Kulgan’s pipe and pouch of tabac and, as the magician
tamped down the bowl, a long burning taper from the fire pot. Kulgan lit his
pipe and, when it was burning to his satisfaction, lay back with a contented
look on his face. “Now,” he said, “where do we begin?”
The Duke quickly filled him in on what Tully had revealed, with the
priest adding a few details the Duke overlooked. When they were done, Kulgan
nodded “Your assumption about the origin of these people is likely. I suspected
the possibility when I saw the artifacts brought from the ship, and the events
in this room yesterday bear me out.” He paused for a moment, organizing his
thoughts. “The scroll was a personal letter from a magician of these people,
the Tsurani, to his wife, but it was also more. The seal was magically endowed
to force the reader to meant a spell contained at the end of the message. It is
a remarkable spell enabling anyone, whether or not they can normally read, to
read the scroll.”
The Duke said, “This is a strange thing.”
Tully said, “It’s astonishing.”
“The concepts involved are completely new to me,” agreed Kulgan.
“Anyway, I had neutralized that spell so I could read the letter without fear
of magical traps, common to private messages written by magicians. The language
was of course strange, and I employed a spell from another scroll to translate
it. Even understanding the language through that spell, I don’t fully
understand everything discussed.
“A magician named Fanatha was traveling by ship to a city on his
homeworld. Several days out to sea, they were struck by a severe storm. The
ship lost its mast, and many of the crew were washed overboard. The magician
took a brief time to pen the scroll—it was written in a hasty hand—and cast the
spells upon it. It seems this man could have left the ship at any time and
returned to his home or some other place of safety, but was enjoined from doing
so by his concern for the ship and its cargo. I am not clear on this point, but
the tone of the letter suggested that risking his life for the others on the
ship was somehow unusual. Another puzzling thing was a mention of his duty to
someone he called the ‘Warlord.’ I may be reaching for straws, but the tone
leads me to think this was a matter of honor or a promise, not some personal
duty. In any event he penned the note, sealed it, and was then going to
undertake to move the ship magically.”
Tully shook his head in disbelief. “Incredible.”
“And as we understand magic, impossible,” Kulgan added excitedly.
Pug noticed that the magician’s professional interest was not shared
by the Duke, who looked openly troubled. The boy remembered Tully’s comments on
what magic of that magnitude meant if these people were to invade the Kingdom.
The magician continued, “These people possess powers about which we can only
speculate. The magician was very clear on a number of points—his ability to
compress so many ideas into so short a message shows an unusually organized
mind.
“He took great pains to reassure his wife he would do everything in
his power to return. He referred to opening a rift to the ‘new world,
because—and I don’t fully understand this—a bridge was already established, and
some device he possessed lacked some
capacity or another to move the ship on his own world. From all indications, it
was a most desperate gamble. He placed a second spell on the scroll—and this is
what caught me in the end. I thought by neutralizing the first spell I had
countered the second also, but I was in error. The second spell was designed to
activate as soon as someone had finished reading the scroll aloud, another
unheard-of piece of magical art. The spell caused an other of these rifts to
open, so the message would be transported to a place called ‘the Assembly’ and
from there to his wife. I was nearly caught in the rift with the message.”
Pug stepped forward. Without thinking, he blurted, “Then those hands
might have been his friends trying to find him.”
Kulgan looked at his apprentice and nodded. “A possibility In any
event, we can derive much from this episode. These Tsurani have the ability to
control magic that we can only hint at in our speculation. We know a little
about the occurrences of rifts, and nothing of their nature.”
The Duke looked surprised. “Please explain.”
Kulgan drew deep on his pipe, then said, “Magic, by its nature, is
unstable. Occasionally a spell will become warped—why, we don’t know —to such a
degree, it . . . tears at the very fabric of the world. For a brief time a rift
occurs, and a passage is formed, goingsomewhere.
Little else is known about such occurrences, except that they involve
tremendous releases of energy.”
Tully said, “There are theories, but no one understands why every so
often a spell, or magic device, suddenly explodes in this fashion and why this
instability in reality is created. There have been several occurrences like
this, but we have only secondhand observations to go on. Those who witnessed
the creation of these rifts died or vanished.”
Kulgan picked up the narrative again “It’s considered axiomatic that
they were destroyed along with anything within several feet of the rift.”
He looked thoughtful for a moment. “By rights I should have been
killed when that rift appeared in my study.”
The Duke interrupted. “From your description, these rifts, as you
call them, are dangerous.”
Kulgan nodded. “Unpredictable, as well. They are one of the most
uncontrollable forces ever discovered. If these people know how to manufacture
them and control them as well, to act as a gate between worlds, and can pass
through them safely, then they have arts of the most powerful sort.”
Tully said, “We’ve suspected something of the nature of rifts
before, but this is the first time we’ve had anything remotely like hard
evidence.”
Kulgan said, “Bah! Strange people and unknown objects have appeared
suddenly from time to time over the years, Tully. This would certainly explain
where they came from.”
Tully appeared unwilling to concede the point. “Theory only, Kulgan,
not proof. The people have all been dead, and the devices . . . no one
understands the two or three that were not burned and twisted beyond
recognition.”
Kulgan smiled “Really? What about the man who appeared twenty years
ago in Salador?” To the Duke he said, “This man spoke no language known and was
dressed in the strangest fashion.”
Tully looked down his nose at Kulgan. “He was also hopelessly mad
and never could speak a word that could be understood. The temples invested
much time on him—”
Borric paled. “Gods! A nation of warriors, with armies many times
the size of our own, who have access to our world at will. Let us hope they
have not turned their eyes toward the Kingdom.”
Kulgan nodded and blew a puff of smoke. “As yet, we have not heard
of any other appearances of these people, and we may not have to fear them, but
I have a feeling . . .” He left the thought unfinished for a moment. He turned
a little to one side, easing some minor discomfort, then said, “It may be
nothing, but a reference to a bridge in the message troubles me. It smacks of a
permanent way between the worlds already in existence. I hope I’m wrong.” The
sound of feet pounding up the stairs made them turn. A guard hurried in and
came to attention before the Duke, handing him a small paper.
The Duke dismissed the man and opened the folded paper. He read it
quickly, then handed it to Tully. “I sent fast riders to the elves and the
dwarves, with pigeons to carry replies. The Elf Queen sends word that she is
already riding to Crydee and will be here in two days’ time.”
Tully shook his head. “As long as I have lived, I have never heard
of the Lady Aglaranna leaving Elvandar. This sets my bones cold.”
Kulgan said, “Things must be approaching a serious turn for her to
come here. I hope I am wrong, but think that we are not the only ones to have
news of these Tsurani.”
Silence descended over the room, and Pug was struck by a feeling of
hopelessness. He shook it off, but its echoes followed him for days.
6
ELFCOUNSEL
Pug leaned out the window.
Despite the driving rain that had come in early morning, the
courtyard was in an uproar. Besides the necessary preparations for any
important visit, there was the added novelty of these visitors being elves.
Even the infrequent elf messenger from Queen Aglaranna was the object of much
curiosity when one appeared at the castle, for rarely did the elves venture
south of the river Crydee. The elves lived apart from the society of men, and
their ways were thought strange and magical. They had lived in these lands long
before the coming of men to the West, and there was an unvoiced agreement that,
in spite of any claims made by the Kingdom, they were a free people.
A cough caused Pug to turn and see Kulgan sitting over a large tome.
The magician indicated with a glance that the boy should return to his studies.
Pug closed the window shutters and sat on his pallet. Kulgan said, “There will
be ample time for you to gawk at elves, boy, in a few hours. Then there will be
little time for studies. You must learn to make the best use of what time you
have.”
Fantus scrambled over to place his head in the boy’s lap. Pug
scratched absently behind an eye ridge as he picked up a book and started to
read. Kulgan had given Pug the task of formulating shared qualities of spells as
described by different magicians, in the hope it would deepen his understanding
of the nature of magic.
Kulgan was of the opinion that Pug’s spells with the trolls had been
the result of the tremendous stress of the moment. He hoped the study of other
magicians’ research might help the boy break through the barriers that held him
back in his studies. The book work also proved fascinating to Pug, and his
reading had improved greatly.
Pug glanced at his master, who was reading while puffing great
clouds of smoke from his long pipe. Kulgan showed no signs of the weakness of
the day before and had insisted the boy use these hours to study, rather than
sit idly by waiting for the arrival of the Elf Queen and her court.
A few minutes later, Pug’s eyes began to sting from the pungent
smoke, and he turned back to the window and pushed open the shutters. “Kulgan?”
“Yes, Pug?”
“It would be much nicer working with you if we could somehow keep
the fire going for warmth but move the smoke outside.” Between the smoking fire
pot and the magician’s pipe, the room was thick with a blue-white haze.
The magician laughed loudly. “Right you are.” He closed his eyes for
a moment, his hands flew in a furious motion, and he softly mouthed a series of
incantations. Soon he was holding a large sphere of white and grey smoke, which
he took to the window and tossed outside, leaving the room fresh and clear.
Pug shook his head, laughing. “Thank you, Kulgan. But I had a more
mundane solution in mind. What do you think of making a chimney for the fire
pot?”
“Not possible, Pug,” Kulgan said, sitting down. He pointed to the
wall. “If one had been installed when the tower was built, fine. But to try to
remove the stones from the tower, from here past my room, and up to the roof
would be difficult, not to mention costly.”
“I wasn’t thinking of a chimney in the wall, Kulgan. You know how
the forge in the smithy has a stone hood taking the heat and smoke through the
roof?” The magician nodded. “Well, if I could have a metal one fashioned by the
smith, and a metal chimney coming from the hood to carry the smoke away, it
would work the same way, wouldn’t it?”
Kulgan pondered this for a moment. “I don’t see why it wouldn’t. But
where would you put this chimney?”
“There.” Pug pointed to two stones above and to the left of the
window. They had been ill fitted when the tower was built, and now there was a
large crack between them that allowed the wind to come howling into the room
“This stone could be taken out,” he said, indicating the leftmost one. “I checked
it and it’s loose. The chimney could come from above the fire pot, bend
here”—he pointed to a spot in the air above the pot and level with the
stone—”and come out here. If we covered the space around it, it would keep the
wind out.”
Kulgan looked impressed. “It’s a novel idea, Pug. It might work.
I’ll speak to the smith in the morning and get his opinion on the matter. I
wonder that no one thought of it before.”
Feeling pleased with himself for having thought of the chimney, Pug
resumed his studies. He reread a passage that had caught his eye before,
puzzling over an ambiguity. Finally he looked up at the magician and said,
“Kulgan.”
“Yes, Pug?” he answered, looking up from his book.
“Here it is again. Magician Lewton uses the same cantrip here as Marsus
did, to baffle the effects of the spell upon the caster, directing it to an
external target.” Placing the large tome down so as not to lose his place, he
picked up another. “But here Dorcas writes that the use of this cantrip blunts
the spell, increasing the chance that it will not work. How can there be so
much disagreement over the nature of this single construction?”
Kulgan narrowed his gaze a moment as he regarded his student. Then
he sat back, taking a long pull on his pipe, sending forth a cloud of blue
smoke “It shows what I’ve said before, lad. Despite any vanity we magicians
might feel about our craft, there’s really very little order or science
involved. Magic is a collection of folk arts and skills passed along from
master to apprentice since the beginning of time. Trial and error, trial and
error is the way. There has never been an attempt to create a system for magic,
with laws and rules and axioms that are well understood and widelv accepted.”
He looked thoughtfully at Pug. “Each of us is like a carpenter, making a table,
but each of us choosing different woods, different types of saws, some using
pegs and dowel, others using nails, another dovetailing joints, some staining,
others not. In the end there’s a table, but the means for making it are not the
same in each case.
“What we have here is most likely an insight about the limits of
each of these venerable sages you study, rather than any sort of prescription
for magic. For Lewton and Marsus, the cantrip aided the construction of the
spell; for Dorcas, it hindered.”
“I understand your example, Kulgan, but I’ll never understand how
these magicians all could do the same thing, but in so many different ways. I
understand that each of them wanted to achieve his end and found a different
means, but there is something missing in the manner they did it.”
Kulgan looked intrigued. “What is missing, Pug?”
The boy looked thoughtful. “I . . . I don’t know. It’s as if I
expect to find something that will tell me, ‘This is the way it must be done,
the only way,’ or something like that. Does that make any sense?”
Kulgan nodded. “I think I know you well enough to understand. You
have a very well-ordered mind, Pug. You understand logic far better than most,
even those much older than yourself. You see things as a system, rather than as
a haphazard collection of events. Perhaps that is part of your trouble.”
Pug’s expression showed his interest in what the magician was saying
Kulgan continued. “Much of what I am trying to teach is based on a system of
logic, cause and effect, but much is not. It is like trying to teach someone to
play the lute. You can show them the fingering of the strings, but that
knowledge alone will not make a great troubadour. It is the art, not the
scholarship, that troubles you.”
“I think I understand, Kulgan.” He sounded dispirited.
Kulgan stood up. “Don’t dwell on it; you are still young, and I have
hope for you yet.” His tone was light, and Pug felt the humor in it.
“Then I am not a complete loss?” he said with a smile.
“Indeed not.” Kulgan looked thoughtfully at his pupil. “In fact, I
have the feeling that someday you may use that logical mind of yours for the
betterment of magic.”
Pug was a little startled. He did not think of himself as one to
accomplish great things.
Shouts came through the window, and Pug hurried to look out. A troop
of guards was running toward the front gate. Pug turned to Kulgan. “The elves
must be coming! The guard is out.”
Kulgan said, “Very well. We are done with study for this day. There
will be no holding you until you get a look at the elves. Run along.”
Pug raced out the door and down the stairs. He took them two at a
time, jumping to the bottom of the tower landing over the last four and hitting
the floor at a full run. He dashed through the kitchen and out the door. As he
rounded the keep to the front courtyard, he found Tomas standing atop a hay
wagon. Pug climbed up next to him, to be better able to see the arrival over
the heads of the curious keep folk gathered around.
Tomas said, “I thought you weren’t coming, thought you’d be locked
away with your books all day.”
Pug said, “I wouldn’t miss this. Elves!”
Tomas playfully dug his elbow into Pug’s side. “Haven’t you had your
fill of excitement for this week?”
Pug threw him a black look. “If you’re so indifferent, why are you
standing in the rain on this wagon?”
Tomas didn’t answer. Instead he pointed. “Look!”
Pug turned to see the guard company snap to attention as riders in
green cloaks entered through the gate. They rode to the main doors of the keep,
where the Duke waited. Pug and Tomas watched in awe, for they rode the most
perfect white horses the boys had ever seen, using no saddle or bridle. The
horses seemed untouched by wetness, and their coats glowed faintly; whether by
some magic, or a trick of the grey afternoon light, Pug couldn’t tell. The
leader rode on an especially grand animal, full seventeen hands in height, with
a long flowing mane and a tail like a plume. The riders reared the mounts in
salute, and an audible intake of breath could be heard from those in the crowd.
“Elf steeds,” said Tomas, in hushed tones. The horses were the
legendary mounts of the elves. Martin Longbow had once told the boys they lived
in hidden, deep glades near Elvandar. It was said they possessed intelligence
and a magic nature, and no human could sit their backs. It was also said that
only one with royal elvish blood could command them to carry riders.
Grooms rushed forward to take the horses, but a musical voice said,
“There is no need.” It came from the first rider, the one mounted on the
greatest steed. She jumped nimbly down, without aid, landing lightly on her
feet, and threw back her hood, revealing a mane of thick reddish hair. Even in
the gloom of the afternoon rain it appeared to be shot through with golden
highlights. She was tall, nearly a match for Borric. She mounted the steps as
the Duke came forward to meet her.
Borric held out his hands and took hers in greeting. “Welcome, my
lady; you do me and my house a great honor.”
The Elf Queen said, “You are most gracious, Lord Borric.” Her voice
was rich and surprisingly clear, able to carry over the crowd so that all in
the courtyard could hear. Pug felt Tomas’s hand clutching his shoulder. He
turned to see a rapt expression on Tomas’s face. “She’s beautiful,” said the
taller boy.
Pug returned his attention to the welcome. He was forced to agree
that the Queen of the elves was indeed beautiful, if not in entirely human
terms. Her eyes were large and a pale blue, nearly luminous in the gloom. Her
face was finely chiseled, with high cheekbones and a strong but not masculine
jaw. Her smile was full, and her teeth shone white between almost-red lips. She
wore a simple circlet of gold around her brow, which held back her hair,
revealing the lobeless, upswept ears that were the hallmark of her race.
The others in her company dismounted, all dressed in rich clothing.
Each tunic was bright with contrasting leggings below. One wore a tunic of deep
russet, another pale yellow with a surcoat of bright green. Some wore purple
sashes, and others crimson hose. Despite the bright colors, these were elegant
and finely made garments, with nothing loud or gaudy about them. There were
eleven riders with the Queen, all similar in appearance, tall, youthful, and
lithe in movement.
The Queen turned from the Duke and said something in her musical
language. The elf steeds reared in salute, then ran through the gate, past the
surprised onlookers. The Duke ushered his guests inside, and soon the crowd
drifted away. Tomas and Pug sat quietly in the rain.
Tomas said, “If I live to be a hundred, I don’t think that I’ll ever
see her like.”
Pug was surprised, for his friend rarely showed such feelings. He
had a brief impulse to chide Tomas over his boyish infatuation, but something
about his companion’s expression made that seem inappropriate. “Come on,” he
said, “we’re getting drenched.”
Tomas followed Pug from the wagon Pug said, “You had better change
into some dry clothing, and see if you can borrow a dry tabard.”
Tomas said, “Why?”
With an evil grin, Pug said, “Oh? Didn’t I tell you? The Duke wants
you to dine with the court. He wants you to tell the Elf Queen what you saw on
the ship.”
Tomas looked as if he were going to break down and run. “Me? Dine in
the great hall?” His face went white. “Talk? To the Queen?”
Pug laughed with glee. “It’s easy. You open your mouth and words
come out.”
Tomas swung a roundhouse at Pug, who ducked under the blow, grabbing
his friend from behind when he spun completely around. Pug had strength in his
arms even if he lacked Tomas’s size, and he easily picked his larger friend off
the ground. Tomas struggled, and soon they were laughing uncontrollably. “Pug,
put me down.”
“Not until you calm down.”
“I’m all right.”
Pug put him down. “What brought that on?”
“Your smug manner, and not telling me until the last minute ‘
“All right. So I’m sorry I waited to tell you. Now what’s the rest
of it?”
Tomas looked uncomfortable, more than was reasonable from the rain.
“I don’t know how to eat with quality folk. I’m afraid I’ll do something
stupid.”
“It’s easy. Just watch me and do what I do. Hold the fork in your
left hand and cut with the knife. Don’t drink from the bowls of water; they’re
to wash with, and use them a lot, because your hands will get greasy from the
rib bones. And make sure you toss the bones over your shoulder to the dogs, and
not on the floor in front of the Duke’s table. And don’t wipe your mouth on
your sleeves, use the tablecloth, that’s what it’s for.”
They walked toward the soldiers’ commons, with Pug giving his friend
instruction on the finer points of court manners. Tomas was impressed at the
wealth of Pug’s knowledge.
Tomas vacillated between looking sick and pained. Each time someone
regarded him, he felt as if he had been found guilty of the most grievous
breach of etiquette and looked sick. Whenever his gaze wandered to the head
table and he caught sight of the Elf Queen, his stomach tied up in knots and he
looked pained.
Pug had arranged for Tomas to sit next to him at one of the more
removed tables from the Duke’s. Pug’s usual place was at Lord Borric’s table,
next to the Princess. He was glad for this chance to be away from her, for she
still showed displeasure with him. Usually she chatted with him about the
thousand little bits of gossip the ladies of the court found so interesting,
but last night she had pointedly ignored him, lavishing all her attention on a
surprised and obviously pleased Roland. Pug found his own reaction puzzling,
relief mixed with a large dose of irritation. While he felt relieved to be free
of her wrath, he found Roland’s fawning upon her a bothersome itch he couldn’t
scratch.
Pug had been troubled by Roland’s hostility toward him of late,
poorly hidden behind stiff manners. He had never been as close to Roland as
Tomas had, but they had never before had cause to be angry with one another.
Roland had always been one of the crowd of boys Pug’s age. He had never hidden
behind his rank when he had cause to be at odds with the common boys, always
standing ready to settle the matter in whatever way proved necessary. And
already being an experienced fighter when he arrived in Crydee, his differences
soon were settled peacefully as often as not. Now there was this dark tension
between Pug and Roland, and Pug found himself wishing he was Tomas’s equal in
fighting; Tomas was the only boy Roland was unable to best with fists, their
one encounter ending quickly with Roland receiving a sound thumping. For as
certain as the sun was rising in the morning, Pug knew a confrontation with the
hotheaded young Squire was quickly approaching. He dreaded it, but knew once it
came, he’d feel relief.
Pug glanced at Tomas, finding his friend lost in his own discomfort.
Pug returned his attention to Carline. He felt overwhelmed by the Princess, but
her allure was tempered by a strange discomfort he felt whenever she was near.
As beautiful as he found her—her black locks and blue eyes igniting some very
uncomfortable flames of imagination—the images were always somehow hollow,
colorless at heart, lacking the amber-and-rose glow such daydreams had
possessed when Carline had been a distant, unapproachable, and unknown figure.
Observing her closely for even as short a time as he had recently made such
idealized musing impossible. She was proving herself to be just too complicated
to fit into simple daydreams. On the whole he found the question of the
Princess troublesome, but seeing her with Roland made him forget his internal
conflicts over her, as a less intellectual, more basic emotion came to the
fore. He was becoming jealous.
Pug sighed, shaking his head as he thought about his own misery at
this moment, ignoring Tomas’s. At least, thought Pug, I’m not alone. To
Roland’s obvious discomfort, Carline was deeply involved at the moment in
conversation with Prince Calin of Elvandar, son of Aglaranna. The Prince seemed
to be the same age as Arutha, or Lyam, but then so did his mother, who appeared
to be in her early twenties. All the elves, except the Queen’s seniormost
adviser, Tathar, were quite young looking, and Tathar looked no older than the
Duke.
When the meal was over, most of the Duke’s court retired. The Duke
rose and offered his arm to Aglaranna and led those who had been ordered to
attend them to his council chamber.
For the third time in two days, the boys found themselves in the Duke’s
council chamber. Pug was more relaxed about being there than before, thanks in
part to the large meal, but Tomas seemed more disturbed than ever. If the
taller boy had spent the hour before dinner staring at the Elf Queen, in these
close quarters he seemed to be looking everywhere but in her direction. Pug
thought Aglaranna noticed Tomas’s behavior and smiled slightly, but he couldn’t
be sure.
The two elves who came with the Queen, Calin and Tathar, went at
once to the side table that held the bowl and the artifacts taken from the
Tsurani soldier. They examined them closely, fascinated by every detail.
The Duke called the meeting to order, and the two elves came to
chairs on either side of the Queen. Pug and Tomas stood by the door as usual.
The Duke said, “We have told you what has occurred as well as we
know, and now you have seen proof with your own eyes. If you think it would be
helpful, the boys can recount the events on the ship.”
The Queen inclined her head, but it was Tathar who spoke. “I would like
to hear the story firsthand, Your Grace.”
Borric motioned for the boys to approach. They stepped forward, and
Tathar said, “Which of you found this outworlder?”
Tomas threw Pug a look that indicated the shorter boy should do the
talking. Pug said, “We both did, sir,” not knowing the proper address for the
elf. Tathar seemed content with the general honorific. Pug recounted the events
of that day, leaving out nothing he could remember. When he had done, Tathar
asked a series of questions, each jogging Pug’s memory, bringing out small
details he had forgotten.
When he was done, Pug stepped back, and Tathar repeated the process
with Tomas Tomas began haltingly, obviously discomfited, and the Elf Queen
bestowed a reassuring smile on him. That only served to make him more
unsettled, and he was soon dismissed.
Tathar’s questions provided more details about the ship, small
things forgotten by the boys: fire buckets filled with sand tossed about the
deck, empty spear-racks, substantiating Arutha’s surmise that it had been,
indeed, a warship.
Tathar leaned back. “We have never heard of such a ship. It is in
many ways like other ships, but not in all ways. We are convinced.”
As if by silent signal, Calin spoke. “Since the death of my
Father-King, I serve as Warleader of Elvandar. It is my duty to supervise the
scouts and patrols that guard our glades. For some time we have been aware that
there were strange occurrences in the great forest, south of the river Crydee.
Several times our runners have found tracks made by men, in isolated parts of
the forest. They have been found as near as the borders of Elvandar, and as far
as the North Pass near Stone Mountain.
“Our scouts have tried for weeks to find these men, but only tracks
could be seen. There were none of the usual things that would be expected of a
scouting or raiding party. These people were taking great care to disguise
their presence. Had they not passed so close to Elvandar, they might have
remained undetected, but no one may intrude near our home and go unnoticed.
“Several days ago, one of our scouts sighted a band of strangers
passing the river, near the edge of our forests heading in the direction of the
North Pass. He followed for a half day’s march, then lost them.”
Fannon raised his eyebrows. “An elven tracker lost them?”
Calin inclined his head slightly “Not by his lack of skill. They
simply entered a thick glade and never appeared on the other side. He followed
their tracks up to the point where they vanished.”
Lyam said, “I think we know now where they went.” He looked
uncommonly somber, resembling his father more than usual.
Calin continued. “Four days before your message arrived, I led a
patrol that sighted a band near the place of last sighting. They were short and
stocky men, without beards. Some were fair and others dark. There were ten of
them, and they moved through the forest with little ease; the slightest sound
put them on guard. But with all their caution, they still had no idea they were
being tracked.
“They all wore armor of bright colors, reds and blues, some green,
others yellow, save one in black robes. They carried swords like the one on the
table and others without the serration, round shields, and strange bows, short
and curved in an odd doubled-back way.”
Algon sat forward. “They’re recurved bows, like the ones used by
Keshian dog-soldiers.”
Calin spread his hands. “Kesh has long been gone from these lands,
and when we knew the Empire, they used simple bows of yew or ash.”
Algon interrupted in excited tones. “They have a way, secret to
them, of fashioning such bows from wood and animal horn. They are small, but
possess great power, though not as much as the longbow. Their range is
surprisingly—”
Borric cleared his throat pointedly, being unwilling to let the
Horse-master indulge himself in his preoccupation with weaponry. “If His
Highness will please continue?”
Algon sat back, blushing furiously, and Calin said, “I tracked them
for two days. They stopped and made cold camp at night and took great care not
to leave signs of their passing. All food scraps and body wastes were gathered
together in a sack and carried by one of their band. They moved carefully, but
were easy for us to follow.
“When they came to the edge of the forest, near the mouth of North
Pass, they made marks upon a parchment as they had several times during their
trek. Then the one in black activated some strange device, and they vanished.”
There was a stir from the Duke’s company Kulgan especially looked disturbed.
Calin paused. “The thing that was most strange, however, was their
language, for their speech was unlike any we know. They spoke in hushed tones,
but we could hear them, and their words were without meaning.”
The Queen then spoke. “Hearing this, I became alarmed, for these
outworlders are clearly mapping the West, ranging freely through the great
forest, the hills of Stone Mountain, and now the coasts of the Kingdom. Even as
we prepared to send you word, the reports of these outworlders became more
frequent. Several more bands were seen in the area of the North Pass.”
Arutha sat forward, resting his arms on the table. “If they cross
the North Pass, they will discover the wav to Yabon, and the Free Cities. The
snows will have started to fall in the mountains, and they may discover we are
effectively isolated from aid during the winter.”
For a moment alarm flickered on the Duke’s face, betraying his stoic
demeanor. He regained his composure and said, “There is still the South Pass,
and they may not have mapped that far. If they were in that area, the dwarves
would most likely have seen signs of them, as the villages of the Grey Towers
are more widely scattered than those of Stone Mountain.”
“Lord Borric,” said Aglaranna, “I would never have ventured from
Elvandar if I had not thought the situation critical. From what you have told
us of the outworld Empire, if they are as powerful as you say, then I fear for
all the free peoples of the West. While the elves have little love for the
Kingdom as such, we respect those of the Crydee, for you have ever been
honorable men and have never sought to extend your realm into our lands. We
would ally with you should these outworlders come for conquest.”
Borric sat quietly for a moment. “I thank the Lady of Elvandar for
the aid of the elven folk should war come. We are also in your debt for your
counsel, for now we can act. Had we not known of these happenings in the great
forests, we would likely have given the aliens more time for whatever trouble
they are preparing.” He paused again, as if considering his next words. “And I
am convinced that these Tsurani plan us ill. Scouting an alien and strange land
I could see, trying to determine the nature and temper of the people who live
there, but extensive mapping by warriors can only be a prelude to invasion.”
Kulgan sounded fatigued as he said, “They most likely will come with
a mighty host.”
Tully shook his head. “Perhaps not.” All eyes turned to him as he
said, “I am not so certain. Much of what I read in Xomich’s mind was confused,
but there is something about this Empire of Tsuranuanni that makes it unlike
any nation we know of; there is something very alien about their sense of duty
and alliances. I can’t tell you how I know, but I suspect they may choose to
test us first, with but a small part of their might. It’s as if their
attentions are elsewhere, and we’re an afterthought.” He shook his head in
admitted confusion. “I have this sense, nothing more.”
The Duke sat upright, a commanding tone coming into his voice. “We
will act. I will send messages to Duke Brucal of Yabon, and again to Stone
Mountain and the Grey Towers.”
Aglaranna said, “It would be good to hear what the dwarven folk
know.”
Borric said, “I had hoped for word by now, but our messengers have
not returned, nor have the pigeons they carry.”
Lyam said, “Hawks, perhaps. The pigeons are not always reliable, or
perhaps the messengers never reached the dwarves.”
Borric turned to Calin. “It has been forty years since the siege of
Carse, and we have had little traffic with the dwarves since Who commands the
dwarven clans now?”
The Elf Prince said, “As then. Stone Mountain is under the banner of
Harthorn, of Hogar’s line, at village Delmona. The Grey Towers rally to the
banner of Dolgan, of Thohn’s line, at village Caldara.”
“Both are known to me, though I was but a boy when they raised the
Dark Brothers’ siege at Carse,” said Borric “They will prove fierce allies if
trouble comes.”
Arutha said, “What of the Free Cities, and the Prince in Krondor?”
Borric sat back. “I must think on that, for there are problems in
the East, or so I have word. I will give thought to the matter this night.” He
stood. “I thank you all for this counsel Return to your quarters and avail
yourselves of rest and refreshments. I will ask you to consider plans for
dealing with the invaders, should they come, and we will meet again tomorrow.”
As the Elf Queen rose, he offered her his arm, then escorted her
through the doors that Tomas and Pug held open. The boys were the last to exit.
Fannon took Tomas in tow, leading him to the soldiers’ commons, while Kulgan
stood outside the hall with Tully and the two elven advisers.
The magician turned to his apprentice. “Pug, Prince Calin expressed
an interest in your small library of magic books. Would you please show them to
him?”
Pug said he would and led the Prince up the stairs to his door and
opened it for him. Calin stepped through, and Pug followed Fantus was asleep
and woke with a start. He threw the elf a distrustful look.
Calin
slowly crossed over to the drake and spoke a few soft words in a language that
Pug didn’t understand Fantus lost his nervousness and stretched forth his neck
to allow the Prince to scratch his head.
After a moment the drake looked expectantly to Pug. Pug said, “Yes,
dinner is over. The kitchen will be full of scraps.” Fantus moved to the window
with a wolfish grin and used his snout to push it open. With a snap of his
wings he was out, gliding toward the kitchen.
Pug offered Calin a stool, but the Prince said, “Thank you, but your
chairs and stools are of little comfort to my kind. I will just sit on the
floor, with your leave. You have a most unusual pet, Squire Pug.” He gave Pug a
small smile. Pug was a little uncomfortable hosting the Elf Prince in his poor
room, but the elf’s manner was such that the boy started to relax.
“Fantus is less a pet than a permanent guest. He has a mind of his
own. It is not unusual for him to disappear for weeks at a time, now and again,
but mostly he stays here. He must eat outside the kitchen now that Meecham has
gone.”
Calin inquired who Meecham was. Pug explained, adding, “Kulgan has
sent him over the mountains to Bordon, with some of the Duke’s guards, before
the North Pass is snowed in. He didn’t say why he was going, Highness.”
Calin looked at one of the boy’s books. “I prefer to be called
Calin, Pug.”
Pug nodded, pleased. “Calin, what do you think the Duke has in
mind?”
The elf gave him an enigmatic smile. “The Duke will reveal his own
plans, I think. My guess is that Meecham is preparing the way should the Duke
choose to journey east. You will most probably know on the morrow.” He held up
the book he had glanced at. “Did you find this interesting?”
Pug leaned over and read the title. “Dorcas’s Treatise on the
Animation of Objects? Yes, though it seemed a little unclear.”
“A fair judgment. Dorcas was an unclear man, or at least I found him
so.”
Pug started. “But Dorcas died thirty years ago.”
Calin smiled broadly, showing even white teeth. His pale eyes shone
in the lantern light. “Then you know little of elven lore?”
“Little,” Pug agreed. “You are the first elf I have ever spoken
with, though I may have seen another elf once, when I was very little. I’m not
sure.” Calin tossed aside the book. “I know only what Martin Longbow has told
me, that you can somehow speak with animals, and some spirits. That you live in
Elvandar and the surrounding elven forests, and that you stay among your own
kind mostly.”
The elf laughed, a soft, melodic sound. “Nearly all true. Knowing
friend Longbow, I wager some of the tales were colorful, for while he is not a
deceiving man, he has an elf’s humor.” Pug’s expression showed he did not
understand. “We live a very long time by your standards. We learn to appreciate
the humor in the world, often finding amusement in places where men find
little. Or you can call it simply a different way of looking at life. Martin
has learned this from us, I think.”
Pug nodded. “Mocking eyes.”
Calin raised an eyebrow in question. Pug explained, “Many people
here find Martin difficult to be with. Different, somehow. I once heard a
soldier say he had mocking eyes.”
Calin sighed. “Life has been difficult for Martin. He was left on
his own at an early age. The Monks of Silban are good, kindly men, but ill
equipped to raise a boy. Martin lived in the woods like a wild thing when he
could flee his tutors. I found him one day, fighting with two of our
children—we are not very much different from men when very young. Over the
years he has grown to be one of the few humans who is free to come to Elvandar
at will. He is a valued friend. But I think he bears a special burden of
loneliness, not being fully in the world of elves nor of men, but partially in
both.”
Pug saw Martin in a new light and resolved to attempt to know the
Huntmaster better. Returning to the original topic, he said, “Is what he said
true?”
Calin nodded “In some respects. We can speak to animals only as men
do, in tones to make them easy, though we are better at it than most humans,
for we read the moods of wild things more readily. Martin has some of this
knack. We do not, however, speak with spirits. There are creatures we know whom
humans consider spirits—dryads, sprites, pixies—but they are natural beings who
live near our magic.”
Pug’s interest was piqued. “Your magic?”
“Ours is a magic that is part of our being, strongest in Elvandar.
It is a heritage ages old, allowing us to live at peace within our forests.
There we work as others do, hunting, tending our gardens, celebrating our joys,
teaching our young. Time passes slowly in Elvandar, for it is an ageless place.
That is why I can remember speaking with Dorcas, for in spite of my youthful
appearance, I am over a hundred years old.”
“A hundred.” Pug shook his head. “Poor Tomas, he was distressed to
hear you were the Queen’s son. Now he will be desolate.”
Calin inclined his head, a half-smile playing across his face “The
lad who was with us in the council hall?”
Pug nodded. Calin said, “It is not the first time my Mother-Queen
has had such an effect upon a human, though older men can mask the effect with
more ease.”
“You don’t mind?” asked Pug, feeling protective toward his friend.
“No, Pug, of course not. All in Elvandar love the Queen, and it is
acknowledged her beauty is unsurpassed. I find it not surprising your friend is
smitten. Since my Father-King passed, more than one bold noble of your race has
come to press his suit for Aglaranna’s hand. Now her mourning is at an end, and
she may take another should she wish. That it would be one of your race is
unlikely, for while a few such marriages have been made, they are very rare,
and tend to be sad things at the end for our kind. She will live many more
human life spans, the gods willing.”
Calin looked around the room, then added, “It is likely our friend
Tomas will outgrow his feelings for the great lady of the elves. Much as your
Princess will change her feelings toward you, I would think.”
Pug felt embarrassed. He had been curious as to what Carline and the
Elf Prince had spoken about during dinner, but had been uncomfortable asking.
“I noticed you spoke with her at great length.”
“I had expected to meet a hero of seven feet in height, with
lightning dancing around his shoulders. It seems you slew a score of trolls
with a cast of your hand.”
Pug blushed. “It was only two, and mostly by accident.”
Calin’s eyebrows shot up. “Even two is an accomplishment. I had
thought the girl guilty of a flight of fancy. I would like to hear the story.”
Pug told him what had happened. When he was done, Calin said, “It is
an unusual tale, Pug. I know little of human magic, but I do know enough to
think that what you did was as strange as Kulgan said. Elf magic is far
different from human, but we understand ours better than you understand your
own. Never have I heard of such an occurrence, but I can share this with you.
Occasionally, at times of great need, an inner call can be made, bringing forth
powers that lay dormant, deep within.”
Pug said, “I have thought as much, though it would be nice to
understand a little better what happened.”
“That may come in time.”
Pug looked at his guest and sighed deeply. “I wish I could
understand Carline, as well.”
Calin shrugged and smiled “Who can understand another’s mind? I
think for some time to come you will be the object of her attention. Then, it
may be, another will distract her, perhaps young Squire Roland. He seems held
in thrall by her.”
Pug snorted. “Roland! That bother.”
Calin smiled appreciatively. “Then you are fond of the Princess?”
Pug looked upward, as if seeking guidance from some higher source “I
do like her,” he admitted with a heavy sigh. “But I don’t know if I care for
her that special way. Sometimes I think I do—especially when I see Roland
fawning over her—but other times I don’t. She makes it very hard for me to
think clearly, and I always seem to say the wrong things to her.”
“Unlike Squire Roland,” prompted Calin.
Pug nodded. “He’s court born and bred. He knows all the right things
to say.” Pug leaned back on his elbows andsighed wistfully. “I guess I’m just
bothered by him out of envy as much as anything. He makes me feel like an
ill-mannered clod with great lumps of stone for hands and tree stumps for
feet.”
Calin nodded understandingly. “I don’t count myself an expert in all
the ways of your people, Pug, but I’ve spent enough time with humans to know
that you choose how you feel; Roland makes you feel clumsy only because you let
him.
“I would hazard a guess young Roland might feel much the same way
when your positions are reversed. The faults we see in others never seem as
dreadful as those we see in ourselves. Roland might envy your direct speech and
honest manner.
“In any event, what you or Roland do will have little effect on the
Princess so long as she’s determined to have her own way. She has romanticized
you in much the same manner your friend has our Queen. Short of you becoming a
hopeless boor, she will not be shaken from this attitude until she is ready. I
think she has you in mind as her future consort.”
Pug gaped for a moment, then said, “Consort?”
Calin smiled. “The young are often overly concerned with matters to
be settled in later years. I suspect her determination in the matter is as much
a result of your reluctance as from a true appreciation of your worth. She,
like many children, simply wants what she can’t have.” In a friendly tone he
added, “Time will decide the issue.”
Pug leaned forward, a worried expression on his face. “Oh, my, I
have made a hash of things. Half the keep boys think themselves in love with
the Princess. If they only knew how terrifying the real thing can be.” He
closed his eyes, squeezing them tightly shut a moment “My head aches. I thought
she and Roland . . .”
Calin said, “He may be but a tool to provoke your interest. Sadly,
that seems to have resulted in bad feelings between you.”
Pug nodded slowly. “I think so. Roland is a good enough sort on the
whole; we’ve been friends for the most part. But since I was elevated in rank,
he’s been openly hostile. I try to ignore it, but it gets under my skin after a
while. Maybe I should try to talk to him.”
“That would prove wise, I think. But don’t be surprised if he is not
receptive to your words. He is most certainly caught up in her spell.”
Pug was getting a headache from the topic, and the mention of spells
made him ask, “Would you tell me more about elven magic?”
“Our magic is ancient. It is part of what we are and in what we
create. Elven boots can make even a human silent when walking, and elven bows
are better able to strike the mark, for that is the nature of our magic. It is
vested in ourselves, our forests, our creations. It can sometimes be managed,
subtly by those who fully understand it . . . Spellweavers, such as Tathar. But
this is not easily done, for our magic resists manipulation. It is more like
air than anything, always surrounding us, yet unseen. But like air, which can
be felt when the wind blows, it has substance. Our forests are called enchanted
by men, for so long have we dwelled there, our magic has created the mystery of
Elvandar. All who dwell there are at peace. No one may enter Elvandar
uninvited, save by mighty arts, and even the distant boundaries of the elven
forests cause unease in those who enter with evil intent. It has not always
been so; in ages past we shared our lot with others, the moredhel, those you
call the Brotherhood of the Dark Path. Since the great break, when we drove
them from our forests, Elvandar has been changing, becoming more our place, our
home, our essence.”
Pug said, “Are the Brothers of the Dark Path truly cousin to the
elves?”
Calin’s eyes grew hooded. He paused for a moment, then said, “We
speak little of such things, for there is much we wish were not true. I can
tell you this: there is a bond between the moredhel, whom you call the
Brotherhood, and my people, though ancient and long strained. We wish it were
not so, but they are true cousins to us. Once in a great while one comes back
to us, what we call Returning.” He looked as if the topic were making him very
uncomfortable.
Pug said, “I’m sorry if—”
Calin waved away the apology. “Curiosity is nothing to apologize for
in a student, Pug. I just would rather not say more on this subject.”
They spoke late into the night, of many things. Pug was fascinated
by the Elf Prince and was flattered so many things he said seemed to be of
interest to Calin.
At last Calin said, “I should retire. Though I need little rest, I
do need some. And I think you do as well.”
Pug rose and said, “Thank you for telling me so much.” Then he
smiled, half in embarrassment. “And for talking to me about the Princess.”
“You needed to talk.”
Pug led Calin to the long hall, where a servant showed him to his
quarters. Pug returned to his room and lay down for sleep, rejoined by a damp
Fantus, who snorted in indignation at having to fly through the ram. Fantus was
soon asleep Pug, however, lay staring at the flickering light from his fire pot
that danced on the ceiling, unable to call up sleep. He tried to put the tales
of strange warriors out of his mind, but images of brightly clad fighters
stalking through the forests of the westlands made sleep impossible.
There was a somber mood throughout Castle Crydee the next morning.
The servants’ gossip had spread the news about the Tsurani, though the details
were lacking. Everyone went about his duties with one ear open for a tidbit of
speculation on what the Duke was going to do. Everyone was agreed to one thing:
Borric conDoin, Duke of Crydee, was not a man to sit idly by waiting. Something
would be done, and soon.
Pug sat atop a bale of hay, watching Tomas practice with a sword,
swinging at a pell post, hacking backhand, then forehand, over and over. His
blows were halfhearted, and finally he threw his sword down with disgust. “I’m
not accomplishing a thing.” He walked over and sat next to Pug. “I wonder what
they’re talking about.”
Pug shrugged. “They” were the Duke’s council; today the boys had not
been asked to attend, and the last four hours had passed slowly.
Abruptly the courtyard became busy as servants began to rush toward
the front gate. “Come on,” said Tomas Pug jumped off the bale and followed his
friend.
They rounded the keep in time to see the guards turning out as they
had the day before. It was colder than yesterday, but there was no rain. The
boys climbed on the same wagon, and Tomas shivered. “I think the snows will
come early this year. Maybe tomorrow.”
“If they do, it will be the earliest snowfall in memory. You should
have worn your cloak Now you’re all sweaty from the drill, and the air is
chilling you.”
Tomas looked pained. “Gods, you sound like my mother.”
Pug mimicked an exasperated manner. In a tone that was high-pitched
and nasal, he said, “And don’t come running to me when you’re all blue with
chill, and coughing and sneezing, looking for comfort, for you’ll find none
here, Tomas Megarson.”
Tomas grinned. “Now you sound exactly like her.”
They turned at the sound of the great doors opening. The Duke and
Elf Queen led the other guests from the central keep, the Duke holding the
Queen’s hand in a parting gesture of friendship. Then the Queen placed her hand
to her mouth and sang out a musical series of words, not loud, but carrying
over the noise of the crowd. The servants who were standing in the court became
silent, and soon the sound of hoof-beats could be heard outside the castle.
Twelve white horses ran through the gates and reared up in greeting
to the Elf Queen. The elves quickly mounted, each springing up on an elf
steed’s back without assistance. They raised their hands in salute to the Duke,
then turned and raced out the gate.
For a few minutes after they were gone, the crowd stood around, as
if loath to admit that they had seen their last of the elves, probably their
last in this lifetime. Slowly they began to drift back to work.
Tomas looked far away, and Pug turned toward him. “What is it?”
Tomas said softly, “I wish I could see Elvandar, someday.”
Pug understood. “Maybe you will.” Then he added, in lighter tones,
“But I doubt it. For I will be a magician, and you will be a soldier, and the
Queen will reign in Elvandar long after we are dead.”
Tomas playfully jumped atop his friend, wrestling him down in the
straw “Oh! Is that so. Well, I will too go to Elvandar someday.” He pinned Pug
under him, sitting atop his chest. “And when I do, I’ll be a great hero, with
victories over the Tsurani by the score. She’ll welcome me as an honored guest.
What do you think of that?”
Pug laughed, trying to push his friend off. “And I’ll be the
greatest magician in the land.”
They both laughed. A voice broke through their play. “Pug! There you
are.”
Tomas got off, and Pug sat up. Approaching them was the stocky
figure of Gardell the smith. He was a barrel-chested man, with little hair but
a thick black beard. His arms were grimy with smoke, and his apron was burned
through with many small holes. He came to the side of the wagon and placed
fists on hips. “I’ve been looking all over for you. I have that hood Kulgan
asked me to fashion for your fire pot.”
Pug scrambled out of the wagon, with Tomas close behind. They walked
after Gardell toward the smithy behind the central keep. The burly smith said,
“Damned clever idea, that hood I’ve worked the forge for nearly thirty years
and never thought of using a hood for a fire pot. Had to make one as soon as
Kulgan told me of the plan.”
They entered the smithy, a large shed with a large and small forge
and several different-sized anvils. All manner of things lay about waiting for
repair: armor, stirrup irons, and kitchen utensils Gardell walked to the larger
forge and picked up the hood. It was about three feet to a side, about three
feet high, and formed a cone with a hole at the top. Lengths of round metal
pipe lay nearby, fashioned especially thin.
Gardell held out his creation for them to study. “I made it fairly
thin, using a lot of tin for lightness, for were it too heavy, it would
collapse.” With his toe he pointed to several lengths of metal rods. “We’ll
knock some little holes in the floor and use these for support. It may take a
bit of time to get it right, but I think this thing of yours is going to work.”
Pug smiled broadly. He found great pleasure in seeing an idea of his
taking concrete form. It was a novel and gratifying sensation. “When can we
install it?”
“Now if you like. I would like to see it work, I must confess.” Pug
gathered up some of the pipe, and Tomas the rest, as well as the rods. Juggling
the awkward load, they set out toward the magician’s tower, with the chuckling
smith following.
Kulgan was deep in thought as he started to mount the stairs to his
room. Suddenly a shout from above sounded: “Watch out!” Kulgan glanced up in
time to see a block of stone come tumbling down the stairs, bounding over the
steps as if in some fit of drunken craziness. He leapt aside as it struck
against the wall where he had stood and came to rest at the bottom of the stairs.
Mortar dust filled the air, and Kulgan sneezed.
Tomas and Pug came running down the stairs, expressions of worry on
their faces. When they saw no one was hurt, they both looked relieved.
Kulgan leveled a baleful gaze upon the pair and said, “What is all
this?”
Pug appeared sheepish, while Tomas tried to blend in with the wall
Pug spoke first. “We were trying to carry the stone down to the yard, and it
sort of slipped.”
“Sort of slipped? It looked more like a mad dash for freedom. Now,
why were you carrying the stone, and where did it come from?”
“It’s the loose one from my wall,” answered Pug. “We took it out so
that Gardell could put the last pipe in place.” When Kulgan still appeared
uncomprehending, Pug said, “It’s for my fire pot hood, remember?”
“Ah,” said Kulgan, “yes. Now I do.” A servant arrived to investigate
the noise, and Kulgan asked him to fetch a couple of workmen from the yard to
carry the block away. He left, and Kulgan said to the boys, “I think it would
be better to let someone a little larger tote that stone out. Now let us see
this marvel.”
They climbed the stairs to the boy’s room and found Gardell
installing the last length of pipe. The smith turned when they entered and
said, “Well, what do you think?”
The pot had been moved a little closer to the wall, and the hood sat
on four metal rods of equal length over it. All of the smoke was trapped by the
hood and carried away through the light metal pipe. Unfortunately, the hole
where the stone was missing was considerably larger than the pipe, so most of
the smoke was blown back into the room by the wind.
“Kulgan, what do you think?” said Pug.
“Well, boy. It looks rather impressive, but I can’t see much
improvement in the atmosphere here.”
Gardell gave the hood a solid whack with his hand, causing it to
ring out with a tinny sound. His thick calluses kept his hand from being burned
by the hot metal. “She’ll do, soon as I plug up that hole, magician. I’ll fetch
some bull hide that I use for making shields for the horsemen and cut a hole in
a piece, slip it around the pipe, and nail it to the wall. A few slaps of
tanning agent on it, and the heat will dry it out all stiff and hard. It will
take the heat and keep the rain and wind out of the room, as well as the
smoke.” The smith looked pleased with his handiwork. “Well, I’ll fetch the
hide. Back in a moment.”
Pug looked as if he would burst from pride, seeing his invention
before him, and Tomas reflected Pug’s glory. Kulgan chuckled softly to himself
for a moment. Suddenly Pug turned to the magician, remembering where he had
spent the day. “What is the news from the council?”
“The Duke sends messages to all the nobles of the West, explaining
what has occurred in great detail, and asking that the Armies of the West be
made ready. I am afraid Tully’s scribes have some rigorous days ahead of them,
since the Duke wants them all finished as soon as possible. Tully’s in a state,
for he has been commanded to stay and act as Lyam’s adviser, along with Fannon
and Algon, during the Duke’s absence.”
“Yes, the Duke, Arutha, and I are going to journey to the Free
Cities, and on to Krondor, to speak with Prince Erland. I am going to send a
dream message to a colleague of mine tonight, if I can. Belgan lives north of
Bordon. He will send word to Meecham, who should be there by now, to find us a
ship. The Duke feels it best that he should carry the word in person.”
Pug and Tomas looked excited. Kulgan knew they both wanted to come
along. To visit Krondor would be the greatest adventure of their young lives
Kulgan stroked his grey beard. “It will be difficult to continue your lessons,
but Tully can brush you up on a trick or two.”
Pug looked as if he were going to burst. “Please, Kulgan, may I come
too?”
Kulgan feigned surprise. “You come? I never thought of that.” He
paused for a moment while the suspense built. “Well . . .” Pug’s eyes pleaded.
“. . . I guess it would be all right.” Pug let out a yelp and jumped in the
air.
Tomas struggled to hide his disappointment. He forced a thin smile
and tried to look happy for Pug.
Kulgan walked to the door. Pug noticed Tomas’s dejected expression.
“Kulgan?” Pug said. The magician turned, a faint smile on his lips.
“Yes, Pug?”
“Tomas, too?”
Tomas shook his head, for he was neither a member of the court nor
the magician’s charge, but his eyes looked at Kulgan imploringly.
Kulgan smiled broadly. “I guess we’re better off keeping you
together, so we need look for trouble in only one place. Tomas, too. I’ll
arrange things with Fannon.”
Tomas shouted, and the two boys slapped each other on the back.
Pug said, “When do we leave?”
Kulgan laughed. “In five days’ time. Or sooner, if the Duke hears
from the dwarves. Runners are being sent to the North Pass to see if it is
clear. If not, we ride by the South Pass.”
Kulgan departed, leaving the two boys dancing arm in arm and
whooping with excitement.
7
UNDERSTANDING
Pug hurried across the courtyard.
Princess Carline had sent him a note asking him to meet her in her
flower garden. It was the first word from the girl since she had stormed away
from their last meeting, and Pug was anxious. He did not want to be on bad
terms with Carline, regardless of any conflicts he might be feeling. After his
brief discussion with Calin, two days earlier, he had sought out. Father Tully
and talked with him at length.
The old priest had been willing to take time out to speak with the
boy, in spite of the demands the Duke was placing upon his staff. It had been a
good talk for Pug, leaving him with a surer sense of himself. The final message
from the old cleric had been: Stop worrying about what the Princess feels and
thinks, and start discovering what Pug feels and thinks.
He had taken the cleric’s advice and was now sure of what he would
say should Carline start referring to any sort of “understanding” between them.
For the first time in weeks he felt something like a sense of direction—even if
he was not sure what destination he would eventually reach, holding to such a
course.
Reaching the Princess’s garden, he rounded a corner, then stopped,
for instead of Carline, Squire Roland stood by the steps. With a slight smile,
Roland nodded. “Good day, Pug.”
“Good day, Roland.” Pug looked around.
“Expecting someone?” said Roland, forcing a note of lightness that
did little to hide a belligerent tone. He casually rested his left hand on the
pommel of his sword. Apart from his sword, he was dressed as usual, in colorful
breeches and tunic of green and gold, with tall riding boots.
“Well, actually, I was expecting to see the Princess,” Pug said,
with a small note of defiance in his manner.
Roland feigned surprise. “Really? Lady Glynis mentioned something
about a note, but I had come to understand things were strained between the two
of you . . .”
While
Pug had tried to sympathize with Roland’s situation over the last few days, his
offhanded, superior attitude and his chronic antagonism conspired to irritate
Pug. Letting his exasperation get the better of him, he snapped, “As one squire
to another, Roland, let me put it this way: how things stand between
Carline and myself is none of your business!”
Roland’s face took on an expression of open anger. He stepped
forward, looking down at the shorter boy “Be damned it’s none of my business! I
don’t know what you’re playing at, Pug, but if you do anything to hurt her,
I’ll—”
“Me hurt her!” Pug interrupted. He was shocked by the intensity of
Roland’s anger and infuriated by the threat “She’s the one playing us one
against the other—”
Abruptly Pug felt the ground tilt under him, rising up to strike him
from behind Lights exploded before his eyes and a bell-like clanging sounded in
his ears. It was a long moment before he realized Roland had just hit him. Pug
shook his head and his eyes refocused. He saw the older, larger squire standing
over him, both hands balled into fists. Through tightly clenched teeth, Roland
spat his words. “If you ever say ill of her again, I’ll beat you senseless.”
Pug’s anger fired within him, rising each second. He got carefully
to his feet, his eyes upon Roland, who stood ready to fight. Feeling the bitter
taste of anger in his mouth, Pug said, “You’ve had two years and more to win
her, Roland. Leave it alone.”
Roland’s face grew livid and he charged, bowling Pug off his feet.
They went down in a tangle, Roland striking Pug harmlessly on the shoulders and
arms. Rolling and grappling, neither could inflict much damage. Pug got his arm
around Roland’s neck and hung on as the older squire thrashed in a frenzy.
Suddenly Roland wedged a knee against Pug’s chest and shoved him away. Pug
rolled and came to his feet. Roland was up an instant later, and they squared
off. Roland’s expression had changed from rage to cold, calculating anger as he
measured the distance between them. He advanced carefully, his left arm bent
and extended, his right fist held ready before his face Pug had no experience
with this form of fighting, called fist-boxing, though he had seen it practiced
for money in traveling shows. Roland had demonstrated on several occasions that
he had more than a passing acquaintance with the sport.
Pug sought to take the advantage and swung a wild, roundhouse blow
at Roland’s head. Roland dodged back as Pug swung completely around, then the
squire jumped forward, his left hand snapping out, catching Pug on the cheek,
rocking his head back with a stinging blow. Pug stumbled away, and Roland’s
right hand missed Pug’s chin by a fraction.
Pug held up his hands to ward off another blow and shook his head,
clearing it of the dancing lights that obscured his vision, barely managing to
duck beneath Roland’s next blow. Under Roland’s guard, Pug lunged, catching the
other boy in the stomach with his shoulder, knocking him down again. Pug fell
on top of him and struggled to pin the larger boy’s arms to his side. Roland
struck out, catching Pug’s temple with an elbow, and the dazed magician’s apprentice
fell away, momentarily confused.
As he rose to his feet again, pain exploded in Pug’s face, and the
world tilted once more. Disoriented, unable to defend himself, Pug felt
Roland’s blows as distant events, somehow muted and not fully recognized by his
reeling senses. A faint note of alarm sounded in part of Pug’s mind. Without
warning, processes began to occur under the level of pain-dimmed consciousness.
Basic, more animal instincts took hold, and in a disjointed, hardly understood
awareness, a new force emerged. As in the encounter with the trolls, blinding
letters of light and flame appeared in his mind’s eye, and he silently
incanted.
Pug’s being became primitive. In his remaining consciousness he was
a primal creature fighting for survival with murderous intent. All he could
envision was choking the very life from his adversary.
Suddenly an alarm rang within Pug’s mind. A deep sense of wrongness,
of evil, struck him. Months of training came to the fore, and it was as if he
could hear Kulgan’s voice crying, “This is not how the power is to be used!”
Ripping aside the mental shroud that covered him, Pug opened his eyes.
Through blurred vision and sparkling lights, Pug saw Roland kneeling
a mere yard before him, eyes enlarged, vainly struggling with the invisible
fingers around his neck. Pug felt no sense of contact with what he saw, and
with returning clarity of mind knew at once what had occurred. Leaning forward,
he seized Roland’s wrists. “Stop it, Roland! Stop it! It isn’t real. There are
no hands but your own at your throat.” Roland, blind with panic, seemed unable
to hear Pug’s shouts. Mustering what remaining strength he possessed, Pug
yanked Roland’s hands away, then struck him a stinging slap to the face.
Roland’s eyes teared and suddenly he breathed in, a gasping, ragged sound.
Still panting, Pug said, “It’s an illusion. You were choking
yourself.”
Roland gasped and pushed himself back from Pug, fear evident on his
face. He struggled weakly to pull his sword Pug leaned forward and firmly gripped
Roland’s wrist. Barely able to speak, he shook his head and said, “There’s no
reason.”
Roland looked into Pug’s eyes, and the fear in his own began to
subside. Something inside the older squire seemed to break, and there was only
a fatigued, drained young man sitting on the ground. Breathing heavily, Roland
sat back, tears forming in his eyes, and asked, “Why?”
Pug’s own fatigue made him lean back, supporting himself on his
hands. He studied the handsome young face before him, twisted by doubt “Because
you’re held under a spell more compelling than any I could fashion.” He looked
Roland in the eyes “You truly love her, don’t you?”
The last vestige of Roland’s anger slowly evaporated and his eyes
showed some slight fear remaining, but also Pug saw deep pain and anguish as a
tear fell to his cheek. His shoulders slumped and he nodded, his breath ragged
as he tried to speak. For a moment he was on the verge of crying, but he fought
off his pain and regained his poise Taking a deep breath, Roland wiped away the
tears and took another deep breath. He looked directly at Pug, then guardedly
asked, “And you?”
Pug sprawled on the ground, feeling some strength returning. “I . .
. I’m not sure. She makes me doubt myself. I don’t know. Sometimes I think of
no one else, and other times I wish I were as far from her as I could be.”
Roland indicated understanding, the last residue of fear draining
away. “Where she’s concerned, I don’t have a whit of wit.”
Pug giggled. Roland looked at him, then also began to laugh “I don’t
know why,” said Pug, “but for some reason, I find what you said terribly
funny.” Roland nodded and began to laugh too. Soon they were both sitting with
tears running down their faces as the emotional vacuum left by the fleeing
anger was replaced by giddiness.
Roland recovered slightly, holding back the laughter, when Pug
looked at him and said, “A whit of wit!” which sent both of them off on another
kag of laughter.
“Well!” a voice said sharply. They turned and found Carline, flanked
by two ladies-in-waiting, surveying the scene before her. Instantly both boys
became silent. Casting a disapproving look upon the pair as they sprawled upon
the ground, she said, “Since you two seem so taken with each other, I’ll not
intrude.”
Pug and Roland exchanged looks and suddenly erupted into uproarious
laughter. Roland fell over backward, while Pug sat, legs stretched before him,
laughing into his cupped hands. Carline flushed angrily and her eyes widened
With cold fury in her voice she said “Excuse me!” and turned, sweeping by her
ladies. As she left, they could hear her loudly exclaim, “Boys!”
Pug and Roland sat for a minute until the near-hysterical fit
passed, then Roland rose and extended his hand to Pug. Pug took it and Roland
helped him to his feet. “Sorry, Pug. I had no right to be angry with you.” His
voice softened. “I can’t sleep nights thinking of her I wait for the few
moments we’re together each day. But since you saved her, all I ever hear is
your name.” Touching his sore neck, Roland said, “I got so angry, I thought I’d
kill you. Damn near got myself killed instead.”
Pug looked at the corner where the Princess had disappeared, nodding
agreement. “I’m sorry, too, Roland. I’m not very good at controlling magic yet,
and when I lose my temper, it seems all sorts of terrible things can happen.
Like with the trolls.” Pug wanted Roland to understand he was still Pug, even
though he was now a magician’s apprentice. “I would never do something like
that on purpose—especially to a friend.”
Roland studied Pug’s face a moment and grinned, half-wryly,
half-apologetically “I understand I acted badly You were right: she’s only
setting us one against the other I am the fool. It’s you she cares for.”
Pug seemed to wilt. “Believe me, Roland, I’m not so sure I’m to be
envied.”
Roland’s grin widened. “She is a strong-willed girl, that’s clear.”
Caught halfway between an open display of self-pity and mock-bravado, Roland
selected mock-bravado.
Pug shook his head. “What’s to be done, Roland?”
Roland looked surprised, then laughed loudly. “Don’t look to me for
advice, Pug I dance to her tune more than any. But ‘there are as many changes
in a young girl’s heart as in the fickle winds,’ as the old saying goes. I’ll
not blame you for Carline’s actions.” He winked at Pug conspiratorially.
“Still, you won’t mind if I keep an eye out for a change in the weather?”
Pug laughed in spite of his exhaustion. “I thought you seemed a
little too gracious in vour concessions.” A thoughtful look came over his face
“You know, it would be simpler—not better, but simpler—if she’d ignore me
forever, Roland. I don’t know what to think about all this. I’ve got my
apprenticeship to complete. Someday I’ll have estates to manage. Then there’s
this business with the Tsurani. It’s all come so quickly, I don’t know what to
do.”
Roland regarded Pug with some sympathy. He put his hand upon the
younger boy’s shoulder. “I forget this business of being apprentice and noble
is all rather new to you. Still, I can’t say I’ve given too much time to such
weighty considerations myself, even though my lot was decided before I was
born. This worrying about the future is a dry sort of work. I think it would be
benefited by a mug of strong ale.”
Feeling his aches and bruises, Pug nodded agreement. “Would that we
could. But Megar will be of a different mind, I’m afraid.”
Roland placed his finger alongside his nose “We shan’t let the
Mastercook smell us out, then. Come on, I know a place where the boards of the
ale shed are loose. We can quaff a cup or two in private.”
Roland began to walk away, but Pug halted him by saying, “Roland, I
am sorry we came to blows.”
Roland stopped, studied Pug a moment, and grinned. “And I.” He
extended his hand. “A peace.”
Pug gripped it. “A peace.”
They turned the corner, leaving the Princess’s garden behind, then
stopped. Before them was a scene of unalloyed misery. Tomas was walking the
length of the court, from the soldiers’ commons to the side gate, in full
armor—old chain mail over gambeson, full helm, and heavy metal greaves over
knee boots. On one arm he bore a heater shield, and in the other hand he held a
heavy spear, twelve feet long and iron-tipped, which bore down cruelly upon his
right shoulder. It also gave him a comic appearance, as it caused him to lean a
little to the right and wobble slightly as he struggled to keep it balanced
while he marched.
The sergeant of the Duke’s Guard stood counting out cadence for him.
Pug knew the sergeant, a tall, friendly man named Gardan. He was Keshian by
ancestry, evident in his dark skin. His white teeth split his dark, nappy beard
in a grin at the sight of Pug and Roland. He stood nearly as broad in the
shoulders as Meecham, with the same loose-gaited movement of a hunter or
fighter. Though his black hair was lightly dusted with grey, his face was
young-looking and unlined, despite thirty years’ service. With a wink at Pug
and Roland, he barked, “Halt!” and Tomas stopped in his tracks.
As Pug and Roland closed the distance between them, Gardan snapped,
“Right turn!” Tomas obeyed “Members of the court approaching. Present arms!”
Tomas extended his right arm, and his spear dipped in salute. He let the tip
drop slightly too low, and nearly broke from attention to pull it back.
Pug and Roland came up to stand next to Gardan, and the large
soldier gave them a casual salute and a warm smile. “Good day, Squires.” He
turned to Tomas for a moment. “Shoulder arms! March post march!” Tomas set off,
marching the “post” assigned to him, in this case the length of the yard before
the soldiers’ commons.
With a laugh, Roland said, “What is this? Special drills?”
Gardan stood with one hand on his sword, the other pointed at Tomas.
“Swordmaster Fannon felt it might prove beneficial to our young warrior if
someone was here to see his drilling didn’t become sloppy from exhaustion or
some other petty inconvenience.” Dropping his voice a bit, he added, “He’s a
tough lad; he’ll be fine, if a little footsore.”
“Why the special drilling?” asked Roland. Pug shook his head as
Gardan told them.
“Our young hero lost two swords. The first was understandable, for
the matter of the ship was vital, and in the excitement of the moment such an
oversight could be forgiven. But the second was found lying on the wet ground
near the pell the afternoon the Elf Queen and her party left, and young Tomas
was nowhere in sight.” Pug knew Tomas had forgotten all about returning to his
drilling when Gardell had come with the hood for his fire pot.
Tomas reached the end of his appointed route, did an about-face, and
began his return. Gardan regarded the two bruised and dirty boys and said,
“What have you two young gentlemen been up to?”
Roland cleared his throat in a theatrical fashion and said, “Ah . .
. I was giving Pug a fist-boxing lesson.”
Gardan reached out and took Pug’s chin in his hand, turning the
boy’s face for inspection Evaluating the damage, he said, “Roland, remind me
never to ask you to instruct my men in swordplay—we couldn’t withstand the
casualty rate.” Releasing his hold upon Pug’s face, he said, “You’ll have a
beautiful eye in the morning, Squire.”
Changing the topic, Pug said, “How are your sons, Gardan?”
“Well enough, Pug. They learn their craft and dream of making
themselves rich, save for the youngest, Faxon, who is still intent on becoming
a soldier next Choosing. The rest are becoming expert cart-wrights under my
brother Jeheil’s tutelage.” He smiled sadly. “With only Faxon at home the house
is very empty, though my wife seems glad for the peace.” Then he grinned, an
infectious smile that rarely could be viewed and not answered. “Still, it won’t
be too long before the elder boys marry, and then there’ll be grandchildren
under foot and plenty of merry noise again, from time to time.”
As Tomas drew near, Pug asked, “May I speak with the condemned?”
Gardan laughed, stroking his short beard. “I guess I might look the
other way for a moment, but be brief, Squire.” Pug left Gardan talking with
Roland and fell into step beside Tomas as he passed on his way to the opposite
end of the court. “How goes it?” Pug asked.
Out of the side of his mouth, Tomas said, “Oh, just fine. Two more
hours of this and I’ll be ready for burial.”
“Can’t you rest?”
“On the half hour I get five minutes to stand at attention.” He
reached the terminus of his post and did a reasonably sharp about-face, then
resumed walking back toward Gardan and Roland. “After the fire-pot cover was
finished, I came back to the pell and found the sword missing. I thought my
heart would stop I looked everywhere I almost thrashed Rulf, thinking he had
hidden it to spite me. When I returned to the commons, Fannon was sitting on my
bunk, oiling down the blade. I thought the other soldiers would hurt themselves
holding in the laughter when he said, ‘If you judge yourself skilled enough
with the sword, perhaps you’d care to spend your time learning the proper way
to walk post with a poll arm.’ All day walking punishment,” he added woefully
“I’ll die.”
They passed Roland and Gardan, and Pug struggled to feel sympathy.
Like the others, he found the situation comical Hiding his amusement, he
lowered his voice to a conspiratorial tone and said, “I’d better get along.
Should the Swordmaster come along, he might tack on an extra day’s marching.”
Tomas groaned at the thought. “Gods preserve me. Get away, Pug.”
Pug whispered, “When you’re done, join us in the ale shed if you’re
able.” Pug left Tomas’s side and rejoined Gardan and Roland. To the sergeant he
said, “Thank you, Gardan.”
“You are welcome, Pug Our young knight-in-the-making will be fine,
though he feels set upon now. He also chafes at having an audience.”
Roland nodded. “Well, I expect he’ll not be losing a sword again
soon.”
Gardan laughed “Too true. Master Fannon could forgive the first, but
not the second. He thought it wise to see Tomas didn’t make a habit of it. Your
friend is the finest student the Swordmaster has known since Prince Arutha, but
don’t tell Tomas that. Fannon’s always hardest on those with the most
potential. Well, good day to you both, Squires. And, boys,”—they paused—”I
won’t mention the ‘fist-boxing lesson.’ ”
They thank the sergeant for his discretion and walked toward the ale
shed, with the measured cadence of Gardan’s voice filling the court.
***
Pug was
well into his second mug of ale and Roland finishing his fourth when Tomas
appeared through the loose boards. Dirty and sweating, he was rid of his armor
and weapons. With a great display of fatigue, he said, “The world must be
coming to an end; Fannon excused me from punishment early.”
“Why?” asked Pug.
Roland lazily reached over to a storage shelf, next to where he sat
upon a sack of grain soon to be used for making ale, and got a cup from a
stack. He tossed it to Tomas, who caught it, then filled it from the hogshead
of ale that Roland rested his feet upon.
Taking a deep drink, Tomas wiped his mouth with the back of his hand
and said, “Something’s afoot. Fannon swooped down, told me to put away my toys,
and nearly dragged Gardan off, he was in such a hurry.”
Pug said, “Maybe the Duke is getting ready to ride east?”
Tomas said, “Maybe.” He studied his two friends, taking note of
their freshly bruised countenances. “All right. What happened?”
Pug regarded Roland, indicating he should explain the sad state of
their appearance. Roland gave Tomas a lopsided grin and said, “We had a
practice bout in preparation for the Duke’s fist-boxing tourney.”
Pug nearly choked on his ale, then laughed. Tomas shook his head.
“If you two don’t look a pair. Fighting over the Princess?”
Pug and Roland exchanged glances; then as one they leaped at Tomas
and bore him to the floor under their combined weight. Roland pinned Tomas to
the floor, then, while Pug held him in place, took a half-filled cup of ale and
held it high. With mock solemnity Roland said, “I hearby anoint thee, Tomas,
First Seer of Crydee!” So saying, he poured the contents of the cup over the
struggling boy’s face.
Pug belched, then said, “As do I.” He poured what remained in his
cup over his friend.
Tomas spat ale, laughing as he said, “Right! I was right!”
Struggling against the weight upon him, he said, “Now get off! Or need I remind
you, Roland, of who gave you your last bloody nose?”
Roland
moved off very slowly, intoxicated dignity forcing him to move with glacial
precision. “Quite right.” Turning toward Pug, who had also rolled off Tomas, he
said, “Still, it must be made clear that at the time, the only reason
Tomas managed to bloody my nose is that during our fight he had an unfair
advantage.”
Pug looked at Roland through bleary eyes and said, “What unfair
advantage?”
Roland put his finger to his lips indicating secrecy, then said, “He
was winning.”
Roland collapsed back upon the grain sack and Pug and Tomas
dissolved into laughter. Pug found the remark so funny, he couldn’t stop, and
hearing Tomas’s laughter only caused his own to redouble. At last he sat up,
gasping, with his sides hurting.
Catching his breath, Pug said, “I missed that set-to. I was doing
something else, but I don’t remember what.”
“You were down in the village learning to mend nets, if I remember
rightly, when Roland first came here from Tulan.”
With a
crooked grin Roland said, “I got into an argument with someone or another—do
you remember who?” Tomas shook his head no. “Anyway, I got into an argument,
and Tomas came over and tried to break it up I couldn’t believe this skinny
boy—” Tomas began to voice an objection, but Roland cut him off, holding a
finger upright and wiggling it. “Yes, you were Very skinny I couldn’t believe
this skinny boy—skinny common boy—would presume to tell me—a
newly appointed member of the Duke’s court and a gentleman, I must
add—the way to behave. So I did the only thing a proper gentleman could do
under the circumstances.”
“What’“ asked Pug.
“I hit him in the mouth.” The three laughed again.
Tomas shook his head at the recollection, while Roland said, “Then
he proceeded to give me the worst beating I had since the last time my father
caught me out at something.
“That’s when I got serious about fist-boxing.”
With an air of mock gravity, Tomas said, “Well, we were younger
then.”
Pug refilled the cups. Moving his jaw in discomfort, he said, “Well,
right now I feel about a hundred years old.”
Tomas studied them both a moment. “Seriously, what was the fight
about?”
With a mixture of humor and regret, Roland said, “Our liege lord’s daughter,
a girl of ineffable charm . . .”
“What’s ineffable?” Tomas asked.
Roland looked at him with intoxicated disdain “Indescribable, dolt!”
Tomas shook his head. “I don’t think the Princess is an
indescribable dolt—” He ducked as Roland’s cup sailed through the space
occupied by his head an instant before. Pug fell over backward laughing again.
Tomas grinned as Roland, in a display of great ceremony, fetched
down another cup from the shelf. “As I was saying,” he began, filling the cup
from the hogshead, “our lady, a girl of ineffable charms—if somewhat
questionable judgment—has taken it into her head—for reasons only the gods may
fully comprehend—to favor our young magician here with her attentions. Why—when
she could spend time with me—I can’t imagine.” He paused to belch. “In any
event, we were discussing the proper manner in which to accept such largess.”
Tomas looked at Pug, a huge grin on his face. “You have my sympathy,
Pug You most certainly have your hands full.”
Pug felt himself flush. Then with a wicked leer, he said, “Do I? And
what about a certain young apprentice soldier, well-known hereabouts, who has
been seen sneaking into the larder with a certain kitchen girl?” He leaned back
and with a look of mock concern etched upon his face added, “I’d hate to think
what would happen to him should Neala find out . . .”
Roland lay back, holding his sides. “Never have I seen such a fair
impersonation of a freshly landed fish!” He sat up, crossed his eyes, and
opened and shut his mouth rapidly. All three degenerated into helpless mirth
again.
Another round was poured, and Roland held up his cup. “Gentlemen, a
toast!”
Pug and Tomas held up their cups.
Roland’s voice turned serious, and he said, “No matter what
differences we have had in the past, you are two fellows I gladly count
friends.” He held his cup higher and said, “To friendship!”
The three drained their cups and refilled them Roland said, “Your
hand upon it.”
The three boys joined hands, and Roland said, “No matter where we
go, no matter how many years pass, never again shall we be without friends.”
Pug was stuck by the sudden solemnity of the pledge and said,
“Friends!”
Tomas echoed Pug’s words, and the three shook hands in a gesture of
affirmation.
Again the cups were drained, and the afternoon sun quickly fled
beyond the horizon as the three boys lost time in the rosy glow of camaraderie
and ale.
Pug came awake, groggy and disoriented. The faint glow from his
nearly extinguished fire pot cast the room into halftones of rose and black. A
faint but persistent knocking sounded on his door. He slowly stood, then nearly
fell, still intoxicated from his drinking bout. He had stayed with Tomas and
Roland in the storage room all evening and into the night, missing supper
entirely. “Putting a considerable dent” in the castle’s ale supply, as Roland
had described it. They hadn’t partaken of any great amount, but as their
capacity was slight, it seemed a heroic undertaking.
Pug drew on his trousers and wobbled over to the door His eyelids
felt gritty, and his mouth was cotton dry. Wondering who could be demanding
entrance in the middle of the night, he threw aside the door.
A blur of motion passed him, and he turned to find Carline standing
in the room, a heavy cloak wrapped around her. “Close the door!” she hissed.
“Someone might pass the base of the tower and see light upon the stairway.”
Pug obeyed, still disoriented. The only thing that penetrated his
numb mind was the thought that it was unlikely the faint light from the coals
would cast much brightness down the stairwell. He shook his head, gathering his
wits about him, and crossed to the fire pot. He lit a taper from the coals and
lit his lantern. The room sprang into cheery brightness.
Pug’s thinking began to pick up a little as Carline looked about the
room, taking stock of the disorderly pile of books and scrolls next to the
pallet. She peered into every corner of the room, then said, “Where is that
dragon thing you keep about?”
Pug’s eyes focused a little, and marshaling his balky tongue, he
said, “Fantus? He’s off somewhere, doing whatever it is firedrakes do.”
Removing
her cloak, she said, “Good. He frightens me.” She sat on Pug’s unmade pallet
and looked sternly at him. “I want to speak with you.” Pug’s eyes went wide,
and he stared, for Carline was wearing only a light cotton sleeping gown. While
covering her from neck to ankles, it was thin and clung to her figure with alarming
tenacity. Pug suddenly realized he was dressed only in trousers and
hurriedly grabbed up his tunic from where he had dropped it onto the floor and
pulled it over his head. As he struggled with the shirt, the last shreds of
alcoholic fog evaporated. “Gods!” he said, in a pained whisper. “Should your
father learn of this, he’d have my head.”
“Not if you’ve wits enough to keep your voice lowered,” she answered
with a petulant look.
Pug crossed to the stool near his pallet, freed of his drunken
wobble by newly arrived terror. She studied his rumpled appearance and with a
note of disapproval in her voice said, “You’ve been drinking.” When he didn’t
deny it, she added, “When you and Roland didn’t appear at supper, I wondered
where you’d gotten yourselves off to. It’s a good thing Father also skipped the
meal with the court, otherwise he’d have sent someone to find you.”
Pug’s discomfort was growing at an alarming rate as every tale of
what horrible fate awaits lowborn lovers of noblewomen rushed back into his
memory. That Carline was an uninvited guest and that nothing untoward had
occurred were niceties he didn’t think the Duke would find particularly
mitigating. Gulping down panic, Pug said, “Carline, you can’t stay here. You’ll
get us both into more trouble than I can imagine.”
Her expression became determined. “I’m not leaving until I tell you
what I came to say.”
Pug knew it was futile to argue. He had seen that look too many
times in the past. With a resigned sigh, he said, “All right, then, what is
it?”
Carline’s eyes widened at his tone. “Well, if that’s how you’re
going to be, I won’t tell you!”
Pug suppressed a groan and sat back with his eyes closed. Slowly
shaking his head, he said, “Very well. I’m sorry. Please, what do you want me
to do?”
She patted the pallet next to her “Come, sit here.”
He complied, trying to ignore the feeling that his fate—an abruptly
short life—was being decided by this capricious girl. He landed rather than sat
beside her. She giggled at the groan he made. “You got drunk! What’s it like?”
“At this moment, not terribly entertaining. I feel like a used
kitchen rag.”
She tried to look sympathetic, but her blue eyes sparkled with
mirth. With a theatrical pout, she said, “You boys get to do all the
interesting things, like sword work and archery. Being a proper lady can be
such a bore. Father would have a fit if I should ever drink more than a cup of
watered wine with supper.”
With rising desperation in his voice, Pug said, “Nothing compared to
the fit he will have if you’re found here. Carline, why did you come here?”
She ignored the question. “What were you and Roland doing this
afternoon, fighting?” He nodded. “Over me?” she asked, a glimmer in her eyes.
Pug sighed. “Yes, over you.” Her pleased look at the reply nettled
him, and irritation crept into his voice. “Carline, you’ve used him rather
badly.”
“He’s a spineless idiot!” she snapped back. “If I asked him to jump
off the wall, he’d do it.”
“Carline,” Pug nearly whined, “why have—”
His question was cut off as she leaned forward and covered his mouth
with her own. The kiss was one-sided, for Pug was too stunned to respond She
quickly sat back, leaving him agape, and she said, “Well?”
Lacking any original response, Pug said, “What?”
Her eyes flashed. “The kiss, you simpleton.”
“Oh!” said Pug, still in shock. “It was . . . nice.”
She rose and looked down on him, her eyes widening with mixed anger
and embarrassment. She crossed her arms and stood tapping her foot, making a
sound like summer hail striking the window shutters. Her tone was low and
harsh. “Nice! Is that all you have to say?”
Pug watched her, a variety of conflicting emotions surging inside.
At this moment panic was contesting with a nearly painful awareness of how
lovely she looked in the dim lantern light, her features alive and animated,
her dark hair loose around her face, and the thin shift pulled tight across her
bosom by her crossed arms. His own confusion made his pose seem unintentionally
casual, which further fueled her petulance. “You’re the first man—not counting
Father and my brothers—I’ve ever kissed, and all you can say is ‘nice.’ ”
Pug was unable to recover. Still awash with tumultuous emotions, he
blurted, “Very nice.”
She placed her hands upon her hips—which pulled her nightdress in
disturbing new directions and stood looking down on him with an expression of
open disbelief. In controlled tones she said, “I come here and throw myself at
you. I risk getting myself banished to a convent for life!” Pug noticed she failed
to mention his possible fate. “Every other boy—and not a slight number of the
older nobles—in the West fall over themselves to get my attention. And all you
do is treat me like some common kitchen drudge, a passing amusement for the
young lord.”
Pug’s wits returned, less of their own accord than from the
realization that Carline was arguing her case a little more emphatically than
was warranted. Suddenly struck with the insight that there was a fair bit of
dramatics mixed in with her genuine irritation, he said, “Carline, wait. Give
me a moment.”
“A moment! I’ve given you weeks I thought . . . well, I thought we
had an understanding.”
Pug tried to look sympathetic, as his mind raced. “Sit down, please.
Let me try to explain.”
She hesitated, then returned to sit next to him. Somewhat clumsily
he took her hands in his own. Instantly he was struck by the nearness of the
girl, her warmth, the smell of her hair and skin. The feelings of desire he had
felt on the bluffs returned with stunning impact, and he had to fight to keep
his mind upon what he wished to say.
Forcing his thoughts away from the hot surge he experienced, he
said, “Carline, I do care for you. A great deal. Sometimes I even think I love
you as much as Roland does, but most of the time I only get confused when
you’re around. That’s the problem: there’s so much confusion inside of me. I
don’t understand what it is I feel most of the time.”
Her eyes narrowed, for this obviously wasn’t the answer she
expected. Her tone was sharp as she said, “I don’t know what you mean. I’ve
never known a boy so caught up in understanding things.”
Pug managed to force a smile. “Magicians are trained to seek
explanations. Understanding things is very important to us.” He saw a flicker
of comprehension in her eyes at this and pressed on “I have two offices now,
both new to me. I may not become a magician, in spite of Kulgan’s attempts to
make me one, for I have trouble with a lot of my work. I don’t really avoid
you, you see, but with this trouble I have, I must spend as much time with my
studies as I can.”
Seeing his explanation was gaining little sympathy, he changed
tactics. “In any event, I have little time to consider my other office I may
end up another noble of your father’s court, running my estates—small though
they might be—caring for my tenants, answering calls to arms, and the rest. But
I can’t even think of that until I resolve this other matter, my studies of
magic. I must keep trying until I’m satisfied I made the wrong choice Or until
Kulgan dismisses me,” he added quietly.
He stopped and studied her face. Her large blue eyes watched him
intently “Magicians are of little consequence in the Kingdom. I mean, should I
become a master magician . . . Well, could you see yourself married to a
magician, whatever his rank?”
She looked slightly alarmed. Quickly she leaned over and kissed him
again, rupturing his already frayed composure. “Poor Pug,” she said, pulling
away a little. Her soft voice rang sweetly to his ears. “You don’t have to be.
A magician, I mean. You have land and title, and I know Father could arrange
others when the time was right.”
“It’s not a question of what I want, don’t you see? It’s a question
of what I am. Part of the problem may be I haven’t truly given myself over to
my work. Kulgan took me for his apprentice as much from pity as need, you know.
And in spite of what he and Tully have said, I’ve never been really convinced I
was especially talented. But perhaps I need to dedicate myself, commit myself
to becoming a magician.” He took a breath. “How can I do that if I’m concerning
myself with my estates and offices? Or gaining new ones?” He paused “Or you?”
Carline bit her lower lip slightly, and Pug fought down the urge to
take her in his arms and tell her everything would be all right. He had no
doubt that once he did that, matters would quickly be beyond his control. No
girl in his limited experience, even the prettier ones in the town, aroused
such strong feelings in him.
Lowering her lashes a little as she looked down, she softly said, “I’ll
do whatever you say, Pug.” Pug felt relief for a moment, then the full impact
of what she had just said hit him. Oh, gods! he thought. No magician’s trick
could keep him focused in the face of youthful passion. He frantically sought
some way to drive desire from him and then thought of her father. Instantly an
image of a scowling Duke of Crydee standing before the hangman’s gibbet
banished most of his lust.
Taking a deep breath, Pug said, “In my own way, I do love you,
Carline.” Her face came aglow, and forfending disaster, he plunged on. “But I
think I should try to find out about myself before I try to make up my mind
about the rest.” His concentration was sorely tested as the girl seemed to
ignore his remarks, being busy kissing his face.
Then she stopped and sat back. Her happy expression faded into one
of thoughtfulness as her natural intelligence overrode her childish need to get
everything she wanted. Comprehension came into her eyes as he said, “If I chose
now, Carline, I might always doubt the choice. Would you want to face the
possibility I would come to resent you for the choice I made?”
She said nothing for a while, then quietly said, “No. I don’t think
I could stand that, Pug.”
He breathed a sigh of relief as he felt tension drain away. Suddenly
the room seemed cold, and both of them shivered. Carline gripped his hands
tight, with surprising strength. She mustered a smile and said, with forced
calm, “I understand, Pug.” She took a long breath, then softly added, “That’s
why I think I love you. You could never be false with anyone. Least of all with
yourself.”
“Or you, Carline.” Her eyes grew moist, but she maintained her
smile. “This isn’t easy,” Pug said, assaulted by feelings for the girl.
“Please, please, believe me, this is not easy.”
Suddenly the tension broke, and Carline laughed softly, sweet music
to Pug. Caught halfway between tears and laughter, she said, “Poor Pug I’ve
upset you.”
Pug’s face showed his relief at her understanding. He felt buoyant
with his affection for the girl. Shaking his head slowly, with a smile of
released tension that gave him a somewhat silly expression, he said, “You’ve no
idea, Carline. No idea.” He reached out and touched her face tenderly. “We have
time. I’m not going anywhere.”
From under lowered lashes, blue eyes regarded him with worry “You’ll
be leaving with Father soon.”
“I mean when I return. I’ll be here for years.” Gently he kissed her
cheek. Forcing a lighter tone, he said, “I can’t inherit for three more years,
that’s the law. And I doubt your father would part with you for as many years
yet.” Attempting a wry smile, he added, “In three years you might not be able
to stand the sight of me.”
She came softly into his arms, holding him tightly, her face resting
on his shoulder. “Never, Pug. I could never care for another.” Pug could only
marvel at the feel of her. Her body trembled as she said, “I don’t have words,
Pug. You’re the only one who tried to . . . understand me. You see more than
anyone else.” Gently he pulled back a little and raised up her face with his
hand. Again he kissed her, tasting salty tears upon her lips. She suddenly
responded, holding him tighter and kissing him with passion. He could feel the
heat of her body through the thin fabric of her gown, and heard soft sighing
sounds in his ear as he felt himself drifting back into mindless passion, his
own body beginning to respond. Steeling his resolve, he gently disengaged
himself from Carline’s embrace Slowly he forced himself away from her and, with
regret in his voice, said, “I think you should return to your rooms, Carline.”
Carline looked up at Pug, her cheeks flushed and her lips slightly
parted. Her breathing was husky, and Pug fought a mighty struggle to control
himself and the situation. More firmly, he said, “You had best return to your
rooms, now.”
They rose slowly from the sleeping pallet, each intensely aware of
the other. Pug held her hand a moment longer, then released it. He bent and
retrieved her cloak, holding it for her as she slipped into it. Guiding her to
the door, he pulled it open and peered down the steps of the tower. With no
hint of anyone nearby, he opened the door fully. She stepped through, then
turned. Softly she said, “I know you think me a sometimes silly and vain girl,
and there are times when I am, Pug. But I do love you.”
Before he could say a word, she vanished down the stairs, the faint
rustling of her cloak echoing in the darkness. Pug quietly closed the door and
then put out the lamp. He lay upon his pallet, staring up into the darkness. He
could still smell her fresh scent in the air around him, and the remembered
touch of her soft body under his hands made them tingle. Now that she was gone
and the need for self-control gone with her, he let longing rush through
himself. He could see her face alive with desire for him. Covering his eyes
with his forearm, he groaned softly to himself and said, “I’m going to hate
myself tomorrow.”
Pug awoke to pounding on the door. His first thought as he scrambled
toward the door was of the Duke having learned of Carline’s visit. He’s here to
hang me! was all he could think. It was still dark outside, so Pug opened the
door expecting the worst. Instead of the girl’s angry father leading a company
of castle guards, a castle porter stood outside the door.
“Sorry to wake you, Squire, but Master Kulgan wishes you to join him
at once,” he said, pointing up toward Kulgan’s room. “At once,” he repeated,
mistaking Pug’s expression of relief for one of sleepy confusion. Pug nodded
and shut the door.
He took stock. He was still dressed, having fallen asleep again
without undressing. He stood quietly as his pounding heart stilled. His eyes
felt as if they were packed with sand, and his stomach was upset, leaving a
foul taste in his mouth. He went to his small table and splashed cold water on
his face, muttering that he would never have another cup of ale again.
Pug reached Kulgan’s room and found the magician standing over a
pile of personal belongings and books Sitting on a stool by the magician’s
sleeping pallet was Father Tully. The priest watched the magician adding to the
steadily growing pile and said, “Kulgan, you can’t take all those books along.
You would need two pack mules for them, and where you would keep them aboard
ship where they would do you any good is beyond me.”
Kulgan looked at two books he held, like a mother regarding her
young. “But I must take them along to further the boy’s education.”
“Pah! So you’ll have something to mull over around the campfires and
aboard ship, more likely. Spare me excuses. You will be riding hard to clear
the South Pass before it is snowed in. And who can read in a ship crossing the
Bitter Sea in winter? The boy will only be away from his studies a month or
two. He’ll have over eight years more study after that. Give him a rest.”
Pug was perplexed by the conversation and tried to ask a question,
but was ignored by the two old companions as they bickered. After several more
remonstrations from Tully, Kulgan surrendered “I suppose you’re right,” he
said, tossing the books onto his pallet. He saw Pug waiting by the door and
said, “What? Still here?”
Pug said, “You haven’t told me why you sent for me yet, Kulgan.”
“Oh?” Kulgan said, eyes blinking wide like those of a barn owl
caught in a bright light. “I haven’t?” Pug nodded “Well, then. The Duke orders
us ready to ride at first light. The dwarves have not answered, but he will not
wait. The North Pass is almost certain to be closed, and he fears snow in the
South Pass.” Kulgan said as an aside, “Which he should. My weather nose tells
me snow is nearly here. We are in for an early and hard winter.”
Tully shook his head as he stood up. “This from the man who
predicted drought seven years ago, when we had the worst flooding in memory.
Magicians! Charlatans, all of you.” He walked slowly to the door, then stopped
to look at Kulgan, his mock irritation replaced by genuine concern. “Though you
are right this time, Kulgan. My bones ache deeply. Winter is upon us.”
Tully left and Pug asked, “We’re leaving?”
With exasperation, Kulgan said, “Yes! I just said so, didn’t I? Get
your things together and quickly. Dawn’s less than an hour away.”
Pug turned to leave, when Kulgan said, “Oh, a moment, Pug.”
The magician crossed to the door and glanced through it, ensuring
Tully was down the stairs and out of earshot Kulgan turned to Pug and said, “I
have no fault to find with your behavior . . . but should you in the future
find yourself with another late-night caller, I suggest you not subject
yourself to further testing. I’m not so sure you would do as well a second
time.”
Pug blanched. “You heard?”
Kulgan pointed to a spot where the floor and wall met. “That
fire-pot thing of yours exits the wall a foot below there, and it seems a
marvelous conduit for sound.” Absently he said, “I’ll have to look to see how it
conducts sound so well when we return.” Returning to the boy, he said, “In any
event, I was working late and didn’t mean to eavesdrop, but I heard every
word.” Pug flushed. Kulgan said, “I don’t mean to embarrass you, Pug. You acted
rightly and showed surprising wisdom.” Putting his hand upon Pug’s shoulder, he
said, “I’m not one to advise you in such matters, I fear, as I’ve had scant
experience with women, of any age, let alone such young and headstrong ones.”
Looking Pug in the eyes, he said, “But this much I do know, it is almost
impossible in the heat of the moment to understand long-term consequences. I am
proud you were able to do this.”
Pug smiled self-consciously. “It was easy enough, Kulgan, I just
kept my mind focused on something.”
“What?”
“Capital punishment.”
Kulgan laughed, a sharp barking sound, then said, “Very well, but
the potential for disaster would be as high for the Princess, too, Pug. A
city-bred noblewoman of the eastern court may indulge herself in as many lovers
of any rank that she can enjoy while maintaining discretion, but the only
daughter of a frontier duke who is so closely related to the king has no such
luxury. She must be above suspicion in all things. Even suspicion could harm
Carline. One who cares for her would take that into consideration. Do you
understand?”
Pug nodded, fully relieved now that he had resisted temptation the
night before.
“Good, I know you’ll be careful in the future.” Kulgan smiled. “And
don’t mind old Tully. He’s just cross because the Duke ordered him to stay
behind. He still thinks he’s as young as his acolytes. Now run along and get
ready. Dawn’s less than an hour away.”
Pug nodded and hurried off, leaving Kulgan to regard the piles of
books before him. With regret he picked the nearest one up and placed it on a
nearby shelf. After a moment he grabbed another and stuffed it into a sack.
“Just one won’t cause any harm,” he said to the invisible specter of Tully
shaking his head in disapproval. He put the rest of the books back on the
shelf, save the last volume, which he shoved into the sack. “All right, then,”
he said defiantly, “two!”
8
JOURNEY
A light wet snow was falling.
Pug shivered under his greatcloak, sitting astride his horse. He had
been in the saddle for the last ten minutes, waiting as the rest of the Duke’s
company made ready.
The courtyard filled with hurrying, shouting men, lashing supplies
onto the balky mules of the baggage train. Dawn was just commencing, giving the
courtyard a little color instead of the blacks and grey that had greeted Pug
when he came from the tower. Porters had already carried his baggage down and
were securing it among the other items being brought along.
A panicked “Whoa!” erupted behind Pug, and he turned to see Tomas
pulling frantically at the reins of a spirited bay, his head tossing high. Like
Pug’s own sleek, light war-horse, he was a far cry from the old draft animal
they had ridden to the site of the shipwreck. “Don’t pull so hard,” Pug
shouted. “You’ll saw at his mouth and make him mad. Pull back gently and
release a couple of times.”
Tomas did, and the horse quieted down, moving alongside Pug’s own.
Tomas sat as if the saddle had nails sticking through it. His face was a study
in concentration as he tried to guess what the horse would do next.
“If you hadn’t been walking post yesterday, you could have gone
riding, getting in some practice. Now I’ll have to teach you as we go.”
Tomas looked thankful for the promise of aid. Pug smiled. “By the
time we reach Bordon, you’ll be riding like the King’s Lancers.”
“And walking like a ruptured spinster.” Tomas shifted in the saddle.
“Already I feel like I’ve been sitting on a stone block for hours. After just a
little way from the saddling post.”
Pug jumped down from his horse and looked over Tomas’s saddle,
making Tomas move his leg so he could examine under the saddle flap, then
asked, “Who saddled this horse for you?”
“Rulf Why?”
“I thought so. He’s paying you back for threatening him about that
sword, or because we’re friends. He doesn’t dare threaten me anymore, now that
I’m a Squire, but he thinks nothing of knotting your stirrup leathers. A couple
of hours riding like this, and you’d be standing at meals for a month, if you
didn’t get pitched on your head and killed. Here, get down and I’ll show you.”
Tomas dismounted, halfway between a leap and a fall Pug showed him
the knots “They would have rubbed the inside of your thighs raw by the end of
the day. And they’re not long enough.” Pug took out the knots and adjusted the
leathers to the proper length. “It’s going to feel very strange for a while,
but you’ve got to keep your heels down. I’ll remind you until you’re sick of
hearing it, but it’ll keep you out of trouble when you do it without thought.
And don’t try to grip with your knees; that’s wrong, and it’ll make your legs
so sore, you’ll hardly be able to walk by tomorrow.” He went on with a few
basic instructions and inspected the cinch, which was loose. He tried
tightening it, and the horse sucked air. Pug struck the gelding a blow in the
side, and the animal exhaled sharply. Pug quickly pulled the cinch strap and
said, “Sometime today, you most likely would have found yourself listing to one
side, a most discomforting position.”
“That Rulf!” Tomas turned toward the stable. “I’ll thrash him within
an inch of death!”
Pug grabbed his friend’s arm. “Wait We don’t have time for
brawling.”
Tomas stood with fists clenched, then relaxed with a relieved sigh.
“I’m in no condition for fighting, anyway.” He turned to see Pug inspecting the
horse.
Pug shook his head, then winced. “Me too.” He finished inspecting
the saddle and bridle, and the horse shied. Pug gentled the horse. “Rulf’s also
given you a temperamental mount. This fellow would have probably thrown you
before noon, and be halfway back to the stable before you hit the ground With
sore legs and shortened stirrup leathers, you never would have stood a chance.
I’ll trade with you.”
Tomas looked relieved and struggled into the saddle of the other
horse Pug readjusted the stirrups for both riders “We can swap our travel rolls
when we take our noon meal.” Pug then soothed the high-strung war-horse and
climbed nimbly into the saddle. Feeling surer hands at the reins, and a firm
leg on either side, the gelding quieted.
“Ho! Martin,” shouted Tomas as the Duke’s Huntmaster walked into
view. “Are you traveling with us?”
A wry grin split the face of the hunter, who was wearing his heavy
green cloak over his forester’s leathers. “For a short while, Tomas. I’m to
lead some trackers around the boundaries of Crydee. I’ll be heading due
eastward when we come to the south branch of the river. Two of my trackers were
on their way an hour ago, breaking trail for the Duke.”
“What do you think of this Tsurani business, Martin?” Pug asked.
The still-youthful Huntmaster’s face clouded. “If elves are given to
worry, there is something to worry over.” He turned toward the front of the
assembling line. “Excuse me, I must instruct my men.” He left the boys sitting
alone.
Pug asked Tomas, “How’s your head this morning?”
Tomas made a face. “About two sizes smaller than when I awoke.” His
face brightened a bit. “Still, the excitement seems to have stopped the banging
inside. I feel almost good.”
Pug gazed at the keep. Memories of his encounter last night kept
tugging at his mind, and suddenly he regretted the need to travel with the
Duke.
Tomas noticed his friend’s pensive mood and said, “Why so glum?
Aren’t you excited about going?”
“It’s nothing. Just thinking.”
Tomas studied Pug for a moment. “I think I understand.” With a deep
sigh, he sat back in the saddle, and his horse stamped and nickered “I, for
one, am glad to be leaving. I think Neala has tumbled to that little matter we
spoke of yesterday.”
Pug laughed. “That will teach you to be mindful of who you escort
into pantries.”
Tomas smiled sheepishly.
The doors to the keep opened, and the Duke and Arutha came out,
accompanied by Kulgan, Tully, Lyam, and Roland. Carline followed, with Lady
Marna behind. The Duke and his companions made their way to the head of the
column, but Carline hurried down to where Pug and Tomas sat. As she passed,
guardsmen saluted her, but she paid them no heed. She reached Pug’s side, and
when he bowed politely, she said, “Oh, get off that stupid horse.”
Pug climbed down, and Carline threw her arms around his neck,
holding him closely for a moment. “Take care and stay well,” she said. “Don’t
let anything happen to you.” She pulled away, then kissed him briefly. “And
come home.” Holding back tears, she hurried to the head of the line, where her
father and brother waited to say good-bye.
Tomas let out a theatrical whoop and laughed, while Pug remounted;
the soldiers nearby attempted to restrain their own amusement. “It seems the
Princess has made plans for you, m’lord,” Tomas gibed. He ducked as Pug stirred
to give him a backhanded cuff. The motion caused his horse to start forward,
and suddenly Tomas was fighting to bring his horse back into line. The horse
seemed determined to go in any direction except the one Tomas wished; now it
was Pug’s turn to laugh. He finally moved his own horse alongside Tomas’s and
herded the fractious mare back into line. She flattened her ears and turned to
nip at Pug’s horse, and the short boy said, “We both have accounts to settle
with Rulf; he gave us two horses that don’t like each other, too. We’ll trade
your mount off with one of the soldiers.”
With relief Tomas half dismounted, half fell to the ground, and Pug
directed the exchange with a soldier down the line. The exchange was made, and
as Tomas returned to his place, Roland came down to where they stood and
offered them both his hand “You two watch yourselves, now. There’s plenty of
trouble waiting out there without your looking for it.”
They acknowledged they would, and Roland said to Pug, “I’ll keep an
eye on things for you.”
Pug noticed his wry smile, glanced back to where Carline stood with
her father, and said, “No doubt,” then added, “Roland, whatever happens, good
luck to you, too.”
Roland said, “Thank you. I’ll take that as it’s meant.” To Tomas he
said, “And things are certainly going to be dull without you around.”
Tomas said, “Given what’s going on, dull would be welcome.”
Roland said, “As long as it’s not too dull, right? Take good care!
You’re a bothersome pair, but I’d hate to lose you.”
Tomas laughed as Roland walked off with a friendly wave. Watching
the Squire go up to the Duke’s party, and seeing Carline standing next to her
father, Pug turned to Tomas. “That decides it I am glad to be going. I need a
rest.”
Sergeant Gardan came riding back with orders to move the column, and
they set off. The Duke and Arutha rode in the van, with Kulgan and Gardan
behind. Martin Longbow and his trackers set off at a run beside the Duke’s
horse. Twenty pair of mounted guards followed, with Tomas and Pug nestled
between them and the baggage train at the rear with its five pair of guards.
Slowly at first, then with increasing speed, they moved through the gates of
the castle and down the south road.
They had been riding for three days, the last two through dense
woodlands. Martin Longbow and his men had turned east that morning as they
crossed the southern branch of the river Crydee, called river Boundary. It marked
the border between Crydee and the Barony of Carse, one of Lord Borric’s vassal
provinces.
The sudden snows of early winter had come and draped the autumn
landscape in white. Many of the denizens of the forest had been caught unaware
by the sudden winter, rabbits whose coats were still more brown than white, and
ducks and geese who scampered across half-frozen ponds, resting as they
migrated south. The snow fell in flurries of heavy wet flakes, melting slightly
during the day, to refreeze at night, making a thin crust of ice. As the
horses’ and mules’ hooves cracked through the ice, the crunching of leaves
underneath could be heard in the still winter air.
In the afternoon Kulgan observed a flight of firedrakes circling in
the distance, barely visible through the trees. The colorful beasts, red, gold,
green, and blue in color, raced over the treetops and dipped out of sight, then
reappeared as they spiraled upward, with cries and small bursts of flame.
Kulgan reined in as the train passed and waited for Pug and Tomas to overtake
him. When they were alongside, he pointed out the display, saying, “It has the
appearance of a mating flight. See, the more aggressively the males act, the
more responsive the females. Oh, I wish we had time to study this more closely.”
Pug followed the creatures with his eyes as they rode through a
clearing, then, somewhat startled, said, “Kulgan, isn’t that Fantus there,
hovering near the edge?”
Kulgan’s eyes widened. “By the gods! I think it is.”
Pug asked, “Shall I call him?”
The magician chuckled “Given the attention he’s receiving from those
females, I think it would do little good.” They lost sight of the congregation
of drakes as they rode after the Duke’s train. Kulgan said, “Unlike most
creatures, drakes mate at first snow. The females will lay eggs in nests, then
sleep the winter, warming them with their bodies. In the spring the young hatch
and are cared for by their mothers. Fantus will most likely spend the next few
days . . . ahem, fathering a clutch of young. Then he’ll be back at the keep,
annoying Megar and the kitchen staff for the rest of the winter.”
Tomas and Pug laughed. Tomas’s father made a great show of
considering the playful drake a plague from the gods visited upon his
well-ordered kitchen, but on several occasions both boys had spied Megar
lavishing some of the choicest dinner scraps upon the beast. In the fifteen
months since Pug had become Kulgan’s apprentice, Fantus had become a winged,
scaled house pet to most of the Duke’s staff, though a few, like the Princess,
found Fantus’s dragonlike appearance disquieting.
They continued to move east by south, as quickly as the terrain
would permit. The Duke was concerned about reaching the South Pass before the
snows made it impassable, cutting them off from the east until spring. Kulgan’s
weather sense had allowed they had a fair chance of making it before any big
storms struck. Soon they came to the edge of the deepest part of the great
southern forests, the Green Heart.
Deep within the glades, at prearranged locations, two troops of
guards from the keep at Carse were waiting for them with fresh horses Duke
Borric had sent pigeons south with instructions for Baron Bellamy, who sent a
reply the same way that horses would be waiting. The remounts and guards would be
hurrying to the meeting places from the Jonril garrison, maintained by Bellamy
and Tolburt of Tulan near the edge of the great forests. By changing mounts,
the Duke would save three, perhaps four days of travel to Bordon. Longbow’s
trackers had left clear blazes for the Duke to follow, and they were due to
reach the first meeting place later that day.
Pug turned to Tomas. The taller boy was sitting his horse somewhat
better, though he still flapped his arms like a chicken trying to fly when they
were forced to a fast trot. Gardan came riding back down the line, to where the
boys rode before the baggage guards. “Be wary,” he shouted. “From here to the
Grey Towers is the darkest part of the Green Heart. Even the elves pass through
here quickly and in numbers.” The sergeant of the Duke’s Guard turned his horse
and galloped back to the head of the line.
They traveled the balance of the day, every eye searching the forest
for signs of trouble. Tomas and Pug made light conversation, with Tomas
remarking on the chance of a good fight. Both boys’ banter sounded hollow to
the soldiers around them, who sat silent and vigilant. They reached the place
of meeting just before sundown. It was a clearing of considerable size, with
several tree stumps grown over with ground cover that peeked through the snow,
showing that the trees had been harvested long ago.
The fresh horses stood in a picket, each tied to a long line, while
six guards stood careful watch around them. When the Duke’s party had ridden
up, they had weapons ready. They lowered their weapons when they saw the
familiar banner of Crydee. These were men of Carse, who wore the scarlet tabard
of Baron Bellamy quartered by a gold cross, a golden griffin rampant over their
hearts. The shield of each man bore the same device.
The sergeant of the six guards saluted. “Well met, my lord.”
Borric acknowledged the salute “The horses?” he asked simply.
“They are fit, lord, and restless from waiting. As are the men.”
Borric dismounted; another soldier of Carse took his horse’s reins.
“Trouble?”
“None, my lord, but this place is suited for other than honest men.
All last night we stood watches by twos and felt the crawl of eyes upon us.”
The sergeant was a scarred veteran, who had fought goblins and bandits in his
day. He was not the type to give in to flights of imagination, and the Duke
acknowledged this. “Double the watch this night. You will escort the horses
back to your garrison tomorrow. I would rather have them rested a day, but this
is a poor place.”
Prince. Arutha came forward. “I have also felt eyes upon us for the
last few hours, Father.”
Borric turned to the sergeant. “It may be that we have been shadowed
by a band of brigands, seeking to judge our mission. I will send two men back
with you, for fifty men or forty-eight is of little difference, but eight is a
far better number than six.” If the sergeant felt any relief at this, he did
not show it, simply saying, “I thank my lord.”
Borric dismissed the man and with Arutha walked toward the center of
the camp, where a large fire was burning. The soldiers were erecting rude
shelters against the night wind, as they had each night of the journey. Borric
saw two mules with the horses and noted that bales of hay had been brought
along. Arutha followed his gaze. “Bellamy is a prudent man; he serves Your
Grace well.”
Kulgan, Gardan, and the boys approached the two nobles, who stood
warming themselves before the fire. Darkness was descending quickly, even at
noon there was little light in the snow-shrouded forest. Borric looked around
and shivered from more than the cold. “This is an ill-omened place. We will do
well to be away as soon as possible.”
They ate a quick meal and turned in Pug and Tomas lay close,
starting at every strange sound until fatigue lulled them to sleep.
The duke’s company passed deep into the forest, through glades so
thick that often the trackers had had to change their course, doubling back to
find another way for the horses, marking the trail as they went. Much of this
forest was dark and twisted, with choking underbrush that impeded travel.
Pug said to Tomas, “I doubt the sun ever shines here.” He spoke in
soft tones. Tomas slowly nodded, his eyes watching the trees. Since leaving the
men from Carse three days ago, they had felt more tension each passing day. The
noises of the forest had lessened as they moved deeper into the trees, until
they now rode in silence. It was as if the animals and birds themselves shunned
this part of the forest. Pug knew it was only because there were few animals
that hadn’t migrated south or gone into hibernation, but that knowledge didn’t
lessen his and Tomas’s dread.
Tomas slowed down. “I feel something terrible is about to happen.”
Pug said, “You’ve been saying that for two days now.” After a minute
he added, “I hope we don’t have to fight I don’t know how to use this sword, in
spite of what you’ve tried to show me.”
“Here,” said Tomas, holding something out. Pug took it and found a
small pouch inside of which was a collection of small, smooth rocks and a
sling. “I thought you might feel better with a sling. I brought one, too.”
They rode for another hour, then stopped to rest the horses and eat
a cold meal. It was midmorning, and Gardan inspected each horse, ensuring it
was fit. No soldier was given a chance to overlook the slightest possible
injury or illness Should a horse falter, its rider would have to double up with
another, and those two would have to return as best they could, for the Duke
could not wait for such a delay. This far from any safe haven, it was something
no one wished to think about or discuss aloud.
They were due to meet the second detachment of horses at
midafternoon. The breakneck pace of the first four days had given way to a
careful walk, for to rush through the trees would be dangerous. At the rate
they were progressing, they would be on time. Still, the Duke was chafing at
the slow pace.
On and on they rode, at times having to stop while guards drew
swords and cut at the brush before them, their sword blows echoing through the
stillness of the forest as they followed the narrow path left by the trackers.
Pug was lost in thoughts of Carline when, later, a shout erupted
from the front of the column, out of sight of the boys. Suddenly the horsemen
near Pug and Tomas were charging forward, oblivious to the thicket around them,
dodging low-hanging branches by instinct.
Pug and Tomas spurred their horses after the others, and soon their
senses recorded a blur of brown and white, as snow-spotted trees seemed to fly
past. They stayed low, close to the necks of their mounts, avoiding most tree
branches, while they struggled to stay aboard Pug looked over his shoulder and
saw Tomas falling behind. Branches and twigs caught at Pug’s cloak as he
crashed through the forest into a clearing. The sounds of battle assaulted his
ears, and the boy saw fighting in progress. The remount horses were trying to
pull up their stakes, while fighting exploded around them. Pug could only
vaguely make out the form of combatants, dark shrouded shapes slashing upward
with swords at the horsemen.
A figure broke away and came running toward him, avoiding the blow
of a guard a few yards ahead of Pug. The strange warrior grinned wickedly at
Pug, seeing only the boy before him Raising his sword for a blow, the fighter
screamed and clawed at his face as blood ran between his fingers Tomas had
reined in behind Pug and with a yell let fly with another stone. “I thought
you’d get yourself into trouble,” he shouted. He spurred his horse forward and
rode over the fallen figure Pug sat rooted for a moment, then spurred his own
horse. Pulling out his sling, he let fly at a couple of targets, but couldn’t
be sure if the stones struck.
Suddenly Pug was in a place of calm in the fighting. On all sides he
could see figures in dark grey cloaks and leather armor pouring out from the
forest. They looked like elves, save their hair was darker, and they shouted in
a language unpleasant to Pug’s ears. Arrows flew from the trees, emptying
saddles of Crydee horsemen.
Lying about were bodies of both attackers and soldiers. Pug saw the
lifeless bodies of a dozen men of Carse, as well as Longbow’s two lead
trackers, tied to stakes in lifelike poses around the campfire. Scarlet
bloodstains spotted the white snow beside them. The ruse had worked, for the
Duke had ridden straight into the clearing, and now the trap was sprung.
Lord Borric’s voice rang out over the fray “To me! To me! We are
surrounded.”
Pug looked about for Tomas as he frantically kicked his mount toward
the Duke and his gathering men. Arrows filled the air, and the screams of the
dying echoed in the glade. Borric shouted, “This way!” and the survivors
followed him. They crashed into the forest, riding over attacking bowmen Shouts
followed them while they galloped away from the ambush, keeping low over the
necks of their mounts, avoiding arrows and low-hanging branches.
Pug frantically pulled his horse aside, avoiding a large tree. He
looked about, but could not see Tomas. Fixing his gaze upon the back of another
horseman, Pug determined to concentrate on one thing only, not losing sight of
the man’s back. Strange loud cries could be heard from behind, and other voices
answered from one side. Pug’s mouth was dry and his hands sweating in the heavy
gloves he wore.
They sped through the forest, shouts and cries echoing around them
Pug lost track of the distance covered, but he thought it surely a mile or
more. Still the voices shouted in the forest, calling to others the course of
the Duke’s flight.
Suddenly Pug was crashing through the thick underbrush, forcing his
lathered, panting horse up a small but steep rise. All around him was a gloom
of grey and greens, broken only by patches of white. Atop the rise the Duke
waited, his sword drawn, as others pulled up around him. Arutha sat by his
father, his face covered with perspiration in spite of the cold. Panting horses
and exhausted guards gathered around. Pug was relieved to see Tomas beside
Kulgan and Gardan.
When the last rider approached, Lord Borric said, “How many?”
Gardan surveyed the survivors and said, “We’ve lost eighteen men,
have six wounded, and all the mules and baggage were taken.”
Borric nodded. “Rest the horses a moment. They’ll come.”
Arutha said, “Are we to stand, Father?”
Borric shook his head. “There are too many of them. At least a
hundred struck the clearing.” He spat. “We rode into that ambush like a rabbit
into a snare.” He glanced about “We’ve lost nearly half our company.”
Pug asked a soldier sitting beside him, “Who were they?”
The soldier looked at Pug. “The Brotherhood of the Dark Path,
Squire, may Ka-hooli visit every one of the bastards with piles,” he answered,
invoking the vengeance god. The soldier indicated a circle around them with his
hand “Small bands of them travel through the Green Heart, though they mostly
live in the mountains east of here, and way up in the Northlands. That was more
than I’d have bargained was around, curse the luck.”
Voices shouted from behind, and the Duke said, “They come Ride!”
The survivors wheeled and rode off, again racing through the trees
ahead of their pursuers. Time became suspended for Pug as he negotiated the
dangerous course through the dense forest. Twice men nearby screamed, whether
from striking branches or from arrows Pug didn’t know.
Again they came to a clearing, and the Duke signaled a halt Gardan
said, “Your grace, the horses can’t endure much more of this.”
Borric struck his saddle horn in frustration, his face dark with
anger. “Damn them! And where are we?”
Pug looked about. He had no idea of where they stood in relationship
to the original site of attack, and from the looks on the faces around him, no
one else did either.
Arutha said, “We must strike eastward, Father, and make for the
mountains.”
Borric nodded. “But which way lies east?” The tall trees and
overcast sky with its defused sunlight conspired to deny them any point of reference.
Kulgan said, “One moment, your grace,” and closed his eyes. Again
shouts of pursuit echoed through the trees, as Kulgan opened his eyes and
pointed “That way. There lies the east.” Without question or comment, the Duke
spurred his horse in the indicated direction, motioning for the others to
follow. Pug felt a strong urge to be near someone familiar and tried to rejoin
Tomas, but couldn’t make his way through the press of riders. He swallowed hard
and admitted to himself he was badly scared. The grim faces of the nearby
soldiers told him he was not alone in that feeling.
More time passed as they raced through the dark corridors of the
Green Heart Every advance along the escape route was accompanied by the echoing
cries of Dark Brothers as they alerted others of the fugitives’ route.
Occasionally Pug would spy a shape loping along in the distance, quickly lost
in the darkness of the trees as it ran a parallel course. The accompanying
runners did not seek to hinder them, but always they were near.
Once more the Duke ordered a halt. Turning to Gardan, he said,
“Skirmishers! Find out how close they follow. We must have rest.” Gardan
indicated three men, who quickly leapt from their horses and ran back along the
route of their retreat. A single clash of steel and a strangled cry heralded
their encounter with the closest Dark Brother tracker.
“Damn them!” said the Duke. “They’re herding us in a circle, seeking
to bring us back into their main strength. Already we’re moving more north than
east.”
Pug took the opportunity to move next to Tomas. The horses were
panting and shivering as perspiration steamed off them in the cold. Tomas
managed a feeble smile, but said nothing.
Men moved quickly among the horses, checking for injury. In a few
minutes the skirmishers returned at a run. Panting, one said, “Lord, they are
close behind, fifty, sixty at least.”
“How long?”
The man stood with perspiration pouring down his face as he
answered, “Five minutes, my lord.” With grim humor he said, “The two we killed
will make them pause, but no more time than that.”
Borric said to the company, “We rest a moment, then we ride.”
Arutha said, “A moment or an hour, what does it matter? The horses
are done. We should stand before more Brothers come to the call.”
Borric shook his head. “I must get through to Erland. He must know
of the coming of the Tsurani.”
An arrow, quickly followed by a second, flew from the nearby trees,
and another rider fell. Borric shouted, “Ride!”
They cantered the exhausted horses deeper into the woods, then
slowed to a walk, while they kept watch for the coming attack. The Duke used
hand signals to deploy the line of soldiers so they might swing to either flank
and charge on command. Horses blew foam as their nostrils distended, and Pug
knew they were close to dropping.
“Why don’t they attack?” whispered Tomas.
“I don’t know,” answered Pug. “They just harry us from the sides and
behind.”
The Duke raised his hand and the column halted. No sounds of pursuit
could be heard. He turned and spoke in a low tone. “They may have lost us. Pass
the word to inspect your mounts—” An arrow sped past his head, missing him by
inches “Forward!” he shouted, and they began a ragged trot along the path they
had been following.
Gardan snouted, “My lord, it seems they wish us to keep moving.”
In a harsh whisper Borric swore, then asked, “Kulgan, which way lies
east?”
The magician closed his eyes again, and Pug knew he was tiring
himself with this particular spell. Not difficult if one was standing calmly,
it had to be fatiguing him under these conditions. Kulgan’s eyes opened and he
pointed to the right. The column was heading northward.
Arutha said, “Again they slowly turn us, Father, back into their
main strength.”
Raising his voice, Borric said, “Only fools or children would keep
to this route. On my command, wheel to the right and charge.” He waited as
every man readied weapons and made silent prayers to their gods that the horses
could withstand one more gallop. Then the Duke shouted, “Now!” As a body, the
column wheeled to the right, and riders spurred their flagging mounts. Arrows
came pouring from the trees, and men and horses screamed.
Pug ducked under a branch, desperately holding on to the reins while
he fumbled with sword and shield. He felt the shield slipping and, as he
struggled with it, sensed his horse slowing. He couldn’t exercise the needed
control over the animal and manage the weapons at the same time.
Pug reined in, risking a momentary stop to put his equipment right.
A noise made him look to the right. Standing less than five yards away was a
bowman of the Brotherhood of the Dark Path. Pug stayed rooted for a moment, as
did the bowman. Pug was struck by his resemblance to the Elf Prince, Calin.
There was little to distinguish the two races, nearly the same in height and
build, save hair and eyes. The creature’s bowstring had snapped, and he stood
with dark eyes fixed upon Pug while calmly setting about restnnging his bow.
Pug’s astonishment at finding the Dark Brother standing so close to
him momentarily caused him to forget the reason he had halted. He sat numbly
watching the bowman repairing his weapon, entranced by the dark elf’s coolly
efficient manner.
Then he was pulling an arrow from his quiver in a fluid motion and
fitting the shaft to the bowstring. Sudden alarm made Pug act. His staggering
horse answered his frantic kicks and was off again. He didn’t see the bowman’s
arrow, but heard and felt it speed past his ear, then he was back to a gallop,
the bowman lost behind as Pug overtook the Duke’s company.
Noise from ahead made Pug urge his horse on, though the poor animal
was giving every indication it was moving as fast as possible. Pug wove through
the forest, the gloom making it difficult to negotiate.
Abruptly he was behind a rider wearing the Duke’s colors and then
passing the man as Pug’s horse proved fresher for carrying a lighter rider. The
terrain became more hilly, and Pug wondered if they were entering the foothills
of the Grey Towers.
A horse’s scream caused Pug to glance behind. He saw the soldier he
had passed thrown as his mount collapsed, foaming blood spurting from the
animal’s nose. Pug and another rider halted, and the soldier turned back,
riding over to where the first man stood. He extended his hand to offer the
fallen man a double ride. The fallen soldier just shook his head, as he struck
the standing horse on the rump, sending it ahead again. Pug knew the second
man’s horse could barely carry one rider, never two. The fallen rider pulled
his sword and put down the injured horse, then turned to wait for the pursuing
Dark Brothers. Pug found his eyes tearing as he contemplated the man’s courage.
The other soldier shouted something over his shoulder that was lost to the boy,
then suddenly he was riding by. He shouted, “Move, Squire!”
Pug put heels to the sides of his horse, and the animal picked up a
staggering trot.
The fleeing column continued on its stumbling, exhausted flight, Pug
moving up through the company of riders to a place near the Duke. After a few
minutes Lord Borric signaled for them to slow. They entered another clearing.
Borric surveyed his company. A look of helpless rage crossed his face, to be
replaced by surprise. He held his hand aloft, and the riders stopped their
milling about. Shouts sounded in the forest, but from some distance away.
Arutha, eyes wide with wonder, said, “Have we lost them?”
Slowly the Duke nodded, his attention focused on the distant shouts.
“For the moment. When we broke through the archers, we must have slipped behind
their pursuit. They’ll discover that fact shortly and double back. We have ten,
fifteen minutes at best.” He looked over his ragged company. “If only we could
find a place to hide.”
Kulgan moved his staggering horse alongside the Duke “My lord, I
might have a solution, though it is risky and might prove fatal.”
Borric said, “No more fatal than waiting for them to come for us.
What is your plan?”
“I have an amulet, which can control weather I had planned to save
it against possible storms at sea, for its use is limited. I may be able to
mask our whereabouts with it. Let every man gather his horse at the far end of
the clearing, near that outcropping of rock. Have them silence the animals.”
Borric ordered it done, and the animals were moved to the opposite
end of the clearing. Reassuring hands gentled exhausted and excited horses,
quieting the mounts after their long flight.
They had gathered at the highest end of a narrow clearing, their
backs to an outcropping of granite that rose overhead like a grey fist. On
three sides the ground sloped away gently. Kulgan began to walk along the
perimeter of the compact company.
He chanted in a low voice, waving the amulet in an intricate pattern
Slowly the grey afternoon light faded, and a mist began to gather around him.
At first only light wisps appeared nearby, then other, more substantial patches
of moisture formed, becoming light fog.
Soon the air between the Duke’s company and the tree line grew hazy.
Kulgan moved more quickly and the fog deepened, filling the clearing with whiteness,
moving outward from the magician into the trees on all sides. Within a few
minutes it was impossible to see beyond a few yards.
On and on paced Kulgan, sending thicker blankets of haze to obscure
the already grey light in the trees. The clearing slowly became darker as the
gloomy fog deepened with every incantation made by the magician.
Then Kulgan stopped and turned to the Duke, whispering, “All must
remain quiet. Should the dark elves wander blindly into the fog, the sloping
terrain will, I hope, guide them past on one side or the other as they come
around the rocks. But let no man move. Any sound will defeat us.”
Each man nodded, understanding the danger coming fast. They would
stand in the center of this deep fog in the hope the Dark Brothers would walk
past, putting the Duke and his men once more behind them. It was an
all-or-nothing gambit, for should they win free, there was a good chance they
would be far removed from this spot when the Brotherhood once more backtracked.
Pug looked at Tomas and whispered, “It’s a good thing it’s rocky
here, else we’d leave some pretty tracks.”
Tomas nodded, too frightened to speak. A nearby guard motioned for
Pug to be silent, and the young Squire nodded.
Gardan and several guards, with the Duke and Arutha, took up
position near the front of the company, weapons ready should the ploy fail
Shouts grew louder as the Dark Brotherhood returned along their trail. Kulgan
stood near the Duke, enchanting quietly, gathering more mist around him, then
sending it forth. Pug knew the mist would be expanding rapidly, shrouding a
continuously larger area as long as Kulgan continued to meant. Every extra
minute would encompass more of the Green Heart in fog, making it increasingly
more difficult for the attackers to find them.
Pug felt wetness on his cheek and looked up. Snow was beginning to
fall With apprehension he looked to the mist, to see if the newly arriving snow
was affecting it. He watched a tense minute, then silently sighed with relief,
for if anything, the snow was adding to the masking effects of the fog.
A soft footfall could be heard nearby. Pug froze, as did every man
near him. A voice rang out in the Brotherhood’s strange language.
Pug felt an itch between his shoulders, but refused to move,
fighting to ignore the nagging sensation on his back. He glanced sideways at
Tomas. Tomas stood stock-still, his hand on his horse’s muzzle, looking like a
statue in the haze. Like every other remaining horse, Tomas’s mount knew the
hand upon his face was a command for quiet.
Another voice rang out in the mist, and Pug nearly jumped. It
sounded as if the caller were standing directly in front of him. Again the
answering call came, sounding farther away.
Gardan stood directly before Pug, who saw the sergeant’s back
twitch. Gardan slowly knelt, silently laying his sword and shield on the
ground. He rose up, still moving slowly, pulling his belt knife. Then suddenly
he stepped into the mist, his movements as quick and fluid as a cat
disappearing into the night. There was a faint sound, and Gardan reappeared.
Before him struggled the form of a Dark Brother, one of Gardan’s
huge black hands clamped tightly over the creature’s mouth. The other arm was
choking its throat. Pug could see the sergeant couldn’t risk letting go for the
brief instant needed to plunge the knife in its back Gardan gritted his teeth
in pain as the creature raked the sergeant’s arm with clawlike nails. Its eyes
bulged as it fought to breathe. Gardan stood rooted to the spot, holding the
Dark Brother off the ground by main force as it struggled to get free. The
creature’s face turned red, then purple, as Gardan choked the life from it.
Blood from the creature’s raking nails flowed freely down Gardan’s arm; but the
powerful soldier barely moved at all. Then the Dark Brother went limp, and
Gardan gave it a final, throat-crushing jerk of his arm and let the creature
slide silently to the ground.
Gardan’s eyes were wide with exertion, and he panted quietly as he
regained his breath. Slowly he turned, knelt, and replaced his knife.
Recovering his sword and shield, he stood, resuming his watch in the mist.
Pug felt nothing but awe and admiration for the sergeant, but like
the others he could only silently watch. Time passed, and the voices grew more
faint as they sounded their angry inquiries to one another, seeking the
fugitives’ hiding place. The voices moved off, and then, like a long sigh of
relief heaved by all in the clearing, it was silent. The Duke whispered, “They
are past us. Lead the horses. We go east.”
Pug looked
about in the gloom. Ahead, Duke Borric and Prince Arutha led the way. Gardan
stayed beside Kulgan, who was still exhausted from his magical undertaking.
Tomas walked silently beside his friend. Of the fifty guardsmen who had set out
with the Duke from Crydee, thirteen remained. Only six horses had survived the
day. As they had faltered, the others had been quickly put down by silent,
tight-lipped riders.
They trudged upward, climbing higher into the foothills. The sun had
set, but the Duke ordered them onward, fearful of the return of their pursuers.
The men stepped cautiously forward, tentative in the rough terrain at night.
The darkness was punctuated by softly uttered oaths as men lost their footing
on the icy rocks time and again.
Pug plodded along, his body numb with fatigue and cold. The day had
seemed an eternity, and he could not remember when he had last stopped or
eaten. Once he had been handed a waterskin by a soldier, but the lone drink was
a dim memory. He grabbed a handful of snow and put it in his mouth, but the
melting iciness gave him little relief. The snow was falling more heavily, or
at least it seemed so to Pug, he couldn’t see it fall, but it struck his face
with more frequency and force. It was bitterly cold, and he shivered inside his
cloak.
Like a booming call, the Duke’s whisper sounded in the murk. “Stop.
I doubt they are wandering about in the dark. We’ll rest here.”
Arutha’s whisper could be heard from somewhere ahead: “The falling
snow should cover our tracks by morning.”
Pug dropped to his knees and pulled his cloak about himself Tomas’s
voice sounded nearby. “Pug?”
Softly he answered, “Here.”
Tomas dropped heavily beside him. “I think . . .,” he said between
panting breaths, “I’ll never . . . move again.”
Pug could only nod. The Duke’s voice came from a short distance
away. “No fires.”
Gardan answered, “It’s a bitter night for a cold camp, Your Grace.”
Borric said, “Agreed, but if those sons of hell are nearby, a fire
would bring them howling down upon us. Huddle together for warmth, so no one
will freeze. Post guards and tell the others to sleep. When dawn breaks, I want
to put as much distance between ourselves and them as possible.” Pug felt
bodies begin to press around him and didn’t mind the discomfort for the warmth.
Soon he drifted off into a fitful doze, starting awake often during the night.
Then suddenly it was dawn.
Three more horses died during the night, their frozen bodies lying
uncovered in the snow. Pug came to his feet, feeling light-headed and stiff. He
shivered uncontrollably as he stamped his feet, trying to stir some life into
his chilled, aching body Tomas stirred, then awoke with a start, looking to see
what was occurring. He climbed awkwardly to his feet, then joined Pug in
stamping feet and swinging arms. “I’ve never been so cold in my life,” he said
through chattering teeth.
Pug looked around. They were in a hollow between large outcrop-pings
of granite, still bare and grey in patches, which rose up behind them thirty
feet into the air, joining a ridge above. The ground sloped away along the path
of their march, and Pug noticed the trees were thinner here. “Come along,” he
said to Tomas as he began to scramble up the rocks.
“Damn!” sounded from behind, and Pug and Tomas looked back to see
Gardan kneeling over the still form of a guard. The sergeant looked at the Duke
and said, “Died in the night, Your Grace.” He shook his head as he added, “He
took a wound and never spoke of it.”
Pug counted; besides himself, Tomas, Kulgan, the Duke, and his son,
there were now just twelve soldiers. Tomas looked up at Pug, who had climbed
ahead, and said, “Where are we going?”
Pug noticed he whispered. He inclined his head upward and said, “To
see what’s over there.”
Tomas nodded, and they continued their climb. Stiff fingers
protested against the need to grip hard rock, but soon Pug found himself warm
again as exertion heated his body. He reached up and gripped the edge of the
ridge above. He pulled himself up and over and waited for Tomas.
Tomas came over the ridge, panting for breath, looked past Pug, and
said, “Oh, glory!”
Rising up majestically before them were the tall peaks of the Grey
Towers. The sun rose behind, casting rose and golden highlights on the north
faces of the mountains, while the western faces were still veiled in indigo
darkness. The sky was clear, the snowfall over. Everywhere they looked, the
scenery was draped in white.
Pug waved toward Gardan. The sergeant walked up to the base of the
rocks, climbed a short way, and said, “What is it?” Pug said, “The Grey Towers!
No more than five miles away.”
Gardan waved for the boys to return, and they scrambled down,
falling the last few feet to land with a thump. With their destination in
sight, they felt revived. They came to where Gardan stood in conference with
the Duke, Arutha, and Kulgan. Borric spoke softly, his words carrying clearly
in the crisp morning air. “Take whatever is left on the dead animals and divide
it among the men. Bring the remaining horses, but no one rides. No use covering
the animals, for we’ll make broad tracks anyway.”
Gardan saluted and began circulating among the soldiers. They stood
about in pairs or singly, eyes watching for signs of possible pursuit.
Borric said to Kulgan, “Have you an idea where the South Pass lies?”
“I will try to use my magic sight, my lord.” Kulgan concentrated,
and Pug watched closely, for seeing with the mind’s eye was another of the
feats that had eluded him in his studies. It was akin to using the crystal, but
less pictorial, more an impression of where something was in relation to the
spellcaster. After a few minutes of silence, Kulgan said, “I cannot tell, Sire.
If I had been there before, then perhaps, but I get no impression of where the
pass may lie.”
Borric nodded. “I wish Longbow were here. He knows the landmarks of
the area.” He turned to the east, as if seeing the Grey Towers through the
intervening ridge. “One mountain looks much like another to me.”
Arutha said, “Father, to the north?”
Borric smiled a little at Arutha’s logic. “Yes If the pass lies
northward, we still might chance across it before it is impassable. Once across
the mountains, the weather will prove milder in the east—at least that is the
rule this time of year. We should be able to walk to Bordon. If we are already north
of the pass, then we will eventually reach the dwarves. They will shelter us
and perhaps know another route to the east.” He inspected his exhausted
company. “With three horses and snow melted for drinking water, we should last
another week.” He looked around, studying the sky. “If the weather holds.”
Kulgan said, “We should be free of bad weather in two, perhaps three
days. Farther into the future I cannot judge.” A distant shout echoed over the
trees, from deep within the forest below. Instantly everyone was still. Borric
looked to Gardan “Sergeant, how far away do you judge them?”
Gardan listened. “It is hard to say, my lord. One mile, two, maybe
more. Sound carries oddly in the forest, more so when it is this cold.” Borric
nodded. “Gather the men. We leave now.”
Pug’s fingertips bled through his torn gloves. At every opportunity
during the day, the Duke had kept the men traveling over rock, to prevent Dark
Brotherhood trackers from following. Every hour guards had been sent back to
cut false trails over their own, pulling blankets taken from the dead horses
behind, obscuring the tracks as best they could.
They stood at the edge of a clearing, a circle of bare rock
surrounded on all sides by scattered pines and aspens. The trees had grown
progressively thinner as they moved up into the mountains, staying on the
rougher, higher terrain rather than risk being followed. Since dawn they had
moved northeast, following a ridge of rugged hills toward the Grey Towers, but
to Pug’s dismay the mountains seemed no closer.
The sun stood high overhead, but Pug felt little of its warmth, for
a cold wind blew down from the heights of the Grey Towers. Pug hqard Kulgan’s
voice some distance behind. “As long as the wind is from the northeast, we’ll
have no snow, as any moisture will have fallen on the peaks. Should the wind
shift and come from the west, or northwest, from off the Endless Sea, we’ll
have more snow.”
Pug panted as he scrambled along the rocks, balancing on the
slippery surface “Kulgan, must we have lessons, too?”
Several men laughed, and momentarily the grim tension of the last
two days lessened. They reached a large flat, before another upward rise, and
the Duke ordered a halt. “Build a fire and slaughter an animal. We’ll wait here
for the last rear guard.”
Gardan quickly sent men to gather wood in the trees, and one was
given two of the horses to lead away. The high-strung mounts were footsore,
tired, and unfed, and in spite of their training, Gardan wanted them removed
from the smell of blood.
The chosen horse screamed, then was suddenly silent, and when the
fires were ready, the soldiers placed spits over the flames. Soon the aroma of
roasting meat filled the air. In spite of his anticipated distaste, Pug found
his mouth watering at the smell. In a while he was handed a stick, with a large
piece of roasted liver on it, which he wolfed down. Nearby, Tomas was doing
equal justice to a portion of sizzling haunch.
When they were done eating, the still-hot meat left over was wrapped
with strips from horse blankets and torn tabards, then divided among the men.
Pug and Tomas sat by Kulgan as men broke camp, putting out fires,
covering signs of passing, and readying for the resumption of the march.
Gardan came to the Duke. “My lord, the rear guard is overdue.”
Borric nodded. “I know. They should have returned a half hour ago.”
He peered down the hillside, toward the huge forest, mist shrouded in the
distance. “We’ll wait five more minutes, then we will go.”
They waited in silence, but the guards didn’t return. Finally Gardan
gave the order. “All right, lads. Off we go.”
The men formed up behind the Duke and Kulgan, and the boys fell in
at the rear. Pug counted. There were only ten soldiers left.
Two days later the howling winds came, icy knives ripping at exposed
flesh. Cloaks were gathered around each figure tramping slowly northward,
leaning into the wind. Rags had been torn and tied around boots in a feeble
attempt to hold off frostbite Pug tried vainly to keep his eyelashes free of
ice, but the harsh wind made his eyes tear, and the drops quickly froze,
blurring his vision.
Pug heard Kulgan’s voice above the wind. “My lord, a storm comes. We
must find shelter or perish.” The Duke nodded and waved two men ahead to seek
shelter. The two set pff at a stumbling run, moving only slightly faster than
the others, but valiantly putting their remaining meager strength into the
task.
Clouds began to roll in from the northwest, and the skies darkened.
“How much time, Kulgan?” shouted the Duke over the shrieking wind.
The magician waved his hand above his head, as the wind blew his
hair and beard back from his face, exposing his high forehead. “An hour at
most.” The Duke nodded again and exhorted his men to move along.
A sad sound, a neighing cry, pierced the wind, and a soldier called
out that the last horse was down. Borric stopped and with a curse ordered it
slaughtered as quickly as possible. Soldiers butchered the animal, steaming
hunks of meat being cut away, to chill in the snow where they were cast before
they could be wrapped. When they were done, the meat was divided among the men.
“If we can find shelter, we will build a fire and cook the meat,”
the Duke shouted.
Silently Pug added that if they couldn’t find shelter, they’d have
little use for the meat. They resumed their march.
A short time later the two guards returned with the news of a cave
less than a quarter mile distant. The Duke ordered them to show the way.
Snow began to fall, whipped by the driving wind. The sky was now
dark, limiting visibility to only a few hundred feet Pug felt light-headed and
had to struggle to pull his feet from the resisting snow. Both hands were numb,
and he wondered if he was frostbitten.
Tomas looked slightly better, being somewhat hardier by nature, but
he also was too exhausted to speak. He just plodded along beside his friend.
Suddenly Pug was lying face down in the snow feeling surprisingly
warm and sleepy. Tomas knelt beside the fallen magician’s apprentice. He shook
Pug. and the nearly unconscious boy groaned.
“Get up,” Tomas shouted. “It’s only a little way farther.”
Pug struggled upright, aided by Tomas and one of the soldiers. When
he was standing, Tomas indicated to the soldier he could take care of his
friend. The soldier nodded, but stayed near. Tomas loosened one of the main
strips of blanket tied around him for warmth, knotted one end to Pug’s belt,
and half guided, half pulled the smaller boy along.
The boys followed the guard who had helped them around an
outcropping of rock and found themselves at the mouth of a cave. They staggered
forward a few steps into the sheltering darkness, then fell to the stone floor.
In contrast to the biting wind outside, the cave seemed warm, and they lapsed
into an exhausted sleep.
Pug awoke to the smell of cooking horse meat. He roused himself and
saw it was dark outside, beyond the fire. Piles of branches and deadwood were
heaped nearby. and men were carefully feeding the fire Others stood by.
roasting pieces of meat. Pug flexed his fingers and found them painfully sore,
but as he peeled off his tattered gloves, he saw no signs of frostbite. He
nudged Tomas awake, and the other boy raised himself up on his elbows, blinking
at the firelight.
Gardan stood on the other side of the fire, speaking with a guard.
The Duke sat nearby, in quiet conversation with his son and Kulgan. Beyond
Gardan and the guard, Pug could see only blackness. He couldn’t remember what
time of day it had been when they found the cave, but he and Tomas must have
slept for hours.
Kulgan saw them stirring and came over. “How do you feel?” he asked,
a look of concern on his face. The boys indicated they felt all right,
considering the circumstances Pug and Tomas doffed their boots at Kulgan’s
orders, and he was pleased to report they had suffered no frostbite, though one
of the soldiers, he said, hadn’t been as lucky.
“How long were we asleep?” asked Pug.
“Throughout last night and all this day,” said the magician with a
sigh-Then Pug noticed signs that a lot of work had been done. Besides the brush
being cut, he and Tomas had been covered by some of the blankets. A pair of
snared rabbits hung near the cave mouth with a row of freshly filled waterskins
stacked near the fire. “You could have woken us,” Pug said, a note of worry in
his voice.
Kulgan shook his head. “The Duke wouldn’t have moved until the storm
had passed, and that was only a few hours ago. In any event, you and Tomas
weren’t the only tired ones here. I doubt even the hearty sergeant there could
have gone more than another few miles with only one night’s rest. The Duke will
see how things stand tomorrow. I expect we shall leave then, if the weather
holds.”
Kulgan stood and, with a small gesture indicating the boys should
return to sleep if possible, went to stand beside the Duke. Pug was surprised
that, for someone who had slept the day around, he was again tired, though he
thought he would fill his stomach before seeking more sleep. Tomas nodded at
his unspoken question, and the two scooted over by the fire. One of the
soldiers was busy cooking meat and handed them hot portions.
The boys wolfed down the food and after they were done sat back
against one wall of the large cave. Pug started to speak to Tomas but was
distracted when he caught sight of the guard by the cave’s mouth. A queer look
passed over the man’s face as he stood talking to Sergeant Gardan, then his
knees buckled. Gardan reached out to catch him, lowering him to the floor. The
big sergeant’s eyes widened as he saw the arrow protruding from the man’s side.
Time seemed suspended for an instant, then Gardan shouted, “Attack!”
A howling cry sounded from outside the cave’s mouth, and a figure
came bounding into the light, jumping over the low brush, then again bounding
over the fire, knocking down the soldier cooking meat. It landed a short way
from the boys and spun to face those it had leapt past. It was wrapped in a
coat and trousers of animal furs. On one arm it bore a battle-scarred
buckler-size shield, and in the other a curved sword was held high.
Pug staved motionless as the creature regarded the company in the
cave, a snarl on inhuman lips, eyes glowing with reflected firelight and fangs
bared Tomas’s training asserted itself, and the sword he had clung to over the
long march was out of its scabbard in an instant. With a show the creature
swung downward at Pug, who rolled sideways, avoiding the blow. The blade rang
out as it struck the ground, and Tomas made an off-balance lunge, awkwardly
taking the creature low in the chest. It fell to its knees and gurgled as blood
filled its lungs, then fell forward.
Other attackers were leaping into the cave and were quickly engaged
by the men from Crydee. Curses and oaths sounded, and swords rang out in the
close confines of the cave. Guards and attackers stood face-to-face, unable to
move more than a few feet. Several of the Duke’s men dropped swords and pulled
daggers from their belts, better for close fighting.
Pug grabbed his sword and looked for an attacker, but found none. In
the dancing light of the fire, he could see the attackers were outnumbered by
the remaining guards, and as two or three men of Crydee grappled with each
attacker, it was quickly down and killed.
Suddenly the cave was quiet, save for the heavy breathing of the
soldiers. Pug looked and saw only one man down, the one who had taken the
arrow. A few others sported light wounds. Kulgan hurried among the men,
checking the wounds, then said to the Duke, “My lord, we have no other serious
injuries.”
Pug looked at the dead creatures. Six of them lay sprawled upon the
cave floor. They were smaller than men, but not by much. Above thick browndges,
their sloping foreheads were topped by thick black hair. Their blue-green
tinged skins were smooth, save for one who had something like a youth’s beard
upon his cheeks. Their eyes, open in death, were huge and round, with black
irises on yellow. All died with snarls upon their hideous faces, showing long
teeth that came close to being fangs.
Pug crossed to Gardan, peering into the gloom of the night for signs
of more of the creatures. “What are they, Sergeant?”
“Goblins, Pug Though I can’t fathom what they are doing this far
from their normal range.”
The Duke came to stand next to him and said, “Only a half dozen,
Gardan I have never heard of goblins attacking armed men except when the
advantage was theirs. This was suicide.”
“My lord, look here,” came Kulgan’s call, as he knelt over the body
of a goblin. He had pulled away the dirty fur jacket worn by the creature and
pointed to a poorly bandaged long, jagged wound on its chest. “This was not
made by us. It is three, four days old and healing badly.”
Guards inspected the other bodies and reported three others also
bore recent wounds, not caused by this fight One had a broken arm and had
fought without a shield.
Gardan said, “Sire, they wear no armor Only the weapons in their
hands.” He pointed to a dead goblin with a bow slung over its back, and an
empty quiver at its belt. “They had but the one arrow they used to wound
Daniel.”
Arutha glanced at the carnage. “This was madness. Hopeless madness.”
Kulgan said, “Yes, Highness; madness. They were battle weary,
freezing, and starved. The smell of cooking meat must have driven them mad.
From their appearance I’d say they’ve not eaten in some time. They preferred to
gamble all on one last, frantic assault than to watch us eat while they froze
to death.”
Borric looked at the goblins again, then ordered his men to take the
bodies outside the cave. To no one in particular, he said, “But who have they
been fighting?”
Pug said, “The Brotherhood?”
Borric shook his head. “They are the Brotherhood’s creatures, or
when not allied against us, they leave one another alone. No, it was someone
else.”
Tomas looked around as he joined those by the entrance. He wasn’t as
comfortable speaking to the Duke as Pug, but finally he said, “My lord, the
dwarves?”
Borric nodded “If there’s been a dwarven raid on a nearby goblin
village, it would explain why they were unarmored and unprovisioned. They would
have grabbed the nearest weapons and fought their way free, fleeing at first
chance. Yes, perhaps it was the dwarves.”
The guards who had carried the bodies off into the snow ran back
into the cave. “Your Grace,” one of them said, “we hear movement in the trees.”
Borric turned to the others. “Get ready!”
Every man in the cave quickly readied his weapons. Soon all could
hear the tread of feet crunching through the icy snow. It grew louder as they
waited, getting closer. Pug stood tensely, holding his sword, pushing down a
churning feeling inside.
Suddenly the sounds of footfalls stopped, as those outside halted.
Then the sound of a single pair of boots could be heard coming closer.
Appearing out of the dark came a figure directly toward the cave Pug craned his
neck to see past the soldiers, and the Duke said, “Who passes this night?”
A short figure, no more than five feet tall, pulled back the hood of
his cloak, revealing a metal helm sitting over a shock of thick brown hair. Two
sparkling green eyes reflected the firelight. Heavy brows of brown-red hair
came together at a point above a large hooked nose. The figure stood regarding
the party, then signaled behind. More figures appeared from out of the night,
and Pug pressed forward to get a better view, Tomas at his side. At the rear
they could see several of the arrivals leading mules.
The Duke and soldiers visibly relaxed, and Tomas said, “They’re
dwarves!”
Several of the guards laughed, as did the closest dwarf. The dwarf
fixed Tomas with a wry gaze, saying, “What were you expecting, boy? Some pretty
dryad come to fetch you away?”
The lead dwarf walked into the firelight. He stopped before the Duke
and said, “From your tabard, I see you to be men of Crydee.” He struck himself
upon the chest and said, formally, “I hight Dolgan, chief of village Caldara,
and Warleader of the Grey Towers dwarven people.” Pulling a pipe out of his
cloak, from under a long beard that fell below his belt, he filled his pipe as
he looked at the others in the cave. Then in less formal language he said,
“Now, what in the name of the gods brings such a sorry-looking party of tall
folk to this cold and forlorn place?”
9
Mac Mordain Cadal
The
dwarves stood guard.
Pug and the others from Crydee sat around the campfire as they
hungrily ate the meal prepared by Dolgan’s men. A pot of stew bubbled near the
fire. Hot loaves of trail bread, thick hard crust broken to reveal dark sweet
dough thick with honey, were quickly being devoured Smoked fish, from the
dwarves’ pack animals, provided a welcome change from the diet of horse meat of
the last few days.
Pug looked from where he sat beside Tomas, who was hard at work
consuming his third portion of bread and stew. Pug watched as the dwarves
worked efficiently about the camp. Most were outside the cave’s mouth, for they
seemed less inconvenienced by the cold than the humans. Two tended the injured
man, who would live, while two others served the hot meal to the Duke’s men, and
another filled ale cups from a large skin filled with the bubbling brown
liquid.
There were forty dwarves with Dolgan. The dwarven chief was flanked
by his sons, Weylin, the older, and Udell. Both showed a striking resemblance
to their father, though Udell tended to darkness, having black hair rather than
red-brown. Both seemed quiet compared to their father, who gestured expansively
with a pipe in one hand and a cup of ale in the other as he spoke with the
Duke.
The dwarves had been on some sort of patrol along the edge of the
forest, though Pug gained the impression a patrol this far from their villages
was unusual. They had come across the tracks of the goblins who had attacked a
few minutes before and were following closely behind, otherwise they would have
missed the Duke’s party as the night’s storm obliterated all tracks of the men
from Crydee’s passage.
“I remember you, Lord Borric,” said Dolgan, sipping at his ale cup,
“though you were scarcely more than a baby when I was last at Crydee. I dined with
your father. He set a fine table.”
“And should you come again to Crydee, Dolgan, I hope you’ll find my
table equally satisfactory.” They had spoken of the Duke’s mission, and Dolgan
had remained mostly silent during the preparation of the meal, lost in thought.
Suddenly he regarded his pipe, which had gone out. He sighed forlornly, putting
it away, until he noticed Kulgan had pulled out his own and was producing
respectable clouds of smoke. Brightening visibly, he said, “Would you be having
the requirement of an extra pipe upon you, master magician?” He spoke with the
deep, rolling burr the dwarves made when speaking the King’s Tongue.
Kulgan fetched out his tabac pouch and handed it across to the dwarf
“Providentially,” said Kulgan, “my pipe and pouch are two items always kept
upon my person at all times. I can withstand the loss of my other goods—though
the loss of my two books troubles me deeply—but to endure any circumstance
without the comfort of my pipe is unthinkable.”
“Aye,” agreed the dwarf as he lit up his own, “you have the right of
it there. Except for autumn’s ale-—and my loving wife’s company or a good
fight, of course—there’s little to match the pipe for pure pleasure.” He drew
forth a long pull and blew out a large cloud of smoke to emphasize his point. A
thoughtful look crossed his rugged face, and he said, “Now to the matter of the
news you carry. They are strange tidings, but explain away some mysteries we
have been tussling with for some time now.”
Borric said, “What mysteries?”
Dolgan pointed out of the cave mouth. “As we told you, we’ve had to
patrol the area hereabouts. This is a new thing, for in years past the lands
along the borders of our mines and farms have been free from trouble.” He
smiled. “Occasionally a band of especially bold bandits or moredhel—the Dark
Brothers you call them—or a more than usually stupid tribe of goblins troubles
us for a time. But for the most part things remain pretty peaceful.
“But of late, everything’s gone agley. About a month ago, or a bit
more, we began to see signs of large movements of moredhel and goblins from
their villages to the north of ours. We sent some lads to investigate. They
found entire villages abandoned, both goblin and moredhel. Some were sacked,
but others stood empty without sign of trouble.
“Needless to say, the displacement of those miscreants caused an
increase in problems for us. Our villages are in the higher meadows and
plateaus, so they dare not attack, but they do raid our herds in the lower
valleys as they pass—which is why we now mount patrols down the mountainside.
With the winter upon us, our herds are in our lowest meadows, and we must keep
vigilant.
“Most likely your messengers didn’t reach our villages because of
the large number of moredhel and goblins fleeing the mountains down into the
forests. Now at least we’ve some gleaning of what’s causing this migration.”
The Duke nodded. “The Tsurani.”
Dolgan was thoughtful for a moment, while Arutha said, “Then they’re
up there in strength.”
Borric gave his son a questioning look, while Dolgan chuckled and
said, “That’s a bright lad you’ve got, Lord Borric.” He nodded thoughtfully,
then said, “Aye, Prince. They’re up there, and in strength. Despite their other
grievous faults, the moredhel are not without skill in warcraft.” He fell
silent again, lost in thought for a few minutes. Then, tapping out the dottle
of his pipe, he said, “The dwarven folk are not counted the finest warriors in
the West for naught, but we lack the numbers to dispose of our more troublesome
neighbors. To dislodge such a host as have been passing would require a great
force of men, well armed and provisioned.”
Kulgan said, “I would give anything to know how they reached these
mountains.”
“I would rather know how many there are,” said the Duke.
Dolgan refilled his pipe and, after it was lit, stared thoughtfully
into the fire. Weylin and Udell nodded at each other, and Weylin said. “Lord
Borric, there may be as many as five thousand.”
Before the startled Duke could respond, Dolgan came out of his reverie.
Swearing an oath, he said, “Closer to ten thousand!” He turned to look at the
Duke, whose expression showed he clearly didn’t understand what was being said.
Dolgan added, “We’ve given every reason for this migration save invasion.
Plague, internal warfare between bands, pests in their crops causing famine,
but an invading army of aliens was not one of them.
“From the number of towns empty, we guess a few thousand goblins and
moredhel have descended into the Green Heart. South of those villages are a clutch
of huts my two boys could overcome unaided. But others are walled hill forts,
with a hundred, two hundred warriors to man the palisade. They’ve swept away a
dozen such in little over a month. How many men do you judge you’d need to
accomplish such a deed, Lord Borric?”
For the first time in his memory, Pug saw fear clearly etched upon
the Duke’s face. Borric leaned forward, his arm resting across his knee, as he
said, “I’ve fifteen hundred men in Crydee, counting those in the frontier
garrisons along the boundary. I can call another eight hundred or a thousand
each from the garrisons at Carse and Tulan, though to do so would strip them
fully. The levies from the villages and towns number at best a thousand, and
most would be old veterans from the siege at Carse or young boys without
skills.”
Arutha looked as grim as his father as he said, “Forty-five hundred
at the outside, a full third unproved, against an army of ten thousand.”
Udell looked at his father, then at Lord Borric. “My father makes no
boast of our skills, nor of the moredhel’s, Your Grace. Whether there be five
thousand or ten thousand, they’ll be hard, experienced fighters to drive out
the enemies of our blood so quickly.”
“Then I’m thinking,” said Dolgan, “you’d best send word to your older
son and your vassal barons, telling them to stay safely behind the walls of
your castles, and hie yourself to Krondor. It will take all the Armies of the
West to withstand these newcomers this spring.”
Tomas suddenly said, “Is it really that bad?” then looked
embarrassed for interrupting the council. “I’m sorry, my lord.”
Borric waved away the apology. “It may be we are weaving many
threads of fear together into a larger tapestry than exists, but a good soldier
prepares for the worst, Tomas. Dolgan is right. I must enlist the Prince’s
aid.” He looked at Dolgan. “But to call the Armies of the West to arms, I must
reach Krondor.”
Dolgan said, “The South Pass is closed, and your human ships’
masters have too much sense to brave the Straits of Darkness in winter. But
there is another way, though it is a difficult path. There are mines throughout
these mountains, ancient tunnels under the Grey Towers. Many were carved by my
people as we dug for iron and gold. Some are natural, fashioned when the
mountains were born. And still others were here when my people first came to
these mountains, dug by only the gods know whom. There is one mine that passes
completely under the mountains, coming out on the other side of the range, only
a day’s march from the road to Bordon. It will take two days to pass through,
and there may be dangers.”
The dwarven brothers looked at their father, and Weylin said,
“Father, the Mac Mordain Cadal?”
Dolgan nodded his head. “Aye, the abandoned mine of my grandfather,
and his father before him.” He said to the Duke, “We have dug many miles of
tunnels under the mountain, and some connect with the ancient passages I have
spoken of. There are dark and queer tales about Mac Mordain Cadal, for it is
connected with these old passages. Not a few dwarves have ventured deep into
the old mines, seeking legendary riches, and most have returned. But a few have
vanished. Once upon a path, a dwarf can never lose his way back, so they were
not lost in their searching. Something must have befallen them. I tell you this
so there will be no misunderstandings, but if we keep to the passages dug by my
ancestors, we should have small risk.”
“ ‘We,’ friend dwarf?” said the Duke.
Dolgan grinned “Should I simply place your feet upon the path, you’d
be hopelessly lost within an hour. No, I’d care not for traveling to Rillanon
to explain to your King how I’d managed to lose one of his better Dukes. I will
guide you willingly, Lord Borric, for a small price.” He winked at Pug and
Tomas as he spoke the last. “Say, a pouch of tabac and a fine dinner at
Crydee.”
The Duke’s mood lightened a little With a smile he said, “Done, and
our thanks, Dolgan.”
The dwarf turned to his sons. “Udell, you take half the compam and
one of the mules, and the Duke’s men too ill or wounded to continue. Make for
the castle at Crydee. There’s an ink horn and quill, wrapped in parchment,
somewhere in our baggage; find it for his lordship, so he may instruct his men.
Weylin, take the others of our kin back to Caldara, then send word to the other
villages before the winter blizzards strike. Come spring, the dwarves of the
Grey Towers go to war.”
Dolgan looked at Borric. “No one has ever conquered our highland
villages, not in the longest memory of the dwarven folk. But it would prove an
irritation for someone to try. The dwarves will stand with the Kingdom, Your
Lordship. You have long been a friend to us, trading fairly and giving aid when
asked. And we have never run from battle when we were called.”
Arutha said, “And what of Stone Mountain?”
Dolgan laughed “I thank His Highness for the jog to my memory. Old
Harthorn and his clans would be sorely troubled should a good fight come and
they were not invited. I’ll send runners to Stone Mountain as well.”
Pug and Tomas watched while the Duke wrote messages to Lyam and
Fannon, then full stomachs and fatigue began to lull them, despite their long
sleep. The dwarves gave them the loan of heavy cloaks, which they wrapped about
pine boughs to make comfortable mattresses. Occasionally Pug would turn in the
night, coming out of his deep sleep, and hear voices speaking low. More than
once he heard the name Mac Mordain Cadal.
Dolgan led the Duke’s party along the rocky foothills of the Grey
Towers. They had left at first light, the dwarven chieftain’s sons departing
for their own destinations with their men. Dolgan walked before the Duke and
his son, followed by the puffing Kulgan and the boys. Five soldiers of Crydee,
those still able to continue, under the supervision of Sergeant Gardan followed
behind, leading two mules. Walking behind the struggling magician, Pug said,
“Kulgan, ask for a rest. You’re all done in.”
The magician said, “No, boy, I’ll be all right. Once into the mines,
the pace will slow, and we should be there soon.”
Tomas regarded the stocky figure of Dolgan, marching along at the
head of the party, short legs striding along, setting a rugged pace. “Doesn’t
he ever tire?”
Kulgan shook his head. “The dwarven folk are renowned for their
strong constitutions. At the Battle of Carse Keep, when the castle was nearly
taken by the Dark Brotherhood, the dwarves of Stone Mountain and the Grey
Towers were on the march to aid the besieged. A messenger carried the news of
the castle’s imminent fall, and the dwarves ran for a day and a night and half
a day again to fall on the Brotherhood from behind without any lessening of
their fighting ability. The Brotherhood was broken, never again organizing
under a single leader.” He panted a bit. “There was no idle boasting in
Dolgan’s appraisal of the aid forthcoming from the dwarves, for they are
undoubtedly the finest fighters in the West. While they have few numbers
compared to men, only the Hadati hillmen come close to their equal as mountain
fighters.”
Pug and Tomas looked with newfound respect upon the dwarf as he
strode along. While the pace was brisk, the meal of the night before and
another this morning had restored the flagging energies of the boys, and they
were not pushed to keep up.
They came to the mine entrance, overgrown with brush. The soldiers
cleared it away, revealing a wide, low tunnel. Dolgan turned to the company.
“You might have to duck a bit here and there, but many a mule has been led
through here by dwarven miners. There should be ample room.”
Pug smiled. The dwarves proved taller than tales had led him to
expect, averaging about four and a half to five feet tall. Except for being
short-legged and broad-shouldered, they looked much like other people. It was
going to be a tight fit for the Duke and Gardan, but Pug was only a few inches
taller than the dwarf, so he’d manage.
Gardan ordered torches lit, and when the party was ready, Dolgan led
them into the mine. As they entered the gloom of the tunnel, the dwarf said,
“Keep alert, for only the gods know what is living in these tunnels We should
not be troubled, but it is best to be cautious.”
Pug entered and, as the gloom enveloped him, looked over his
shoulder. He saw Gardan outlined against the receding light. For a brief
instant he thought of Carline, and Roland, then wondered how she could seem so
far removed so quickly, or how indifferent he was to his rival’s attentions. He
shook his head, and his gaze returned to the dark tunnel ahead.
The tunnels were damp. Every once in a while they would pass a
tunnel branching off to one side or the other Pug peered down each as he
passed, but they were quickly swallowed up in gloom. The torches sent
flickering shadows dancing on the walls, expanding and contracting as they
moved closer or farther from each other, or as the ceiling rose or fell. At
several places they had to pull the mules’ heads down, but for most of their
passage there was ample room.
Pug heard Tomas, who walked in front of him, mutter, “I’d not want
to stray down here; I’ve lost all sense of direction.” Pug said nothing, for
the mines had an oppressive feeling to him.
After some time they came to a large cavern with several tunnels
leading out. The column halted, and the Duke ordered watches to be posted.
Torches were wedged in the rocks and the mules watered. Pug and Tomas stood
with the last watch, and Pug thought a hundred times that shapes moved just
outside the fire’s glow. Soon guards came to replace them, and the boys joined
the others, who were eating. They were given dried meat and biscuits to eat.
Tomas asked Dolgan, “What place is this?”
The dwarf puffed on his pipe “It is a glory hole, laddie. When my
people mined this area, we fashioned many such places When great runs of iron,
gold, silver, and other metals would come together, many tunnels would be
joined. And as the metals were taken out, these caverns would be formed. There
are natural ones down here as large, but the look of them is different. They
have great spires of stone rising from the floor, and others hanging from the ceiling,
unlike this one. You’ll see one as we pass through.”
Tomas looked above him. “How high does it go?”
Dolgan looked up. “I can’t rightly say. Perhaps a hundred feet,
perhaps two or three times as much. These mountains are rich with metals still,
but when my grandfather’s grandfather first mined here, the metal was rich
beyond imagining. There are hundreds of tunnels throughout these mountains,
with many levels upward and downward from here Through that tunnel there”—he
pointed to another on the same level as the floor of the glory hole—”lies a
tunnel that will join with another tunnel, then yet another. Follow that one,
and you’ll end up in the Mac Bronin Alroth, another abandoned mine. Beyond that
you could make your way to the Mac Owyn Dur, where several of my people would
be inquiring how you managed entrance into their gold mine.” He laughed “Though
I doubt you could find the way, unless you were dwarven born.”
He puffed at his pipe, and the balance of the guards came over to
cat. Dolgan said, “Well, we had best be on our way.”
Tomas looked startled. “I thought we were stopping for the night.”
“The sun is yet high in the sky, laddie. There’s half the day left
before we sleep.”
“But I thought . . .”
“I know. It is easy to lose track of time down here, unless you have
the knack of it.”
They gathered together their gear and started off again. After more
walking they entered a series of twisting, turning passages that seemed to
slant down. Dolgan explained that the entrance on the east side of the mountains
was several hundred feet lower than on the west, and they would be moving
downward most of the journey.
Later they passed through another of the glory holes, smaller than
the last, but still impressive for the number of tunnels leading from it.
Dolgan picked one with no hesitation and led them through.
Soon they could hear the sound of water, coming from ahead. Dolgan
said, over his shoulder, “You’ll soon see a sight that no man living and few
dwarves have ever seen.”
As they walked, the sound of rushing water became louder. They
entered another cavern, this one natural and larger than the first by several
times. The tunnel they had been walking in became a ledge, twenty feet wide,
that ran along the right side of the cavern. They all peered over the edge and
could see nothing but darkness stretching away below.
The path rounded a curve in the wall, and when they passed around
it, they were greeted with a sight that made them all gasp. Across the cavern,
a mighty waterfall spilled over a huge outcropping of stone. From fully three
hundred feet above where they stood, it poured into the cavern, crashing down
the stone face of the opposite wall to disappear into the darkness below. It
filled the cavern with reverberations that made it impossible to hear it striking
bottom, confounding any attempt to judge the fall’s height. Throughout the
cascade luminous colors danced, aglow with an inner light. Reds, golds, greens,
blues, and yellows played among the white foam, falling along the wall, blazing
with brief flashes of intense luminosity where the water struck the wall,
painting a fairy picture in the darkness.
Dolgan shouted over the roar, “Ages ago the river Wynn-Ula ran from
the Grey Towers to the Bitter Sea. A great quake opened a fissure under the
river, and now it falls into a mighty underground lake below. As it runs
through the rocks, it picks up the minerals that give it its glowing colors.”
They stood quietly for a while, marveling at the sight of the falls of Mac
Mordain Cadal.
The Duke signaled for the march to resume, and they moved on.
Besides the spectacle of the falls, they had been refreshed by spray and cool
wind off them, for the caverns were dank and musty. Onward they went, deeper
into the mines, past numberless tunnels and passages. After a time, Gardan
asked the boys how they fared. Pug and Tomas both answered that they were fine,
though tired.
Later they came to yet another cavern, and Dolgan said it was time
to rest the night. More torches were lit, and the Duke said, “I hope we have
enough brands to last the journey. They burn quickly.”
Dolgan said, “Give me a few men, and I will fetch some old timbers
for a fire. There are many lying about if you know where to find them without
bringing the ceiling down upon your head.”
Gardan and two other men followed the dwarf into a side tunnel,
while the others unloaded the mules and staked them out. They were given water
from the waterskins and a small portion of grain carried for the times when
they could not graze.
Borric sat next to Kulgan. “I have had an ill feeling for the last
few hours. Is it my imagining, or does something about this place bode evil?”
Kulgan nodded as Arutha joined them “I have felt something also, but
it comes and goes. It is nothing I can put a name to.”
Arutha hunkered down and used his dagger to draw aimlessly in the
dirt. “This place would give anyone a case of the jumping fits and starts.
Perhaps we all feel the same thing: dread at being where men do not belong.”
The Duke said, “I hope that is all it is. This would be a poor place
to fight”—he paused—”or flee from.” The boys stood watch, but could overhear
the conversation, as could the other men, for no one else was speaking in the
cavern and the sound carried well Pug said in a hushed voice, “I will also be
glad to be done with this mine.”
Tomas grinned in the torchlight, his face set in an evil leer.
“Afraid of the dark, little boy?”
Pug snorted. “No more than you, should you but admit it. Do you
think you could find your way out?”
Tomas lost his smile. Further conversation was interrupted by the
return of Dolgan and the others. They carried a good supply of broken timbers,
used to shore up the passages in days gone by. A fire was quickly made from the
old, dry wood, and soon the cavern was brightly lit.
The boys were relieved of guard duty and ate. As soon as they were
done eating, they spread their cloaks. Pug found the hard dirt floor
uncomfortable, but he was very tired, and sleep soon overtook him.
They led the mules deeper into the mines, the animal’s hooves
clattering on the stone, the sound echoing down the dark tunnels. They had
walked the entire day, taking only a short rest to eat at noon. Now they were
approaching the cavern where Dolgan said they were to spend their second night.
Pug felt a strange sensation, as if remembering a cold chill. It had touched
him several times over the last hour, and he was worried. Each time he had
turned to look behind him. This time Gardan said. “I feel it too, boy, as if
something is near.”
They entered another large glory hole, and Dolgan stood with his
hand upraised. All movement ceased as the dwarf listened for something. Pug and
Tomas strained to hear as well, but no sounds came to them. Finally the dwarf
said, “For a time I thought I heard . . . but then I guess not. We will camp
here.” They had carried spare timber with them and used it to make a fire.
When Pug and Tomas left their watch, they found a subdued party
around the fire. Dolgan was saying, “This part of Mac Mordain Cadal is closest
to the deeper, ancient tunnels. The next cavern we come to will have several
that lead directly to the old mines. Once past that cavern, we will have a
speedy passage to the surface. We should be out of the mine bv midday
tomorrow.”
Borric looked around “This place may suit your nature, dwarf, but I
will be glad to have it behind.”
Dolgan laughed, the rich, hearty sound echoing off the cavern walls.
“It is not that the place suits my nature, Lord Borric, but rather that my
nature suits the place. I can travel easily under the mountains, and my folk
have ever been miners. But as to choice, I would rather spend my time in the
high pastures of Caldara tending my herd, or sit in the long hall with my
brethren, drinking ale and singing ballads.”
Pug asked, “Do you spend much time singing ballads?”
Dolgan fixed him with a friendly smile, his eyes shining in the
firelight. “Aye. For winters are long and hard in the mountains. Once the herds
are safely in winter pasture, there is little to do, so we sing our songs and
drink autumn ale, and wait for spring. It is a good life.”
Pug nodded. “I would like to see your village sometime,
Dolgan.” Dolgan puffed on his ever-present pipe. “Perhaps you will
someday, laddie.”
They turned in for the night, and Pug drifted off to sleep. Once in
the dead of night, when the fire had burned low, he awoke, feeling the chilling
sensation that had plagued him earlier. He sat up, cold sweat dripping down his
body, and looked around. He could see the guards who were on duty, standing
near their torches. Around him he saw the forms of sleeping bodies. The feeling
grew stronger for a moment, as if something dreadful was approaching, and he
was about to wake Tomas when it passed, leaving him tired and wrung out. He lay
back down and soon was lost in dreamless sleep.
He awoke cold and stiff. The guards were readying the mules, and
soon they would all leave Pug roused Tomas, who protested at being pulled from
his dream. “I was in the kitchen at home, and Mother was preparing a large
platter of sausages and corn cakes dripping with honey,” he said sleepily.
Pug threw a biscuit at him “This will have to do until Bordon. Then we
shall eat.”
They gathered together their meager provisions, loaded them on the
mules, and set off. As they made their way along, Pug began to experience the
icy feeling of the night before. Several times it came and went. Hours passed,
and they came to the last great cave. Here Dolgan stopped them while he looked
into the gloom. Pug could hear him saying, “For a moment I thought . . .”
Suddenly the hairs on Pug’s neck stood up, and the feeling of icy
terror swept over him, more horrible than before. “Dolgan, Lord Borric!” he
cried. “Something terrible is happening!”
Dolgan stood stock-still, listening. A faint moan echoed from down
another tunnel.
Kulgan shouted, “I feel something also.”
Suddenly the sound repeated, closer, a chilling moan that echoed off
the vaulted ceiling, making its origins uncertain.
“By the
gods!” shouted the dwarf. “’Tis a wraith! Hurry! Form a circle, or it will be
upon us and we’ll be lost.”
Gardan pushed the boys forward, and the guards moved the mules to
the center of the cavern. They quickly staked the two mules down andi formed a
circle around the frantic animals. Weapons were drawn. Gardan placed himself
before the two boys, forcing them back near the mules. Both had swords out, but
held them uncertainly. Tomas could feel his heart pound, and Pug was bathed in
cold sweat. The terror that gripped him had not increased since Dolgan had put
a name to it, but it had not lessened either.
They heard the sharp hiss of intaken breath and looked to the right.
Before the soldier who had made the sound, a figure loomed out of the darkness:
a shifting man-shape, darker blackness against the black, with two glowing,
red-coal lights where eyes should be.
Dolgan shouted, “Keep close, and guard your neighbor. You can’t kill
it, but they like not the feel of cold iron. Don’t let it touch you, for it’ll
draw your life from your body. It is how they feed.”
It approached them slowly, as if having no need to hurry. It stopped
for a moment, as if inspecting the defense before it.
The wraith let out another low, long moan, sounding like all the
terror and hopelessness of the world given voice. Suddenly one of the guards
struck downward, slashing at the wraith. A shrill moan erupted from the creature
when the sword hit, and cold blue fire danced along the blade for a moment. The
creature shrank away, then with sudden speed struck out at the guard. An
armlike shadow extended from its body, and the guard shrieked as he crumpled to
the ground.
The mules broke, pulling up stakes, terrified by the presence of the
wraith. Guards were knocked to the ground, and confusion reigned. Pug lost
sight of the wraith for a moment, being more concerned with flying hooves. As
the mules kicked, Pug found himself dodging through the melee. He heard
Kulgan’s voice behind him and saw the magician standing next to Prince Arutha.
“Stand close, all of you,” the magician commanded. Obeying, Pug closed to
Kulgan with the others as the scream of another guard echoed through the
gallery Within a moment a great cloud of white smoke began to appear around
them, issuing from Kulgan’s body. “We must leave the mules,” said the magician
“The undead will not enter the smoke, but I cannot keep it together long or
walk far. We must escape now!”
Dolgan pointed to a tunnel, on the other side of the cavern from
where they had entered. “That’s the way we must go.” Keeping close together,
the group started toward the tunnel while a terrified bray sounded. Bodies lay
on the floor: the two mules as well as the fallen guards. Dropped torches
flickered, giving the scene a nightmarish quality, as the black shape closed
upon the party. Reaching the edge of the smoke, it recoiled from its touch. It
ranged about the edge, unable or unwilling to enter the white smoke.
Pug looked past the creature, and the pit of his stomach churned.
Clearly standing in the light of a torch held in his hand was Tomas,
behind the creature. Tomas looked helplessly past the wraith at Pug and the
escaping party. “Tomas!” ripped from Pug’s throat, followed by a sob.
The party halted for a brief second, and Dolgan said, “We can’t
stop. We’d all perish for the sake of the boy. We must press on.” A firm hand
clutched at Pug’s shoulder as he started forward to aid his friend. He looked
back and saw that it was Gardan holding him. “We must leave him, Pug,” he said,
a grim expression on his ebony face. “Tomas is a soldier. He understands.” Pug
was pulled along helplessly. He saw the wraith follow along for a moment, then
stop and turn toward Tomas.
Whether alerted by Pug’s cries or by some evil sense, the undead
creature started toward Tomas, slowly stalking him. The boy hesitated, then
spun and ran to another tunnel. The wraith shrieked and started after him. Pug
saw the glow of Tomas’s torch disappear down the tunnel, then flicker into
blackness.
Tomas saw the pained expression on Pug’s face as Gardan pulled his
friend away. When the mules had broken, he had dodged away from the others and
now found himself separated from them. He looked for a way to circle around the
wraith, but it was too close to the passage his companions were taking. As
Kulgan and the others escaped up the tunnel, Tomas saw the wraith turn toward
him. It started to approach, and he hesitated a moment, then ran toward a
different tunnel.
Shadows and light danced madly on the walls as Tomas fled down the
passage, his footfalls echoing in the gloom. His torch was held tightly in his
left hand, the sword clutched in his right. He looked over his shoulder and saw
the two glowing red eyes pursuing him, though they seemed not to be gaining.
With grim determination he thought, if it catches me, it will catch the fastest
runner in all of Crydee. He lengthened his strides into a long, easy lope,
saving strength and wind. He knew that if he had to turn and face the creature,
he would surely die. The initial fear lessened, and now he felt a cold clarity
holding his mind, the cunning reason of a prey knowing it is hopeless to fight.
All his energy was turned toward fleeing. He would try to lose the creature any
way possible.
He ducked into a side corridor and hurried along it, checking to see
if the wraith would follow. The glowing red eyes appeared at the entrance to
the tunnel he had turned into, following him. The distance between them seemed
to have increased. The thought that many might have died at the thing’s hand
because they were too frightened to run crossed his mind. The wraith’s strength
lay in the numbing terror it caused.
Another corridor and another turn. Still the wraith followed. Ahead
lay a large cavern, and Tomas found himself entering the same hall in which the
wraith had attacked the party. He had circled around and entered through
another tunnel. Racing across the floor, he saw the bodies of mules and guards
lying in his path. He paused long enough to grab a fresh torch, for his was
nearly spent, and transferred the flame.
He looked backward to see the undead creature closing on him and
started off again. Hope briefly flickered in his breast, for if he could pick
the proper corridor, he might catch up to the others. Dolgan had said that from
this cavern it was a straight journey to the surface. He picked what he thought
was the proper one, though he was disoriented and couldn’t be sure.
The wraith let out a howl of rage at its prey’s eluding it again,
and followed. Tomas felt terror bordering on elation as his long legs stretched
out, eating up the distance ahead of him. He gained his second wind and set a
steady pace for himself. Never had he run so well, but then never had he
possessed such a reason.
After what seemed an endless time of running, he found himself
coming to a series of side tunnels, set closely together. He felt hope die, for
this was not the straight path the dwarf had mentioned. Picking one at random,
he turned into a passage and found more tunnels close by. Cutting through
several more, he turned as quickly as possible, weaving his way through a maze
of passages. Ducking around a wall formed between two such tunnels, he stopped
briefly and caught his breath. He listened for a moment and heard only the
sound of his pounding heart. He had been too busy to look behind and was unsure
of the wraith’s whereabouts.
Suddenly a shriek of rage echoed faintly down the corridors,
sounding far off. Tomas sank to the floor of the tunnel and felt his body go
limp. Another shriek echoed more faintly, and Tomas felt certain that the
wraith had lost his trail and was moving off in another direction.
A sense of relief flooded through him, nearly causing him to laugh
giddily. It was closely followed by the sudden realization of his situation. He
sat up and took stock. If he could find his way back to the dead animals, he
would at least have food and water. But as he stood up, he realized that he had
no notion which way the cavern lay. Cursing himself for not counting the turns
as he had made them, he tried to remember the general pattern he had followed.
He had turned mostly to the right, he reminded himself, so if he retraced his
steps mostly to the left, he should be able to find one of the many tunnels
that led to the glory hole. Looking cautiously around the first corner, Tomas
set off, searching his way through the maze of passages.
After an unknown time had passed, Tomas stopped and looked around in
the second large cavern he had come to since he had fled the wraith. Like the
first, this cavern was devoid of mules and men—and the hoped-for food and
water. Tomas opened his pouch and took out the small biscuit he had hoarded to
nibble while walking. It gave him little relief from his hunger.
When he was done, he set off again, trying to find some clue to the
way out. He knew he had only a short time before his torch died, but he refused
to simply sit and wait for a nameless death in the dark.
After some time Tomas could hear the sound of water echoing through
the tunnel. Hurrying forward, his thirst spurring him on, he entered a large
cavern, the biggest yet, as far as he could tell. Far away he could hear the
faint roar of the Mac Mordain Cadal falls, but in which direction he couldn’t
be sure. Somewhere high in the darkness lay the path that they had taken two
days earlier. Tomas felt his heart sink, he had moved deeper into the earth than
he had thought.
The tunnel widened to a landing of some sort and disappeared beneath
what appeared to be a large lake, constantly lapping against the sides of the
cavern, filling it with muted echoes. Quickly he fell to his knees and drank.
The water tasted rich with minerals, but was clear and fresh.
Sitting back on his haunches, he looked about. The landing was
packed earth and sand and appeared to be fashioned rather than natural. Tomas
guessed the dwarves might have used boats to cross the underground lake, but
could only wonder what lay on the other side. Then the thought hit him that
perhaps someone other than the dwarves had used boats to cross the lake, and he
felt fear again.
To his
left he spied a pile of wood, nestled against a junction of the landing and the
cavern wall. Crossing to it, he pulled out several pieces and started a small
fire. The wood was mostly timber pieces, used to shore up the tunnels, but
mixed in were several branches and twigs. They must have been brought down by
the falls from above, where the river enters the mountain, he thought.
Underneath the pile he found some fibrous weeds growing. Wondering at the
plants’ ability to grow without sunlight, the boy was nevertheless thankful,
for after cutting them with his sword, he was able to fashion some rude torches
with the weeds wrapped around some driftwood. He tied them in a bundle, using
his sword belt, forcing him to give up his scabbard. At least, he thought, I’ll
have a little more light. Some extra time to see where he was going was
comforting.
He threw some bigger timber pieces on his small fire, and soon it
was roaring into brightness. Abruptly the cavern seemed to light up, and Tomas
spun around. The entire cavern was glowing with sparkling light, as some sort
of mineral, or crystal, caught the light and reflected it to be caught and
reflected again. It was a glittering, sparkling rainbow of colors cascading
over walls and ceiling, giving the entire cavern a fairy-like quality as far as
the eye could follow.
Tomas stood in awe for a minute, drinking in the sight, for he knew
he would never be able to explain in words what he was seeing. The thought
struck him that he might be the only human ever to have witnessed the display.
It was hard to tear his eyes from the glory of the vision, but Tomas
forced himself. He used the extra illumination to examine the area he was in.
There was nothing beyond the landing, but he did spy another tunnel off to the
left, leaving the cavern at the far end of the sand.
He gathered together his torches and walked along the landing. As he
reached the tunnel, his fire died down, the dry timber being quickly consumed.
Another glorious vision assaulted his senses, for the gemlike walls and ceiling
continued to glimmer and glow. Again he stood silently watching the display.
Slowly the sparkling dimmed, until the cavern was again dark, except for his
torch and the quickly dying fire’s red glow.
He had to stretch to reach the other tunnel, but made it without
dropping his sword or torches, or getting his boots wet. Turning away from the
cavern, he resumed his journey.
He made his way for hours, the torch burning lower. He lit one of
the new ones and found that it gave a satisfactory light. He was still
frightened, but felt good about keeping his head under these conditions and was
sure Swordmaster Fannon would approve of his actions.
After walking for a while, he came to an intersection. He found the
bones of a creature in the dust, its fate unknowable. He spotted the tracks of
some other small creature leading away, but they were faint with age. With no
other notion than the need for a clear path, Tomas followed them. Soon they
also vanished in the dust.
He had no means to reckon time, but thought that it must be well
into night by now. There was a timeless feeling to these passages, and he felt
lost beyond recovery. Fighting down what he recognized as budding panic, he
continued to walk. He kept his mind on pleasant memories of home, and dreams of
the future. He would find a way out, and he would become a great hero in the
coming war. And most cherished dream of all, he would journey to Elvandar and
see the beautiful lady of the elves again.
He followed the tunnel downward. This area seemed different from the
other caverns and tunnels, its manner of fashioning unlike the others. He
thought that Dolgan could tell if this was so, and who had done the work.
He entered another cavern and looked around. Some of the tunnels
that entered the cavern were barely tall enough for a man to walk through
upright. Others were broad enough for a company of men to walk through ten
abreast, with long spears upon their shoulders. He hoped this meant the dwarves
had fashioned the smaller tunnels and he could follow one upward, back to the
surface.
Looking around, he spied a likely ledge to rest upon, within jumping
distance. He crossed to it and tossed up his sword and the bundle of torches.
He then gently tossed up his torch, so as not to put it out, and pulled himself
up. It was large enough to sleep upon without rolling off Four feet up the wall
was a small hole, about three feet in diameter. Looking down it, Tomas could
see that it opened up quickly to a size large enough to stand in and stretched
away into blackness.
Satisfied that nothing lurked immediately above him, and that
anything coming from below would awaken him, Tomas pulled his cloak around him,
rested his head on his hand, and put out the torch. He was frightened, but the
exhaustion of the day lulled him quickly to sleep. He lay in fitful dreams of
red glowing eyes chasing him down endless black corridors, terror washing over
him. He ran until he came to a green place where he could rest, feeling safe,
under the gaze of a beautiful woman with red-gold hair and pale blue eyes.
He started awake to some nameless call. He had no idea of how long
he had slept, but he felt as if it had been long enough for his body to run
again, if need be. He felt in the dark for his torch and took flint and steel
from out of his pouch. He struck sparks into the wadding of the torch and
started a glow. Quickly bringing the torch close, he blew the spark into flame.
Looking about, he found the cavern unchanged. A faint echoing of his own
movements was all he heard.
He realized he could have a chance of survival only if he kept
moving and found a way up. He stood and was about to climb down from the ledge
when a faint noise sounded from the hole above.
He peered down it but could see nothing. Again there came a faint
sound, and Tomas strained to hear what it was. It was almost like the tread of
footfalls, but he could not be sure. He nearly shouted, but held off, for there
was no assurance it was his friends returned to find him. His imagination
provided many other possibilities, all of them unpleasant.
He thought for a moment, then decided. Whatever was making the noise
might lead him out of the mines, even if only by providing a trail to follow.
With no other option appearing more attractive, he pulled himself up through
the small hole, entering the new tunnel.
10
RESCUE
It was a dispirited group that emerged from the mine.
The survivors sank to the ground, near exhaustion. Pug had fought
tears for hours after Tomas had fled, and now he lay on the wet ground staring
upward at the grey sky, feeling numb. Kulgan had fared worst of all, being
completely drained of energy by the spell used to repel the wraith. He had been
carried on the shoulders of the others most of the way, and they showed the
price of their burden. All fell into an exhausted sleep, except Dolgan, who lit
a fire and stood watch.
Pug awoke to the sound of voices and a clear, starry night. The
smell of food cooking greeted him. When Gardan and the three remaining guards
awakened, Dolgan had left them to watch over the others and had snared a brace
of rabbits. These were roasting over a fire. The others awake, except Kulgan,
who snored deeply.
Arutha and the Duke saw the boy wake, and the Prince came to where
he sat. The younger son of the Duke, ignoring the snow, sat on the ground next
to Pug, who had his cloak wrapped around him. “How do you feel. Pug?” Arutha
asked, concern showing in his eyes.
This was the first time Pug had seen Arutha’s gentler nature. Pug
tried to speak and found tears coming to his eyes. Tomas had been his friend as
long as he could remember, more a brother than a friend. As he tried to speak,
great racking sobs broke from his throat, and he felt hot, salty tears run down
into his mouth.
Arutha placed his arm around Pug, letting the boy cry on his
shoulder. When the initial flood of grief had passed, the Prince said, “There
is nothing shameful in mourning the loss of a friend, Pug. My father and I
share your pain.”
Dolgan came to stand behind the Prince. “I also, Pug, for he was a
likable lad We all share your loss.” The dwarf seemed to consider something and
spoke to the Duke.
Kulgan had just awakened, sitting up like a bear waking from
winter’s sleep. He regained his bearings and, seeing Arutha with Pug, quickly
forgot his own aching joints and joined them.
There was little they could say, but Pug found comfort in their
closeness. He finally regained his composure and pulled away from the Prince
“Thank you, Your Highness,” he said, sniffing. “I will be all right.”
They joined Dolgan, Gardan, and the Duke near the fire. Borric was
shaking his head at something the dwarf had said. “I thank you for your
bravery, Dolgan, but I can’t allow it.”
Dolgan puffed on his pipe, a friendly smile splitting his beard.
“And how do you intend to stop me, Your Grace? Surely not by force?”
Borric shook his head. “No, of course not. But to go would be the
sheerest folly.”
Kulgan and Arutha exchanged questioning looks. Pug paid little
attention, being lost in a cold, numb world. In spite of having just awakened,
he felt ready for sleep again, welcoming its warm, soft relief.
Borric told them, “This mad dwarf means to return to the mines.”
Before Kulgan and Arutha could voice a protest, Dolgan said, “I know
it is only a slim hope, but if the boy has eluded the foul spirit, he’ll be
wandering lost and alone. There are tunnels down there that have never known
the tread of a dwarf’s foot, let alone a boy’s. Once down a passage, I have no
trouble making my way back, but Tomas has no such natural sense. If I can find
his trail, I can find him. If he is to have any chance of escaping the mines,
he’ll be needing my guidance. I’ll bring home the boy if he lives, on this you
have the word of Dolgan Tagarson, chief of village Caldara. I could not rest in
my long hall this winter if I did not try.”
Pug was roused from his lethargy by the dwarf’s words. “Do you think
you can find him, Dolgan?”
“If any can, I can,” he said. He leaned close to Pug “Do not get
your hopes too high, for it is unlikely that Tomas eluded the wraith. I would
do you a disservice if I said otherwise, boy.” Seeing the tears brimming in
Pug’s eyes again, he quickly added, “But if there is a way, I shall find it.”
Pug nodded, seeking a middle path between desolation and renewed
hope. He understood the admonition, but still could not give up the faint
flicker of comfort Dolgan’s undertaking would provide.
Dolgan crossed over to where his shield and ax lay and picked them
up. “When the dawn comes, quickly follow the trail down the hills through the
woodlands. While not the Green Heart, this place has menace aplenty for so
small a band. If you lose your way, head due east. You’ll find your way to the
road to Bordon. From there it is a matter of three days’ walk. May the gods
protect you.”
Borric nodded, and Kulgan walked over to where the dwarf made ready
to leave. He handed Dolgan a pouch. “I can get more tabac in the town, friend
dwarf Please take this.”
Dolgan took it and smiled at Kulgan. “Thank you, magician I am in
your debt.”
Borric came to stand before the dwarf and place a hand on his
shoulder. “It is we who are in your debt, Dolgan. If you come to Crydee, we
will have that meal you were promised. That, and more. May good fortune go with
you.”
“Thank you, Your Lordship. I’ll look forward to it.” Without another
word, Dolgan walked into the blackness of Mac Mordain Cadal.
Dolgan stopped by the dead mules, pausing only long enough to pick
up food, water, and a lantern. The dwarf needed no light to make his way
underground—his people had long ago adapted other senses for the darkness. But,
he thought, it will increase the chances of finding Tomas if the boy can see
the light, no matter the risk of attracting unwelcome attention. Assuming he is
still alive, he added grimly.
Entering the tunnel where he had last seen Tomas, Dolgan searched
about for signs of the boy’s passing. The dust was thin, but here and there he
could make out a slight disturbance, perhaps a footprint Following, the dwarf
came to even dustier passages, where the boy’s footfalls were clearly marked.
Hurrying, he followed them.
Dolgan came back to the same cavern, after a few minutes, and
cursed.
He felt little hope of finding the boy’s tracks again among all the
disturbance caused by the fight with the wraith. Pausing briefly, he set out to
examine each tunnel leading out of the cavern for signs. After an hour he found
a single footprint heading away from the cavern, through a tunnel to the right
of where he had entered the first time. Moving up it, he found several more
prints, set wide apart, and decided the boy must have been running. Hurrying
on, he saw more tracks, as the passage became dustier.
Dolgan came to the cavern on the lake and nearly lost the trail
again, until he saw the tunnel near the edge of the landing. He slogged through
the water, pulling himself up into the passage, and saw Tomas’s tracks. His
faint lantern light was insufficient to illuminate the crystals in the cavern.
But even if it had, he would not have paused to admire the sight, so intent was
he on finding the boy.
Downward he followed, never resting. He knew that Tomas had long
before outdistanced the wraith. There were signs that most of his journey was
at a slower pace: footprints in the dust showed he had been walking, and the cold
campfire showed he had stopped. But there were other terrors besides the wraith
down here, just as dreadful.
Dolgan again lost the trail in the last cavern, finding it only when
he spied the ledge above where the tracks ended. He had difficulty climbing to
it, but when he did, he saw the blackened spot where the boy had snuffed out
his torch. Here Tomas must have rested. Dolgan looked around the empty cavern.
The air did not move this deep below the mountains. Even the dwarf, who was
used to such things, found this an unnerving place. He looked down at the black
mark on the ledge. But how long did Tomas stay, and where did he go?
Dolgan saw the hole in the wall and, since no tracks led away from
the ledge, decided that was the way Tomas must have gone. He climbed through
and followed the passage until it came to a larger one, heading downward, into
the bowels of the mountain.
Dolgan followed what seemed to be a group of tracks, as if a band of
men had come this way. Tomas’s tracks were mixed in, and he was worried, for
the boy could have been along this way before or after the others, or could
have been with them. If the boy was held prisoner by someone, then Dolgan knew
every moment was critical.
The tunnel wound downward and soon changed into a hall fashioned
from great stone blocks fitted closely together and polished smooth. In all his
years he had never seen its like. The passage leveled out, and Dolgan walked
along quietly. The tracks had vanished, for the stone was hard and free of
dust. High overhead, Dolgan could make out the first of several crystal
chandeliers hung from the ceiling by chains. They could be lowered by means of
a pulley, so the candles might be lit. The sound of his boots echoed hollowly
off the high ceiling.
At the far end of the passage he spied large doors, fashioned from
wood, with bands of iron and a great lock. They were ajar, and light could be
seen coming through.
Without a sound, Dolgan crept close to the doors and peered in. He
gaped at what he saw, his shield and ax coming up instinctively.
Sitting on a pile of gold coins, and gems the size of a man’s fist,
was Tomas, eating what looked to be a fish. Opposite him crouched a figure that
caused Dolgan to doubt his eyes.
A head the size of a small wagon rested on the floor. Shield-size
scales of a deep golden color covered it, and the long, supple neck led back to
a huge body extending into the gloom of the giant hall. Enormous wings were
folded across its back, their drooping tips touching the floor. Two pointed
ears sat atop its head, separated by a delicate-looking crest, flecked with
silver. Its long muzzle was set in a wolflike grin, showing fangs as long as
broadswords, and a long forked tongue flicked out for a moment.
Dolgan fought down the overwhelming and rare urge to run, for Tomas
was sitting, and to all appearances sharing a meal, with the dwarven folk’s
most feared hereditary enemy: a great dragon. He stepped forward, and his boots
clacked on the stone floor.
Tomas turned at the sound, and the dragon’s great head came up.
Giant ruby eyes regarded the small intruder Tomas jumped to his feet, an
expression of joy upon his face. “Dolgan!” He scrambled down from the pile of
wealth and rushed to the dwarf.
The dragon’s voice rumbled through the great hall, echoing like thunder
through a valley. “Welcome, dwarf. Thy friend hath told me that thou wouldst
not forsake him.”
Tomas stood before the dwarf, asking a dozen questions, while
Dolgan’s senses reeled. Behind the boy, the Prince of all dragons sat quietlv
observing the exchange, and the dwarf was having trouble maintaining the
equanimity that was normally his. Making little sense of Tomas’s questions,
Dolgan gently pushed him to one side to better see the dragon. “I came alone,”
he said softly to the boy “The others were loath to leave the search to me, but
they had to press on, so vital was the mission.”
Tomas said, “I understand.”
“What manner of wizardry is this?” asked Dolgan softly.
The dragon chuckled, and the room rumbled with the sound. “Come into
my home, dwarf, and I will tell thee.” The great dragon’s head returned to the
floor, his eyes still resting above Dolgan’s head. The dwarf approached slowly,
shield and ax unconsciously at the ready. The dragon laughed, a deep, echoing
sound, like water cascading down a canyon “Stay thy hand, small warrior, I’ll
not harm thee or thy friend.”
Dolgan let his shield down and hung his ax on his belt. He looked
around and saw that they were standing in a vast hall, fashioned out of the
living rock of the mountain. On all its walls could be seen large tapestries
and banners, faded and torn; something about their look set Dolgan’s teeth on
edge, for they were as alien as they were ancient—no creature he knew of,
human, elf, or goblin fashioned those pennants. More of the giant crystal
chandeliers hung from timbers across the ceiling. At the far end of the hall, a
throne could be seen on a dais, and long tables with chairs for many diners
stood before it Upon the tables were flagons of crystal and plates of gold. And
all was covered with the dust of ages.
Elsewhere in the hall lay piles of wealth: gold, gems, crowns,
silver, rich armor, bolts of rare cloth, and carved chests of precious woods,
fitted with inlaid enamels of great craft.
Dolgan sat upon a lifetime’s riches of gold, absently moving it
around to make as comfortable a seat as was possible. Tomas sat next to him as
the dwarf pulled out his pipe. He didn’t show it, but he felt the need to calm
himself, and his pipe always soothed his nerves. He lit a taper from his
lantern and struck it to his pipe. The dragon watched him, then said, “Canst
thou now breathe fire and smoke, dwarf? Art thou the new dragon? Hath ever a
dragon been so small?”
Dolgan
shook his head. “ ‘Tis but my pipe .” He explained the use of tabac.
The dragon said, “This is a strange thing, but thine are a strange
folk, in truth.”
Dolgan cocked a brow at this but said nothing. “Tomas, how did you
come to this place?”
Tomas seemed unmindful of the dragon, and Dolgan found this
reassuring. If the great beast had wished to harm them, he could have done so
with little effort. Dragons were undisputedly the mightiest creatures on
Midkemia. And this was the mightiest dragon Dolgan had heard of, half again the
size of those he had fought in his youth.
Tomas finished the fish he had been eating and said, “I wandered for
a long time and came to a place where I could sleep.”
“Aye, I found it.”
“I awoke at the sound of something and found tracks that led here.”
“Those I saw also. I was afraid you had been taken.”
“I wasn’t. It was a party of goblins and a few Dark Brothers, coming
to this place. They were very concerned about what was ahead and didn’t pay
attention to what was behind, so I could follow fairly close.”
“That was a dangerous thing to do.”
“I know, but I was desperate for a way out. I thought they might
lead me to the surface, and I could wait while they went on ahead, then slip
out. If I could get out of the mines, I could have headed north toward your
village.”
“A bold plan, Tomas,” said Dolgan, an approving look in his eyes.
“They came to this place, and I followed.”
“What happened to them?”
The dragon spoke. “I sent them far away, dwarf, for they were not
company I would choose.”
“Sent them away? How?”
The dragon raised his head a little, and Dolgan could see that his
scales were faded and dull in places. The red eyes were filmed over slightly,
and suddenly Dolgan knew the dragon was blind.
“The dragons have long had magic, though it is unlike any other. It
is by my arts that I can see thee, dwarf, for the light hath long been denied
me. I took the foul creatures and sent them far to the north. They do not know
how they came to that place, nor remember this place.”
Dolgan puffed on his pipe, thinking of what he was hearing. “In the
tales of my people, there are legends of dragon magicians, though you are the
first I have seen.”
The dragon lowered his head to the floor slowly, as if tired. “For I
am one of the last of the golden dragons, dwarf, and none of the lesser dragons
have the art of sorcery. I have sworn never to take a life, but I would not
have their kind invade my resting place.”
Tomas spoke up. “Rhuagh has been kind to me, Dolgan. He let me stay
until you found me, for he knew that someone was coming.”
Dolgan looked at the dragon, wondering at his foretelling.
Tomas continued, “He gave me some smoked fish to eat, and a place to
rest.”
“Smoked fish?”
The dragon said, “The kobolds, those thou knowest as gnomes, worship
me as a god and bring me offerings, fish caught in the deep lake and smoked, and
treasure gleaned from deeper halls.”
“Aye,” said Dolgan, “gnomes have never been known for being overly
bright.”
The dragon chuckled. “True. The kobolds are shy and harm only those
who trouble them in their deep tunnels. They are a simple folk, and it pleaseth
them to have a god. As I am not able to hunt, it is an agreeable arrangement.”
Dolgan considered his next question. “I mean no disrespect, Rhuagh,
but it has ever been my experience with dragons that you have little love for
others not your own kind. Why have you aided the boy?”
The dragon closed his eyes for a moment, then opened them again to
stare blankly toward the dwarf “Know this, dwarf, that such was not always the
way of it. Thy people are old, but mine are the oldest of all, save one. We
were here before the elves and the moredhel. We served those whose names may
not be spoken, and were a happy people.”
“The Dragon Lords?”
“So your legends call them. They were our masters, and we were their
servants, as were the elves and the moredhel. When they left this land, on a
journey beyond imagining, we became the most powerful of the free people, in a
time before the dwarves or men came to these lands. Ours was a dominion over
the skies and all things, for we were mighty beyond any other.
“Ages ago, men and dwarves came to our mountains, and for a time we
lived in peace. But ways change, and soon strife came. The elves drove the
moredhel from the forest now called Elvandar, and men and dwarves warred with
dragons.
“We were strong, but humans are like the trees of the forest, their
numbers uncountable. Slowly my people fled to the south, and I am the last in
these mountains. I have lived here for ages, for I would not forsake my home.
“By magic I could turn away those who sought this treasure, and kill
those whose arts foiled my clouding of their minds. I sickened of the killing
and vowed to take no more lives, even those as hateful as the moredhel. That is
why I sent them far, and why I aided the boy, for he is undeserving of harm.”
Dolgan studied the dragon. “I thank you, Rhuagh.”
“Thy thanks are welcome, Dolgan of the Grey Towers. I am glad of thy
coming also. It is only a little longer that I could shelter the boy, for I
summoned Tomas to my side by magic arts, so he might sit my death-watch.”
“What?” exclaimed Tomas.
“It is given to dragons to know the hour of their death, Tomas, and
mine is close. I am old, even by the measure of my people, and have led a full
life. I am content for it to be so. It is our way.”
Dolgan looked troubled. “Still, I find it strange to sit here
hearing you speak of this.”
“Why, dwarf? Is it not true with thine own people that when one
dieth, it is accounted how well he lived, rather than how long?”
“You have the truth of that.”
“Then why should it matter if the death hour is known or not? It is
still the same. I have had all that one of my kind could hope for: health,
mates, young, riches, and rest. These are all I have ever wanted, and I have
had them.”
“ ‘Tis
a wise thing to know what is wanted, and wiser still to know when ‘tis
achieved,” said Dolgan.
“True. And still wiser to know when it is unachievable, for then
striving is folly. It is the way of my people to sit the deathwatch, but there
are none of my kind near enough to call. I would ask thee to wait for my
passing before thy leaving. Wilt thou?”
Dolgan looked at Tomas, who bobbed his head in agreement. “Aye,
dragon, we will, though it is not a thing to gladden our hearts.”
The dragon closed his eyes; Tomas and Dolgan could see they were
beginning to swell shut. “Thanks to thee, Dolgan, and to thee, Tomas.”
The dragon lay there and spoke to them of his life, flying the skies
of Midkemia, of far lands where tigers lived in cities, and mountains where
eagles could speak. Tales of wonder and awe were told, long into the night.
When his voice began to falter, Rhuagh said, “Once a man came to
this place, a magician of mighty arts. He could not be turned from this place
by my magic, nor could I slay him. For three days we battled, his arts against
mine, and when done, he had bested me. I thought he would slay me and carry off
my riches, but instead he stayed, for his only thought was to learn my magic,
so that it would not be lost when I passed.”
Tomas sat in wonder, for as little as he knew about magic from Pug,
he thought this a marvelous thing In his mind’s eye he could see the titanic
struggle and the great powers working.
“With him he had a strange creature, much like a goblin, though
upright, and with features of finer aspect. For three years he stayed with me,
while his servant came and went. He learned all I could teach, for I could deny
him not. But he taught as well, and his wisdom gave me great comfort. It was
because of him that I learned to respect life, no matter how mean of character,
and vowed to spare any that came to me. He also had suffered at the hands of
others, as I had in the wars with men, for much that I cherished was lost. This
man had the art of healing the wounds of the heart and mind, and when he left,
I felt the victor, not the vanquished.” He paused and swallowed, and Tomas
could see that speech was coming to him with more difficulty. “If a dragon
could not have attended my deathwatch, I would as soon have him sit here, for
he was the first of thy kind, boy, that I would count a friend.”
“Who was he, Rhuagh?” Tomas asked.
“He was called Macros.”
Dolgan looked thoughtful. “I’ve heard his name, a magician of most
puissant arts. He is nearly a myth, having lived somewhere to the east.”
“A myth he is not, Dolgan,” said Rhuagh, thickly. “Still, it may be
that he is dead, for he dwelt with me ages ago.” The dragon paused “My time is
now close, so I must finish I would ask a boon of thee, dwarf.” He moved his
head slightly and said, “In yon box is a gift from the mage, to be used at this
time. It is a rod fashioned of magic. Macros left it so that when I die no
bones will be left for scavengers to pick over. Wilt thou bring it here?”
Dolgan went to the indicated chest. He opened it to discover a black
metal rod lying upon a blue velvet cloth. He picked up the rod and found it
surprisingly heavy for its size. He carried it over to the dragon.
The dragon spoke, his words nearly unintelligible, for his tongue
was swollen. “In a moment, touch the rod to me, Dolgan, for then will I end.”
“Aye,” said Dolgan, “though it will give me scant pleasure to see
your end, dragon.”
“Before that I have one last thing to tell. In a box next to the
other is a gift for thee, dwarf. Thou mayest take whatever else here pleaseth
thee, for I will have no use for any of it. But of all in this hall, that in
the box is what I wish thee to have.” He tried to move his head toward Tomas,
but could not. “Tomas, thanks to thee, for spending my last with me. In the box
with the dwarf’s gift is one for you. Take whatever else pleaseth thee, also,
for thy heart is good.” He drew a deep breath, and Tomas could hear it rattle
in his throat. “Now, Dolgan.”
Dolgan extended the rod and lightly touched the dragon on the head
with it. At first nothing happened. Rhuagh said softly, “It was Macros’s last
gift.”
Suddenly a soft golden light began to form around the dragon. A
faint humming could be heard, as if the walls of the hall reverberated with fey
music. The sound increased as the light grew brighter and began to pulse with
energy. Tomas and Dolgan watched as the discolored patches faded from Rhuagh’s
scales. His hide shone with golden sparkle, and the film started to lift from
his eyes. He slowly raised his head, and they knew he could again see the hall
around him. His crest stood erect, and his wings lifted, showing the rich
silver sheen underneath. The yellowed teeth became brilliant white, and his
faded black claws shone like polished ebony as he stood upright, lifting his
head high.
Dolgan said softly, “Tis the grandest sight I’ve ever beheld.”
Slowly the light grew in intensity as Rhuagh returned to the image
of his youthful power. He pulled himself to his full, impressive height, his
crest dancing with silver lights. The dragon threw back his head, a youthful,
vigorous motion, and with a shout of joy sent a powerful blast of flame up to
the high vaulted ceiling. With a roar like a hundred trumpets he shouted, “I
thank thee, Macros. It is a princely gift indeed.”
Then the strangely harmonic thrumming changed in tone, becoming more
insistent, louder. For a brief instant both Dolgan and Tomas thought a voice
could be heard among the pulsing tones, a deep, hollow echo saying, “You are
welcome, friend.”
Tomas felt wetness on his face, and touched it. Tears of joy from
the dragon’s sheer beauty were running down his cheeks. The dragon’s great
golden wings unfolded, as if he were about to launch himself in flight. The
shimmering light became so bright, Tomas and Dolgan could barely stand to look,
though they could not pull their eyes from the spectacle. The sound in the room
grew to a pitch so loud, dust fell from the ceiling upon their heads, and they
could feel the floor shake. The dragon launched himself upward, wings extended,
then vanished in a blinding flash of cold white light. Suddenly the room was as
it had been and the sound was gone.
The emptiness in the cavern felt oppressive after the dragon
vanished, and Tomas looked at the dwarf “Let’s leave, Dolgan. I have little
wish to stay.”
Dolgan looked thoughtful. “Aye, Tomas, I also have little desire to
stay. Still, there is the matter of the dragon’s gifts.” He crossed over to the
box the dragon had identified and opened it.
Dolgan’s eyes became round as he reached in and pulled out a dwarven
hammer. He held it out before himself and looked upon it with reverence. The
head was made from a silver metal that shone in the lantern light with bluish
highlights. Across the side were carved dwarven symbols. The haft was carved
oak, with scrollwork running the length. It was polished, and the deep rich
gram showed through the finish Dolgan said, faintly, “Tis the Hammer of Tholin.
Long removed from my people. Its return will cause rejoicing in every dwarven
long hall throughout the West. It is the symbol of our last king, lost ages
ago.”
Tomas came over to watch and saw something else in the box. He
reached past Dolgan and pulled out a large bundle of white cloth. He unrolled
it and found that the cloth was a tabard of white, with a golden dragon
emblazoned on the front. Inside were a shield with the same device and a golden
helm. Most marvelous of all was a golden sword with a white hilt. Its scabbard
was fashioned from a smooth white material like ivory, but stronger, like
metal. Beneath the bundle lav a coat of golden chain mail, which he removed
with an “Oh!” of wonder.
Dolgan watched him and said, “Take them, boy. The dragon said it was
your gift.”
“They are much too fine for me, Dolgan. They belong to a prince or a
king.”
“I’m thinking the previous owner has scant use for them, laddie.
They were freely given, and you may do what you will, but I think that there is
something special to them, or else they wouldn’t have been placed in the box
with the hammer. Tholin’s hammer is a weapon of power, forged in the ancient
hearths of the Mac Cadman Alair, the oldest mine in these mountains. In it
rests magic unsurpassed in the history of the dwarves. It is likely the gilded
armor and sword are also such. It may be there is a purpose in their coming to
you.”
Tomas thought for a moment, then quickly pulled off his great cloak.
His tunic was no gambeson, but the golden mail went over it easily enough,
being fashioned for someone of larger stature. He pulled the tabard over it and
put the helm upon his head. Picking up the sword and shield, he stood before
Dolgan. “Do I look foolish?”
The dwarf regarded him closely “They are a bit large, but you’ll
grow into them, no doubt.” He thought he saw something in the way the boy stood
and held the sword in one hand and the shield in the other. “No, Tomas, you do
not look foolish. Perhaps not at ease, but not foolish. They are grand, and you
will come to wear them as they were meant to be worn, I think.”
Tomas nodded, picked up his cloak, and turned toward the door,
putting up his sword. The armor was surprisingly light, much lighter than what
he had worn at Crydee. The boy said, “I don’t feel like taking anything else,
Dolgan. I suppose that sounds strange.”
Dolgan walked over to him. “No, boy, for I also wish nothing of the
dragon’s riches.” With a backward glance at the hall, he added, “Though there
will be nights to come when I will wonder at the wisdom of that. I may return
someday, but I doubt it. Now let us find a way home.” They set off and soon
were in tunnels Dolgan knew well, taking them to the surface.
Dolgan gripped Tomas’s arm in silent warning. The boy knew enough
not to speak. He also felt the same alarm he had experienced just before the
wraith had attacked the day before. But this time it was almost physically
felt. The undead creature was near. Putting down the lantern, Tomas shuttered
it. His eyes widened in sudden astonishment, for instead of the expected
blackness, he saw faintly the figure of the dwarf moving slowly forward.
Without thought he said, “Dolgan—”
The dwarf turned, and suddenly a black form loomed up at his back “Behind
you!” shouted Tomas.
Dolgan spun to confront the wraith, instinctively bringing up his
shield and Tholin’s hammer. The undead creature struck at the dwarf, and only
Dolgan’s battle-trained reflexes and dwarven ability to sense movement in the
inky darkness saved him, for he took the contact on his iron-bosked shield. The
creature howled in rage at the contact with iron. Then Dolgan lashed out with
the legendary weapon of his ancestors, and the creature screamed as the hammer
struck its form. Blue-green light sprang about the head of the hammer, and the
creature retreated, wailing in agony.
“Stay behind me,” shouted Dolgan. “If iron irritates it, then
Tholin’s hammer pains it. I may be able to drive it off.”
Tomas began to obey the dwarf, then found his right hand crossing to
pull the golden sword free of the scabbard on his left hip Suddenly the
ill-fitting armor seemed to settle more comfortably around his shoulders, and
the shield balanced upon his arm as if he had carried it for years. Without
volition of his own, Tomas moved behind Dolgan, then stepped past, bringing the
golden sword to the ready.
The creature seemed to hesitate, then moved toward Tomas. Tomas
raised his sword, readying to strike. With a sound of utter terror, the wraith
turned and fled. Dolgan glanced at Tomas, and something he saw made him
hesitate as Tomas seemed to come to an awareness of himself and put up his
sword.
Dolgan returned to the lantern and said, “Why did you do that, lad?”
Tomas said, “I . . . don’t know.” Feeling suddenly self-conscious at
having disobeyed the dwarf’s instructions, he said, “But it worked. The thing
left.”
“Aye, it worked,” agreed Dolgan, removing the shutter from the
lantern. In the light he studied the boy.
Tomas said, “I think your ancestor’s hammer was too much for it.”
Dolgan said nothing, but he knew that wasn’t the case. The creature
had fled in fear from the sight of Tomas in his armor of white and gold. Then
another thought struck the dwarf. “Boy, how did you know to warn me the
creature was behind me?”
“I saw it.”
Dolgan turned to look at Tomas with open astonishment “You saw it?
How? You had shuttered the lantern.”
“I don’t know how. I just did.”
Dolgan closed the shutter on the lantern again and stood up. Moving
a few feet away, he said, “Where am I now, lad?”
Without hesitation Tomas came to stand before him, placing a hand
upon his shoulder. “Here.”
“What—?” said the dwarf.
Tomas touched the helm, then the shield “You said they were
special.”
“Aye,
lad. But I didn’t think they were that special.”
“Should I take them off?” asked the worried boy.
“No, no.” Leaving the lantern upon the floor, Dolgan said, “We can
move more quickly if I don’t have to worry about what you can and can’t see.”
He forced a note of cheenness into his voice. “And despite there being no two
finer warriors in the land, it’s best if we don’t announce our presence with that
light. The dragon’s telling of the moredhel being down in our mines gives me no
comfort. If one band was brave enough to risk my people’s wrath, there may be
others. Yon wraith may be terrified of your golden sword and my ancient hammer,
but twenty or so moredhel might not be so easily impressed.”
Tomas could find nothing to say, so they started moving off into the
darkness.
Three times they stopped and hid while hurrying groups of goblins
and Dark Brothers passed near by. From their dark vantage point they could see
that many of those who passed harbored wounds or were aided by their kinsmen as
they limped along. After the last group was gone, Dolgan turned to Tomas and
said, “Never in history have the goblins and moredhel dared to enter our mines
in such numbers. Too much do they fear my people to risk it.”
Tomas said, “They look pretty beat up, Dolgan, and they have females
and young with them, and carry great bundles, too. They are fleeing something.”
The dwarf nodded. “They are all moving from the direction of the
northern valley in the Grey Towers, heading toward the Green Heart. Something
still drives them south.”
“The Tsurani?”
Dolgan nodded. “My thought also. Come. We had best return to Caldara
as quickly as we can.” They set off and soon were in tunnels Dolgan knew well,
taking them to the surface and home.
They
were both exhausted when they reached Caldara five days later. The snows in the
mountains were heavy, and the going was slow. As they approached the village,
they were sighted by guards, and soon the entire village turned out to greet
them.
They were taken to the village long hall, and Tomas was given a
room. He was so tired that he fell asleep at once, and even the stout dwarf was
fatigued. The dwarves agreed to call the village elders together the next day
in council and discuss the latest news to reach the valley.
Tomas awoke feeling ravenous. He stretched as he stood up and was
surprised to find no stiffness. He had fallen asleep in the golden mail and
should have wakened to protesting joints and muscles. Instead he felt rested
and well. He opened the door and stepped into a hall. He saw no one until he
came to the central room of the long hall. There were several dwarves seated
along the great table, with Dolgan at the head. Tomas saw one was Weylin,
Dolgan’s son. Dolgan motioned the boy to a chair and introduced him to the
company.
The dwarves all greeted Tomas, who made polite responses. Mostly he
stared at the great feast of food on the table.
Dolgan laughed and said, “Help yourself, laddie; there is little
cause for you to be hungry with the board full.” Tomas heaped a plate with
beef, cheese, and bread and took a flagon of ale, though he had little head for
it and it was early in the day. He quickly consumed what was on the platter and
helped himself to another portion, looking to see if anyone disapproved. Most
of the dwarves were involved in a complicated discussion of an unknown nature
to Tomas, having to do with the allocation of winter stores to various villages
in the area.
Dolgan called a halt to the discussion and said, “Now that Tomas is
with us, I think we had best speak of these Tsurani.”
Tomas’s ears pricked up at that, and he turned his attention fully
to what was being said Dolgan continued, “Since I left on patrol, we have had
runners from Elvandar and Stone Mountain. There have been many sightings of
these aliens near the North Pass. They have made camp in the hills south of
Stone Mountain.”
One of the dwarves said, “That is Stone Mountain’s business, unless
they call us to arms.”
Dolgan said, “True, Orwin, but there is also the news they have been
seen moving in and out of the valley just south of the pass. They have intruded
on lands traditionally ours, and that is the business of the Grev Towers.”
The dwarf addressed as Orwin nodded “Indeed it is, but there is
naught we can do until spring.”
Dolgan put his feet up on the table, lighting a pipe. “And that is
true also. But we can be thankful the Tsurani can do naught until spring, as
well.”
Tomas put down a joint of beef he was holding. “Has the blizzard
struck?”
Dolgan looked at him. “Aye, laddie, the passes are all solid with
snow, for the first winter blizzard came upon us last night. There will be
nothing that can move out there, least of all an army.”
Tomas looked at Dolgan. “Then . . .”
“Aye. You’ll guest with us this winter, for not even our hardiest
runner could make his way out of these mountains to Crydee.”
Tomas sat back, for in spite of the comforts of the dwarven long
hall, he wished for more familiar surroundings. Still, there was nothing that
could be done. He resigned himself to that and returned his attention to his
meal.
11
SORCERER’S ISLE
The weary group trudged into Bordon.
Around them rode a company of Natalese Rangers, dressed in their
traditional grey tunics, trousers, and cloaks. They had been on patrol, had
encountered the travelers a mile out of town, and were now escorting them.
Borric was irritated that the rangers had not offered to let the exhausted
travelers ride double, but he hid it well. They had little reason to recognize
this group of ragamuffins as the Duke of Crydee and his party, and even if he
should have arrived in state, there was little warmth between the Free Cities
of Natal and the Kingdom.
Pug looked at Bordon with wonder. It was a small city by Kingdom
standards, little more than a seaport town, but far larger than Crydee.
Everywhere he looked, people were hurrying about on unknown tasks, busy and
preoccupied. Little attention was paid the travelers except for an occasional
glance from a shopkeeper or a woman at market. Never had the boy seen so many
people, horses, mules, and wagons all in one place. It was a confusion of
colors and sounds, overwhelming his senses. Barking dogs ran behind the
rangers’ horses, nimbly avoiding kicks by the irritated mounts. A few street
boys shouted obscenities at the party, all obviously outlanders from their
look, and most likely prisoners from the escort. Pug was vaguely troubled by
this rudeness, but his attention was quickly distracted by the newness of the
city.
Bordon, like the other cities in the area, had no standing army, but
instead supported a garrison of Natalese Rangers, descendants of the legendary
Imperial Keshian Guides and counted among the best horse soldiers and trackers
in the west. They could provide ample warning of approaching trouble and allow
the local militia time to turn out. Nominally independent, the rangers were
free to dispose of outlaws and renegades on the spot, but after hearing the
Duke’s story, and at mention of the name Martin Longbow—whom they knew well—the
leader of the patrol decided this matter should be turned over to the local
prefects.
They were taken to the office of the local prefect, located in a
small building near the city square. The rangers appeared pleased to be shed of
the prisoners and return to their patrol as they gave over custody to the
prefect.
The prefect was a short, swarthy man given to brightly colored
sashes about his ample girth and large golden rings upon his fingers. He
smoothed his dark, oiled beard as the ranger captain explained his company’s
meeting with the Duke’s party. As the rangers rode off, the prefect greeted
Borric coolly. When the Duke made it clear they were expected by Talbott
Kilrane, the largest ships’ broker in the city and Bornc’s trading agent in the
Free Cities, the prefect’s manner changed abruptly. They were taken from the
office to the prefect’s private quarters and offered hot, dark coffee. The
prefect sent one of his servants with a message to the house of Kilrane and
waited quietly, only occasionally making noncommittal small talk with the Duke.
Kulgan leaned over to Pug and said, “Our host is the sort who sees
which way the wind blows before making up his mind, he waits word from the
merchant before deciding if we’re prisoners or guests.” The magician chuckled.
“You’ll find as you grow older that minor functionaries are the same the world
over.”
An angry storm in the person of Meecham appeared suddenly in the
door of the prefect’s home a short time later, one of Kilrane’s senior clerks
at his elbow. The clerk quickly made it clear that this was indeed the Duke of
Crydee and, yes, he was expected by Talbott Kilrane. The prefect was abjectly
apologetic and hopeful the Duke would forgive the inconvenience, but under the
present conditions, in these troubled times, he could understand? His manner
was fawning and his smile unctuous.
Borric indicated that, yes, he did understand, all too well. Without
any further delay, they left the prefect and went outside, where a group of
grooms waited with horses. Quickly they mounted up, and Meecham and the clerk
led them through the town, toward a hillside community of large, imposing
houses.
The house of Talbott Kilrane stood topmost upon the highest hill
overlooking the city. From the road Pug could see ships standing at anchor.
Dozens of them were sitting with masts removed, obviously out of service during
the harsh weather. A few coast-huggers bound for Ylith in the north or the
other Free Cities were making their way cautiously in and out of the harbor,
but for the most part the harbor was quiet.
They reached the house and entered an open gate in a low wall, where
servants ran to take their horses. As they dismounted, their host came through
the large entrance to the house.
“Welcome, Lord Borric, welcome,” he said, a warm smile splitting his
gaunt face. Talbott Kilrane looked like a vulture reincarnated into human form,
with a balding head, sharp features, and small, dark eyes. His expensive robes
did little, to hide his gauntness, but there was an ease to his manner, and a
concern in his eyes, that softened the unattractive aspect.
In spite of the man’s appearance, Pug found him likable. He shooed
servants off, to make ready rooms and hot meals for the party. He would not
listen as the Duke tried to explain the mission. Raising a hand, he said,
“Later, Your Grace. We can speak at length, after you have had rest and food. I
will expect you for dinner tonight, but for now there are hot baths and clean
beds for your party. I will have warm meals delivered to your quarters. Good
food, rest, and clean clothes, and you’ll feel like a new man. Then we can
speak.”
He clapped his hands, and a housecarl came to show them their rooms.
The Duke and his son were given separate quarters, while Pug and Kulgan shared
another Gardan was shown to Meecham’s room, and the Duke’s soldiers were taken
to the servants’ quarters.
Kulgan told Pug to take the first bath while the magician spoke with
his servant for a while. Meecham and Kulgan went off to the franklin’s room,
and Pug stripped off his dirty clothes. In the center of the room was a large
metal tub, filled with scented water, hot and steaming. He stepped into it and
pulled his foot out quickly. After three days of walking through snow, the
water felt as if it were boiling. Gently he placed his foot back in and, when
he had become used to the heat, slowly entered the water.
He sat back in the tub, the sloping back providing support. The
inside of the tub was enameled, and Pug found the slick, smooth feeling strange
after the wooden tubs of home. He lathered himself over with a sweet soap and
washed the dirt from his hair, then stood in the tub and poured a bucket of
cold water over his head to rinse off.
He dried himself and put on the clean nightshirt that had been left
for him. In spite of the early hour he fell into the warm bed. His last thought
was of the sandy-haired boy with the ready grin. As Pug slipped into sleep, he
wondered if Dolgan had found his friend.
He awoke once during the day, hearing a nameless tune being hummed,
while water was being splashed about with great zeal as Kulgan soaped his large
body. Pug closed his eyes and was quickly asleep again.
He was hard asleep when Kulgan roused him for dinner. His tunic and
trousers had been cleaned and a small rent in the shirt mended. His boots were
polished and shone with a black gleam. As he stood inspecting himself in a
mirror, he noticed for the first time a soft black shadow on his cheeks. He
leaned closer and saw the early signs of a beard.
Kulgan watched him and said, “Well, Pug. Shall I have them fetch you
a razor so you can keep your chin bare like Prince Arutha? Or do you wish to
cultivate a magnificent beard?” He exaggeratedly brushed his own grey beard.
Pug smiled for the first time since leaving Mac Mordain Cadal. “I
think I can leave off worrying about it for a time.”
Kulgan laughed, glad to see the boy’s spirits returning. The
magician had been troubled at the depth of Pug’s mourning for Tomas and was
relieved to see the boy’s resilient nature assert itself. Kulgan held the door
open “Shall we?”
Pug inclined his head, imitating a courtly bow, and said, “Certes,
master magician. After you?” and broke into a laugh.
They made their way to the dining room, a large and well-lit hall,
though nothing as large as in the castle of Crydee. The Duke and Prince Arutha
were already seated, and Kulgan and Pug quickly took their places at the table.
Borric was just finishing his account of the events at Crydee and in
the great forest when Pug and Kulgan sat. “So,” he said, “I chose to carry this
news myself, so important I believe it to be.”
The
merchant leaned back in his chair as servants brought a wide variety of dishes
for the diners. “Lord Borric,” said Talbott, “when your man Meecham first
approached me, his request on your behalf was somewhat vague, due, I believe,
to the manner in which the information was transmitted.” He referred to the
magic employed by Kulgan to contact Belgan, who had in turn sent the message to
Meecham. “I never expected your desire to reach Krondor would prove as vital to
my own people as I now see it to be.” He paused, then continued, “I am, of
course, alarmed by the news you bear. I was willing to act as a broker to find
you a ship, but now I will undertake to send you in one of my own vessels.” He
picked up a small bell that sat near his hand and rang. In a moment a servant
was standing at his shoulder. “Send word to Captain Abram to ready the Storm
Queen. He leaves on tomorrow’s afternoon tide for Krondor. I will send more
detailed instructions later.”
The servant bowed and left. The Duke said, “I thank you, Master
Kilrane. I had hoped that you would understand, but I did not expect to find a
ship so quickly.”
The merchant looked directly at Borric. “Duke Borric, let me be
frank. There is little love lost between the Free Cities and the Kingdom. And,
to be franker still, less love for the name conDoin. It was your grandfather
who laid waste to Walinor and siege to Natal. He was stopped only ten miles
north of this very city, and that memory still rankles many of us. We are
Keshian by ancestry, but freemen by birth, and have little affection for
conquerors.” Kilrane continued as the Duke sat stiffly in his chair, “Still, we
are forced to admit that your father later, and yourself now, have been good
neighbors, treating fairly with the Free Cities, even generously at times. I
believe you to be a man of honor and realize these Tsurani people are likely
all you say they are. You are not the sort of man given to exaggeration, I
think.”
The Duke relaxed a little at this. Talbott took a sip of wine, then
resumed his conversation. “We would be foolish not to recognize that our best
interests lie with those of the Kingdom, for alone we are helpless. When you
have departed, I will summon a meeting of the Council of Guilds and Merchants
and will argue for support of the Kingdom in this.” He smiled, and all at the
table could see that here was a man as confident in his influence and authority
as the Duke was in his. “I think I will have little difficulty in making the
council see the wisdom of this. A brief mention of that Tsurani war galley and
a little conjecture on how our ships would fare against a fleet of such ships
should convince them.”
Borric laughed and slapped his hand upon the table. “Master
merchant, I can see your wealth was not acquired by a lucky cast of fate’s
knucklebones. Your shrewd mind is a match for my own Father Tully’s. As is your
wisdom. I give you my thanks.”
The Duke and the merchant continued to talk late into the night, but
Pug was still tired and returned to his bed. When Kulgan came in hours later,
he found the boy lying restfully, a peaceful expression on his face.
The
Storm Queen ran before the wind, her topgallants and sky sails slamming her
through the raging sea. The swirling, stinging icy rain made the night so black
that the tops of her tall masts were lost in hazy darkness to those who stood
on her decks.
On the quarterdeck, figures huddled under great fur-lined oilcloth
cloaks, trying to stay warm and dry in the bitterly cold wetness. Twice during
the last two weeks they had run through high seas, but this was by far the
worst weather they had encountered. A cry went up from the rigging, and word
was carried to the captain that two men had fallen from the yards. Duke Borric
shouted to Captain Abram, “Can nothing be done?”
“Nay, my lord. They are dead men, and to search would be folly, even
if possible, which it is not,” the captain shouted back, his voice carrying
over the storm’s roar.
A full watch was above in the treacherous rigging, knocking away the
ice that was forming on the spars, threatening to crack them with additional
weight, disabling the ship. Captain Abram held the rail with one hand, watching
for signs of trouble, his whole body in tune with his ship. Next to him stood
the Duke and Kulgan, less sure of their footing on the pitching deck. A loud
groaning, cracking sound came from below, and the captain swore.
Moments later a sailor appeared before them. “Captain, we’ve cracked
a timber and she’s taking water.”
The captain waved to one of his mates who stood on the main deck
“Take a crew below and shore up the damage, then report.”
The mate quickly picked four men to accompany him below. Kulgan
seemed to go into a trance for a minute before he said, “Captain, this storm
will blow another three days.”
The captain cursed the luck the gods had sent him and said to the
Duke, “I can’t run her before the storm for three days taking water. I must
find a place to heave to and repair the hull.”
The Duke nodded, shouting over the storm, “Are you turning for
Queg?”
The captain shook his head, dislodging snow and water dripping from
his black beard. “I cannot turn her into the wind for Queg. We will have to lie
off Sorcerer’s Isle.”
Kulgan shook his head, though the gesture was not noticed by the
others. The magician asked, “Is there nowhere else we can put in?”
The captain looked at the magician and the Duke. “Not as close. We
would risk the loss of a mast. Then, if we didn’t founder and sink, we’d lose
six days rather than three. The seas run higher, and I fear I may lose more
men.” He shouted orders aloft and to the steersman, and they took a more
southerly course, heading for Sorcerer’s Isle.
Kulgan went below with the Duke. The rocking, surging motion of the
ship made the ladder and narrow passageway difficult to negotiate, and the
stout magician was tossed from one side to the other as they made their way to
their cabins. The Duke went into his cabin, shared with his son, and Kulgan
entered his own. Gardan, Meecham, and Pug were trying to rest on their
respective bunks during the buffeting. The boy was having a difficult time, for
he had been sick the first two days. He had gained sea legs of a sort, but
still couldn’t bring himself to eat the salty pork and hardtack they were
forced to consume. Because of the rough seas, the ship’s cook had been unable
to perform his usual duties.
The ship’s timbers groaned in protest at the pounding the waves were
giving, and from ahead they could hear the sound of hammers as the work crew
struggled to repair the breached hull.
Pug rolled over and looked at Kulgan. “What about the storm?”
Meecham came up on one elbow and looked at his master. Gardan did
likewise. Kulgan said, “It will blow three days longer. We will put in to the
lee of an island and hold there until it slackens.”
“What island?” asked Pug.
“Sorcerer’s Isle.”
Meecham shot up out of his bunk, hitting his head on the low
ceiling. Cursing and rubbing his head, while Gardan stifled a laugh, he
exclaimed, “The island of Macros the Black?”
Kulgan nodded, while using one hand to steady himself as the ship
nosed over a high crest and forward into a deep trough. “The same. I have
little liking for the idea, but the captain fears for the ship.” As if to
punctuate the point, the hull creaked and groaned alarmingly for a moment.
“Who is Macros?” asked Pug.
Kulgan looked thoughtful for a moment, as much from listening to the
work crew in the hold as from the boy’s question, then said, “Macros is a great
sorcerer, Pug. Perhaps the greatest the world has ever known.”
“Aye,” added Meecham, “and the spawn of some demon from the deepest
circle of hell. His arts are the blackest, and even the bloody Priests of
Lims-Kragma fear to set foot on his island.”
Gardan laughed. “I have yet to see a wizard who could cow the death
goddess’s priests. He must be a powerful mage.”
“Those are only stories, Pug,” Kulgan said. “What we do know about
him is that when the persecution of magicians reached its height in the
Kingdom, Macros fled to this island. No one has since traveled to or from it.”
Pug sat up on his bunk, interested in what he was hearing, oblivious
to the terrible noise of the storm. He watched as Kulgan’s face was bathed in
moving half lights and shadows by the crazily swinging lantern that danced with
every lurch of the ship.
“Macros is very old,” Kulgan continued. “By what arts he keeps
alive, only he knows, but he has lived there over three hundred years.”
Gardan scoffed, “Or several men by the same name have lived there.”
Kulgan nodded. “Perhaps. In any event, there is nothing truly known
about him, except terrible tales told by sailors. I suspect that even if Macros
does practice the darker side of magic, his reputation is greatly inflated,
perhaps as a means of securing privacy.”
A loud cracking noise, as if another timber in the hull had split,
quieted them. The cabin rolled with the storm, and Meecham spoke all their
minds: “And I’m hoping we’ll all be able to stand upon Sorcerer’s Isle.”
The ship limped into the southern bay of the island. They would have
to wait until the storm subsided before they could put divers over the side to
inspect the damage to the hull.
Kulgan, Pug, Gardan, and Meecham came out on deck. The weather was
slightly kinder with the cliffs cutting the fury of the storm. Pug walked to
where the captain and Kulgan were standing. He followed their gaze up to the
top of the cliffs.
High above the bay sat a castle, its tall towers outlined against
the sky by the grey light of day. It was a strange place, with spires and
turrets pointing upward like some clawed hand. The castle was dark save for one
window in a high tower that shone with blue, pulsating light, as if lightning
had been captured and put to work by the inhabitant.
Pug heard Meecham say, “There, upon the bluff. Macros.”
Three days later the divers broke the surface and yelled to the
captain their appraisal of the damage. Pug was on the main deck with Meecham,
Gardan, and Kulgan Prince Arutha and his father stood near the captain,
awaiting the verdict on the ship’s condition. Above, the seabirds wheeled,
looking for the scraps and garbage heralded by a ship in these waters. The
storms of winter did little to supplement the meager feeding of the birds, and
a ship was a welcome source of fare.
Arutha came down to the main deck where the others waited. “It will
take all of this day and half tomorrow to repair the damage, but the captain
thinks it will hold fair until we reach Krondor. We should have little trouble
from here.”
Meecham and Gardan threw each other meaningful glances. Not wanting
to let the opportunity pass, Kulgan said, “Will we be able to put ashore, Your
Highness?”
Arutha rubbed his clean-shaven chin with a gloved hand. “Aye, though
not one sailor will put out a boat to carry us.”
“Us?” asked the magician.
Arutha smiled his crooked smile. “I have had my fill of cabins,
Kulgan. I feel the need to stretch my legs on firm ground. Besides, without
supervision, you’d spend the day wandering about places where you’ve no
business.” Pug looked up toward the castle, his glance noted by the magician.
“We’ll keep clear of that castle and the road up from the beach, to
be sure. The tales of this island only speak of ill coming to those who seek to
enter the sorcerer’s halls.”
Arutha signaled a seaman. A boat was readied, and the four men and
the boy got aboard. The boat was hauled over the side and lowered by a crew
sweating despite the cold wind that still blew after the storm. By the glances
they kept throwing toward the crest of the bluffs, Pug knew they were not
sweating because of work or weather.
As if reading his thoughts, Arutha said, “There may be a more
superstitious breed on Midkemia than sailors, but who they are I could not tell
you.”
When the boat was in the water, Meecham and Gardan cast off the
lines that hung suspended from the davits. The two men awkwardly took oars and
began to row toward the beach. It was a broken, stuttering rhythm at first, but
with disapproving looks from the Prince, along with several comments about how
men could spend their lives in a sea town and not know how to row, they finally
got the boat moving in good order.
They put in at a sandy stretch of beach, a little cove that broke
the bluffs of the bay. Upward toward the castle ran a path, which joined
another leading away across the island.
Pug leaped out of the boat and helped pull it ashore. When it was
fast aground, the others got out and stretched their legs.
Pug felt as if they were being watched, but each time he looked
around, there was nothing in sight but the rocks, and the few seabirds that
lived the winter in clefts of the cliff face.
Kulgan and the Prince studied the two paths up from the beach. The
magician looked at the other path, away from the sorcerer’s castle, and said,
“There should be little harm in exploring the other trail. Shall we?”
Days of boredom and confinement outweighed whatever anxiety they
felt. With a brusque nod, Arutha led the way up the trail.
Pug followed last, behind Meecham. The big-shouldered franklin was
armed with a broadsword, upon which his hand rested. Pug kept his sling handy,
for he still didn’t feel comfortable with a sword, though Gardan was giving him
lessons when possible. The boy fingered the sling absently, his eyes taking in
the scene before them.
Along the trail they startled several colonies of turnstones and
plovers, which took flight when the party came near. The birds squawked their
protests and hovered near their roosts until the hikers passed, then returned
to the scant comfort of the hillside.
They crested the first of a series of hills, and the path away from
the castle could be seen to dip behind another crest Kulgan said, “It must lead
somewhere. Shall we continue?” Arutha nodded, and the others said nothing. They
continued their journey until they came to a small valley, little more than a
dell, between two ranges of low hills. On the floor of the valley sat some
buildings.
Arutha said softly, “What do you think, Kulgan? Are they inhabited?”
Kulgan studied them for a moment, then turned to Meecham, who
stepped forward. The franklin inspected the vista below, his gaze traveling
from the floor of the vale to the hills around. “I think not. There is no sign
of smoke from cook fires, nor sound of people working.”
Arutha resumed his march down toward the floor of the valley, and
the others followed. Meecham turned to watch Pug for a moment, then noticed the
boy was unarmed except for his sling. The franklin pulled a long hunting knife
from his belt and handed it to the boy without comment. Pug bobbed his head
once in acknowledgment and took the knife in silence.
They reached a plateau above the buildings, and Pug could see an
alien-looking house, the central building circled by a large court and several
outbuildings. The entire property was surrounded by a low wall, no more than
four feet tall.
They worked their way down the hillside to a gate in the wall. There
were several barren fruit trees in the courtyard, and a garden area overgrown
with weeds. Near the front of the central building a fountain stood, topped
with a statue of three dolphins. They approached the fountain and saw that the
interior of the low pool surrounding the statue was covered in blue tiles,
faded and discolored with age. Kulgan examined the construction of the fountain
‘This is fashioned in a clever manner. I believe that water should issue from
the mouths of the dolphins.”
Arutha agreed. “I have seen the King’s fountains in Rillanon, and
they are similar, though lacking the grace of this.”
There was little snow on the ground, for it seemed the sheltered
valley and the entire island received little even in the most severe winters.
But it was still cold. Pug wandered a little way off and studied the house. It
had a single story, with windows every ten feet along the wall. There was but
one opening for a double door in the wall he stood facing, though the doors
were long off their hinges.
“Whoever lived here expected no trouble.”
Pug turned to see Gardan standing behind him, staring at the house
as well. “There is no tower for lookout,” continued the Sergeant. “And the low
wall seems more likely to keep livestock out of the gardens than for defense.”
Meecham joined them, hearing Gardan’s last remar.k “Aye, there is
little concern for defense here. This is the lowest spot on the island, save
for that small stream you could see behind the house when we came down the
hill.” He turned to stare up at the castle, the highest spires of which could
still be seen from the valley. “There is where you build for trouble. This
place,” he said, indicating the low buildings with a sweep of his hand, “was
fashioned by those who knew little of strife.”
Pug nodded as he moved away. Gardan and Meecham headed in a
different direction, toward an abandoned stable.
Pug moved around to the back of the house and found several smaller
buildings. He clutched his knife in his right hand and entered the closest. It
was open to the sky, for the roof had collapsed. Red roof tiles, shattered and
faded, lay about the floor, in what seemed to be a storeroom, with large wooden
shelves along three walls. Pug investigated the other rooms in the building,
finding them to be of similar configuration. The entire building was some sort
of storage area.
He moved to the next building and found a large kitchen. A stone
stove stood against one wall, big enough for several kettles to cook upon it
simultaneously, while a spit hung over a back opening above the fire was large
enough for a beef side or whole lamb. A mammoth butcher’s block stood in the
center of the room, scarred from countless blows of cleaver and knife.
Pug examined a strange-looking bronze pot in the corner, overlaid
with dust and cobwebs. He turned it over and found a wooden spoon. As he looked
up, he thought he saw a glimpse of someone outside the door of the cookhouse.
“Meecham? Gardan?” he asked, as he slowly approached the door. When
he stepped outside, there was no one in sight, but he did catch another glimpse
of movement at the rear door of the main house.
He hurried toward that door, assuming his companions had already
entered the building. As he entered the main house, he caught a hint of
movement down a side corridor. He stopped for a moment to survey this strange
house.
The door before him stood open, a sliding door fallen from railings
that had once held it in place. Through the door he could see a large central
courtyard, open to the sky above. The house was actually a hollow square, with
pillars holding up the interior of the partial roof. Another fountain and a
small garden occupied the very center of the courtyard. Like the one outside,
the fountain was in disrepair, and this garden was also choked with weeds.
Pug turned toward the hall down which he had seen movement. He
passed through a low side door into a shadowy corridor. In places the roof had
lost several tiles, so that occasionally light shone down from above, making it
easy for the boy to find his way. He passed two empty rooms, he suspected they
might be sleeping quarters.
He turned a corner to find himself before the door of an odd-looking
room and entered. The walls were tile mosaics, of sea creatures sporting in the
foam with scantily dressed men and women. The style of art was new to Pug. The
few tapestries and fewer paintings on display in the Duke’s halls were all very
lifelike, with muted colors and detailed execution in the finish. These mosaics
were suggestive of people and animals without capturing details.
In the floor was a large depression, like a pool, with steps leading
down before him Out of the wall opposite obtruded a brass fish head, hanging
over the pool. The nature of the room was beyond Pug.
As if someone had read his thoughts, a voice from behind said, “It
is a tepidanum.”
Pug turned and saw a man standing behind him. He was of average
height, with a high forehead and deep-set black eyes. There were streaks of
grey at the temples of his dark hair, but his beard was black as night. He wore
a brown robe of simple material, a whipcord belt around the waist. In his left
hand he held a sturdy oak staff. Pug came on guard, holding the long hunting
knife before him.
“Nay, lad. Put up your scramasax, I mean you no harm.” He smiled in
a way that made Pug relax.
Pug lowered his knife and said, “What did you call this room?”
“A tepidarium,” he said, entering the room. “Here warm water was
piped into the pool, and bathers would remove their clothing and place them on
those shelves.” He pointed to some shelves against the rear wall.
“Servants would clean and dry the clothing of dinner guests while
they bathed here.”
Pug thought the idea of dinner guests bathing at someone’s home in a
group a novel one, but he said nothing. The man continued, “Through that
door”—he pointed to a door next to the pool—“was another pool with very hot
water, in a room called a calidanum. Beyond was another pool with cold water in
a room called a fngidarium. There was a fourth room called the unctonum, where
servants would rub down the bathers with scented oils. And they scraped their
skins with wooden sticks. They didn’t use soap then.”
Pug was confused by all the different bathing rooms. “That sounds
like a lot of time spent getting clean. This is all very odd.”
The man leaned on his staff. “So it must seem to you, Pug. Still, I
expect those that built this house would consider your keep halls strange as
well.”
Pug started. “How did you know my name?”
The man smiled again. “I heard the tall soldier call you by name as
you approached the building. I was watching you, keeping out of sight until I
was sure you were not pirates come to seek ancient loot. Few pirates come so
young, so I thought it would be safe to talk to you.”
Pug studied the man. There was something about him that suggested
hidden meanings in his words. “Why would you speak with me?”
The man sat on the edge of the empty pool. The hem of his robe was
pulled back, revealing cross-gartered sandals of sturdy construction. “I am
alone mostly, and the chance to speak with strangers is a rare thing. So I
thought to see if you would visit with me awhile, for a few moments at least,
until you return to your ship.”
Pug sat down also, but kept a comfortable distance between himself
and the stranger. “Do you live here?”
The man looked around the room. “No, though I once did, long ago.”
There was a contemplative note in his voice, as if the admission were calling
up long-buried memories.
“Who are you?”
The man smiled again, and Pug felt his nervousness vanish. There was
something reassuring about his manner, and Pug could see that he intended no
harm. “Mostly I am called the traveler, for many lands have I seen. Here I am
sometimes known as the hermit, for so I live. You may call me what you like. It
is all the same.”
Pug looked at him closely. “Have you no proper name?”
“Many, so many that I have forgotten a few. At the time of my birth
I was given a name, as you were, but among those of my tribe it is a name known
only to the father and the mage-priest.”
Pug considered this. “It is all very strange, much like this house. Who
are your people?”
The man called the traveler laughed, a good-natured chuckle. “You
have a curious mind, Pug, full of questions. That is good.” He paused for a
moment, then said, “Where are you and your companions from? The ship in the bay
flies the Natalese banner of Bordon, but your accent and dress are of the
Kingdom.”
Pug said, “We are of Crydee,” and gave the man a brief description
of the journey. The man asked a few simple questions, and without being aware
of it, Pug found that soon he had given a full accounting of the events that
had brought them to the island, and the plans for the rest of the journey.
When he had finished, the traveler said, “That is a wondrous story
indeed. I should think there will be many more wonders before this strange meeting
of worlds is finished.”
Pug questioned him with a look. “I don’t understand.”
The traveler shook his head. “I don’t expect you to, Pug. Let us say
that things are occurring that can be understood only by examination after the
fact, with a distance of time separating the participants from the
participating.”
Pug scratched his knee. “You sound like Kulgan, trying to explain
how magic works.”
The traveler nodded. “An apt comparison. Though sometimes the only
way to understand the workings of magic is to work magic.”
Pug brightened. “Are you also a magician?”
The traveler stroked his long black beard. “Some have thought me
one, but I doubt that Kulgan and I share the same understanding of such
things.”
Pug’s expression showed he considered this an unsatisfactory
explanation even if he didn’t say so. The traveler leaned forward. “I can
effect a spell or two, if that answers your question, young Pug.”
Pug heard his name shouted from the courtyard. “Come,” said the
traveler “Your friends call. We had best go and reassure them that you are all
right.”
They left the bathing room and crossed the open court of the inner
garden. A large anteroom separated the garden from the front of the house, and
they passed through to the outside. When the others saw Pug in the company of
the traveler, they looked around quickly, their weapons drawn. Kulgan and the
Prince crossed the court to stand before them. The traveler put up his hands in
the universal sign that he was unarmed.
The Prince was the first to speak. “Who is your companion, Pug?”
Pug introduced the traveler. “He means no harm. He hid until he
could see that we were not pirates.” He handed the knife to Meecham.
If the explanation was unsatisfactory, Arutha gave no sign. “What is
your business here?”
The traveler spread his hands, with the staff in the crook of his
left arm. “I abide here, Prince of Crydee. I should think that the question
better serves me.”
The Prince stiffened at being addressed so, but after a tense moment
relaxed. “If that is so, then you are correct, for we are the intruders. We
came seeking relief from the solitary confines of the ship. Nothing more.”
The traveler nodded. “Then you are welcome at Villa Beata.”
Kulgan said, “What is Villa Beata?”
The traveler made a sweeping motion with his right hand. “This home
is Villa Beata. In the language of the builders, it means ‘blessed home,’ and
so it was for many years. As you can see, it has known better days.”
Everyone was relaxing with the traveler, for they also felt a reassurance
in his easy manner and friendly smile Kulgan said, “What of those who built
this strange place?”
“Dead . . . or gone. They thought this the Insula Beata, or Blessed
Isle, when they first came here. They fled a terrible war, which changed the
history of their world.” His dark eyes misted over, as if the pain of
remembering was great. “A great king died . . . or is thought to have died, for
some say he may return. It was a terrible and sad time. Here they sought to
live in peace.”
“What happened to them?” asked Pug.
The traveler shrugged “Pirates, or goblins? Sickness, or madness?
Who can tell? I saw this home as you see it now, and those who lived here were
gone.”
Arutha said, “You speak of strange things, friend traveler. I know
little of such, but it seems that this place has been deserted for ages. How is
it you knew those who lived here?”
The traveler smiled “It is not so long ago as you would imagine,
Prince of Crydee. And I am older than I look. It comes from eating well and
bathing regularly.”
Meecham had been studying the stranger the entire time, for of all
those who had come ashore, his was the most suspicious nature “And what of the
Black One? Does he not trouble you?”
The traveler looked over his shoulder at the top of the castle.
“Macros the Black? The magician and I have little cause to be at odds. He
suffers me the run of the island, as long as I don’t interfere with his work.”
A suspicion crossed Pug’s mind, but he said nothing, as the traveler
continued “Such a powerful and terrible sorcerer has little to fear from a
simple hermit, I’m sure you’ll agree.” He leaned forward and added in
conspiratorial tones, “Besides, I think much of his reputation is inflated and
overboasted, to keep intruders away. I doubt he is capable of the feats attributed
to him.”
Arutha said, “Then perhaps we should visit this sorcerer.”
The hermit looked at the Prince. “I don’t think you would find a
welcome at the castle. The sorcerer is oftentimes preoccupied with his work and
suffers interruption with poor grace. He may not be the mythical author of all
the world’s ills that some imagine him to be, but he could still cause more
trouble than it is worth to visit him. On the whole he is often poor company.”
There was a faint, wry hint of humor in his words.
Arutha looked around and said, “I think we have seen all of interest
we are likely to. Perhaps we should return to the ship.”
When none disagreed, the Prince said, “What of you, friend
traveler?”
The stranger spread his hands in a general gesture. “I continue my
habit of solitude, Your Highness. I have enjoyed this small visit, and the
boy’s news of the occurrences of the world outside, but I doubt that you would
find me tomorrow if you were to seek me.”
It was evident he was unlikely to provide any more information, and
Arutha found himself growing irritated with the man’s obscure answers. “Then we
bid you farewell, traveler. May the gods watch over you.”
“And you as well, Prince of Crydee.”
As they turned to leave, Pug felt something trip his ankle, and he
fell hard against Kulgan. Both went down in a tangle of bodies, and the
traveler helped the boy up. Meecham and Gardan assisted the stout mage to his
feet. Kulgan put weight upon his foot and started to fall. Arutha and Meecham
grabbed him. The traveler said, “It appears your ankle is turned, friend
magician. Here.” He held out his staff. “My staff is stout oak and will bear
your weight as you return to the ship.”
Kulgan took the offered staff and put his weight on it. He took an
experimental step and found that he could negotiate the path with the aid of
the staff. “Thank you, but what of yourself?”
The stranger shrugged. “A simple staff, easily replaced, friend
magician. Perhaps I shall have the opportunity of reclaiming it someday.”
“I will keep it against that day.”
The traveler turned away, saying, “Good. Then until that day, again
farewell.”
They watched as he walked back into the building, and then turned to
face each other, expressions of wonder upon their faces. Arutha was the first
to speak. “A strange man, this traveler.”
Kulgan nodded “More strange than you know, Prince. At his leaving I
feel the lifting of some enchantment, as if he carries a spell about him, one
that makes all near him trusting.”
Pug turned to Kulgan. “I wanted to ask him so many questions, but I
didn’t seem to be able to make myself.”
Meecham said, “Aye, I felt that also.”
Gardan said, “There is a thought in my mind I think we have been
speaking to the sorcerer himself.”
Pug said, “That is my thought.”
Kulgan leaned on the staff and said, “Perhaps. If it is so, then he
has his own reasons for masking his identity.” They talked about this as they
walked slowly up the path from the villa.
As they reached the cove where the boat was beached, Pug felt something
brush against his chest. He reached inside his tunic and found a small folded
piece of parchment. He withdrew it, startled by his find. He had not picked it
up, as well as he could remember. The traveler must have slipped it inside his
shirt when he had helped Pug to his feet.
Kulgan looked back as he started for the boat and, seeing Pug’s
expression, said, “What have you there?”
Pug handed the parchment over, while the others gathered around the
magician. Kulgan unfolded the parchment. He read it, and a surprised expression
crossed his face. He read it again, aloud. “I welcome those who come with no
malice in their hearts. You will know in days to come that our meeting was not
by chance. Until we meet again, keep the hermit’s staff as a sign of friendship
and goodwill Seek me not until the appointed time, for that too is foreordained
Macros.”
Kulgan handed the message back to Pug, who read it. “Then the hermit
was Macros!”
Meecham rubbed his beard. “This is something beyond my
understanding.”
Kulgan looked up to the castle, where the lights still flashed in
the single window. “As it is beyond mine, old friend. But whatever it means, I
think the sorcerer wishes us well, and I find that a good thing.”
They returned to the ship and retired to their cabins. After a night
of rest, they found the ship ready to leave on the midday tide. As they raised
sail, they were greeted with unseasonably light breezes, blowing them directly
for Krondor.
12
COUNCILS
Pug was restless.
He sat looking out a window of the Prince’s palace in Krondor.
Outside, the snow was falling, as it had been for the last three days. The Duke
and Arutha had been meeting with the Prince of Krondor daily. On the first day
Pug had told his story about finding the Tsurani ship, then had been dismissed.
He remembered that awkward interview.
He had been surprised to find the Prince to be young, in his
thirties, if not a vigorous and well man. Pug had been startled during their
interview when the Prince’s remarks were interrupted by a violent attack of
coughing. His pale face, drenched with sweat, showed him to be in worse health
than his manner indicated.
He had waved off Pug’s suggestion that he should leave and come back
when more convenient for him. Erland of Krondor was a reflective person, who listened
patiently to Pug’s narration, lessening the boy’s discomfort at being before
the heir apparent to the throne of the Kingdom. His eyes regarded Pug with
reassurance and understanding, as if it were a common thing to have awkward
boys standing before him. After listening to Pug’s narration, he had spent a
short time talking with Pug about small things, such as his studies and his
fortuitous rise to the nobility, as if these were important matters to his
realm.
Pug decided he liked Prince Erland. The second most powerful man in
the Kingdom, and the single most powerful man in the West, was warm and
friendly and cared for the comfort of his least-important guest.
Pug looked around the room, still not used to the splendor of the
palace. Even this small room was richly appointed, with a canopied bed instead
of a sleeping pallet. It was the first time Pug had ever slept in one, and he
found it difficult to get comfortable on the deep, soft, feather-stuffed
mattress. In the corner of the room stood a closet with more clothing in it
than he thought he could wear in his lifetime, all of costly weave and fine
cut, and all seemingly in his size. Kulgan had said it was a gift from the
Prince.
The quiet of his room reminded Pug how little he had seen of Kulgan
and the others. Gardan and his soldiers had left that morning with a bundle of
dispatches for Prince Lyam from his father, and Meecham was housed with the
palace guard. Kulgan was involved in the meetings as often as not, so Pug had a
lot of time to himself. He wished he had his books with him, for then at least
the time could be put to some good use. Since his arrival in Krondor there had
been little for him to do.
More than once Pug had thought of how much Tomas would have loved
the newness of this place—seemingly fashioned from glass and magic more than
stone—and the people in it. He thought about his lost friend, hoping Dolgan had
somehow found him, but not believing he had. The pain of loss was now a dull
ache, but still tender. Even after the last month, he would find himself
turning, expecting to see Tomas close by.
Not wishing to sit idle any longer, Pug opened the door and looked
down the hallway that ran the length of the east wing of the Prince’s palace.
He hurried down the hall, looking for any familiar face to break the monotony.
A guard passed him by, going the other way, and saluted. Pug still couldn’t
get used to the idea of being saluted every time a guard passed, but as a
member of the Duke’s party he was given full honors due his Squire’s rank by
the household staff.
Reaching a smaller hallway, he decided to explore. One way was the
same as another, he thought. The Prince had personally told him he had the run
of the palace, but Pug had been shy about overstepping himself. Now boredom
drove him to adventuring, or at least as much adventuring as possible under the
circumstances.
Pug found a small alcove with a window, providing a different view
of the palace grounds. Pug sat upon the window seat. Beyond the palace walls he
could see the port of Krondor lying below like a white-shrouded toy village.
Smoke was coming from many of the buildings, the only sign of life in the city.
The ships in the harbor looked like miniatures, lying at anchor, waiting for
more propitious conditions under which to sail.
A small voice behind him brought Pug out of his reverie. “Are you
Prince Arutha?”
A girl was standing behind him, about six or seven years old, with
big green eyes and dark reddish brown hair done up in silver netting. Her dress
was simple but fine looking, of red cloth with white lace at the sleeves. Her
face was pretty, but was set in an expression of deep concentration that gave
it a comic gravity.
Pug hesitated for a moment, then said, “No, I’m Pug. I came with the
Prince.”
The girl made no attempt to hide her disappointment. With a shrug
she came over and sat next to Pug. She looked up at him with the same grave
expression and said, “I was so hoping that you might be the Prince, for I
wanted to catch a glimpse of him before you leave for Salador.”
“Salador,” Pug said flatly. He had hoped the journey would end with
the visit to the Prince. Lately he had been thinking of Carline.
“Yes. Father says you are all to leave at once for Salador, then
take a ship for Rillanon to see the King.”
“Who’s your father?”
“The Prince, silly. Don’t you know anything?”
“I guess not.” Pug looked at the girl, seeing another Carline in the
making. “You must be Princess Anita.”
“Of course. And I’m a real princess too. Not the daughter of a duke,
but the daughter of a prince. My father would have been King if he had wanted,
but he didn’t want to. If he had, I would be Queen someday. But I won’t be.
What do you do?”
The question, coming so suddenly without preamble, caught Pug off
guard. The child’s prattling wasn’t very irksorne, and he wasn’t following
closely, being more intent on the scene through the window.
He hesitated, then said, “I’m apprenticed to the Duke’s magician.”
The Princess’s eyes grew round, and she said, “A real magician?”
“Real enough.”
Her little face lit up with delight. “Can he turn people into toads?
Mummy said magicians turn people into toads if they are bad.”
“I don’t know. I’ll ask him when I see him—if I see him again,” he
added under his breath.
“Oh, would you? I would so very much like to know.” She seemed
utterly fascinated by the prospect of finding out if the tale was true. “And
could you please tell me where I might see Prince Arutha?”
“I don’t know. I haven’t seen him myself in two days. What do you
want to see him for?”
“Mummy says I may marry him someday. I want to see if he is a nice
man.”
The prospect of this tiny child’s being married to the Duke’s
younger son confounded Pug for a moment. It was not an uncommon practice for
nobles to pledge their children in marriage years before their coming of age.
In ten years she would be a woman, and the Prince would still be a young man,
the Earl of some minor keep in the Kingdom. Still, Pug found the prospect
fascinating.
“Do you think you would like living with an earl?” Pug asked,
realizing at once it was a stupid question. The Princess confirmed the opinion
with a glance that would have done Father Tully credit.
She said, “Silly! How could I possibly know that when I don’t even
know who Mummy and Father will have me marry?”
The child jumped up. “Well, I must go back I’m not supposed to be
here. If they find me out of my rooms, I’ll be punished. I hope you have a nice
journey to Salador and Rillanon.”
“Thank you.”
With a sudden expression of worry, she said, “You won’t tell anyone
that I was here, will you?”
Pug gave her a conspiratorial smile “No. Your secret’s safe.” With a
look of relief, she smiled and peeked both ways down the hallway. As she
started to leave, Pug said, “He’s a nice man.”
The Princess stopped. “Who?”
“The Prince He’s a nice man. Given to brooding and moods, but on the
whole a nice person.”
The Princess frowned for a moment as she digested the information.
Then, with a bright smile, she said, “That’s good. I’d not want to marry a man
who’s not nice.” With a giggle she turned the corner and was gone.
Pug sat awhile longer, watching the snow fall, musing over the fact
of children being concerned about matters of state, and over a child with big,
serious green eyes.
That night the entire party was feted by the Prince. The whole
population of nobles at court and most of the rich commoners of Krondor were
attending the gala. Over four hundred people sat to dine, and Pug found himself
at a table with strangers who, out of respect for the quality of his clothing
and the simple fact of his being there in the first place, politely ignored
him. The Duke and Prince Arutha were seated at the head table with Prince
Erland and his wife, Princess Alicia, along with Duke Dulanic, Chancellor of
the Principality and Knight-Marshal of Krondor. Owing to Erland’s ill health,
the business of running Krondor’s military fell to Dulanic and the man he was
deep in conversation with, Lord Barry, Erland’s Lord-Admiral of the Krondonan
fleet. Other royal ministers were seated nearby, while the rest of the guests
were at smaller tables. Pug was seated at the one farthest removed from the
royal table.
Servants were bustling in and out of the hall, carrying large
platters of food and decanters of wine. Jongleurs strolled the hall, singing
the newest ballads and ditties. Jugglers and acrobats performed between the
tables, mostly ignored by the dinner guests, but giving their best, for the
Master of Ceremony would not call them back again should he judge their efforts
lacking.
The walls were covered with giant banners and rich tapestries. The
banners were of every major household in the Kingdom, from the gold and brown
of Crydee in the far west, to the white and green of far Ran, in the east.
Behind the royal table hung the banner of the Kingdom, a golden lion rampant
holding a sword, with a crown above his head, upon a field of purple, the
ancient crest of the conDoin kings. Next to it hung Krondor’s banner, an eagle
flying above a mountain peak, silver upon the royal purple. Only the Prince,
and the King in Rillanon, could wear the royal color. Borric and Arutha wore
red mantles over their tunics, signifying they were princes of the realm,
related to the royal family. It was the first time Pug had ever seen the two
wearing the formal marks of their station.
Everywhere were sights and sounds of gaiety, but even from across
the room Pug could tell that the talk at the Prince’s table was subdued. Borric
and Erland spent most of the dinner with their heads close together, speaking
privately.
Pug was startled by a touch on his shoulder and turned to see a
doll-like face peering through the large curtains not two feet behind him.
Princess Anita put her finger to her lips and beckoned for him to step through.
Pug saw the others at the table were looking at the great and near-great in the
room and would scarcely notice the departure of a nameless boy. He rose and
moved through the curtain, finding himself in a small servants’ alcove. Before
him was another curtain, leading to the kitchen, Pug supposed, through which
peeked the tiny fugitive from bed Pug moved to where Anita waited, discovering
it was, indeed, a long connecting corridor between the kitchen and the great
hall. A lengthy table covered with dishware and goblets ran along the wall.
Pug said, “What are you doing here?”
“Shush!” she said in a loud whisper. “I’m not supposed to be here.”
Pug smiled at the child. “I don’t think you have to worry about
being heard, there’s too much noise for that.”
“I came to see the Prince. Which one is he?”
Pug motioned for her to step into the small alcove, then drew aside
the curtain a little. Pointing at the head table, he said, “He’s two removed
from your father, in the black-and-silver tunic and red mantle.”
The child stretched up on tiptoe and said, “I can’t see.”
Pug held the girl up for a moment. She smiled at him. “I am in your
debt.”
“Not at all,” Pug intoned with mock gravity. They both giggled.
The Princess started as a voice spoke close to the curtain. “I must
fly!” She darted through the alcove, passed through the second curtain, and
disappeared from sight heading toward the kitchen and her getaway.
The curtain into the banquet hall parted, and a startled servant
stared at Pug. Uncertain what to say, the servingman nodded. The boy by rights
shouldn’t be there, but by his dress he was certainly someone.
Pug looked about and, without much conviction, finally said, “I was
looking for the way to my room. I must be going the wrong way.”
“The guest wing is through the first door on the left in the dining
hall, young sir. Ah . . . this way lies the kitchen. Would you care to have me
show you the way?” The servant obviously didn’t care to do so, and Pug was
equally lacking any desire for a guide. “No, thank you, I can find it,” he
said.
Pug rejoined his table, unnoticed by the other guests. The balance
of the meal passed without incident, except for an occasional strange glance by
a servingman.
Pug passed the time after dinner talking with the son of a merchant.
The two young men found each other in the crowded room where the Prince’s
after-dinner reception was being held. They spent a fitful hour being polite to
one another, before the boy’s father came and took him in tow. Pug stood around
being ignored by the Prince’s other dinner guests for a while, then decided he
could slip back to his own quarters without affronting anyone—he wouldn’t be
missed. Besides he hadn’t seen the Prince, Lord Borric, or Kulgan since they
left the dinner table. Most of the reception seemed under the supervision of a
score of household officials and Princess Alicia, a charming woman who had
spoken politely with Pug for a moment as he passed through the reception line.
Pug found Kulgan waiting for him in his room when he returned.
Kulgan said, without preamble, “We leave at first light, Pug. Prince
Erland is sending us on to Rillanon to see the King.”
Pug said, “Why is the Prince sending us?” His tone was cross, for he
was deeply homesick.
Before Kulgan could answer, the door flew open and Prince Arutha
came storming in Pug was surprised by Arutha’s expression of unconfined anger.
“Kulgan! There you are,” Arutha said, slamming the door. “Do you
know what our royal cousin is doing about the Tsurani invasion?”
Before Kulgan could speak, the Prince supplied the answer. “Nothing!
He won’t lift a finger to send aid to Crydee until Father has seen the King.
That will take another two months at least.”
Kulgan raised his hand. Instead of an adviser to the Duke, Arutha
saw one of his boyhood instructors. Kulgan, like Tully, could still command
both sons of the Duke when the need arose. “Quietly, Arutha.”
Arutha shook his head as he pulled over a chair. “I am sorry, Kulgan
I should have mastered my temper.” He noticed Pug’s confusion. “I apologize to
you also, Pug. There is much involved here that you don’t know of Perhaps . .
.” He looked questioningly at Kulgan.
Kulgan took out his pipe. “You might as well tell him, he’s going
along for the journey. He’ll find out soon enough.”
Arutha drummed his fingers on the arm of the chair for a moment,
then sitting forward, said, “My father and Erland have been conferring for days
on the best way to meet these outworlders should they come. The Prince even
agrees it is likely they will come.” He paused. “But he will do nothing to call
the Armies of the West together until he has been given permission by the
King.”
“I don’t understand,” said Pug. “Aren’t the Armies of the West the
Prince’s to command as he sees fit?”
“No longer,” said Arutha with a near-grimace. “The King sent word,
less than a year ago, that the armies may not be mustered without his
permission.” Arutha sat back in his chair as Kulgan blew a cloud of smoke. “It
is in violation of tradition. Never have the Armies of the West had another
commander than the Prince of Krondor, as the Armies of the East are the
King’s.”
Pug was still unclear about the significance of all this. Kulgan
said, “The Prince is the King’s Lord-Marshal in the West, the only man besides
the King who may command Duke Borric and the other Knight-Generals. Should he
call, every Duke from Malac’s Cross to Crydee would respond, with their
garrisons and levies. King Rodric, for his own reasons, has decided that none
may gather the armies without his authority.”
Arutha said, “Father would come to the Prince’s call, regardless, as
would the other Dukes.”
Kulgan nodded. “That may be what the King fears, for the Armies of
the West have long been more the Prince’s armies than the King’s. If your
father called, most would gather, for they revere him nearly as much as they
revere Erland. And if the King should say not . . .” He let the sentence slip
away.
Arutha nodded. “Strife within the Kingdom.”
Kulgan looked at his pipe. “Even to civil war, perhaps.”
Pug was troubled by the discussion. He was a keep boy, in spite of
his newly acquired title. “Even if it is in defense of the Kingdom?”
Kulgan shook his head slowly. “Even then. For some men, kings also,
there is as much importance in the manner in which things are done as the
doing.” Kulgan paused. “Duke Borric will not speak of it, but there has long
been trouble between himself and certain eastern dukes, especially his cousin,
Guy du Bas-Tyra. This trouble between the Prince and the King will only add to
the strain between West and East.”
Pug sat back. He knew that this was somehow more important than what
he was understanding, but there were blank places in his picturings of the way
things were. How could the King resent the Prince’s summoning the armies in
defense of the Kingdom? It didn’t make sense to him, in spite of Kulgan’s
explanation. And what sort of trouble in the East was Duke Borric unwilling to
speak of?
The magician stood. “We have an early day tomorrow, so we had best
get some sleep. It will be a long ride to Salador, then another long passage by
ship to Rillanon. By the time we reach the King, the first thaw will have come
to Crydee.”
Prince Erland bade the party a good journey as they sat upon their
horses in the courtyard of the palace. He looked pale and deeply troubled as he
wished them well.
The little Princess stood at an upstairs window and waved at Pug
with a tiny handkerchief. Pug was reminded of another Princess and wondered if
Anita would grow to be like Carline or be more even-tempered.
They rode out of the courtyard, where an escort of Royal Krondonan
Lancers stood ready to accompany them to Salador. It would be a three weeks’
ride over the mountains and past the marshes of Darkmoor, past Malac’s
Cross—the dividing point between the western and eastern realms—and on to
Salador. There they would take ship, and after another two weeks they would
reach Rillanon.
The lancers were shrouded in heavy cloaks of grey, but the
purple-and-silver tabards of Krondor’s Prince could be seen underneath, and
their shields bore the device of the royal Krondorian household. The Duke was
being honored by an escort of the Prince’s own household guard, rather than a
detachment from the city garrison.
As they left the city, the snow began to fall once more, and Pug
wondered if he would ever see spring in Crydee again. He sat quietly on his
horse as it plodded along the road east, trying to sort out the impressions of
the last few weeks, then gave up, resigning himself to whatever was to happen.
The ride to Salador took four weeks instead of three, for there had
been a storm of unusual intensity in the mountains west of Darkmoor. They had
been forced to take lodging at an inn outside the village that took its name
from the marshes. It had been a small inn, and they had all been forced to
crowd together regardless of rank for several days. The food had been simple
and the ale indifferent, and by the time the storm passed, they were all glad
to leave Darkmoor behind.
Another day had been lost when they chanced upon a village being
troubled by bandits. The sight of approaching cavalry had driven the brigands
away, but the Duke had ordered a sweep of the area to insure that they didn’t
return as soon as the soldiers rode off. The villagers had opened their doors
to the Duke’s party, welcoming them and offering their best food and warmest
beds. Poor offerings by the Duke’s standards, yet he received their hospitality
with graciousness, for he knew it was all they had. Pug enjoyed the simple food
and company, the closest yet to home since he had left Crydee.
When they were a half day’s ride short of Salador, they encountered
a patrol of city guards. The guard captain rode forward. Pulling up his horse,
he shouted, “What business brings the Prince’s guard to the lands of Salador?”
There was little love lost between the two cities, and the Krondorians rode
without a heraldic banner. His tone left no doubt that he regarded their
presence as an infringement upon his territory.
Duke Borric threw back his cloak, revealing his tabard. “Carry word
to your master that Borric, Duke of Crydee, approaches the city and would avail
himself of Lord Kerus’s hospitality.”
The guard captain was taken aback. He stammered, “My apologies, Your
Grace. I had no idea . . . there was no banner . . . .”
Arutha said dryly, “We mislaid it in a forest sometime back.”
The captain looked confused. “My lord?”
Borric said, “Never mind, Captain. Just send word to your master.”
The captain saluted. “At once, your Grace.” He wheeled his horse and
signaled for a rider to come forward. He gave him instructions, and the soldier
spurred his horse toward the city and soon galloped out of sight.
The captain returned to the Duke. “If Your Grace will permit, my men
are at your disposal.”
The Duke looked at the travel-weary Krondorians, all of whom seemed
to be enjoying the captain’s discomfort. “I think thirty men-at-arms are
sufficient, Captain. The Salador city guard is renowned for keeping the
environs near the city free of brigands.”
The captain, not realizing he was being made sport of, seemed to
puff up at this. “Thank you, Your Grace.”
The Duke said, “You and your men may continue your patrol.”
The captain saluted again and returned to his men. He shouted the
order to move out, and the guard column moved past the Duke’s party. As they
passed, the captain ordered a salute, and lances were dipped toward the Duke.
Borric returned the salute with a lazy wave of his hand, then when the guards
had passed, said, “Enough of this foolishness, let us to Salador.”
Arutha laughed and said, “Father, we have need of men like that in
the West.”
Borric turned and said, “Oh? How so?”
As the horses moved forward, Arutha said, “To polish shields and
boots.”
The Duke smiled and the Krondorians laughed. The western soldiers
held those of the East in low regard. The East had been pacified long before
the West had been opened to Kingdom expansion, and there was little trouble in
the Eastern Realm requiring real skill in warcraft. The Prince of Krondor’s
guards were battle-proved veterans, while those of Salador were considered by
the guardsmen from the West to do their best soldiering on the parade ground.
Soon they saw signs that they were nearing the city: cultivated
farmland, villages, roadside taverns, and wagons laden with trade goods. By
sundown they could see the walls of distant Salador.
As they entered the city, a full company of Duke Kerus’s own
household guards lined the streets to the palace. As in Krondor, there was no
castle, for the need for a small, easily defensible keep had passed as the
lands around became civilized.
Riding through the city, Pug realized how much of a frontier town
Crydee was. In spite of Lord Bornc’s political power, he was still Lord of a
frontier province.
Along the streets, citizens stood gawking at the western Duke from
the wild frontier of the Far Coast. Some cheered, for it seemed like a parade,
but most stood quietly, disappointed that the Duke and his party looked like
other men, rather than blood-drenched barbarians.
When they reached the courtyard of the palace, household servants
ran to take their horses. A household guard showed the soldiers from Krondor to
the soldiers’ commons, where they would rest before returning to the Prince’s
city. Another, with a captain’s badge of rank on his tunic, led Borric’s party
up the steps of the building.
Pug looked with wonder, for this palace was even larger than the
Prince’s in Krondor. They walked through several outer rooms, then reached an
inner courtyard. Here fountains and trees decorated a garden, beyond which
stood the central palace Pug realized that the building they had passed through
was simply one of the buildings surrounding the Duke’s living quarters. He
wondered what use Lord Kerus could possibly have for so many buildings and such
a large staff.
They crossed the garden courtyard and mounted another series of
steps toward a reception committee that stood in the door of the central
palace. Once this building might have been a citadel, protecting the
surrounding town, but Pug couldn’t bring himself to imagine it as it might have
been ages ago, for numerous renovations over the years had transformed an
ancient keep into a glittering thing of glass and marble.
Duke Kerus’s chamberlain, an old dried-up stick of a man with a
quick eye, knew every noble worth noting—from the borders of Kesh in the south
to Tyr-Sog in the north—by sight. His memory for faces and facts had often
saved Duke Kerus from embarrassment. By the time Borric had made his way up the
broad stairway from the courtyard, the chamberlain had provided Kerus with a
few personal facts and a quick evaluation of the right amount of flattery
required.
Duke Kerus took Borric’s hand. “Ah, Lord Borric, you do me great
honor by this unexpected visit. If you had only sent word of your arrival, I
would have prepared a more fitting welcome.”
They entered the antechamber of the palace, the Dukes in front.
Borric said, “I am sorry to put you to any trouble, Lord Kerus, but I am afraid
our mission is dependent on speed, and that the formal courtesies will have to
be put aside. I bear messages for the King and must put to sea for Rillanon as
soon as is possible.”
“Of course, Lord Borric, but you will surely be able to stay for a
short while, say a week or two?”
“I regret not. I would put to sea tonight if I could.”
“That is indeed sorry news. I so hoped that you could guest with us
for a time.”
The party reached the Duke’s audience hall, where the chamberlain
gave instructions to a company of household servants, who jumped to the task of
readying rooms for the guests. Entering the vast hall, with its high vaulted
ceiling, gigantic chandeliers, and great arched glass windows, Pug felt
dwarfed. The room was the largest he had ever seen, greater than the hall of
the Prince of Krondor.
A huge table was set with fruits and wine, and the travelers fell to
with vigor. Pug sat down with little grace, his whole body one mass of aches.
He was turning into a skilled horseman simply from long hours in the saddle,
but that fact didn’t ease his tired muscles.
Lord Kerus pressed the Duke for the cause of his hurried journey,
and between mouthfuls of fruit and drinks of wine, Borric filled him in on the
events of the last three months. After he was done, Kerus looked distressed.
“This is grave news indeed, Lord Borric. Things are unsettled in the Kingdom. I
am sure the Prince has told you of some of the trouble that has occurred since
last you came to the East.”
“Yes, he did. But reluctantly and in only the most cursory manner
Remember, it has been thirteen years since I journeyed to the capital, at
Rodric’s coronation when I came to renew my vassalage. He seemed a bright
enough young man then, able enough to learn to govern. But from what I’ve heard
in Krondor, there seems to have been a change.”
Kerus glanced around the room, then waved away his servants. Looking
pointedly at Borric’s companions, he raised one eyebrow questioningly.
Lord Borric said, “These have my trust and will not betray a
confidence.”
Kerus nodded. Loudly he said, “If you would like to stretch your
legs before retiring, perhaps you’d care to see my garden?”
Borric frowned and was about to speak when Arutha put his hand upon
his father’s arm, nodding agreement.
Borric said, “That sounds interesting. Despite the cold I could use
a short walk.”
The Duke motioned for Kulgan, Meecham, and Gardan to remain, but
Lord Kerus indicated Pug should join them. Borric looked surprised, but nodded
agreement. They left through a small set of doors to the garden, and once
outside, Kerus whispered, “It will look less suspicious if the boy comes with
us. I can’t even trust my own servants anymore. The King has agents
everywhere.”
Borric seemed infuriated. “The King has placed agents in your
household?”
“Yes, Lord Borric, there has been a great change in our King. I know
Erland has not told you the entire story, but it is one you must know.”
The Duke and his companions watched Duke Kerus, who looked
uncomfortable. He cleared his throat as he glanced around the snow covered
garden. Between the light from the palace windows and the large moon above, the
garden was a winterscape of white and blue crystals, undisturbed by footprints.
Kerus pointed to a set of tracks in the snow and said, “I made those
this afternoon when I came here to think about what I could safely tell you.”
He glanced around one more time, seeing if anyone could overhear the
conversation, then continued. “When Rodric the Third died, everyone expected
Erland would take the crown. After the official mourning, the Priests of Ishap
called all the possible heirs forward to present their claims. You were
expected to be one of them.”
Borric nodded “I know the custom. I was late getting to the city. I
would have renounced the claim in any event, so there was no importance in my
absence.”
Kerus nodded. “History might have been different had you been here,
Borric.” He lowered his voice. “I risk my neck by saying this, but many, even
those of us here in the East, would have urged you to take the crown.”
Borric’s expression showed he did not like hearing this, but Kerus
pressed on. “By the time you got here, all the back-hallway politics had been
done—with most lords content to give the crown to Erland—but it was a tense day
and a half while the issue was in doubt. Why the elder Rodric didn’t name an
heir I don’t know. But when the priests had chased away all the distant kin
with no real claim, three men stood before them, Erland, young Rodric, and Guy
du Bas-Tyra. The priests asked for their declarations, and each gave them in
turn. Rodric and Erland both had solid claims, while Guy was there as a matter
of form, as you would have been had you arrived in time.”
Arutha interjected dryly, “The time of mourning ensures no western
Lord will be King.”
Borric threw a disapproving glance at his son, but Kerus said, “Not
entirely. If there had been any doubt to the rights of succession, the priest
would have held off the ceremony until your father arrived, Arutha. It has been
done before.”
He looked at Borric and lowered his voice. “As I said, it was
expected Erland would take the crown. But when the crown was presented to him,
he refused, conceding the claim to Rodric. No one at that time knew of Erland’s
ill health, so most lords judged the decision a generous affirmation of
Rodric’s claim, as the only son of the King. With Guy du Bas-Tyra’s backing the
boy, the assembled Congress of Lords ratified his succession. Then the real
infighting began, until at last your late wife’s uncle was named as King’s
Regent.”
Borric nodded. He remembered the battle over who would be named the
then boy King’s Regent. His despised cousin Guy had nearly won the position,
but Borric’s timely arrival and his support of Caldric of Rillanon, along with
the support of Duke Brucal of Yabon and Prince Erland, had swung the majority
of votes in the congress away from Guy.
“For the next five years there was only an occasional border clash
with Kesh. Things were quiet. Eight years ago”—Kerus paused to glance around
again—”Rodric embarked upon a program of public improvements, as he calls them,
upgrading roads and bridges, building dams, and the like. At first they were of
little burden, but the taxes have been increased yearly until now the peasants
and freemen, even the minor nobles, are being bled white. The King has expanded
his programs until now he is rebuilding the entire capital, to make it the
greatest city known in the history of man, he says.
“Two years ago a small delegation of nobles came to the King and
asked him to abjure this excessive spending and ease the burden upon the
people. The King flew into a rage, accused the nobles of being traitors, and
had them summarily executed.”
Borric’s eyes widened. The snow under his boot crunched dryly as he
turned suddenly. “We’ve heard nothing of this in the West!”
“When Erland heard the news, he went immediately to the King and
demanded reparation for the families of the nobles who were executed, and a
lessening of the taxes. The King—or so it is rumored—was ready to seize his
uncle, but was restrained by the few counselors he still trusted. They advised
His Majesty that such an act, unheard of in the history of the Kingdom, would
surely cause the western lords to rise up against the King.”
Borric’s expression darkened “They were right. Had that boy hanged
Erland, the Kingdom would have been irretrievably split.”
“Since that time the Prince has not set foot in Rillanon, and the
business of the Kingdom is handled by aides, for the two men will not speak to
one another.”
The Duke looked skyward, and his voice became troubled. “This is
much worse than I had heard. Erland told me of the taxes and his refusal to
impose them in the West. He said that the King was agreed, for he understood
the need of maintaining the garrisons of the North and West.”
Kerus slowly shook his head no. “The King agreed only when his aides
painted pictures of goblin armies pouring down from the Northlands and
plundering the cities of his Kingdom.”
“Erland spoke of the strain between himself and his nephew, but even
in light of the news I carry, said nothing about His Majesty’s actions.”
Kerus drew a deep breath and started walking once more. “Borric, I
spend so much time with the sycophants of the King’s court, I forget that you
of the West are given to plain speech.” Kerus was silent a moment, then said,
“Our King is not the man he once was. Sometimes he seems his old self, laughing
and open, filled with grand plans for the Kingdom; other times he is . . .
someone else, as if a dark spirit has taken possession of his heart.
“Take care, Borric, for only Erland stands closer to the throne than
yourself. Our King is well aware of that fact—even if you never think of it—and
sees daggers and poison where none exists.”
Silence descended over the group, and Pug saw Borric look openly
troubled. Kerus continued. “Rodric fears others covet his crown. That may be,
but not those the King suspects. There are only four conDoin males besides the
King, all of whom are men of honor.” Borric inclined his head at the
compliment. “But there are perhaps a dozen more who can claim ties to the
throne, through the King’s mother and her people. All are eastern lords, and
many would not flinch from the opportunity to press their claim to the throne
before the Congress of Lords.”
Borric looked incensed. “You speak of treason.”
“Treason in men’s hearts, if not in deeds . . . yet.”
“Have things come to such a pass in the East, without us of the West
knowing?”
Kerus nodded as they reached the far end of the garden. “Erland is
an honorable man, and as such would keep unfounded rumors from his subjects,
even yourself. As you have said, it is thirteen years since you last were at
Rillanon. All warrants and missives from the King still pass through the
Prince’s court. How would you know?
“I fear it is only a matter of time before one or other of the
King’s advisers positions himself over the fallen heads of those of us who hold
to our beliefs that the nobility are wardens of the nation’s welfare.”
Borric said, “Then you risk much with your frank speech.”
Duke Kerus shrugged, indicating they should begin their return to
the palace. “I have not always been a man to speak my mind, Lord Borric, but
these are difficult times. Should anyone else have passed through, there would
have been only polite conversation. You are unique, for with the Prince
estranged from his nephew, you are the only man in the Kingdom with the
strength and rank to possibly influence the King. I do not envy your weighty
position, my friend.
“When Rodric the Third was king, I was among the most powerful
nobles in the East, but I might as well be a landless freebooter for all the
influence I now hold in Rodric the Fourth’s court.” Kerus paused “Your
black-hearted cousin Guy is now closest to the King, and the Duke of Bas-Tyra
and I have little love between us. Our reasons for disliking one another are
not as personal as yours. But as his star rises, mine falls even more.”
Kerus slapped his hands as the cold was beginning to bite. “But one
bit of good news. Guy is wintering at his estate near Pointer’s Head, so the
King is free of his plotting for the present.” Kerus gripped Borric’s arm. “Use
whatever influence you can muster to stem the King’s impulsive nature, Lord
Borric, for with this invasion you bring word of, we need to stand united. A
lengthy war would drain us of what little reserves we possess, and should the
Kingdom be put to the test, I do not know whether it would endure.”
Borric said nothing, for even his worst fears since leaving the
Prince were surpassed by Kerus’s remarks. The Duke of Salador said, “One last
thing, Borric. With Erland having refused the crown thirteen years ago, and the
rumors of his health failing, many of the Congress of Lords will be looking to
you for guidance. Where you lead, many will follow, even some of us in the
East.”
Borric said coldly, “Are you speaking of civil war?”
Kerus waved a hand, a pained expression crossing his face His eyes
seemed moist, as if near tears. “I am ever loyal to the crown, Borric, but if
it comes to the right of things, the Kingdom must prevail. No one man is more
important than the Kingdom.”
Borric said through clenched jaws, “The King is the Kingdom.”
Kerus said, “You would not be the man you are and say otherwise. I
hope you are able to direct the King’s energies toward this trouble in the
West, for should the Kingdom be imperiled, others will not hold to such lofty
beliefs.”
Borric’s tone softened a little as they walked up the steps leading
from the garden. “I know you mean well, Lord Kerus, and there is only love of
the realm in your heart. Have faith and pray, for I will do whatever I can to
ensure the survival of the Kingdom.”
Kerus stood before the door back into the palace. “I fear we will
all be in deep water soon, my lord Borric. I pray that this invasion you speak
of will not be the wave that drowns us. In whatever way I can aid you, I will.”
He turned toward the door, which was opened by a servant. Loudly he said, “I
will bid you a good night, for I can see you’re all tired.”
The tension in the room was heavy as Borric, Arutha, and Pug
re-entered, and the Duke’s mood one of dark reflection. Servants came to show
the guests to their rooms, and Pug followed a boy near his own age, dressed in
the Duke’s livery. Pug looked over his shoulder as they left the hall to see
the Duke and his son standing together, speaking quietly to Kulgan.
Pug was shown to a small but elegant room and, ignoring the richness
of the bed covers, fell across them still fully clothed. The servant boy said,
“Do you need aid in undressing, Squire?”
Pug sat up and looked at the boy with such a frank expression of
wonder that the servant backed away a step. “If that will be all, Squire?” he
asked, obviously uncomfortable.
Pug just laughed. The boy stood uncertainly for an instant, then
bowed and hurriedly left the room. Pug pulled off his clothing, wondering at
the eastern nobles and servants who had to help them undress. He was too tired
to fold his garments, simply letting them fall to the floor in a heap.
After blowing out the bedside candle, Pug lay for a time in the
darkness, troubled by the evening’s discussion. He knew little of court
intrigue, but knew that Kerus must have been deeply worried to speak as he did
before strangers, in spite of Borric’s reputation as a man of high honor.
Pug thought of all the things that had taken place in the last
months and knew that his dreams of the King answering the call of Crydee with
banners flying were another boyish fancy shattered upon the hard rock of
reality.
13
Rillanon
The ship sailed into the harbor.
The climate of the Kingdom Sea was more clement than that of the
Bitter Sea, and the journey from Salador had proven uneventful. They’d had to
beat a tack much of the way against a steady northeast wind, so three weeks had
passed instead of two.
Pug stood on the foredeck of the ship, his cloak pulled tightly
around him. The winter wind’s bitterness had given way to a softer cool, as if
spring were but a few days in coming.
Rillanon was called the Jewel of the Kingdom, and Pug judged the
name richly deserved. Unlike the squat cities of the West, Rillanon stood a
mass of tall spires, gracefully arched bridges, and gently twisting roadways,
scattered atop rolling hills in delightful confusion. Upon heroic towers,
banners and pennons fluttered in the wind, as if the city-celebrated the simple
fact of its own existence. To Pug, even the ferrymen who worked the barges
going to and from the ships at anchor in the harbor were more colorful for
being within the enchantment of Rillanon.
The Duke of Salador had ordered a ducal banner sewn for Borric, and
it now flew from the top of the ship’s mainmast, informing the officials of the
royal city that the Duke of Crydee had arrived. Borric’s ship was given
priority in docking by the city’s harbor pilot, and quickly the ship was being
secured at the royal quay. The party disembarked and were met by a company of
the Royal Household Guard. At the head of the guards was an old, grey-haired,
but still erect man, who greeted Borric warmly.
The two men embraced, and the older man, dressed in the royal purple
and gold of the guard but with a ducal signet over his heart, said, “Borric, it
is good to see you once more. What has it been? Ten . . . eleven years?”
“Caldric, old friend. It has been thirteen.” Borric regarded him
fondly. He had clear blue eyes and a short salt-and-pepper beard.
The man shook his head and smiled. “It has been much too long.” He
looked at the others. Spying Pug, he said, “Is this your younger boy?”
Borric laughed. “No, though he would be no shame to me if he were.”
He pointed out the lanky figure of Arutha. “This is my son. Arutha, come and
greet your great-uncle.”
Arutha stepped forward, and the two embraced. Duke Caldric, Lord of
Rillanon, Knight-General of the King’s Royal Household Guard, and Royal
Chancellor, pushed Arutha back and regarded him at arm’s length. “You were but
a boy when I last saw you. I should have known you, for though you have some of
your father’s looks, you also resemble my dear brother—your mother’s
father—greatly. You do honor to my family.”
Borric said, “Well, old war-horse, how is your city?”
Caldric said, “There is much to speak of, but not here. We shall
bring you to the King’s palace and quarter you in comfort. We shall have much
time to visit. What brings you here to Rillanon?”
“I have pressing business with His Majesty, but it is not something
to be spoken of in the streets. Let us go to the palace.”
The Duke and his party were given mounts, and the escort cleared
away the crowds as they rode through the city. If Krondor and Salador had
impressed Pug with their splendor, Rillanon left him speechless.
The island city was built upon many hills, with several small rivers
running down to the sea. It seemed to be a city of bridges and canals, as much
as towers and spires. Many of the buildings seemed new, and Pug thought that
this must be part of the King’s plan for rebuilding the city. At several points
along the way he saw workers removing old stones from a building, or erecting
new walls and roofs. The newer buildings were faced with colorful stonework,
many of marble and quartz, giving them a soft white, blue, or pink color. The
cobblestones in the streets were clean, and gutters ran free of the clogs and
debris Pug had seen in the other cities. Whatever else he might be doing, the boy
thought, the King is maintaining a marvelous city.
A river ran before the palace, so that entrance was made over a high
bridge that arched across the water into the main courtyard. The palace was a
collection of great buildings connected by long halls that sprawled atop a
hillside in the center of the city It was faced with many-colored stone, giving
it a rainbow aspect.
As they entered the courtyard, trumpets sounded from the walls, and
guards stood to attention. Porters stepped forward to take the mounts, while a
collection of palace nobles and officials stood near the palace entrance in
welcome.
Approaching, Pug noticed that the greeting given by these men was
formal and lacked the personal warmth of Duke Caldric’s welcome. As he stood
behind Kulgan and Meecham, he could hear Caldric’s voice. “My lord Borric, Duke
of Crydee, may I present Baron Gray, His Majesty’s Steward of the Royal
Household.” This was a short, plump man in a tight-fitting tunic of red silk,
and pale grey hose that bagged at the knees “Earl Selvec, First Lord of the
Royal Navies.” A tall, gaunt man with a thin, waxed mustache bowed stiffly. And
so on through the entire company. Each made a short statement of pleasure at
Lord Borric’s arrival, but Pug felt there was little sincerity in their
remarks.
They were taken to their quarters. Kulgan had to raise a fuss to
have Meecham near him, for Baron Gray had wanted to send him to the distant
servants’ wing of the palace, but he relented when Caldric asserted himself as
Royal Chancellor.
The room that Pug was shown to far surpassed in splendor anything he
had yet seen. The floors were polished marble, and the walls were made from the
same material but flecked with what looked to be gold. A great mirror hung in a
small room to one side of the sleeping quarters, where a large, gilded bathing
tub sat. A steward put his few belongings —what they had picked up along the
way since their own baggage had been lost in the forest—in a gigantic closet
that could have held a dozen times all that Pug owned. After the man had
finished, he inquired, “Shall I ready your bath, sir?”
Pug nodded, for three weeks aboard ship had made his clothes feel as
if they were sticking to him. When the bath was ready, the steward said, “Lord
Caldric will expect the Duke’s party for dinner in four hours’ time, sir. Shall
I return then?”
Pug said yes, impressed with the man’s diplomacy. He knew only that
Pug had arrived with the Duke, and left it to Pug to decide whether or not he
was included in the dinner invitation.
As he slipped into the warm water, Pug let out a long sigh of
relief. He had never been one for baths when he had been a keep boy, preferring
to wash away dirt in the sea and the streams near the castle. Now he could
learn to enjoy them. He mused about what Tomas would have thought of that. He
drifted off in a warm haze of memories, one very pleasant, of a dark-haired,
lovely princess, and one sad, of a sandy-haired boy.
The dinner of the night before had been an informal occasion, with
Duke Caldric hosting Lord Borric’s party. Now they stood in the royal throne
room waiting to be presented to the King. The hall was vast, a high vaulted
affair, with the entire southern wall fashioned of floor-to-ceiling windows
overlooking the city. Hundreds of nobles stood around as the Duke’s party was
led down a central aisle between the onlookers.
Pug had not thought it possible to consider Duke Borric poorly
dressed, for he had always worn the finest clothing in Crydee, as had his
children. But among the finery in evidence around the room, Borric looked like
a raven amid a flock of peacocks. Here a pearl-studded doublet, there a
gold-thread-embroidered tunic—each noble seemed to be outdoing the next. Every
lady wore the costliest silks and brocades, but only slightly outshone the men.
They halted before the throne, and Caldric announced the Duke. The
King smiled, and Pug was struck by a faint resemblance to Arutha, though the
King’s manner was more relaxed. He leaned forward on his throne and said,
“Welcome to our city, cousin. It is good to see Crydee in this hall after so
many years.”
Borric stepped forward and knelt before Rodric the Fourth, King of
the Kingdom of the Isles. “I am gladdened to see Your Majesty well.”
A brief shadow passed over the monarch’s face, then he smiled again
“Present to us your companions.”
The Duke presented his son, and the King said, “Well, it is true
that one of the conDoin line carries the blood of our mother’s kin besides
ourself.” Arutha bowed and backed away. Kulgan was next as one of the Duke’s
advisers. Meecham, who had no rank in the Duke’s court, had stayed in his room.
The King said something polite, and Pug was introduced. “Squire Pug of Crydee,
Your Majesty, Master of Forest Deep, and member of my court.”
The King clapped his hands together and laughed “The boy who kills
trolls. How wonderful. Travelers have carried the tale from the far shores of
Crydee, and we would hear it spoken by the author of the brave deed. We must
meet later so that you may tell us of this marvel.”
Pug bowed awkwardly, feeling a thousand eyes upon him. There had
been times before when he had wished the troll story had not been spread, but
never so much as now.
He backed away, and the King said, “Tonight we will hold a ball to
honor the arrival of our cousin Borric.”
He stood, arranging his purple robes around him, and pulled his
golden chain of office over his head. A page placed the chain on a purple
velvet cushion. The King then lifted his golden crown from his black-tressed
head and handed it to another page.
The crowd bowed as he stepped down from his throne. “Come, cousin,”
he said to Borric, “let us retire to my private balcony, where we can speak
without all the rigors of office. I grow weary of the pomp.”
Borric nodded and fell in next to the King, motioning Pug and the
others to wait. Duke Caldric announced that the day’s audience was at an end,
and that those with petitions for the King should return the next day.
Slowly the crowd moved out the two great doors at the end of the
hall, while Arutha, Kulgan, and Pug stood by. Caldric approached and said, “I
will show you to a room where you may wait. It would be well for you to stay
close, should His Majesty call for your attendance.”
A steward of the court took them through a small door near the one
the King had escorted Borric through. They entered a large, comfortable room
with a long table in the center laden with fruit, cheese, bread, and wine. At
the table were many chairs, and around the edge of the room were several
divans, with plump cushions piled upon them.
Arutha crossed over to large glass doors and peered through them. “I
can see Father and the King sitting on the royal balcony.”
Kulgan and Pug joined him and looked to where Arutha indicated. The
two men were at a table, overlooking the city and the sea beyond. The King was
speaking with expansive gestures, and Borric nodded as he listened.
Pug said, “I had not expected that His Majesty would look like you,
Your Highness.”
Arutha replied with a wry smile, “It is not so surprising when you
consider that, as my father was cousin to his father, so my mother was cousin
to his mother.”
Kulgan put his hand on Pug’s shoulder. “Many of the noble families
have more than one tie between them, Pug. Cousins who are four and five times
removed will marry for reasons of politics and bring the families closer again.
I doubt there is one noble family in the East that can’t claim some
relationship to the crown, though it may be distant and follow along a twisted
route.”
They returned to the table, and Pug nibbled at a piece of cheese.
“The King seems in good humor,” he said, cautiously approaching the subject all
had on their minds.
Kulgan looked pleased at the circumspect manner of the boy’s
comment, for after leaving Salador, Borric had cautioned them all regarding
Duke Kerus’s remarks. He had ended his admonition with the old adage, “In the
halls of power, there are no secrets, and even the deaf can hear.”
Arutha said, “Our monarch is a man of moods; let us hope he stays in
a good one after he hears Father’s tidings.”
The afternoon slowly passed as they awaited word from the Duke. When
the shadows outside had grown long, Borric suddenly appeared at a door. He
crossed over to stand before them, a troubled expression on his face. “His
Majesty spent most of the afternoon explaining his plans for the rebirth of the
Kingdom.”
Arutha said, “Did you tell him of the Tsurani?”
The Duke nodded. “He listened and then calmly informed me that he
would consider the matter. We will speak again in a day or so was all he said.”
Kulgan said, “At least he seemed in good humor.”
Borric regarded his old adviser. “I fear too good. I expected some
sign of alarm. I do not ride across the Kingdom for minor cause, but he seemed
unmoved by what I had to tell him.”
Kulgan looked worried “We are overlong on this journey as it is. Let
us hope that His Majesty will not take long in deciding upon a course of
action.”
Borric sat heavily in a chair and reached for a glass of wine. “Let
us hope.”
Pug walked through the door to the King’s private quarters, his
mouth dry with anticipation. He was to have his interview with King Rodric in a
few minutes, and he was unsettled to be alone with the ruler of the Kingdom.
Each time he had been close to other powerful nobles, he had hidden in the
shadow of the Duke or his son, coming forward to tell briefly what he knew of
the Tsurani, then able to disappear quickly back into the background. Now he
was to be the only guest of the most powerful man north of the Empire of Great
Kesh.
A house steward showed him through the door to the King’s private
balcony Several servants stood around the edge of the large open veranda, and
the King occupied the lone table, a carved marble affair under a large canopy.
The day was clear. Spring was coming early, as winter had before it,
and there was a hint of warmth in the gusting air. Below the balcony, past the
hedges and stone walls that marked its edge, Pug could see the city of Rillanon
and the sea beyond. The colorful rooftops shone brightly in the midday sun, as
the last snows had melted completely over the last four days. Ships sailed in
and out of the harbor, and the streets teemed with citizens. The faint cries of
merchants and hawkers, shouting over the noise of the streets, floated up to
become a soft buzzing where the King took his midday meal.
As Pug approached the table, a servant pulled out a chair. The King
turned and said, “Ah! Squire Pug, please take a seat.” Pug began a bow, and the
King said, “Enough. I don’t stand on formality when I dine with a friend.”
Pug hesitated, then said, “Your Majesty honors me,” as he sat.
Rodric waved the comment way. “I remember what it is to be a boy in
the company of men. When I was but a little older than you, I took the crown.
Until then I was only my father’s son.” His eyes got a distant look for a
moment. “The Prince, it’s true, but still only a boy. My opinion counted for
nothing, and I never seemed to satisfy my father’s expectations, in hunting,
riding, sailing, or swordplay. I took many a hiding from my tutors, Caldric among
them. That all changed when I became King, but I still remember what it was
like.” He turned toward Pug, and the distant expression vanished as he smiled.
“And I do wish us to be friends.” He glanced away and again his expression
turned distant. “One can’t have too many friends, now, can one? And since I’m
the King, there are so many who claim to be my friend, but aren’t.” He was
silent a moment, then again came out of his revery. “What do you think of my
city?”
Pug said, “I have never seen anything like it, Majesty. It’s
wonderful.”
Rodric looked out across the vista before them. “Yes, it is, isn’t
it?” He waved a hand, and a servant poured wine into crystal goblets. Pug
sipped at his; he still hadn’t developed a taste for wine, but found this very
good, light and fruity with a hint of spices. Rodric said, “I have tried very
hard to make Rillanon a wonderful place for those who live here. I would have
the day come when all the cities of the Kingdom are as fine as this, where
everywhere the eye travels, there is beauty. It would take a hundred lifetimes
to do that, so I can only set the pattern, building an example for those who
follow to imitate. But where I find brick, I leave marble. And those who see it
will know it for what it is— my legacy.”
The King seemed to ramble a bit, and Pug wasn’t sure of all that he
was saying as he continued to talk about buildings and gardens and removing
ugliness from view. Abruptly the King changed topics. “Tell me how you killed
the trolls.”
Pug told him, and the King seemed to hang on every word. When the
boy had finished, the King said, “That is a wonderful tale. It is better than
the versions that have reached the court, for while it is not half so heroic,
it is twice as impressive for being true. You have a stout heart, Squire Pug.”
Pug said, “Thank you, Majesty.”
Rodric said, “In your tale you mentioned the Princess Carline.”
“Yes, Majesty?”
“I have not seen her since she was a baby in her mother’s arms. What
sort of woman has she become?”
Pug found the shift in topic surprising, but said, “She has become a
beautiful woman, Majesty, much like her mother. She is bright and quick, if
given to a little temper.”
The King nodded. “Her mother was a beautiful woman. If the daughter
is half as lovely, she is lovely indeed. Can she reason?”
Pug looked confused. “Majesty?”
“Has she a good head for reason, logic? Can she argue?”
Pug nodded vigorously. “Yes, Your Majesty. The Princess is very good
at that.”
The King rubbed his hands together. “Good. I must have Borric send
her for a visit. Most of these eastern ladies are vapid, without substance. I
was hoping Borric gave the girl an education. I would like to meet a young
woman who knew logic and philosophy, and could argue and declaim.”
Pug suddenly realized what the King had meant by arguing wasn’t what
he had thought. He decided it best not to mention the discrepancy.
The King continued. “My ministers dun me to seek a wife and give the
Kingdom an heir. I have been busy, and frankly, have found little to interest
me in the court ladies—oh, they’re fine for a moonlight walk and other things.
But as the mother of my heirs? I hardly think so. But I should become serious
in my search for a queen. Perhaps the only conDoin daughter would be the
logical place to start.”
Pug began to mention another conDoin daughter, then stifled the
impulse, remembering the tension between the King and Anita’s father. Besides,
the girl was only seven.
The King shifted topics again. “For four days cousin Borric has
regaled me with tales of these aliens, these Tsurani. What do you think of all
this business?”
Pug looked startled. He had not thought the King might ask him for
an opinion on anything, let alone a matter as important as the security of the
Kingdom. He thought for a long moment, trying to frame his answer as best he
could, then said, “From everything I have seen and heard, Your Majesty, I think
these Tsurani people not only are planning to invade, but are already here.”
The King raised an eyebrow. “Oh? I would like to hear your
reasoning.”
Pug considered his words carefully. “If there have been as many
sightings as we are aware of, Majesty, considering the stealth these people are
employing, wouldn’t it be logical that there are many more occurrences of their
coming and going than we know of?”
The King nodded. “A good proposition. Continue.”
“Then might it also not be true that once the snows have fallen, we
are less likely to find signs of them, as they are holding to remote areas?”
Rodric nodded and Pug continued. “If they are as warlike as the Duke
and the others have said them to be, I think they have mapped out the West to
find a good place to bring their soldiers in during the winter so they can
launch their offensive this spring.”
The King slapped the table with his hand. “A good exercise in logic,
Pug.” Motioning for the servants to bring food, he said, “Now, let us eat.”
Food of an amazing variety and amount for just the two of them was
produced, and Pug picked small amounts of many things, so as not to appear
indifferent to the King’s generosity Rodric asked him a few questions as they
dined, and Pug answered as well as he could.
As Pug was finishing his meal, the King put his elbow on the table
and stroked his beardless chin. He stared out into space for a long time, and
Pug began to feel self-conscious, not knowing the proper courtesy toward a king
who is lost in thought. He elected to sit quietly.
After a time Rodric came out of his revery. There was a troubled
note in his voice as he looked at Pug and said, “Why do these people come to
plague us now? There is so much to be done. I can’t have war disrupting my
plans.” He stood and paced around the balcony for a while, leaving Pug standing,
for he had risen when the King had. Rodric turned to Pug. “I must send for Duke
Guy. He will advise me. He has a good head for such things.”
The King paced, looking at the city for a few minutes more, while
Pug stood by his chair. He heard the monarch mutter to himself about the great
works that must not be interrupted, then felt a tug on his sleeve. He turned
and saw a palace steward standing quietly at his side. With a smile and a
gesture toward the door, the steward indicated the interview was at an end. Pug
followed the man to the door, wondering at the staff’s ability to recognize the
moods of the King.
Pug was shown the way back to his room, and he asked the servant to
carry word to Lord Borric that Pug wished to see him if he was not busy.
He went into his room and sat down to think. A short time later he
was brought out of his musing by a knock at the door. He gave permission for
the caller to enter, and the same steward who had carried the message to the
Duke entered, with the message that Borric would see Pug at once.
Pug followed the man from his room and sent him away, saying he
could find the Duke’s room without guidance. He walked slowly, thinking of what
he was going to tell the Duke. Two things were abundantly clear to the boy: the
King was not pleased to hear that the Tsurani were a potential threat to his
kingdom, and Lord Borric would be equally displeased to hear that Guy du
Bas-Tyra was being called to Rillanon.
As with every dinner over the last few days, there was a hushed mood
at the table. The five men of Crydee sat eating in the Duke’s quarters, with
palace servants, all wearing the King’s purple-and-gold badge on their dark
tunics, hovering nearby.
The Duke was chafing to leave Rillanon for the West. Nearly four
months had passed since they left Crydee: the entire winter. Spring was upon
them, and if the Tsurani were going to attack, as they all believed, it was
only a matter of days now. Arutha’s restlessness matched his father’s. Even
Kulgan showed signs that the waiting was telling upon him. Only Meecham, who
revealed nothing of his feelings, seemed content to wait.
Pug also longed for home. He had grown bored in the palace. He
wished to be back in his tower with his studies. He also wished to see Carline
again, though he didn’t speak of this to anyone. Lately he found himself
remembering her in a softer light, forgiving those qualities that had once
irritated him. He also knew, with mixed feelings of anticipation, that he might
discover the fate of Tomas. Dolgan should soon send word to Crydee, if the thaw
came early to the mountains.
Borric had endured several more meetings with the King over the last
week, each ending unsatisfactorily as far as he was concerned. The last had
been hours ago, but he would say nothing about it until the room was emptied of
servants.
As the last dishes were being cleared away, and the servants were
pouring the King’s finest Keshian brandy, a knock came at the door and Duke
Caldric entered, waving the servants outside. When the room was cleared, he
turned to the Duke.
“Borric, I am sorry to interrupt your dining, but I have news.”
Borric stood, as did the others. “Please join us. Here, take a
glass.”
Caldric took the offered brandy and sat in Pug’s chair, while the
boy pulled another over. The Duke of Rillanon sipped his brandy and said,
“Messengers arrived less than an hour ago from the Duke of Bas-Tyra. Guy
expresses alarm over the possibility that the King might be ‘unduly’ distressed
by these ‘rumors’ of trouble in the West.”
Borric stood and threw his glass across the room, shattering it.
Amber fluid dripped down the wall as the Duke of Crydee nearly roared with
anger. “What game does Guy play at? What is this talk of rumors and undue
distress!”
Caldric raised a hand and Borric calmed a little, sitting again. The
old Duke said, “I myself penned the King’s call to Guy. Everything you had
told, every piece of information and every surmise, was included. I can only
think Guy is ensuring that the King reaches no decision until he arrives at the
palace.”
Borric drummed his fingers on the table and looked at Caldric with
anger flashing in his eyes. “What is Bas-Tyra doing? If war comes, it comes to
Crydee and Yabon. My people will suffer. My lands will be ravaged.”
Caldric shook his head slowly. “I will speak plainly, old friend.
Since the estrangement between the King and his uncle, Erland, Guy plays to
advance his own banner to primacy in the Kingdom. I think that, should Erland’s
health fail, Guy sees himself wearing the purple of Krondor.”
Through clenched teeth Borric said, “Then hear me clearly, Caldric.
I would not put that burden on myself or mine for any but the highest purpose.
But if Erland is as ill as I think, in spite of his claims otherwise, it will
be Anita who sits the throne in Krondor, not Black Guy. If I have to march the
Armies of the West into Krondor and assume the regency myself, that is what
shall be, even should Rodric wish it otherwise. Only if the King has issue will
another take the western throne.”
Caldric looked at Borric calmly. “And will you be branded traitor to
the crown?”
Borric slapped the table with his hand. “Curse the day that villain
was born. I regret that I must acknowledge him kinsman.”
Caldric waited for a minute until Borric calmed down, then said, “I know
you better than you know yourself, Borric You would not raise the war banner of
the West against the King, though you might happily strangle your cousin Guy.
It was always a sad thing for me that the Kingdom’s two finest generals could
hate each other so.”
“Aye, and with cause. Every time there is a call to aid the West, it
is cousin Guy who opposes. Every time there is intrigue and a title is lost, it
is one of Guy’s favorites who gains. How can you not see? It was only because
you, Brucal of Yabon, and I myself held firm that the congress did not name Guy
regent for Rodric’s first three years. He stood before every Duke in the
Kingdom and called you a tired old man who was not fit to rule in the King’s
name. How can you forget?”
Caldric did look tired and old as he sat in the chair, one hand
shading his eyes, as if the room light were too bright. Softly he said, “I do
see, and I haven’t forgotten. But he also is my kinsman by marriage, and if I
were not here, how much more influence do you think he would have with Rodric?
As a boy the King idolized him, seeing in him a dashing hero, a fighter of the
first rank, a defender of the Kingdom.”
Borric leaned back in his chair. “I am sorry, Caldric,” he said, his
voice losing its harsh edge. “I know you act for the good of us all. And Guy
did play the hero, rolling the Keshian Army back at Deep Taunton, all those
years ago. I should not speak of things I have not seen firsthand.”
Arutha sat passively through all this, but his eyes showed he felt
the same anger as his father. He moved forward in his chair, and the dukes
looked at him. Borric said, “You have something to say, my son?”
Arutha spread his hands wide before him. “In all this the thought
has bothered me: should the Tsurani come, how would it profit Guy to see the
King hesitate?”
Borric drummed his fingers on the table. “That is the puzzle, for in
spite of his scheming, Guy would not peril the Kingdom, not to spite me.”
“Would it not serve him,” said Arutha, “to let the West suffer a
little, until the issue was in doubt, then to come at the head of the Armies of
the East, the conquering hero, as he was at Deep Taunton?”
Caldric considered this. “Even Guy could not think so little of
these aliens, I would hope.”
Arutha paced the room “But consider what he knows. The ramblings of
a dying man. Surmise on the nature of a ship that only Pug, here, has seen, and
I caught but a glimpse of as it slid into the sea. Conjecture by a priest and a
magician, both callings Guy holds in little regard. Some migrating Dark Brothers.
He might discount such news.”
“But it is all there for the seeing,” protested Borric.
Caldric watched the young Prince pace the room. “Perhaps you are
right. What may be lacking is the urgency of your words, an urgency lacking in
the dry message of ink and parchment. When he arrives, we must convince him.”
Borric nearly spat his words. “It is for the King to decide, not
Guy!”
Caldric said, “But the King has given much weight to Guy’s counsel.
If you are to gain command of the Armies of the West, it is Guy who must be
convinced.”
Borric looked shocked. “I? I do not want the banner of the armies. I
only wish for Erland to be free to aid me, should there be need.”
Caldric placed both hands upon the table. “Borric, for all your
wisdom, you are much the rustic noble. Erland cannot lead the armies. He is not
well. Even if he could, the King would not allow it. Nor would he give leave
for Erland’s Marshal, Dulanic. You have seen Rodric at his best, of late. When
the black moods are upon him, he fears for his life. None dare say it, but the
King suspects his uncle of plotting for the crown.”
“Ridiculous!” exclaimed Borric. “The crown was Erland’s for the
asking thirteen years ago. There was no clear succession Rodric’s father had
not yet named him heir apparent, and Erland’s claim was as clear as the King’s,
perhaps more so. Only Guy and those who sought to use the boy pressed Rodric’s
claim. Most of the congress would have sustained Erland as King.”
“I know, but times are different, and the boy is a boy no longer. He
is now a frightened young man who is sick from fear. Whether it is due to Guy’s
and the others’ influence or from some illness of the mind, I do not know. The
King does not think as other men do. No king does, and Rodric less than most.
Ridiculous as it may seem, he will not give the Armies of the West to his
uncle. I am also afraid that once Guy has his ear, he will not give them to you
either.”
Borric opened his mouth to say something, but Kulgan interrupted.
“Excuse me, Your Graces, but may I suggest something?”
Caldric looked at Borric, who nodded. Kulgan cleared his throat and
said, “Would the King give the Armies of the West to Duke Brucal of Yabon?”
Comprehension slowly dawned on Borric’s and Caldric’s faces, until
the Duke of Crydee threw back his head and laughed. Slamming his fist on the
table, he nearly shouted, “Kulgan! If you had not served me well in all the
years I have known you, tonight you have.” He turned to Caldric. “What do you
think?”
Caldric smiled for the first time since entering the room “Brucal?
That old war dog? There is no more honest man in the Kingdom. And he is not in
the line of succession. He would be beyond even Guy’s attempts to discredit.
Should he receive the command of the armies . . .”
Arutha finished the thought “He would call Father to be his chief
adviser. He knows Father is the finest commander in the West.”
Caldric sat up straight in his chair, excitement on his face. “You
would even have command of the armies of Yabon.”
“Yes,” said Arutha, “and LaMut, Zun, Ylith, and the rest.”
Caldric stood. “I think it will work. Say nothing to the King
tomorrow. I will find the proper time to make the ‘suggestion.’ Pray that His
Majesty approves.”
Caldric took his leave, and Pug could see that for the first time
there was hope for a good ending to this journey. Even Arutha, who had fumed
like black thunder all week, looked nearly happy.
Pug was awakened by a pounding on his door. He sleepily called out
for whoever was out there to enter, and the door opened. A royal steward peeked
in. “Sir, the King commands all in the Duke’s party to join him in the throne
room. At once.” He held a lantern for Pug’s convenience.
Pug said he would come straight away and hurriedly got dressed.
Outside it was still dark, and he felt anxious about what had caused this
surprise summons. The hopeful feeling of the night before, after Caldric had
left, was replaced by a gnawing worry that the unpredictable King had somehow
learned of the plan to circumvent the arrival of the Duke of Bas-Tyra.
He was still buckling his belt about his tunic when he left his
room. He hurried down the hall, with the steward beside him holding a lantern
against the dark, as the torches and candles usually lit in the evening had all
been extinguished.
When they reached the throne room, the Duke, Arutha, and Kulgan were
arriving, all looking apprehensively toward Rodric, who paced by his throne,
still in his night-robes. Duke Caldric stood to one side, a grave expression on
his face. The room was dark, save for the lanterns carried by the stewards.
As soon as they were gathered before the throne, Rodric flew into a
rage. “Cousin! Do you know what I have here?” he screamed, holding out a sheaf
of parchment.
Borric said he didn’t. Rodric’s voice lowered only a little. “It is
a message from Yabon! That old fool Brucal has let those Tsurani aliens attack
and destroy one of his garrisons. Look at these!” he nearly shrieked, throwing
the parchments toward Borric. Kulgan picked them up and handed them to the
Duke. “Never mind,” said the King, his voice returning to near-normalcy. “I’ll
tell you what they say.
“These invaders have attacked into the Free Cities, near Wahnor.
They have attacked into the elven forests. They have attacked Stone Mountain.
They have attacked Crydee.”
Without thinking, Borric said, “What news from Crydee?”
The King stopped his pacing. He looked at Borric, and for a moment
Pug saw madness in his eyes. He closed them briefly, then opened them, and Pug
could see the King was himself again. He shook his head slightly and raised his
hand to his temple. “I have only secondhand news from Brucal. When those
messages left six weeks ago, there had only been one attack at Crydee. Your son
Lyam reports the victory was total, driving the aliens deep into the forest.”
Caldric stepped forward. “All reports say the same thing. Heavily
armed companies of foot soldiers attacked during the night, before the snows
had melted, taking the garrisons by surprise. Little is known save that a
garrison of LaMutians near Stone Mountain was overrun. All other attacks seem
to have been driven back.” He looked at Borric meaningfully. “There is no word
of the Tsurani’s using cavalry.”
Borric said, “Then perhaps Tully was right, and they have no
horses.”
The King seemed to be dizzy, for he took a staggering step backward
and sat on his throne. Again he placed a hand to his temple, then said, “What
is this talk of horses? My Kingdom is invaded. These creatures dare to attack
my soldiers.”
Borric looked at the King. “What would Your Majesty have me do?”
The King’s voice rose. “Do? I was going to wait for my loyal Duke of
Bas-Tyra to arrive before I made any decision. But now I must act.”
He paused, and his face took on a vulpine look, as his dark eyes
gleamed in the lantern light. “I was considering giving the Armies of the West
to Brucal, but the doddering old fool can’t even protect his own garrisons.”
Borric was about to protest on Brucal’s behalf, but Arutha, knowing
his father, gripped his arm, and the Duke remained silent.
The King said, “Borric, you must leave Crydee to your son. He is
capable enough, I should think. He’s given us our only victory so far.” His
eyes wandered and he giggled. He shook his head for a moment, and his voice
lost its frantic edge. “Oh, gods, these pains I think my head will burst.” He
closed his eyes briefly. “Borric, leave Crydee to Lyam and Arutha, I’m giving
you the banner of the Armies of the West, go to Yabon. Brucal is sorely
pressed, for most of the alien army strikes toward LaMut and Zun. When you are
there, request what you need. These invaders must be driven from our lands.”
The King’s face was pale, and perspiration gleamed on his forehead.
“This is a poor hour to start, but I have sent word to the harbor to ready a
ship. You must leave at once. Go now.”
The Duke bowed and turned Caldric said, “I will see His Majesty to
his room. I will accompany you to the docks when you are ready.”
The old Chancellor helped the King from the throne, and the Duke’s
party left the hall. They rushed back to their rooms to find stewards already
packing their belongings. Pug stood around excitedly, for at last he was
returning to his home.
They stood at dockside, bidding farewell to Caldric. Pug and Meecham
waited, and the tall franklin said, “Well, lad. It will be some time before we
see home again, now that war is joined.”
Pug looked up into the scarred face of the man who had found him in
the storm, so long ago. “Why? Aren’t we going home?”
Meecham shook his head. “The Prince will ship from Krondor through
the Straits of Darkness to join his brother, but the Duke will ship for Ylith,
then to Brucal’s camp somewhere near LaMut. Where Lord Borric goes, Kulgan
goes. And where my master goes, I go. And you?”
Pug felt a sinking in his stomach. What the franklin said was true.
He belonged with Kulgan, not with the folk at Crydee, though he knew if he
asked, he would be allowed to go home with the Prince. He resigned himself to
another sign that his boyhood was ending. “Where Kulgan goes, I go.”
Meecham clapped him on the shoulder and said, “Well, at least I can
teach you to use that bloody sword you swing like a fishwife’s broom.”
Feeling little cheer at the prospect, Pug smiled weakly. They soon
boarded the ship and were under way toward Salador, and the first leg of the
long journey west.
14
INVASION
The spring rains were heavy that year.
The business of war was hampered by the ever-present mud. It would
stay wet and cold for nearly another month before the brief, hot summer came.
Duke Brucal of Yabon and Lord Borric stood looking over a table
laden with maps. The rain hammered on the roof of the tent, the central part of
the commander’s pavilion. On either side of the tent two others were attached,
providing sleeping quarters for the two nobles. The tent was filled with smoke,
from lanterns and from Kulgan’s pipe. The magician had proven an able adviser
to the dukes, and his magical aid helpful. He could detect trends in the
weather, and his wizard’s sight could detect some of the Tsurani’s troop
movements, though not often. And over the years his reading of every book he
encountered, including narratives of warfare, had made him a fair student of
tactics and strategy.
Brucal pointed to the newest map on the table. “They have taken this
point here, and another here. They hold this point”—he indicated another spot
on the map—” in spite of our every effort to dislodge them. They also seem to
be moving along a line from here, to here.” His finger swept down a line along
the eastern face of the Grey Towers. “There is a coordinated pattern here, but
I’m damned if I can anticipate where it’s going next.” The old Duke looked
weary. The fighting had been going on sporadically for over two months now, and
no distinct advantage could be seen on either side.
Borric studied the map. Red spots marked known Tsurani strongholds:
hand-dug, earthen breastworks, with a minimum of two hundred men defending.
There were also suspected reinforcement companies, their approximate location
indicated with yellow spots. It was known that any position attacked was quick
to get reinforcements, sometimes in a matter of minutes. Blue spots indicated
the location of Kingdom pickets, though most of Brucal’s forces were billeted
around the hill upon which the commander’s tent sat.
Until the heavy foot soldiers and engineers from Ylith and Tyr-Sog
arrived to man and create permanent fortifications, the Kingdom was fighting a
principally mobile war, for most of the troops assembled were cavalry. The Duke
of Crydee agreed with the other man’s assessment. “It seems their tactics
remain the same: bring in a small force, dig in, and hold. They prevent our
troops from entering, but refuse to follow when we withdraw. There is a
pattern. But for the life of me, I can’t see it either.”
A guard entered. “My lords, an elf stands without, seeking
entrance.”
Brucal said, “Show him in.”
The guard held aside the tent flap, and an elf entered. His
red-brown hair was plastered to his head, and his cloak dripped water on the
floor of the tent. He made a slight bow to the dukes.
“What news from Elvandar?” Borric asked.
“My Queen sends you greetings.” He quickly turned to the map. He
pointed at the pass between the Grey Towers on the south and Stone Mountain on
the north, the same pass Borric’s forces now bottled up at its east end. “The
outworlders move many soldiers through this pass. They have advanced to the
edge of the elven forests, but seek not to enter. They have made it difficult
to get through.” He grinned. “I led several a merry chase for half a day. They
run nearly as well as the dwarves. But they could not keep up in the forest.”
He returned his attention to the map. “There is word from Crydee that
skirmishes have been fought by outriding patrols, but nothing close to the
castle itself. There is no word of activity from the Grey Towers, Carse, or
Tulan. They seem content to dig in along this pass. Your forces to the west
will not be able to join you, for they could not break through now.”
“How strong do the aliens appear to be?” asked Brucal.
“It is not known, but I saw several thousand along this route.” His
finger indicated a route along the northern edge of the pass, from the elven
forests to the Kingdom camp. “The dwarves of Stone Mountain are left alone, so
long as they do not venture south. The outworlders deny them the pass also.”
Borric asked the elf, “Has there been any report of the Tsurani’s
having cavalry?”
“None. Every report refers only to infantry.”
Kulgan said, “Father Tully’s speculation on their being horseless
seems to be borne out.”
Brucal took brush and ink in hand and entered the information on the
map. Kulgan stood looking over his shoulder.
Borric said to the elf, “After you’ve rested, carry my greetings to
your mistress, and my wish for her good health and prosperity. If you should
send runners to the west, please carry the same message to my sons.”
The elf bowed. “As my lord wishes. I shall return to Elvandar at
once.” He turned and left the tent.
Kulgan said, “I think I see it.” He pointed to the new red spots on
the map. They formed a rough half circle, through the pass “The Tsurani are
trying to hold this area here. That valley is the center of the circle I would
guess they are attempting to keep anyone from getting close.”
Both the dukes looked puzzled Borric said, “But to what purpose?
There is nothing there of any value militarily. It is as if they are inviting
us to bottle them up in that valley.”
Suddenly Brucal gasped “It’s a bridgehead. Think of it in terms of
crossing a river. They have a foothold on this side of the rift, as the
magician calls it. They have only as many supplies as their men can carry
through. They don’t have enough control of the area for foraging, so they need
to expand the area under their control and build up supplies before they launch
an offensive.”
Brucal turned to the magician. “Kulgan, what do you think? This is
more in your province.”
The magician looked at the map as if trying to divine information
hidden in it. “We know nothing of the magic involved. We don’t know how fast
they can pass supplies and men through, for no one has ever witnessed an
appearance. They may require a large area, which this valley provides them. Or
they may have some limit on the amount of time available to pass troops
through.”
Duke Borric considered this. “Then there is only one thing to do. We
must send a party into the valley to see what they are doing.”
Kulgan smiled “I will go too, if Your Grace permits. Your soldiers
might not have the faintest idea of what they are seeing if it involves magic.”
Brucal started to object, his gaze taking in the magician’s ample
size. Borric cut him off. “Don’t let his look fool you. He rides like a
trooper.”
He turned to Kulgan. “You had best take Pug, for if one should fall,
then the other can carry the news.”
Kulgan looked unhappy at that, but saw the wisdom in it. The Duke of
Yabon said, “If we strike at the North Pass, then into this valley and draw
their forces there, a small, fast company might break through here.” He pointed
at a small pass that entered the south end of the valley from the east.
Borric said, “It is a bold enough plan. We have danced with the
Tsurani so long, holding a stable front, I doubt they will expect it.” The
magician suggested they retire for the rest of the evening, for it would be a
long day on the morrow. He closed his eyes briefly, then informed the two
leaders that the rain would stop and the next day would be sunny.
Pug lay wrapped in a blanket, trying to nap, when Kulgan entered
their tent. Meecham sat before the cook fire, preparing the evening meal and
attempting to keep it from the greedy maw of Fantus. The firedrake had sought
out his master a week before, eliciting startled cries from the soldiers as he
swooped over the tents. Only Meecham’s commanding shouts had kept a bowman from
putting a cloth-yard arrow into the playful drake. Kulgan had been pleased to
see his pet, but at a loss to explain how the creature had found them. The
drake had moved right into the magician’s tent, content to sleep next to Pug
and steal food from under Meecham’s watchful eye.
Pug sat up as the magician pulled off his sopping cloak. “There is
an expedition going deep within Tsurani-held territory, to break the circle
they’ve thrown up around a small valley and find out what they are up to. You
and Meecham will be going with me on this trip, I would have friends at my back
and side.”
Pug felt excited by the news. Meecham had spent long hours schooling
him in use of sword and shield, and the old dream of soldiering had returned.
“I have kept my blade sharp, Kulgan.”
Meecham gave forth a snort that passed for laughter, and the
magician threw him a black look. “Good, Pug. But with any luck we’ll not be
fighting. We are to go in a smaller force attached to a larger one that will
draw off the Tsurani. We will drive quickly into their territory and discover
what they are hiding. We will then ride as fast as possible to bring back the
news. I thank the gods they are without horses, or we could never hope to
accomplish so bold a stroke. We shall ride through them before they know we
have struck.”
“Perhaps we may take a prisoner,” the boy said hopefully.
“It would be a change,” said Meecham. The Tsurani had proved to be
fierce fighters, preferring to die rather than be captured.
“Maybe then we’d discover why they’ve come to Midkemia,” ventured
Pug.
Kulgan looked thoughtful. “There is little we understand about these
Tsurani. Where is this place they come from? How do they cross between their
world and ours? And as you’ve pointed out, the most vexing question of all, why
do they come? Why invade our lands?”
“Metal.”
Kulgan and Pug looked over at Meecham, who was spooning up stew,
keeping one eye on Fantus. “They don’t have any metal and they want ours.” When
Kulgan and Pug regarded him with blank expressions, he shook his head. “I’d
thought you puzzled it out by now, so I didn’t think to bring it up.” He put
aside the bowls of stew, reached behind himself, and drew a bright red arrow
out from under his bedding. “Souvenir,” he said, holding it out for inspection.
“Look at the head. It’s the same stuff their swords are made from, some kind of
wood, hardened like steel. I picked over a lot of things fetched in by the
soldiers, and I haven’t seen one thing these Tsurani make with any metal in
it.”
Kulgan looked flabbergasted. “Of course! It’s all so simple. They
found a way to pass between their world and ours, sent through scouts, and
found a land rich in metals they lack. So they sent in an invading army. It
also explains why they marshal in a high valley of the mountains, rather than
in the lower forests. It gives them free access to . . . the dwarven mines!” He
jumped up. “I’d better inform the dukes at once. We must send word to the
dwarves to be alert for incursions into the mines.”
Pug sat thoughtfully as Kulgan vanished through the tent entrance.
After a moment he said, “Meecham, why didn’t they try trading?”
Meecham shook his head “The Tsurani? From what I’ve seen, boy, it’s
a good bet trading never entered their minds. They are one very warlike bunch.
Those bastards fight like six hundred kinds of demons. If they had cavalry,
they would have chased this whole lot back to LaMut, then probably burned the
city down around them. But if we can wear them down, like a bulldog does, just
keep hanging on until they tire, we might settle this after a time. Look what
happened to Kesh. Lost half of Bosania to the Kingdom in the north ‘cause the
Confederacy just plain wore the Empire out with one rebellion after another in
the south.”
After a time, Pug gave up on Kulgan’s returning soon, ate supper
alone, and made ready for bed. Meecham quit trying to keep the magician’s meal
away from the drake, and also turned in.
In the dark, Pug lay staring up at the tent roof, listening to the
sound of the rain and the drake’s joyous chewing. Soon he drifted off into
sleep, where he dreamed of a dark tunnel and a flickering light vanishing down
it.
The trees were thick and the air hung heavy with mist as the column
moved slowly through the forest. Outriders came and went every few minutes,
checking for signs that the Tsurani were preparing an ambush. The sun was lost
high in the trees overhead, and the entire scene had a greyish-green quality to
it, making it difficult to see more than a few yards ahead.
At the head of the column rode a young captain of the LaMutian army,
Vandros, son of the old Earl of LaMut. He was also one of the more level-headed
and capable young officers in Brucal’s army.
They rode in pairs, with Pug sitting next to a soldier, behind
Kulgan and Meecham. The order to halt came down the line, and Pug reined in his
horse and dismounted. Over a light gambeson, he wore a well-oiled suit of chain
mail. Over that was a tabard of the LaMutian forces, with the grey wolf’s head
on a circle of blue in the center. Heavy woolen trousers were tucked into his
high boots. He had a shield on his left arm, and his sword hung from his belt;
he felt truly a soldier. The only discordant note was his helm, which was a
little too large and gave him a slightly comic appearance.
Captain Vandros came back to where Kulgan stood waiting, and
dismounted. “The scouts have spotted a camp about half a mile ahead. They think
they were not seen by the guards.”
The captain pulled out a map. “We are about here I will lead my men
and attack the enemy position. Cavalry from Zun will support us on either side
Lieutenant Garth will command the column you will ride with. You will pass the
enemy camp and continue on toward the mountains. We will try to follow if we can,
but if we haven’t rejoined you by sundown, you must continue alone.
“Keep moving, if only at a slow walk. Push the horses, but try to
keep them alive. On horseback you can always outrun these aliens, but on foot I
wouldn’t give you much chance of getting back. They run like fiends.
“Once in the mountains, move through the pass Ride into the valley
one hour after sunrise. The North Pass will be attacked at dawn, so if you get
safely into the valley you should, I hope, find little between you and the
North Pass. Once in the valley, don’t stop for anything. If a man falls, he is
to be left. The mission is to get information back to the commanders. Now try
to rest. It may be your last chance for some time. We attack in an hour.”
He walked his horse back to the head of the line. Kulgan, Meecham,
and Pug sat without speaking. The magician wore no armor because he claimed it
would interfere with his magic. Pug was more inclined to believe it would
interfere with his considerable girth. Meecham had a sword at his side, like
the others, but held a horse bow. He preferred archery to close fighting,
though Pug knew, from long hours of instruction at his hands, that he was no
stranger to the blade.
The hour passed slowly, and Pug felt mounting excitement, for he was
still possessed by boyish notions of glory. He had forgotten the terror of the
fighting with the Dark Brothers before they reached the Grey Towers.
Word was passed and they remounted. They rode slowly at first, until
the Tsurani were in sight. As the trees thinned, they picked up speed, and when
they reached the clearing, they galloped the horses. Large breastworks of earth
had been thrown up as a defense against the charge of horsemen. Pug could see
the brightly colored helmets of the Tsurani rushing to defend their camp. As
the riders charged, the sounds of fighting could be heard echoing through the
trees as the Zunese troops engaged other Tsurani camps.
The ground shook under the horses as they rode straight at the camp,
sounding like a rolling wave of thunder. The Tsurani soldiers stayed behind the
earthworks, shooting arrows, most of which fell short. As the first element of
the column hit the earthworks, the second element turned to the left, riding
off at an angle past the camp. A few Tsurani soldiers were outside the
breastworks here, and were ridden down like wheat before a scythe. Two came
close to hitting the riders with the great two-handed swords they wielded, but
their blows went wide. Meecham, guiding his horse with his legs, dropped both
with two quick arrows.
Pug heard a horse scream among the sounds of the fighting behind,
then suddenly found himself crashing through the brush as they entered the
forest. They rode as hard as possible, cutting through the trees, ducking under
low branches, the scene a passing kaleidoscope of greens and browns.
The column rode for nearly a half hour, then slackened pace as the
horses began to tire. Kulgan called to Lieutenant Garth, and they halted to
check their position against the map. If they moved slowly for the balance of
the day and night, they would reach the mouth of the pass near daybreak.
Meecham peered over the heads of the lieutenant and Kulgan as they
knelt on the ground. “I know this place. I hunted it as a boy, when I lived
near Hush.”
Pug was startled. This was the first time Meecham had ever mentioned
anything about his past Pug had supposed that Meecham was from Crydee, and was
surprised to find he had been a youth in the Free Cities. But then he found it
difficult to imagine Meecham as a boy.
The franklin continued. “There is a way over the crest of the
mountains, a path that leads between two smaller peaks. It is little more than
a goat trail, but if we led the horses all night, we could be in the valley by
sunrise. This way is difficult to find on this side if you don’t know where to
seek it. From the valley side, it is nearly impossible. I would bet the Tsurani
know nothing about it.”
The lieutenant regarded Kulgan with a question in his eyes. The
magician looked at Meecham, then said, “It might be worth a try. We can mark
our trail for Vandros. If we move slowly, he might catch up before we reach the
valley.”
“All right,” said the lieutenant, “our biggest advantage is
mobility, so let’s keep moving. Meecham, where will we come out?”
The large man leaned over the lieutenant’s shoulder to point at a
spot on the map near the south end of the valley. “Here If we come out straight
west for a half mile or so, then swing north, we can cut down the heart of the
valley.” He motioned with his finger as he spoke. “This valley’s mostly woods
at the north and south end, with a big meadow in the middle. That’s where
they’d be if they have a big camp. It’s mostly open there, so if the aliens
haven’t come up with anything surprising, we should be able to ride right by
them afore they can organize to stop us. The dicey part will be getting through
the northern woods if they’ve garrisoned soldiers there. But if we get through
them, we’ll be free to the North Pass.”
“All agreed?” asked the lieutenant. When no one said anything, he
gave orders for the men to walk their horses, and Meecham took the lead as
guide.
They reached the entrance to the pass, or what Pug thought Meecham
had correctly called a goat trail, an hour before sundown. The lieutenant
posted guards and ordered the horses unsaddled Pug rubbed down his horse with
handfuls of long grass, then staked it out. The thirty soldiers were busy
tending to their horses and armor. Pug could feel the tension in the air. The
run around the Tsurani camp had set the soldiers on edge, and they were anxious
for a fight.
Meecham showed Pug how to muffle his sword and shield with rags torn
from the soldiers’ blankets. “We’re not going to be using these bed rolls this
night, and nothing will ring through the hills like the sound of metal striking
metal, boy. Except maybe the clopping of hooves on the rock.” Pug watched as he
muffled the horses’ hooves with leather stockings designed for just this
purpose and carried in the saddlebags. Pug rested as the sun began to set.
Through the short spring twilight, he waited until he heard the order to
resaddle. The soldiers were beginning to pull their horses into a line when he
finished.
Meecham and the lieutenant were walking down the line repeating
instructions to the men. They would move in single file, Meecham taking the
lead, the lieutenant second, down the line to the last soldier. They tied a
series of ropes through the left stirrup of each horse, and each man gripped it
tightly as he led his own horse. After everyone was in position, Meecham
started off.
The path rose steeply, and the horses had to scramble in places. In
the darkness they moved slowly, taking great care not to stray from the path.
Occasionally Meecham stopped the line, to check ahead. After several such
stops, the trail crested through a deep, narrow pass and started downward. An
hour later it widened, and they stopped to rest. Two soldiers were sent ahead
with Meecham to scout the way, while the rest of the tired line dropped to the
ground to ease cramped legs. Pug realized the fatigue was as much the result of
the tension created by the silent passage as of the climbing, but it didn’t
make his legs feel any better.
After what seemed to be much too short a rest they were moving
again. Pug stumbled along, fatigue numbing his mind to the point where the
world became an endless series of picking up one foot and placing it before the
other. Several times the horse before him was literally towing him as he
grasped the rope tied to its stirrup.
Suddenly Pug was aware that the line had stopped and that they were
standing in a gap between two small hills, looking down at the valley floor.
From here it would take only a few minutes to ride down the slope.
Kulgan walked back to where the boy stood next to his animal. The
stout wizard seemed little troubled by the climb, and Pug wondered at the
muscle that must he hidden beneath the layers of fat. “How are you feeling,
Pug?”
“I’ll live, I expect, but I think next time I’ll ride, if it’s all
the same to you.” They were keeping their voices low, but the magician gave out
with a soft chuckle anyway.
“I understand completely. We’ll be staying here until first light.
That will be slightly less than two hours. I suggest you get some sleep, for we
have a great deal of hard riding ahead.”
Pug nodded and lay down without a word. He used his shield for a
pillow and, before the magician had taken a step away, was fast asleep. He
never stirred as Meecham came and removed the leather muffles from his horse.
A gentle shaking brought Pug awake. He felt as if he had just closed
his eyes a moment before. Meecham was squatting before him, holding something
out “Here, boy. Eat this.”
Pug took the offered food. It was soft bread, with a nutty flavor.
After two bites he began to feel better.
Meecham said, “Eat quickly, we’re off in a few minutes.” He moved
forward to where the lieutenant and the magician stood by their horses. Pug
finished the bread and remounted. The soreness had left his legs, and by the
time he was astride his mount, he felt anxious to be off.
The lieutenant turned his horse and faced the men. “We will ride
west—then, on my command, north. Fight only if attacked. Our mission is to
return with information about the Tsurani. If any man falls, we cannot stop. If
you are separated from the others, get back as best you can. Remember as much
of what you see as possible, for you may be the only one to carry the news to
the dukes. May the gods protect us all.”
Several of the soldiers uttered quick prayers to various deities,
chiefly Tith, the war god, then they were off. The column came down the
hillside and reached the flat of the valley. The sun was cresting the hills
behind, and a rosy glow bathed the landscape. At the foot of the hills they
crossed a small creek and entered a plain of tall grass. Far ahead was a stand
of trees, and another could be seen off to the north. At the north end of the
valley the haze of campfire smoke hung in the air. The enemy was there all
right, thought Pug, and from the volume of smoke there must be a large
concentration of them. He hoped Meecham was right and they were all garrisoned
out in the open, where the Kingdom soldiers stood a fair chance of outrunning
them.
After a while the lieutenant passed the word, and the column turned
north. They trotted along, saving the horses for when they would be sure to
need the speed.
Pug thought he saw glimpses of color in the trees ahead, as they
descended into the southern woods of the valley, but couldn’t be sure. As they
reached the woods, a shout went up from within the trees. The lieutenant cried,
“All right, they’ve seen us. Ride hard and stay close.” He spurred his horse
forward, and soon the entire company was thundering through the woods. Pug saw
the horses in front bear to the left and turned his to follow, seeing a
clearing in the trees. The sound of voices grew louder as the first trees went
flying past, and his eyes tried to adjust to the darkness of the woods. He
hoped his horse could see more clearly than he could, or he might find himself
inside a tree.
The horse, battle trained and quick, darted between the trunks, and
Pug could begin to see flashes of color among the branches. Tsurani soldiers
were rushing to intercept the horsemen, but were forced to weave through the
trees, making it impossible. They were speeding through the woods faster than
the Tsurani could pass the word and react. Pug knew that this advantage of
surprise couldn’t last much longer, they were making too great a commotion for
the enemy not to realize what was happening.
After a mad dash through the trees, they broke into another clear
area where a few Tsurani soldiers stood waiting for them. The horsemen charged,
and most of the defenders scattered to avoid being run down. One, however,
stood his ground, in spite of the terror written on his face, and swung the
blue two-handed sword he carried. A horse screamed, and the rider was thrown as
the blade cut the horse’s right leg from under him. Pug lost sight of the fight
as he sped quickly past.
An arrow shot over Pug’s shoulder, buzzing like an angry bee. He
hunched over the withers of his mount, trying to give the archers behind him as
small a target as possible. Ahead, a soldier fell backward out of his saddle, a
red arrow through his neck.
Soon they were out of bow range and riding toward a breastwork
thrown across an old road from the mines in the south Hundreds of brightly
colored figures scurried behind it. The lieutenant signaled for the riders to
pass around it, to the west.
As soon as it was apparent they would pass the earthwork and not
charge it, several Tsurani bowmen came tumbling over the top of the redoubt and
ran to intercept the riders. As soon as they came within bowshot, the air
filled with red and blue shafts Pug heard a horse scream, but he couldn’t see
the stricken animal or its rider.
Riding quickly beyond the range of the bowmen, they entered another
thick stand of trees. The lieutenant pulled up his mount for a moment and
yelled, “From here on, make straight north. We’re almost to the meadow, so
there’ll be no cover, and speed is your only ally. Then once you’re in the
woods to the north, keep moving. Our forces should have broken through up
there, and if we can get past those woods, we should be all right.” Meecham had
described the woods as being about two or three miles across. From there it was
three miles of open ground until the North Pass through the hills began.
They slowed to a walk, trying to rest the horses as much as
possible. They could see the tiny figures of the Tsurani coming from behind,
but they would never catch up before the horses were running again. Ahead Pug
could see the trees of the forest, looming larger with each passing minute. He
could feel the eyes that must be there, watching them, waiting.
“As soon as we are within bowshot, ride as fast as you can,” shouted
the lieutenant. Pug saw the soldiers pull their swords and bows out, and drew
his own sword. Feeling uncomfortable with the weapon clutched in his right
hand, he rode at a trot toward the trees.
Suddenly the air was filled with arrows. Pug felt one glance off his
helm, but it still snapped his head back and brought tears to his eyes. He
urged his horse ahead blindly, trying to blink his eyes clear. He had the
shield in his left hand and a sword in his right, so that by the time he
blinked enough to be able to see clearly, he found himself in the woods. His
war-horse responded to leg pressure as he moved into the forest.
A yellow-garbed soldier burst from behind a tree and aimed a swing
at the boy. He caught the sword blow on his shield, which sent a numbing shock
up his left arm. He swung overhand and down at the soldier, who leaped away,
and the blow missed. Pug spurred his horse on, before the soldier could get in
position to swing again. All around, the forest rang with the sounds of battle.
He could barely make out the other horsemen among the trees.
Several times he rode down Tsurani soldiers as they tried to block
his passage. Once one tried to grab at the reins of the horse, but Pug sent him
reeling with a blow on the potlike helmet. To Pug it seemed as if they were all
engaged in some mad game of hide-and-go-seek, with foot soldiers lumping out
from behind every other tree.
A sharp pain stung Pug on the right cheek. Feeling with the back of
his sword hand as he bounded through the wood, he felt a wetness, and when he
pulled his hand away, he could see blood on his knuckles. He felt a detached
curiosity. He hadn’t even heard the arrow that had stung him.
Twice more he rode down soldiers, the war-horse knocking them aside.
Suddenly he burst out of the forest and was assaulted by a kaleidoscope of
images. He pulled up for a moment and let the scene register. Less than a
hundred yards to the west of where he exited the woodlands, a great device,
some hundred feet in length, with twenty-foot-high poles at each end, stood.
Around it were clustered several men, the first Tsurani Pug had seen who
weren’t wearing armor. These men wore long black robes and were completely
unarmed. Between the poles a shimmering grey haze like the one they had seen in
Kulgan’s room filled the air, blocking out the view of the area directly
behind. From out of the haze a wagon was being pulled by two grey, squat,
six-legged beasts, who were prodded by two soldiers in red armor Several more
wagons were standing beyond the machines, and a few of the strange beasts could
be seen grazing beyond the wagons.
Beyond the strange device, a mighty camp sprawled across the meadow,
with more tents than Pug could count. Banners of strange design and gaudy colors
fluttered in the wind above them, and the rising smoke of the campfires stung
his nose with acrid pungency as it was carried off in the breeze.
More riders were coming through the trees, and Pug spurred his horse
forward, angling away from the strange device. The six-legged beasts raised
their heads and ambled away from the oncoming horses, seeming to move with
little more than the minimum effort required to take them out of the path of
the riders.
One of the black-robed men ran toward the riders. He stopped and
stood off to one side as they sped past Pug got a glimpse of his face, clean
shaven, his lips moving and eyes fixed on something behind the boy. Pug heard a
yell and, looking back, saw a rider on the ground, his horse rooted in place,
like a statue. Several guards were rushing over to subdue the man when the boy
turned away. Once beyond the strange device, he could see a series of large,
brightly colored tents off to the left. Ahead, the way was clear.
Pug caught sight of Kulgan and reined his horse to bring himself
closer to the magician. Thirty yards to the right, Pug could see other riders.
As they dashed away, Kulgan shouted something at the boy that he couldn’t make
out. The magician pointed at the side of his face, then at Pug, who realized the
mage was asking if he was all right. Pug waved his sword and smiled, and the
magician smiled back.
Suddenly, about a hundred yards in front, a loud buzzing noise
filled the air, and a black-robed man appeared, as if from thin air. Kulgan’s
horse bore straight for him, but the man had a queer-looking device in his hand
that he pointed at the magician.
The air sizzled with energy Kulgan’s horse screamed and fell as if
poleaxed. The fat magician was tossed over the horse’s head and tucked his
shoulder under as he hit the ground. With an amazing display of agility he
rolled up onto his feet and bowled over the black-robed man.
Pug pulled up in spite of the order to keep going. He reined his
horse around and charged back to find the magician sitting astride the chest of
the smaller man, each grasping the left wrist of the other with his right hand.
Pug could see that they were locked eye to eye in a contest of wills. Kulgan
had explained this strange mental power to Pug before. It was a way in which a
magician could bend the will of another to his own. It took great concentration
and was very dangerous. Pug leaped from his own mount and rushed over to where
the two men were locked in struggle. With the flat of his sword, he struck the
black-robed figure on the temple. The man slumped unconscious.
Kulgan staggered to his feet. “Thank you, Pug. I don’t think I could
have bettered him. I’ve never encountered such mental strength.” Kulgan looked
to where his horse lay quivering on the ground. “It’s useless.” Turning to Pug,
he said, “Listen well, for you’ll have to carry word to Lord Borric. From the
speed that wagon was coming through the rift, I estimate they can bring in
several hundred men a day, perhaps a great deal more. Tell the Duke it would be
suicide to try to take the machine. Their magicians are too powerful. I don’t
think we can destroy the machine they use to hold the rift open. If I had time
to study it . . . He must call for reinforcements from Krondor, perhaps from the
East.”
Pug grabbed Kulgan by the arm “I can’t remember all that. We’ll ride
double.”
Kulgan began to protest but was too weak to prevent the boy’s
pulling him to where his horse stood. Ignoring Kulgan’s objections, he bullied
his master up into the saddle. Pug hesitated a moment, noting the animal’s
fatigue, then came to a decision. “With both of us to carry, he’ll never make
it, Kulgan,” he shouted as he struck the animal on the flank. “I’ll find
another.”
Pug scanned the area as the horse bearing Kulgan sped away. A
riderless mount was wandering about, less than twenty feet away, but as he
approached, the animal bolted. Cursing, Pug turned and was confronted by the
sight of the black-robed Tsurani regaining his feet. The man appeared confused
and weak, and Pug charged him. Only one thought was in Pug’s mind: to capture a
prisoner, and, from his appearance, a Tsurani magician in the bargain. Pug took
the magician by surprise, knocking him down.
The man scrambled backward in alarm as Pug raised his sword threateningly.
The man put forth his hand in what Pug took as a sign of submission, and the
boy hesitated. Suddenly a wave of pain passed through him, and he had to fight
to keep his feet. He staggered about and through the agony saw a familiar
figure riding toward him, shouting his name.
Pug shook his head, and suddenly the pain vanished. Meecham sped
toward him, and Pug knew the franklin could carry the Tsurani to the Duke’s
camp if Pug could keep him from fleeing. So he spun, all pain forgotten, and
closed upon the still-supine Tsurani. A look of shock crossed the magician’s
face when he saw the boy again advancing on him. Pug heard Meecham’s voice
calling his name from behind but didn’t take his eyes from the Tsurani.
Several Tsurani soldiers ran across the meadow, seeking to aid their
fallen magician, but Pug stood only a few feet away, and Meecham would reach
them in a few more moments.
The magician jumped to his feet and reached into his robe. He pulled
out a small device and activated it. A loud humming came from the object. Pug
rushed the man, determined to knock the device from his hand, whatever it might
be. The device hummed louder, and Pug could hear Meecham again shouting his
name as he struck the magician, burying his shoulder in the man’s stomach.
Suddenly the world exploded with white and blue lights, and Pug felt
himself falling through a rainbow of colors into a pit of darkness.
Pug opened his eyes. For a moment he struggled to bring them into
focus, for everything in his field of vision seemed to be flickering. He then
came fully awake and realized it was still night and the flickering came from
campfires a short distance from where he lay. He tried to sit up and found his
hands tied behind him. A groan sounded next to him. In the dim light he could
make out the features of a LaMutian horse soldier lying a few feet away. He was
also bound His face was drawn, and there was a nasty-looking cut running down
from his hairline to his cheekbone, all crusted over with dried blood.
Pug’s attention was distracted by the sound of voices speaking low,
behind him. He rolled over and saw two Tsurani guards in blue armor standing
watch. Several more tied prisoners lay about between the boy and the two
aliens, who were speaking together in their strange, musical-sounding language.
One noticed Pug’s movement and said something to the other, who nodded and
quickly hurried off.
In a moment he was back with another soldier, this one in
red-and-yellow armor, with a large crest on his helm, who ordered the two guards
to stand Pug up. He was pulled roughly to his feet, and the newcomer stood
before him and took stock. This man was dark-haired and had the uptilted,
wide-set eyes that Pug had seen before in the field among the Tsurani dead. His
cheekbones were flat, and he had a broad brow, topped by thick dark hair. In
the dim firelight, his skin looked nearly golden in color.
Except for their short stature, most of the Tsurani soldiers could
pass for citizens of many of the nations of Midkemia, but these golden men, as
Pug thought of them, resembled some Keshian traders Pug had seen in Crydee
years before, from the distant trading city of Shing Lai.
The officer inspected the boy’s clothing. Next he knelt and
inspected the boots on Pug’s feet. He stood and barked an order at the soldier
who had fetched him, who saluted and turned to Pug. He seized the bound boy and
led him away, on a winding course through the Tsurani camp.
At the center of the camp, large banners hung from the cross pieces
of standards, all set in a circle around a large tent. All bore strange
designs, creatures of outlandish configuration, depicted in bold colors.
Several had glyphs of an unknown language on them. It was to this place Pug was
half pulled, half dragged, through the hundreds of Tsurani soldiers who sat
quietly polishing their leather armor and making repairs on weapons. Several
watched as he passed, but the camp was free of the usual noise and bustle Pug
was used to in the camp of his own army. There was more than just the strange
and colorful banners to give this place an otherworld feeling. Pug tried to
note the details, so if he could escape and report, he could tell Duke Borric
something useful, but he found his senses betrayed by so many unfamiliar
images. He didn’t know what was important in all he saw.
At the entrance of the large tent, the guard who pulled Pug along
was challenged by two others, wearing black-and-orange armor. A quick exchange
of words resulted in the tent flap being held aside while Pug was thrust
through. He fell forward onto a thick pile of furs and woven mats. From where
he lay, Pug could see more banners hanging on the tent walls. The tent was
richly fashioned, with silklike hangings and thick rugs and pillows.
Hands roughly pulled him upright, and he could see several men
regarding him. All stood dressed in the gaudy armor and crested helms of the
Tsurani officers except for two. They sat upon a raised dais covered with
cushions. The first wore a simple black robe with cowl pulled back, revealing a
thin, pale face and bald pate: a Tsurani magician. The other wore a
rich-looking robe of orange with black trim, cut below knees and elbows, so
that it gave the look of something worn for comfort. From his wiry, muscled
appearance and several visible scars, Pug assumed that this man was a warrior
who had put aside his armor for the night.
The man in black said something in a high-pitched, singsong language
to the others. None of the other men said anything, but the one in the orange
robe nodded. The great tent was lit by a single brazier near where the two
robed men sat. The lean, black-robed one sat forward, and the light from the
brazier cast upward on his face, giving him a decidedly demonic look. His words
came haltingly, and thick with accent.
“I know only . . . little . . . of your speech. You understand?”
Pug nodded, his heart pounding while his mind worked furiously.
Kulgan’s training was coming into play. First he calmed himself, clearing the
fog that had gripped his mind. Then he extended every sense, automatically,
taking in every scrap of information available, seeking any useful bit of
knowledge that might improve his chances of survival. The soldier nearest the
door seemed to be relaxing, his left arm behind his head as he lay back on a
pile of cushions, his attention only half focused on the captive. But Pug
noticed that his other hand was never more than an inch from the hilt of a
wicked-looking dagger at his belt. A brief gleam of light on lacquer revealed
the presence of another dagger hilt, half protruding from a pillow at the right
elbow of the man in orange.
The man in black said slowly, “Listen, for I tell you something.
Then you asked questions. If you lie, you die. Slowly. Understand?” Pug nodded.
There was no doubt in his mind.
“This man,” said the black-robed one, pointing to the man in the
short orange robe, “is a . . . great man. He is . . . high man. He is . . .”
The man used a word Pug didn’t understand When Pug shook his head, the magician
said, “He family great Minwanabi. He second to . . .” He fumbled for a term,
then moved his hand in a circle, as if indicating all the men in the tent,
officers from their proud plumes “. . . man who lead.”
Pug nodded and softly said, “Your lord?”
The magician’s eyes narrowed, as if he were about to object to Pug’s
speaking out of turn, but instead he paused, then said, “Yes. Lord of War. It
is that one’s will that we are here. This one is second to Lord of War.” He
pointed to the man in orange, who looked on impassively. “You are nothing to
this man.” It was obvious the man was feeling frustration in his inability to
convey what he wished. It was plain this lord was something special by the
lights of his own people, and the man translating was trying to impress this
upon Pug.
The lord cut the translator off and said several things, then nodded
toward Pug. The bald magician bobbed his head in agreement, then turned his
attention toward Pug. “You are lord?”
Pug looked startled, then stammered out a negative. The magician
nodded, translated, and was given instruction by the lord. He turned back to
Pug. “You wear cloth like lord, true?”
Pug nodded His tunic was of a finer fabric than the homespun of the
common soldiers. He tried to explain his position as a member in the Duke’s
court. After several attempts he resigned himself to the presumption they made
of his being some sort of highly placed servant.
The magician picked up a small device and held it out to Pug.
Hesitating for a moment, the boy reached out and took it. It was a cube of some
crystal-like material, with veins of pink running throughout. After a moment in
his hand, it took on a glow, softly pink. The man in orange gave an order, and
the magician translated. “This lord says, how many men along pass to . . .” He
faltered and pointed.
Pug had no idea of where he was, or what direction was being pointed
to. “I don’t know where I am,” he said. “I was unconscious when I was brought
here.”
The magician sat in thought for a moment, then stood. “That way,” he
said, pointing at a right angle to the direction he had just indicated, “is
tall mountain, larger than others. That way,” he moved his hand a little, “in
sky, is five fires, like so.” His hands traced a pattern. After a moment Pug
understood. The man had pointed to where Stone Mountain lay and where the
constellation called the Five Jewels hung in the sky. He was in the valley they
had raided. The pass indicated was the one used as an escape route.
“I . . . really, I don’t know how many.”
The magician looked closely at the cube in Pug’s hand. It continued
to glow in soft pink tones. “Good, you tell truth.”
Pug then understood that he held some sort of device that would
inform his captives if he tried to deceive them. He felt black despair wash
over him. He knew that any survival hopes he entertained were going to involve
some manner of betraying his homeland.
The magician asked several questions about the nature of the force
outside the valley. When most went unanswered, for Pug had not been privy to
meetings on strategy matters, the question changed to a more general nature,
about common things in Midkemia, but which seemed to hold a fascination for the
Tsurani.
The interview continued for several hours. Pug began to feel faint
on several occasions as the pressure of the situation combined with his general
exhaustion. He was given a strong drink one of these times, which restored his
energy for a while but left him light-headed.
He answered every question. Several times he got around the truth
device by telling only some of the information requested, not volunteering
anything. On several of these occasions, he could tell both the lord and
magician were nettled by their inability to deal with answers that were
incomplete or complex. Finally the lord indicated the interview was over, and Pug
was dragged outside. The magician followed.
Outside the tent the magician stood before Pug. “My lord says, ‘I
think this servant’” —he pointed at Pug’s chest— “ ‘he is . . .’ ” He groped
for a word . . . “ ‘He is clever.’ My lord does not mind clever servants, for
they work well. But he thinks you are too clever. He says to tell you to be
careful, for you are now slave. Clever slave may live long time. Too clever
slave, dies quickly if . . .” Again the pause. Then a broad smile crossed the
magician’s face. “If he is fortun . . . fortunate. Yes . . . that is the word.”
He rolled the word around his mouth one more time, as if savoring the taste of
it. “Fortunate.”
Pug was led back to the holding area and left with his own thoughts.
He looked around and saw that a few other captives were awake. Most looked
confused and dispirited. One openly wept. Pug turned his eyes skyward and saw
the pink edge along the mountains in the east, heralding the coming dawn.
15
CONFLICTS
The rain was unceasing.
Huddled near the mouth of the cave, a group of dwarves sat around a
small cook fire, the gloom of the day reflected upon their faces. Dolgan puffed
upon his pipe, and the others were working on their armor, repairing cuts and
breaks in leather, cleaning and oiling metal. A pot of stew simmered on the
fire.
Tomas sat at the back of the cave, his sword set across his knees.
He looked blankly past the others, his eyes focused on some point far beyond
them.
Seven times the dwarves of the Grey Towers had ventured out against
the invaders, and seven times they had inflicted heavy losses. But each time it
was clear that the Tsurani’s numbers were undiminished. Many dwarves were
missing now, their lives bought at a dear price to the enemy, but dearer to the
families of the Grey Towers. The long-lived dwarves had fewer children, years
further apart, than did humans. Each loss diminished dwarvenkind at a much more
damaging cost than could have been imagined by the humans.
Each time the dwarves had gathered and attacked through the mines
into the valley, Tomas had been in the van. His golden helm would be a signal
beacon for the dwarves. His golden broadsword would arc above the fray, then
swing down to take its toll from the enemy. In battle the keep boy was
transformed into a figure of power, a fighting hero whose presence on the field
struck awe and fear into the Tsurani. Had he possessed any doubt about the
magical nature of his arms and armor after driving off the wraith, they were
dispelled the first time he wore them into battle.
They had gathered thirty fighting dwarves from Caldara and ventured
through the mines to an entrance in the south portion of the captured valley.
They surprised a Tsurani patrol not far from the mines and slew them. But
during the course of the fighting, Tomas had been cut off from the dwarves by
three Tsurani warriors. As they bore down on him, their swords raised high
overhead, he felt something take hold of him. Darting between two of them, like
some maddened acrobat, he had slain both with a single stroke from one side to
the other. The third had been taken quickly from behind before he could recover
from the sudden move.
After the fray, Tomas had been filled with an elation new to him,
and somehow frightening as well. All the way back from the battle, he had felt
suffused with an unknown energy.
Each subsequent battle had gained him the same power and skill of
arms. But the elation had become something more urgent, and the last two times
the visions had begun. Now for the first time the visions were coming unbidden.
They were transparent, like an image laid upon another.
He could see the dwarves through it, as well as the forest beyond.
But upon them played a scene of people long dead and places vanished from the
memories of the living. Halls decked with golden trappings were lit with
torches that threw dancing light from crystal set upon tables. Goblets that
never knew human touch were raised to lips that curved in unfamiliar smiles.
Great lords of some long-dead race supped at banquet before his eyes Strange
they were, yet also familiar Humanlike, but with elven ears and eyes. Tall like
the elvenfolk, but broader of shoulder and thicker of arm. The women were
beautiful, but in alien ways.
The dream took shape and substance, more vivid than any he had
experienced so far. Tomas strained to hear the faint laughter, the sound of
alien music, and the spoken words of these people.
He was ripped from his reverie by Dolgan’s voice. “Will you take
some food, laddie?” He could answer with only a part of his awareness, as he
rose and crossed the space between them to take the offered bowl of meat stew.
When his hand touched the bowl, the vision vanished, and he shook his head to
clear it.
“Are you all right, Tomas?”
Slowly sitting, Tomas looked at his friend for a moment. “I’m not
sure,” he said hesitantly. “There is something. I . . . I’m not really sure.
Just tired, I guess.”
Dolgan looked at the boy. The ravages of battle were showing on his
young face. Already he looked less the boy and more the man. But beyond the
normal hardening of character expected from battle, something else was
occurring in Tomas. Dolgan had not as yet decided if the change was fully for
good or ill—or if it could even be considered in those terms Six months of
watching Tomas was not long enough to come to any sort of conclusion.
Since donning the dragon’s gift armor, Tomas had become a fighter of
legendary capabilities. And the boy . . . no, the young man, was taking on
weight, even though food was often scarce. It was as if something were acting
to bring him to a growth sufficient to fit the cut of the armor. And his
features were gaining a strange cast. His nose had taken on a slightly more
angular shape, more finely chiseled than before. His brows had become more
arched, his eyes deeper set. He was still Tomas, but Tomas with a slight change
in appearance, as if wearing someone else’s expression.
Dolgan pulled long on his pipe and looked at the white tabard Tomas
wore. Seven times in battle, and free from stain. Dirt, blood, and all other
manner of contamination were refused purchase in its fabric. And the device of
the golden dragon gleamed as brightly as when they had first found it. So it
was also with the shield he wore in battle. Many times struck, still it was
free of any scar. The dwarves were circumspect in this matter, for their race
had long ago used magic in the fashioning of weapons of power. But this was
something else. They would wait and see what it brought before they would
judge.
As they finished their meager meal, one of the guards on the edge of
camp came into the clearing before the cave. “Someone comes.”
The dwarves quickly armed themselves and stood ready. Instead of the
strangely armored Tsurani soldiers, a single man dressed in the dark grey cloak
and tunic of a Natalese Ranger appeared. He walked directly into the center of
the clearing and announced in a voice hoarse from days running through wet
forests, “Hail, Dolgan of the Grey Towers.”
Dolgan stepped forward. “Hail, Grimsworth of Natal.”
The rangers were serving as scouts and runners since the invaders
had taken the Free City of Wahnor. The man walked into the cave mouth and sat
down. He was given a bowl of stew, and Dolgan asked, “What news?”
“None good, I’m afraid,” he said, between mouthfuls of stew. “The
invaders hold a hard front from out of the valley, northeast toward LaMut.
Walinor has been reinforced with fresh troops from their homeland and stands
like a knife between the Free Cities and the Kingdom. They had thrice raided
the main camp of the Kingdom’s host when I left two weeks ago, probably again
since. They harry patrols from Crydee. I am to tell you that it is believed they
will start a drive into your area soon.”
Dolgan looked perplexed. “Why do the dukes think that? Our lookouts
have seen no increase in the aliens’ activity in these parts. Every patrol they
send out we attack. If anything, they seem to be leaving us alone.”
“I am not sure. I heard that the magician Kulgan thinks the Tsurani
seek metals from your mines, though why I do not know. In any event, this is
what the dukes have said. They think there will be an assault on the mine
entrances in the valley. I am to tell you that new Tsurani troops may be coming
into the southern end of the valley, for there has been no new major assault in
the north, only the small raids.
“Now you must do what you think is best.” So saying, he turned his
full attention to the stew.
Dolgan thought. “Tell me, Grimsworth, what news of the elvenfolk?”
“Little. Since the aliens have invaded the southern part of the
elven forests, we are cut off. The last elven runner came through over a week
before I left. At last word, they had stopped the barbarians at the fords of
the river Crydee where it passes through the forest.
“There are also rumors of alien creatures fighting with the
invaders. But as far as I know, only a few burned-out village folk have seen
these creatures, so I wouldn’t place too much stock in what they say.
“There is one interesting piece of news, though. It seems a patrol
from Yabon made an unusually broad sweep to the edge of the Lake of the Sky. On
the shore they found what was left of some Tsurani and a band of goblins raiding
south from the Northlands. At least we don’t have to worry about the northern
borders. Perhaps we could arrange for them to battle each other for a while and
leave us alone.”
“Or take up common cause against us,” said Dolgan. “Still, I think
that unlikely, as the goblins tend to kill first and negotiate later.”
Grimsworth chuckled deeply. “It is somehow meet that these two
bloody-handed folk should run across one another.”
Dolgan nodded. He hoped Grimsworth correct, but was disquieted by
the thought of the Nations of the North—as the dwarves thought of the
Northlands—joining the fray.
Grimsworth wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. “I will stay
this night only, for if I am to pass safely through their lines, I must move
quickly. They step up their patrols to the coast, cutting off Crydee for days
at a time. I will spend some time there, then start the long run for the dukes’
camp.”
“Will you return?” asked Dolgan.
The ranger smiled, his grin showing up brightly against his dark
skin “Perhaps, if the gods are obliging. If not I, then one of my brothers. It
might be that you’ll see Long Leon, for he was sent to Elvandar and, if he is
a’right, may be bound here with missives from the Lady Aglaranna. It would be
good to know how the elvenfolk fare.” Tomas’s head came up from his musing at
the mention of the Elf Queen’s name.
Dolgan puffed on his pipe and nodded. Grimsworth turned to Tomas and
spoke directly to him for the first time. “I bring you a message from Lord
Borric, Tomas.” It had been Grimsworth who earned the first messages from the
dwarves along with the news that Tomas was alive and well. Tomas had wanted to
return to the Kingdom forces with Grimsworth, but the Natalese Ranger had
refused to have him along, citing his need to travel fast and quietly.
Grimsworth continued his message. “The Duke rejoices at your good fortune and
your good health. But he sends grave news as well. Your friend Pug fell in the
first raid into the Tsurani camp and was taken by them. Lord Borric shares your
loss.”
Tomas stood without a word and moved deep into the cave. He sat in
the rear, for a few moments as still as the rock around him, then a faint
trembling started in his shoulders. It grew in seventy until he shook
violently, teeth chattering as if from bitter cold. Then tears came unbidden to
his cheeks, and he felt a hot pain rush up from his bowels to his throat,
constricting his chest. Without a sound he gasped for breath, and great silent
sobs shook him. As the pain grew near-unbearable, a seed of cold fury formed in
the center of his being, pushing upward, displacing the hot pain of grief.
Dolgan, Grimsworth, and the rest looked up when Tomas re-entered the
light of the fire. “Would you please tell the Duke that I thank him for
thinking of me?” he asked the ranger.
Grimsworth nodded. “Yes, I will, lad. I think it would be a’right for
you to make the run to Crydee, if you wish to return home. I’m sure Prince Lyam
could use your sword.”
Tomas thought. It would be good to see home again, but at the keep
he would be just another apprentice, even if he did bear arms. They would let
him fight if the keep was attacked, but they certainly wouldn’t let him
participate in raids.
“Thank you, Grimsworth, but I will remain. There is much yet to be
done here, and I would be a part of it. I would ask you to give word to my
mother and father that I am well enough and think of them.” Sitting down, he
added, “If it is my destiny to return to Crydee, I shall.”
Grimsworth looked hard at Tomas, seemed about to speak, then noticed
a slight shake of Dolgan’s head. More than any other humans in the West, the Rangers
of Natal were sensitive to the ways of the elves and dwarves. Something was
occurring here that Dolgan thought best left unexplored for the time being, and
Grimsworth would bow before the dwarven chief’s wisdom.
As soon as the meal was finished, guards were posted, and the rest
made ready for sleep. As the fire died down, Tomas could hear the faint sounds
of inhuman music and again saw the shadows dance. Before sleep claimed him, he
plainly saw one figure stand apart from the rest, a tall warrior, cruel of face
and powerful in countenance, dressed in a white tabard emblazoned with a golden
dragon.
Tomas stood with his back pressed against the wall of the passage.
He smiled, a cruel and terrible smile. His eyes were wide, whites vivid around
pale blue irises. His body was nearly rigid as he stood motionless. His fingers
clenched and unclenched on the hilt of his sword of white and gold.
Images shimmered before his eyes, tall, graceful people who rode on
the backs of dragons and lived in halls deep in the earth. Music could be
faintly heard in his mind’s ear, and strange tongues. The long-dead race called
to him, a mighty race who had fashioned this armor, never meant for human use.
More and more the visions came. He could keep his mind free of them
most times, but when he felt the battle lust rise, as it did now, the images
took on dimension, color, and sound. He would strain to hear the words. They
efame faintly, and he could almost understand them.
He shook his head, bringing himself back to the present. He looked
around the dark passage, no longer surprised at his ability to see in the dark.
He signaled across the intersecting tunnel to Dolgan, who stood quietly waiting
in position with his men forty feet away and acknowledged him with a wave. On
each side of the large tunnel sixty dwarves waited to spring the trap. They
waited for the handful of dwarves who were running before a Tsurani force,
leading the enemy into the trap.
The sound of footfalls pounding down the tunnel alerted them. In a
moment it was joined by the sounds of clashing arms. Tomas tensed. Several
dwarves came into view, moving backward as they fought a rearward action.
Passing the side tunnels, the fighting dwarves gave no indication they were
aware of their brethren waiting on either side.
As soon as the first Tsurani warriors were past, Tomas cried, “Now!”
and leaped forward. Suddenly the tunnel was filled with turning, slashing
bodies. The Tsurani were mostly armed with broadswords, ill fitted for close
quarters, and the dwarves wielded hand axes and hammers with expertise Tomas
laid about himself, and several bodies fell. The flickering Tsurani torches
threw mad, dancing shadows high on the passage walls, creating confusion for
the eye.
A shout from the rear of the Tsurani force sounded, and the aliens
began to back down the tunnel. Those with shields came to the fore, forming a
wall over which the swordsmen could strike. The dwarves were unable to reach
far enough to do any damage. Each time a dwarf attacked, the shield wall would stand,
and the attacker would be answered by sword blows from behind the shield. In
short spurts the enemy backed away.
Tomas moved to the fore, since his reach was long enough to strike
at the shield holders. He felled two, but as quickly as each dropped, another
took his place. Still the dwarves pressed them and they retreated.
They reached a glory hole, entering it at the lowest level, and the
Tsurani rapidly took position in the center of the great cavern, forming a
rough circle of shields. The dwarves paused for a moment, then charged the
position.
A faint flicker of movement caught Tomas’s eye, and he looked up to
one of the ledges above. In the darkness of the mine it was impossible to see
anything clearly, but a sudden feeling alerted him. “Look to the rear!” he
shouted.
Most of the dwarves had broken through the shield wall and were too
busy to heed him, but a few close by stopped their attack and looked up One
standing next to Tomas cried, “From above!”
Black shapes came pouring from above, seeming to crawl down the face
of the rock. Other, human, shapes came running down the paths from the higher
levels. Lights appeared above as Tsurani warriors on the upper levels opened
shuttered lamps and lit torches.
Tomas stopped in shock. Directly behind the few surviving Tsurani in
the center of the cavern he could see creatures entering from every opening
above, like a herd of ants, which they closely resembled. Unlike ants, though,
they were upright from the center of their bodies, with humanlike arms bearing
weapons. Their faces, insectlike, had large multifaceted eyes but very
humanlike mouths. They moved with incredible speed, dodging forward to strike
at the dwarves, who, surprised though they were, responded without hesitation,
and the battle was joined.
The fray increased in intensity, and several times Tomas faced two
opponents, Tsurani, or monster, or both. The creatures were obviously
intelligent, for they fought in an organized manner, and their inhuman voices
could be heard crying out in the Tsurani tongue.
Tomas looked up after dispatching one of the creatures and saw a new
influx of warriors from above. “To me! To me!” he shouted, and the dwarves
started fighting toward him When most were close by, Dolgan could be heard
shouting, “Back, fall back! They are too many.”
The dwarves slowly began to move toward the tunnel they had entered
from, with its relative safety. There they could face a smaller number of
creatures and Tsurani and, they hoped, lose them in the mines. Seeing the
dwarves moving back, the Tsurani and their allies pressed the attack. Tomas saw
a large number of the creatures interpose themselves between the dwarves and
the escape route. He sprang forward and heard a strange war cry escape from his
lips, words he didn’t understand. His golden sword flashed, and with a shriek
one of the strange creatures fell. Another wielded a broadsword at him, and he
caught it on his shield. A lesser being’s arm would have been broken, but the
blow rang out on the white shield and the creature backed away, then struck
again.
Again he blocked it, and with a looping overhand swing struck
through its neck, severing head from body. It stiffened for a moment, then
collapsed at his feet. He leaped over its fallen body and landed before three
startled Tsurani warriors. One held two lanterns and the others were armed.
Before the man with the lanterns could drop them, Tomas jumped forward and
struck down the other two men. The third died trying to draw his sword.
Letting his shield hang on his arm, Tomas reached down and grabbed a
lantern. He turned and saw the dwarves scrambling over the bodies of the fallen
creatures he had killed. Several carried wounded comrades. A handful of
dwarves, with Dolgan at their head, held their enemies at bay while the others
made good their escape. The dwarves who carried wounded hurried past Tomas.
One, who had stayed behind in the tunnel during the fighting,
hastened forward when his comrades were obviously in retreat. Instead of
weapons he carried two bulging skins filled with liquid.
The rear guard was pressed back toward the escape tunnel, and twice
soldiers tried to circle to cut them off. Both times Tomas struck out, and they
fell. When Dolgan and his fighters stood atop the bodies of the fallen
monsters, Tomas yelled, “Be ready to jump.”
He took the two heavy skins from the dwarf. “Now!” he shouted Dolgan
and the others leaped back, and the Tsurani were left standing on the other
side of the corpses. Without hesitation, the dwarves sped up the tunnel while
Tomas threw the skins at the bodies. They had been earned carefully, for they
were fashioned to rupture on impact. Both contained naphtha, which the dwarves
had gathered from deep black pools under the mountain. It would burn without a
wick, as oil would not.
Tomas raised the lantern and smashed it in the midst of the pools of
volatile liquid. The Tsurani, hesitating only briefly, were moving forward as
the lantern burst. White heat exploded in the tunnel as the naphtha burst into
flame. The dwarves, blinded, could hear the screams of the Tsurani who had been
caught. When their vision recovered, they could see a single figure striding
down the tunnel. Tomas appeared black, outlined against the near-white flames.
When he reached them, Dolgan said, “They’ll be upon us when the
flames die.”
They quickly made their way through a series of tunnels and headed
back toward the exit on the western side of the mountains. After they had
traveled a short distance, Dolgan halted the party. He and several others stood
still, listening to the silence in the tunnels. One dropped to the floor and
placed his ear on the ground, but immediately jumped to his feet. “They come!
By the sound, hundreds of them, and the creatures too. They must be mounting a
major offensive.”
Dolgan took stock. Of the hundred and fifty dwarves who had begun
the ambush, only seventy or so stood here, and of these, twelve were injured.
It could be hoped that others had escaped through other passages, but for the
moment they were all in danger.
Dolgan acted quickly. “We must make for the forest.” He started to
trot along with the others following behind.
Tomas ran easily, but his mind reeled with images. In the heat of
battle they assaulted him, more vivid and clear than before. He could see the
bodies of his fallen enemies, yet they looked nothing like the Tsurani. He
could taste the blood of the fallen, the magic energies that came with him as
he drank from their open wounds in the ceremony of victory. He shook his head
to clear the images. What ceremony? he wondered.
Dolgan spoke, and Tomas forced his attention to the dwarf’s words.
“We must find another stronghold,” he said as they ran. “Perhaps it would be
best to try for Stone Mountain. Our villages here are safe, but we have no base
to fight from, for I think the Tsurani will have control of these mines soon.
Those creatures of theirs fight well in the dark, and if they have many of
them, they can ferret us out of the deeper passages.”
Tomas nodded, unable to speak. He was burning inside, a cold fire of
hatred for these Tsurani. They had savaged his homeland and taken his brother
in all but name, and now many dwarven friends lay dead under the mountain
because of them. His face was grim as he made a silent vow to destroy these
invaders, whatever the cost.
They moved cautiously through the trees, watching for signs of the
Tsurani. Three times in six days they had skirmished, and now the dwarves
numbered fifty-two. The more seriously wounded had been carried to the relative
safety of the high villages, where the Tsurani were unlikely to follow.
Now they approached the southern part of the elven forests. At first
they had tried to turn eastward toward the pass, seeking a way toward Stone
Mountain. The route was thick with Tsurani camps and patrols, and they had been
constantly turned northward. Finally it had been decided to try for Elvandar,
where they could find rest from the constant flight.
A scout returned from his position twenty yards ahead and said
softly, “A camp, at the ford.”
Dolgan considered. The dwarves were not swimmers, and they would
need to cross at a ford. It was likely the Tsurani would hold all the fords on
this side. They would have to find a place free of guards, if one existed.
Tomas looked around. It was nearly nightfall, and if they were to
sneak across the river this close to the Tsurani lines, it would best be done
in the dark Tomas whispered this to Dolgan, who nodded. He signaled the guard
to head off to the west of the espied camp, to find a likely looking place to
hole up.
After a short wait the guide returned with word of a thicket facing
a hollowed rock, where they could wait for nightfall. They hurried to the place
and found a boulder of granite extruding from the ground, twelve feet tall, and
broadening to a base twenty-five or thirty feet across. When they pulled back
the brush, they found a hollow in which they could tightly fit. It was only
twenty feet across, but it reached back under the rock shelf for over forty
feet, angling down When they were all safely tucked in, Dolgan observed, “This
must have been under the river at one time—see how it is worn smooth on the underside.
It is cramped, but we should be safe for a bit.”
Tomas barely heard, for he was once again fighting his battle
against the images, the waking dreams, as he thought of them. He closed his
eyes, and again the visions came, and the faint music.
***
The
victory had been swift, but Ashen-Shugar brooded. Something troubled the Ruler
of the Eagles’ Reaches. The blood of Algon-Kokoon, Tyrant of Wind Valley, was
still salty upon his lips, and his consorts were now Ashen-Shugar’s. Still
there was something lacking.
He studied the moredhel dancers, moving in perfect time with the
music for his amusement. That was as it should be. No, the lack was felt deep
within Ashen-Shugar.
Alengwan, one whom the elves called their Princess, and his latest
favorite, sat on the floor beside his throne, awaiting his pleasure. He barely
noticed her lovely face and her supple body, clothed in silken garments that
served to accent her beauty rather than conceal it.
“Art thou troubled, master?” she asked faintly, her terror of him as
thinly veiled as her body.
He glanced away. She had glimpsed his uncertainty, that earned her
death, but he would kill her later. Appetites of the flesh had fled lately,
both the pleasure of the bed and that of killing. Now he thought upon his
nameless feeling, that phantom emotion so strange within. Ashen-Shugar raised
his hand, and the dancers were on the floor, foreheads pressed to the stone.
The musicians had ceased playing in midnote, it seemed, and the cavern was
silent. With a flickering of his hand he dismissed them, and they fled out of
the great hall, past the mighty golden dragon, Shuruga, who patiently awaited
his master . . . .
“Tomas,” came the voice.
Tomas’s eyes opened with a snap. Dolgan had his hand upon the young
man’s arm. “It is time. Night has fallen. You’ve been asleep, laddie.”
Tomas shook his head to clear it, and the lingering images fled. He
felt a churning in his stomach as the last flickering vision of a warrior in
white and gold standing over the bloody body of an elven princess vanished.
With the others, he crawled out from under the overhanging rock, and
they set out once more toward the river. The forest was silent, even the night
birds seemingly cautious about revealing their whereabouts.
They reached the river without incident, save that they had to lie
hidden while a patrol of Tsurani passed. They followed the river, with a scout
in front. After a few minutes, the scout returned. “A sandbar crosses the
river.”
Dolgan nodded; the dwarves moved quietly forward and entered the
water in single file. Tomas waited with Dolgan while the others crossed.
When the last dwarf entered the water, an inquiring shout sounded
from farther up the bank. The dwarves froze. Tomas moved quickly forward and
surprised a Tsurani guard who was trying to peer through the gloom. The man
cried out as he was felled, and shouting erupted a short way off.
Tomas saw lantern light rapidly approaching him, turned, and ran. He
found Dolgan waiting on the bank and shouted, “Fly! They are upon us.”
Several dwarves stood indecisively as Tomas and Dolgan splashed into
the river. The water was cold, moving rapidly over the sandbar. Tomas had to
steady himself as he waded through. The water was only waist deep for him, but
the dwarves were covered nearly to their chins. They would never be able to
fight in the river.
As the first Tsurani guards leaped into the water, Tomas turned to
hold them off while the dwarves made good their escape. Two Tsurani attacked,
and he struck them both down. Several more jumped into the river, and he had
only a brief moment to see to the dwarves. They were almost at the opposite
bank, and he caught sight of Dolgan, helpless frustration clearly marked on his
face in the Tsurani lamplight.
Tomas struck out again at the Tsurani soldiers. Four or five were
trying to surround him, and the best he could manage was to keep them at bay.
Each time he tried for a kill, he would leave himself open from a different quarter.
The sound of new voices told him it was only a matter of moments
before he would be overwhelmed. He vowed to make them pay dearly and lashed out
at one man, splitting his shield and breaking his arm. The man went down with a
cry.
Tomas barely caught an answering blow on his shield when a whistling
sound sped past his ear, and a Tsurani guard fell screaming, a long arrow
protruding from his chest. The air was at once full of arrows. Several more
Tsurani fell, and the rest pulled back. Every soldier in the water died before
he could reach the shore.
A voice called out, “Quickly, man. They will answer in kind.” As if
to demonstrate the truth of the warning, an arrow sped past Tomas’s face from
the other direction. He hurried toward the safety of the opposite bank. A
Tsurani arrow struck him in the helm, and he stumbled. As he righted himself,
another took him in the leg. He pitched forward and felt the sandy soil of the
riverbank below him. Hands reached down and pulled him unceremoniously along.
A dizzy, swimming sensation swept over him, and he heard a voice
say, “They poison their arrows. We must . . .” The rest trailed away into
blackness.
***
Tomas
opened his eyes. For a moment he had no idea of where he was. He felt
light-headed and his mouth was dry. A face loomed over him, and a hand lifted
his head as water was placed at his lips. He drank deeply, feeling better
afterward. He turned his head a little and saw two men sitting close by. For a
moment he feared he had been captured, but then he saw that these men wore dark
green leather tunics.
“You have been very ill,” said the one who had given him water.
Tomas then realized these men were elves.
“Dolgan?” he croaked.
“The dwarves have been taken to council with our mistress. We could
not chance moving you, for fear of the poison. The outworlders have a venom
unknown to us, which kills rapidly. We treat it as best we can, but those
wounded die as often as not.”
He felt his strength returning slowly. “How long?”
“Three days. You have hovered near death since we fished you from
the river. We carried you as far as we dared.”
Tomas looked around and saw that he had been undressed and was lying
under a shelter fashioned from tree branches, a blanket over him. He smelled
food cooking over a fire and saw the pot the savory aroma came from. His host
noticed and signaled for a bowl to be brought over.
Tomas sat up, and his head swam for a moment. He was given a large
piece of bread and used it in place of a spoon. The food was delicious, and
every bite seemed to fill him with increasing strength. As he ate, he took
stock of the others sitting nearby. The two silent elves regarded him with
blank expressions. Only the speaker showed any signs of hospitality.
Tomas looked at him and said, “What of the enemy?”
The elf smiled. “The outworlders still fear to cross the river. Here
our magic is stronger, and they find themselves lost and confused. No
out-worlder has reached our shore and returned to the other side.”
Tomas nodded. When he finished eating, he felt surprisingly well. He
tried to stand and found he was only a little shaky. After a few steps, he
could feel the strength returning to his limbs, and that his leg was already
healed. He spent a few minutes stretching and working out the stiffness of
three days sleeping on the ground, then dressed.
“You’re Prince Calin. I remember you from the Duke’s court.”
Calin smiled in return. “And I you, Tomas of Crydee, though you have
changed much in a year’s time. These others are Galain and Algavins. If you
feel up to it, we can rejoin your friends at the court of the Queen.”
Tomas smiled. “Let’s go.”
They broke camp and set out. At first they moved slowly, giving
Tomas plenty of time to gain his wind, but after a while it was evident he was
remarkably fit in light of his recent brush with death.
Soon the four figures were running through the trees. Tomas, in
spite of his armor, kept pace. His hosts glanced questioningly at each other.
They ran most of the afternoon before stopping. Tomas looked around
the forest and said, “What a wonderful place.”
Galain said, “Most of your race would disagree, man. They find the
forest frightening, full of strange shapes and fearful sounds.”
Tomas laughed. “Most men lack imagination, or possess too much. The
forest is quiet and peaceful. It is the most peaceful place I think I have
known.”
The elves said nothing, but a look of mild surprise crossed Calin’s
face. “We had best continue, if we are to reach Elvandar before dark.”
As night fell, they reached a giant clearing Tomas stopped and stood
rooted by the sight before him. Across the clearing a huge city of trees rose
upward. Gigantic trees, dwarfing any oaks imagined, stood together. They were
linked by gracefully arching bridges of branches, flat across the tops, on
which elves could be seen crossing from bole to bole. Tomas looked up and saw
the trunks rise until they were lost in a sea of leaves and branches. The
leaves were deep green, but here and there a tree with golden, silver, or even
white foliage could be seen, sparkling with lights. A soft glow permeated the
entire area, and Tomas wondered if it ever became truly dark here.
Calin placed his hand on Tomas’s shoulder and simply said,
“Elvandar.”
They hurried across the clearing, and Tomas could see the elven tree
city was even larger than he had first imagined. It spread away on all sides
and must have been over a mile across. Tomas felt a thrill of wonder at this
magic place, a singular exaltation.
They reached a stairway, carved into the side of a tree, that wound
its way upward, into the branches. They started up the steps, and Tomas again
felt a sensation of joy, as if the mad frenzy that filled him during a battle
had a harmonious aspect of gentler nature.
Upward they climbed, and as they passed the large branches that
served as roadways for the elves, Tomas could see elven men and women on all
sides. Many of the men wore fighting leather like his guides, but many others
wore long, graceful robes or tunics of bright and rich colors. The women were
all beautiful, with their hair worn long and down, unlike the ladies of the
Duke’s court. Many had jewels woven into their tresses that sparkled when they
passed. All were tall and graceful.
They reached a gigantic branch and left the stairs. Calin began to
warn him about not looking down, for he knew humans had difficulty on the high
pathways, but Tomas stood near the edge, looking down with no sign of
discomfort or vertigo.
“This is a marvelous place,” he said. The three elves exchanged
questioning glances, but no words were spoken.
They set off again, and when they came to an intersection of
branches, the two elves turned off the path, leaving Tomas and Calin to travel
alone Deeper and deeper they moved, Tomas as surefooted on the branch road as
the elf, until they reached a large opening. Here a circle of trees formed a
central court for the Elf Queen. A hundred branches met and merged into a huge
platform. Aglaranna was sitting upon a wooden throne, surrounded by her court.
A single human, in the grey of a Natalese Ranger, stood near the Queen, his
black skin gleaming in the night glow. He was the tallest man Tomas had ever
seen, and the young man from Crydee knew this must be Long Leon, the ranger
Grimsworth had spoken of.
Calin led Tomas into the center of the clearing and presented him to
Queen Aglaranna. She showed slight surprise as she saw the figure of the young
man in white and gold, but quickly composed her features. In her rich voice she
welcomed Tomas to Elvandar, and bade him stay as long as he wished.
The court adjourned, and Dolgan came to where Tomas stood. “Well,
laddie, I am glad to see you recovered. It was an undecided issue when we left
you I hated to do so, but I think you understand. I was in need of getting word
on the fighting near Stone Mountain.”
Tomas nodded. “I understand. What news?”
Dolgan shook his head. “Bad, I fear. We are cut off from our
brethren. I think we will be staying with the elvenfolk for a while, and I have
little love for these heights.”
Tomas broke into open laughter at that. Dolgan smiled, for it was
the first time since the boy had donned the dragon’s armor he had heard the
sound.
16
RAID
Wagons groaned under heavy loads.
Whips cracked and wheels creaked as lumbering oxen pulled their
burdens down the road toward the beach. Arutha, Fannon, and Lyam rode before
soldiers protecting the wagons traveling between the castle and the shore.
Behind the wagons a ragged crowd of townspeople followed. Many carried bundles
or pulled carts, following the Duke’s sons toward the waiting ships.
They turned down the road that split off from the town road, and
Arutha’s gaze swept over the signs of destruction. The once-thriving town of
Crydee was now covered in an acrid blue haze. The sounds of hammering and
sawing rang through the morning air as workmen labored to repair what they
could of the damage.
The Tsurani had raided at sundown two days before, racing through
the town, overwhelming the few guards at their posts before an alarm was raised
by terrified women, old men, and children. The aliens had run riot through the
town, not pausing until they reached dockside, where they had fired three
ships, heavily damaging two. The damaged ships were already limping toward
Carse, while the undamaged ships in the harbor had moved down the coast to
their present location, north of Sailor’s Grief.
The Tsurani had put most of the buildings near the quay to the
torch, but while heavily damaged, they were repairable. The fire had spread
into the heart of town, resulting in the heaviest loss there. The Hall of the
Craftmasters, the two inns, and dozens of lesser buildings were now only
smoldering ruins. Blackened timbers, cracked roof tiles, and scorched stones
marked their locations. Fully one third of Crydee had burned before the fire
had been brought under control.
Arutha had stood on the wall, watching the hellish glow reflected on
the clouds above the town as the flames spread. Then at first light he had led
the garrison out, finding the Tsurani already vanished into the forests.
Arutha still chafed at the memory. Fannon had advised Lyam not to
allow the garrison out until dawn—fearing it was a ruse to get the castle gates
open or to lure the garrison into the woods where a larger force waited in
ambush—and Lyam had acceded to the old Swordmaster’s request. Arutha was sure
he could have prevented much of the damage had he been allowed to rout the
Tsurani at once.
As he rode down the coast road, Arutha was lost in thought. Orders
arrived the day before instructing Lyam to leave Crydee. The Duke’s
aide-de-camp had been killed, and with the war beginning its third year this
spring, he wished Lyam to join him at his camp in Yabon. For reasons Arutha
didn’t understand, Duke Borric had not given command to him as expected;
instead Borric had named the Swordmaster garrison commander. But, thought the
younger Prince, at least Fannon will be less ready to order me about without
Lyam’s backing. He shook his head slightly in an attempt to dislodge his
irritation. He loved his brother, but wished Lyam had shown more willingness to
assert himself Since the beginning of the war, Lyam had commanded in Crydee,
but it had been Fannon making all the decisions. Now Fannon had the office as
well as the influence.
“Thoughtful, brother?”
Lyam had pulled his own horse up and was now beside Arutha, who
shook his head and smiled faintly. “Just envious of you.”
Lyam smiled his warmest at his younger brother. “I know you wish to
be going, but Father’s orders were clear. You’re needed here.”
“How needed can I be where every suggestion I make has been
ignored?”
Lyam’s expression was conciliatory. “You’re still disturbed by
Father’s decision to name Fannon commander of the garrison.”
Arutha looked hard at his brother. “I am now the age you were when
Father named you commander at Crydee. Father was full commander and second
Knight-General in the West at my age, only four years shy of being named King’s
Warden of the West. Grandfather trusted him enough to give him full command.”
“Father’s not Grandfather, Arutha. Remember, Grandfather grew up in
a time when we were still warring in Crydee, pacifying newly conquered lands.
He grew up in war. Father did not. He learned all his warcraft down in the Vale
of Dreams, against Kesh, not defending his own home as Grandfather had. Times
change.”
“How they change, brother,” Arutha said dryly “Grandfather, like his
father before him, would not have sat behind safe walls. In the two years since
the war began, we have not mounted one major offensive against the Tsurani. We
cannot continue letting them dictate the course of the war, or surely they will
prevail.”
Lyam regarded his brother with concern mirrored in his eyes.
“Arutha, I know you are restless to harry the enemy, but Fannon is right in saying
we dare not risk the garrison. We must hold here and protect what we have.”
Arutha cast a quick glance at the ragged townspeople behind. “I’ll
tell those who follow how well they’re protected.”
Lyam saw the bitterness in Arutha. “I know you blame me, brother.
Had I taken your advice, rather than Fannon’s . . .”
Arutha lost his harsh manner. “It is not your doing,” he conceded
“Old Fannon is simply cautious. He also is of the opinion a soldier’s worth is
measured by the grey in his beard. I am still only the Duke’s boy. I fear my
opinions from now on will receive short shrift.”
“Curb thy impatience, youngster,” he said in mock seriousness.
“Perhaps between your boldness and Fannon’s caution, a safe middle course will
be followed.” Lyam laughed.
Arutha had always found his brother’s laughter infectious and
couldn’t repress a grin. “Perhaps, Lyam,” he said with a laugh.
They came to the beach where longboats waited to haul the refugees
out to the ships anchored offshore. The captains would not return to the
quayside until they were assured their ships would not again come under attack,
so the fleeing townspeople were forced to walk through the surf to board the
boats. Men and women began to wade to the boats, bundles of belongings and
small children held safely overhead. Older children swam playfully, turning the
event into sport. There were many tearful partings, for most of the townsmen
were remaining to rebuild their burned homes and serve as levies in the dukes’
army. The women, children, and old men who were leaving would be carried down
the coast to Tulan, the southernmost town in the Duchy, as yet untroubled by
either the Tsurani or the rampaging Dark Brothers in the Green Heart.
Lyam and Arutha dismounted, and a soldier took their horses. The
brothers watched as soldiers carefully loaded crates of messenger pigeons onto
the sole longboat pulled up on shore. The birds would be shipped through the
Straits of Darkness to the dukes’ camp Pigeons trained to fly to the camp were
now on their way to Crydee, and with their arrival some of the responsibility
for carrying information to and from the dukes’ camp would be lifted from
Martin Longbow’s trackers and the Natalese Rangers. This was the first year
mature pigeons raised in the camp—necessary for them to develop the homing
instinct—were available.
Soon the baggage and refugees were loaded, and it was time for Lyam
to depart. Fannon bid him a stiff and formal farewell, but it was apparent from
his controlled manner that the old Swordmaster felt concern for the Duke’s
older son. With no family of his own, Fannon had been something of an uncle to
the boys when they were growing, personally instructing them in swordsmanship,
the maintenance of armor, and the theories of warcraft. He maintained his
formal pose, but both brothers could see the genuine affection there.
When Fannon left, the brothers embraced. Lyam said, “Take care of
Fannon.” Arutha looked surprised. Lyam grinned and said, “I’d not care to think
what would happen here should Father pass you over once more and name Algon
commander of the garrison.”
Arutha groaned, then laughed with his brother. As Horsemaster, Algon
was technically second-in-command behind Fannon. All in the castle shared
genuine affection for the man, and deep respect for his vast knowledge of
horses, but everyone conceded his general lack of knowledge about anything
besides horses. After two years of warfare, he still resisted the idea the
invaders came from another world, an attitude that caused Tully no end of
irritation.
Lyam moved into the water, where two sailors held the longboat for
him. Over his shoulder he shouted, “And take care of our sister, Arutha.”
Arutha said he would. Lyam leaped into the longboat, next to the
precious pigeons, and the boat was pushed away from shore. Arutha watched as
the boat dwindled into the distance.
Arutha walked slowly back to where a soldier held his mount. He
paused to stare down the beach. To the south, the high bluffs reared, dominated
by Sailor’s Grief, which stood upthrust against the morning sky. Arutha
silently cursed the day the Tsurani ship crashed against those rocks.
Carline stood atop the southern tower of the keep, watching the
horizon, gathering her cloak around her against the sea breeze. She had stayed
at the castle, bidding Lyam good-bye earlier, not wishing to ride to the beach.
She preferred that her fears not becloud Lyam’s happiness at joining their
father in the dukes’ camp. Many times over the last two years she had chided
herself over such feelings. Her men were soldiers, all trained since boyhood
for war. But since word had reached Crydee of Pug’s capture, she had remained
afraid for them.
A feminine clearing of the throat made Carline turn. Lady Glynis,
the Princess’s companion for the last four years, smiled slightly and indicated
with a nod of her head the newcomer who appeared at the trapdoor leading down
into the tower.
Roland emerged from the doorway in the floor. The last two years had
added to his growth, and now he stood as tall as Arutha. He was still thin, but
his boyish features were resolving into those of a man.
He bowed and said, “Highness.”
Carline acknowledged the greeting with a nod and gestured that Lady
Glynis should leave them alone. Glynis fled down the stairway into the tower.
Softly Carline said, “You did not ride to the beach with Lyam?”
“No, Highness.”
“You spoke with him before he left?”
Roland turned his gaze to the far horizon. “Yes, Highness, though I
must confess to a foul humor at his going.”
Carline nodded understanding. “Because you have to stay.”
He spoke with bitterness, “Yes, Highness.”
Carline said gently, “Why so formal, Roland?”
Roland looked at the Princess, seventeen years old just this last
Midsummer’s Day. No longer a petulant little girl given to outbursts of temper,
she was changing into a beautiful young woman of thoughtful introspection. Few
in the castle were unaware of the many nights’ sobbing that issued from
Carline’s suite after news of Pug had reached the castle. After nearly a week
of solitude, Carline had emerged a changed person, more subdued, less willful.
There was little outward to show how Carline felt, but Roland knew she carried
a scar.
After a moment of silence, Roland said, “Highness, when . . .” He
halted, then said, “It is of no consequence.”
Carline placed her hand upon his arm. “Roland, whatever else, we
have always been friends.”
“It pleases me to think that is true.”
“Then tell me, why has a wall grown between us?”
Roland sighed, and there was none of his usual roguish humor in his
answer. “If there has, Carline, it is not of my fashioning.”
A spark of the girl’s former self sprang into being, and with a
temperamental edge to her voice she said, “Am I, then, the architect of this
estrangement?”
Anger erupted in Roland’s voice. “Aye, Carline!” He ran his hand
through his wavy brown hair and said, “Do you remember the day I fought with
Pug? The very day before he left.”
At the mention of Pug’s name she tensed. Stiffly she said, “Yes, I
remember.”
“Well, it was a silly thing, a boys’ thing, that fight. I told him
should he ever cause you any hurt, I’d thrash him. Did he tell you that?”
Moisture came unbidden to her eyes. Softly she said, “No, he never
mentioned it.”
Roland looked at the beautiful face he had loved for years and said,
“At least then I knew my rival.” He lowered his voice, the anger slipping away.
“I like to think then, near the end, he and I were fast friends. Still, I vowed
I’d never stop my attempts to change your heart.”
Shivering, Carline drew her cloak about her, though the day was not
that cool She felt conflicting emotions within, confusing emotions. Trembling,
she said, “Why did you stop, Roland?”
Sudden harsh anger burst within Roland. For the first time he lost
his mask of wit and manners before the Princess. “Because I can’t contend with
a memory, Carline.” Her eyes opened wide, and tears welled up and ran down her
cheeks. “Another man of flesh I can face, but this shade from the past I cannot
grapple with.” Hot anger exploded into words “He’s dead, Carline. I wish it
were not so; he was my friend and I miss him, but I’ve let him go. Pug is dead.
Until you grant that this is true, you are living with a false hope.”
She put her hand to her mouth, palm outward, her eyes regarding him
in wordless denial. Abruptly she turned and fled down the stairs.
Alone, Roland leaned his elbows on the cold stones of the tower
wall. Holding his head in his hands, he said, “Oh, what a fool I have become!”
“Patrol!”
shouted the guard from the wall of the castle. Arutha and Roland turned from
where they watched soldiers giving instructions to levies from the outlying
villages.
They reached the gate, and the patrol came riding slowly in, a dozen
dirty, weary riders, with Martin Longbow and two other trackers walking beside.
Arutha greeted the Huntmaster and then said, “What have you there?”
He indicated the three men in short grey robes who stood between the
line of horsemen. “Prisoners, Highness,” answered the hunter, leaning on his
bow.
Arutha dismissed the tired riders as other guards came to take
position around the prisoners. Arutha walked to where they waited, and when he
came within touching distance, all three fell to their knees, putting their
foreheads to the dirt.
Arutha raised his eyebrows in surprise at the display. “I have never
seen such as these.”
Longbow nodded in agreement. “They wear no armor, and they didn’t
give fight or run when we found them in the woods. They did as you see now,
only then they babbled like fishwives.”
Arutha said to Roland, “Fetch Father Tully. He may be able to make
something of their tongue.” Roland hurried off to find the priest. Longbow
dismissed his two trackers, who headed for the kitchen. A guard was dispatched
to find Swordmaster Fannon and inform him of the captives.
A few minutes later Roland returned with Father Tully. The old
priest of Astalon was dressed in a deep blue, nearly black, robe, and upon
catching a glimpse of him, the three prisoners set up a babble of whispers.
When Tully glanced in their direction, they fell completely silent. Arutha
looked at Longbow in surprise.
Tully said, “What have we here?”
“Prisoners,” said Arutha. “As you are the only man here to have had
some dealings with their language, I thought you might get something out of
them.”
“I remember little from my mind contact with the Tsurani Xomich, but
I can try.” The priest spoke a few halting words, which resulted in a confusion
as all three prisoners spoke at once. The centermost snapped at his companions,
who fell silent. He was short, as were the others, but powerfully built. His
hair was brown, and his skin swarthy, but his eyes were a startling green. He
spoke slowly to Tully, his manner somehow less deferential than his
companions’.
Tully shook his head. “I can’t be certain, but I think he wishes to
know if I am a Great One of this world.”
“Great One?” asked Arutha.
“The dying soldier was in awe of the man aboard ship he called
‘Great One.’ I think it was a title rather than a specific individual. Perhaps
Kulgan was correct in his suspicion these people hold their magicians or
priests in awe.”
“Who are these men?” asked the Prince.
Tully spoke to them again in halting words. The man in the center
spoke slowly, but after a moment Tully cut him off with a wave of his hand. To
Arutha he said, “These are slaves.”
“Slaves?” Until now there had been no contact with any Tsurani
except warriors. It was something of a revelation to find they practiced
slavery. While not unknown in the Kingdom, slavery was not widespread and was
limited to convicted felons. Along the Far Coast, it was nearly nonexistent.
Arutha found the idea strange and repugnant. Men might be born to low station,
but even the lowliest serf had rights the nobility were obligated to respect
and protect. Slaves were property. With a sudden disgust, Arutha said, “Tell
them to get up, for mercy’s sake.”
Tully spoke and the men slowly rose, the two on the flanks looking
about like frightened children. The other stood calmly, eyes only slightly
downcast. Again Tully questioned the man, finding his understanding of their
language returning.
The centermost man spoke at length, and when he was done Tully said,
“They were assigned to work in the enclaves near the river. They say their camp
was overrun by the forest people—he refers to the elves, I think—and the short
ones.”
“Dwarves, no doubt,” added Longbow with a grin.
Tully threw him a withering look. The rangy forester simply
continued to smile. Martin was one of the few young men of the castle never
intimidated by the old cleric, even before becoming one of the Duke’s staff.
“As I was saying,” continued the priest, “the elves and dwarves
overran their camp. They fled, fearing they would be killed. They wandered in
the woods for days until the patrol picked them up this morning.”
Arutha said, “This fellow in the center seems a bit different from
the others. Ask why this is so.”
Tully spoke slowly to the man, who answered with little inflection
in his tones. When he was done, Tully spoke with some surprise “He says his
name is Tchakachakalla. He was once a Tsurani officer!”
Arutha said, “This may prove most fortunate. If he’ll cooperate, we
may finally learn some things about the enemy.”
Swordmaster Fannon appeared from the keep and hurried to where
Arutha was questioning the prisoners. The commander of the Crydee garrison
said, “What have you here?”
Arutha explained as much as he knew about the prisoners, and when he
was finished, Fannon said, “Good, continue with the questioning.”
Arutha said to Tully, “Ask him how he came to be a slave.”
Without sign of embarrassment, Tchakachakalla told his story. When
he was done, Tully stood shaking his head. “He was a Strike Leader. It may take
some time to puzzle out what his rank was equivalent to in our armies, but I
gather he was at least a Knight-Lieutenant. He says his men broke in one of the
early battles and his ‘house’ lost much honor. He wasn’t given permission to
take his own life by someone he calls the Warchief. Instead he was made a slave
to expiate the shame of his command.”
Roland whistled low. “His men fled and he was held responsible.”
Longbow said, “There’s been more than one earl who’s bollixed a
command and found himself ordered by his Duke to serve with one of the Border
Barons along the Northern Marches.”
Tully shot Martin and Roland a black look. “If you are finished?” He
addressed Arutha and Fannon: “From what he said, it is clear he was stripped of
everything. He may prove of use to us.”
Fannon said, “This may be some trick I don’t like his looks.”
The man’s head came up, and he fixed Fannon with a narrow gaze
Martin’s mouth fell open. “By Kilian! I think he understands what you said.”
Fannon stood directly before Tchakachakalla “Do you understand me?”
“Little, master.” His accent was thick, and he spoke with a slow
singsong tone alien to the King’s Tongue. “Many Kingdom slaves on Kelewan. Know
little King’s Tongue.”
Fannon said, “Why didn’t you speak before?”
Again without any show of emotion, he answered, “Not ordered Slave
obey. Not . . .” He turned to Tully and spoke a few words.
Tully said, “He says it isn’t a slave’s place to show initiative.”
Arutha said, “Tully, do you think he can be trusted?”
“I don’t know. His story is strange, but they are a strange people
by our standards. My mind contact with the dying soldier showed me much I still
don’t understand.” Tully spoke to the man.
To Arutha the Tsurani said, “Tchakachakalla tell.” Fighting for
words, he said, “I Wedewayo. My house, family. My clan Hunzan Old, much honor.
Now slave. No house, no clan, no Tsuranuanni. No honor Slave obey.”
Arutha said, “I think I understand If you go back to the Tsurani,
what would happen to you?”
Tchakachakalla said, “Be slave, maybe. Be killed, maybe. All same.”
“And if you stay here?”
“Be slave, be killed?” He shrugged, showing little concern.
Arutha said, slowly, “We keep no slaves. What would you do if we set
you free?”
A flicker of some emotion passed over the slave’s face, and he
turned to Tully and spoke rapidly. Tully translated. “He says such a thing is
not possible on his world. He asks if you can do such a thing.”
Arutha nodded. Tchakachakalla pointed to his companions. “They work.
They always slaves.”
“And you?” said Arutha.
Tchakachakalla looked hard at the Prince and spoke to Tully, never
taking his eyes from Arutha. Tully said, “He’s recounting his lineage. He says
he is Tchakachakalla, Strike Leader of the Wedewayo, of the Hunzan Clan. His
father was a Force Leader, and his great-grandfather Warchief of the Hunzan
Clan. He has fought honorably, and only once has he failed in his duty. Now he
is only a slave, with no family, no clan, no nation, and no honor. He asks if you
mean to give him back his honor.”
Arutha said, “If the Tsurani come, what will you do?”
Tchakachakalla indicated his companions. “These men slaves Tsurani
come, they do nothing. Wait. Go with . . .” He and Tully exchanged brief
remarks and Tully supplied him with the word he wished.” victors. They go with
victors.” He looked at Arutha, and his eyes came alive “You make Tchakachakalla
free Tchakachakalla be your man, lord. Your honor is Tchakachakalla’s honor.
Give life if you say. Fight Tsurani if you say.”
Fannon spoke. “Likely story that. More’s the odds he’s a spy.”
The barrel-chested Tsurani looked hard at Fannon, then with a sudden
motion stepped before the Swordmaster, and before anyone could react, pulled
Fannon’s knife from his belt.
Longbow had his own knife out an instant later, as Arutha’s sword
was clearing its scabbard. Roland and the other soldiers were only a moment
behind. The Tsurani made no threatening gesture, but simply flipped the knife,
reversing it and handing it to Fannon hilt first. “Master think Tchakachakalla
enemy? Master kill. Give warrior’s death, return honor.”
Arutha returned his sword to his scabbard and took the knife from
Tchakachakalla’s hand. Returning the knife to Fannon, he said, “No, we will not
kill you.” To Tully he said, “I think this man may prove useful. For now, my
inclination is to believe him.”
Fannon looked less than pleased “He may be a very clever spy, but
you’re right. There’s no harm if we keep a close watch on him. Father Tully,
why don’t you take these men to soldiers’ commons and see what you can learn
from them. I’ll be along shortly.”
Tully spoke to the three slaves and indicated they should follow.
The two timid slaves moved at once, but Tchakachakalla bent his knee before
Arutha. He spoke rapidly in the Tsurani tongue; Tully translated.
“He’s just demanded you either kill him or make him your man. He
asked how a man can be free with no house, clan, or honor. On his world such
men are called grey warriors and have no honor.”
Arutha said, “Our ways are not your ways. Here a man can be free
with no family or clan and still have honor.”
Tchakachakalla bent his head slightly while listening, then nodded.
He rose and said, “Tchakachakalla understand.” Then with a grin he added,
“Soon, I be your man. Good lord need good warrior. Tchakachakalla good
warrior.”
“Tully, take them along, and find out how much Tchak . . . Tchakal .
. .” Arutha laughed. “I can’t pronounce that mouthful.” To the slave he said,
“If you’re to serve here, you need a Kingdom name.”
The slave looked about and then gave a curt nod.
Longbow said, “Call him Charles. It’s as close a name as I can
imagine.”
Arutha said, “As good a name as any. From now on, you will be called
Charles.”
The newly named slave said, “Tcharles?” He shrugged and nodded.
Without another word he fell in beside Father Tully, who led the slaves toward
the soldiers’ commons.
Roland said, “What do you make of that?” as the three slaves
vanished around the corner.
Fannon said, “Time will tell if we’ve been duped.”
Longbow laughed “I’ll keep an eye on Charles, Swordmaster. He’s a
tough little fellow. He traveled at a good pace when we brought them in. Maybe
I’ll turn him into a tracker.”
Arutha interrupted “It will be some time before I’ll be comfortable
letting him outside the castle walls.”
Fannon let the matter drop. To Longbow he said, “Where did you find
them?”
“To the north, along the Clearbrook branch of the river. We were
following the signs of a large party of warriors heading for the coast.”
Fannon considered this. “Gardan leads another patrol near there.
Perhaps he’ll catch sight of them and we’ll find out what the bastards are up
to this year.” Without another word he walked back toward the keep.
Martin laughed, Arutha was surprised to hear him. “What in this
strikes you as funny, Huntmaster?”
Martin shook his head. “A little thing, Highness It’s the
Swordmaster himself He’ll not speak of it to anyone, but I wager he would give
all he owns to have your father back in command. He’s a good soldier, but he
dislikes the responsibility.”
Arutha regarded the retreating back of the Swordmaster, then said,
“I think you are right, Martin.” His voice carried a thoughtful note. “I have
been at odds with Fannon so much of late, I lost sight of the fact he never
requested this commission.”
Lowering his voice, Martin said, “A suggestion, Arutha.”
Arutha nodded Martin pointed to Fannon. “Should anything happen to
Fannon, name another Swordmaster quickly; do not wait for your father’s
consent. For if you wait, Algon will assume command, and he is a fool.”
Arutha stiffened at the Huntmaster’s presumption, while Roland tried
to silence Martin with a warning look. Arutha coldly said, “I thought you a
friend of the Horsemaster.”
Martin smiled, his eyes hinting at strange humor. “Aye, I am, as are
all in the castle. But anyone you ask will tell you the same: take his horses
away, and Algon is an indifferent thinker.”
Nettled by Martin’s manner, Arutha said, “And who should take his place?
The Huntmaster?”
Martin laughed, a sound of such open, clear amusement at the
thought, Arutha found himself less angry at his suggestion.
“I?” said the Huntmaster “Heaven forfend, Highness. I am a simple
hunter, no more. No, should the need come, name Gardan. He is by far the most
able soldier in Crydee.”
Arutha knew Martin was correct, but gave in to impatience. “Enough.
Fannon is well, and I trust will remain so.”
Martin nodded “May the gods preserve him . . . and us all. Please
excuse me, it was but a passing concern. Now, with Your Highness’s leave, I’ve
not had a hot meal in a week.”
Arutha indicated he could leave, and Martin walked away toward the
kitchen Roland said, “He is wrong on one account, Arutha.”
Arutha stood with his arms folded across his chest, watching Longbow
as he vanished around the corner. “What is that, Roland?”
“That man is much more than the simple hunter he pretends.”
Arutha was silent for a moment. “He is Something about Martin
Longbow has always made me uneasy, though I have never found fault with him.”
Roland laughed, and Arutha said, “Now something strikes you as
funny, Roland?”
Roland shrugged. “Only that many think you and he are much alike.”
Arutha turned a black gaze upon Roland, who shook his head. “It’s
often said we take offense most in what we see of ourselves in others It’s
true, Arutha. You both have that same cutting edge to your humor, almost
mocking, and neither of you suffers foolishness.” Roland’s voice became
serious. “There’s no mystery to it, I should think. You’re a great deal like
your father, and with Martin having no family, it follows he would pattern
himself after the Duke.”
Arutha became thoughtful. “Perhaps you’re right. But something else
troubles me about that man.” He left the thought unfinished and turned toward
the keep.
Roland fell into step beside the thoughtful Prince and wondered if
he had overstepped himself.
The night thundered. Ragged bolts of lightning shattered the
darkness as clouds rolled in from the west. Roland stood on the southern tower
watching the display. Since dinner his mood had been as dark as the western
sky. The day had not gone well. First he had felt troubled by his conversation
with Arutha by the gate. Then Carline had treated him at dinner with the same
stony silence he had endured since their meeting on this very tower two weeks
earlier Carline had seemed more subdued than usual, but Roland felt a stab of
anger at himself each time he chanced a glance in her direction. Roland could
still see the pain in the Princess’s eyes. “What a witless fool I am,” he said
aloud.
“Not a fool, Roland.”
Carline was standing a few paces away, looking toward the coming
storm. She clutched a shawl around her shoulders, though the air was temperate.
The thunder had masked her footfalls, and Roland said, “It is a poor night to
be upon the tower, my lady.”
She came to stand beside him and said, “Will it rain? These hot
nights bring thunder and lightning, but usually little rain.”
“It will rain. Where are your ladies?”
She indicated the tower door. “Upon the stairs. They fear the
lightning, and besides, I wished to speak with you alone.”
Roland said nothing, and Carline remained silent for a time. The
night was sundered with violent displays of energy tearing across the heavens,
followed by cracking booms of thunder. “When I was young,” she said at last,
“Father used to say on nights such as this the gods were sporting in the sky.”
Roland looked at her face, illuminated by the single lantern hanging
on the wall. “My father-told me they made war.”
She smiled “Roland, you spoke rightly on the day Lyam left. I have
been lost in my own grief, unable to see the truth. Pug would have been the
first to tell me that nothing is forever. That living in the past is foolish
and robs us of the future.” She lowered her head a little. “Perhaps it has
something to do with Father. When Mother died, he never fully recovered. I was
very young, but I can still remember how he was. He used to laugh a great deal
before she died. He was more like Lyam then. After . . . well, he became more
like Arutha. He’d laugh, but there’d be a hard edge to it, a bitterness.”
“As if somehow mocking?”
She nodded thoughtfully. “Yes, mocking. Why did you say that?”
“Something I noticed . . . something I pointed out to your brother
today. About Martin Longbow.”
She sighed. “Yes, I understand. Longbow is also like that.”
Softly Roland said, “Nevertheless, you did not come to speak of your
brother or Martin.”
“No, I came to tell you how sorry I am for the way I’ve acted. I’ve
been angry with you for two weeks, but I’d no right. You only said what was
true. I’ve treated you badly.”
Roland was surprised. “You’ve not treated me badly, Carline. I acted
the boor.”
“No, you have done nothing but be a friend to me, Roland. You told
me the truth, not what I wanted to hear. It must have been hard . . .
considering how you feel.” She looked out at the approaching storm. “When I
first heard of Pug’s capture, I thought the world ended.”
Trying to be understanding, Roland quoted, “ ‘The first love is the
difficult love.’ ”
Carline smiled at the aphorism. “That is what they say. And with
you?”
Roland mustered a carefree stance. “So it seems, Princess.”
She placed her hand upon his arm. “Neither of us is free to feel
other than as we do, Roland.”
His smile became sadder. “That is the truth, Carline.”
“Will you always be my good friend?”
There was a genuine note of concern in her voice that touched the
young Squire. She was trying to put matters right between them, but without the
guile she’d used when younger. Her honest attempt turned aside any frustration
he felt at her not returning his affections fully. “I will, Carline. I’ll
always be your good friend.”
She came into his arms and he held her close, her head against his
chest. Softly she said, “Father Tully says that some loves come unbidden like
winds from the sea, and others grow from the seeds of friendship.”
“I will hope for such a harvest, Carline. But should it not come,
still I will remain your good friend.”
They stood quietly together for a time, comforting each other for
different causes, but sharing a tenderness each had been denied for two years.
Each of them was lost in the comfort of the other’s nearness, and neither saw
what the lightning flashes revealed for brief instants. On the horizon, beating
for the harbor, came a ship.
The winds whipped the banners on the palisades of the castle walls
as rain began to fall. As water gathered in small pools, the lanterns cast
yellow reflections upward off the puddles to give an otherworldly look to the
two men standing on the wall.
A flash of lightning illuminated the sea, and a soldier said,
“There! Highness, did you see? Three points south of the Guardian Rocks.” He
extended his arm, pointing the way.
Arutha peered into the gloom, his brow furrowed in concentration. “I
can see nothing in this darkness. It’s blacker than a Guiswan priest’s soul out
there.” The soldier absently made a protective sign at the mention of the
killer god. “Any signal from the beacon tower?”
“None, Highness. Not by beacon, nor by messenger.”
Another flash of lightning illuminated the night, and Arutha saw the
ship outlined in the distance. He swore. “It will need the beacon at Longpoint
to reach the harbor safely.” Without another word, he ran down the stairs
leading to the courtyard. Near the gate he instructed a soldier to get his
horse and two riders to accompany him. As he stood there waiting, the rain
passed, leaving the night with a clean but warm, moist feeling. A few minutes
later, Fannon appeared from the direction of the soldiers’ commons. “What’s
this? Riding?”
Arutha said, “A ship makes for the harbor, and there is no beacon at
Longpoint.”
As a groom brought Arutha’s horse, followed by two mounted soldiers,
Fannon said, “You’d best be off, then. And tell those stone-crowned layabouts
at the lighthouse I’ll have words for them when they finish duty.”
Arutha had expected an argument from Fannon and felt relieved there
would be none. He mounted and the gates were opened. They rode through and
headed down the road toward town.
The brief rain had made the night rich with fresh odors: the flowers
along the road, and the scent of salt from the sea, soon masked by the acrid
odor of burned wood from the charred remnants of gutted buildings as they
neared town.
They sped past the quiet town, taking the road along the harbor. A
pair of guards stationed by the quayside hastily saluted when they saw the
Prince fly past. The shuttered buildings near the docks bore mute testimony to
those who had fled after the raid.
They left the town and rode out to the lighthouse, following a bend
in the road. Beyond the town they gained their first glimpse of the lighthouse,
upon a natural island of rock joined to the mainland by a long causeway of
stone, topped by a compacted dirt road. The horses’ hooves beat a dull tattoo
upon the dirt as they approached the tall tower. A lightning flash lit up the
sky, and the three riders could see the ship running under full sail toward the
harbor.
Shouting to the others, Arutha said, “They’ll pile upon the rocks
without a beacon.”
One of the guards shouted back, “Look, Highness. Someone signals!”
They reined in and saw figures near the base of the tower. A man dressed
in black stood swinging a shuttered lantern back and forth. It could be clearly
seen by those on the ship, but not by anyone upon the castle walls. In the dim
light, Arutha saw the still forms of Crydee soldiers lying on the ground. Four
men, also attired in black with head coverings that masked their faces, ran
toward the horsemen. Three drew long swords from back scabbards, while the
fourth aimed a bow. The soldier to Arutha’s right cried out as an arrow struck
him in the chest. Arutha charged his horse among the three who closed, knocking
over two while his sword slashed out, taking the third across the face. The man
fell without a sound.
The Prince wheeled around and saw his other companion also engaged,
hacking downward at the bowman. More men in black dashed from within the tower,
rushing forward silently.
Arutha’s horse screamed. He could see an arrow protruding from its
neck. As it collapsed beneath him, he freed his feet from the stirrups and
lifted his left leg over the dying animal’s neck, jumping free as it struck the
ground. He hit and rolled, coming to his feet before a short figure in black
with a long sword held high overhead with both hands. The long blade flashed
down, and Arutha jumped to his left, thrusting with his own sword. He took the
man in the chest, then yanked his sword free Like the others before, the man in
black fell without uttering a cry.
Another flash of lightning showed men rushing toward Arutha from the
tower. Arutha turned to order the remaining rider back to warn the castle, but
the shouted command died aborning when he saw the man pulled from his saddle by
swarming figures in black. Arutha dodged a blow from the first man to reach him
and ran past three startled figures. He smashed at the face of a fourth man
with his sword hilt, trying to knock the man aside. His only thought was to
open a pathway so he might flee to warn the castle. The struck man reeled back,
and Arutha attempted to jump past him. The falling man reached out with one
hand, catching Arutha’s leg as he sprang.
Arutha struck hard stone and felt hands frantically grab at his
right foot. He kicked backward with his left and took the man in the throat
with his boot. The sound of the man’s windpipe being crushed was followed by a
convulsion of movement.
Arutha came to his feet as another attacker reached him, others only
a step behind. Arutha sprang backward, trying to gain some distance. His boot
heel caught on a rock, and suddenly the world tilted crazily. He found himself
suspended in space for an instant, then his shoulders met rock as he bounced
down the side of the causeway. He hit several more rocks, and icy water closed
over him.
The shock of the water kept him from passing into unconsciousness.
Dazed, he reflexively held his breath, but had little wind. Without thinking,
he pushed upward and broke the surface with a loud, ragged gasp. Still groggy,
he nevertheless possessed enough wits to duck below the surface when arrows
struck the water near him. He couldn’t see a thing in the murky darkness of the
harbor, but clung to the rocks, pulling himself along more than swimming. He
moved back toward the tower end of the causeway, hoping the raiders would think
him headed in the other direction.
He quietly surfaced and blinked the salt water from his eyes. Peering
around the shelter of a large rock, he saw black figures searching the darkness
of the water. Arutha moved quietly, nestling himself into the rocks. Bruised
muscles and joints made him wince as he moved, but nothing seemed broken.
Another flash of lightning lit the harbor. Arutha could see the ship
speeding safely into Crydee harbor. It was a trader, but rigged for speed and
outfitted for war. Whoever piloted the ship was a mad genius, for he cleared
the rocks by a scant margin, heading straight for the quayside around the bend
of the causeway. Arutha could see men in the rigging, frantically reefing in
sails. Upon the deck a company of black-clad warriors stood with weapons ready.
Arutha turned his attention to the men on the causeway and saw one
motion silently to the others. They ran off in the direction of the town.
Ignoring the pain in his body, Arutha pulled himself up, negotiating the
slippery rocks to regain the dirt road of the causeway. Staggering a bit, he
came to his feet and looked off toward the town. There was still no sign of
trouble, but he knew it would erupt shortly.
Arutha half staggered, half ran to the lighthouse tower and forced
himself to climb the stairs. Twice he came close to blacking out, but he
reached the top of the tower. He saw the lookout lying dead near the signal
fire. The oil-soaked wood was protected from the elements by a hood that hung
suspended over it. The cold wind blew through the open windows on all sides of
the building.
Arutha found the dead sentry’s pouch and removed flint, steel, and
tinder. He opened the small door in the side of the metal hood, using his body
to shield the wood from the wind. The second spark he fired caught in the wood,
and a small flame sprang into existence. It quickly spread, and when it was
burning fully, Arutha pulled on the chain hoist that elevated the hood. With an
audible whoosh, the flames sprang fully to the ceiling as the wind struck the
fire.
Against one wall stood a jar of powder mixed by Kulgan against such
an emergency. Arutha fought down dizziness as he bent again to pull the knife
from the dead sentry’s belt. He used it to pry the lid off the jar and then
tossed the entire contents into the fire.
Instantly the flames turned bright crimson, a warning beacon none
could confuse with a normal light. Arutha turned toward the castle, standing
away from the window so as not to block the light. Brighter and brighter the
flames burned as Arutha found his mind going vague again. For a long moment
there was silence in the night, then suddenly an alarm sounded from the castle.
Arutha felt relief. The red beacon was the signal for reavers in the harbor,
and the castle garrison had been well drilled to meet such raids. Fannon might
be cautious with chasing Tsurani raiders into the woods at night, but a pirate
ship in his harbor was something he would not hesitate to answer.
Arutha staggered down the stairs, stopping to support himself at the
door His entire body hurt, and he was nearly overcome by dizziness. He drew a
deep breath and headed for the town. When he came to where his dead horse lay,
he looked about for his sword, then remembered he had carried it with him into
the harbor. He stumbled to where one of his riders lay, next to a black-clad bowman.
Arutha bent down to pick up the fallen soldier’s sword, nearly blacking out as
he stood. He held himself erect for a moment, fearing he might lose
consciousness if he moved, and waited as the ringing in his head subsided. He
slowly reached up and touched his head. One particularly sore spot, with an
angry lump forming, told him he had struck his head hard at least once as he
fell down the causeway. His fingers came away sticky with clotting blood.
Arutha began to walk to town, and as he moved, the ringing in his
head resumed. For a time he staggered, then he tried to force himself to run,
but after only three wobbly strides he resumed his clumsy walk. He hurried as
much as he could, rounding the bend in the road to come in sight of town. He
heard faint sounds of fighting. In the distance he could see the red light of
fires springing heavenward as buildings were put to the torch. Screams of men
and women sounded strangely remote and muted to Arutha’s ears.
He forced himself into a trot, and as he closed upon the town,
anticipation of fighting forced away much of the fog clouding his mind. He
turned along the harborside; with the dockside buildings burning, it was bright
as day, but no one was in sight. Against the quayside the raiders’ ship rested,
a gangway leading down to the dock. Arutha approached quietly, fearing guards
had been left to protect it. When he reached the gangway, all was quiet. The
sounds of fighting were distant, as if all the raiders had attacked deeply into
the town.
As he began to move away, a voice cried out from the ship, “Gods of
mercy! Is anyone there?” The voice was deep and powerful, but with a controlled
note of terror.
Arutha hurried up the gangway, sword ready. He stopped when he
reached the top. From the forward hatch cover he could see fire glowing
brightly belowdecks. He looked about: everywhere his eyes traveled he saw
seamen lying dead in their own blood. From the rear of the ship the voice cried
out, “You, man. If you’re a godsfearing man of the Kingdom, come help me.”
Arutha made his way amid the carnage and found a man sitting against
the starboard rail. He was large, broad-shouldered, and barrel-chested. He
could have been any age between twenty and forty. He held the side of an ample
stomach with his right hand, blood seeping through his fingers. Curly dark hair
swept back from a receding hairline, and he wore his black beard cut short. He
managed a weak smile as he pointed to a black-clothed figure lying nearby. “The
bastards killed my crew and fired my ship. That one made the mistake of not
killing me with the first blow.” He pointed at the section of a fallen yard
pinning his legs. “I can’t manage to budge that damned yard and hold my guts in
at the same time. If you’d lift it a bit, I think I can pull myself free.”
Arutha saw the problem: the man was pinned down at the short end of
the yard, tangled in a mass of ropes and blocks. He gripped the long end and
heaved upward, moving it only a few inches, but enough. With a half grunt, half
groan, the wounded man pulled his legs out. “I don’t think my legs are broken,
lad. Give me a hand up and we’ll see.”
Arutha gave him a hand and nearly lost his footing pulling the bulky
seaman to his feet. “Here, now,” said the wounded man. “You’re not in much of a
fighting trim yourself, are you?”
“I’ll be all right,” said Arutha, steadying the man while fighting
off an attack of nausea.
The seaman leaned upon Arutha. “We’d better hurry, then. The fire is
spreading.” With Arutha’s help, he negotiated the gangway. When they reached
the quayside, gasping for breath, the heat was becoming intense. The wounded
seaman gasped, “Keep going!”
Arutha nodded and slung the man’s arm over his shoulder. They set
off down the quay, staggering like a pair of drunken sailors on the town.
Suddenly there came a roar, and both men were slammed to the ground.
Arutha shook his dazed head and turned over. Behind him a great tower of flames
leaped skyward. The ship was a faintly seen black silhouette in the heart of
the blinding yellow-and-white column of fire. Waves of heat washed over them,
as if they were standing at the door of a giant oven.
Arutha managed to croak, “What was that?”
His companion gave out with an equally feeble reply: “Two hundred
barrels of Quegan fire oil.”
Arutha spoke in disbelief. “You didn’t say anything about fire oil
back aboard ship.”
“I didn’t want you getting excited. You looked half-gone already. I
figured we’d either get clear or we wouldn’t.”
Arutha tried to rise, but fell back. Suddenly he felt very
comfortable resting on the cool stone of the quay. He saw the fire begin to dim
before his eyes, then all went dark.
Arutha opened his eyes and saw blurred shapes over him. He blinked
and the images cleared. Carline hovered over his sleeping pallet, looking
anxiously on as Father Tully examined him. Behind Carline, Fannon watched, and
next to him stood an unfamiliar man. Then Arutha remembered him. “The man from
the ship.”
The man
grinned. “Amos Trask, lately master of the Sidonie until those
bast—begging the Princess’s pardon—those cursed land rats put her to the torch.
Standing here thanks to Your Highness.”
Tully interrupted. “How do you feel?”
Arutha sat up, finding his body a mass of dull aches. Carline placed
cushions behind her brother. “Battered, but I’ll survive.” His head swam a
little. “I’m a bit dizzy.”
Tully looked down his nose at Arutha’s head. “Small wonder. You took
a nasty crack. You may find yourself occasionally dizzy for a few days, but I
don’t think it is serious.”
Arutha looked at the Swordmaster. “How long?”
Fannon said, “A patrol brought you in last night. It’s morning.”
“The raid?”
Fannon shook his head sadly. “The town’s gutted. We managed to kill
them all, but there’s not a whole building left standing in Crydee. The fishing
village at the south end of the harbor is untouched, but otherwise everything
was lost.”
Carline fussed around near Arutha, tucking in covers and fluffing
his cushions. “You should rest.”
He said, “Right now, I’m hungry.”
She brought over a bowl of hot broth. He submitted to the light broth
in place of solid food, but refused to let her spoon-feed him. Between
mouthfuls he said, “Tell me what happened.”
Fannon looked disturbed. “It was the Tsurani.”
Arutha’s hand stopped, his spoon poised halfway between bowl and
mouth. “Tsurani? I thought they were reavers, from the Sunset Islands.”
“At first so did we, but after talking to Captain Trask here, and
the Tsurani slaves who are with us, we’ve pieced together a picture of what’s
happened.”
Tully picked up the narrative. “From the slaves’ story, these men
were specially chosen. They called it a death raid. They were selected to enter
the town, destroy as much as possible, then die without fleeing. They burned
the ship as much as a symbol of their commitment as to deny it to us. I gather
from what they say it’s considered something of a great honor.”
Arutha looked at Amos Trask. “How is it they managed to seize your
ship, Captain?”
“Ah, that is a bitter story, Highness.” He leaned to his right a
little, and Arutha remembered his wound.
“How is your side?”
Trask grinned, his dark eyes merry. “A messy wound, but not a
serious one. The good father put it right as new, Highness.”
Tully made a derisive sound. “That man should be in bed. He is more
seriously injured than you. He would not leave until he saw you were all
right.”
Trask ignored the comment. “I’ve had worse. We once had a fight with
a Quegan war galley turned rogue pirate and—well, that’s another story. You
asked about my ship.” He limped over closer to Arutha’s pallet. “We were
outward bound from Palanque with a load of weapons and fire oil. Considering
the situation here, I thought to find a ready market. We braved the straits
early in the season, stealing the march on other ships, or so we hoped.
“But while we made the passage early, we paid the price. A monstrous
storm blew up from the south, and we were driven for a week. When it was over,
we headed east, striking for the coast. I thought we’d have no trouble plotting
our position from landmarks. When we sighted land, not one aboard recognized a
single feature. As none of us had ever been north of Crydee, we judged rightly
we had gone farther than we had thought.
“We coasted by day, heaving to at night, for I’d not risk unknown
shoals and reefs. On the third night the Tsurani came swimming out from shore
like a pod of dolphins. Dived right under the ship, and came up on both sides.
By the time I was awake from the commotion on deck, there was a full half dozen
of the bast—begging the Princess’s pardon—them Tsurani swarming over me. It took
them only minutes to take my ship.” His shoulders sagged a bit. “It’s a hard
thing to lose one’s ship, Highness.”
He grimaced and Tully stood, making Trask sit on the stool next to
Arutha. Trask continued his story. “We couldn’t understand what they said; their
tongue is more suited for monkeys than men—I myself speak five civilized
languages and can do ‘talk-see’ in a dozen more. But as I was saying, we
couldn’t understand their gibberish, but they made their intentions clear
enough.
“They pored over my charts.” He grimaced in remembering. “I
purchased them legal and aboveboard from a retired captain down in Durbin.
Fifty years of experience in those charts, there were, from here in Crydee to
the farthest eastern shores of the Keshian Confederacy, and they were tossing
them around my cabin like so much old canvas until they found the ones they
wanted. They had some sailors among them, for as soon as they recognized the
charts, they made their plans known to me.
“Curse me for a freshwater fisherman, but we had heaved to only a
few miles north of the headlands above your lighthouse. If we’d sailed a little
longer, we would have been safely in Crydee harbor two days ago.”
Arutha and the others said nothing. Trask continued, “They went
through my cargo holds and started tossing things overboard, no matter what.
Over five hundred fine Quegan broadswords, over the side. Pikes, lances,
longbows, everything—I guess to keep any of it from reaching Crydee somehow.
They didn’t know what to do with the Quegan fire oil —the barrels would’ve
needed a dock hoist to get them out of the hold —so they left it alone. But
they made sure there wasn’t a weapon aboard that wasn’t in their hands. Then
some of the little land rats got dressed up in those black rags, swam ashore,
and started down the coast toward the lighthouse. While they were going, the
rest were praying, on their knees rocking back and forth, except for a few with
bows watching my crew. Then all of a sudden, about three hours after sundown,
they’re up and kicking my men around, pointing to the harbor on the map.
“We set sail and headed down the coast. The rest you know. I guess
they judged you would not expect an attack from seaward.”
Fannon said, “They judged correctly. Since their last raid we’ve
patrolled the forests heavily. They couldn’t get within a day’s march of Crydee
without our knowing. This way they caught us unawares.” The old Swordmaster
sounded tired and bitter. “Now the town is destroyed, and we’ve a courtyard
filled with terrified townsmen.”
Trask also sounded bitter. “They put most of their men ashore
quickly, but left two dozen to slaughter my men.” An expression of pain crossed
his face. “They were a hard lot, my lads, but on the whole good enough men. We
didn’t know what was happening until the first of my boys began to fall from
the spars with Tsurani arrows in them, waving like little flags as they hit the
water. We thought they were going to have us take them out again. My boys put
up a struggle then, you can bet. But they didn’t start soon enough.
Marlinspikes and belayin’ pins can’t stand up to men with swords and bows.”
Trask sighed deeply, the pain on his face as much from his story as
from his injury. “Thirty-five men. Dock rats, cutthroats, and murderers all,
but they were my crew. I was the only one allowed to go killing them. I cracked
the skull of the first Tsurani who came at me, took his sword, and killed
another. But the third one knocked it from my hand and ran me through.” He
barked a short, harsh-sounding laugh. “I broke his neck. I passed out for a
time. They must have thought me dead. The next I knew, the fires were going and
I started yelling. Then I saw you come up the gangway.”
Arutha said, “You’re a bold man, Amos Trask.”
A look of deep pain crossed the large man’s face. “Not bold enough
to keep my ship, Highness. Now I’m nothing more than another beached sailor.”
Tully said, “Enough for now. Arutha, you need rest.” He put his hand
on Amos Trask’s shoulder. “Captain, you’d do well to follow his example. Your
wound is more serious than you admit. I’ll take you to a room where you can
rest.”
The captain rose, and Arutha said, “Captain Trask.”
“Yes, Highness?”
“We have need of good men here in Crydee.”
A glimmer of humor crossed the seaman’s face. “I thank you,
Highness. Without a ship, though, I don’t know what use I could be.”
Arutha said, “Between Fannon and myself, we’ll find enough to keep
you busy.”
The man bowed slightly, restricted by his wounded side. He left with
Tully. Carline kissed Arutha on the cheek, saying, “Rest now.” She took away
the broth and was escorted from the room by Fannon. Arutha was asleep before
the door closed.
17
ATTACK
Carline lunged.
She thrust the point of her sword in a low line, aiming a killing
blow for the stomach. Roland barely avoided the thrust by a strong beat of his
blade, knocking hers out of line. He sprang back and for a moment was off
balance. Carline saw the hesitation and lunged forward again.
Roland
laughed as he suddenly leaped away, knocking her blade aside once more, then
stepping outside her guard. Quickly tossing his sword from right hand to left,
he reached out and caught her sword arm at the wrist, pulling her, in turn, off
balance. He swung her about, stepping behind her. He wrapped his left arm
around her waist, being careful of his sword edge, and pulled her tightly to
him. She struggled against his superior strength, but while he was behind her,
she could inflict no more than angry curses on him. “It was a trick! A loathsome
trick,” she spat.
She
kicked helplessly as he laughed. “Don’t overextend yourself that way, even when
it looks like a clean kill. You’ve good speed, but you press too much. Learn
patience. Wait for a clear opening, therf attack. You overbalance that much and
you’re dead.” He gave her a quick kiss on the cheek and pushed her
unceremoniously away.
Carline stumbled forward, regained her balance, and turned. “Rogue!
Make free with the royal person, will you?” She advanced on him, sword at the
ready, slowly circling to the left. With her father away, Carline had pestered
Arutha into allowing Roland to teach her swordplay. Her final argument had
been, “What do I do if the Tsurani enter the castle? Attack them with
embroidery needles?” Arutha had relented more from tiring of the constant
nagging than from any conviction she would have to use the weapon.
Suddenly Carline launched a furious attack in high line, forcing
Roland to retreat across the small court behind the keep. He found himself
backed against a low wall and waited. She lunged again, and he nimbly stepped
aside, the padded point of her rapier striking the wall an instant after he
vacated the spot. He jumped past her, playfully swatting her across the rump
with the flat of his blade as he took up position behind her. “And don’t lose
your temper, or you’ll lose your head as well.”
“Oh!” she cried, spinning to face him. Her expression was caught
halfway between anger and amusement. “You monster!”
Roland stood ready, a look of mock contrition on his face. She
measured the distance between them and began to advance slowly. She was wearing
tight-fitting men’s trousers—to the despair of Lady Marna— and a man’s tunic
cinched at the waist by her sword belt. In the last year her figure had filled
out, and the snug costume bordered on the scandalous. Now eighteen years of
age, there was nothing about Carline that was girlish. The specially crafted
boots she wore, black, ankle-high, carefully beat upon the ground as she
stepped the distance between them, and her long, lustrous dark hair was tied
into a single braid that swung freely about her shoulders.
Roland welcomed these sessions with her. They had rediscovered much
of their former playful fun in them, and Roland held the guarded hope her
feelings for him might be developing into something more than friendship. In
the year since Lyam’s departure they had practiced together, or had gone riding
when it was considered safe, near the castle. The time with her had nourished a
sense of companionship between them he had previously been unable to bring
about. While more serious than before, she had regained her spark and sense of
humor.
Roland stood lost in reflection a moment. The little-girl Princess,
spoiled and indulged, was gone. The child grown petulant and demanding from the
boredom of her role was now a thing of the past. In her stead was a young woman
of strong mind and will, tempered by harsh lessons.
Roland blinked and found himself with her sword’s point at his
throat. He playfully threw down his own weapon and said, “Lady, I yield!”
She laughed. “What were you daydreaming about, Roland?”
He gently pushed aside the tip of her sword. “I was remembering how
distraught Lady Mama became when you first went riding in those clothes and
came back all dirty and very unladylike.”
Carline smiled at the memory. “I thought she would stay abed for a
week.” She put up her sword. “I wish I could find reasons to wear these clothes
more often. They are so comfortable.”
Roland nodded, grinning widely. “And very fetching.” He made a
display of leering at the way they hugged Carline’s curvaceous body. “Though I
expect that is due to the wearer.”
She tilted her nose upward in a show of disapproval. “You are a
rogue and a flatterer, sir. And a lecher.”
With a chuckle, he picked up his sword. “I think that is enough for
today, Carline. I could endure only one defeat this afternoon. Another, and I
shall have to quit the castle in shame.”
Her eyes widened as she drew her weapon, and he saw the dig had
struck home. “Oh! Shamed by a mere girl, is it?” she said, advancing with her
sword ready.
Laughing, he brought his own to the ready, backing away. “Now, Lady.
This is most unseemly.”
Leveling her sword, she fixed him with an angry gaze. “I have Lady
Mama to be concerned with my manners, Roland I don’t need a buffoon like you to
instruct me.”
“Buffoon!” he cried, leaping forward. She caught his blade and
riposted, nearly striking. He took the thrust on his blade, sliding his own
along hers until they stood corps a corps. He seized her sword wrist with his
free hand and smiled. “You never want to find yourself in this position.” She
struggled to free herself, but he held her fast. “Unless the Tsurani start
sending their women after us, most anyone you fight will prove stronger than
yourself, and from here have his way with you.” So saying, he jerked her closer
and kissed her.
She pulled back, an expression of surprise on her face. Suddenly the
sword fell from her fingers and she grabbed him. Pulling him with surprising
force, she kissed him with a passion that answered his.
When he pulled back, she regarded him with a look of surprise mixed
with longing. A smile spread on her face, as her eyes sparkled. Quietly she
said, “Roland, I—”
Alarm sounded throughout the castle, and the shout of “Attack!”
could be heard from the walls on the other side of the keep.
Roland swore softly and stepped back. “Of all the gods-cursed,
ill-timed luck.” He headed into the hall that led to the main courtyard. With a
grin he turned and said, “Remember what you were going to say, Lady.” His humor
vanished when he saw her following after, sword in hand. “Where are you going?”
he asked, all lightness absent from his voice.
Defiantly she said, “To the walls. I’m not going to sit in the
cellars any longer.”
Firmly he said, “No. You’ve never experienced true fighting. As a
sport, you do well enough with a sword, but I’ll not risk your freezing the
first time you smell blood. You’ll go to the cellars with the other ladies and
lock yourself safely in.”
Roland had never spoken to her in this manner before, and she was
amazed. Always before he had been the teasing rogue, or the gentle friend. Now
he was suddenly a different man. She began to protest, but he cut her off.
Taking her by the arm, half leading, half dragging her, he walked in the
direction of the cellar doors. “Roland!” she cried. “Let me go!”
Quietly he said, “You’ll go where you were ordered. And I’ll go
where I’m ordered. There will be no argument.”
She pulled against his hold, but the grip was unyielding. “Roland!
Take your hand from me this instant!” she commanded.
He continued to ignore her protests and dragged her along the hall.
At the cellar door a startled guard watched the approaching pair. Roland came
to a stop and propelled Carline toward the door with a less than gentle shove.
Her eyes wide in outrage, Carline turned to the guard. “Arrest him! At once!
He”—anger elevated her voice to a most unladylike volume—”laid hands on me!”
The guard hesitated, looking from one to another, then tentatively
began to step toward the Squire. Roland raised a warning finger and pointed it
at the guard, less than an inch from his nose. “You will see Her Highness to
her appointed place of safety. You will ignore her objections, and should she
try to leave, you will restrain her. Do you understand?” His voice left no
doubt he was deadly serious.
The guard nodded, but still was reluctant to place hands upon the
Princess. Without taking his eyes from the soldier’s face, Roland pushed
Carline gently toward the door and said, “If I find she has left the cellar
before the signal that all is safe has sounded, I will ensure that the Prince
and the Swordmaster are informed you allowed the Princess to step in harm’s
way.”
That was enough for the guard. He might not understand who had right
of rank between Princess and Squire during attacks, but there was no doubt at
all in his mind of what the Swordmaster would do to him under such
circumstances. He turned to the cellar door before Carline could return and
said, “Highness, this way,” forcing her down the steps.
Carline backed down the stairs, fuming. Roland closed the door
behind them. She turned after another backward step, then haughtily walked
down. When they reached the room set aside for the women of the castle and town
in time of attack, Carline found the other women waiting, huddled together,
terrified.
The guard hazarded an apologetic salute and said, “Begging the
Princess’s pardon, but the Squire seemed most determined.”
Suddenly Carline’s scowl vanished, and in its place a small smile
appeared. She said, “Yes, he did, didn’t he?”
Riders sped into the courtyard, the massive gates swinging shut
behind. Arutha watched from the walls and turned to Fannon.
Fannon said, “Of all the worst possible luck.”
Arutha said, “Luck has nothing to do with it. The Tsurani would
certainly not be attacking when the advantage is ours.” Everything looked
peaceful, except the burned town standing as a constant reminder of the war.
But he also knew that beyond the town, in the forests to the north and
northeast, an army was gathering. And by all reports as many as two thousand
more Tsurani were on the march toward Crydee.
“Get back inside, you rat-bitten, motherless dog.”
Arutha looked downward into the courtyard and saw Amos Trask kicking
at the panic-stricken figure of a fisherman, who dashed back into one of the
many rude huts erected inside the wall of the castle to house the last of the
displaced townsfolk who had not gone south. Most of the townspeople had shipped
for Carse after the death raid, but a few had stayed the winter. Except for
some fishermen who were to stay to help feed the garrison, the rest were due to
be shipped south to Carse and Tulan this spring. But the first ships of the
coming season were not due in for weeks. Amos had been put in charge of these
folk since his ship had been burned the year before, keeping them from getting
underfoot and from causing too much disruption in the castle. The former sea
captain had proved a gift during the first weeks after the burning of the town.
Amos had the necessary talent for command and kept the tough, ill-mannered, and
individualistic fisherfolk in line. Arutha judged him a braggart, a liar, and
most probably, a pirate, but generally likable.
Gardan came up the stairs from the court, Roland following. Gardan
saluted the Prince and Swordmaster, and said, “That’s the last patrol, sir.”
“Then we must only wait for Longbow,” said Fannon.
Gardan shook his head “Not one patrol caught sight of him, sir.”
“That’s because Longbow is undoubtedly closer to the Tsurani than
any soldier of sound judgment is likely to get,” ventured Arutha. “How soon, do
you think, before the rest of the Tsurani arrive?”
Pointing to the northeast, Gardan said, “Less than an hour, if they
push straight through.” He looked skyward. “They have less than four hours of
light. We might expect one attack before nightfall. Most likely they’ll take
position, rest their men, and attack at first light.”
Arutha glanced at Roland. “Are the women safe?”
Roland grinned. “All, though your sister might have a few harsh
words about me when this is over.”
Arutha returned the grin. “When this is over, I’ll deal with it.” He
looked around. “Now we wait.”
Swordmaster Fannon’s eyes swept the deceptively peaceful scene before
them. There was a note of worry mixed with determination in his voice as he
said, “Yes, now we wait.”
Martin raised his hand. His three trackers stopped moving. The woods
were quiet as far as they could tell, but the three knew Martin possessed more
acute senses than they. After a moment he moved along, scouting ahead.
For ten hours, since before dawn, they had been marking the Tsurani
line of march. As well as he could judge, the Tsurani had been repulsed once
more from Elvandar at the fords along the river Crydee and were now turning
their attention to the castle at Crydee. For three years the Tsurani had been
occupied along four fronts: against the Duke’s armies in the east, the elves
and dwarves along the north, the hold at Crydee in the west, and the
Brotherhood of the Dark Path and the goblins in the south.
The trackers had stayed close to the Tsurani trailbreakers,
occasionally too close. Twice they had been forced to run from attackers,
Tsurani warriors tenaciously willing to follow the Huntmaster of Crydee and his
men. Once they had been overtaken, and Martin had lost one of his men in the
fighting.
Martin gave the raucous caw of a crow, and in a few minutes his
three remaining trackers joined him. One, a long-faced young man named Garret,
said, “They move far west of where I thought they would turn.”
Longbow considered. “Aye, it seems they may be planning to encircle
all of the lands around the castle. Or they may simply wish to strike from an
unexpected quarter.” Then with a wry grin he said, “But most likely, they
simply sweep the area before the attack begins, ensuring they have no harrying
forces at their backs.”
Another tracker said, “Surely they know we mark their passing.”
Longbow’s crooked grin widened. “No doubt. I judge them unconcerned
with our comings and goings.” He shook his head. “These Tsurani are an arrogant
crew.” Pointing, he said, “Garret will come with me. You two will make straight
for the castle. Inform the Swordmaster some two thousand more Tsurani march on
Crydee.” Without a word the two men set off at a brisk pace toward the castle.
To his remaining companion he spoke lightly. “Come, let us return to
the advancing enemy and see what he is about now.”
Garret shook his head. “Your cheerful manner does little to ease my
worrisome mind, Huntmaster.”
Turning back the way they had come, Longbow said, “One time is much
like another to death. She comes when she will. So why give over your mind to
worry?”
“Aye,” said Garret, his long face showing he was unconvinced. “Why,
indeed? It’s not death arriving when she will that worries me; it’s your
inviting her to visit that gets me shivering.”
Martin laughed softly. He motioned for Garret to follow. They set
off at a trot, covering ground with long, loose strides. The forest was bright with
sunlight, but between the thick boles were many dark places wherein a watchful
enemy could lurk Garret left it to Longbow’s able judgment whether these hiding
places were safe to pass. Then, as one, both men stopped in their tracks at the
sound of movement ahead. Noiselessly they melted into a shadowy thicket. A
minute passed slowly with neither man speaking. Then a faint whispering came to
them, the words unclear.
Into their field of vision came two figures, moving cautiously along
a north-south path that intersected the one Martin followed. Both were dressed
in dark grey cloaks, with bows held ready. They stopped, and one kneeled down
to study the signs left by Longbow and his trackers. He pointed down the trail
and spoke to his companion, who nodded and returned the way they had come.
Longbow heard Garret hiss as he drew in his breath. Peering around
the area was a tracker of the Brotherhood of the Dark Path. After a moment of
searching he followed his companion.
Garret began to stir and Martin gripped his arm. “Not yet,” Longbow
whispered.
Garret whispered back, “What are they doing this far north?”
Martin shook his head. “They’ve slipped in behind our patrols along
the foothills. We’ve grown lax in the south, Garret. We never thought they’d
move north this far west of the mountains.” He waited silently for a moment,
then whispered, “Perhaps they tire of the Green Heart and are trying for the
Northlands to join their brothers.”
Garret started to speak, but stopped when another Dark Brother
entered the spot vacated by the others a moment before. He looked around, then
raised his hand in signal. Other figures appeared along the trail intersecting
the one Martin’s men had traveled. In ones, twos, and threes, Dark Brothers
crossed the path, disappearing into the trees.
Garret sat holding his breath. He could hear Martin counting faintly
as the figures crossed their field of vision: “. . . ten, twelve, fifteen,
sixteen, eighteen . . .”
The stream of dark-cloaked figures continued, seemingly unending to
Garret. “. . . thirty-one, thirty-two, thirty-four . . .”
As the crossing continued, larger numbers of Brothers appeared, and
after a time Martin whispered, “There are more than a hundred.”
Still they came, some now carrying bundles on their backs and
shoulders. Many wore the dark grey mountain cloaks, but others were dressed in
green, brown, or black clothing. Garret leaned close to Martin and whispered,
“You are right. It is a migration north. I mark over two hundred.”
Martin nodded. “And still they come.”
For many more minutes the Dark Brothers crossed the trail, until the
flood of warriors was replaced by ragged-looking females and young. When they
had passed, a company of twenty fighters crossed the trail, and then the area
was quiet.
They waited a moment in silence. Garret said, “They are elven-kin to
move so large a number through the forest undetected so long.”
Martin smiled. “I’d advise you not mention that fact to the next elf
you encounter.” He stood slowly, unbending cramped muscles from the long
sitting in the brush. A faint sound echoed from the east, and Martin got a
thoughtful look on his face. “How far along the trail do you judge the Dark
Brothers’ march?”
Garret said, “At their rear, a hundred yards; at the van, perhaps a
quarter mile or less. Why?”
Martin grinned, and Garret became discomforted by the mocking humor
in his eyes. “Come, I think I know where we can have some fun.”
Garret groaned softly, “Ah, Huntmaster, my skin gets a poxy feeling
when you mention fun.”
Martin struck the man a friendly blow to the chest with the back of
his hand. “Come, stout fellow.” The Huntmaster broke trail, with Garret behind.
They loped along through the woods, easily avoiding obstacles that would have
hindered less experienced woodsmen.
They came to a break in the trail, and both men halted. Just down
the trail, at the edge of their vision in the gloom of the forest, came a
company of Tsurani trailbreakers. Martin and Garret faded into the trees, and
the Huntmaster said, “The main column is close behind. When they reach the
crossing where the Dark Brothers passed, they might chance to follow.”
Garret shook his head. “Or they might not, so we will make certain
they do.” Taking a deep breath, he added, “Oh well,” then made a short silent
prayer to Kihan, the Singer of Green Silences, Goddess of Foresters, as they
unshouldered their bows.
Martin stepped out onto the trail and took aim, and Garret followed
his example. The Tsurani trailbreakers came into view, cutting away the thick
underbrush along the trail so the main body could more easily follow. Martin
waited until the Tsurani were uncomfortably close, then he let fly, just as the
first trailbreaker took notice of them. The first two men fell, and before they
hit the ground, two more arrows were loosed Martin and Garret pulled arrows
from back quivers in fluid motions, set arrow to bowstring, and let fly with uncommon
quickness and accuracy. It was not from any act of kindness Martin had selected
Garret five years before. In the eye of the storm, he would stand calmly, do as
ordered, and do it with skill.
Ten stunned Tsurani fell before they could raise an alarm. Calmly
Martin and Garret shouldered their bows and waited. Then along the trail
appeared a veritable wall of colored armor. The Tsurani officers in the van
stopped in shocked silence as they regarded the dead trail-breakers. Then they
saw the two foresters standing quietly down the trail and shouted something.
The entire front of the column sprang forward, weapons drawn.
Martin leaped into the thicket on the north side of the trail,
Garret a step behind. They dashed through the trees, the Tsurani in close pursuit.
Martin’s voice filled the forest with a wild hunter’s call. Garret
shouted as much from some nameless, crazy exhilaration as from fear. The noise
behind was tremendous as a horde of Tsurani pursued them through the trees.
Martin led them northward, paralleling the course taken by the Dark
Brotherhood. After a time he stopped and between gasping breaths said, “Slowly,
we don’t want to lose them.”
Garret looked back and saw the Tsurani were out of sight. They
leaned against a tree and waited. A moment later the first Tsurani came into
view, hurrying along on a course that angled off to the northwest.
With a disgusted look, Martin said, “We must have killed the only
skilled trackers on their whole bloody world.” He took his hunter’s horn from
his belt and let forth with such a loud blast the Tsurani soldier froze, an
expression of shock clearly evident on his face even from where Martin and
Garret stood.
The Tsurani looked around and caught sight of the two huntsmen
Martin waved for the man to follow, and he and Garret were off again. The
Tsurani shouted for those behind and gave chase. For a quarter mile they led
the Tsurani through the woods, then they angled westward Garret shouted,
between heaving breaths, “The Dark Brothers . . . they’ll know we come.”
Martin shouted back, “Unless they’ve . . . suddenly all . . . gone
deaf.” He managed a smile. “The Tsurani hold a six-to-one . . . advantage I . .
. think it . . . only fair to let . . . the Brotherhood . . . have the . . .
ambush.”
Garret spared enough breath for a low groan and continued to follow
his master’s lead. They crashed out of a thicket and Martin stopped, grabbing
Garret by the tunic. He cocked his head and said, “They’re up ahead.”
Garret said, “I don’t know . . . how you can hear a thing with . . .
all that cursed racket behind.” It sounded as if most of the Tsurani column had
followed, though the forest amplified the noise and confused its source.
Martin said, “Do you still wear that . . . ridiculous red
undertunic?”
“Yes, why?”
“Tear off a strip.” Garret pulled his knife without question and
lifted up his green forester’s tunic. Underneath was a garish red cotton
undertunic. He cut a long strip off the bottom, then hastily tucked the
undertunic in. While Garret ordered himself, Martin tied the strip to an arrow.
He looked back to where the Tsurani thrashed in the brush. “It must be those
stubby legs. They may be able to run all day, but they can’t keep up in the
woods.” He handed the arrow to Garret. “See that large elm across that small
clearing?”
Garret nodded. “See the small birch behind, off to the left?” Again
Garret nodded. “Think you can hit it with that rag dragging at your arrow?”
Garret grinned as he unslung his bow, notched the arrow, and let
fly. The arrow sped true, striking the tree. Martin said, “When our bandylegged
friends get here, they’ll see that flicker of color over there and go charging
across. Unless I’m sadly mistaken, the Brothers are about fifty feet the other
side of your arrow.” He pulled his horn as Garret shouldered his bow again.
“Once more we’re off,” he said, blowing a long, loud call.
Like hornets the Tsurani descended, but Longbow and Garret were off
to the southwest before the note from the hunter’s horn had died in the air.
They dashed to be gone before the Tsurani caught sight of them, aborting the
hoax. Suddenly they broke through a thicket and ran into a group of women and
children milling about. One young woman of the Brotherhood was placing a bundle
upon the ground. She stopped at the sight of the two men. Garret had to slide
to a halt to keep from bowling her over.
Her large brown eyes studied him for an instant as he stepped
sideways to get around her. Without thinking, Garret said, “Excuse me, ma’am,”
and raised his hand to his forelock. Then he was off after the Huntmaster as
shouts of surprise and anger erupted behind them.
Martin called a halt after they had covered another quarter mile and
listened. To the northeast came the sounds of battle, shouts and screams, and
the ring of weapons. Martin grinned. “They’ll both be busy for a while.”
Garret sank wearily to the ground and said, “Next time send me to
the castle, will you, Huntmaster?”
Martin kneeled beside the tracker. “That should prevent the Tsurani
from reaching Crydee until sundown or after. They won’t be able to mount an
attack until tomorrow. Four hundred Dark Brothers are not something they can
safely leave at their rear. We’ll rest a bit, then make for Crydee.”
Garret leaned back against a tree. “Welcome news.” He let out a long
sigh of relief. “That was a close thing, Huntmaster.”
Martin smiled enigmatically. “All life is a close thing, Garret.”
Garret shook his head slowly. “Did you see that girl?”
Martin nodded. “What of her?”
Garret looked perplexed. “She was pretty no, closer to being
beautiful, in a strange sort of way, I mean. But she had long black hair, and
her eyes were the color of otter’s fur. And she had a pouty mouth and pert
look. Enough to warrant a second glance from most men. It’s not what I would
have expected from the Brotherhood.”
Martin nodded “The moredhel are a pretty people, in truth, as are
the elves. But remember, Garret,” he said with a smile, “should you chance to
find yourself exchanging pleasantries with a moredhel woman again, she’d as
soon cut your heart out as kiss you.”
They rested for a while as cries and shouts echoed from the
northeast. Then slowly they stood and began the return to Crydee.
***
Since
the start of the war, the Tsurani had confined their activities to those areas
immediately adjacent the valley in the Grey Towers. Reports from the dwarves
and the elves revealed mining activities were taking place in the Grey Towers.
Enclaves had been thrown up outside the valley, from which they raided Kingdom
positions. Once or twice during the year they would mount an offensive against
the Dukes’ Armies of the West, the elves in Elvandar, or Crydee, but for the
most part they were content to hold what they had already taken.
And each year they would expand their holdings, building more enclaves,
expanding the area under their control, and gaining themselves a stronger
position from which to conduct the next year’s campaign. Since the fall of
Wahnor, the expected thrust toward the coast of the Bitter Sea had not
materialized, nor had the Tsurani again tried for the LaMutian fortresses near
Stone Mountain. Walinor and Crydee town were sacked and abandoned, more to deny
them to the Kingdom and Free Cities than for any Tsurani gain. By the spring of
the third year of the war, the leaders of the Kingdom forces despaired of a
major attack, one that might break the stalemate. Now it came. And it came at
the logical place, the allies’ weakest front, the garrison at Crydee.
Arutha looked out over the walls at the Tsurani army. He stood next
to Gardan and Fannon, with Martin Longbow behind. “How many?” he asked, not
taking his eyes from the gathering host.
Martin spoke. “Fifteen hundred, two thousand, it is hard to judge.
There were two thousand more coming yesterday, less whatever the Dark
Brotherhood took with them.”
From the distant woods the sounds of workmen felling trees rang out.
The Swordmaster and Huntmaster judged the Tsurani were cutting trees to build
scaling ladders.
Martin said, “I’d never thought to hear myself say such, but I wish
there’d been four thousand Dark Brothers in the forest yesterday.”
Gardan spat over the wall. “Still, you did well, Huntmaster. It is
only fitting they should run afoul of each other.”
Martin chuckled humorlessly. “It is also a good thing the Dark
Brothers kill on sight. Though I am sure they do it out of no love for us, they
do guard our southern flank.”
Arutha said, “Unless yesterday’s band was not an isolated case. If
the Brotherhood is abandoning the Green Heart, we may soon have to fear for
Tulan, Jonril, and Carse.”
“I’m glad they’ve not parleyed,” said Fannon. “If they should truce
. . .”
Martin shook his head. “The moredhel will traffic only with weapons
runners and renegades who will serve them for gold. Otherwise they have no use
for us. And by all evidence, the Tsurani are bent on conquest. The moredhel are
no more spared their ambition than we are.”
Fannon looked back at the mounting Tsurani force. Brightly colored
standards with symbols and designs strange to behold were placed at various
positions along the leading edge of the army. Hundreds of warriors in
different-colored armor stood in groups under each banner.
A horn sounded, and the Tsurani soldiers faced the walls. Each
standard was brought forward a dozen paces and planted in the ground. A handful
of soldiers wearing the high-crested helmets that the Kingdom forces took to
denote officers walked forward and stood halfway between the army and the
standard-bearers. One, wearing bright blue armor, called something and pointed
at the castle. A shout went up from the assembled Tsurani host, and then
another officer, this one in bright red armor, began to walk slowly up to the
castle.
Arutha and the others watched in silence while the man crossed the
distance to the gate. He looked neither right nor left, nor up at the people on
the walls, but marched with eyes straight ahead until he reached the gate.
There he took out a large hand ax and banged three times upon it with the haft.
“What is he doing?” asked Roland, just come up the stairs.
Again the Tsurani pounded on the gates of the castle. “I think,”
said Longbow, “he’s ordering us to open up and quit the castle.”
Then the Tsurani reached back and slammed his ax into the gate,
leaving it quivering in the wood. Without hurrying, he turned and began walking
away to cheers from the watching Tsurani.
“What now?” asked Fannon.
“I think I know,” said Martin, unshouldering his bow. He drew out an
arrow and fitted it to the bowstring. With a sudden pull, he let fly. The shaft
struck the ground between the Tsurani officer’s legs and the man halted.
“The Hadati hillmen of Yabon have rituals like this,” said Martin.
“They put great store by showing bravery in the face of an enemy. To touch one
and live is more honorable than killing him.” He pointed toward the officer,
who stood motionless. “If I kill him, I have no honor, because he’s showing us
all how brave he is. But we can show we know how to play this game.”
The Tsurani officer turned and picked up the arrow and snapped it in
two. He faced the castle, holding the broken arrow high as he shouted defiance
at those on the walls. Longbow sighted another arrow and let fly. The second
arrow sped down and sliced the plume from the officer’s helmet. The Tsurani
fell silent as feathers began drifting down around his face.
Roland whooped at the shot, and then the walls of the castle erupted
with cheers. The Tsurani slowly removed his helm.
Martin said, “Now he’s inviting one of us either to kill him,
showing we are without honor, or to come out of the castle and dare to face
him.”
Fannon said, “I will not allow the gates open over some childish
contest!”
Longbow grinned as he said, “Then we’ll change the rules.” He leaned
over the edge of the walkway and shouted down to the courtyard below. “Garret,
fowling blunt!”
Garret, in the court below, drew a fowling arrow from his quiver and
tossed it up to Longbow. Martin showed the others the heavy iron ball that
served as the tip, used to stun game birds where a sharp arrow would destroy
them, and then fitted it to his bow. Sighting the officer, he let fly.
The arrow took the Tsurani officer in the stomach, knocking him
backward. All on the wall could imagine the sound made as the man had his
breath knocked from him. The Tsurani soldiers shouted in outrage, then quieted
as the man stood up, obviously stunned but otherwise showing no injury. Then he
doubled over, his hands on his knees, and vomited.
Arutha said dryly, “So much for an officer’s dignity.”
“Well,” said Fannon, “I think it is time to give them another lesson
in Kingdom warfare.” He raised his arm high above his head. “Catapults!” he
cried.
Answering flags waved from the tops of the towers along the walls
and atop the keep. He dropped his arm, and the mighty engines were fired. On
the smaller towers, ballistae, looking like giant crossbows, shot spearlike
missiles, while atop the keep, huge mangonels flung buckets of heavy stones.
The rain of stones and missiles landed amid the Tsurani, crushing heads and
limbs, tearing ragged holes in their lines. The screams of wounded men could be
heard by the defenders, while the catapult crew quickly rewound and loaded
their deadly engines.
The Tsurani milled about in confusion and, when the second flight of
stones and missiles struck, broke and ran. A cheer went up from the defenders
on the wall, then died when the Tsurani regrouped beyond the range of the
engines.
Gardan said, “Swordmaster, I think they mean to wait us out.”
“I think you’re wrong,” said Arutha, pointing. The other looked: a
large number of Tsurani detached themselves from the main body, moving forward
to stop just outside missile range.
“They look to be readying an attack,” said Fannon, “but why with
only a part of their force?”
A soldier appeared and said, “Highness, there are no signs of
Tsurani along any of the other positions.”
Arutha looked to Fannon. “And why attack only one wall?” After a few
minutes, Arutha said, “I’d judge a thousand.”
“More likely twelve hundred,” said Fannon. He saw scaling ladders
appearing at the rear of the attackers, moving forward. “Anytime now.”
A thousand defenders waited inside the walls. Other men of Crydee
still manned outlying garrisons and lookout positions, but the bulk of the
Duchy’s strength was here. Fannon said, “We can withstand this force as long as
the walls remain unbreached. Less than a ten-to-one advantage we can deal
with.”
More messengers came from the other walls. “They still mount nothing
along the east, north, and south, Swordmaster,” one reported.
“They seem determined to do this the hard way.” Fannon looked
thoughtful for a moment. “Little of what we’ve seen is understandable. Death
raids, marshaling within catapult range, wasting time with games of honor.
Still, they are not without skill, and we can take nothing for granted.” To the
guard he said, “Pass the word to keep alert on the other walls, and be ready to
move to defend should this prove a feint.”
The messengers left, and the waiting continued. The sun moved across
the sky, until an hour before sunset, when it sat at the backs of the
attackers. Suddenly horns blew and drums beat, and in a rush the Tsurani broke
toward the walls. The catapults sang, and great holes appeared in the lines of
attackers. Still they came, until they moved within bow range of the patiently
waiting defenders. A storm of arrows fell upon the attackers, and to a man the
front rank collapsed, but those behind came on, large brightly colored shields
held overhead as they rushed the walls. A half-dozen times men fell, dropping
scaling ladders, only to have others grab them up and continue.
Tsurani bowmen answered the bowmen from the walls with their own
shower of arrows, and men of Crydee fell from the battlements. Arutha ducked
behind the walls of the castle as the arrows sped overhead, then he risked a
glance between the merlons of the wall. A horde of attackers filled his field
of vision, and a ladder top suddenly appeared before him. A soldier near the
Prince grabbed the ladder top and pushed it away, aided by a second using a
pole arm. Arutha could hear the screams of the Tsurani as they fell from the
ladder. The first soldier to the ladder then fell backward, a Tsurani arrow
protruding from his eye, and disappeared into the courtyard.
A sudden shout went up from below, and Arutha sprang to his feet,
risking a bowshaft by looking down. All along the base of the wall, Tsurani
warriors were withdrawing, running back to the safety of their own lines.
“What are they doing?” wondered Fannon.
The Tsurani ran until they were safe from the catapults, then
stopped, turned, and formed up ranks. Officers were walking up and down before
the men, exhorting them. After a moment the assembled Tsurani cheered.
“Damn me!” came from Arutha’s left, and he glimpsed Amos Trask at
his shoulder, a seaman’s cutlass in his hand. “The maniacs are congratulating
themselves on getting slaughtered.”
The scene below was grisly. Tsurani soldiers lay scattered around
like toys thrown by a careless giant child. A few moved feebly and moaned, but
most were dead.
Fannon said, “I’d wager they lost a hundred or more. This makes no
sense.” He said to Roland and Martin, “Check the other walls.” They both hurried
off. “What are they doing now?” he said as he watched the Tsurani. In the red
glow of sunset, he could see them still in lines, while men lit torches and
passed them around. “Surely they don’t intend to attack after sunset? They’ll
fall over themselves in the dark.”
“Who knows what they plan?” said Arutha. “I’ve never heard of an
attack being staged this badly.”
Amos said, “Beggin’ the Prince’s pardon, but I know a thing or two
about warcraft—from my younger days—and I’ve also never heard of this like before.
Even the Keshians, who’ll throw away dog soldiers like a drunken seaman throws
away his money, even they wouldn’t try a frontal assault like this. I’d keep a
weather eye out for trickery.”
“Yes,” answered Arutha. “But of what sort?”
Throughout the night the Tsurani attacked, rushing headlong against
the walls, to die at the base. Once a few made the top of the walls, but they
were quickly killed and the ladders thrown back. With dawn the Tsurani
withdrew.
Arutha, Fannon, and Gardan watched as the Tsurani reached the safety
of their own lines, beyond catapult and bow range. With the sunrise a sea of
colorful tents appeared, and the Tsurani retired to their campsites. The
defenders were astonished at the number of Tsurani dead along the base of the
castle walls.
After a few hours the stink of the dead became overpowering. Fannon
consulted with an exhausted Arutha as the Prince was readying for an overdue
sleep. “The Tsurani have made no attempt to reclaim their fallen.”
Arutha said, “We have no common language in which to parley, unless
you mean to send Tully out under a flag of truce.”
Fannon said, “He’d go, of course, but I’d not risk him. Still, the
bodies could be trouble in a day or two. Besides the stink and flies, with
unbuned dead comes disease. It’s the gods’ way of showing their displeasure
over not honoring the dead.”
“Then,” said Arutha, pulling on the boot he had just taken off, “we
had best see what can be done.”
He returned to the gate and found Gardan already making plans to
remove the bodies. A dozen volunteers were waiting by the gate to go and gather
the dead for a funeral pyre.
Arutha and Fannon reached the walls as Gardan led the men through
the gate. Archers lined the walls to cover the retreat of the men outside the
walls if necessary, but it soon became evident the Tsurani were not going to
trouble the party. Several came to the edge of their lines, to sit and watch
the Kingdom soldiers working.
After a half hour it was clear the men of Crydee would not be able
to complete the work before they were exhausted. Arutha considered sending more
men outside, but Fannon refused, thinking it what the Tsurani were waiting for.
“If we have to move a large party back through the gate, it might prove
disastrous. If we close the gate, we lose men outside, and if we leave it open
too long, the Tsurani breach the castle.” Arutha was forced to agree, and they
settled down to watch Gardan’s men working in the hot morning.
Then, near midday, a dozen Tsurani warriors, unarmed, walked
casually across their lines and approached the work party. Those on the wall
watched tensely, but when the Tsurani reached the spot where Crydee men worked,
they silently began picking up bodies and carrying them to where the pyre was
being erected.
With the help of the Tsurani, the bodies were stacked upon the huge
pyre. Torches were set, and soon the bodies of the slain were consumed in fire.
The Tsurani who had helped place the bodies upon the pyre watched as the
soldier who led the volunteers stood away from the mounting flames. Then one
Tsurani soldier spoke a word, and he and his companions bowed in respect to
those upon the fire. The soldier who led the Crydee soldiers said, “Honors to
the dead!” The twelve men of Crydee assumed a posture of attention and saluted.
Then the Tsurani turned to face the Kingdom soldiers and again they bowed. The
commanding soldier called out, “Return salute!” and the twelve men of Crydee
saluted the Tsurani.
Arutha shook his head, watching men who had tried to kill one
another working side by side as if it were the most natural thing in the world,
then saluting one another. “Father used to say that, among man’s strange
undertakings, war stood clearly forth as the strangest.”
At
sundown they came again, wave after wave of attackers, rushing the west wall,
to die at the base. Four times during the night they struck, and four times
they were repulsed.
Now they came again, and Arutha shrugged off his fatigue to fight
once more. They could see more Tsurani joining those before the castle, long
snakes of torchlight coming from the forest to the north. After the last
assault, it was clear the situation was shifting to the Tsurani’s favor. The
defenders were exhausted from two nights of fighting, and the Tsurani were
still throwing fresh troops into the fray.
“They mean to grind us down, no matter what the cost,” said a
fatigued Fannon. He began to say something to a guard when a strange expression
crossed his face. He closed his eyes and collapsed. Arutha caught him. An arrow
protruded from his back. A panicky-looking soldier kneeling on the other side
looked at Arutha, clearly asking: What do we do?
Arutha shouted, “Get him into the keep, to Father Tully,” and the
man and another soldier picked up the unconscious Swordmaster and carried him
down. A third soldier asked, “What orders, Highness?”
Arutha spun around, seeing the worried faces of Crydee’s soldiers
nearby, and said, “As before. Defend the wall.”
The fighting went hard. A half-dozen times Arutha found himself
dueling with Tsurani warriors who topped the wall. Then, after a timeless
battling, the Tsurani withdrew.
Arutha stood panting, his clothing drenched with perspiration
beneath his chest armor. He shouted for water, and a castle porter arrived with
a bucket. He drank, as did the others around, and turned to watch the Tsurani
host.
Again they stood just beyond catapult range, and their torchlights
seemed undimimshed. “Prince Arutha,” came a voice behind. He spun around
Horsemaster Algon was standing before him. “I just heard of Fannon’s wound.”
Arutha said, “How is he?”
“A close thing. The wound is serious, but not yet fatal. Tully
thinks should he live another day, he will recover. But he will not be able to
command for weeks, perhaps longer.”
Arutha knew Algon was waiting for a decision from him. The Prince
was Knight-Captain of the King’s army and, without Fannon, the commander of the
garrison. He was also untried and could turn over command to the Horsemaster.
Arutha looked around. “Where is Gardan?”
“Here, Highness,” came a shout from a short way down the wall.
Arutha was surprised at the sergeant’s appearance. His dark skin was nearly
grey from the dust that stuck to it, held fast by the sheen of perspiration.
His tunic and tabard were soaked with blood, which also covered his arms to the
elbows.
Arutha looked down at his own hands and arms and found them likewise
covered. He shouted, “More water!” and said to Algon, “Gardan will act as my
second commander. Should anything happen to me, he will take command of the
garrison. Gardan is acting Swordmaster.”
Algon hesitated as if about to say something, then a look of relief
crossed his face. “Yes, Highness. Orders?”
Arutha looked back toward the Tsurani lines, then to the east. The
first light of the false dawn was coming, and the sun would rise over the
mountains in less than two hours. He seemed to weigh facts for a time, as he
washed away the blood on his arms and face. Finally he said, “Get Longbow.”
The Huntmaster was called for and arrived a few minutes later,
followed by Amos Trask, who wore a wide grin. “Damn me, but they can fight,”
said the seaman.
Arutha ignored the comment. “It is clear to me they plan to keep
constant pressure upon us. With as little regard as they show for their own
lives, they can wear us down in a few weeks. This is one thing we didn’t count
upon, this willingness of their men to go to certain death. I want the north,
south, and east walls stripped. Leave enough men to keep watch, and hold any
attackers until reinforcements can arrive. Bring the men from the other walls
here, and order those here to stand down. I want six-hour watches rotated
throughout the rest of the day. Martin, has there been any more word of Dark
Brother migration?”
Longbow shrugged. “We’ve been a little busy, Highness. My men have
all been in the north woods the last few weeks.”
Arutha said, “Could you slip a few trackers over the walls before
first light?”
Longbow considered “If they leave at once, and if the Tsurani aren’t
watching the east wall too closely, yes.”
“Do so. The Dark Brothers aren’t foolish enough to attack this
force, but if you could find a few bands the size of the one you spotted three
days ago and repeat your trap . . .”
Martin grinned. “I’ll lead them out myself. We’d best leave now,
before it gets much lighter.” Arutha dismissed him, and Martin ran down the
stairs. “Garret!” he shouted. “Come on, lad. We’re off for some fun.” A groan
could be heard by those on the wall as Martin gathered his trackers around him.
Arutha said to Gardan, “I want messages sent to Carse and Tulan. Use
five pigeons for each. Order Barons Bellamy and Tolburt to strip their
garrisons and take ship for Crydee at once.”
Gardan said, “Highness, that will leave those garrisons nearly
undefended.”
Algon joined in the objection. “If the Dark Brotherhood moves toward
the Northlands, the Tsurani will have an open path to the southern keeps next
year.”
Arutha said, “If the Dark Brothers are moving en masse, which they
may not be, and if the Tsurani learn they have abandoned the Green Heart, which
they may not. I am concerned by this known threat, not a possible one next
year. If they keep this constant pressure upon us, how long can we withstand?”
Gardan said, “A few weeks, perhaps a month No longer.”
Arutha once more studied the Tsurani camp. “They boldly pitch their
tents near the edge of town. They range through our forests, building ladders
and siege engines no doubt. They know we cannot sally forth in strength. But
with eighteen hundred fresh soldiers from the southern keeps attacking up the
coast road from the beaches and the garrison sallying forth, we can rout them
from Crydee. Once the siege is broken, they will have to withdraw to their
eastern enclaves. We can harry them continuously with horsemen, keep them from
regrouping. Then we can return those forces to the southern keeps, and they’ll
be ready for any Tsurani attacks against Carse or Tulan next spring.”
Gardan said, “A bold enough plan, Highness.” He saluted and left the
wall, followed by Algon.
Amos Trask said, “Your commanders are cautious men, Highness.”
Arutha said, “You agree with my plan?”
“Should Crydee fall, what matters when Carse or Tulan falls? If not
this year, then next for certain. It might as well be in one fight as two or
three. As the sergeant said, it is a bold plan. Still, a ship was never taken
without getting close enough to board. You have the makings of a fine corsair
should you ever grow tired of being a Prince, Highness.”
Arutha regarded Amos Trask with a skeptical smile. “Corsair, is it?
I thought you claimed to be an honest trader.”
Amos looked slightly discomposed. Then he broke out in a hearty
laugh. “I only said I had a cargo for Crydee, Highness I never said how I came
by it.”
“Well, we have no time for your piratical past now.”
Amos
looked stung. “No pirate, Sire. The Sidonie was carrying letters of
marque from Great Kesh, given by the governor of Durbin.”
Arutha laughed. “Of course! And everyone knows there is no finer,
more law-abiding group upon the high seas than the captains of the Durbin
coast.”
Amos
shrugged. “They tend to be a crusty lot, it’s true. And they sometimes make
free with the concept of free passage on the high seas, but we prefer the term privateer.”
Horns blew and drums beat, and with shrieking war cries the Tsurani
came. The defenders waited, then as the attacking host crossed the invisible
line marking the outer range of the castle’s war engines, death rained down
upon the Tsurani. Still they came.
The Tsurani crossed the second invisible line marking the outer
range of the castle’s bowmen, and scores more died. Still they came.
The attackers reached the walls, and defenders dropped stones and
pushed over scaling ladders, dealing out death to those below Still they came.
Arutha quickly ordered a redeployment of his reserves, directing
them to be ready near the points of heaviest attack. Men hurried to carry out
his orders.
Standing atop the west wall, in the thick of the fight, Arutha
answered attack with attack, repulsing warrior after warrior as they reached
the top of the wall. Even in the midst of battle, Arutha was aware of the scene
around him, shouting orders, hearing replies, catching glimpses of what others
were doing. He saw Amos Trask, disarmed, strike a Tsurani full in the face with
his fist, knocking the man from the wall Trask then carefully bent down and
picked up his cutlass as if he had simply dropped it while strolling along the
wall. Gardan moved among the men, exhorting the defenders, bolstering sagging
spirits, and driving the men beyond the point where they would normally have
given in to exhaustion.
Arutha helped two soldiers push away another scaling ladder, then
stared in momentary confusion as one of the men slowly turned and sat at his
feet, surprise on his face as he looked down at the Tsurani bow-shaft in his
chest. The man leaned back against the wall and closed his eyes as if deciding
to sleep for a time.
Arutha heard someone shout his name Gardan stood a few feet away,
pointing to the north section of the west wall. “They’ve crested the wall!”
Arutha ran past Gardan, shouting, “Order the reserves to follow!” He
raced along the wall until he reached the breach in the defenses. A dozen
Tsurani held each end of a section of the wall, pushing forward to clear room
for their comrades to follow. Arutha hurled himself into the front rank, past
weary and surprised guards who were being forced back along the battlement.
Arutha thrust over the first Tsurani shield, taking the man in the throat. The
Tsurani’s face registered shock, then he keeled over and fell into the
courtyard below. Arutha attacked the man next to the first and shouted, “For
Crydee! For the Kingdom!”
Then Gardan was among them, like a towering black giant, dealing
blows to all who stood before. Suddenly the men of Crydee pressed forward, a
wave of flesh and steel along the narrow rampart. The Tsurani stood their
ground, refusing to yield the hard-won breach, and to a man were killed.
Arutha struck a Tsurani warrior with the bell guard of his rapier,
knocking him to the ground below, and turned to find the wall once more in the
possession of the defenders. Horns blew from the Tsurani lines, and the attackers
withdrew.
Arutha became aware the sun had cleared the mountains to the east.
The morning had finally come. He surveyed the scene below and felt suddenly
more fatigued than he could ever remember. Turning slowly, he saw every man on
the wall was watching him. Then one of the soldiers shouted, “Hail, Arutha!
Hail, Prince of Crydee!”
Suddenly the castle was ringing with shouts as men chanted, “Arutha!
Arutha!”
To Gardan, Arutha asked, “Why?”
With a satisfied look the sergeant replied, “They saw you personally
take the fight to the Tsurani, Highness, or heard from others. They are
soldiers and expect certain things from a commander. They are now truly your
men, Highness.”
Arutha stood quietly as the cheers filled the castle. Then he raised
his hand and the courtyard fell silent. “You have done well. Crydee is served
aright by her soldiers.” He spoke to Gardan. “Change the watch upon the walls.
We may have little time to enjoy the victory.”
As if his words were an omen, a shout came from a guard atop the
nearest tower. “Highness, ‘ware the field.”
Arutha saw the Tsurani lines had been re-formed. Wearily he said,
‘Have they no limit?”
Instead of the expected attack, a single man walked from the Tsurani
line, apparently an officer by his crested helm. He pointed to the walls, and
the entire Tsurani line erupted in cheers. He walked farther, within bow range,
stopping several times to point at the wall His blue armor glinted in the
morning sun as the attackers cheered with his gestures toward the castle.
“A challenge?” said Gardan, watching the strange display as the man
showed his back, unmindful of personal danger, and walked back to his own
lines.
“No,” said Amos Trask, who came to stand next to Gardan “I think
they salute a brave enemy.” Amos shook his head slightly. “A strange people.”
Arutha said, “Shall we ever understand such men?”
Gardan put his hand upon Arutha’s shoulder. “I doubt it. Look, they
quit the field.”
The Tsurani were marching back toward their tents before the remains
of Crydee town. A few watchmen were left to observe the castle, but it was
clear the main force was being ordered to stand down again. Gardan said, “I
would have ordered another assault.” His voice betrayed his disbelief. “They
have to know we are near exhaustion. Why not press the attack?”
Amos said, “Who can say. Perhaps they, too, are tired.”
Arutha said, “This attacking through the night has some meaning I do
not understand.” He shook his head “In time we will know what they plot. Leave
a watch upon the walls, but have the men retire to the courtyard. It is
becoming clear they prefer not to attack during the day. Order food brought
from the kitchen, and water to bathe with.” Orders were passed, and men left
their posts, some sitting on the walks below the wall, too tired to trudge down
the steps. Others reached the courtyard and tossed aside their weapons, sitting
in the shade of the battlements while castle porters hurried among them with
buckets of fresh water. Arutha leaned against the wall. He spoke silently to
himself “They’ll be back.”
They came again that night.
18
SIEGE
Wounded men groaned at sunrise.
For the twelfth straight night the Tsurani had assaulted the castle,
only to retire at dawn. Gardan could not see any clear reason for the dangerous
night attacks. As he watched the Tsurani gathering up their dead, then
returning to their tents, he said, “They are strange. Their archers cannot fire
at the walls once the ladders are up for fear of hitting their own men. We have
no such problem, knowing everyone below is the enemy. I don’t understand these
men.”
Arutha sat numbly washing the blood and dirt from his face,
oblivious to the scene about him. He was too tired even to answer Gardan.
“Here,” a voice nearby said, and he pulled the damp cloth from his face to see
a proffered drinking cup. He took the cup and drained it in one long pull,
savoring the taste of strong wine.
Carline stood before him, wearing tunic and trousers, her sword
hanging at her side. “What are you doing here?” Arutha asked, fatigue making
his voice sound harsh in his own ears.
Carline’s manner was brisk. “Someone must carry water and food. With
every man on the walls all night long, who do you think is fit for duty in the
morning? Not that pitiful handful of porters who are too old for fighting, that
is certain.”
Arutha looked about and saw other women, ladies of the castle as
well as servants and fishwives, walking among the men, who thankfully took the
offered food and drink. He smiled his crooked smile. “How fare you?”
“Well enough. Still, sitting in the cellar is as difficult in its own
way as being on the wall, I judge. Each sound of battle that reaches us brings
one or another of the ladies to tears.” Her voice carried a tone of mild
disapproval. “They huddle like rabbits. Oh, it is so tiresome.” She stood
quietly for a moment, then asked, “Have you seen Roland?”
He looked about. “Last night for a time.” He covered his face in the
soothing wetness of the cloth. Pulling it away after a moment, he added, “Or
perhaps it was two nights past. I’ve lost track.” He pointed toward the wall nearest
the keep. “He should be over there somewhere. I put him in charge of the off
watch. He is responsible for guarding against a flank attack.”
Carline smiled She knew Roland would be chafing to get into the
fight, but with his responsibilities it would be unlikely unless the Tsurani
attacked on all sides. “Thank you, Arutha.”
Arutha feigned ignorance. “For what?”
She kneeled and kissed his wet cheek. “For knowing me better than I
know myself sometimes.” She stood and walked away.
Roland walked along the battlements, watching the distant forest
beyond the broad clearing that ran along the eastern wall of the castle. He
approached a guard standing next to an alarm bell and said, “Anything?”
“Nothing, Squire,”
Roland nodded. “Keep a watchful eye. This is the narrowest open area
before the wall. If they come against a second flank, this is where I would
expect the assault.”
The soldier said, “In truth, Squire. Why do they come only against
one wall, and why the strongest?”
Roland shrugged. “I don’t pretend to know. Perhaps to show contempt,
or bravery. Or for some alien reason.”
The guard came to attention and saluted. Carline had come silently
up behind them. Roland took her by the arm and hurried her along. “What do you
think you’re doing up here?” he said in ungentle tones.
Her look of relief at finding him alive and unhurt turned to one of
anger. “I came to see if you were all right,” she said defiantly.
Guiding her down the stairs to the courtyard below, he answered,
“We’re not so far removed from the forest a Tsurani bowman could not reduce the
Duke’s household by one. I’ll not explain to your father and brothers what my
reasons were for allowing you up there.”
“Oh! Is that your only reason? You don’t want to face Father.”
He smiled and his voice softened. “No. Of course not.”
She returned the smile. “I was worried.”
Roland sat upon the lower steps and plucked at some weeds growing
near the base of the stones, pulling them out and tossing them aside. “Little
reason for that. Arutha has seen I’ll not risk much.”
Placatingly, Carline said, “Still, this is an important post. If
they attack here, you’ll have to hold with a small number until reinforcements
come.”
“If they attack. Gardan came by yesterday, and he thinks they may
tire of this soon and dig in for a long siege, waiting for us to starve.”
She said, “More’s their hard luck, then. We’ve stores through the
winter, and they’ll find little to forage out there once the snows come.”
Playfully mocking, he said, “What have we here? A student of
tactics?”
She regarded him like an overtaxed teacher confronted with a
particularly slow student. “I listen, and I have my wits about me. Do you think
I do nothing but sit around waiting for you men to tell me what is occurring?
If I did, I’d know nothing.”
He put up his hands in sign of supplication. “I’m sorry, Carline You
are most definitely no one’s fool.” He stood and took her hand. “But you have
made me your fool.”
She squeezed his hand. “No, Roland, I have been the fool. It has
taken me almost three years to understand just how good a man you are. And how
good a friend.” She leaned over and kissed him lightly. He returned the kiss
with tenderness. “And more,” she added quietly.
“When this is over . . .” he began.
She placed her free hand over his lips. “Not now, Roland. Not now.”
He smiled his understanding “I’d best be back to the walls,
Carline.”
She kissed him again and left for the main courtyard and the work to
be done. He climbed back to the wall and resumed his vigil.
It was late afternoon when a guard shouted, “Squire! In the forest!”
Roland looked in the indicated direction and saw two figures sprinting across
the open ground. From the trees the shouts of men came, and the clamor of
battle.
Crydee bowmen raised their weapons, then Roland shouted, “Hold! It’s
Longbow!” To the guard next to him he said, “Bring ropes, quickly.”
Longbow and Garret reached the wall as the ropes were being lowered
and, as soon as they were secured, scrambled upward. When they were safely over
the walls, they sank exhaustedly behind the battlements. Waterskins were handed
the two foresters, who drank deeply.
“What now?” asked Roland.
Longbow gave him a lopsided smile. “We found another band of
travelers heading northward about thirty miles southeast of here and arranged
for them to visit with the Tsurani.”
Garret looked up at Roland with eyes darkly circled from fatigue. “A
band he calls it. Damn near five hundred moredhel moving in strength. Must have
been a full hundred chasing us through the woods the last two days.”
Roland said, “Arutha will be pleased. The Tsurani have hit us each
night since you left. We could do with a little diverting of their attentions.”
Longbow nodded. “Where’s the Prince?”
“At the west wall, where all the fighting’s been.”
Longbow stood and pulled the exhausted Garret to his feet. “Come
along. We’d better report.”
Roland instructed the guards to keep a sharp watch and followed the
two huntsmen. They found Arutha supervising the distribution of weapons to
those in need of replacing broken or dulled ones. Gardell, the smith, and his
apprentices gathered up those that were reparable and dumped them into a cart,
heading for the forge to begin work.
Longbow said, “Highness, another band of moredhel have come north. I
led them here, so the Tsurani could be too busy to attack tonight.”
Arutha said, “That is welcome news. Come, we’ll have a cup of wine,
and you can tell of what you saw.”
Longbow sent Garret off to the kitchen and followed Arutha and
Roland into the keep. The Prince sent word asking Gardan to join them in the
council room and, when they were all there, asked Longbow to recount his
travels.
Longbow drank deeply from the wine cup placed before him. “It was
touch and go for a while. The woods are thick with both Tsurani and moredhel.
And there are many signs they have little affection for one another. We counted
at least a hundred dead on both sides.”
Arutha looked at the other three men. “We know little of their ways,
but it seems foolish for them to travel so close to Crydee.”
Longbow shook his head. “They have little choice, Highness. The
Green Heart must be foraged clean, and they cannot return to their mountains
because of the Tsurani. The moredhel are making for the Northlands and won’t
risk passing near Elvandar. With the rest of the way blocked by the Tsurani
strength, their only path is through the forests nearby, then westward along
the river toward the coast. Once they reach the sea, they can turn northward
again. They must gain the Great Northern Mountains before winter to reach their
brothers in the Northlands safely.”
He drank the rest of his cup and waited while a servant refilled it.
“From all signs, nearly every moredhel in the south is making for the
Northlands. It looks as if over a thousand have already safely been by here.
How many more will come this way through the summer and fall, we cannot guess.”
He drank again. “The Tsurani will have to watch their eastern flank and would
do well to watch the south as well. The moredhel are starved and might chance a
raid into the Tsurani camp while the bulk of the army is thrown against the
walls of the castle. Should a three-way fight occur, it could get messy.”
“For the Tsurani,” said Gardan.
Martin hoisted his cup in salute. “For the Tsurani.”
Arutha said, “You’ve done well, Huntmaster.”
“Thank you, Highness.” He laughed. “I’d never thought to see the day
I’d welcome sight of the Dark Brotherhood in the forests of Crydee.”
Arutha drummed his fingers upon the table. “It will be another two
to three weeks before we can expect the armies from Tulan and Carse. If the
Dark Brothers harry the Tsurani enough, we might have some respite.” He looked
at Martin. “What occurs to the east?”
Longbow spread his hands upon the table “We couldn’t get close
enough to see much as we hurried past, but they are up to something. They’ve a
good number of men scattered throughout the woods from the edge of the clearing
back about a half mile. If it hadn’t been for the moredhel hot on our heels,
Garret and I might not have made it back to the walls.”
“I wish I knew what they were doing out there,” said Arutha “This
attacking only at night, it surely masks some trickery.”
Gardan said, “We’ll know soon enough, I fear.”
Arutha stood, and the others rose as well. “We have much to do in
any event. But if they do not come this night, we should all take advantage of
the rest. Order watches posted, and send the men back to the commons for sleep.
If I’m needed, I’ll be in my room.”
The others followed him from the council hall, and Arutha walked
slowly to his room, his fatigued mind trying to grasp what he knew were
important matters, but failing. He threw off only his armor and fell fully
clothed across his pallet. He was quickly asleep, but it was a troubled,
dream-filled slumber.
For a week no attacks came, as the Tsurani were cautious of the
migrating Brotherhood of the Dark Path. As Martin had foretold, the moredhel
were emboldened by hunger and had twice struck into the heart of the Tsurani
camp.
On the eighth afternoon after the first moredhel attack, the Tsurani
were again gathering on the field before the castle, their ranks once more
swelled by reinforcements from the east. Messages carried by pigeon between
Arutha and his father told of increased fighting along the eastern front as
well. Lord Borric speculated Crydee was being attacked by troops fresh from the
Tsurani homeworld, as there had been no reports of any troop movements along
his front. Other messages arrived with word of relief from Carse and Tulan.
Baron Tolburt’s soldiers had departed Tulan within two days of receiving
Arutha’s message, and his fleet would join with Baron Bellamy’s at Carse.
Depending upon the prevailing winds, it would be from one to two weeks before
the relief fleet arrived.
Arutha stood at his usual place upon the west wall, Martin Longbow
at his side. They watched the Tsurani taking position as the sun sank in the
west, a red beacon bathing the landscape in crimson.
“It seems,” said Arutha, “they mount a full attack tonight.”
Longbow said, “They’ve cleared the area of troublesome neighbors by
all appearances, at least for a time. The moredhel gained us a little time,
Highness, but no more.”
“I wonder how many will reach the Northlands?”
Longbow shrugged. “One in five perhaps From the Green Heart to the
Northlands is a long, difficult journey under the best of circumstances. Now .
. .” He let his words trail off.
Gardan came up the stairs from the courtyard. “Highness, the tower
watch reports the Tsurani are in formation.”
As he spoke, the Tsurani sounded their battle calls and began to
advance. Arutha drew his sword and gave the order for the catapults to fire.
Bowmen followed, unleashing a storm of arrows upon the attackers, but still the
Tsurani came.
Through the night, wave after wave of brightly armored aliens threw
themselves at the west wall of Castle Crydee. Most died on the field before the
wall, or at its base, but a few managed to crest the battlements. They, too, died.
Still, more came.
Six times the Tsurani wave had broken upon the defenses of Crydee,
and now they prepared for a seventh assault. Arutha, covered in dirt and blood,
directed the disposition of rested troops along the wall Gardan looked to the
east. “If we hold one more time, the dawn will be here. Then we should have
some respite,” he said, his voice thick with fatigue.
“We will hold,” answered Arutha, his own voice sounding just as
tired in his ears as Gardan’s.
“Arutha?”
Arutha saw Roland and Amos coming up the stairs, with another man
behind. “What now?” asked the Prince.
Roland said, “We can see no activity on the other walls, but there
is something here you should see.”
Arutha recognized the other man, Lewis, the castle’s Rathunter. It
was his responsibility to keep vermin from the keep. He tenderly held something
in his hands.
Arutha looked closely: it was a ferret, twitching slightly in the
firelight. “Highness,” said Lewis, his voice thick with emotion, “it’s—”
“What, man?” said Arutha impatiently. With attack about to begin, he
had little time to mourn a lost pet.
Roland spoke, for Lewis was obviously overcome at the loss of his
ferret. “The Rathunter’s ferrets didn’t return two days ago. This one crawled
into the storage room behind the kitchen sometime since Lewis found it there a
few minutes ago.”
In choked tones, Lewis said, “They’re all well trained, sire. If
they didn’t come back, it’s because something kept them from returnin’. This
poor lad’s been stepped on. His back’s broken. He must’ve crawled for hours to
get back.”
Arutha said, “I fail to see the significance of this.”
Roland gripped the Prince’s arm. “Arutha, he hunts them in the rat
tunnels under the castle.”
Comprehension dawned upon Arutha. He turned to Gardan and said,
“Sappers! The Tsurani must be digging under the east wall.”
Gardan said, “That would explain the constant attacks upon the west
wall—to draw us away.”
Arutha said, “Gardan, take command of the walls. Amos, Roland, come
with me.”
Arutha ran down the steps and through the courtyard. He shouted for
a group of soldiers to follow and bring shovels. They reached the small
courtyard behind the keep, and Arutha said, “We’ve got to find that tunnel and collapse
it.”
Amos said, “Your walls are slanted outward at the plinth. They’ll
recognize they can’t fire the timbers of the tunnels to bring it down to make a
breach. They’ll be trying to get a force inside the castle grounds or into the
keep.”
Roland looked alarmed. “Carline! She and the other ladies are in the
cellars.”
Arutha said, “Take some men and go to the cellars.” Roland ran off.
Arutha fell to his knees and placed his ear on the ground. The others followed
his example, moving around, listening for sounds of digging from below.
Carline sat nervously next to the Lady Marna. The fat former
governess made a show of calmly attending to her needlepoint despite the
rustling and stirring of the other women in the cellar. The sounds of battle
from the walls came to them as faint, distant echoes, muted by the thick walls
of the keep. Now there was an equally unnerving quiet.
“Oh! To be sitting here like a caged bird,” said Carline.
“The walls are no place for a lady,” came the retort from Lady
Marna.
Carline stood. As she paced the room, she said, “I can tie bandages
and carry water. All of us could.”
The other ladies of the court looked at one another as if the
Princess had been bereft of her senses. None of them could imagine subjecting
herself to such a trial.
“Highness, please,” said Lady Mama, “you should wait quietly. There
will be much to do when the battle’s over. Now you should rest.”
Carline began a retort, then stopped. She held up her hand. “Do you
hear something?”
The others stopped their movement, and all listened. From the floor
came a faint tapping sound. Carline knelt upon the flagstone. “My lady, this is
most unseemly,” began the Lady Marna.
Carline stopped the complaint with an imperious wave of her hand
“Quiet!” She placed her ear upon the flagstones. “There is something . . .”
Lady Glynis shuddered. “Probably rats scurrying about. There are
hundreds of them down here.” Her expression showed this revelation was about as
unpleasant a fact as imaginable.
“Be quiet!” ordered Carline.
There came a cracking sound from the floor, and Carline leaped to
her feet. Her sword came out of its scabbard as a fracture appeared in the
stones of the floor. A chisel point broke through the flagstone, and suddenly
the upturned stone was pushed up and outward.
Ladies screamed as a hole appeared in the floor. A startled face
popped into the light, then a Tsurani warrior, hair filthy from the dirt of the
tunnel, tried to scramble upward Carline’s sword took him in the throat as she
shouted, “Get out! Call the guards!”
Most of the women sat frozen in terror, refusing to move. Lady Marna
heaved her massive bulk from the bench upon which she sat and gave a shrieking
town girl a backhanded slap. The girl looked at Lady Marna with wide-eyed
fright for an instant, then broke toward the steps. As if at a signal, the
others ran after, screaming for help.
Carline watched as the Tsurani slowly fell back, blocking the hole
in the floor. Other cracks appeared around the hole, and hands pulled pieces of
flagstone downward into the ever-widening entrance. Lady Marna was halfway to
the steps when she saw Carline standing her ground. “Princess!” she shrieked.
Another man came scrambling upward, and Carline delivered a death
blow to him. She was then forced back as the stones near her feet collapsed.
The Tsurani had terminated their tunnel in a wide hole and were now broadening
the entrance, pulling down stones so that they could swarm out, overwhelming
any defenders.
A man fought upward, pushing Carline to one side, allowing another to
start his climb upward Lady Mama ran back to her former ward and grabbed up a
large piece of loose stone, which she brought crashing down on the unhelmeted
skull of the second man. Grunts and strange-sounding words came from the tunnel
mouth as the man fell back upon those behind.
Carline ran the other man through and kicked another in the face.
“Princess!” cried Lady Marna. “We must flee!”
Carline didn’t answer. She dodged a blow at her feet delivered by a
Tsurani who then sprang nimbly out of the hole. Carline thrust and the man
dodged. Another came scrambling out of the hole, and the Lady Marna shrieked.
The first man turned reflexively at the sound, and Carline drove her
sword into his side. The second man raised a serrated sword to strike Lady
Marna, and Carline sprang for him, thrusting her sword point into his neck. The
man shuddered and fell, his fingers releasing their grip on the sword Carline
grabbed Lady Marna’s arm and propelled her toward the steps.
Tsurani came swarming out of the hole, and Carline turned at the
bottom of the stairs Lady Marna stood behind her beloved Princess, not willing
to leave. The Tsurani approached wanly. The girl had killed enough of their
companions to warrant their respect and caution.
Suddenly a body crashed past the girl as Roland charged into the
Tsurani, soldiers of the keep hurrying behind. The young Squire was in a frenzy
to protect the Princess, and he boiled over three Tsurani in his rush. They
tumbled backward, disappearing into the hole, Roland with them.
As the Squire vanished from view, Carline screamed, “Roland!” Other
guards leaped past the Princess to engage the Tsurani who still stood in the
cellar, and more jumped boldly into the hole. Grunts and cries, shouts and
oaths rang from the tunnel.
A guard took Carline by the arm and began to drag her up the stairs.
She followed, helpless in the man’s strong grip, crying, “Roland!”
Grunts of exertion filled the dark tunnel as the soldiers from
Crydee dug furiously. Arutha had found the Tsurani tunnel and had ordered a
shaft sunk near it. They were now digging a countertunnel to intercept the
Tsurani, near the wall. Amos had agreed with Arutha’s judgment that they needed
to force the Tsurani back beyond the wall before collapsing the tunnel, denying
them any access to the castle.
A shovel broke through, and men began frantically clearing away
enough dirt to allow passage into the Tsurani tunnel. Boards were hastily
jammed into place, jerry-rigged supports, preventing the earth above from
caving in on them.
The men from Crydee surged into the low tunnel and entered a
frantic, terrible melee. Tsurani warriors and Roland’s squad of soldiers were
locked in a desperate hand-to-hand struggle in the dark. Men fought and died in
the gloom under the earth. It was impossible to bring order to the fray, with
the fighting in such confinement. An overturned lantern flickered faintly,
providing little illumination.
Arutha said to a soldier behind, “Get more men!”
“At once, Highness!” answered the soldier, turning toward the shaft.
Arutha entered the Tsurani tunnel. It was only five feet high, so he
moved stooped over. It was fairly wide, with enough room for three men to
negotiate closely. Arutha stepped on something soft, which groaned in pain. He
continued past the dying man, toward the sound of fighting.
It was a scene from his worst nightmare, faintly lit by widely
spaced torches. With little room only the first three men could engage the
enemy at any one point. Arutha called out, “Knives!” and dropped his rapier. In
close quarters the shorter weapons would prove more effective.
He came upon two men struggling in the darkness and grabbed at one.
His hand closed on chitinous armor, and he plunged his knife into the man’s
exposed neck. Jerking the now lifeless body off the other man, he saw a jam of
bodies a few feet away, where Crydee and Tsurani soldiers pressed against one
another. Curses and cries filled the tunnel, and the damp earth smell was mixed
with the odor of blood and excrement.
Arutha fought madly, blindly, lashing out at barely seen foes. His
own fear kept threatening to overcome him as primitive awareness cried for him
to quit the tunnel and the threatening earth above. He forced his panic down
and continued to lead the attack on the sappers.
A familiar voice grunted and cursed at his side, and Arutha knew
Amos Trask was near. “Another thirty feet, lad!” he shouted.
Arutha took the man at his word, having lost all sense of distance.
The men of Crydee pressed onward, and many died killing the resisting Tsurani.
Time became a blur and the fight a dim montage of images.
Abruptly Amos shouted, “Straw!” and bundles of dry straw were passed
forward “Torches!” he cried, and flaming torches were passed up. He piled the
straw near a latticework of timbers and drove the torch into the pile. Flames
burst upward, and he yelled, “Clear the tunnel!”
The fighting stopped. Every man, whether of Crydee or Tsurani,
turned and fled the flames. The sappers knew the tunnel was lost without means
to quench the flames and scrambled for their lives.
Choking smoke filled the tunnel, and men began to cough as they
cleared the cramped quarters. Arutha followed Amos, and they missed the turn to
the countertunnel, coming out in the cellar. Guardsmen, dirty and bloody, were
collapsing on the stones of the cellar, gasping for air. A dull rumble sounded,
and with a crash, a blast of air and smoke blew out of the hole. Amos grinned,
his face streaked with dirt. “The timbers collapsed. The tunnel’s sealed.”
Arutha nodded dumbly, exhausted and still reeling from the smoke. A
cup of water was handed to him, and he drank deeply, soothing his burning
throat.
Carline appeared before him. “Are you all right?” she asked, concern
on her face. He nodded. She looked around. “Where’s Roland?”
Arutha shook his head. “It was impossible to see down there. Was he
in the tunnel?”
She bit her lower lip. Tears welled up in her blue eyes as she
nodded Arutha said, “He might have cleared the tunnel and come up in the
courtyard. Let us see.”
He got to his feet, and Amos and Carline followed him up the stairs.
They left the keep, and a soldier informed him the attack on the wall had been
repulsed. Arutha acknowledged the report and continued around the keep until
they came to the shaft he had ordered dug Soldiers lay on the grass of the
yard, coughing and spitting, trying to clear their lungs of the burning smoke.
The air hung heavy with an acrid haze as fumes from the fire continued to
billow from the shaft. Another rumble sounded, and Arutha could feel it through
the soles of his boots. Near the wall a depression had appeared where the
tunnel had fallen below. “Squire Roland!” Arutha shouted.
“Here, Highness,” came an answering shout from a soldier.
Carline dashed past Arutha and reached Roland before the Prince. The
Squire lay upon the ground, tended by the soldier who answered. His eyes were
closed and his skin pale, and blood seeped from his side. The soldier said, “I
had to drag him along the last few yards, Highness. He was out on his feet. I
thought it might be smoke until I saw the wound.”
Carline cradled Roland’s head, while Arutha first cut the binding
straps of Roland’s breastplate, then tore away the undertunic. After a moment
Arutha sat back upon his heels. “It’s a shallow wound He’ll be all right.”
“Oh, Roland,” Carline said softly.
Roland’s eyes opened and he grinned weakly. His voice was tired, but
he forced a cheery note. “What’s this? You’d think I’d been killed.”
Carline said, “You heartless monster.” She gently shook him but
didn’t release her hold as she smiled down at him. “Playing tricks at a time
like this!”
He winced as he tried to move. “Ooh, that hurts.” She placed a
restraining hand upon his shoulder.
“Don’t try to move. We must bind the wound,” she said, caught
between relief and anger.
Nestling his head into her lap, he smiled. “I’d not move for half
your father’s Duchy.”
She looked at him in irritation. “What were you doing throwing
yourself upon the enemy like that?”
Roland looked genuinely embarrassed. “In truth, I tripped coming
down the steps and couldn’t stop myself.”
She placed her cheek against his forehead as Arutha and Amos
laughed. “You are a liar. And I do love you,” she said softly.
Arutha stood and took Amos in tow, leaving Roland and Carline to
each other. Reaching the corner, they encountered the former Tsurani slave,
Charles, carrying water for the wounded. Arutha halted the man.
He stood with a yoke across his shoulders holding two large water
buckets. He was bleeding from several small wounds and was covered with mire.
Arutha said, “What happened to you?”
With a broad smile, Charles said, “Good fight. Jump in hole. Charles
good warrior.”
The former Tsurani slave was pale and weaved a little as he stood
there. Arutha remained speechless, then indicated he should continue his work.
Happily Charles hurried along. Arutha said to Amos, “What do you make of that?”
Amos chuckled. “I’ve had many dealings with rogues and scoundrels,
Highness. I know little of these Tsurani, but I think that’s a man to count
on.”
Arutha watched as Charles dispensed water to the other soldiers,
ignoring his own wounds and fatigue. “That was no mean thing, jumping into the
shaft without orders. I’ll have to consider Longbow’s offer to put that man in
service.”
They continued on their way, Arutha supervising the care of the
wounded, while Amos was put in charge of the final destruction of the tunnel.
When dawn came, the courtyard was still, and only a patch of raw
earth, where the shaft had been filled in, and a long depression running from
the keep to the outer wall showed anything unusual had occurred in the night.
Fannon hobbled along the wall, favoring his right side. The wound to
his back was almost healed, but he was still unable to walk without aid. Father
Tully supported the Swordmaster as they came to where the others waited.
Arutha gave the Swordmaster a smile and gently took him by the other
arm, helping Tully hold him. Gardan, Amos Trask, Martin Longbow, and a group of
soldiers stood nearby.
“What’s this?” asked Fannon, his display of gruff anger a welcome
sight to those on the wall. “Have you so little wits among you that you must
haul me from my rest to take charge?”
Arutha pointed out to sea. On the horizon dozens of small flecks
could be seen against the blue of sea and sky, flashes of brilliant white
glinting as the morning sun was caught and reflected back to them. “The fleet
from Carse and Tulan approaches the south beaches.”
He indicated the Tsurani camp in the distance, bustling with
activity. “Today we’ll drive them out. By this time tomorrow we’ll clear this
entire area of the aliens. We’ll harry them eastward, allowing them no respite.
It will be a long time before they’ll come in strength again.”
Quietly Fannon said, “I trust you are right, Arutha.” He stood
without speaking for a time, then said, “I have heard reports of your command,
Arutha. You’ve done well. You are a credit to your father, and to Crydee.”
Finding himself moved by the Swordmaster’s praise, Arutha tried to
make light, but Fannon interrupted. “No, you have done all that was needed, and
more. You were right. With these people we must not be cautious. We must carry
the struggle to them.” He sighed. “I am an old man, Arutha. It is time I retired
and left warfare to the young.”
Tully made a derisive noise. “You’re not old. I was already a priest
when you were still in swaddling.”
Fannon laughed with the others at the obvious untruth of the
statement, and Arutha said, “You must know, if I’ve done well, it is because of
your teachings.”
Tully gripped Fannon’s elbow. “You may not be an old man, but you
are a sick one. Back to the keep with you. You’ve had enough gadding about. You
can begin walking regularly tomorrow. In a few weeks you’ll be charging about,
shouting orders at everyone like your old self.”
Fannon managed a slight smile and allowed Tully to lead him back
down the stairs. When he was gone, Gardan said, “The Swordmaster’s right,
Highness. You’ve done your father proud.”
Arutha watched the approaching ships, his angular features fixed in
an expression of quiet reflection. Softly he said, “If I have done well, it is
because I have had the aid of good men, many no longer with us.” He took a deep
breath, then continued, “You have played a great part in our withstanding this
siege, Gardan, and you, Martin.”
Both men smiled and voiced their thanks. “And you, pirate.” Arutha
grinned. “You’ve also played a great part. We are deeply in your debt.”
Amos Trask tried to look modest and failed. “Well, Highness, I was
merely protecting my own skin as well as everyone else’s.” He then returned
Arutha’s grin. “It was a rousing good fight.”
Arutha looked toward the sea once more. “Let us hope we can soon be
done with rousing good fights.” He left the walls and started down the stairs.
“Give orders to prepare for the attack.”
Carline stood atop the south tower of the keep, her arm around
Roland’s waist. The Squire was pale from his wound, but otherwise in hale
spirits. “We’ll be done with the siege, now the fleet’s arrived,” he said,
clinging tightly to the Princess.
“It has been a nightmare.”
He smiled down at her, gazing into her blue eyes. “Not entirely.
There has been some compensation.”
Softly she said, “You are a rogue,” then kissed him. When they
separated, she said, “I wonder if your foolish bravery was nothing more than a
ploy to gain my sympathies.”
Feigning a wince, he said, “Lady, I am wounded.”
She clung to him. “I was so worried about you, not knowing if you
lay dead in the tunnel. I . . .” Her voice dropped off as her gaze strayed to
the north tower of the keep, opposite the one upon which they stood. She could
see the window upon the second floor, the window to Pug’s room. The funny
little metal chimney, which would constantly belch smoke when he was at his
studies, was now only a mute reminder of just how empty the tower stood.
Roland followed her gaze. “I know,” he said. “I miss him, too. And
Tomas as well.”
She sighed. “That seems such a long time ago, Roland. I was a girl
then, a girl with a girl’s notion of what life and love were about.” Softly she
said, “Some love comes like a wind off the sea, while others grow slowly from
the seeds of friendship and kindness. Someone once told me that.”
“Father Tully. He was right.” He squeezed her waist. “Either way, as
long as you feel, you live.”
She watched as the soldiers of the garrison prepared for the coming
sortie. “Will this end it?”
“No, they will come again. This war is fated to last a long time.”
They stood together, taking comfort in the simple fact of each
other’s existence.
Kasumi of the Shinzawai, Force Leader of the Armies of the Kanazawai
Clan, of the Blue Wheel Party, watched the enemy upon the castle wall.
He could barely make out the figures walking along the battlements,
but he knew them well. He could not put names to any, but they were each as
familiar to him as his own men. The slender youth who commanded, who fought
like a demon, who brought order to the fray when needed, he was there. The
black giant would not be too far from his side, the one who stood like a
bulwark against every attack upon the walls. And the green-clad one, who could
race through the woods like an apparition, taunting Kasumi’s men by the freedom
with which he passed their lines, he would be there as well. No doubt the
broad-shouldered one was nearby, the laughing man with the curved sword and
maniacal grin. Kasumi quietly saluted them all as valiant foemen, even if only
barbarians.
Chingari of the Omechkel, the Senior Strike Leader, came to stand at
Kasumi’s side. “Force Leader, the barbarian fleet is nearing. They will land
their men within the hour.”
Kasumi regarded the scroll he held in his hand. It had been read a
dozen times since arriving at dawn. He glanced at it one more time, again studying
the chop at the bottom, the crest of his father, Kamatsu, Lord of the
Shinzawai. Silently accepting his personal fate, Kasumi said, “Order for march.
Break camp at once and begin assembling the warriors. We are commanded to
return to Kelewan. Send the trailbreakers ahead.”
Chingari’s voice betrayed his bitterness. “Now the tunnel is
destroyed, do we quit so meekly?”
“There is no shame, Chingari. Our clan has withdrawn itself from the
Alliance for War, as have the other clans of the Blue Wheel Party. The War
Party is once more alone in the conduct of this invasion.”
With a sigh Chingari said, “Again politics interferes with conquest.
It would have been a glorious victory to take such a fine castle.”
Kasumi laughed. “True.” He watched the activities of the castle.
“They are the best we have ever faced. We already learn much from them. Castle
walls slanted outward at the plinth, preventing sappers from collapsing them,
this is a new and clever thing. And those beasts they ride. Ayee, how they
move, like Thьn racing across the tundras of home. I will somehow gain some of
those animals. Yes, these people are more than simple barbarians.”
After a moment’s more reflection, he said, “Have our scouts and
trailbreakers keep alert for signs of the forest devils.”
Chingari spat. “The foul ones move in great number northward once
more. They’re as much a dagger in our side as the barbarians.”
Kasumi said, “When this world is conquered, we shall have to see to
these creatures. The barbarians make strong slaves. Some may even prove
valuable enough to make free vassals who will swear loyalty to our houses, but
those foul ones, they must be obliterated.” Kasumi fell silent for a while.
Then he said, “Let the barbarians think we flee in terror from their fleet.
This place is now a matter for the clans remaining in the War Party. Let Tasio
of the Minwanabi worry about a garrison at his rear should he move eastward.
Until the Kanazawai once more realign themselves in the High Council, we are
done with this war. Order the march.”
Chingari saluted his commander and left, and Kasumi considered the
implications of the message from his father. He knew the withdrawal of all the
forces of the Blue Wheel Party would prove a major setback for the Warlord and
his party. The repercussions of such a move would be felt throughout the Empire
for some years to come. There would be no smashing victories for the Warlord
now, for with the departure of those forces loyal to the Kanazawai lords and
the other clans of the Blue Wheel, other clans would reconsider before joining
in an all-out push. No, thought Kasumi, it was a bold but dangerous move by his
father and the other lords. This war would now be prolonged. The Warlord was
robbed of a spectacular conquest; he was now overextended with too few men
holding too much land. Without new allies he would remain unable to press
forward with the war. His choices were now down to two: withdraw from Midkemia
and risk humiliation before the High Council, or sit and wait, hoping for
another shift in politics at home.
It was a stunning move on behalf of the Blue Wheel. But the risk was
great. And the risk from the next series of moves in the Game of the Council
would be even more dangerous. Silently he said: O my father, we are now firmly
committed to the Great Game. We risk much: our family, our clan, our honor, and
perhaps even the Empire itself.
Crumbling the scroll, he tossed it into a nearby brazier, and when
it was totally consumed by flame, he put aside thoughts of risk and walked back
toward his tent.
BOOK II
MILAMBER AND THE VALHERU
We were, fair queen,
Two lads
that thought there was no more behind
But such a
day to-morrow as to-day,
And to be
boy eternal.
—SHAKESPEARE, The Winter’s Tale
19
SLAVE
The dying slave lay screaming.
The day was unmercifully hot. The other slaves went about their
work, ignoring the sound as much as possible. Life in the work camp was cheap,
and it did no good to dwell on the fate that awaited so many. The dying man had
been bitten by a relli, a snakelike swamp creature. Its venom was slow-acting
and painful; short of magic, there was no cure.
Suddenly there was silence. Pug looked over to see a Tsurani guard
wipe off his sword. A hand fell on Pug’s shoulder. Laurie’s voice whispered in
his ear, “Looks like our venerable overseer was disturbed by the sound of
Toffston’s dying.”
Pug tied a coil of rope securely around his waist. “At least it
ended quickly.” He turned to the tall blond singer from the Kingdom city of
Tyr-Sog and said, “Keep a sharp eye out. This one’s old and may be rotten.”
Without another word Pug scampered up the bole of the ngaggi tree, a firlike
swamp tree the Tsurani harvested for wood and resins. With few metals, the Tsurani
had become clever in finding substitutes. The wood of this tree could be worked
like paper, then dried to an incredible hardness, useful in fashioning a
hundred things. The resins were used to laminate woods and cure hides. Properly
cured hides could produce a suit of leather armor as tough as Midkemian
chainmail, and laminated wooden weapons were nearly the match of Midkemian
steel.
Four years in the swamp camp had hardened Pug’s body. His sinewy
muscles strained as he climbed the tree. His skin had been tanned deeply by the
harsh sun of the Tsurani homeworld. His face was covered by a slave’s beard.
Pug reached the first large branches and looked down at his friend.
Laurie stood knee-deep in the murky water, absently swatting at the insects
that plagued them while they worked. Pug liked Laurie. The troubadour had no
business being here, but then he’d had no business tagging along with a patrol
in the hope of seeing Tsurani soldiers, either. He said he had wanted material
for ballads that would make him famous throughout the Kingdom. He had seen more
than he had hoped for. The patrol had ridden into a major Tsurani offensive,
and Laurie had been captured. He had come to this camp over four months ago,
and he and Pug had quickly become friends.
Pug continued his climb, keeping one eye always searching for the
dangerous tree dwellers of Kelewan. Reaching the most likely place for a
topping, Pug froze as he caught a glimpse of movement. He relaxed when he saw
it was only a needier, a creature whose protection was its resemblance to a
clump of ngaggi needles. It scurried away from the presence of the human and
made the short jump to the branch of a neighboring tree. Pug made another
survey and started tying his ropes. His job was to cut away the tops of the
huge trees, making the fall less dangerous to those below.
Pug took several cuts at the bark, then felt the edge of his wooden
ax bite into the softer pulp beneath. A faint pungent odor greeted his careful
sniffing. Swearing, he called down to Laurie, “This one’s rotten. Tell the
overseer.”
He waited, looking out over the tops of trees. All around, strange
insects and birdlike creatures flew. In the four years he had been a slave on
this world, he had not grown used to the appearance of these life-forms. They
were not all that different from those on Midkemia, but it was the similarities
as much as the differences that kept reminding him this was not his home. Bees
should be yellow-and-black-striped, not bright red. Eagles shouldn’t have
yellow bands on their wings, nor hawks purple. These creatures were not bees,
eagles, or hawks, but the resemblance was striking. Pug found it easier to accept
the stranger creatures of Kelewan than these. The six-legged needra, the
domesticated beast of burden that looked like some sort of bovine with two
extra stumpy legs, or the cho-ja, the insectoid creature who served the Tsurani
and could speak their language: these he had come to find familiar. But each
time he glimpsed a creature from the corner of his eye and turned, expecting it
to be Midkemian only to find it was not, then the despair would strike.
Laurie’s voice brought him from his reverie. “The overseer comes.”
Pug swore. If the overseer had to get himself dirty by wading in the
water, then he would be in a foul mood—which could mean beatings, or a
reduction in the chronically meager food. He would already be angered by the
delay in the cutting. A family of burrowers-—beaverlike six-legged
creatures—had made themselves at home in the roots of the great trees. They
would gnaw the tender roots, and the trees would sicken and die. The soft,
pulpy wood would turn sour, then watery, and after a while the tree would
collapse from within. Several burrower tunnels had been poisoned, but the
damage had already been done to the trees.
A rough voice, swearing mightily while its owner splashed through
the swamp, announced the arrival of the overseer, Nogamu. He himself was a
slave, but he had attained the highest rank a slave could rise to, and while he
could never hope to be free, he had many privileges and could order soldiers or
freemen placed under his command. A young soldier came walking behind, a look
of mild amusement on his face. He was clean-shaven in the manner of a Tsurani
freeman, and as he looked up at Pug, the slave could get a good look at him. He
had the high cheekbones and nearly black eyes that so many Tsurani possessed.
His dark eyes caught sight of Pug, and he seemed to nod slightly. His blue
armor was of a type unknown to Pug, but with the strange Tsurani military
organization, that was not surprising.Even family, demesne, area, town, city,
and province appeared to have its own army. How they all related one to another
within the Empire was beyond Pug’s understanding.
The overseer stood at the base of the tree, his short robe held
above the water. He growled like the bear he resembled and shouted up at Pug,
“What’s this about another rotten tree?”
Pug spoke the Tsurani language better than any Midkemian in the
camp, for he had been there longer than all but a few old Tsurani slaves. He
shouted down, “It smells of rot. We should rerig another and leave this one
alone, Slave Master.”
The overseer shook his fist. “You are all lazy. There is nothing
wrong with this tree. It is fine. You only want to keep from working. Now cut
it!”
Pug sighed. There was no arguing with the Bear, as all the Midkemian
slaves called Nogamu. He was obviously upset about something, and the slaves
would pay the price. Pug started hacking through the upper section, and it soon
fell to the ground. The smell of rot was thick, and Pug removed the ropes
quickly. Just as the last length was coiled around his waist, a splitting sound
came from directly in front of him. “It falls!” he shouted down to the slaves
standing in the water below. Without hesitation they all ran. The cry of
“falls” was never ignored.
The bole of the tree was splitting down the middle now that the top
had been cut away. While this was not common, if a tree was far enough gone for
the pulp to have lost its strength, any flaw in the bark could cause it to
split under its own weight. The tree’s branches would pull the halves away from
each other. Had Pug been tied to the bole, the ropes would have cut him in half
before they snapped.
Pug gauged the direction of the fall, then as the half he stood upon
started to move, he launched himself away from it. He hit the water flat, back
first, trying to let the two feet of water break his fall as much as possible.
The blow from the water was immediately followed by the harder impact with the
ground. The bottom was mostly mud, so there was little damage done. The air in
his lungs exploded from his mouth when he struck, and his senses reeled for a
moment. He retained enough presence of mind to sit up and gasp a deep lungful
of air.
Suddenly a heavy weight hit him across the stomach, knocking the
wind from him and pushing his head back underwater. He struggled to move and
found a large branch across his stomach. He could barely get his face out of
the water to get air His lungs burned, and he breathed without control. Water
came pouring down his windpipe, and he started to choke. Coughing and
sputtering, he tried to keep calm but felt panic rise within him. He
frantically pushed at the weight across him but couldn’t move it.
Abruptly he found his head above water; Laurie said, “Spit, Pug! Get
the muck out of your lungs, or you’ll get lung fever.”
Pug coughed and spit. With Laurie holding his head, he could catch
his breath.
Laurie shouted, “Grab this branch. I’ll pull him out from under.”
Several slaves splashed over, sweat beading their bodies. They
reached underwater and seized the branch. Heaving, they managed to move it
slightly, but Laurie couldn’t drag Pug out.
“Bring axes, we’ll have to cut the branch from the tree.”
Other slaves were starting to bring axes over when Nogamu shouted,
“No. Leave him. We have no time for this. There are trees to cut.”
The overseer crossed over and struck Laurie across the face with a
lash. It cut deep into the singer’s cheek, but he didn’t let go of his friend’s
head. “Back to work, slave. You’ll be beaten tonight for speaking to me that
way. There are others who can top. Now, let him go!” He struck Laurie again.
Laurie winced, but held Pug’s head above water.
Nogamu raised his lash for a third blow, but was halted by a voice
from behind. “Cut the slave from under the branch.” Laurie saw the speaker was
the young soldier who had accompanied the slave master. The overseer whirled
about, unaccustomed to having his orders questioned. When he saw who had
spoken, he bit back the words that were on his lips. Bowing his head, he said,
“My lord’s will.”
He signaled for the slaves with the axes to cut Pug loose, and in
short order Pug was out from under the branch. Laurie carried him over to where
the young soldier stood. Pug coughed the last water from his lungs and gasped,
“I thank the master for my life.”
The man said nothing, but when the overseer approached, directed his
remarks to him. “The slave was right, and you were not. The tree was rotten It
is not proper for you to punish him for your bad judgment and ill temper I
should have you beaten, but will not spare the time for it. The work goes
slowly, and my father is displeased.”
Nogamu bowed his head. “I lose much face in my lord’s sight. May I
have his permission to kill myself?”
“No. It is too much honor. Return to work.”
The overseer’s face grew red in silent shame and rage. Raising his
lash, he pointed at Laurie and Pug. “You two, back to work.”
Laurie stood, and Pug tried. His knees were wobbly from his near
drowning, but he managed to stand after a few attempts.
“These two shall be excused work the rest of the day,” the young
lord said. “This one”—he pointed to Pug—“is of little use. The other must dress
those cuts you gave him, or festering will start.” He turned to a guard. “Take
them back to camp and see to their needs.”
Pug was grateful, not so much for himself as for Laurie. With a
little rest, Pug could have returned to work, but an open wound in the swamp
was a death warrant as often as not. Infections came quickly in this hot, dirty
place, and there were few ways of dealing with them.
They followed the guard. As they left, Pug could see the slave
master watching them with naked hatred in his eyes.
There was a creaking of floorboards, and Pug came instantly awake
His slave-bred wariness told him that the sound didn’t belong in the hut during
the dead of night.
Through the gloom, footfalls could be heard coming closer, then they
stopped at the foot of his pallet. From the next pallet, he could hear Laurie’s
sharp intake of breath, and he knew the minstrel was awake also. Probably half
the slaves had been awakened by the intruder. The stranger hesitated over
something, and Pug waited, tense with uncertainty. There was a grunt, and
without hesitation Pug rolled off his mat. A weight came crashing down, and Pug
could hear a dull thud as a dagger struck where his chest had been only moments
before. Suddenly the room exploded with activity. Slaves were shouting and
could be heard running for the door.
Pug felt hands reach for him in the dark, and a sharp pain exploded
across his chest. He reached blindly for his assailant and grappled with him
for the blade. Another slash, and his right hand was cut across the palm.
Abruptly the attacker stopped moving, and Pug became aware that a third body
was atop the would-be assassin.
Soldiers rushed into the hut, carrying lanterns, and Pug could see
Laurie lying across the still body of Nogamu. The Bear was still breathing, but
from the way the dagger protruded from his ribs, not for long.
The young soldier who had saved Pug’s and Laurie’s lives entered,
and the others made way for him. He stood over the three combatants and simply
asked, “Is he dead?”
The overseer’s eyes opened, and in a faint whisper he said, “I live,
lord. But I die by the blade.” A weak but defiant smile showed on his
sweat-drenched face.
The young soldier’s expression betrayed no emotion, but his eyes
looked as if ablaze. “I think not,” he said softly. He turned to two of the
soldiers in the room “Take him outside at once and hang him. There will be no
honors for his clan to sing. Leave the body there for the insects. It shall be
a warning that I am not to be disobeyed. Go.”
The dying man’s face paled, and his lips quivered. “No, master. I
pray, leave me to die by the blade. A few minutes longer.” Bloody foam appeared
at the corner of his mouth.
Two husky soldiers reached down for Nogamu and, with little thought
for his pain, dragged him outside. He could be heard wailing the entire way.
The amount of strength left in his voice was amazing, as if his fear of the
rope had awakened some deep reserve.
They stood in frozen tableau until the sound was cut off in a
strangled cry. The young officer then turned to Pug and Laurie. Pug sat, blood
running from a long, shallow gash across his chest. He held his injured hand in
the other. It was deeply cut, and his fingers wouldn’t move.
“Bring your wounded friend,” the young soldier commanded Laurie.
Laurie helped Pug to his feet, and they followed the officer out of
the slave hut. He led them across the compound to his own quarters and ordered
them to enter. Once inside, he instructed a guard to send for the camp
physician. He had them stand in silence until the physician arrived. He was an
old Tsurani, dressed in the robes of one of their gods —which one the
Midkemians couldn’t tell. He inspected Pug’s wounds and judged the chest wound
superficial. The hand, he said, would be another matter.
“The cut is deep, and the muscles and tendons have been cut. It will
heal, but there will be a loss of movement and little strength for gripping. He
most likely will be fit for only light duty.”
The soldier nodded, a peculiar expression on his face: a mixture of
disgust and impatience. “Very well. Dress the wounds and leave us.”
The physician set about cleaning the wounds. He took a score of stitches
in the hand, bandaged it, admonished Pug to keep it clean, and left. Pug
ignored the pain, easing his mind with an old mental exercise.
After the physician was gone, the soldier studied the two slaves
before him “By law, I should have you hanged for killing the slave master.”
They said nothing. They would remain silent until commanded to
speak.
“But as I hanged the slave master, I am free to keep you alive,
should it suit my purpose I can simply have you punished for wounding him.” He
paused. “Consider yourselves punished.”
With a wave of his hand he said, “Leave me, but return here at
daybreak I have to decide what to do with you.”
They left, feeling fortunate, for under most circumstances they
would now be hanging next to the former slave master. As they crossed the
compound, Laurie said, “I wonder what that was about.”
Pug responded, “I hurt too much to wonder why. I’m just thankful
that we will see tomorrow.”
Laurie said nothing until they reached the slave hut. “I think the
young lord has something up his sleeve.”
“Whatever I have long since given up trying to understand our
masters. That’s why I’ve stayed alive so long, Laurie. I just do what I’m told
to, and I endure.” Pug pointed to the tree where the former overseer’s body
could be seen in the pale moonlight—only the small moon was out tonight. “It’s
much too easy to end up like that.”
Laurie nodded. “Perhaps you’re right. I still think about escape.”
Pug laughed, a short, bitter sound. “Where, singer? Where could you
run? Toward the rift and ten thousand Tsurani?”
Laurie said nothing. They returned to their pallets and tried to
sleep in the humid heat.
***
The
young officer sat upon a pile of cushions, cross-legged in Tsurani fashion. He
sent away the guard who had accompanied Pug and Laurie, then motioned for the
two slaves to sit. They did so hesitantly, for a slave was not usually
permitted to sit in a master’s presence.
“I am Hokanu, of the Shinzawai. My father owns this camp,” he said
without preamble. “He is deeply dissatisfied with the harvest this year. He has
sent me to see what can be done. Now I have no overseer to manage the work,
because a foolish man blamed you for his own stupidity. What am I to do?”
They said nothing. He asked, “You have been here, how long?”
Pug and Laurie answered in turn. He considered the answers, then
said, “You”—pointing at Laurie—“are nothing unusual, save you speak our tongue
better than most barbarians, all things considered. But you” —pointing at
Pug—“have stayed alive longer than most of your stiff-necked countrymen and
also speak our language well. You might even pass for a peasant from a remote
province.”
They sat still, unsure of what Hokanu was leading up to. Pug
realized with a shock that he was probably older by a year or two than this
young lord. He was young for such power. The ways of the Tsurani were very
strange. In Crydee he would still be an apprentice, or if noble, continuing his
education in statecraft.
“How do you speak so well?” he asked of Pug.
“Master, I was among the first captured and brought here. There were
only seven of us among so many Tsurani slaves. We learned to survive. After
some time, I was the only one left. The others died of the burning fever or
festering wounds, or were killed by the guards. There were none for me to talk
with who spoke my own language. No other countryman came to this camp for over
a year.”
The officer nodded, then to Laurie said, “And you?”
“Master, I am a singer, a minstrel in my own land. It is our custom
to travel broadly, and we must learn many tongues. I have also a good ear for
music. Your language is what is called a tone language on my world, words with
the same sound save for the pitch with which they are spoken have different
meanings. We have several such tongues to the south of our Kingdom. I learn quickly.”
A glimmering appeared in the eyes of the soldier “It is good to know
these things.” He lapsed deep into thought. After a moment he nodded to himself
“There are many considerations that fashion a man’s fortune, slaves.” He
smiled, looking more like a boy than a man. “This camp is a shambles. I am to
prepare a report for my father, the Lord of the Shinzawai. I think I know what
the problems are.” He pointed at Pug. “I would have your thoughts on the
subject. You have been here longer than anyone.”
Pug composed himself. It had been a long time since anyone had asked
him to venture an opinion on anything. “Master, the first overseer, the one who
was here when I was captured, was a shrewd man, who understood that men, even
slaves, cannot be made to work well if they are weak from hunger. We had better
food and if injured were given time for healing. Nogamu was an ill-tempered man
who took every setback as a personal affront. Should burrowers ruin a grove, it
was the fault of the slaves. Should a slave die, it was a plot to discredit his
oversight of the work force. Each difficulty was rewarded by another cut in
food, or in longer work hours. Any good fortune was regarded as his rightful
due.”
“I suspected as much. Nogamu was at one time a very important man. He
was the hadonra—demesne manager—of his father’s estates. His family was found
to be guilty of plotting against the Empire, and his own clan sold them all
into slavery, those that were not hanged. He was never a good slave. It was
thought that giving him responsibility for the camp might find some useful
channel for his skills. It proved not to be the case.
“Is there a good man among the slaves who could command ably?”
Laurie inclined his head, then said, “Master, Pug here . . .”
“I think not. I have plans for you both.”
Pug was surprised and wondered what he meant. He said, “Perhaps
Chogana, master. He was a farmer, until his crops failed and he was sold into
slavery for taxes. He has a level head.”
The soldier clapped his hands once, and a guard was in the room in
an instant. “Send for the slave Chogana.”
The guard saluted and left. “It is good that he is Tsurani,” said
the soldier. “You barbarians do not know your place, and I hate to think what
would happen should I leave one in charge. He would have my soldiers cutting
the trees while the slaves stood guard.”
There was a moment of silence, then Laurie laughed. It was a rich,
deep sound. Hokanu smiled. Pug watched closely. The young man who had their
lives in his hands seemed to be working hard at winning their trust. Laurie
appeared to have taken a liking to him, but Pug held his feelings in check. He
was further removed from the old Midkemian society, where war made noble and
commoner comrades-in-arms, able to share meals and misery without regard for
rank. One thing he had learned about the Tsurani early on was that they never
for an instant forgot their station. Whatever was occurring in this hut was by
this young soldier’s design, not by chance. Hokanu seemed to feel Pug’s eyes
upon him and looked at him. Their eyes locked briefly before Pug dropped his as
a slave is expected to do. For an instant a communication passed between them.
It was as if the soldier had said: You do not believe that I am a friend. So be
it, as long as you act your part.
With a wave of his hand, Hokanu said, “Return to your hut. Rest
well, for we will leave after the noon meal.”
They rose and bowed, then backed out of the hut. Pug walked in
silence, but Laurie said, “I wonder where we are going.” When no answer came,
he added, “In any event, it will have to be a better place than this.”
Pug wondered if it would be.
A hand shook Pug’s shoulder, and he came awake. He had been dozing
in the morning heat, taking advantage of the extra rest before he and Laurie
left with the young noble after the noon meal Chogana, the former farmer Pug
had recommended, motioned for silence, pointing to where Laurie slept deeply.
Pug followed the old slave out of the hut, to sit in the shade of the
building. Speaking slowly, as was his fashion, Chogana said, “My lord Hokanu
tells me you were instrumental in my being selected slave master for the camp.”
His brown, seamed face looked dignified as he bowed his head toward Pug. “I am
in your debt.”
Pug returned the bow, formal and unusual in this camp. “There is no
debt. You will conduct yourself as an overseer should. You will care well for
our brothers.”
Chogana’s old face split in a grin, revealing teeth stained brown by
years of chewing tateen nuts. The mildly narcotic nut—easily found in the
swamp—did not reduce efficiency but made the work seem less harsh. Pug had
avoided the habit, for no reasons he could voice, as had most of the
Midkemians. It seemed somehow to signify a final surrender of will.
Chogana stared at the camp, his eyes narrowed to slits by the harsh
light. It stood empty, except for the young lord’s bodyguard and the cook’s
crew. In the distance the sounds of the work crew echoed through the trees.
“When I was a boy, on my father’s farm in Szetac,” began Chogana,
“it was discovered I had a talent. I was investigated and found lacking.” The
meaning of that last statement was lost on Pug, but he didn’t interrupt. “So I
became a farmer like my father. But my talent was there. Sometimes I see
things, Pug, things within men. As I grew, word of my talent spread, and
people, mostly poor people, would come and ask for my advice. As a young man I
was arrogant and charged much, telling of what I saw. When I was older, I was
humble and took whatever was offered, but still I told what I saw. Either way,
people left angry. Do you know why?” he asked with a chuckle. Pug shook his
head. “Because they didn’t come to hear the truth, they came to hear what they
wanted to hear.”
Pug shared Chogana’s laugh. “So I pretended the talent went away,
and after a time people stopped coming to my farm. But the talent never went
away, Pug, and I still can see things, sometimes. I have seen something in you,
and I would tell you before you leave forever. I will die in this camp, but you
have a different fate before you. Will you listen?” Pug said he would, and
Chogana said, “Within you there is a trapped power. What it is and what it
means, I do not know.”
Knowing the strange Tsurani attitude toward magicians, Pug felt
sudden panic at the possibility someone might have sensed his former calling.
To most he was just another slave in the camp, and to a few, a former squire.
Chogana continued, speaking with his eyes closed. “I dreamed about
you, Pug. I saw you upon a tower, and you faced a fearsome foe.” He opened his
eyes. “I do not know what the dream may mean, but this you must know. Before
you mount that tower to face your foe, you must seek your wal; it is that
secret center of your being, the perfect place of peace within. Once you reside
there, you are safe from all harm. Your flesh may suffer, even die, but within
your wal you will endure in peace. Seek hard, Pug, for few men find their wal.”
Chogana stood. “You will leave soon. Come, we must wake Laurie.”
As they walked to the hut entrance, Pug said, “Chogana, thank you.
But one thing: you spoke of a foe upon the tower. Could you mark him?”
Chogana laughed and bobbed his head up and down. “Oh yes, I saw
him.” He continued to chuckle as he climbed the steps to the hut. “He is the
foe to be feared most by any man.” Narrow eyes regarded Pug. “He was you.”
Pug and Laurie sat on the steps of the temple, with six Tsurani
guards lounging around. The guards had been civil—barely—for the entire
journey. The travel had been tiring, if not difficult. With no horses, nor
anything to substitute for them, every Tsurani not riding in a needra cart
moved by power of shanks’ mare, their own or others. Nobles were carried up and
down the wide boulevards on litters borne on the backs of puffing, sweating
slaves.
Pug and Laurie had been given the short, plain grey robes of slaves.
Their loincloths, adequate in the swamps, were deemed unsightly for travel
among Tsurani citizens. The Tsurani put some store upon modesty—if not as much
as people in the Kingdom did.
They had come up the road along the coast of the great body of water
called Battle Bay. Pug had thought that if it was a bay, it was larger than
anything so named in Midkemia, for even from the high cliffs overlooking it,
the other side could not be seen. After several days’ travel they had entered
cultivated pastureland and soon after could see the opposite shore closing in
rapidly. Another few days on the road, and they had come to the city of Jamar.
Pug and Laurie watched the passing traffic, while Hokanu made an
offering at the temple. The Tsurani seemed mad for colors. Here even the
lowliest worker was likely to be dressed in a brightly colored short robe.
Those with wealth could be seen in more flamboyant dress, covered with intricately
executed designs. Only slaves lacked colorful dress.
Everywhere around the city, people thronged: farmers, traders,
workers, and travelers. Lines of needras plodded by, pulling wagons filled with
produce and goods. The sheer numbers of people overwhelmed Pug and Laurie, for
the Tsurani seemed like ants scurrying about as if the commerce of the Empire
could not wait upon the comfort of its citizens. Many who passed stopped to
stare at the Midkemians, whom they regarded as giant barbarians. Their own
height topped out at about five feet six inches, and even Pug was considered
tall, having come to his full growth at five feet eight. For their part, the
Midkemians had come to refer to the Tsurani as runts.
Pug and Laurie looked about. They waited in the center of the city,
where the great temples were. Ten pyramids sat amid a series of parks differing
in size. All were richly appointed with murals, both tiled and painted. From
where they were, the young men could see three of the parks. Each was terraced,
with miniature watercourses winding through, complete with tiny waterfalls.
Dwarf trees, as well as large shade trees, dotted the grass-covered grounds of
the parks Strolling musicians played flutes and strange stringed instruments,
producing alien, polytonal music, entertaining those who rested in the parks or
passed by.
Laurie listened with rapt attention. “Listen to those halftones! And
those diminished minors!” He sighed and looked down at the ground, his manner
somber. “It’s alien, but it’s music.” He looked at Pug, and the usual humor was
missing from his voice. “If I could only play again.” He glanced at the distant
musicians. “I could even develop a taste for Tsurani music.” Pug left him alone
with his longings.
Pug glanced around the busy city square, attempting to sort out the
impressions that had been coming without cease since entering the outer
precinct of the city. Everywhere people hurried about their business. A short
distance from the temples, they had passed through a market, not unlike those
in Kingdom cities, but larger. The noise of hawkers and buyers, the smells, the
heat, all reminded him of home in an odd way.
When Hokanu’s party neared, commoners would step out of the way, for
the guards at the head of the procession would call out “Shinzawai! Shinzawai!”
letting everyone know a noble approached. Only once did the party give way in
the city; a group of red-clad men, robed in cloaks of scarlet feathers. The one
that Pug took to be a high priest wore a mask of wood fashioned to resemble a
red skull, while the others had red painted faces. They blew reed whistles, and
people scattered to clear their line of march. One of the soldiers made a sign
of protection, and later Pug learned these men were the priests of Turakamu,
the eater of hearts, brother to the goddess Sibi, she who was death.
Pug turned to a nearby guard and motioned for permission to speak.
The guard nodded once, and Pug said, “Master, what god resides here?” as he
pointed to the temple where Hokanu prayed.
“Ignorant barbarian,” answered the soldier in a friendly manner,
“the gods do not abide in these halls, but in the Upper and Lower Heavens. This
temple is for men to make their devotions. Here my lord’s son makes an offering
and petitions to Chochocan, the good god of the Upper Heaven and his servant,
Tomachaca, the god of peace, for good fortune for the Shinzawai.”
When Hokanu returned, they started off again. They made their way
through the city, Pug still studying the people they passed. The press was
incredible, and Pug wondered how they managed to stand it. Like farmers in a
city for the first time, Pug and Laurie kept gawking at the wonders of Jamar.
Even the supposedly worldly troubadour would exclaim about this sight or that.
Soon the guards were chuckling over the barbarians’ obvious delight at the most
mundane things.
Every building they passed was fashioned from wood and a translucent
material, clothlike but rigid. A few, like the temples, were constructed with
stone, but what was most remarkable was that every building they passed, from
temple to worker’s hut, was painted white, except for bordering beams and door
frames, which were polished deep brown. Every open surface was decorated with
colorful paintings. Animals, landscapes, deities, and battle scenes abounded.
Everywhere was a not of color to confound the eye.
To the north of the temples, across from one of the parks and facing
a wide boulevard, stood a single building, set apart by open lawns bordered
with hedges. Two guards, dressed in armor and helm similar to those of their
own guards, stood watch at the door. They saluted Hokanu when he approached.
Without a word their other guards marched around the side of the
house, leaving the slaves with the young officer. He signaled, and one of the
door guards slid the large cloth-covered door aside. They entered an open
hallway leading back, with doors on each side. Hokanu marched them to a rear
door, which a house slave opened for them.
Pug and Laurie then discovered the house was fashioned like a
square, with a large garden in the center, accessible from all sides. Near a
bubbling pool sat an older man, dressed in a plain but rich-looking dark blue
robe. He was consulting a scroll. He looked up when the three entered, and rose
to greet Hokanu.
The young man removed his helm and then came to attention Pug and
Laurie stood slightly behind and said nothing. The man nodded, and Hokanu
approached. They embraced, and the older man said, “My son, it is good to see
you again. How were things at the camp?”
Hokanu made his report on the camp, briefly and to the point,
leaving out nothing of importance. He then told of the actions taken to remedy
the situation. “So the new overseer will see that the slaves have ample food
and rest. He should increase production soon.”
His father nodded. “I think you have acted wisely, my son. We shall
have to send another in a few months’ time to gauge progress, but things could
not become any worse than they were. The Warlord demands higher production, and
we border on falling into his bad graces.”
He seemed to notice the slaves for the first time. “These?” was all
he said, pointing at Laurie and Pug.
“They are unusual. I was thinking of our talk on the night before my
brother went to the north. They may prove valuable.”
“Have you spoken of this to anyone?” Firm lines set around his grey
eyes. Even though much shorter, he somehow reminded Pug of Lord Borric.
“No, my father. Only those who took council that night—”
The lord of the house cut him off with a wave of the hand. “Save
your remarks for later. ‘Trust no secrets to a city.’ Inform Septiem. We close
the house and leave for our estates in the morning.”
Hokanu bowed slightly, then turned to leave. “Hokanu.” His father’s
voice stopped him. “You have done well.” Pride plainly showing on his face, the
young man left the garden.
The lord of the house sat again upon a bench of carved stone, next
to a small fountain, and regarded the two slaves. “What are you called?”
“Pug, master.”
“Laurie, master.”
He seemed to derive some sort of insight from these simple
statements. “Through that door,” he said, pointing to the left, “is the way to
the cookhouse. My hadonra is called Septiem. He will see to your care. Go now.”
They bowed and left the garden. As they made their way through the
house, Pug nearly knocked over a young girl coming around a corner. She was
dressed in a slave’s robe and carried a large bundle of washing. It went flying
across the hall.
“Oh!” she cried. “I’ve just now washed these. Now I’ll have to do
them over.” Pug quickly bent to help her pick them up. She was tall for a
Tsurani, nearly Pug’s height, and well proportioned. Her brown hair was tied
back, and her brown eyes were framed by long, dark lashes. Pug stopped
gathering the clothing and stared at her in open admiration. She hesitated
under his scrutiny, then quickly picked up the rest of the clothes and hurried
off. Laurie watched her trim figure retreat, tan legs shown to good advantage
by the short slave’s robe.
Laurie slapped Pug’s shoulder. “Ha! I told you things would be
looking up.”
They left the house and approached the cookhouse, where the smell of
hot food set their appetites on edge. “I think you’ve made an impression on
that girl, Pug.”
Pug had never had much experience with women and felt his ears start
to burn. At the slave camp much of the talk was about women, and this, more
than anything else, had kept him feeling like a boy. He turned to see if Laurie
was having sport with him, then saw the blond singer looking behind him. He
followed Laurie’s gaze and caught a glimpse of a shyly smiling face pull back
from a window in the house.
The next day the household of the Shinzawai Family was in an uproar
Slaves and servants hurried every which way making ready for the journey to the
north. Pug and Laurie were left to themselves, as there was no one among the
household staff free enough to assign them tasks. They sat in the shade of a
large willowhke tree, enjoying the novelty of free time as they observed the
furor.
“These people are crazy, Pug. I’ve seen less preparation for
caravans. It looks as if they plan on taking everything with them.”
“Maybe they are. These people no longer surprise me.” Pug stood,
leaning against the bole. “I’ve seen things that defy logic.”
“True enough. But when you’ve seen as many different lands as I
have, you learn that the more things look different, the more they are the
same.”
“What do you mean?”
Laurie rose and leaned on the other side of the tree. In low tones
he said, “I’m not sure, but something is afoot, and we play a part, be sure. If
we keep sharp, we may be able to turn it to our advantage. Always remember
that. Should a man want something from you, you can always make a bargain, no
matter what the apparent differences in your stations.”
“Of course. Give him what he wants, and he’ll let you live.”
“You’re too young to be so cynical,” Laurie countered, with mirth
sparkling in his eyes. “Tell you what. You leave the world-weary pose to old
travelers such as myself, and I’ll make sure that you don’t miss a single
opportunity.”
Pug snorted. “What opportunity?”
“Well, for one thing,” Laurie said, pointing behind Pug, “that
little girl you nearly knocked over yesterday is appearing to have some
difficulty in lifting those boxes.” Pug, glancing back, saw the laundry girl
struggling to stack several large crates ready to be loaded into wagons. “I
think she might appreciate a little help, don’t you think?”
Pug’s confusion was evident on his face. “What . . . ?”
Laurie gave him a gentle push. “Off with you, dolt. A little help
now, later . . . who knows?”
Pug stumbled. “Later?”
“Gods!” laughed Laurie, fetching Pug a playful kick in the rump.
The troubadour’s humor was infectious, and Pug was smiling as he
approached the girl. She was trying to lift a large wooden crate atop another.
Pug took it from her. “Here, I can do that.”
She stepped away, uncertain. “It’s not heavy. It’s just too high for
me.” She looked everywhere but at Pug.
Pug lifted the crate easily and placed it on top of the others,
favoring his tender hand only a little. “There you are,” he said, trying to
sound casual.
The girl brushed back a stray wisp of hair that had fallen into her
eyes. “You’re a barbarian, aren’t you?” She spoke hesitantly.
Pug flinched. “You call us that. I like to think I’m as civilized as
the next man.”
She blushed. “I didn’t mean any offense. My people are called
barbarians also. Anyone who’s not a Tsurani is called that. I meant you’re from
that other world.”
Pug nodded. “What’s your name?”
She said, “Katala,” then in a rush, “What is your name?”
“Pug.”
She smiled. “That’s a strange name. Pug.” She seemed to like the
sound of it.
Just then the hadonra, Septiem, an old but erect man with the bearing
of a retired general, came around the house. “You two!” he snapped. “There’s
work to do! Don’t stand there.”
Katala ran back into the house, and Pug was left hesitating before
the yellow-robed estate manager. “You! What’s your name?”
“Pug, sir.”
“I see that you and your blond giant friend have been given nothing
to do. I’ll have to remedy that. Call him over.”
Pug sighed. So much for their free time. He waved for Laurie to come
over, and they were put to work loading wagons.
20
ESTATE
The weather had turned cooler during the last three weeks.
Still it hinted at the summer’s heat. The winter season in this
land, if a season it properly was, lasted a mere six weeks, with brief cold
rains out of the north. The trees held most of their bluish green leaves, and
there was nothing to mark the passing of fall. In the four years Pug had abided
in Tsuranuanni, there were none of the familiar signs that marked the passing
seasons: no bird migrations, frost in the mornings, rains that froze, snow, or
blooming of wild flowers. This land seemed eternally set in the soft amber of
summer.
For the first few days of the journey, they had followed the highway
from Jamar, northward to the city of Sulan-qu. The river Gagajin had carried a
ceaseless clutter of boats and barges, while the highway was equally jammed
with caravans, farmers’ carts, and nobles riding in litters.
The Lord of the Shinzawai had departed the first day by boat for the
Holy City, to attend the High Council. The household followed at a more
leisurely pace. Hokanu paused outside the city of Sulan-qu long enough to pay a
social call upon the Lady of the Acoma, and Pug and Laurie found the
opportunity to gossip with another Midkemian slave, recently captured. The news
of the war was disheartening. No change since the last they had heard, the
stalemate continued.
At the Holy City, the Lord of the Shinzawai joined his son and the
retinue on its journey to the Shinzawai estates, outside the City of Silmani.
From then, the trek northward had been uneventful.
The Shinzawai caravan was approaching the boundaries of the family’s
northern estates Pug and Laurie had little to do along the way except
occasional chores: dumping the cook pots, cleaning up needra droppings, loading
and unloading supplies. Now they were riding on the back of a wagon, feet
dangling over the rear. Laurie bit into a ripe jomach fruit, something like a
large green pomegranate with the flesh of a watermelon. Spitting out seeds, he
said, “How’s the hand?”
Pug studied his right hand, examining the red puckered scar that ran
across the palm “It’s still stiff. I expect it’s as healed as it will ever be.”
Laurie took a look. “Don’t think you’ll ever carry a sword again.”
He grinned.
Pug laughed “I doubt you will either. I somehow don’t think they’ll
be finding a place for you in the Imperial Horse Lance.”
Laurie spat a burst of seeds, bouncing them off the nose of the
needra who pulled the wagon behind them. The six-legged beast snorted, and the
driver waved his steering stick angrily at them. “Except for the fact that the
Emperor doesn’t have any lancers, due to the fact that he also doesn’t have any
horses, I can’t think of a finer choice.”
Pug laughed derisively.
“I’ll have you know, fella-me-lad,” said Laurie in aristocratic
tones, “that we troubadours are often beset by a less savory sort of customer,
brigands and cutthroats seeking our hard-earned wages—scant though they may be.
If one doesn’t develop the ability to defend oneself, one doesn’t stay in
business, if you catch my meaning.”
Pug smiled. He knew that a troubadour was nearly sacrosanct in a
town, for should he be harmed or robbed, word would spread, and no other would
ever come there again. But on the road it was a different matter. He had no
doubt of Laurie’s ability to take care of himself, but wasn’t about to let him
use that pompous tone and sit without a rejoinder. As he was about to speak,
though, he was cut off by shouts coming from the front of the caravan. Guards
came rushing forward, and Laurie turned to his shorter companion. “What do you
suppose that is all about?”
Not waiting for an answer, he jumped down and ran forward. Pug
followed. As they reached the head of the caravan, behind the Lord of the
Shinzawai’s litter, they could see shapes advancing up the road toward them.
Laurie grabbed Pug’s sleeve. “Riders!”
Pug could scarcely believe his eyes, for indeed it appeared that
riders were approaching along the road from the Shinzawai manor. As they got
closer, he could see that, rather than riders, there was one horseman and three
cho-ja, all three a rich dark blue color.
The rider, a young brown-haired Tsurani, taller than most,
dismounted. His movement was clumsy, and Laurie observed, “They will never pose
any military threat if that’s the best seat they can keep. Look, there is no
saddle, nor bridle, only a rude hackamore fashioned from leather straps. And
the poor horse looks like it hasn’t been properly groomed for a month.”
The curtain of the litter was pulled back as the rider approached.
The slaves put the litter down, and the Lord of the Shinzawai got out. Hokanu
had reached his father’s side, from his place among the guards at the rear of
the caravan, and was embracing the rider, exchanging greetings. The rider then
embraced the Lord of the Shinzawai Pug and Laurie could hear the rider say,
“Father! It is good to see you.”
The Shinzawai lord said, “Kasumi! It is good to see my firstborn
son. When did you return?”
“Less than a week ago. I would have come to Jamar, but I heard that
you were due here, so I waited.”
“I am glad. Who are these with you?” He indicated the creatures.
“This,” he said, pointing to the foremost, “is Strike Leader
X’calak, back from fighting the short ones under the mountains on Midkemia.”
The creature stepped forward and raised his right hand—very
humanlike—in salute, and in a high, piping voice said, “Hail, Kamatsu, Lord of
the Shinzawai. Honors to your house.”
The Lord of the Shinzawai bowed slightly from the waist “Greetings,
X’calak. Honors to your hive. The cho-ja are always welcome guests.”
The creature stepped back and waited. The lord turned to look at the
horse. “What is this upon which you sit, my son?”
“A horse, Father. A creature the barbarians ride into battle. I’ve
told you of them before. It is a truly marvelous creature. On its back I can
run faster than the swiftest cho-ja runner.”
“How do you stay on?”
The older Shinzawai son laughed. “With great difficulty, I’m afraid.
The barbarians have tricks to it I have yet to learn.”
Hokanu smiled. “Perhaps we can arrange for lessons.”
Kasumi slapped him playfully on the back. “I have asked several
barbarians, but unfortunately they were all dead.”
“I have two here who are not.”
Kasumi looked past his brother and saw Laurie, standing a full head
taller than the other slaves who had gathered around. “So I see. Well, we must
ask him. Father, with your permission, I will ride back to the house and have
all made ready for your homecoming.”
Kamatsu embraced his son and agreed. The older son grabbed a handful
of mane, and with an athletic leap, remounted. With a wave, he rode off.
Pug and Laurie quickly returned to their places on the wagon. Laurie
asked, “Have you seen the like of those things before?”
Pug nodded. “Yes. The Tsurani call them the cho-ja. They live in
large hive mounds, like ants. The Tsurani slaves I spoke with in the camp tell
me they have been around as long as can be remembered. They are loyal to the
Empire, though I seem to remember someone saying that each hive has its own
queen.”
Laurie peered around the front of the wagon, hanging on with one
hand. “I wouldn’t like to face one on foot. Look at the way they run.”
Pug said nothing. The older Shinzawai son’s remark about the short
ones under the mountain brought back old memories. If Tomas is alive, he
thought, he is a man now. If he is alive.
The Shinzawai manor was huge. It was easily the biggest single
building —short of temples and palaces—that Pug had seen. It sat atop a hill,
commanding a view of the countryside for miles. The house was square, like the
one in Jamar, but several times the size. The town house could easily have fit
inside this one’s central garden. Behind it were the outbuildings, cookhouse,
and slave quarters.
Pug craned his neck to take in the garden, for they were walking
quickly through, and there was little time to absorb all of it. The hadonra,
Septiem, scolded him. “Don’t tarry.”
Pug quickened his step and fell in beside Laurie. Still, on a brief
viewing, the garden was impressive. Several shade trees had been planted beside
three pools that sat in the midst of miniature trees and flowering plants.
Stone benches had been placed for contemplative rest, and paths of fine pebble
gravel wandered throughout. Around this tiny park the building rose, three
stories tall. The top two stones had balconies, and several staircases rose to
connect them. Servants could be seen hurrying along the upper levels, but there
appeared to be no one else in the garden, or at least that portion they had
crossed.
They reached a sliding door, and Septiem turned to face them. In
stern tones he said, “You two barbarians will watch your manners before the
lords of this house, or by the gods, I’ll have every inch of skin off your
backs. Now make sure you do all that I’ve told you, or you’ll wish that Master
Hokanu had left you to rot in the swamps.”
He slid the door to one side and announced the slaves. The command
for them to enter was given, and Septiem shooed them inside.
They found themselves in a colorfully lit room, the light coming
through the large translucent door covered with a painting. On the walls hung
carvings, tapestries, and paintings, all done in fine style, small and
delicate. The floor was covered, in Tsurani fashion, with a thick pile of
cushions. Upon a large cushion Kamatsu, Lord of the Shinzawai, sat; across from
him were his two sons. All were dressed in the short robes of expensive fabric
and cut they used when off duty. Pug and Laurie stood with their eyes downcast
until they were spoken to.
Hokanu spoke first. “The blond giant is called Loh-’re, and the more
normal-sized one is Poog.”
Laurie started to open his mouth, but a quick elbow from Pug
silenced him before he could speak.
The older son noticed the exchange, and said, “You would speak?”
Laurie looked up, then quickly down again. The instructions had been
clear: not to speak until commanded to Laurie wasn’t sure the question was a
command.
The lord of the house said, “Speak.”
Laurie looked at Kasumi. “I am Laurie, master. Lor-ee. And my friend
is Pug, not Poog.”
Hokanu looked taken aback at being corrected, but the older brother
nodded and pronounced the names several times over, until he spoke them
correctly. He then said, “Have you ridden horses?”
Both slaves nodded. Kasumi said, “Good. Then you can show me the
best way.”
Pug’s gaze wandered as much as was possible with his head down, but
something caught his eye. Next to the Lord of the Shinzawai sat a game board
and what looked like familiar figures. Kamatsu noticed and said, “You know this
game?” He reached over and brought the board forward, so that it lay before
him.
Pug said, “Master, I know the game. We call it chess.”
Hokanu looked at his brother, who leaned forward “As several have
said, Father, there has been contact with the barbarians before.”
His father waved away the comment. “It is a theory.” To Pug he said,
“Sit here and show me how the pieces move.”
Pug sat and tried to remember what Kulgan had taught him. He had
been an indifferent student of the game, but knew a few basic openings. He
moved a pawn forward and said, “This piece may move forward only one space,
except when it is first moved, master. Then it may move two.” The lord of the
house nodded, motioning that he should continue. “This piece is a knight and
moves like so,” said Pug.
After he had demonstrated the moves of the various pieces, the Lord
of the Shinzawai said, “We call this game shah. The pieces are called by
different names, but it is the same. Come, we will play.”
Kamatsu gave the white pieces to Pug. He opened with a conventional
king’s pawn move, and Kamatsu countered. Pug played badly and was quickly
beaten. The others watched the entire game without a sound. When it was over,
the lord said, “Do you play well, among your people?”
“No, master. I play poorly.”
He smiled, his eyes wrinkling at the edges. “Then I would guess that
your people are not as barbarous as is commonly held. We will play again soon.”
He nodded to his older son, and Kasumi rose. Bowing to his father,
he said to Pug and Laurie, “Come.”
They bowed to the lord of the house and followed Kasumi out of the
room. He led them through the house, to a smaller room with sleeping pallets
and cushions. “You will sleep here. My room is next door. I would have you at
hand at all times.”
Laurie spoke up boldly. “What does the master want of us?”
Kasumi regarded him for a moment. “You barbarians will never make
good slaves. You forget your place too often.”
Laurie started to stammer an apology but was cut off. “It is of
little matter. You are to teach me things, Laurie. You will teach me to ride,
and how to speak your language. Both of you. I would learn what those.”
—he paused, then made a flat, nasal wa-wa-wa sound—”noises mean when
you speak to each other.”
Further conversation was cut off by the sound of a single chime that
reverberated throughout the house. Kasumi said, “A Great One comes. Stay in
your rooms. I must go to welcome him with my father.” He hurried off, leaving
the two Midkemians to sit in their new quarters wondering at this newest twist
in their lives.
Twice during the following two days, Pug and Laurie glimpsed the
Shinzawai’s important visitor. He was much like the Shinzawai lord in
appearance, but thinner, and he wore the black robe of a Tsurani Great One. Pug
asked a few questions of the house staff and gained a little information. Pug
and Laurie had seen nothing that compared with the awe in which the Great Ones
were held by the Tsurani. They seemed a power apart, and with what little
understanding of Tsurani social reality Pug had, he couldn’t exactly comprehend
how they fit into the scheme of things. At first he had thought they were under
some social stigma, for all he was ever told was that the Great Ones were “outside
the law.” He then was made to understand, by an exasperated Tsurani slave who
couldn’t believe Pug’s ignorance of important matters, that the Great Ones had
little or no social constraints in exchange for some nameless service to the
Empire.
Pug had made a discovery during this time that lightened the alien
feeling of his captivity somewhat. Behind the needra pens he had found a kennel
full of yapping, tail-wagging dogs. They were the only Midkemian-like animals
he had seen on Kelewan, and he felt an unexplained joy at their presence. He
had rushed back to their room to fetch Laurie and had brought him to the
kennel. Now they sat in one of the runs, amid a group of playful canines.
Laurie laughed at their boisterous play. They were unlike the Duke’s
hunting hounds, being longer of leg, and more gaunt. Their ears were pointed,
and perked at every sound.
“I’ve seen their like before, in Gulbi. It’s a town in the Great
Northern Trade Route of Kesh. They are called greyhounds and are used to run
down the fast cats and antelope of the grasslands near the Valley of the Sun.”
The kennel master, a thin, droopy-eyelidded slave named Rachmad,
came over and watched them suspiciously “What are you doing here?”
Laurie regarded the dour man and playfully pulled the muzzle of a
rambunctious puppy. “We haven’t seen dogs since we left our homeland, Rachmad.
Our master is busy with the Great One, so we thought we would visit your fine
kennel.”
At mention of his “fine kennel” the gloomy countenance brightened
considerably. “I try to keep the dogs healthy We must keep them locked up, for
they try to harry the cho-ja, who like them not at all.” For a moment Pug
thought perhaps they had been taken from Midkemia as the horse had been. When
he asked where they had come from, Rachmad looked at him as if he were crazy.
“You speak like you have been too long in the sun. There have always been
dogs.” With that final pronouncement on the matter, he judged the conversation
closed and left.
Later that night, Pug awoke to find Laurie entering their room
“Where have you been?”
“Shh! You want to wake the whole household? Go back to sleep.”
“Where did you go?” Pug asked in hushed tones.
Laurie could be seen grinning in the dim light “I paid a visit to a
certain cook’s assistant, for . . . a chat.”
“Oh. Almorella?”
“Yes,” came the cheerful reply “She’s quite a girl.” The young slave
who served in the kitchen had been making big eyes at Laurie ever since the
caravan had arrived four days ago.
After a moment of silence, Laurie said, “You should cultivate a few
friends yourself. Gives a whole new look to things.”
“I’ll bet,” Pug said, disapproval mixed with more than a little
envy. Almorella was a bright and cheerful girl, near Pug’s age, with merry dark
eyes.
“That little Katala, now. She has her eye on you, I’m thinking.”
Cheeks burning, Pug threw a cushion at his friend. “Oh, shut up and
go to sleep.”
Laurie stifled a laugh. He retired to his pallet and left Pug alone
in thought.
There was the faint promise of rain on the wind, and Pug welcomed
the coolness he felt in its touch. Laurie was sitting astride Kasumi’s horse,
and the young officer stood by and watched. Laurie had directed Tsurani
craftsmen as they fashioned a saddle and bridle for the mount and was now
demonstrating their use.
“This horse is combat trained,” Laurie shouted. “He can be neck
reined”—he demonstrated by laying the reins on one side of the horse’s neck,
then the other—”or he can be turned by using your legs.” He raised his hands
and showed the older son of the house how this was done.
For three weeks they had been instructing the young noble in riding,
and he had shown natural ability. Laurie jumped from the horse, and Kasumi took
his place. The Tsurani rode roughly at first, the saddle feeling strange under
him. As he bounced by, Pug called out, “Master, grip him firmly with your lower
leg!” The horse sensed the pressure and picked up a quick trot. Rather than be
troubled by the increase in speed, Kasumi looked enraptured. “Keep your heels
down!” shouted Pug. Then, without instructions from either slave, Kasumi kicked
the horse hard in the sides and had the animal running over the fields.
Laurie watched him vanish across the meadow and said, “He’s either a
natural horseman or he’s going to kill himself.”
Pug nodded. “I think he’s got the knack. He’s certainly not lacking
courage.”
Laurie pulled up a long stem of grass from the ground and put it
between his teeth. He hunkered down and scratched the ear of a bitch who lay at
his feet, as much to distract the dog from running after the horse as to play
with her. She rolled over on her back and playfully chewed his hand.
Laurie turned his attention to Pug. “I wonder what game our young
friend is playing at.”
Pug shrugged. “What do you mean?”
“Remember when we first arrived? I heard Kasumi was about to head
out with his cho-ja companions. Well, those three cho-ja soldiers left this
morning—which is why Bethel here is out of her pen—and I heard some gossip that
the orders of the older son of the Shinzawai were suddenly changed. Put that
together with these riding and language lessons and what do you have?”
Pug stretched. “I don’t know.”
“I don’t know either.” Laurie sounded disgusted “But these matters
are of high import.” He looked across the plain and said lightly, “All I ever
wanted to do was to travel and tell my stories, sing my songs, and someday find
a widow who owned an inn.”
Pug laughed. “I think you would find tavern keeping dull business
after all this fine adventure.”
“Some fine adventuring. I’m riding along with a bunch of provincial
militia and run right smack into the entire Tsurani army. Since then I’ve been
beaten several times, spent over four months mucking about in the swamps,
walked over half this world—”
“Ridden in a wagon, as I remember.”
“Well, traveled over half this world, and now I’m giving riding
lessons to Kasumi Shinzawai, older son of a lord of Tsuranuanm Not the stuff
great ballads are made of.”
Pug smiled ruefully “You could have been four years in the swamps.
Consider yourself lucky. At least you can count on being here tomorrow. At
least as long as Septiem doesn’t catch you creeping around the kitchen late at
night.”
Laurie studied Pug closely “I know you’re joking. About Septiem, I
mean. It has occurred to me several times to ask you, Pug. Why do you never
speak of your life before you were captured?”
Pug looked away absently “I guess it’s a habit I picked up in the swamp
camp. It doesn’t pay to remind yourself of what you used to be. I’ve seen brave
men die because they couldn’t forget they were born free.”
Laurie pulled at the dog’s ear “But things are different here.”
“Are they? Remember what you said back in Jamar about a man wanting
something from you. I think the more comfortable you become here, the easier it
is for them to get whatever it is they want from you. This Shinzawai lord is no
one’s fool.” Seemingly shifting topics, he said, “Is it better to train a dog
or horse with a whip or with kindness?”
Laurie looked up. “What? Why, with kindness, but you have to use
discipline also.”
Pug nodded. “We are being shown the same consideration as Bethel and
her kind, I think. But we still are slaves. Never forget that.”
Laurie looked out over the field for a long time and said nothing.
The pair were rousted from their thoughts by the shouts of the older
son of the house as he rode back into view. He pulled the horse up before them
and jumped down. “He flies,” he said, in his broken King’s Tongue. Kasumi was
an apt student and was picking up the language quickly. He supplemented his
language lessons with a constant stream of questions about the lands and people
of Midkemia. There was not a single aspect of life in the Kingdom that he
seemed uninterested in. He had asked for examples of the most mundane things,
such as the manner in which one bargains with tradespeople, and the proper
forms of address when speaking to people of different ranks.
Kasumi led the horse back to the shed that had been built for him,
and Pug watched for any sign of footsoreness. They had fashioned shoes for him
from wood treated with resin, by trial and error, but these seemed to be
holding up well enough. As he walked, Kasumi said, “I have been thinking about
a thing. I don’t understand how your King rules, with all you have said about
this Congress of Lords. Please explain this thing.”
Laurie looked at Pug with an eyebrow raised. While no more an
authority on Kingdom politics than Laurie, he seemed better able to explain
what he knew. Pug said, “The congress elects the King, though it is mostly a
matter of form.”
“Form?”
“A tradition. The heir to the throne is always elected, except when
there is no clear successor. It is considered the best way to stem civil war,
for the ruling of the congress is final.” He explained how the Prince of
Krondor had deferred to his nephew, and how the congress had acquiesced to his
wishes “How is it with the Empire?”
Kasumi thought, then said, “Perhaps not so different. Each emperor
is the elect of the gods, but from what you have told me he is unlike your
King. He rules in the Holy City, but his leadership is spiritual. He protects
us from the wrath of the gods.”
Laurie asked, “Who then rules?”
They reached the shed, and Kasumi took the saddle and bridle off the
horse and began rubbing him down. “Here it is different from your land.” He
seemed to have difficulty with the language and shifted into Tsurarri. “A
Ruling Lord of a family is the absolute authority upon his estate. Each family
belongs to a clan, and the most influential lord in the clan is Warchief.
Within that clan, each other lord of a family holds certain powers depending
upon influence. The Shinzawai belong to the Kanazawai Clan. We are the second
most powerful family in that clan next to the Keda. My father in his youth was
commander of the clan armies, a Warchief, what you would call a general. The
position of families shifts from generation to generation, so that it is
unlikely I will reach so exalted a position.
“The leading lords of each clan sit in the High Council. They advise
the Warlord. He rules in the name of the Emperor, though the Emperor could
overrule him.”
“Does the Emperor in fact ever overrule the Warlord?” asked Laurie.
“Never.”
“How is the Warlord chosen?” asked Pug.
“It is difficult to explain. When the old Warlord dies, the clans
meet. It is a large gathering of lords, for not only the council comes, but
also the heads of every family. They meet and plot, and sometimes blood feuds
develop, but in the end a new Warlord is elected.”
Pug brushed back the hair from his eyes. “Then what is to keep the
Warlord’s clan from claiming the office, if they are the most powerful?”
Kasumi looked troubled. “It is not an easy thing to explain. Perhaps
you would have to be Tsurani to understand. There are laws, but more important,
there are customs. No matter how powerful a clan becomes, or a family within
it, only the lord of one of five families may be elected Warlord. They are the
Keda, Tonmargu, Minwanabi, Oaxatucan, and the Xacatecas. So there are only five
lords who may be considered. This Warlord is an Oaxatucan, so the light of the
Kanazawai clan burns dimly. His clan, the Omechan, is in ascension now. Only
the Minwanabi rival them, and for the present they are allied in the war
effort. That is the way of it.”
Laurie shook his head “This family and clan business makes our own
politics seem simple.”
Kasumi laughed. “That is not politics. Politics is the province of
the parties.”
“Parties?” asked Laurie, obviously getting lost in the conversation.
“There are many parties. The Blue Wheel, the Golden Flower, the Jade
Eye, the Party for Progress, the War Party, and others. Families may belong to
different parties, each trying to further their own needs. Sometimes families
from the same clan will belong to different parties. Sometimes they switch
alliances to suit their needs for the moment. Other times they may support two
parties at once, or none.”
“It seems a most unstable government,” remarked Laurie.
Kasumi laughed. “It has lasted for over two thousand years. We have
an old saying: ‘In the High Council, there is no brother.’ Remember that and
you may understand.”
Pug weighed his next question carefully. “Master, in all this you
have not mentioned the Great Ones. Why is that?”
Kasumi stopped rubbing down the horse and looked at Pug for a
moment, then resumed his ministrations. “They have nothing to do with politics.
They are outside the law and have no clan.” He paused again. “Why do you ask?”
“It is only that they seem to command a great amount of respect, and
since one has called here so recently, I thought you could enlighten me.”
“They are given respect because the fate of the Empire is at all
times in their hands. It is a grave responsibility. They renounce all their
ties, and few have personal lives beyond their community of magicians. Those
with families live apart, and their children are sent to live with their former
families when they come of age. It is a difficult thing. They make many
sacrifices.”
Pug watched Kasumi closely. He seemed somehow troubled by what he
was saying. “The Great One who came to see my father was, when a boy, a member
of this family. He was my uncle. It is difficult for us now, for he must
observe the formalities and cannot claim kinship. It would be better if he
stayed away, I think.” The last was spoken softly.
“Why is that, master?” Laurie asked, in hushed tones.
“Because it is hard for Hokanu. Before he became my brother, he was
that Great One’s son.”
They finished caring for the horse and left the shack. Bethel ran
ahead, for she knew it was close to feeding time. As they passed the kennel,
Rachmad called her over, and she joined the other dogs.
The entire way there was no conversation, and Kasumi entered his
room with no further remark for either of the Midkemians. Pug sat on his
pallet, waiting for the call for dinner, and thought about what he had learned.
For all their strange ways, the Tsurani were much like other men. He found this
somehow both comforting and troublesome.
Two weeks later, Pug was faced with another problem to mull over.
Katala had been making it obvious she was less than pleased with Pug’s lack of
attention. In little ways at first, then with more blatant signs, she had tried
to spark his interest. Finally things had come to a head when he had run into
her behind the cook shed earlier that afternoon.
Laurie and Kasumi were trying to build a small lute, with the aid of
a Shinzawai woodcrafter Kasumi had expressed interest in the music of the
troubadour and, the last few days, had watched closely while Laurie argued with
the artisan over the selection of proper grains, the way to cut the wood, and
the manner of fashioning the instrument. He was perplexed about whether or not
needra gut would make suitable strings, and a thousand other details. Pug had
found all this less than engrossing, and after a few days had found every
excuse to wander off. The smell of curing wood reminded him too much of cutting
trees in the swamp for him to enjoy being around the resin pots in the
wood-carver’s shed.
This afternoon he had been lying in the shade of the cook shed when
Katala came around the corner. His stomach constricted at the sight of her. He
thought her very attractive, but each time he had tried to speak to her, he
found he couldn’t think of anything to say. He would simply make a few inane
remarks, become embarrassed, then hurry off. Lately he had taken to saying
nothing. As she had approached this afternoon, he had smiled noncommittally,
and she started to walk past. Suddenly she had turned and looked as if near to
tears.
“What is the matter with me? Am I so ugly that you can’t stand the
sight of me?”
Pug had sat speechless, his mouth open She had stood for a moment,
then kicked him in the leg “Stupid barbarian,” she had sniffed, then run off.
Now he sat in his room, feeling confused and uneasy over this
afternoon’s encounter Laurie was carving pegs for his lute. Finally he put knife
and wood aside and said, “What’s troubling you, Pug? You look as if they’re
promoting you to slave master and sending you back to the swamp.”
Pug lay back on his pallet, staring at the ceiling. “It’s Katala.”
“Oh,” Laurie said.
“What do you mean, ‘Oh’?”
“Nothing, except that Almorella tells me the girl has been
impossible for the last two weeks, and you look about as bright as a poleaxed
steer these days. What’s the matter?”
“I don’t know. She’s just . . . she’s just . . . She kicked me
today.”
Laurie threw back his head and laughed. “Why in the name of heaven
did she do that?”
“I don’t know. She just kicked me.”
“What did you do?”
“I didn’t do anything.”
“Ha!” Laurie exploded with mirth. “That’s the trouble, Pug. There is
only one thing I know of that a woman hates more than a man she doesn’t like
paying her too much attention—and that’s lack of attention from a man she does
like.”
Pug looked despondent. “I thought it was something like that.”
Surprise registered on Laurie’s face. “What is it? Don’t you like
her?”
Leaning forward, his elbows on his knees, Pug said, “It’s not that.
I like her. She’s very pretty and seems nice enough. It’s just that . . .”
“What?”
Pug glanced sharply over at his friend, to see if he was being
mocked. Laurie was smiling, but in a friendly, reassuring way. Pug continued.
“It’s just . . . there’s someone else.”
Laurie’s mouth fell open, then snapped shut “Who? Except for
Almorella, Katala’s the prettiest wench I’ve seen on this gods-forsaken world.”
He sighed. “In honesty, she’s prettier than Almorella, though only a little.
Besides, I’ve not seen you ever speak to another woman, and I’d have noticed
you skulking off with anyone.”
Pug shook his head and looked down. “No, Laurie. I mean back home.”
Laurie’s mouth popped open again, then he fell over backward and
groaned. “ ‘Back home!’ What am I to do with this child? He’s bereft of all
wit!” He pulled himself up on an elbow and said, “Can this be Pug speaking? The
lad who counsels me to put the past behind? The one who insists that dwelling
on how things were at home leads only to a quick death?”
Pug ignored the sting of the questions. “This is different.”
“How is it different? By Ruthia—who in her more tender moments
protects fools, drunks, and minstrels—how can you tell me this is different? Do
you imagine for a moment you have one hope in ten times ten thousand of ever
seeing this girl again, whoever she is?”
“I know, but thinking of Carline has kept me from losing my mind
more times . . .” He sighed loudly. “We all need one dream, Laurie.”
Laurie studied his young friend for a quiet moment. “Yes, Pug, we
all need one dream. Still,” he added brightly, “a dream is one thing, a living,
breathing, warm woman is another.” Seeing Pug become irritated at the remark,
he switched topics. “Who is Carline, Pug?”
“My lord Borric’s daughter.”
Laurie’s eyes grew round. “Princess Carline?” Pug nodded. Laurie’s
voice showed amusement. “The most eligible noble daughter in the Western Realm
after the daughter of the Prince of Krondor? There are sides to you I never
would have thought possible! Tell me about her.”
Pug began to speak slowly at first, telling of his boyhood
infatuation for her, then of how their relationship developed. Laurie remained
silent, putting aside questions, letting Pug relieve himself of the pent-up
emotions of years. Finally Pug said, “Perhaps that’s what bothers me so much
about Katala. In certain ways Katala’s like Carline. They’ve both got strong
wills and make their moods known.”
Laurie nodded, not saying anything. Pug lapsed into silence, then
after a moment said, “When I was at Crydee, I thought for a time I was in love
with Carline. But I don’t know. Is that strange?”
Laurie shook his head. “No, Pug. There are many ways to love someone.
Sometimes we want love so much, we’re not too choosy about who we love. Other
times we make love such a pure and noble thing, no poor human can ever meet our
vision. But for the most part, love is a recognition, an opportunity to say,
There is something about you I cherish.’ It doesn’t entail marriage, or even
physical love. There’s love of parents, love of city or nation, love of life,
and love of people. All different, all love. But tell me, do you find your
feelings for Katala much as they were for Carline?”
Pug shrugged and smiled. “No, they’re not, not quite the same. With
Carline, I felt as if I had to keep her away, you know, at arm’s length. Sort
of keeping control of what went on, I think.”
Laurie probed lightly. “And Katala?”
Pug shrugged again. “I don’t know. It’s different. I don’t feel as
if I have to keep her under control. It’s more as if there are things I want to
tell her, but I don’t know how. Like the way I got all jammed up inside when
she smiled at me the first time. I could talk to Carline, when she kept quiet
and let me. Katala keeps quiet, but I don’t know what to say.” He paused a
moment, then made a sound that was half sigh, half groan. “Just thinking about
Katala makes me hurt, Laurie.”
Laurie lay back, a friendly chuckle escaping his lips. “Aye, it’s
well I’ve known that ache. And I must admit your taste runs to interesting
women. From what I can see, Katala’s a prize. And the Princess Carline . . .”
A little snappishly, Pug said, “I’ll make a point of introducing you
when we get back.”
Laurie ignored the tone “I’ll hold you to that. Look, all I mean is
it seems you’ve developed an excellent knack for finding worthwhile women.” A
little sadly, he said, “I wish I could claim as much. My life has been mostly
caught up with tavern wenches, farmers’ daughters, and common street whores. I
don’t know what to tell you.”
“Laurie,” said Pug. Laurie sat up and looked at his friend. “I don’t
know . . . I don’t know what to do.”
Laurie studied Pug a moment, then comprehension dawned and he threw
back his head, laughing. He could see Pug’s anger rising and put his hands up
in supplication. “I’m sorry, Pug. I didn’t mean to embarrass you. It was just
not what I expected to hear.”
Somewhat placated, Pug said, “I was young when I was captured, less
than sixteen years of age. I was never of a size like the other boys, so the
girls didn’t pay much attention to me, until Carline, I mean, and after I
became a squire, they were afraid to talk to me. After that . . . Damn it all,
Laurie. I’ve been in the swamps for four years. What chance have I had to know
a woman?”
Laurie sat quietly for a moment, and the tension left the room.
“Pug, I never would have imagined, but as you said, when have you had the
time?”
“Laurie, what am I to do?”
“What would you like to do?” Laurie looked at Pug, his expression
showing concern.
“I would like to . . . go to her. I think. I don’t know.”
Laurie rubbed his chin. “Look, Pug, I never thought I’d have this
sort of talk with anyone besides a son someday if I ever have one. I wasn’t
meaning to make sport of you. You just caught me off guard.” He looked away,
gathering his thoughts, then said, “My father threw me out when I was just shy
twelve years old; I was the oldest boy, and he had seven other mouths to feed.
And I was never much for farming. A neighbor boy and I walked to Tyr-Sog and
spent a year living on the streets. He joined a mercenary band as a cook’s
monkey and later became a soldier. I hooked up with a traveling troupe of musicians.
I apprenticed to a jongleur from whom I learned the songs, sagas, and ballads,
and I traveled.
“I came quickly to my growth, a man at thirteen. There was a woman
in the troupe, a widow of a singer, traveling with her brothers and cousins.
She was just past twenty, but seemed very old to me then. She was the one who
introduced me to the games of men and women.” He stopped for a moment, reliving
memories long forgotten.
Laurie smiled. “It was over fifteen years ago, Pug. But I can still
see her face. We were both a little lost. It was never a planned thing. It just
happened one afternoon on the road.
“She was . . . kind.” He looked at Pug. “She knew I was scared,
despite my bravado.” He smiled and closed his eyes. “I can still see the sun in
the trees behind her face, and the smell of her mingled with the scent of
wildflowers.” Opening his eyes he said, “We spent the next two years together,
while I learned to sing. Then I left the troupe.”
“What happened?” Pug asked, for this was a new story to him. Laurie
had never spoken of his youth before.
“She married again. He was a good man, an innkeeper on the road from
Malac’s Cross to Durrony’s Vale. His wife had died the year before of fever,
leaving him with two small sons. She tried to explain things to me, but I
wouldn’t listen. What did I know? I was not quite sixteen, and the world was a
simple place.”
Pug nodded. “I know what you mean.”
Laurie said, “Look, what I’m trying to say is that I understand the
problem. I can explain how things work . . .”
Pug said, “I know that. I wasn’t raised by monks.”
“But you don’t know how things work.”
Pug nodded as they both laughed. “I think you should just go to the
girl and make your feelings known,” said Laurie.
“Just talk to her?”
“Of course. Love is like a lot of things, it is always best done
with the head. Save mindless efforts for mindless things Now go.”
“Now?” Pug looked panic-stricken.
“You can’t start any sooner, right?”
Pug nodded and without a word left. He walked down the dark and
quiet corridors, outside to the slave quarters, and found his way to her door.
He raised his hand to knock on the door frame, then stopped. He stood quietly
for a moment trying to make up his mind what to do, when the door slid open.
Almorella stood in the doorway, clutching her robe about her, her hair
disheveled. “Oh,” she whispered, “I thought it was Laurie. Wait a moment.” She
disappeared into the room, then shortly reappeared with a bundle of things in
her arms. She patted Pug’s arm and set off in the direction of his and Laurie’s
room.
Pug stood at the door, then slowly entered. He could see Katala
lying under a blanket on her pallet. He stepped over to where she lay and
squatted next to her. He touched her shoulder and softly spoke her name. She
came awake and sat up suddenly, gathered her blanket around her, and said,
“What are you doing here?”
“I . . . I wanted to talk to you.” Once started, the words came out
in a tumbling rush. “I am sorry if I’ve done anything to make you angry with
me. Or haven’t done anything. I mean, Laurie said that if you don’t do
something when someone expects you to, that’s as bad as paying too much
attention. I’m not sure, you see.” She covered her mouth to hide a giggle, for
she could see his distress in spite of the gloom. “What I mean . . . what I
mean is I’m sorry. Sorry for what I’ve done. Or didn’t do . . .”
She silenced him by placing her fingertips across his mouth. Her arm
snaked out and around his neck, pulling his head downward. She kissed him
slowly, then said, “Silly. Go close the door.”
They lay together, Katala’s arm across Pug’s chest, while he stared
at the ceiling. She made sleepy sounds, and he ran his hands through her thick
hair and across her soft shoulder.
“What?” she asked sleepily.
“I was just thinking that I haven’t been happier since I was made a
member of the Duke’s court.”
“ ‘Sgood.” She came a bit more awake. “What’s a duke?”
Pug thought for a moment. “It’s like a lord here, only different. My
Duke was cousin to the King, and the third most powerful man in the Kingdom.”
She snuggled closer to him. “You must have been important to be part
of the court of such a man.”
“Not really; I did him a service and was rewarded for it.” He didn’t
think he wanted to bring up Carline’s name here. Somehow his boyhood fantasies
about the Princess seemed childish in light of this night.
Katala rolled over onto her stomach. She raised her head and rested
it on a hand, forming a triangle with her arm. “I wish things could be
different.”
“How so, love?”
“My father was a farmer in Thuril. We are among the last free people
in Kelewan. If we could go there, you could take a position with the Coaldra,
the Council of Warriors. They always have need for resourceful men. Then we
could be together.”
“We’re together here, aren’t we?”
Katala kissed him lightly. “Yes, dear Pug, we are. But we both
remember what it was to be free, don’t we?”
Pug sat up. “I try to put that sort of thing out of my mind.”
She put her arms around him, holding him as she would a child. “It
must have been terrible in the swamps. We hear stories, but no one knows,” she
said softly.
“It is well that you don’t.”
She kissed him, and soon they returned to that timeless, safe place
shared by two, all thoughts of things terrible and alien forgotten. For the
rest of the night they took pleasure in each other, discovering a depth of
feeling new to each. Pug couldn’t tell if she had known other men before, and
didn’t ask. It wasn’t important to him. The only important thing was being
there, with her, now. He was awash in a sea of new delights and emotions. He
didn’t understand his feelings entirely, but there was little doubt what he
felt for Katala was more real, more compelling, than the worshipful, confused
longings he had known when with Carline.
Weeks passed, and Pug found his life falling into a reassuring
routine. He spent occasional evenings with the Lord of the Shinzawai playing
chess—or shah, as it was called here—and their conversations gave Pug insights
into the nature of Tsurani life. He could no longer think of these people as
aliens, for he saw their daily life as similar to what he had known as a boy.
There were surprising differences, such as the strict adherence to an honor
code, but the similarities far outnumbered the differences.
Katala became the centerpiece of his existence. They came together
whenever they found time, sharing meals, a quick exchange of words, and every
night that they could steal together Pug was sure the other slaves in the
household knew of their nighttime assignations, but the proximity of people in
Tsurani life had bred a certain blindness to the personal habits of others, and
no one cared a great deal about the comings and goings of two slaves.
Several weeks after his first night with Katala, Pug found himself
alone with Kasumi, as Laurie was embroiled in another shouting match with the
woodcrafter who was finishing his lute. The man considered Laurie somewhat
unreasonable in objecting to the instrument’s being finished in bright yellow
paint with purple trim. And he saw absolutely no merit in leaving the natural
wood tones exposed. Pug and Kasumi left the singer explaining to the
woodcrafter the requirements of wood for proper resonance, seemingly intent on
convincing by volume as much as by logic.
They walked toward the stable area. Several more captured horses had
been purchased by agents of the Lord of the Shinzawai and had been sent to his
estate, at what Pug took to be a great deal of expense and some political
maneuvering. Whenever alone with the slaves, Kasumi spoke the King’s Tongue and
insisted they call him by name. He showed a quickness in learning the language
that matched his quickness in learning to ride.
“Friend Laurie,” said the older son of the house, “will never make a
proper slave from a Tsurani point of view. He has no appreciation of our arts.”
Pug listened to the argument that still could be heard coming from
the wood-carver’s building. “I think it more the case of his being concerned
over the proper appreciation of his art.”
They reached the corral and watched as a spirited grey stallion
reared and whinnied at their approach. The horse had been brought in a week
ago, securely tied by several leads to a wagon, and had repeatedly tried to
attack anyone who came close.
“Why do you think this one is so troublesome, Pug?”
Pug watched the magnificent animal run around the corral, herding
the other horses away from the men. When the mares and another, less dominant,
stallion were safely away, the grey turned and watched the two men warily.
“I’m not sure. Either he’s simply a badly tempered animal, perhaps
from mishandling, or he’s a specially trained war-horse. Most of our war mounts
are trained not to shy in battle, to remain silent when held, to respond to
their rider’s command in times of stress. A few, mostly ridden by lords, are
specially trained to obey only their master, and they are weapons as much as
transport, being schooled to attack. He may be one of these.”
Kasumi watched him closely as he pawed the ground and tossed his
head. “I shall ride him someday,” he said. “In any event, he will sire a strong
line. We now number five mares, and Father has secured another five. They will
arrive in a few weeks, and we are scouring every estate in the Empire to find
more.” Kasumi got a far-off look and mused, “When I was first upon your world,
Pug, I hated the sight of horses. They rode down upon us, and our soldiers
died. But then I came to see what magnificent creatures they are. There were
other prisoners, when I was still back on your world, who said you have noble
families who are known for nothing so much as the fine stock of horses they
breed. Someday the finest horses in the Empire shall be Shinzawai horses.”
“By the look of these, you have a good start, though from what
little I know, I think you need a larger stock for breeding.”
“We shall have as many as it takes.”
“Kasumi, how can your leaders spare these captured animals from the
war effort? You must surely see the need to quickly build mounted units if you
are going to advance your conquest.”
Kasumi’s face took on a rueful expression. “Our leaders, for the
most part, are tradition-bound, Pug. They refuse to see any wisdom in training
cavalry. They are fools. Your horsemen ride over our warriors, and yet they
pretend we cannot learn anything, calling your people barbarians. I once sieged
a castle in your homeland, and those who defended taught me much about
warcraft. Many would brand me traitor for saying such, but we have held our own
only by force of numbers. For the most part, your generals have more skill.
Trying to keep one’s soldiers alive, rather than sending them to their death,
teaches a certain craftiness.
“No, the truth of the matter is we are led by men who—” He stopped,
realizing he was speaking dangerously. “The truth is,” he said at last, “we are
as stiff-necked a people as you.”
He studied Pug’s face for a moment, then smiled. “We raided for
horses during the first year, so that the Warlord’s Great Ones could study the
beasts, to see if they were intelligent allies, like our cho-ja, or merely
animals. It was a fairly comical scene. The Warlord insisted he be the first to
try to ride a horse. I suspect he chose one much like this big grey, for no
sooner did he approach the animal than the horse attacked, nearly killing him.
His honor won’t permit any other to ride when he failed. And I think he was
fearful of trying again with another animal. Our Warlord, Almecho, is a man of
considerable pride and temper, even for a Tsurani.”
Pug said, “Then how can your father continue to purchase captured horses?
And how can you ride in defiance of his order?”
Kasumi’s smile broadened. “My father is a man of considerable
influence in the council. Our politics is strangely twisted, and there are ways
to bend any command, even from the Warlord or High Council, and any order, save
one from the Light of Heaven himself. But most of all it is because these
horses are here, and the Warlord is not.” He smiled “The Warlord is supreme
only in the field. Upon this estate, none may question my father’s will.”
Since coming to the estate of the Shinzawai, Pug had been troubled
by whatever Kasumi and his father were plotting. That they were embroiled in
some Tsurani political intrigue he doubted not, but what it might prove to be
he had no idea. A powerful lord like Kamatsu would not spend this much effort
satisfying a whim of even a son as favored as Kasumi. Still, Pug knew better
than to involve himself any more than he was involved by circumstance. He
changed the topic of conversation. “Kasumi, I was wondering something.”
“Yes?”
“What is the law regarding the marriage of slaves?”
Kasumi seemed unsurprised by the question. “Slaves may marry with
their master’s permission. But permission is rarely given. Once married, a man
and wife may not be separated, nor can children be sold away so long as the
parents live. That is the law. Should a married couple live a long time, an
estate could become burdened with three or four generations of slaves, many
more than they could economically support. But occasionally permission is
granted. Why, do you wish Katala for your wife?”
Pug looked surprised. “You know?”
Without arrogance Kasumi said, “Nothing occurs upon my father’s
estates that he is ignorant of, and he confides in me. It is a great honor.”
Pug nodded thoughtfully. “I don’t know yet. I feel much for her, but
something holds me back. It’s as if . . .” He shrugged, at a loss for words.
Kasumi regarded him closely for a time, then said, “It is by my
father’s will you live and by his whim how you live.” Kasumi stopped for a
minute, and Pug became painfully aware of how large a gulf still stood between
the two men, one the son of a powerful lord and the other the lowest of his
father’s property, a slave. The false veneer of friendship was ripped away, and
Pug again knew what he had learned in the swamp: here life was cheap, and only
this man’s pleasure, or his father’s, stood between Pug and destruction.
As if reading Pug’s mind, Kasumi said, “Remember, Pug, the law is
strict. A slave may never be freed. Still, there is the swamp, and there is
here. And to us of Tsuranuanni, you of the Kingdom are very impatient.”
Pug knew Kasumi was trying to tell him something, something perhaps
important. For all his openness at times, Kasumi could easily revert to a
Tsurani manner Pug could only call cryptic. There was an unvoiced tension
behind Kasumi’s words, and Pug thought it best not to press. Changing the topic
of conversation again, he asked, “How goes the war, Kasumi?”
Kasumi sighed, “Badly for both sides.” He watched the grey stallion.
“We fight along stable lines, unchanged in the last three years. Our last two
offensives were blunted, but your army also could make no gains. Now weeks pass
without fighting. Then your countrymen raid one of our enclaves, and we return
the compliment. Little is accomplished except the spilling of blood. It is all
very senseless, and there is little honor to be won.”
Pug was surprised. Everything he had seen of the Tsurani reinforced
Meecham’s observation of years ago, that the Tsurani were a very warlike race.
Everywhere he had looked when traveling to this estate, he had seen soldiers.
Both sons of the house were soldiers, as had been their father in his youth.
Hokanu was First Strike Leader of his father’s garrison, due to his being the
Lord of the Shinzawai’s second son, but his dealing with the slave master at
the swamp camp showed a ruthless efficiency in Hokanu, and Pug knew it to be no
quirk. He was Tsurani, and the Tsurani code was taught at a very early age, and
fiercely followed.
Kasumi sensed he was being studied and said, “I fear I am becoming
softened by your outlandish ways, Pug.” He paused. “Come, tell me more of your
people, and what . . .” Kasumi froze. He seized Pug’s arm and cocked his head,
listening. After a brief instant he said, “No! It can’t be!” Suddenly he
wheeled and shouted, “Raid! The Thun!”
Pug listened and in the distance could hear the faint rumbling, as
if a herd of horses were galloping over the plains. He climbed upon the rail of
the corral and looked into the distance. A large meadow stretched away behind
the corral ending at the edge of a lightly wooded area. While the alarm sounded
behind him, he could see forms emerging from the tree line.
Pug watched in terrible fascination as the creatures called Thьn
came racing toward the estate house. They grew in stature as they ran furiously
toward where Pug waited. They were large, centaurlike beings, looking like
mounted riders in the distance. Rather than horselike, the lower body was
reminiscent of a large deer or an elk, but more heavily muscled. The upper body
was completely manlike, but the face resembled nothing so much as an ape with a
long snout. The entire body, except the face, was covered by a medium-length
fur, mottled grey and white. Each creature carried a club or ax, the head being
stone lashed to the wooden haft.
Hokanu and the household guard came running from the soldiers’
building and took up positions near the corral. Archers readied their bows, and
swordsmen stood in ranks, ready to accept the charge.
Suddenly Laurie was at Pug’s side, holding his nearly finished lute
“What?”
“Thьn raid!”
Laurie stood as fascinated by the sight as Pug. Suddenly he put his
lute aside, then jumped into the corral. “What do you think you’re doing?”
yelled Pug.
The troubadour dodged a protective feint by the grey stallion and
jumped upon the back of another horse, the dominant mare of the small herd.
“Trying to get the animals safely away.”
Pug nodded and opened the gate Laurie rode the horse out, but the
grey kept the others from following, herding them back Pug hesitated for a
minute, then said, “Algon, I hope you knew what you taught.” He walked calmly
toward the stallion, silently trying to convey a sense of command. When the
stallion put back his ears and snorted at him, Pug said, “Stand!”
The horse’s ears cocked at the command, and it seemed to be
deciding. Pug knew timing was critical and did not break the rhythm of his
approach. The horse studied him as he came alongside, and Pug said, “Stand!”
again. Then before the animal could bolt, he grabbed a handful of mane and was
up on its back.
The battle-trained war-horse, whether by design or luck, decided Pug
was close enough to his former master to respond. Perhaps it was due to the
clamor of battle around, but for whatever reason, the grey leaped forward in
response to Pug’s leg commands and was out the gate at a run. Pug gripped with
his legs for his life. As the horse cleared the gate, Pug shouted, “Laurie, get
the others!” as the stallion turned to the left. Pug glanced over his shoulder
and saw the other animals following the herd leader as Laurie brought her past
the gate.
Pug saw Kasumi running from the tack house, a saddle in his hand,
and shouted, “Whoa!” setting as hard a seat as he could manage bareback. The
stallion halted and Pug commanded, “Stand!” The grey pawed the ground in
anticipation of a fight. Kasumi shouted as he approached, “Keep the horses from
fighting. This is a Blood Raid, and the Thьn will not retreat until each has
killed at least once.” He called for Laurie to stop, and when the small herd
was milling about, he quickly saddled a horse and turned it away from the
others.
Pug kicked, and the grey and the mare Laurie rode led the remaining
four horses to the side of the estate house. They kept the animals closely
bunched out of sight of the attacking Thьn.
A soldier came running around the corner of the house, carrying
weapons. He reached Pug and Laurie and shouted, “My master Kasumi commands you
defend the horses with your lives.” He handed the two slaves each a sword and
shield, then turned and dashed back toward the fighting.
Pug regarded the strange sword and shield, lighter by half than any
he had ever trained with. A shrill cry interrupted his examination as Kasumi
came riding around the house, in a running fight with a Thьn warrior. The
eldest son of the Shinzawai rode well, and though he had little training in
fighting from horseback, he was a skilled swordsman His inexperience was offset
by the Thun’s lack of experience with horses, for while it was not unlike
fighting one of his own kind, the horse was also attacking, biting at the
creature’s chest and face.
Catching wind of the Thьn, Pug’s grey reared and nearly threw him.
He held fiercely to the mane and gripped tightly with his lower legs. The other
horses neighed, and Pug fought to keep his from charging. Laurie shouted, “They
don’t like the way those things smell. Look at the way Kasumi’s horse is
acting.”
Another of the creatures came into sight, and Laurie let out a whoop
and rode to intercept. They came together in a clash of weapons, and Laurie
took the Thьn club blow on his shield. His own sword struck the creature across
the chest, and it cried out in a strange, guttural language, staggering for a
moment, then falling.
Pug heard a scream from inside the house and turned to see one of
the thin sliding doors erupt outward as a body hurled through it. A stunned
house slave staggered to his feet, then collapsed, blood welling up from a
wound on his head. Other figures came scurrying through the door.
Pug saw Katala and Almorella running from the house with the others,
a Thьn warrior in pursuit. The creature bore down upon Katala, club raised high
overhead.
Pug shouted her name, and the grey sensed his rider’s alarm. Without
command the huge war-horse sprang forward, intercepting the Thьn as it closed
with the slave girl. The horse was enraged, from the sounds of battle or the
Thьn smell. It crashed heavily into the Thьn, biting and lashing out with heavy
forelegs, and the Thьn’s legs went out from under it. Pug was thrown by the
impact and landed heavily. He lay dazed for a moment, then he climbed to his
feet. He staggered to where Katala sat huddled and pulled her away from the
maddened stallion.
The grey reared above the still Thьn, and hooves came flashing down.
Again and again the war-horse struck at the Thьn, until there was no doubt of
there being a breath of life left in the fallen creature.
Pug shouted for the horse to halt and stand, and with a contemptuous
snort, the animal ceased the attack, but it kept its ears pinned back, and Pug
could see it quiver. Pug approached it and stroked its neck, until the animal
stopped trembling.
Then it was quiet. Pug looked about and saw Laurie riding after the
scattering horses. He left his own mount and returned to Katala She sat
trembling upon the grass, Almorella at her side.
Kneeling before her, he said, “Are you all right?”
She took a deep breath, then gave him a frightened smile. “Yes, but
I was sure I was going to be trampled for a minute.”
Pug looked at the slave girl who had come to mean so much to him and
said, “I thought so, too.” Suddenly they were both smiling at each other.
Almorella stood and made some comment about seeing to the others. “I was so
afraid you’d been hurt,” Pug said “I thought I would lose my mind when I saw
you running from that creature.”
Katala put her hand upon Pug’s cheek, and he realized they were wet
with tears, “I was so frightened for you,” he said.
“And I for you. I thought you’d be killed the way you came crashing
into the Thьn.” Then she was weeping. She came slowly into his arms. “I don’t
know what I would do if you were killed.” Pug gripped her with all his
strength. They sat that way for a few minutes, until Katala regained her
composure. Gently pulling away from Pug, she said, “The estate is a shambles.
Septiem will have a thousand things for us to do.” She began to stand, and Pug
gripped her hand.
Rising before her he said, “I didn’t know, before I mean. I love
you, Katala.”
She smiled at him, touching his cheek. “And I you, Pug.”
Their moment of discovery was interrupted by the appearance of the
Lord of the Shinzawai and his younger son. Looking around, he surveyed the
damage to his house as Kasumi rode around the corner, splattered in blood.
Kasumi saluted his father and said, “They have fled, I have ordered
men dispatched to the northern watch forts. They must have overwhelmed one of
the garrisons to have broken through.”
The Lord of the Shinzawai nodded he understood and turned to enter
his house, calling for his First Adviser and his other senior servants to
report the damage to him.
Katala whispered to Pug, “We’ll talk later,” and answered the hoarse
shouts of the hadonra, Septiem. Pug joined Laurie, who had ridden up to
Kasumi’s side.
The minstrel looked at the dead creatures on the ground and said,
“What are they?”
Kasumi said, “Thьn. They’re nomadic creatures of the northern
tundra. We have forts along the foothills of the mountains separating our
estates from their lands, at every pass. Once they roamed these ranges until we
drove them north. Occasionally they seek to return to the warmer lands of the
south.” He pointed to a talisman tied in the fur of one of the creatures. “This
was a Blood Raid. They are all young males, unproved in their bands, without
mates. They failed in the summer rites of combat and were banished from the
herd by the stronger males. They had to come south, killing at least one
Tsurani before they would be allowed to return to their band. Each would have
to return with a Tsurani head, or not come back. It is their custom. Those who
escaped will be hunted down, for they will not cross back to their home range.”
Laurie shook his head. “Does this happen often?”
“Every year,” said Hokanu with a wry smile. “Usually the watch forts
turn them back, but it must have been a large herd this year. Many must have
already returned to the north with heads taken from our men at the forts.”
Kasumi said, “They must have killed two patrols, as well.” He shook
his head. “We’ve lost between sixty and a hundred men.”
Hokanu seemed to reflect his older brother’s unhappiness at the
setback. “I will personally lead a patrol to see to the damage.”
Kasumi gave him permission, and he left Kasumi turned toward Laurie.
“The horses?” Laurie pointed to where the stallion Pug had ridden stood watch
over a small herd.
Suddenly Pug spoke up. “Kasumi, I do wish to ask your father
permission to marry Katala.”
Kasumi’s eyes narrowed. “Listen well, Pug. I tried to instruct you,
but you did not seem to catch my meaning. You are not of a subtle people. Now I
will put it plainly. You may ask, but it will be refused.”
Pug began to object, but Kasumi cut him off. “I have said, you are
impatient people. There are reasons. More I cannot say, but there are reasons,
Pug.”
Anger flared in Pug’s eyes, and Kasumi said, in the King’s Tongue,
“Say a word in anger within earshot of any soldier of this house, especially my
brother, and you are a dead slave.”
Stiffly Pug said, “Your will, master.”
Witnessing the bitterness of Pug’s expression, Kasumi softly
repeated, “There are reasons, Pug.” For a moment he was trying to be other than
a Tsurani master, a friend trying to ease pain. He locked gaze with Pug, then a
veil dropped over Kasumi’s eyes, and once more they were slave and master.
Pug lowered his eyes as was expected of a slave, and Kasumi said,
“See to the horses.” He strode away, leaving Pug alone.
Pug never spoke of his request to Katala She sensed that something
troubled him deeply, something that seemed to add a bitter note to their
otherwise joyful time together. He learned the depth of his love for her and
began to explore her complex nature. Besides being strong-willed, she was
quick-minded. He only had to explain something to her once, and she understood.
He learned to love her dry wit, a quality native to her people, the Thuril, and
sharpened to a razor’s edge by her captivity She was an observant student of
everything around her and commented unmercifully upon the foibles of everyone
in the household, to their detriment and Pug’s amusement She insisted upon
learning some of Pug’s language, so he began teaching her the King’s Tongue.
She proved an apt student.
Two months went by uneventfully, then one night Pug and Laurie were
called to the dining room of the master of the house. Laurie had completed work
upon his lute and, though dissatisfied in a hundred little ways, judged it
passable for playing. Tonight he was to play for the Lord of the Shinzawai.
They entered the room and saw that the lord was entertaining a
guest, a black-robed man, the Great One whom they had glimpsed months ago. Pug
stood by the door while Laurie took a place at the foot of the low dining
table. Adjusting the cushion he sat upon, he began to play.
As the first notes hung in the air, he started singing: an old tune
that Pug knew well. It sang of the joys of harvest and the riches of the land,
and was a favorite in farm villages throughout the Kingdom. Besides Pug, only
Kasumi understood the words, though his father could pick out a few that he had
learned during his chess matches with Pug.
Pug had never heard Laurie sing before, and he was genuinely
impressed. For all the troubadour’s braggadocio, he was better than any Pug had
heard. His voice was a clear, true instrument, expressive in both words and
music of what he sang. When he was finished, the diners politely struck the
table with eating knives, in what Pug assumed was the Tsurani equivalent of
applause.
Laurie began another tune, a merry air played at festivals
throughout the Kingdom. Pug remembered when he had last heard it, at the
Festival of Banapis the year before he had left Crydee for Rillanon. He could
almost see once more the familiar sights of home. For the first time in years,
Pug felt a deep sadness and longing that nearly overwhelmed him.
Pug swallowed hard, easing the tightness in his throat. Homesickness
and hopeless frustration warred within him, and he could feel his hard-learned
self-control slipping away. He quickly invoked one of the calming exercises he
had been taught by Kulgan. A sense of well-being swept over him, and he
relaxed. While Laurie performed, Pug used all his concentration to fend off the
haunting memories of home. All his skills created an aura of calm he could
stand within, a refuge from useless rage, the only legacy of reminiscence.
Several times during the performance, Pug felt the gaze of the Great
One upon him. The man seemed to study him with some question in his eyes. When
Laurie was finished, the magician leaned over and spoke to his host.
The Lord of the Shinzawai beckoned Pug to the table. When he was
seated, the Great One spoke. “I must ask you something.” His voice was clear
and strong, and his tone reminded Pug of Kulgan when he was preparing Pug for
lessons. “Who are you?”
The direct, simple question caught everyone at the table by
surprise. The lord of the house seemed uncertain as to the magician’s question
and started to reply. “He is a slave—”
He was interrupted by the Great One’s upraised hand. Pug said, “I am
called Pug, master.”
Again the man’s dark eyes studied him. “Who are you?”
Pug felt flustered. He had never liked being the center of
attention, and this time it was focused upon him as never before in his life.
“I am Pug, once of the Duke of Crydee’s court.”
“Who are you, to stand here radiating the power?” At this all three
men of the Shinzawai household started, and Laurie looked at Pug in confusion.
“I am a slave, master.”
“Give me your hand.”
Pug reached out, and his hand was taken by the Great One. The man’s
lips moved, and his eyes clouded over Pug felt a warmth flow through his hand
and over him. The room seemed to glow with a soft white haze. Soon all he could
see was the magician’s eyes. His mind fogged over, and time was suspended. He
felt a pressure inside his head as if something were trying to intrude. He
fought against it, and the pressure withdrew.
His vision cleared, and the two dark eyes seemed to withdraw from
his face until he could see the entire room again. The magician let go of his
hand. “Who are you?” A brief flicker in his eyes was the only sign of his deep
concern.
“I am Pug, apprentice to the magician Kulgan.”
At this the Lord of the Shinzawai blanched, confusion registering on
his face. “How . . .”
The black-robed Great One rose and announced, “This slave is no
longer property of this house. He is now the province of the Assembly.”
The room fell silent. Pug couldn’t understand what was happening and
felt afraid.
The magician drew forth a device from his robe Pug remembered that
he had seen one before, during the raid on the Tsurani camp, and his fear
mounted. The magician activated it, and it buzzed as the other one had. He
placed his hand on Pug’s shoulder, and the room disappeared in a grey haze.
21
CHANGELING
The Elf Prince sat quietly.
Calin awaited his mother. There was much on his mind, and he needed
to speak with her this night. There had been little chance for that of late,
for as the war had grown in scope, he found less time to abide in the bowers of
Elvandar. As Warleader of the elves, he had been in the field nearly every day
since the last time the outworlders had tried to forge across the river.
Since the siege of Castle Crydee three years before, the outworlders
had come each spring, swarming across the river like ants, a dozen for each elf
Each year elven magic had defeated them. Hundreds would enter the sleeping
glades to fall into the endless sleep, their bodies being consumed by the soil,
to nourish the magic trees. Others would answer the dryads’ call, following the
enchanted sprites’ songs until in their passion for the elemental beings they
would die of thirst while still in their inhuman lovers’ embrace feeding the
dryads with their lives. Others would fall to the creatures of the forests, the
giant wolves, bears, and lions who answered the call of the elven war horns.
The very branches and roots of the trees of the elven forests would resist the
invaders until they turned and fled.
But this year, for the first time, the Black Robes had come. Much of
the elven magic had been blunted. The elves had prevailed, but Calin wondered
how they would fare when the outworlders returned.
This year the dwarves of the Grey Towers had again aided the elves.
With the moredhel gone from the Green Heart, the dwarves had made swift passage
from their wintering in the mountains, adding their numbers to the defense of
Elvandar. For the third year since the siege at Crydee, the dwarves had proved
the difference in holding the out-worlders across the river. And again with the
dwarves came the man called Tomas.
Calin looked up, then rose as his mother approached. Queen Aglaranna
seated herself upon her throne and said, “My son, it is good to see you again.”
“Mother, it is good to see you also.” He sat at her feet and waited
for the words he needed to come. His mother sat patiently, sensing his dark
mood.
Finally he spoke. “I am troubled by Tomas.”
“As am I,” said the Queen, her expression clouded and pensive.
“Is that why you absent yourself when he comes to court?”
“For that . . . and other reasons.”
“How can it be the Old Ones’ magic still holds so strong after all
these ages?”
A voice came from behind the throne. “So that’s it, then?”
They turned, surprised, and Dolgan stepped from the gloom, lighting
his pipe. Aglaranna looked incensed. “Are the dwarves of the Grey Towers known
for eavesdropping, Dolgan?”
The dwarven chief ignored the bite of the question. “Usually not, my
lady. But I was out for a walk—those little tree rooms fill with smoke right
quickly—and I happened to overhear. I did not wish to interrupt.”
Calin said, “You can move with stealth when you choose, friend
Dolgan.”
Dolgan shrugged and blew a cloud of smoke. “Elvenfolk are not the
only ones with the knack of treading lightly. But we were speaking of the lad.
If what you say is true, then it is a serious matter indeed. Had I known, I
would never have allowed him to take the gift.”
The Queen smiled at him. “It is not your fault, Dolgan. You could
not have known. I have feared this since Tomas came among us in the mantle of
the Old Ones. At first I thought the magic of the Valheru would not work for
him, being a mortal, but now I can see he is less mortal each year.
“It was an unfortunate series of events brought this to pass. Our
Spellweavers would have discovered that treasure ages ago, but for the dragon’s
magic. We spent centuries seeking out and destroying such relics, preventing
their use by the moredhel. Now it is too late, for Tomas would never willingly
let the armor be destroyed.”
Dolgan puffed at his pipe. “Each winter he broods in the long halls,
awaiting the coming of spring, and the coming of battle. There is little else
for him. He sits and drinks, or stands at the door staring out into the snow,
seeing what no other can see. He keeps the armor locked away in his room during
such times, and when campaigning, he never removes it, even to sleep. He has
changed, and it is not a natural changing. No, he would never willingly give up
the armor.”
“We could try to force him,” said the Queen, “but that could prove
unwise. There is something coming into being in him, something that may save my
people, and I would risk much for them.”
Dolgan said, “I do not understand, my lady.”
“I am not sure I do either, Dolgan, but I am Queen of a people at
war. A terrible foe savages our lands and each year grows bolder. The outworld
magic is strong, perhaps stronger than any since the Old Ones vanished. It may
be the magic in the dragon’s gift will save my people.”
Dolgan shook his head. “It seems strange such power could still
reside in metal armor.”
Aglaranna smiled at the dwarf. “Does it? What of the Hammer of
Tholin you carry? Is it not vested with powers from ages past? Powers that mark
you once more heir to the throne of the dwarves of the West?”
Dolgan looked hard at the Queen. “You know much of our ways, lady I
must never forget your girlish countenance masks ages of knowledge.” He then
brushed away her comment. “We have been done with kings for many years in the
West, since Tholin vanished in the Mac Mordain Cadal. We do as well as those
who obey old King Halfdan in Dorgin. But should my people wish the throne
restored, we shall meet in moot, though not until this war is over. Now, what
of the lad?”
Aglaranna looked troubled. “He is becoming what he is becoming. We
can aid that transformation. Our Spellweavers work to this end already. Should
the full power of the Valheru rise up in Tomas un-tempered, he would be able to
brush aside our protective magic much as you would a bothersome twig barring your
way upon the trail. But he is not an Old One born. His nature is as alien to
the Valheru as their nature was to all others. Aided by our Spellweavers, his
human ability to love, to know compassion, to understand, may temper the
unchecked power of the Valheru. If so, he may . . . he may prove a boon to us
all.” Dolgan was visited by the certainty the Queen had been about to say
something else, but remained silent as she continued “Should that Valheru power
become coupled with a human’s capacity for blind hatred, savagery, and cruelty,
then he would become something to fear. Only time will tell us what such a
blending will produce.”
“The Dragon Lords . . . ,” said Dolgan. “We have some mention of the
Valheru in our lore, but only scraps here and there. I would understand more,
if you’ll permit.”
The Queen looked off into the distance. “Our lore, eldest of all in
the world today, tells of the Valheru, Dolgan. There is much of which I am
forbidden to speak, names of power, fearful to invoke, things terrible to
recall, but I may tell you this much. Long before man or dwarf came to this
world, the Valheru ruled. They were part of this world, fashioned from the very
fabric of its creation, nearly godlike in power and unfathomable in purpose.
Their nature was chaotic and unpredictable. They were more powerful than any
others. Upon the backs of the great dragons they flew, no place in the universe
beyond their reach. To other worlds they roamed, bringing back that which
pleased them, treasure and knowledge plundered from other beings. They were
subject to no law but their own will and whim. They fought among themselves as
often as not, and only death resolved conflicts. This world was their dominion.
And we were their creatures.
“We and the moredhel were of one race then, and the Valheru bred us
as you would cattle. Some were taken, from both races, for . . . personal pets,
bred for beauty . . . and other qualities. Others were bred to tend the forests
and fields. Those who lived in the wild became the forerunners of the elves,
while those who remained with the Valheru were the forerunners of the moredhel.
“But then came a time of changing. Our masters ceased their
internecine struggles and banded together. Why they did so is forgotten, though
some among the moredhel may still know, for they were closer to our masters
than we elves. We may have known their reasons then, but this was the time of
the Chaos Wars, and much was lost. Only this we know: all the servants of the
Valheru were given freedom, and the Old Ones were never again seen by elf or
moredhel. When the Chaos Wars raged, great rifts in time and space were opened,
and it was through these that goblins, men, and dwarves came to this world. Few
of our people or of the moredhel survived, but those that did rebuilt our
homes. The moredhel longed to inherit the might of their lost masters, rather
than seek their own destiny as the elves did, and used their cunning to find
tokens of the Valheru, taking to the Dark Path. It is the reason we are so
unalike, who once were brothers.
“The old magic is still powerful. In strength and bravery Tomas
matches any. He took the magic unwittingly, and that may prove the difference.
The old magic changed the moredhel into the Brotherhood of the Dark Path
because they sought the power out of dark longings. Tomas was a boy of good and
noble heart, with no taint of evil in his soul. Perchance he will grow to
master the dark side of the magic.”
Dolgan scratched his head. “ ‘Tis a grave risk, then, from what you
say. I was concerned for the lad, true, and gave little thought to the larger
scheme of things. You know the way of it better than I, but I hope we’ll not
live to regret letting him keep the armor.”
The Queen stepped down from her throne. “I also hope there will be
no regrets, Dolgan. Here in Elvandar the old magic is softened, and Tomas is of
lighter heart. Perhaps that is a sign we do the right thing, tempering the
change rather than opposing it.”
Dolgan made a courtly bow. “I yield to your wisdom, my lady. And I
pray you are right.”
The Queen bade them good night and left. Calin said, “I also pray my
Mother-Queen speaks from wisdom, and not from some other feeling.”
“I don’t take your meaning, Elf Prince.”
Calin looked down upon the short figure. “Don’t play the fool with
me, Dolgan Your wisdom is widely known and highly respected. You see it as well
as I. Between my mother and Tomas there is something growing.”
Dolgan sighed, the freshening breeze carrying away his pipe’s smoke
“Aye, Calin, I’ve seen it as well. A look, little more, but enough.”
“She looks upon Tomas as she once looked upon my Father-King, though
she still denies it within herself.”
“And there is something within Tomas,” said the dwarf, watching the
Elf Prince closely, “though it is less tender than what your lady feels. Still,
he holds it well in check.”
“Look to your friend, Dolgan. Should he try to press his suit for
the Queen, there will be trouble.”
“So much do you dislike him, Calin?”
Calin looked thoughtfully at Dolgan. “No, Dolgan. I do not dislike
Tomas. I fear him. That is enough.” Calin was silent for a while, then said,
“We will never again bend knee before another master, we who live in Elvandar.
Should my mother’s hopes of how Tomas will change prove false, we shall have a
reckoning.”
Dolgan shook his head slowly. “That would prove a sorry day, Calin.”
“That it would, Dolgan.” Calin walked from the council ring, past
his mother’s throne, and left the dwarf alone. Dolgan looked out at the fairy
lights of Elvandar, praying the Elf Queen’s hopes would not prove unfounded.
***
Winds
howled across the plains. Ashen-Shugar sat astride the broad shoulders of
Shuruga. The great golden dragon’s thoughts reached his master. Do we hunt?
There was hunger in the dragon’s mind.
“No. We wait.”
The Ruler of the Eagles’ Reaches waited as the streaming moredhel
made their way toward the rising city. Hundreds pulled great blocks of stone
mined in quarries half a world away, dragging them toward the city on the
plains. Many had died and many more would die, but that was unimportant. Or was
it? Ashen-Shugar was troubled by this new and strange thought.
A roar
from above sounded as another great dragon came spiraling down, a magnificent
black bellowing challenge. Shuruga raised his head and trumpeted his reply. To
his master he said, Do we fight?
“No.”
Ashen-Shugar sensed disappointment in his mount, but chose to ignore
it. He watched as the other dragon settled gracefully to the ground a short
distance away, folding its mighty wings across its back. Black scales reflected
the hazy sunlight like polished ebony. The dragon’s rider raised his hand in
salute.
Ashen-Shugar returned the greeting, and the other’s dragon
approached cautiously. Shuruga hissed, and Ashen-Shugar absently struck the
beast with his fist. Shuruga lapsed into silence.
“Has the Ruler of the Eagles’ Reaches finally come to join us?”
asked the newcomer, Draken-Korin, the Lord of Tigers. His
black-and-orange-striped armor sparkled as he dismounted from his dragon.
Out of courtesy Ashen-Shugar dismounted as well. His hand never
strayed far from his white-hilted sword of gold, for though times were
changing, trust was unknown among the Valheru. In times past they would have
fought as likely as not, but now the need for information was more pressing.
Ashen-Shugar said, “No. I simply watch.”
Draken-Korin regarded the Ruler of the Eagles’ Reaches, his pale
blue eyes revealing no emotion. “You alone have not agreed, Ashen-Shugar.”
“Joining to plunder across the cosmos is one thing, Draken-Korin This
. . . this plan of yours is madness.”
“What is this madness? I know not of what you speak. We are. We do.
What more is there?”
“This is not our way.”
“It is not our way to let others stand against our will. These new
beings, they contest with us.”
Ashen-Shugar raised his eyes skyward. “Yes, that is so. But they are
not like others. They also are formed from the very stuff of this world, as are
we.”
“What does that matter? How many of our kin have you killed? How
much blood has passed your lips? Whoever stands against you must be killed, or
kill you. That is all.”
“What of those left behind, the moredhel and the elves?”
“What of them? They are nothing.”
“They are ours.”
“You have grown strange under your mountains, Ashen-Shugar. They are
our servants. It is not as if they possessed true power. They exist for our
pleasure, nothing more. What concerns you?”
“I do not know. There is something. . . .”
“Tomas.”
For an instant Tomas existed in two places. He shook his head and
the visions vanished. He turned his head and saw Galain lying in the brush next
to him. A force of elves and dwarves waited some distance behind. The young
cousin of Prince Calin pointed toward the Tsurani camp across the river. Tomas
followed his companion’s gesture and saw the outworld soldiers sitting near
their campfires, and smiled. “They hug their camps,” he whispered.
Galain nodded. “We have stung them enough that they seek the warmth of
their campfires.”
The late spring evening mist shrouded the area, mantling the Tsurani
camp in haze. Even the campfires seemed to burn less brightly. Tomas again
studied the camp. “I mark thirty, with thirty more in each camp east and west.”
Galain said nothing, waiting for Tomas’s next command. Though Calin
was Warleader of Elvandar, Tomas had assumed command of the forces of elves and
dwarves. It was never clear when captaincy had passed to him, but slowly, as he
had grown in stature, he had grown in leadership. In battle he would simply
shout for something to be done, and elves and dwarves would rush to obey. At
first it had been because the commands were logical and obvious. But the
pattern had become accepted, and now they obeyed because it was Tomas who
commanded.
Tomas motioned for Galain to follow and moved away from the
river-bank, until they were safely out of sight of the Tsurani camp, among
those who waited deep within the trees Dolgan looked at the young man who once
had been the boy he saved from the mines of Mac Mordain Cadal.
Tomas stood six inches past six feet in height, as tall as any elf.
He walked with a powerful self-assurance, a warrior born. In the six years he
had been with the dwarves, he had become a man . . . and more. Dolgan watched
him, as Tomas surveyed the warriors gathered before him, and knew Tomas could
now walk the dark mines of the Grey Towers without fear or danger.
“Have the other scouts turned?”
Dolgan nodded, signaling for them to come forward. Three elves and
three dwarves approached. “Any sign of the Black Robes?”
When the scouts indicated no, the man in white and gold frowned. “We
would do well to capture one of them and carry him to Elvandar. Their last
attack was the deepest yet. I would give much to know the limits of their
power.”
Dolgan took out his pipe, gauging they were far enough from the
river for it not to be seen. As he lit it, he said, “The Tsurani guard the
Black Robes like a dragon guards its treasure.”
Tomas laughed at that, and Dolgan caught a glimpse of the boy he had
known. “Aye, and it’s a brave dwarf who loots a dragon’s lair.”
Galain said, “If they follow the pattern of the last three years,
they most likely are done with us for the season. It is possible we shall not
see another Black Robe until next spring.”
Tomas looked thoughtful, his pale eyes seemingly aglow with a light
of their own. “Their pattern . . . their pattern is to take, to hold, then to
take more. We have been willing to let them do as they wish, so long as they do
not cross the river. It is time to change that pattern. And if we trouble them
enough, we may have the opportunity to seize one of these Black Robes.”
Dolgan shook his head at the risk implicit in what Tomas proposed.
Then, with a smile, Tomas added, “Besides, if we can’t loosen their hold along
the river for a time, the dwarves and I will be forced to winter here, for the
outworlders are now deep into the Green Heart.”
Galain looked at his tall friend. Tomas grew more elf-like each
year, and Galain could appreciate the obscure humor that often marked his
words. He knew Tomas would welcome staying near the Queen. But in spite of his
worries over Tomas’s magic, he had come to like the man. “How?”
“Send bowmen to the camps on the right and the left and beyond. When
I call with the honk of a greylag, have them volley across the river, but from
beyond those positions as if the main attack were coming from east and west.”
He smiled, and there was no humor in his expression. “That should isolate this
camp long enough for us to do some bloody work.”
Galain nodded, and sent ten bowmen to each camp. The others made
ready for the attack, and after sufficient time Tomas raised his hands to his
mouth Cupping them, he made the sound of a wild goose.
A moment later he could hear shouting coming from east and west of
the position across the river. The soldiers in the Tsurani camp stood and
looked both ways, with several coming to the edge of the water, peering into
the dark forest. Tomas raised his hand and dropped it with a chopping motion.
Suddenly it was raining elven arrows on the camp across the river,
and Tsurani soldiers were diving for their shields. Before they could fully
recover, Tomas led a charge of dwarves across the shallow sandbar ford. Another
flight of arrows passed overhead, then the elves shouldered bows, drew swords,
and charged after the dwarves, all save a dozen who would stay to offer
covering fire should it be needed.
Tomas was first ashore and struck down a Tsurani guard who met him
at the river’s edge. Quickly he was among them, wreaking mayhem. Tsurani blood
exploded off his golden blade, and the screams of wounded and dying men filled
the damp night.
Dolgan slew a guard and found none to stand against him. He turned
and saw Galain standing over another dead Tsurani, but staring at something
beyond. The dwarf followed his gaze to where Tomas was standing over a wounded
Tsurani soldier who lay with blood running down his face from a scalp wound, an
arm upraised in a plea for mercy. Over him stood Tomas, his face an alien mask
of rage. With a strange and terrible cry, in a voice cruel and harsh, he
brought down his golden sword and ended the Tsurani’s life. He turned quickly,
seeking more foes. When none presented themselves, he seemed to go blank for a
moment, then his eyes refocused.
Galain heard a dwarf call, “They come.” Shouts came from the other
Tsurani camps as they discovered the ruse and quickly approached the true
battle site.
Without a word Tomas’s party hurried across the water. They reached
the other side as Tsurani bowmen fired upon them, to be answered by elves on
the opposite shore. The attacking group quickly fell back deeply into the
trees, until they were a safe distance away.
When they stopped, the elves and dwarves sat down to catch their
wind, and to rest from the battle surge still in their blood. Galain looked to
Tomas and said, “We did well. No one lost, and only a few slightly wounded, and
thirty outworlders slain.”
Tomas didn’t smile, but looked thoughtfully for a moment, as if
hearing something. He turned to look at Galain, as if the elf’s words were
finally registering. “Aye, we did well, but we must strike again, tomorrow and
the next day and the next, until they act.”
Night after night they crossed the river. They would attack a camp,
and the next night strike miles away. A night would pass without attack, then
the same camp would be raided three nights running. Sometimes a single arrow
would take a guard from the opposite shore, then nothing, while his companions
stood waiting for an attack that never came. Once they struck through the lines
at dawn, after the defenders had decided that no attack was coming. They
overran a camp, ranging miles into the south forest, and took a baggage train,
even slaughtering the strange six-legged beasts who pulled the wagons. Five
separate fights were fought as they turned from that raid, and two dwarves and
three elves were lost.
Now Tomas and his band, numbering over three hundred elves and
dwarves, sat awaiting word from other camps. They were eating a stew of
venison, seasoned with mosses, roots, and tubers.
A runner came up to Tomas and Galain. “Word from the King’s army.”
Behind him a figure in grey approached the campfire.
Tomas and Galain stood. “Hail, Long Leon of Natal,” said the elf.
“Hail, Galain,” answered the tall, black-skinned ranger.
An elf brought over bread and a bowl of steaming stew to the two
newcomers, and as they sat, Tomas said, “What news from the Duke?”
Between mouthfuls of food, the ranger said, “Lord Borric sends
greetings. Things stand poorly. Like moss on a tree, the Tsurani slowly advance
in the east. They take a few yards, then sit. They seem to be in no hurry. The
Duke’s best guess is they seek to reach the coast by next year, isolating the
Free Cities from the north. Then perhaps an attack toward Zun or LaMut. Who can
say?”
Tomas asked, “Any news from Crydee?”
“Pigeons arrived just before I left Prince Arutha holds fast against
the Tsurani. They have luck as poor there as here. But they move southward
through the Green Heart.” He surveyed the dwarves and Tomas. “I am surprised
that you could reach Elvandar.”
Dolgan puffed his pipe. “It was a long trek. We had to move swiftly
and with stealth. It is unlikely we will be able to return to the mountains now
the invaders are aroused. Once in place, they are loath to yield what they have
gained.”
Tomas paced before the fire. “How did you elude their sentries?”
“Your raids are causing much confusion in their ranks. Men who faced
the Armies of the West were pulled out of the line to rush to the river. I
simply followed one such group. They never thought to look behind. I had only
to slip past their lines when they withdrew and then again across the river.”
Calin said, “How many do they bring against us?”
Leon shrugged “I saw six companies, there must be others.” They had
estimated a Tsurani company at twenty squads each of thirty men.
Tomas slapped his gloved hands together. “They would bring three
thousand men back only if they were planning another crossing. They must seek
to drive us deep into the forest again, to keep us from harrying their
positions.” He crossed to stand over the ranger. “Do any of the black-robed
ones come?”
“From time to time I saw one with the company I followed.”
Tomas again slapped his hands. “This time they come in force. Send
word to the other camps. In two days’ time all the host of Elvandar is to meet
at the Queen’s court, save scouts and runners who will watch the outworlders.”
Silently runners sprang up from the fire and hurried off to carry
word to the other elven bands strung out along the banks of the river Crydee.
Ashen-Shugar sat upon his throne, oblivious to the dancers. The moredhel
females had been chosen for their beauty and grace, but he was untouched by
their allure. His mind’s eye was far away, seeking the coming battle. Inside, a
strangeness, a hollow feeling without name, came into being.
It
is called sadness, said the voice within.
Ashen-Shugar thought: Who are you to visit me in my solitude?
I am
that which you are becoming. This is but a dream, a memory.
Ashen-Shugar
drew forth his sword and rose from his throne, bellowing his rage. Instantly
the musicians stopped their playing. The dancers, servants, and musicians fell
to the floor, prostrating themselves before their master “I am! There is no
dream!”
You
are but a remembrance of the past, said the voice. We
are becoming one.
Ashen-Shugar raised his sword, then lashed down. The head of a
cowering servant rolled upon the floor. Ashen-Shugar knelt and placed his hand
in the fountain of blood Raising fingers to his lips, he tasted the salty
flavor and cried, “Is this not the taste of life!”
It
is illusion. All has passed.
“I feel
a strangeness, an unease that makes me . . . it makes me . . . there is no
word.”
It
is fear.
Ashen-Shugar
again lashed out with his sword, and a young dancer died. “These things, they
know fear. What has fear to do with me?”
You
are afraid. All creatures fear change, even the gods.
Who are
you? asked the Valheru silently.
I am
you. I am what you will become. I am what you were. I am Tomas.
***
A shout
from below brought Tomas from his reverie. He rose and left his small room,
crossing a tree-branch bridge to the level of the Queen’s court. At a rail he
could make out the dim figures of hundreds of dwarves camped below the heights
of Elvandar. He stood for a time watching the campfires below. Each hour
hundreds more elven and dwarven warriors made their way to join this army he
marshaled. Tomorrow he would sit in council with Calin, Tathar, Dolgan, and
others and make known his plan to meet the coming assault.
Six years of fighting had given Tomas a strange counterpoint to the
dreams that still troubled his sleep. When the battle rage took him, he existed
in another’s dreams. When he was away from the elven forest, the call to enter
those dreams became ever more difficult to stem. He felt no fear of these
visitations, as he had at first. He was more than human because of some
long-dead being’s dreams. There were powers within him, powers that he could
use, and they were now part of him, as they had been part of the wearer of the
white and gold. He knew that he would never be Tomas of Crydee again, but what
was he becoming . . . ?
The slightest hint of a footfall sounded behind him. Without
turning, he said, “Good eve, my lady.”
The Elf Queen came to stand next to him, a studied expression on her
face. “Your senses are elven now,” she said in her own language.
“So it seems, Shining Moon,” he answered in the same language, using
the ancient translation of her name.
He turned to face her and saw wonder in her eyes. She reached out
and gently touched his face. “Is this the boy who stood so flustered in the
Duke’s council chamber at the thought of speaking before the Elf Queen, who now
speaks the true tongue as if born to it?”
He pushed away her hand, gently. “I am what I am, what you see.” His
voice was firm, commanding.
She studied his face, holding back a shudder as she recognized
something fearful within his countenance. “But what do I see, Tomas?”
Ignoring her question, he said, “Why do you avoid me, lady?”
Gently she spoke. “There is this thing growing between us that may
not be. It sprang into existence the moment you first came to us, Tomas.”
Almost with a note of amusement, Tomas said, “Before that, lady,
from the first I gazed upon you.” He stood tall over her. “And why may this
thing not be? Who better to sit at your side?”
She moved away from him, her control lost for a brief moment. In
that instant he saw what few had ever seen: the Elf Queen confused and unsure,
doubting her own ancient wisdom. “Whatever else, you are man. Despite what
powers are granted you, it is a man’s span allotted to you. I will reign until
my spirit travels to the Blessed Isles to be with my lord, who has already made
the journey. Then Calin rules, as son of a king, as King. Thus it is with my
people.”
Tomas reached for her and turned her to face him. “It was not always
so.”
Her eyes showed a spark of fear. “No, we were not always a free
people.”
She sensed impatience within him, but she also saw him struggle with
it as he forced his voice to calmness. “Do you then feel nothing?”
She took a step away. “I would lie if I said not. But it is a
strange pulling, and something that fills me with uncertainty and with no small
dread. If you become more the Valheru, more than the man can master, then we
could not welcome you here. We would not allow the return of the Old Ones.”
Tomas laughed, with a strange mixture of humor and bitterness. “As a
boy I beheld you and was filled with a boy’s longing. Now I am a man and behold
you with a man’s longing. Is the power that makes me bold enough to seek you
out, the power that gives me the means to do so, that which will also keep us
apart?”
Aglaranna put her hand to her cheek. “I know not. It has never been
with the royal family to be other than what we are. Others may seek alliance
with humans. I would not have that sadness when you are old and grey and I am
still as you see me.”
Tomas’s eyes flashed, and his voice gained a harsh edge. “That will
never happen, lady I shall live a thousand years in this glade. Of that I have
no doubt. But I shall trouble you no more . . . until other matters are
settled. This thing is willed by fate to be, Aglaranna. You will come to know
that.”
She stood with her hand raised to her mouth, and her eyes moist with
emotion. He walked away, leaving her alone in her court to consider what he had
said. For the first time since her Lord-King had passed over, Aglaranna knew
two conflicting emotions: fear and longing.
Tomas turned at a shout from the edge of the clearing. An elf was
walking from the trees followed by a simply dressed man. He stopped his
conversation with Calin and Dolgan, and the three hurried to follow the
stranger as he was guided up to the Queen’s court. Aglaranna sat on her throne,
her elders arranged on benches to either side. Tathar stood next to the Queen.
The stranger approached the throne and made a slight bow. Tathar
threw a quick glance at the sentry who had escorted the man, but the elf looked
bemused. The man in brown said, “Greetings, lady,” in perfect elvish.
Aglaranna answered in the King’s Tongue. “You come boldly among us,
stranger.”
The man smiled, leaning on his staff. “Still, I did seek a guide,
for I would not enter Elvandar unbidden.”
Tathar said, “I think yon guide had little choice.”
The man said, “There is always a choice, though it is not always
apparent.”
Tomas stepped forward. “What is your purpose here?”
Turning at the voice, the man smiled “Ah! The wearer of the dragon’s
gift. Well met, Tomas of Crydee.”
Tomas stepped back. The man’s eyes radiated power, and his easy
manner veiled strength that Tomas could feel. “Who are you?”
The man said, “I have many names, but here I am called Macros the
Black.” He pointed with his staff and swept it around the gathered watchers. “I
have come, for you have embarked upon a bold plan.” At the last, he pointed his
staff at Tomas. He dropped the tip and leaned on the staff again. “But the plan
to capture a Black Robe will bring naught but destruction to Elvandar should
you not have my aid.” He smiled slightly. “A Black Robe you shall have in time,
but not yet.” There was a hint of irony in his voice.
Aglaranna arose. Her shoulders were back, and her eyes looked
straight into his. “You know much.”
Macros inclined his head slightly “Aye, I know much, more than is
sometimes comforting.” He stepped past her and placed a hand upon Tomas’s
shoulder. Guiding Tomas to a seat near where the Queen stood, Macros forced him
to sit with a gentle pressure on his shoulder. He took a seat next to him and
laid the staff against the crook of his neck and shoulder. Looking at the
Queen, he said, “The Tsurari come at first light, and they will drive straight
through to Elvandar.”
Tathar stepped before Macros and said, “How do you know this?”
Macros smiled again. “Do you not remember me in council with your
father?”
Tathar stepped back, his eyes widening. “You . . .”
“I am he, though I am no longer called as I was then.”
Tathar looked troubled. “So long ago. I would not have thought it
possible.”
Macros said, “Much is possible.” He looked pointedly from the Queen
to Tomas.
Aglaranna slowly sat down, masking her discomfort. “Are you the
sorcerer?”
Macros nodded. “So I am called, though there is more in the tale
than can be told now. Will you heed me?”
Tathar nodded to the Queen. “Long ago, this one came to our aid. I
do not understand how it can be the same man, but he was then a true friend to
your father and mine. He can be trusted.”
“What, then, is your counsel?” asked the Queen.
“The Tsurani magicians have marked your sentries, knowing where they
hide. At first light they will come, breaking across the river in two waves,
like the horns of a bull. As you meet them, a wave of the creatures called
cho-ja will come through the center, where your strength is weak. They have not
thrown them against you yet, but the dwarves can tell you of their skill in
warfare.”
Dolgan stepped forward. “Aye, lady. They are fearsome creatures and
fight in the dark as well as do my people. I had thought them confined to the
mines.”
Macros said, “And so they were, until the raids. They have brought
up a host of them, which ready themselves across the river, beyond the sight of
your scouts. They will come in numbers. The Tsurani tire of your raids and
would put an end to the warring across the river. Their magicians have worked
hard to learn the secrets of Elvandar, and now they know that should the sacred
heart of the elven forests fall, the elves will be a force no longer.”
Tomas said, “Then we shall hold back, and defend against the
center.”
Macros sat quietly for a moment, as if remembering something. “That
is a start, but they bring their magicians with them, anxious as they are for
an ending. Their magic will let their warriors pass through your forests
unchecked by the power of your Spellweavers, and here they will come.”
Aglaranna said, “Then we shall meet them here and stand until the
end.”
Macros nodded. “Bravely said, lady, but you will need my aid.”
Dolgan studied the sorcerer. “What can one man do?”
Macros stood. “Much. Upon the morrow, you shall see. Fear not,
dwarf, the battle will be harsh, and many will travel to the Blessed Isles, but
with firm resolve, we shall prevail.”
Tomas said, “You speak like one who has already seen these things
happen.”
Macros smiled, and his eyes said a thousand things, and nothing. “I
do, Tomas of Crydee, do I not?” He turned to the others and with a sweep of his
staff said, “Ready yourselves. I shall be with you.” To the Queen he said, “I
would rest; if you have a place for me?”
The Queen turned to the elf who had brought Macros to the council.
“Take him to a room, bring him whatever he requires.”
The sorcerer bowed and followed the guide. The others stood in
silence, until Tomas said, “Let us make ready.”
As night gave way to dawn, the Queen stood alone near her throne. In
all the years of her rule, she had never known a time like this. Her thoughts
ran with hundreds of images, from times as long ago as her youth, and as recently
as two nights ago.
“Seeking answers in the past, lady?”
She turned to see the sorcerer standing behind her, leaning on his
staff. He approached and stood next to her.
“Can you read my mind, sorcerer?”
With a smile and a wave of his hand, Macros said, “No, my lady. But
there is much I do know and can see. Your heart is heavy, and your mind
burdened.”
“Do you understand why?”
Macros laughed softly. “Without question. Still, I would speak to
you of these things.”
“Why, sorcerer? What part ,do you play?”
Macros looked out over the lights of Elvandar “A part, much as any
man plays.”
“But you know yours well.”
“True. It is given to some to understand what is obscure to others.
Such is my fate.”
“Why have you come?”
“Because there is need. Without me Elvandar may fall, and that must
not be. It is so ordained, and I can only do my part.”
“Will you stay if the battle is won?”
“No. I have other tasks. But I will come once more, when the need is
again great.”
“When?”
“That I may not tell you.”
“Will it be soon?”
“Soon enough, though not soon enough.”
“You speak in riddles.”
Macros smiled, a crooked, sad smile. “Life is a riddle. It is in the
hands of the gods. Their will shall prevail, and many mortals will find their
lives changed.”
“Tomas?” Aglaranna looked deep into the sorcerer’s dark eyes.
“He most visibly, but all who live through these times.”
“What is he?”
“What would you have him be?”
The Elf Queen found herself unable to answer. Macros placed his hand
lightly on her shoulder. She felt calm flow from his fingers and heard herself
say, “I would wish nothing of trouble upon my people, but the sight of him
fills me with longing. I long for a man . . . a man with his . . . might. Tomas
is more like my lost lord than he will ever know. And I fear him, for once I
make the pledge, once I place him above me, I lose the power to rule. Do you
think the elders would allow this? My people would never willingly place the
yoke of the Valheru upon their necks again.”
The sorcerer was silent for a time, then said, “For all my arts,
there are things hidden from me, but understand this: there is a magic here fey
beyond imagining. I cannot explain save to say it reaches across time, more
than is apparent. For while the Valheru is present within Tomas now, so is
Tomas present within the Valheru in ages past.
“Tomas wears the garb of Ashen-Shugar, last of the Dragon Lords.
When the Chaos Wars raged, he alone remained upon this world, for he felt
things alien to his kind.”
“Tomas?”
Macros smiled. “Think not upon this overly long, lady. These sorts
of paradox can send the mind reeling. What Ashen-Shugar felt was an obligation
to protect this world.”
Aglaranna studied Macros’s face in the twinkling lights of Elvandar.
“You know more of the ancient lore than any other man, sorcerer.”
“I have been . . . given much, lady.” He looked over the elven
forests and spoke more to himself than to the Queen: “Soon will come a time of
testing for Tomas. I cannot be sure what will occur, but this much I do know.
Somehow the boy from Crydee, in his love for you and yours, in his simple human
caring, has so far withstood the most powerful member of the most powerful
mortal race ever to have lived upon this world. And he is well served in
withstanding the terrible pain of that conflict of two natures by the soft arts
of your Spellweavers.”
She looked hard at Macros. “You know of this?”
He laughed with genuine amusement. “Lady, I am not without some
vanity. I’m stung you’d think you could fashion so fine a spellweaving without
my observing. Little magic in this world escapes my notice. What you have done
is wise and may tip the balance in Tomas’s favor.”
“That is the thought I plead to myself,” said Aglaranna quietly,
“when I see in Tomas a lord to match the King of my youth, the husband taken
too soon from my side. Can it be true?”
“Should he survive the time of testing, yes. It may be the conflict
will prove the end of both Tomas and Ashen-Shugar. But should Tomas survive, he
may become what you most secretly long for.
“Now I shall tell you something only the gods and I know, I can
judge many things yet to come, but much is still unknown to me. One thing I
know is this: at your side Tomas may grow to rule wisely and well and, as his
youth is replaced by wisdom, grow to be the lord of your wishes, if his power
can somehow be tempered by his human heart. Should he be sent away, a terrible
fate may await both the Kingdom and the free peoples of the West.”
Her eyes asked the question, and he continued. “I cannot see into
that dark future, lady; I can only surmise. Should he come into his powers with
the dark side in preeminence, he will be a terrible force, one that must be
destroyed. Those who see the battle madness come upon him see but a shadow of
the true darkness bound up within him. Even if a balance is struck and Tomas’s
humanity survives, but still you send him away, then humanity’s capacity for
anger, pain, and hate may come forth. I ask you: should Tomas be driven away
and someday raise the dragon standard in the north, what would occur?”
The Queen became frightened and openly showed it, her mask of
control lost completely. “The moredhel would gather.”
“Aye, my lady. Not as bands of troublesome bandits, but as a host.
Twenty thousand Dark Brothers, and with them a hundred thousand goblins, and
companies of men whose dark nature would seek profit in the destruction and
savagery to follow. A mighty army under the steel glove of a warrior born, a
general whom even your own people follow without question.”
“Do you advise me to keep him here?”
“I can only point out the alternatives. You must decide.”
The Elf Queen threw back her head, her red-gold locks flying and her
eyes moist, looking out over Elvandar. The first light of day was breaking.
Rosy light lanced through the trees, casting shadows of deep blue. The morning
songs of birds could be heard around the glades She turned to Macros, wishing
to thank him for his counsel, and found him gone.
***
The
Tsurani advanced as Macros had foretold. The cho-ja attacked across the river,
after the two human waves had carried the flanks. Tomas had set skirmishers,
lines of bowmen with a few shield guards, who retreated and fired into the
advancing army, giving the impression of resistance.
Tomas stood before the assembled army of Elvandar and the dwarves of
the Grey Towers, only fifteen hundred arrayed against the six thousand invaders
and their magicians. In silence they waited. As the enemy approached, the
shouts of Tsurani warriors and the cries of those who fell to elvish arrows
could be heard through the forest. Tomas looked up at the Queen, standing on a
balcony overlooking the scene of the coming battle, next to the sorcerer.
Suddenly elves were running toward them, and the first flashes of
brightly colored Tsurani armor could be seen through the trees. When the
skirmishers had rejoined the main force, Tomas raised his sword.
“Wait,” a voice cried out from above, and the sorcerer pointed
across the open clearing, where the first elements of the Tsurani forces were
running into the clearing. Confronted by the waiting elven army, the vanguard
halted and waited as their comrades joined them. Their officers ordered ranks
formed, for here was fighting they could understand, two armies meeting on an
open plain, and the advantage was theirs.
The cho-ja also stood in ordered ranks, heeding the officers’
shouted commands Tomas was fascinated, for he still knew little of these
creatures and counted them animals as much as intelligent allies of the
Tsurani.
Macros shouted, “Wait!” again, and waved his staff above his head,
inscribing broad circles in the air. A stillness descended upon the glade.
Suddenly an owl flew past Tomas’s head, straight for the Tsurani
lines. It circled above the aliens for a moment, then swooped and struck a
soldier in the face. The man screamed in pain as its talons clawed his eyes.
A hawk sped past and duplicated the owl’s attack. Then a large black
rook descended from the sky. A flight of sparrows erupted from the trees behind
the Tsurani and pecked at faces and unprotected arms. Birds came flying from
every part of the forest and attacked the invaders. Soon the air was filled
with the sound of flapping wings as every manner of bird in the forest
descended upon the Tsurani. Thousands of them, from the smallest hummingbird to
the mighty eagle, attacked the out-world host. Men cried out, and a few broke
formation and ran, trying to avoid the wicked beaks and talons that tried to
scratch at eyes, pull at cloaks, and tear flesh. The cho-ja reared, for though
their armored hide was immune to the pecking and clawing, their large,
jewellike eyes were easy targets for the feathered attackers.
A shout went up from the elves as the Tsurani lines dissolved in
disorder. Tomas gave the order, and elven bowmen added feathered arrows to the
fray. Tsurani soldiers were struck and fell before they could come to grips
with the enemy. Their own bowmen could not return the fire, for they were
harried by a hundred tiny foes.
The elves watched as the Tsurani tried to hold position, while the
birds continued their bloody work in their midst. The Tsurani fought back as
best they could, striking down many birds in midflight, but for each one
killed, three took its place.
Suddenly a hissing, tearing sound cut through the din. There was an
instant of silence as everything moving on the Tsurani side of the clearing
seemed to pause. Then the birds exploded upward, accompanied by a sizzling
crackle of energy, as if thrown back by some unseen force. As the birds cleared
the area, Tomas could see the black robes of the Tsurani magicians as they
moved through their forces, restoring order. Hundreds of wounded Tsurani lay
upon the ground, but the battle-tempered aliens quickly re-formed their lines,
ignoring the injured.
The enormous flight of birds gathered again above the invaders and
started to dive. Instantly a glowing red shield of energy formed around the
Tsurani. As the birds struck, they stiffened and fell, their feathers
smoldering and filling the air with a pungent burning stench. Elven arrows that
struck the barrier were halted in midflight and burst into flame, falling
harmlessly to the ground.
Tomas gave the order to stop the bow fire and turned to look at
Macros. Again the sorcerer shouted, “Wait!”
Macros waved his staff and the birds dispersed, hearing his silent
command. The staff extended toward the Tsurani, as Macros aimed it at the red
barrier. A golden bolt of energy shot forth. It sped across the clearing and
pierced the red barrier, to strike a black-robed magician in the chest. The
magician crumpled to the ground, and a shout of horror and outrage went up from
the assembled Tsurani. The other magicians turned their attention to the
platform above the elven army, and blue globes of fire shot toward Macros.
Tomas shouted, “Aglaranna!” in rage as the tiny blue stars struck the platform,
obliterating all sight of her in a blinding display of exploding light. Then he
could see again.
The sorcerer stood upon the platform unharmed, as did the Queen.
Tathar pulled her away, and Macros pointed with his staff again. Another
black-robed magician fell. The four remaining magicians looked upon Macros’s
survival and counterattack with expressions of mixed awe and anger, clearly
seen across the glade. They redoubled their assault upon the sorcerer, wave
after wave of blue light and fire striking Macros’s protective barrier. All
upon the ground were forced to turn away from the sight, lest they become
blinded by the terrible energies being unleashed. After this magical onslaught
was ended, Tomas looked upward, and again the sorcerer was unharmed.
One magician gave out with a cry of pure anguish and pulled a device
from his robe. Activating it, he vanished from the clearing, followed moments
later by his three companions. Macros looked down at Tomas, pointed his staff at
the Tsurani host, and called, “Now!”
Tomas raised his sword and gave the signal to attack. A hail of
arrows passed overhead as he led the charge across the clearing. The Tsurani
were demoralized, their attack blunted by the birds and the sight of their magicians
being killed and driven off. Yet they stood their ground and took the charge.
Hundreds had died from the claws and beaks of the birds, and more from the
flights of arrows, but still they numbered three to one of the elves and
dwarves.
The battle was joined, and Tomas was caught up in the red haze that
washed away any thought but to kill. Hacking right and left, he carved a path
through the Tsurani, confounding their every attempt to strike him down.
Tsurani and cho-ja both fell to his blade, as he delivered death with an even
hand to all who stood before him.
Back and forth across the clearing the battle moved, as man and
cho-ja, elf and dwarf fell. The sun moved higher in the sky, and there was no
respite from the fray. The sounds of death filled the air, and high overhead
the kites and vultures gathered.
Slowly the Tsurani press forced the elves and dwarves back. Slowly
they moved toward the heart of Elvandar. There was a brief pause, as if both
sides had struck a balance, when the adversaries moved away from each other,
leaving an open space between. Tomas heard the voice of the sorcerer ringing
clear above the sounds of battle. “Back!” it cried, and to a man, the forces of
Elvandar retreated.
The Tsurani paused a moment, then, sensing the hesitation of the
elves and dwarves to continue, started to press forward. Abruptly there came a
rumbling sound, and the earth trembled. All stopped moving, and the Tsurani
looked fearful.
Tomas could see the trees shake, more and more violently, as the
trembling increased. Suddenly there came a crescendo of noise, as if the grandfather
of all thunderclaps pealed overhead. With the booming sound, a huge piece of
earth erupted upward, as if heaved by some invisible giant’s hand. The Tsurani
who were standing on it shot upward, to fall hard to the ground, and those
nearby were knocked aside.
Another piece of the ground erupted, then a third. Suddenly the air
was full of giant pieces of earth that flew upward, then fell upon the Tsurani.
Screams of terror filled the air, and the Tsurani turned and fled. There was no
order to their retreat, for they flew from a place where the very earth
attacked them. Tomas watched as the clearing was emptied of all but the dead
and dying.
In a matter of minutes, the clearing was quiet, as the earth
subsided and the shocked onlookers stood mute. The sounds of the Tsurani army
retreating through the woods could be heard. Their cries told of other horrors
being visited upon them as they fled.
Tomas felt weak and weary, and looked down to find his arms covered
with blood. His tabard and shield and his golden sword were clean as they
always were, but for the first time he could feel human life splattered upon
himself. In Elvandar the battle madness did not stay with him, and he felt sick
to his inner being.
He turned and said softly, “It is over.” There was a faint cheer
from the elves and dwarves, but it was halfhearted, for none felt like victors.
They had seen a mighty host felled by primeval forces, elemental powers that
defied description.
Tomas walked slowly past Calin and Dolgan and mounted the stairs.
The Elf Prince sent soldiers to follow the retreating invaders, to care for the
allied wounded, and to give the dying Tsurani quick mercy.
Tomas made his way to the small room where he abided, and pulled
aside the curtain. He sat heavily upon his pallet, tossing aside his sword and
shield. A dull throbbing in his head caused him to close his eyes. Memories
came flooding in.
The heavens were torn with mad vortices of energy crashing from
horizon to horizon. Ashen-Shugar sat upon mighty Shuruga’s back, watching the
very fabric of time and space rent.
A clarion rang, the heralding note heard by dint of his magic. The
moment he awaited had come. Urging Shuruga upward, Ashen-Shugar’s eyes searched
the’ heavens, seeking what must come against the mad display in the skies. A
sudden stiffening of Shuruga under him coincided with his sighting of his prey.
The figure of Draken-Korin grew recognizable as he sat upon his black dragon.
There was a strangeness in his eyes, and for the first time in his long memory Ashen-Shugar
began to understand the meaning of horror. He could not put a name to it, could
not describe it, but in the tortured eyes of Draken-Korin he saw it.
Ashen-Shugar ordered Shuruga forward. The mighty golden dragon
roared his challenge, answered by Draken-Korin’s equally mighty black. The two
clashed in the sky, and their riders worked their arts upon each other.
Ashen-Shugar’s golden blade arched overhead and struck, cleaving the
black shield with the grinning tiger’s head in twain. It was almost too easy,
as Ashen-Shugar had known it would be. Draken-Korin had given up too much of
his essence to that which was forming. Before the might of the last Valheru, he
was little more than a mortal. Once, twice, three times more Ashen-Shugar
struck, and the last of his brothers fell from the back of his black dragon.
Downward he tumbled to strike the ground. By force of will, Ashen-Shugar left
Shuruga’s back and floated to stand beside the helpless body of Draken-Korin,
leaving Shuruga to finish his contest with the near-dead black dragon.
A spark of life still persisted within the broken form, life ages
past remembering. A pleading look entered Draken-Korin’s eyes as Ashen-Shugar
approached. He whispered, “Why?”
Pointing heavenward with his golden blade, Ashen-Shugar said, “This
obscenity should never have been allowed. You bring an end to all we knew.”
Draken-Korin looked skyward to where Ashen-Shugar pointed. He
watched the tumbling, raging display of energies, twisted, screaming rainbows
of light jagged across the vault of the sky. He witnessed the new horror being
formed from the twisted life force of his brothers and sisters, a raging,
mindless thing of hate and anger.
In a croaking voice, Draken-Korin said, “They were so strong. We
could never have dreamed.” His face contorted in terror and hate as
Ashen-Shugar raised his golden blade. “But I had the right!” he screamed.
Ashen-Shugar brought down his blade, cleanly severing the head of
Draken-Korin from his body. At once both head and body were engulfed with a
glimmering light, and the air hissed around Ashen-Shugar. Then the fallen
Valheru vanished without trace, his essence returning to that mindless monster
raging against the new gods. With bitterness Ashen-Shugar said, “There is no
right. There is only power.”
Is
that how it was?
“Yes,
that is how I slew the last of my brethren.”
The
others?
“They
are now part of that.” He indicated the terrible sky.
Together, never apart, they watched the madness above as the Chaos
Wars raged. After a time Ashen-Shugar said, “Come, this is an ending. Let us be
done with it.”
They began to walk toward the waiting Shuruga. Then a voice came.
***
“You
are quiet.”
Tomas
opened his eyes. Before him knelt Aglaranna, a basin of herb-sweetened water
and a cloth in her hand. She removed his tabard and helped him pull off the
golden chain. While he sat near exhaustion, she began washing the blood from
his face and arms, saying nothing as he watched her.
When he was clean, she took a dry cloth to his face and said, “You
look tired, my lord.”
“I see many things, Aglaranna, things not meant for a man to see. I
bear the weight of ages upon my soul, and I am tired.”
“Is there no comfort to be sought?”
He looked at her, their eyes locking. The commanding gaze was
tempered by a hint of gentleness, but still she was forced to drop her eyes.
“Do you mock me, lady?”
She shook her head. “No, Tomas. I . . . came to comfort you, if you
have need.”
He reached out and took her hand, and drew her toward him, hunger in
his eyes. When she was encircled by his embrace, feeling the rising passion in
his body, she heard him say, “My need is great, lady.”
Looking into his pale eyes, she dropped the final barriers between
them. “As is mine, my lord.”
22
TRAINING
He arose in the darkness.
He donned a simple white robe, a mark of his station, and left his
cell. He waited outside the small and simple room, which contained a sleeping
mat, a single candle, and a shelf for scrolls: all that was deemed necessary
for his education. Down the corridor he could see the others, all years younger
than he, standing quietly before the doors of their cells. The first black-clad
master came along the corridor and stopped before one of the others. Without a
word the man nodded, the boy fell in behind him, and they marched away into the
gloom. The dawn sent soft grey light through the high narrow windows in the
hallway. He, like the others, extinguished the torch on the wall opposite his
door, at the first hint of day. Another man in black came down the corridor,
and another waiting youth left behind him. Soon a third. Then a fourth. After a
time he found himself alone. The hallway was silent.
A figure emerged from the darkness, his robes conspiring to mask his
coming until the last few feet. He stood before the young man in white and
nodded, pointing down the corridor. The youth fell in behind his black-robed
guide, and they made their way down a series of torchlit passages, into the heart
of the great building that had been the young man’s home as long as he could
remember. Soon they were traveling through a series of low tunnels, rank with
the smell of age, and wet, as if deep below the lake that surrounded the
building on all sides.
The man in black paused at a wooden door, slid a bolt aside, and
opened it. The younger man entered behind the older and came to stand before a
series of wooden troughs. Each was half the length of a man’s height, and half
that wide. One stood on the floor, and the others were arrayed above it,
suspended by wooden supports in steps, one above the next, until the highest
stood near the height of a man’s head. All of those above had single holes in
the end that overhung the trough below. In the bottom trough, water could be
heard sloshing, as it responded to the vibrations of their footfalls on the
stone floor.
The man in black pointed to a bucket and turned and left the young
man in white alone.
The young man picked up the bucket and set about his task. All
commands to those in white were given without words, and, as he had quickly
learned when he had first become aware, those in white were not allowed to
speak. He knew he could speak, for he understood the concept and had quietly
tried to form a few words while lying on his mat in the dark. As with so many
other things, he understood the fact, without being aware of how he understood.
He knew that he existed before his first awakening in his cell, but was not in
the least alarmed by his lack of memory. It seemed somehow proper.
He started his task. Like so many other things he was commanded to
do, it seemed an impossible undertaking. He took the bucket and filled the
topmost trough from the bottom one. As it had on days before, the water spilled
from the top down into each successive trough, until the contents of the bucket
rested again at the bottom Doggedly he pursued his work, letting his mind go
vacant, while his body undertook the mindless task.
As it did so many other times when left to its own devices, his mind
danced from image to image, bright flashes of shapes and colors the eluded his
grasp as he sought to close mental fingers around them. First came a brief
glimpse of a beach, with crashing waves on rocks, black and weathered.
Fighting. A strange-looking cold white substance lying on the ground—a word,
snow, that fled as quickly as it came. A muddy camp. A great kitchen with boys
hurrying about many tasks. A room in a high tower. Each passed with blinding
quickness, leaving only an afterimage in its passing.
Daily a voice would sound in his head, and his mind’s voice would
respond with an answer, while he labored at his endless task. The voice would
ask a simple question, and his mind’s voice would answer. Should the answer be
incorrect, the question would be repeated. If several wrong answers were made,
the voice would cease its questioning, sometimes returning later in the day,
sometimes not.
The white-clad worker felt the familiar pressure against the fabric
of his thoughts.
—What
is the law— the voice asked.
—The
law is the structure that surrounds our lives, and gives them meaning— he
answered.
—What
is the highest embodiment of the law?—
—The
Empire is the highest embodiment of the law—
—What
are you?— came the next question.
—I
am a servant of the Empire—
The thought contact flickered for a moment, then returned, as if the
other were considering the following question carefully.
—In
what manner are you allowed to serve?—
The question had been asked several times before, and always his
answer had been met with the blank inner silence that told him he had answered
incorrectly. This time he carefully considered, eliminating all the answers he
had made previously, as well as those that were combinations of extrapolations
of the previously incorrect ones.
Finally
he answered—As I see fit—
There was a surge of feeling from without, a feeling of approval.
Quickly another question followed.
—Where
is your allotted place?—
He thought about this, knowing that the obvious answer was likely to
be the incorrect one, but still one that needed to be tested. He answered.
—My
place is here—
The mind contact was broken, as he suspected it would be. He knew
that he was being trained, though the purpose of the training was masked from
his mind. Now he could ponder the last question in light of his previous
answers and perhaps ascertain the correct response.
That night he dreamed.
A strange man in a brown robe, tied with a whipcord belt, walked
along the roadway. The man in brown turned and said, “Hurry up. We don’t have
much time, and you can’t fall behind.”
He tried to move faster but found his feet were lead and his arms
tied to his sides. The man in brown halted his brisk walk and said, “Very well,
then. One thing at a time.”
He tried to speak and found his mouth refused to move. The man in
brown stroked his beard thoughtfully, then said, “Consider this: you are the
architect of your own imprisonment.”
He looked down and saw that his bare feet were upon a dusty road. He
looked up, and the man in brown was again walking briskly away. He tried to
follow and again couldn’t move. He awoke in a cold sweat.
Again
he had been asked where his place was, and again his answer,— Where I am
needed—was unsatisfactory. He toiled over another pointless task, driving
nails into a thick sheet of wool, which let them fall through to the floor,
where he picked them up and drove them through again.
His reconsideration of the last question he had been asked was
interrupted when the door behind him opened, and his guide motioned for him to
follow. They moved through long passages, winding their way up to the level
where they would eat the scant morning meal.
When they entered the hall, the guide took a place by the door,
while others in black robes similarly escorted the white-clad ones into the
hall. This was the day that the young man’s guide would stand and watch the
boys in white, who, along with the young man, were bound to eat in silence.
Each day a different wearer of the black robe filled this function.
The
young man ate and considered the last question of the morning. He weighed each
possible answer, seeking out possible flaws, and as they were discovered,
discarding them. Abruptly one answer came unbidden to his mind, an intuitive
leap, as his subconscious provided him with a solution to the question. I
am the architect of my own imprisonment. Several times in the past, when
particularly knotty problems had stopped his progress, this had occurred, which
accounted for his rapid advancement in his lessons. He weighed the possible
flaws in this answer, and when he was certain he was correct, he stood. Other
eyes regarded him furtively, for this was a violation of the rules.
He went over to stand before his guide, who regarded his approach
with a controlled expression, his only sign of curiosity being a slight arching
of his brows.
Without preamble the young man in white said, “This is no longer my
place.”
The man in black showed no emotion, but placed a hand on the young
man’s shoulder and nodded slightly. He reached inside his robe and removed a
small bell, which he rang once. Another black-robed individual appeared moments
later. Without word the newcomer took the place at the door, as the guide
motioned for the young man to follow him.
They walked in silence as they had done many times before, until
they came to a room. The man in black turned to the young man and said, “Open
the door.”
The young man started to reach for the door, then with a flash of
insight pulled his hand away. Knitting his brow in concentration, he opened the
door by the power of his mind. Slowly it swung inward. The man in black turned
and smiled. “Good,” he said, in a soft, pleasant voice.
They entered a room with many white, grey, and black robes hanging
upon hooks. The man in black said, “Change to a grey robe.”
The young man did so quickly and faced the other man. The man in
black studied the new wearer of the grey. “You are no longer bound to silence.
Any question you may have will be answered, as well as is possible, though
there are still things that will be waited upon, until you don the black. Then
you will fully understand. Come.”
The young man in grey followed his guide to another room, where cushions
surrounded a low table, upon which rested a pot of hot chocha, a pungent,
bittersweet drink. The man in black poured two cups and handed one to the young
man, indicating he should sit. They both sat, and the young man said, “Who am
I?”
The man in black shrugged. “You will have to decide that, for only
you can glean your true name. It is a name that must never be spoken to others,
lest they gain power over you. Henceforward you will be called Milamber.”
The newly named Milamber thought for a moment, then said, “It will
serve What are you called?”
“I am called Shimone.”
“Who are you?”
“Your guide, your teacher. Now you will have others, but it was
given to me to be responsible for the first part of your training, the longest
part.”
“How long have I been here?”
“Nearly four years.”
Milamber was surprised by this, for his memory stretched back only a
little, several months at best. “When will my memories be returned to me?”
Shimone smiled, for he was pleased that Milamber had not asked if
they would be returned, and said as much. “Your mind will call up your past
life as you progress in the balance of your training, slowly at first, with
more rapidity later. There is a reason for this. You must be able to withstand
the lure of former ties, of family and nations, of friends and home. In your
case that is particularly vital.”
“Why is that?”
“When your past returns to you, you will understand,” was all
Shimone said, a smile on his face His hawkish features and dark eyes were set
in an expression that communicated the feeling this was the end of that topic.
Milamber thought of several questions, quickly discarding them as of
less immediate consequence. Finally he asked, “What would have happened if I
had opened the door by hand?”
“You would have died.” Shimone said this flatly, without emotion.
Milamber was not surprised or shocked, he simply accepted it. “To
what end?”
Shimone was a little surprised by the question and showed it. “We
cannot rule each other, all we can do is ensure that each new magician is able
to discharge the responsibility attendant upon his actions. You made the
judgment that your place was no longer with those who wore the white, the
novices. If that was not your place, then you would have to demonstrate your ability
to deal with the responsibilities of this change. The bright but foolish ones
often die at this stage.”
Milamber considered this and acknowledged the propriety of such a
test. “How long will my training continue?”
Shimone made a noncommittal gesture. “As long as it takes. You rise
rapidly, however, so I think it will not be too much longer in your case. You
have certain natural gifts, and—you will understand this when your memory
returns—a certain advantage over the other, younger, students who started with
you.”
Milamber studied the contents of his cup. In the thin, dark fluid he
seemed to glimpse a single word, as if seen from the corner of the eye, that
vanished when he tried to focus upon it. He couldn’t hang on to it, but it had
been a short name, a simple name.
That night he dreamed again.
The man in brown walked along the road, and this time Milamber could
follow. “You see, there are few objective limits. What they teach you is
useful, but never accept the proposition that just because a solution satisfies
a problem, that it must be the only solution.”
The man in brown stopped. “Look at this,” he said, pointing to a
flower beside the road Milamber leaned down to see what the man was pointing
at. A small spider spun a web between two leaves. “That creature,” said the man
in brown, “toils oblivious to our passing. Either of us could crush out its
existence at whim. Consider this, then, if that creature could somehow
apprehend our existence, our threat to its life, would the spider worship us?”
“I don’t know,” Milamber answered “I don’t know how a spider
thinks.”
The man in brown leaned upon his staff. “Considering how little
humans think alike, it might be that this spider would react with fear,
defiance, indifference, fatalism, or incredulity. Anything’s possible.” He
reached out with his staff and gently caught a piece of spider silk on the
wooden pole. Lifting the tiny arachnid, he transported it over to the opposite
side of the road. “Do you think the creature knows that this is a different flower?”
“I don’t know.”
The man in brown smiled. “That is perhaps the wisest of all
answers.”
Returning to his walk, he said, “You will be seeing many things
soon, some of which will make little sense to you. When you do, remember one
thing.”
“What is that?” asked Milamber.
“Things are not always what they seem. Remember the spider, who at
this very moment may be offering prayers to me in thanks for its sudden
bounty.” Pointing back with the staff at the plant, he said, “There are a great
many more bugs on that one than the other.” Scratching at his beard he added,
“I wonder: is the flower also offering prayers of thanks?”
He spent weeks in the company of Shimone and a few others. He knew
more of his life, though only a fragment of what was missing. He had been a
slave, and he had been discovered to have the power. He remembered a woman, and
felt a faint tugging at the thought of her vaguely remembered image.
He was quick to learn. Each lesson was accomplished in a single day,
or at most two. He would quickly dissect each problem given, and when it was
time to discuss it with his teachers, his questions were to the point, well
thought out, and proper.
One day he arose, in a newer but still simple cell, and emerged to
find Shimone waiting for him. The black-robed magician said, “From this point
on, you may not speak until you have finished the task set for you.”
Milamber nodded his understanding and followed his guide down the
hall. The older magician led him through a series of long tunnels to a place in
the building he had never been before. They mounted a long staircase, rising
many stories above where they had started. Upward they climbed, until Shimone
opened a door for him. Milamber preceded Shimone through the door and found
himself upon an open flat roof, atop a high tower. From the center of the roof
a single spire of stone rose. Skyward it shot, a needle of fashioned rock.
Winding upward around it was a narrow stairway, carved into the side of the
needle. Milamber’s eyes followed it until the top was lost in the clouds. He
found the sight fascinating, for it seemed to violate several canons of
physical law that he had studied. Still, it stood before him, and what was
more, his guide was indicating that he should mount the steps.
He started upward. As he completed his first circumnavigation, he
noted that Shimone had disappeared through the wooden door. Relieved of his
presence, Milamber turned his gaze outward from the roof, drinking in the vista
around him.
He was atop the highest tower of an immense city of towers.
Everywhere he looked, hundreds of stone fingers pointed upward, strong
structures with windows turning blind eyes outward. Some were open to the sky,
as this one was; others were roofed in stone, or in shimmering lights. But of
them all, this one alone was topped by a thin spire. Below the hundreds of
towers, bridges arched through the sky, connecting them, and farther down could
be seen the bulk of the single, incredible building that supported all he saw.
It was a monster of construction. Sprawling below him, it stretched away for
miles in every direction. He had known it would be a large place, from his
travels within, but this knowledge did nothing to lessen his awe at the sight.
Still farther down, in the dim extreme of his vision, he could see
the faint green of grass, a thin border edging the dark bulk of the building.
On all sides he saw water, the once-glimpsed lake. In the distance he could
make out the hazy suggestion of mountains, but unless he strained to see them,
it was as if the entire world were arrayed below.
Plodding upward, he turned around the spire as he climbed. Each
circle brought him a new detail of the vista. A single bird wheeled high above
all else, ignorant of the affairs of men, its scarlet wings spread to catch the
air as it watched with keen eye the lake below. Seeing a telltale flicker on
the water, it folded back its wings and stooped, hitting the surface for the
briefest moment before it climbed aloft once more, a flopping prize clutched in
its talons. With a cry of victory it circled once, then sped westward.
A turn. A play of winds. Each carried suggestions of far and alien
lands From the south a gust with a hint of hot jungles where slaves toiled to
reclaim farmlands from deadly, water-shrouded marshes. From the east a breeze
carried the victory chant of a dozen warriors of the Thuril Confederation,
after defeating an equal number of Empire soldiers in a border clash. In
counterpoint there was a faint echo of a dying Tsurani soldier, crying for his
family. From the north came the smell of ice and the sound of the hooves of
thousands of Thьn pounding over the frozen tundra, heading south for warmer
lands. From the west, the laughter of the young wife of a powerful noble
teasing a half-terrified, half-aroused household guard into betraying her
husband, away conducting business with a merchant in Tusan to the south. From
the east, the smell of spices as merchants haggled in the market square in far
Yankora. Again south, and the smell of salt from the Sea of Blood. North, and
windswept ice fields that had never known the tread of human feet, but over
which beings old and wise in ways unknown to men walked, seeking a sign in the
heavens—one that never came. Each breeze brought a note and tone, a color and
hue, a taste and fragrance. The texture of the world blew by, and he breathed
deeply, savoring it.
A turn. From the steps below came a pulsing as the world beat with a
life of its own. Upward through the island, through the building, through the
tower, the spire, and his very body came the urgent yet eternal beating of the
planet’s heart. He cast his eyes downward and saw deep caverns, the upper ones
worked by slaves who harvested the few rare metals to be found, along with coal
for heat and stone for building. Below these were other caverns, some natural,
others the remnants of a lost city, overblown by dust that became soil as the
ages passed. Here once dwelled creatures beyond his ability to imagine. Deeper
still his vision plunged him, to a region of heat and light, where primeval
forces contested Liquid rock, inflamed and glowing, pushed against its solid
cousin, seeking a passage upward, mindlessly driven by nature. Deeper still, to
a world of pure force, where lines of energy ran through the heart of the
world.
A turn, and he stepped upon a small platform atop the spire. It was
less than his own height in size on each side, an impossibly precarious perch.
He stepped to the middle, overcoming a vertigo that tried to send him screaming
over the edge. He employed every part of his ability and training to stand
there, for he understood without being told that to fail here was to die.
He cleared his mind of fear and looked around at the scene before
him, awed by the expanse of emptiness. Never before had he felt so truly
isolated, so truly alone. Here he stood with nothing between him and whatever
fate was allotted to him.
Below him stretched the world and above him an empty sky. The wind
held a hint of moisture, and he saw dark clouds racing up from the south. The
tower, or the needle upon it, swayed slightly, and he unconsciously shifted his
weight to compensate.
Lightning flashed as the storm clouds rushed toward him, and thunder
broke around his head. The very sound was enough to dislodge him from the small
platform, and he was forced to delve deeper into his inner well of power, into
that silent place known only as wal, and there he found the strength to resist
the onslaught of the storm.
Winds buffeted him, slamming him toward the platform’s edge. He
reeled and recovered, the darkling abyss below beckoning to him, inviting his
fall. With a surge of will, he brushed aside the vertigo once again and set his
mind to the task ahead.
In his
mind a voice cried, —Now is the time of testing. Upon this tower you must
stand, and should your will falter, from it you will fall—
There
was a momentary pause, then the voice cried once more, —Behold! Witness and
understand how it was—
Blackness swept upward, and he was consumed.
For a
time he floats, nameless and lost. A pinpoint of flickering consciousness, an
unknown swimmer through a black and empty sea. Then a single note invades the
void. It reverberates, a soundless sound, a sense-lacking intruder on the
senses. —Without senses, how is there perception?— his mind asks. His
mind! —I am!— he cries, and a million philosophies cry out in wonder. —If
I am, then what is not me? —he wonders.
An echo
replies, —You are that which you are, and not that which you are not—
—An
unsatisfactory answer— he muses.
—Good—
replies the echo.
—What
is that note?— he asks.
—It
is the touch of an old man’s sleep the moment before death—
—What
is that note?—
—It
is the color of winter—
—What
is that note?—
—It
is the sound of hope—
—What
is that note?—
—It
is the taste of love—
—What
is that note?—
—It is
an alarm to wake you—
He floats. Around him swim a billion billion stars. Great clusters
drift by, ablaze with energy. In riots of color they spin, giant reds and
blues, the smaller oranges and yellows, and the tiny reds and whites. The
colorless and angry black ones drink in the storm of light around them, while
others pulse out energies in an unknown spectrum, and a few twist the fabric of
space and time, sending his vision swimming as he tries to fathom their
passing. From each to each a line of force stretches, binding them all in a net
of power. Back and forth along the strands of this web energy flows, pulsing
with a life that is not life. The stars know as they fly by. They are aware of
his presence, but acknowledge it not. He is too small for them to be concerned
with. Around him stretches away the whole of the universe.
At various points in the web, creatures of power rest or work, each
different from the others, but all somehow the same. Some he can see are gods,
for they are familiar to him, and others are less or more. Each plays a role.
Some regard him, for his passing is not without notice; some are beyond him,
too great to comprehend him, and so being, are less than he. Others study him
closely, weighing his power and abilities against their own. He studies them in
return. All are silent.
He speeds among the stars and the beings of power, until he espies a
star, one among the multitude, but one that calls to him. From the star twenty
lines of energy lead away, and near each is a being of power. Without knowing
why, he understands that here are the ancient gods of Kelewan. Each plays on
the nearest line of power influencing the structure of space and time nearby.
Some contest among themselves, others work oblivious to the strife, and still
others do nothing that is discernible.
He moves closer. A single planet swings about the star, a
blue-and-green sphere shrouded in white clouds. Kelewan.
Down the lines of force he plunges, until he is on the surface. Here
he sees a world untouched by the footprint of man. Great beasts with six legs
stride the land, and hiding from them are a young race of quick-thinking
beings.
The cho-ja, a few bands of scurrying creatures, little more than the
large insects that spawned them, speed through the trees of the great forests,
fearing the large predators who hunt them, as they in turn hunt smaller game.
They have begun to reason, and their queens now design each for a specific
purpose, so strong and well-armed soldiers protect the foragers. More food is
brought to the hive, and the race begins to prosper.
Over the plains the young Thьn males race, fighting among themselves
with rocks and sticks, fists and fang. They clash knowing only there is a
nameless urge driving them on, demanding that one or another from their band
drive off the others and sire the next generation of young. It will be ages
before they become reasoning beings, able to work together against the
two-legged creatures who have yet to appear upon this world.
Near the sea, not yet named for the blood of thousands killed upon
it, the Sunn huddle on the shore, newly emerged from the sea, discomforted upon
the land, but no longer able to abide in the deep. Fearing all, they plot in
their sea-caves, seeking security and building an attitude toward outsiders
that will set the stage for their genocide generations later.
Above the mountains, the Thrillillil soar, their culture formative
and crude, only little more than a loose association of breeding pairs and
young. Their large but delicate wings cast shadows that hide the Nummongnum,
who creep along the edge of the rocks, hidden from sight by their mottled fur,
which resembles the stones behind which they scurry, seeking Thrillillil eggs,
beginning a war that will last a thousand years and end in the annihilation of
both races.
This is a harsh world, abundant with life, but contentious life,
with no mercy for the weak. Of those races he sees, only two will endure, the
Thьn and the cho-ja. He sees darkness approaching like a sudden storm, and it
sweeps over him.
Like the calm after the storm, light comes.
He stands on a cliff looking down upon a great plain of grass
separated from the sea by a small beach. A shimmering in the air begins, and
the sea beyond the plain is distorted. Like the agitation of the air by the
heat of the day, the scene ripples. Scintillating colors appear in the air.
Then, as if by two giant hands, the very fabric of space and time is torn, an
ever-widening gap through which he can see. Beyond this fracture in the air, a
vision of chaos is revealed, a mad display of energy, as if all the lines of
power in that universe are torn asunder. Bolts of energy sufficient to destroy
suns explode in displays of color beyond the ability of mortal eyes to
describe, leaving them dazzled with lesser lights. From deep within this giant
rift, a wide bridge of golden light extends downward, until it touches the
grass of the plain. Upon the bridge thousands of figures are moving, escaping
the madness beyond the rift to the serenity of the plain.
Downward they hurry, some carrying all they own on their backs,
others with animals pulling wagons and sleds heaped with valuables. All press
forward, fleeing a nameless horror behind.
He studies the figures, and though much is alien, he can see much
that is also familiar. Many wear short robes of plain fashion, and he knows he
is looking upon the seeds of the Tsurani race. Their faces are more basic,
showing less of the blending with others that would take place in years to
come. Most are fair, with brown or blond hair. At their feet run barking dogs,
sleek and swift greyhounds and whippets.
Next to them stride proud warriors, with slanted eyes and bronze
skin. These are fighting men, but not organized soldiers, for they wear robes
of different cut and color one from the other. Each steps down off the bridge,
some showing wounds, all hiding terror behind implacable expressions. Over
their shoulders they carry long swords of fine steel, fashioned with great
care. The tops of their heads are shaved, with the hair around pulled back into
a knot. These bear the proud look of men unsure if they are better off for
having survived the battle. Mixed among them are others, all strangers.
A race of short people carry nets that proclaim them fishers, though
of what sea only they know. They have dark hair, sallow skin, and grey-green
eyes. Men, women, and children all wear simple fur trousers, leaving upper
bodies bare.
Behind them come a nation of tall, noble, black-skinned people.
Their robes are richly fashioned of soft and subtle colors. Many have gems
adorning their foreheads, and gold bands on their arms. All are weeping for a
homeland never to be seen again.
Then come riders upon impossible beasts that look like flying
serpents with feathered birds’ heads. Upon the riders’ faces are masks of
animals and birds, brightly painted and plumed. They are covered in paint
alone, for their homeworld was a hot place. They wear their nakedness like a
cloak, for there is beauty in their form, as if each had been fashioned by a
master sculptor, and they bear weapons of black glass. Women and children ride
behind the men unmasked, revealing expressions made harsh by the cruel world
they flee. The Serpent Riders turn their creatures eastward and fly away. The
great flying snakes will die out in the cold highlands of the east, but will
remain forever in the legends of the proud Thuril.
Thousands more come, all walking down the golden ramp to set foot
upon Kelewan. When they reach the plain, some move off, traveling to other
parts of the planet, but many stay and watch as thousands more come across the
bridge. Time passes, night follows day, then gives way to day once more, while
the hosts enter from the insane storm of chaos.
With them come twenty beings of power, also fleeing the utter
destruction of a universe. The multitudes upon the plain cannot see them
passing, but he can. He knows they will become the twenty gods of Kelewan, the
Ten Higher and Ten Lower Beings. They fly upward, to wrest the lines of power
from the ancient, feeble beings who hold station around this world. There is no
struggle as the new gods take their stations, for the old beings of power know
a newer order is coming into the world.
After days of watching, he sees that the stream of humanity is
thinning. Hundreds of men and women pull huge boats made from some metal, shining
in the sun, mounted on wheels of a black substance. They reach the plain and
see the ocean beyond the narrow beach. They give a shout and pull their boats
to the water and launch them. Fifty boats raise sail and set out across the
ocean, heading southward, for the land that will become Tsubar, the lost
nation.
The last group is composed of thousands of men in robes of many
designs and colors. He knows that these are the priests and magicians of many
nations. Together they stand, holding back the raging madness beyond. As he
watches, many fall, their lives burning out like spent candles. At some
prearranged signal, many of them, but less than one for each hundred standing
at the top of the golden bridge, turn and flee downward. All are holding books,
scrolls, and other tomes of knowledge. When they reach the bottom of the
bridge, they turn and watch the unfolding drama at the top.
Those above, looking not at those who have fled but at what they
hold back, give forth a shout, incanting a mighty spell, wielding magic of
enormous power. Those below echo their cries, and all who can hear them quail
in dread at the sound. The bridge begins to dissolve, from the ground up. A
flood of terror and hate comes pouring through the rift, and those who stand
atop the bridge begin to crumple before its onslaught. As the bridge and the
opening above disappear from sight, a single blast of fury comes through that
stuns many who stand upon the plain below, felling them as if with a blow.
For some time those who escaped the nameless terror behind the rift
stand mute. Then slowly they start to disperse. Groups break away and move off.
He knows that, in years to come, these ragged refugees will conquer this world,
for they are the seeds of the nations that populate Kelewan.
He knows he has seen the beginning of the nations, and their flight
from the Enemy, the nameless terror that destroyed the homes of the races of
mankind, dispersing them to other universes.
Again the cloak of time is drawn over him, creating darkness.
Followed by light.
On the plain that had been empty, a great city stands. Its white
towers ascend to the skies. Its people are industrious, and the city prospers.
Caravans of trade goods come overland, and great ships call from across the
sea. Years speed by, bringing war and famine, peace and bounty.
One day a ship pulls into the harbor, as scarred and ill as its
crew. A great battle has been fought, and this ship is one of the few to
survive. Those across the water will come soon, and the City of the Plains will
fall if help is not forthcoming. Runners are sent north to the cities along the
great river, for should the white city fall, nothing will prevent the invaders
from striking northward. Runners return, carrying the news. The armies of the
other cities will come. He watches as they gather and meet the invaders near
the sea. The invaders are repulsed, but the cost is great, for the battle rages
twelve days. A hundred thousand men die, and the sands are red for months. A
thousand ships burn, and the sky is filled with black smoke, and for days it falls
upon the land, covering miles about with a fine, powdery ash. The city of white
becomes the city of grey. The sea is called Blood from that day forward, and
the great bay is called Battle. But out of the battle an alliance is formed,
and the seeds of the great Empire are planted, the world-spanning Empire of
Tsuranuanm.
Like silence descending, darkness comes.
As a clarion sounding, light returns.
He stands atop a temple, in the heart of the central city of the
Empire. Below, thousands of people stand. Shoulder to shoulder they fill the
streets, chanting while thousands of upraised hands pass along great wooden
platforms overhead. Upon the platforms stand the nobles of the Empire, Lords of
the Five Great Families. Upon the last platform, largest of all, rests a golden
throne, fashioned from the rarest of metals of this mineral-poor world. Upon
this throne sits a young boy. When the platform reaches the Great Square of the
Twenty Higher and Lower Gods, it is placed upon the ground, and the throne is
carried on the backs of the citizens to the top of the highest temple.
The throne is lowered, facing southeast, from where the nations had
come in the beginning. From deep within the temple, a dozen black-clad
priestesses rush forth, red-clad priests at their side. The Priestesses of
Sibi, the Death Goddess, point out one or another citizen in the crowd, and the
red-clad Priests of the Killing God grab them. They seize men, women, and
occasionally children. All are dragged to the top of the temple, where waiting priests
of the Red God cut their hearts from their bodies, while the priests and
priestesses of the other eighteen orders look on silently. When hundreds have
been sacrificed, and the temple steps are bathed in blood, the Chief Priestess
of the Death Goddess judges the gods satisfied. They place a silver ring upon
the boy’s hand, and a golden circlet upon his brow, and proclaim him the Light
of Heaven, Minjochka, eleven times Emperor. The boy plays with a wooden toy
given to him at the start of the day, for he grows bored easily, while the
throng presses forward to dip their hands in the blood of their countrymen,
counting it lucky to do so. In the east, the sky darkens as night approaches.
As the sun rises, he stands near a magician who has worked the night
through. The man grows alarmed at what his calculations have shown, and he
incants a spell that takes him to another place. The watcher follows. In a
small hall, several more magicians react with expressions of dread to the news
the first magician brings. A messenger is dispatched to the Warlord, ruler of
the Empire in the Emperor’s name. The Warlord summons the magicians. The
watcher follows. The magicians explain the news. The signs in the stars, along
with ancient writings, herald the coming of a great disaster. A star, a
wanderer in the heavens sighted where none has been seen before, stands
motionless but grows brighter. It will bring destruction to the nations. The
Warlord is skeptical, but of late more and more nobles have come to heed the
words of magicians. There have always been legends of magicians saving the
nations from the Enemy, but few think them likely. Still, there is now this new
convocation of magicians, who have formed something called the Assembly, toward
what ends only the magicians know. So, with the changing times in mind, the
Warlord agrees to take the news to the Emperor. After a time an order is sent
to the Assembly by the Emperor. His demand: bring proof. The magicians shake
their heads and return to their modest halls.
Decades pass, and the magicians conduct a campaign of propaganda,
seeking to influence any noble of the Empire who will listen. The day arrives
when the news is proclaimed that the Emperor is dead and his son now reigns.
The magicians gather with all who can travel to the Holy City for the
coronation of the new Emperor.
Thousands of people line the streets, while slaves bear the nobles
of the land in litters to the great temples. The new Emperor rides the ancient
golden throne, born by a hundred husky slaves. He is crowned, while a slave is
sacrificed deep within the halls of the temple of the Death God, Turakamu, as a
petition to the gods to allow the old Emperor’s soul to rest in heaven.
The crowd cheers, for Sudkahanchoza, thirty-four times Emperor, is
well loved, and this will be the last time they will ever look upon him.
He will now retire to the Holy Palace, where his soul will stand
forever vigilant on behalf of his subjects, while the Warlord and the High
Council conduct the business of governing the Empire. The new Emperor will live
a contemplative life, reading, painting, studying the great books of the
temples, seeking to purify his soul for this arduous life.
This Emperor is unlike his father and, after hearing the grave news
from the Assembly, orders the building of a great castle upon an island in the
center of the giant lake in the midst of the mountains of Ambolina.
Time . . .
. . . passes.
Hundreds of black-clad magicians stand atop towers that rise from
the city of the island, not yet the magnificent single entity of the future.
Two hundred years have passed, and now two suns burn in the sky, one warm and
yellow-green, the other small, white, and angry. The watcher sees the men work
their magic, the greatest spell cast in the history of the nations. Even the
legendary bridge from the outside, the beginning of time, was not so great a
feat, for then they had only moved between worlds, now they would move a star.
Below he can feel the presence of hundreds of other magicians, adding their
power to those above. The spell has been wrought over the last few years, each
step taken with the greatest care, as the Stranger approaches. Though powerful
beyond compare, this enchantment is also delicate in the extreme. Any misstep
and its work will be undone. He looks up and sees the Stranger, its course
marked toward the path of this world. It will not strike Kelewan, but there is
little doubt that its heat added to Kelewan’s already hot star will render the
planet lifeless. Kelewan will hang for over a year between its own primary and
the Stranger, in constant daylight, and all magicians agree that only a few
might survive in deep caves, to emerge to a burned-out planet. Now they must
act, before it is too late to try again should the enchantment fail.
Now they do act, all in concert, incanting the last piece of the
great arcane work. The world seems to stand still for a moment, reverberating
with the final word of the spell. Slowly that reverberation grows louder,
picking up resonance, developing new harmonies, new overtones, a character of
its own. Soon it is loud enough to deafen those in the towers, who cover their
ears. Below, those on the ground stand in mute wonder, looking to the sky where
a blaze of color begins to form. Ragged bolts of energy flash, and the light
from the two stars is dimmed in momentarily blinding displays that will leave
some who viewed them sightless for the rest of their lives. He is not affected
by the sound or light, as if some agency has taken care to protect him from
their effects. A great rift appears in the sky, much like the one the golden
bridge came through ages ago. He watches without emotion, his strongest feeling
being detached fascination. It grows in the sky, between the Stranger and
Kelewan, and begins to move away from the planet, toward the invading star.
But something else occurs. From the heart of the rift, more violent
than at the time of the golden bridge, an unprecedented display of erupting
energies comes forth. The chaotic scene is matched with an overwhelming wave of
hatred. The Enemy, the evil power that drove the nations to Kelewan, still
abides in the other universe, and it has not forgotten those who escaped it
ages ago. It cannot pierce the barrier of the rift, for it needs more time to
move between universes than the life span of the rift, but it reaches forth and
warps it, sending it away from the Stranger. The rift grows larger, and those
on the ground see it is going to engulf Kelewan, bringing the planet back into
the dominion of the Enemy.
The watcher looks on impassively, unlike those around him, for he
knows that this is not the end of the world. The rift rushes toward the planet,
and one magician comes forth.
He is somehow familiar to the one who watches. The man, unlike those
around him, wears a brown robe, fastened round with a whipcord belt, and holds
a staff of wood. He raises the staff above his head and incants. The rift
changes, from colors impossible to describe to inky black, and it strikes the
planet.
The heavens explode for a moment, then all around is black. When the
darkness lifts, the sun, Kelewan’s own, is dropping below the horizon.
The magicians who are not dead or mad stare upward in horror. Above
them the sky is a void, without stars.
And the man in brown turns to him and says, “Remember, things are
not always what they seem.”
Blackness . . .
. . . heralds the passing of time again. He is standing in the halls
of the Assembly. Magicians are appearing regularly, using the pattern on the
floor as a focal point for their transit. Each remembers the pattern like an
address, and wills himself there. A message arrives from the Emperor. He begs
the Assembly to solve the problem, promising them whatever aid they require.
The watcher moves forward through generations to find the magicians
again upon the towers. Now, instead of the invading Stranger, they regard a
starless sky. Another spell, years in the fashioning, is being incanted. When
it is finished, the earth reverberates with violent energies. Suddenly the sky
is ablaze with stars, and Kelewan is again in its normal place.
“Things are not always what they seem,” says a voice.
The Emperor sends a command that the full Assembly should come to
the Holy City at once. By ones and twos they use the patterns to travel to
Kentosani. The watcher follows. There they are taken to the inner chamber of
the Emperor’s palace, something unheard of in the history of the Empire.
Of the seven thousand magicians who gathered a century before to
thwart the Stranger, only two hundred survived. Even now that number has
increased but slightly, so that not even one magician for each twenty who stood
upon towers against the Stranger answers the Emperor’s call. They advance to
stand before Tukamaco, forty times Emperor, descendant of Sudkahanchoza, and
Light of Heaven. The Emperor asks if the Assembly will accept the charge to
stand ever vigilant over the Empire, protecting it until the end of time. The
magicians confer and agree. The Emperor then leaves his throne and abases
himself before the assembled magicians, something never done before. He sits
back and, still on his knees before them, throws wide his arms and proclaims
that from this day forth the magicians are the Great Ones, free from all
obligations, save the charge just accepted. They are outside the law, and none
may command them, including the Warlord, who stands to one side, a frown upon
his face. Whatever they desire is theirs to ask, for their words will be as
law.
And a magician smiles knowingly at another nearby.
Darkness . . .
. . . and time passes.
The watcher stands before the Warlord’s throne. A delegation of
magicians stand before the Warlord. They present him with proof of what they
have claimed. A controllable rift, free from the Enemy’s influence, has been
opened, and another world has been found. This is unsuitable for life—but a
second has been discovered, a rich, ripe world. They show him a lifetime’s
worth of wealth in metals, all found lying about, discarded. He who watches
smiles to himself over the Warlord’s eagerness at the sight of a broken
breastplate, a rusted sword, and a handful of bent nails. To further prove this
is an alien world, they present him with a strange but beautiful flower. The
Warlord smells it and is pleased with its rich fragrance. The watcher nods, for
he, too, knows the richness of a Midkemian rose. The black wing of passing time
covers him again.
Once more he stood upon the platform. He looked around and saw that
the full fury of the storm was breaking around him. Only by his unconscious
will had he been able to stand upon this platform, while his conscious mind was
occupied by the unfolding history of Kelewan. He now understood the nature of
the test, for he found himself exhausted from the energy he had expended during
the ordeal. While being instilled with the final instruction in his place in
this society, he had been tested with the raw fury of nature.
He took a last look around, finding the grim view of the
storm-tossed lake and the shuttered windows of the towers somehow satisfying.
He strove to capture this image, as if to ensure that he would forever remember
the moment he came to his full awakening as a Great One, for there were no more
blocks on his memory, or his emotions. He exulted in his power: no longer Pug
the keep boy, but now a magician of power to dwarf the imagination of his
former master, Kulgan. And never again would either of these worlds, Midkemia
or Kelewan, seem the same to him.
By force of will he descended to the roof, floating gently through
the raging wind. The door opened in anticipation of his coming. He entered, and
it closed behind him. Shimone was waiting for him, a smile upon his face. As
they moved down the long halls of the Assembly building-city, the skies outside
exploded with clashes of thunder, as if heralding his arrival.
Hochopepa sat upon his mat, awaiting the arrival of his guest. The
heavy, bald magician was interested in gauging the mettle of the newest member
of the Assembly, come into his estate as a wearer of the black robe the
previous day.
A chime sounded, announcing his guest’s arrival. Hochopepa stood and
crossed his richly furnished apartment. He pulled aside the sliding door
“Welcome, Milamber I am pleased you saw fit to accept my invitation.”
“I am honored,” was all Milamber said as he entered and regarded the
room. Of all the quarters in the Assembly building he had seen, this was by far
the most opulent. The hangings on the walls were rich cloth, enhanced with the
finest threadwork, and there were several valuable metal objects adorning
various shelves.
Milamber made a study of his host as well. The heavyset magician
showed Milamber to a cushion before a low table and then poured cups of chocha.
His plump hands moved with controlled ease, precisely and efficiently. His
dark, nearly black, eyes shone from under the thick brows that accented an
otherwise deceptively bland face. He was the stockiest magician Milamber had
seen yet, as most who wore the black robe tended to be thin and ascetic
looking. Milamber sensed this was largely by design, as if someone occupied
with the pleasures of the flesh couldn’t be too concerned with matters of deep
thought.
After the first sip of chocha had been taken, Hochopepa said, “You
pose something of a problem for me, Milamber.”
When Milamber made no comment, Hochopepa said, “You make no remark.”
Milamber inclined his head in agreement. “Perhaps your background accounts for
a bit more wariness than is the rule here.”
Milamber said, “A slave become magician is something to ponder.”
Hochopepa waved his hand. “It is a rarity for a slave to don the
black robe, but not unheard of. Occasionally the power is not recognized until
adulthood. But the laws are explicit, and no matter how late the power is
revealed, nor how mean the station of the man manifesting it, from that instant
on he is subject only to the Assembly. Once a soldier was ordered hanged by his
lord. He floated, suspended in space, a scant hair’s breadth from hanging, by
sheer power of will. His power finally manifested itself at the moment of his
greatest need. He was given over to the Assembly, where he survived training,
but proved to be a magician of indifferent power and overall poor outlook.
“But that is not for this discussion. Your particular situation, the
one that makes you somewhat of a problem for me, is that you are a
barbarian—excuse me, were a barbarian.”
Milamber smiled again. He had left the Tower of Testing with all his
memories of his life, though much about his training was still sketchy. He
understood the processes that had been used to bring him into control of his
magic. They had singled him out as one among a hundred thousand, a Great One.
Of the two hundred million people of the Empire, he was one of two thousand
magicians of the black robe. His slave-bred wariness, as Hochopepa pointed out,
combined with his intelligence to keep him silent. Hochopepa was trying to make
a point, and Milamber would wait to hear what it was, no matter how roundabout
the stout magician insisted on being.
When Milamber said nothing, Hochopepa continued. “Your position is
strange for several reasons. The obvious one is that you are the first to wear
the black who is not of this world. The second is that you were the apprentice
of a Lesser Magician.”
Milamber raised an eyebrow. “Kulgan? You know of my training?”
Hochopepa laughed, a genuine belly laugh, which made Milamber relax
his guard a little and regard the other man with a little less distrust. “Of
course. There was not one aspect of your background that was not closely
examined, for you provided a wealth of information about your world.” Hochopepa
looked closely at his guest. “The Warlord might choose to launch an invasion
into a world we know little about—over the objections of some of his magician advisers,
I might add—but we of the Assembly prefer to study our adversaries. We were
most relieved to learn magic is restricted to the province of priests and
followers of the Lesser Path on your world.”
“Again you mention a Lesser Magic. What is your meaning?”
It was Hochopepa’s turn to look slightly surprised. “I assumed you
knew.” Milamber shook his head. “The Path of Lesser Magic is walked by some who
can operate certain forces by power of will, though of a different order than
we of the black robe.”
“Then you know of my previous failure.”
Hochopepa laughed again “Yes. Had you been less suited to the
Greater Path, you might have learned his ways. As it is, you had too much
ability to have succeeded as a Lesser Path magician. It is a talent rather than
an art, the Lesser Path. The Greater Path is for scholars.”
Milamber nodded. Each time Hochopepa explained a concept, it was as
if Milamber had known it all his life. He remarked on this.
“It is easy enough to understand. During your training many facts and
concepts were taught you. The basic concepts of magic were taught early, your
responsibility to the Empire later. Part of the process of bringing all your
abilities to maturity requires that all these facts be there when you need
them. But much of what you were taught was also masked, to be revealed when you
needed it, when you could fully understand what was in your mind. There will be
a period when thoughts will come unbidden from time to time. As you frame a
question, the answer will appear in your mind. And sometimes an answer will
come as you read it or hear it. It serves to keep you from reeling under the
impact of years of learning coming upon you in an instant.
“It is not unlike the spells used to grant you the visions on the
Tower of Testing. Obviously, we have no means to ‘see’ what occurred before the
time of the bridge, or at any other time in history, but we can plant
suggestions, create illusion—”
Things
are not what they seem. Milamber barely hid his
surprise at this unexpected voice in his mind “—and provide a construct around
which you may add the images most significant to you. Personally, I find the
entire presentation upon the Tower reeks of Grand Dц Opera. You may avail
yourself of the libraries should you seek history rather than theater.” Seeing
Milamber’s attentions were elsewhere, Hochopepa said, “In any event, we were
speaking of other things.”
Milamber said, “I would hear of your problem.”
Hochopepa adjusted his robe, smoothing the creases. “Indulge me a
moment longer for a brief digression. It all has bearing on why I asked you
here.” Milamber signified that Hochopepa should continue.
“Little is known of our peoples before the Escape. We know that the
nations came from many different worlds. There is also some speculation that
others fled the Enemy to different worlds, your former homeworld among them
perhaps. There are a few shreds of evidence to support that hypothesis, but it
is only conjecture at this point.” Milamber thought about the games of shдh he
had played with the Lord of the Shinzawai and considered the possibility.
“We came as refugees. Of millions, only thousands survived to plant
seeds here. We found this world old and used up. Great civilizations once
flourished here, and all that is left of them are worn, smooth stones where
once cities stood. Who these creatures were, no one knows This world has few
metals, and what was brought with us in the Escape wore away over the ages. Our
animals, like your horses and cattle, died out, all save for dogs. We had to
adjust to our new homeworld, and to each other.
“We fought many wars between the time of the Escape and the advent
of the Stranger. We were little more than city-states until the Battle of a
Thousand Ships. Then the humblest of the races, the Tsurani, rose to conquer all
others, uniting most of this world in a single Empire.
“We of the Assembly support the Empire because on this world it is
the single most powerful force for order—not because it is noble, or fair, or
beautiful, or just. But because of it the majority of humanity can live and
work without war in their homelands, can live without famine, plagues, and the
other disasters of older times. And with this order around us, we of the
Assembly can work unhindered.
“It was the attempt to dispel the Stranger that first made it
apparent that we must be able to work unhindered by anyone, including the
Emperor, with whatever resources are necessary. We were robbed of precious time
for action by the Emperor’s lack of cooperation when we first learned of the
Stranger. Had we been given support at once, we might have been able to deal
with the Enemy when it acted to warp the rift. That is why we accepted the
charge to defend and serve the Empire, in exchange for total freedom.”
Milamber said, “This is all apparent as you speak of it. I am still
waiting to hear of your problem regarding me.”
Hochopepa sighed. “In good time, my friend. I must finish one last
thought. You must understand why the Assembly functions as it does to have any
hope of surviving more than a few weeks.”
Milamber looked openly surprised at this remark. “Survive?”
“Yes, Milamber, survive, for there are many here who would have seen
you at the bottom of the lake during your training.”
“Why?”
“We work to restore the Greater Art. When we fled the Enemy, at the
dawn of history, only one magician in a thousand who battled the Enemy
survived. They, for the most part, were the Lesser Magicians and apprentices.
They banded together in small groups to protect the knowledge they brought with
them from their homeworlds. At first countryman would seek out countryman,
then, later, larger associations grew, as desire grew to restore the lost arts.
After centuries had passed, the Assembly was founded, and magicians from all
parts of the world came, until today all who walk the Greater Path are members
of the Assembly. Most of those who practice the Lesser Art serve here as well,
though they are afforded a different level of respect and freedom. They tend to
be better at building devices and understanding the forces of nature than we of
the black robes—they build the orbs we use to transport ourselves from place to
place, for one example. While not outside the law, the Lesser Magicians are
protected from interference from others by the Assembly. All magicians are the
province of the Assembly.”
Milamber said, “So we gain freedom to act as we see fit, as long as
we act in the best interest of the Empire.”
Hochopepa nodded. “It does not matter what we do, or even that two
magicians may find themselves at odds over some action or another, as long as
both are working in what they believe is the best interest of the Empire.”
“From my somewhat ‘barbaric’ point of view, a strange law.”
“Not a law, but a tradition. On this world, my barbaric friend,
tradition and custom can be a much stronger constraint than law. Laws are
changed, but tradition endures.”
“I think I see what your problem is, my civilized friend. You are
not sure if I will act in the best interest of the Empire, being an outlander.”
Hochopepa nodded. “Were we certain that you were capable of acting
against the Empire, you would have been killed. As it is, we are uncertain,
though we tend to believe it unlikely you are capable of such action.”
For the first time Milamber was completely unsure of what he was
hearing. “I was under the assumption that you had ways of ensuring that all who
are trained are loyal to the Empire, as the first duty.”
“Normally, yes. In your case we faced problems new to us. As far as
we can tell, you are submerged in the underlying cause of the brotherhood of
magicians, the order of the Empire. Usually we are certain. We simply read the
apprentice’s mind. With you we couldn’t. We had to rely on truth drugs, long
interrogations, and training drills designed to show any duplicity.”
“Why?”
“Not for any reason we understand. The spells of thought masking are
known. It was nothing of that sort. It was as if your mind held some property
we had never encountered before. Perhaps a natural talent unknown to us, but
common to your world, or the result of some training at the hands of your
Lesser Path master protected you against our mind-reading arts.
“In any event, it created something of a stir in these halls, you
may be sure. Several times during your training, the question of your
continuing was raised, and each time our inability to read your mind was given
as reason for your termination. Each time more were willing to see you continue
than not. On the whole you present a possible wealth of new knowledge and, as
such, deserve every benefit of the doubt—to ensure we do not lose such a
valuable addition to our storehouse of talents, of course.”
“Of course,” Milamber said dryly.
“Yesterday the question of your continuation became critical. When
the time came for your final acceptance into the Assembly, the issue was put to
the vote and ended in a tie. There was one abstention, myself. As long as I
remain unallied with one side or the other, the question of your survival is
moot. You are free to act as a full member of the Assembly until I recast my
vote to ratify your selection into the Assembly, or not. Our tradition does not
allow a change of vote, once cast, except abstentions. As no one absent during
the voting may add their vote later, I am the only one who can break the tie.
So the result of the voting, no matter how long delayed, is mine to decide.”
Milamber looked long and hard at the older magician. “I see.”
Hochopepa shook his head slowly. “I wonder if you do. To put it in
its simplest form, the question of the moment is, what am I to do with you?
Without meaning to, I find your life is now in my hands. What I have to decide
is whether or not you should be killed. That is why I wished to see you, to see
if I might have erred in judgment.”
Suddenly Milamber threw back his head and laughed, long and hard. In
a moment tears were running down his cheeks. When he quieted, Hochopepa said,
“I fail to see the humor.”
Milamber raised his hand in a placating gesture. “No offense was
intended, my civilized friend. But surely you must see the irony of the
situation. I was a slave, my life subject to the whim of others. For all my
training, and advancement in station, I find that this fact has not been
altered.” He paused for a moment, and his smile was friendly. “Still, I would
rather have you hold my life in your hands than my former overseer. That is
what I find so funny.”
Hochopepa was startled by the answer, then he, too, started to laugh.
“Many of our brothers pay little heed to the ancient teachings, but if you are
familiar with our older philosophers, you will understand my meaning. You seem
to be a man who has found his wal. I think we have an understanding, my
barbaric friend I think we have started well.”
Milamber studied Hochopepa. Without knowing the unconscious process
whereby he reached the conclusion, he judged he had found an ally, and perhaps
a friend. “I think so, as well. And I think you also a man who has found his
wal.”
Feigning modesty, Hochopepa said, “I am but a simple man, too much a
slave to pleasures of the flesh to have reached such a state of perfect
centering.” With a sigh he leaned forward and began to speak intently. “Listen
to me well, Milamber For all the reasons enumerated before, you are as much a
weapon to be feared as a possible source of knowledge.
“Tsurani are slaves to politics, as any student of the Game of the
Council can attest; while we of the Assembly are reputed to be above such
things, we have our own factions and infighting, not always settled in a
peaceful, bloodless manner.
“Many of our brothers are little more than superstitious peasants,
distrusting that which is alien and unknown. From this day forward, you must
bend yourself to one task. Stay peacefully hidden within your wal, and become
Tsurani. To all outward appearances, you must become more Tsurani than anyone
else in the Assembly. Is that understood?”
“It is,” Milamber said simply.
Hochopepa poured another cup of hot chocha each. “Be especially wary
of the Warlord’s pets, Elgahar and Ergoran, and a reckless youngster named
Tapek. Their master rankles at the progress of the war upon your former
homeworld and is suspicious of the Assembly. Now that two of our brothers died
in the last major campaign, fewer of our brothers are willing to lend further
aid to that undertaking. The few magicians left within his faction are
overtaxed, and it is rumored he will be unable to subdue any more of your world
without a miracle. It would take a united High Council—-which should happen
when the Thьn raiders become agriculturalists and poets, and not before—or a
large number of Black Robes agreeing to do his bidding. The latter should occur
about a year after the former, so you can see he is in a somewhat poor
political situation. Warlords who fail in conducting war tend to fall from
grace quickly.” With a smile he added, “Of course, we of the Assembly are far
above matters political.” His tone turned serious once more. “You must face one
thing: he may view you as a potential threat, either influencing others not to
aid him, or openly opposing him from some deep-rooted sympathy for your former
homeland. You are protected from his direct actions, but you still might run
afoul of his pets. Some still blindly follow his lead.”
“ ‘The path of power is a path of turns within turns,’ ” Milamber
quoted.
Hochopepa nodded, a satisfied expression upon his face. His eyes
seemed to glint. “That is Tsurani. You learn quickly.”
In the following weeks Milamber grew into the fullness of his new
position, learning the responsibilities of his office. It was remarked on more
than once, and occasionally with distrust, that there had been few who had
demonstrated so much ability so soon after donning the black robe.
For all the changes in his existence, Milamber discovered many
things were unchanged. With practice he discovered he still had untapped wells
of power within, which could be called up only in times of stress. He studied
to bring this wild augmentation of power under control, but with little
success. He also discovered he was able to put aside the mental conditions
placed upon him during training. He chose not to reveal this fact to anyone,
not even Hochopepa. His reordering of these mental conditionings also regained him
something else, a nearly overwhelming desire to be with Katala once again. He
put aside that desire, to go to her at once and demand her release from the
Lord of the Shinzawai, well within his ability now he was a Great One. He
hesitated for fear of the reaction of the other magicians, and for fear her
feelings might have changed toward him. Instead he plunged into his studies.
His time in the Assembly brought forth his true identity, as he had
been told it would. This identity proved the key to his unusual mastery of the
Greater Path. He was a being of both worlds, worlds bound together by the great
rift. And for as long as those worlds stayed bound together, he drew power from
both, twice the power available to others of the black robe. This knowledge revealed
his true name, that name which could not be spoken lest it let another gain
power over him. In the ancient Tsurani language, unused since the time of the
Escape, it meant, “One who stands between worlds.”
23
VOYAGE
Martin watched.
Motioning silently to his companions, they slipped through the wood
line, just out of sight of those in the meadow. They could easily hear the
shouts in the Tsurani camp as orders were given. Martin crouched low, so no
hint of movement would betray their presence. Behind him scurried Garret and
the former Tsurani slave, Charles. In the six years since the siege of Crydee,
Charles had met Martin’s expectations, proving his loyalty and worth a dozen
times. He had also become a passable woodsman, though he would never have
Garret or Martin’s natural ease.
Whispering, Charles said, “Huntmaster, I mark many new banners.”
“Where?”
Charles pointed to a spot near the farthest edge of the Tsurani
camp. With the aid of the dwarves remaining in the high villages, Martin and
his two companions had made the dangerous climb over the Grey Towers, easily
passing the few Tsurani sentries left along the western edge of the valley, the
flank thought least in need of vigilance. Now they were within a few hundred
feet of the main Tsurani camp.
Garret let forth a nearly silent whistle. “The man has eyes like a
falcon. I can barely see those banners.”
Charles said, “I only know what to look for.”
“What do the new banners mean?” asked Longbow.
“Ill news, Huntmaster. Those are the house banners of families that
were loyal to the Blue Wheel Party. At least when I was captured. They have
been absent since the siege of Crydee. This can mean only another major shift
in the High Council.” He studied the Huntmaster’s face. “It tells us the Alliance
for War is again restored. And next spring we can expect a major offensive.”
Martin motioned for them to move back into the woods. The trees were
fully covered in fall colors, riots of red, gold, and brown. Moving quietly
through fallen leaves, they found a sheltering stand of brush skirting an
ancient oak and knelt behind it. Martin took out a small piece of dried beef
and chewed it. The climb over the Grey Towers, even with the dwarves’ help, had
taken its toll: they all were hungry, tired, and dirty. “Where are the new
companies of soldiers?” Martin asked.
“They won’t bring them through this winter. They can stage outside
the City of the Plains on Kelewan, at ease in a milder climate. They’ll move
through the rift just before the spring thaw. By the time flowers are blooming
in Princess Carline’s garden again, they’ll be marching.”
A high-pitched keening sound came from the north. Charles’s
expression changed to one of controlled alarm “Cho-ja!” He glanced around, then
pointed upward.
Martin nodded and made a stirrup with his hands. He boosted first
Charles, then Garret, into the oak tree. Then he jumped, and they caught his
hands and pulled him up.
Moving into the higher branches, they were motionless and had
weapons ready when the cho-ja patrol came into view, passing beneath the tree.
Six of the antlike creatures moved at steady pace; then the leader, marked by a
crested helm of Tsurani make, motioned them to halt. He turned one way then
another, then made commands in their high-pitched language. The other five
spread out, and for nearly ten minutes the three men in the tree could hear
them searching the area.
When they returned, they quickly formed up and moved off. When
Martin was certain they were out of hearing range, he whispered, “What was that?”
“They smelled us. My scent will have changed from all the Midkemian
food I have eaten. They knew we were not Tsurani.”
Climbing down from the tree, Charles said, “Cho-ja cannot look
easily upward, so they rarely do.”
Garret asked, “What if some of your former countrymen had been
along?”
Charles shrugged. “The cho-ja would have been speaking Tsurani.
Their language is almost impossible to learn, so no one tries.”
Martin said, “Will they be able to mark our trail?”
Charles said, “I don’t think so, but—” He stopped as loud barking
came from the Tsurani camp. “Dogs!”
Martin said, “They can track us. Come.” He set out at a controlled
run, back toward an ancient trail into the mountains, one almost completely
overgrown and undiscovered by the Tsurani but used by Martin’s band to enter
the valley.
For a few moments the three men loped through the woods, listening
to the barking behind. Then the sound of the dogs changed, and barks became
howls and baying. “They’ve gotten the scent,” said Garret.
Martin only nodded and picked up the pace. They ran for another
minute, the sound of the dogs steadily gaining on them, when Martin halted and
grabbed at Garret’s arm to keep him from running past. With a signal, he
changed directions away from the trail and led the others to a small stream.
Entering the water, he said, “I remembered hearing this when we passed by
before.”
The other two entered the water, and Martin said, “We gain only
minutes. They’ll search up- and downstream.”
Garret said, “Which way?”
Martin said, “Downstream. They’ll search upstream first, as that’s
the way out.”
Charles said, “Huntmaster, there’s another way.” He quickly
un-shouldered his backpack and removed a large pouch. He began sprinkling black
powder up and down the shore of the stream where they had entered.
Garret felt his eyes tearing and blew hard through his nose to keep
from sneezing. “Pepper!”
Charles said, “Mastercook Megar will be angry, but I thought we
might need it. The cho-ja and the dogs will smell nothing for hours when they
sniff around here.”
Martin nodded. “Upstream!”
The three men splashed through the water, then got into a quieter,
steady rhythm. They were out of sight of the place where they entered when the
baying of the dogs was interrupted by sneezes. Angry voices shouted commands,
and frustrated replies were heard. Charles indulged himself in a faint smile as
they continued to move through the water.
Finding a branch low enough over the stream, Martin boosted his
companions out and climbed up after them. They moved along the tree until they
found another branch of a nearby oak close enough to jump to.
They touched the ground again a dozen yards from the stream bank
Martin glanced around to ensure they were not seen and motioned for the others
to follow as he led them back toward the Grey Towers.
***
Sea
breezes swept the walls. Arutha looked out at the town of Crydee and the sea
beyond, his brown hair ruffled by the wind. Patches of light and dark flashed
across the landscape as high, fluffy clouds raced overhead. Arutha watched the
distant horizon, taking in the vista of the Endless Sea whipped to a froth of
whitecaps, as the noise of workmen restoring another building in the town blew
by on the wind.
Another autumn visited Crydee, the eighth since the start of the
war. Arutha considered it fortunate another spring and summer had passed
without a major Tsurani offensive; still, he felt little cause for comfort. He
was no longer a boy fresh to command, but a seasoned soldier. At twenty-seven
years he had seen more conflict, and had made more decisions, than most men of
the Kingdom knew in their lives. In his best judgment, he knew the Tsurani were
slowly winning the war.
He let his mind drift a little, then shook himself out of his
brooding While no longer a moody boy, he still tended to let introspection
overtake him. He found it best to keep busy and avoid such wasteful pastimes.
“It is a short autumn.”
Arutha looked to his left and found Roland standing nearby. The
Squire had caught the Prince lost in thought and had made his approach without
detection. Arutha found himself irritated. He shrugged it off and said, “And a
short winter will follow, Roland. And in the spring.
“What news of Longbow?”
Arutha balled a gloved fist and gently struck the stones of the
wall, the slow, controlled gesture, a clear sign of his frustration. “I’ve
regretted the need for his going a hundred times. Of the three, only Garret
shows any sense of caution. That Charles is a Tsurani madman, consumed by
honor, and Longbow is . . .”
“Longbow,” finished Roland.
“I’ve never met a man who reveals so little of himself, Roland If I
live as long as an elf, I don’t think I’ll ever understand what makes him the
way he is.”
Roland leaned against the cool stones of the wall and said, “Do you
think they’re safe?”
Arutha returned his attention to the sea. “If any man in Crydee can
crest the mountains into the Tsurani-held valley and get back, it is Martin.
Still, I worry.”
Roland found the admission surprising. Like Martin, Arutha was not a
man to reveal what he felt. Sensing the Prince’s deep trouble, Roland changed
the topic. “I’ve a message from my father, Arutha.”
“I was told there was a personal message among the dispatches from
Tulan.”
“Then you know Father’s calling me home.”
“Yes. I’m sorry about the broken leg.”
“Father was never much of a rider. It’s the second time he’s fallen
from his horse and broken something. Last time, when I was little, it was his
arm.”
“It’s been a long time since you were home.”
Roland shrugged. “With the war, I felt little need to return. Most
of the fighting’s been around here. And,” he added with a grin, “there are
other reasons to stay.”
Sharing the smile, Arutha said, “Have you told Carline yet?”
Roland lost his grin. “Not yet. I thought I’d wait until I’d
arranged for a ship south.” With the Brotherhood’s abandonment of the Green
Heart, travel by land to the south was nearly impossible, for the Tsurani had
cut off the roads to Carse and Tulan.
A shout from the tower caused them to turn. “Trackers approaching!”
Arutha squinted against the glare reflecting off the distant sea and
could make out three figures trotting easily along the road. When they were
close enough to be seen clearly, Arutha said, “Longbow.” There was a note of
relief in his voice.
Leaving the wall, Arutha descended the steps to the courtyard to
wait for the Huntmaster and his men. Roland stood by his side as the three
dusty men entered the gates of the castle. Both Garret and Charles remained
silent as Martin said, “Greetings, Highness.”
“Greetings, Martin. What news?” asked the Prince.
Martin began to recount the facts unearthed at the Tsurani camp, and
after a moment Arutha cut him off. “Better save your wind for the council,
Martin. Roland, go gather Father Tully, Swordmaster Fannon, and Amos Trask, and
bring them to the council hall.”
Roland hurried off, and Arutha said, “Charles and Garret are to come
as well, Martin.”
Garret glanced at the former Tsurani slave, who shrugged. Both knew
the long-anticipated hot meal would have to wait a little longer upon the
Prince’s convenience.
Martin took the seat next to Amos Trask, while Charles and Garret
remained standing. The former sea captain nodded a greeting to Martin, as Arutha
pulled out his own chair, as was his habit, ignoring most formalities when with
his councillors. Amos had become an unofficial member of Arutha’s staff since
the siege of the castle; he was an enterprising man of many unexpected skills.
Fannon sat to Arutha’s right. Since his wound, he had been content
to accept Arutha as commander in Crydee and had sent a personal note to Lord
Borric advising him so. The Duke had sent a reply ratifying the transfer of
command, and Fannon had returned to his former role as adjutant. The
Swordmaster seemed pleased with the situation.
Arutha said, “Martin has just returned from a mission of special
importance. Martin, tell us what you’ve seen.”
Martin said, “We climbed the Grey Towers and entered the valley
where the Tsurani have their headquarters.”
Fannon and Tully looked at the Huntmaster with surprise, while Amos
Trask guffawed. “You toss aside a small saga in one sentence,” said the seaman.
Martin ignored the comment and said, “I think it best to let Charles
tell you what we saw.”
The former Tsurani slave’s voice held a note of concern. “From all
signs, the Warlord will launch another major offensive next spring.”
Everyone in the room sat speechless, save Fannon. “How can you be
sure? Are there new armies in his camp?”
Charles shook his head. “No, the new soldiers will not arrive until
just before the first spring thaw. My former countrymen have little liking for
your cold climate. They will stage during the winter months on my former
homeworld. They’ll move through the rift just before the offensive.”
Even after five years, Fannon still had lingering doubts about
Charles’s loyalty, though Longbow held none. “How, then,” said the Swordmaster,
“can you be certain there is to be an offensive? We’ve had none since the assault
on Elvandar three years ago.”
“There are new banners in the Warlord’s camp, Swordmaster, the
banners of the houses who belong to the Blue Wheel Party. They have been absent
for six years. It can mean only another major change within the High Council.
The Alliance for War is again formed.”
Of those in the room, only Tully seemed to grasp what Charles was
saying. He had made a study of the Tsurani, learning all he could from the
captured slaves. He said, “You had better explain, Charles.”
Charles took a moment to organize his remarks and said, “You must
understand one thing of my former homeland. Above everything except honor and
obedience to the Emperor, there is the High Council. To gain in the High
Council is worth much, even the risk of life itself. More than one family has
been destroyed by plots and intrigues within the council. We of the Empire
refer to this as the ‘Game of the Council.’
“My family was well placed within the Hunzan Clan, neither great
enough to warrant notice by our clan’s rivals, nor small enough to be relegated
to only minor roles. We had the benefit of knowing much of the matters before
the High Council without having to worry overly much about what decisions were
made. Our clan was active in the Party for Progress, for we numbered many
scholars, teachers, healers, priests, and artists in our families.
“Then for a time the Hunzan Clan left the Party for Progress, for
reasons not clear to any but the highest family leaders, reasons I can only
speculate on. My clan joined with the clans of the Blue Wheel Party, one of the
oldest in the High Council. While not so powerful as the Warlord’s War Party,
or the traditionalists of the Imperial Party, it still has much honor and
influence.
“Six years ago, when I first came here, the Blue Wheel Party had
joined with the War Party to form the Alliance for War. Those of us in the
lesser families were not told why such a radical change in alignment had come
about, but there was no doubt it was a matter of the Game of the Council.
“My personal fall from grace and my enslavement was certainly
necessary to ensure that those of my clan would stay above suspicion until the
time was right for whatever move was being planned. It is now clear what that
move was.
“Since the siege of this castle, I have seen no sign of any soldier
who’s a member of the Blue Wheel families. I took it to mean the Alliance for
War had been ended.”
Fannon interrupted. “Are you then saying the conduct of this war is
but an aspect of some political game in this High Council?”
Charles said, “Swordmaster, I know it is difficult for a man as
steadfast in his loyalty to his nation as you are to understand such a thing.
But that is exactly what I am saying.
“There are reasons, Tsurani reasons, for such a war. Your world is
rich in metals, metals we treasure on Kelewan. Also, ours is a bloody history,
and all who are not of Tsuranuanni are to be feared and subjugated. If we could
find your world, then might you not someday find ours?
“But more, it is a way for the Warlord to gain great influence in
the High Council. For centuries we have fought the Thuril Confederation, and
when we at last were forced to the treaty table, the War Party lost a great
deal of power within the council. This war is a way for that lost power to be
regained. The Emperor rarely commands, leaving the Warlord supreme, but the
Warlord is still the Lord of a family, the Warchief of a clan, and as such is
constantly seeking to gain advantage for his own people in the Game of the
Council.”
Tully looked fascinated. “So the Blue Wheel Party joining with the Warlord’s
party, then suddenly withdrawing, was but a ploy in this political game, a
maneuver to gain some advantage?”
Charles smiled. “It is very Tsurani, good Father. The Warlord
planned his first campaign with great care, then three years into it finds himself
with only half an army. He is overextended, unable to bring news of smashing
victories to the High Council and the Emperor. He loses position and prestige
in the game.”
Fannon said, “Unbelievable! Hundreds of men dying for such a thing.”
“Such is the way of the Game of the Council, Swordmaster. The
Warlord Almecho is an ambitious man. To be Warlord one must be. He must rely on
other ambitious men, many who would seek to take his mantle should he falter.
To keep these men as allies rather than foemen, he must occasionally look the
other way.
“In the first year of the war, the Warlord’s subcommander, a man
called Tasio of the Minwanabi, ordered an attack upon one of the LaMutian
garrisons. Besides being second-in-command in the campaign on this world, Tasio
is also the cousin of Lord Jingu of the Minwanabi. The order to attack was
given to Lord Sezu of the Acoma, sworn enemy of Jingu. The Acoma soldiers were
almost destroyed to a man, including Lord Sezu and his son Tasio arrived
moments too late to save the Acoma, but in time to seize the battle and bring
the Warlord a victory.”
Fannon’s eyes were round with disbelief. “That’s the blackest
duplicity I have ever heard of.”
Arutha said, “It’s also brilliant, by these people’s standards.”
Charles nodded in agreement with the Prince’s remark. “The Warlord
would forgive Tasio getting one of his better commanders slaughtered and losing
the entire Acoma army, in exchange for a victory and strengthened support by
the Minwanabi.
“Any Ruling Lord who had no direct stake in the game would applaud
the move as a masterstroke, even those who admired Lord Sezu. It gained Almecho
and Lord Jingu many allies in the council. So the Warlord’s political
opponents, needing to devise a way to counter his growing power, created the
situation I described, overextending the Warlord and leaving him unable to
prosecute this war. Many families hovering near the edge of the War Party would
then be drawn to the Blue Wheel and their allies for delivering such a stunning
blow.”
Arutha said, “But the important fact for us is that this Blue Wheel
is once more allied with the Warlord, and their soldiers will be rejoining the
war come spring.”
Charles looked at those in the council hall. “I cannot begin to
guess why there has once again been a realignment in the council. I am too
removed from the game. But as His Highness has said, what is important for
those of us here in Crydee to know is that as many as ten thousand fresh
soldiers may come against one of the fronts in the spring.”
Amos scowled. “That’s a backbreaker, for certain.”
Arutha unfolded a half-dozen parchments. “Over the last few months,
most of you have read these messages.” He looked at Tully and Fannon “You’ve
seen the pattern begin to emerge.” He picked up one parchment “From Father:
‘Constant Tsurani sorties and raids keep our men in a state of unease. Our
inability to close with the enemy has lent a dark aspect to all we do. I fear
we shall never see an end to this business . . .’ From Baron Bellamy: ‘. . .
increased Tsurani activity near the Jonril garrison. I deem it advisable to
increase our commitment there this winter, while the Tsurani are normally
inactive, lest we lose that position next spring.’ Squire Roland will be
supervising a joint reinforcement from Carse and Tulan at Jonril this winter.”
Several in the room glanced at Roland, who stood near Arutha’s
shoulder. The Prince continued. “From Lord Dulanic, Knight-Marshal of Krondor:
‘While His Highness shares your concern, there is little to indicate the need
for alarm Unless some intelligence can be produced to give credence to your
fears of possible future Tsurani offensives, I have advised the Prince of
Krondor to refuse your request for elements of the Krondorian garrison to be
sent to the Far Coast . . .’ ” Arutha looked around the room. “Now the pattern
is clear.”
Setting aside the parchments, Arutha pointed at the map affixed to
the tabletop. “We have committed every available soldier. We dare not pull men
from the south for fear of the Tsurani moving against Jonril. With the garrison
strengthened, we will have a stable situation down there for a while. Should
the enemy attack the garrison, it can be reinforced from Carse and Tulan.
Should the enemy move against either castle, they leave Jonril at their back.
But all that will fail should we strip those garrisons.
“And Father is committed to a long front and has no men to spare.”
He looked at Charles. “Where would you expect the attack to come?”
The former Tsurani slave looked over the map, then shrugged. “It’s
difficult to say, Highness. Should the situation be decided solely upon
military merits, the Warlord should attack against the weaker front, either
toward the elves, or here. But little done in the Empire is free of political
considerations.” He studied troop dispositions on the map, then said, “Were I
the Warlord, in need of a simple victory to bolster my position in the High
Council, I would attack Crydee once more. But were I the Warlord and my
position in the High Council precarious, in need of a bold stroke to regain
lost prestige, I might risk an all-out offensive against the main force of the
Kingdom, those armies under Duke Borric’s command. To crush the main strength
of the Kingdom would give him dominance within the council for years to come.”
Fannon leaned back in his chair and sighed. “Then we are faced with
the possibility of another assault upon Crydee this spring without recourse to
reinforcements for fear of attack elsewhere.” He indicated the map with a sweep
of his hand. “Now we face the same problem as the Duke. All our forces are
committed along the Tsurani front. The only men we have available are those in
the towns on leave, only a small part of the whole.
“We can’t maintain the army in the field indefinitely; even Lords
Borric and Brucal winter in LaMut with the Earl, leaving small companies to
guard the Tsurani.” Waving his hand in the air, he said, “I digress. What is
important is to notify your father at once, Arutha, of the possibility of attack.
Then should the Tsurani hit his lines, he’ll be back from LaMut early, in
position and ready. Even should the Tsurani bring ten thousand fresh troops, he
can call up more soldiers from the outlying garrisons in Yabon, fully another
two thousand.”
Amos said, “Two thousand against ten thousand sounds poor odds,
Swordmaster.”
Fannon was inclined to agree “We do all we can. There are no
guarantees it will be enough.”
Charles said, “At least they will be horse soldiers, Swordmaster. My
former comrades still have little liking for horses.”
Fannon nodded agreement “But even so, it is a bleak picture.”
“There is one thing,” said Arutha, holding up a parchment. “The
message from Lord Dulanic stated the need for intelligence to give credence to
our request for aid. We now have enough intelligence to satisfy him, I think.”
Fannon said, “Even a small portion of the Krondonan garrison here
would give us the strength to resist an offensive. Still, it is late in the
season, and a message would have to be dispatched at once.”
“That’s the gods’ truth,” said Amos. “If you left this afternoon,
you’d barely clear the Straits of Darkness before winter shuts them off. In
another two weeks it’d be a close thing.”
Arutha said, “I have given the matter some thought. I think there is
enough need to risk my going to Krondor.”
Fannon sat up straight in his chair. “But you’re the commander of
the Duchy’s army, Arutha. You can’t abandon that responsibility.”
Arutha smiled “I can and I will. I know you have no wish to resume
command here once more, but resume command you will. If we are to win support
from Erland, I must convince him myself. When Father first carried word of the
Tsurani to Erland and the King, I learned the advantage of speaking in person.
Erland’s a cautious man. I will need every persuasion I can bring to bear.”
Amos snorted. “And how do you plan on reaching Krondor, begging Your
Highness’s pardon? There’s the better part of three Tsurani armies between here
and the Free Cities should you go overland. And there are only a few luggers
fit for coasting in the harbor, and you’d need a deep-water ship for a sea
journey.”
“There’s one deep-water ship, Amos. The Wind of Dawn is still in
port.”
Amos’s mouth dropped open. “The Wmd of Dawn?” he cried in disbelief
“Beside the fact she’s little better than a lugger herself, she’s laid up for
the winter. I heard her captain crying over her broken keelson when the
muddleheaded fool came limping into harbor a month ago. She needs to be hauled
out, have the keel inspected and the keelson replaced. Without repair her
keel’s too weak to take the pounding she’ll get from the winter storms. You
might as well stick your head in a rain barrel, begging Your Highness’s pardon.
You’d still drown, but you’d save a lot of other people a great deal of
trouble.”
Fannon looked incensed at the seaman’s remarks, but Tully, Martin,
Roland, and Arutha only looked amused. “When I sent Martin out,” said Arutha,
“I considered the possibility I might need a ship for Krondor. I ordered her
repaired two weeks ago. There’s a swarm of shipwrights aboard her now.” He
fixed Amos with a questioning look. “Of course I’ve been told it won’t be as
good a job as if they’d hauled her out, but it will serve.”
“Aye, for potting up and down the coast in the light winds of spring,
perhaps. But you’re talking about winter storms, and you’re talking about
running the Straits of Darkness.”
Arutha said, “Well, she will have to do I’m leaving in a few days’
time. Someone must convince Erland we need aid, and I have to be the one.”
Amos refused to let the subject drop “And has Oscar Danteen agreed
to captain his ship through the straits for you?”
Arutha said, “I’ve not told him our destination as yet.” Amos shook
his head. “As I thought. That man’s got the heart of a shark, which is to say
none, and the courage of a jellyfish, which is also to say none. Soon as you
give the order, he’ll cut your throat, drop you over the side, winter with the
pirates of the Sunset Islands, then head straight for the Free Cities come
spring. He’ll then have some Natalese scribe pen a most grieving and flowery
message to your father, describing your valor just before you were lost
overboard in high seas while fighting pirates. Then he’ll spend a year drinking
up the gold you gave him for passage.”
Arutha said, “But I purchased his ship. I’m ship’s master now.” Amos
said, “Owner or not, Prince or not, aboard ship there is but one master, the
captain. He is King and High Priest, and no man tells him what to do, save when
a harbor pilot’s aboard, and then only with respect. No, Highness, you’ll not
survive this journey with Oscar Danteen on the quarterdeck.”
Faint lines of mirth began to crinkle at the corners of Arutha’s
eyes “Have you another suggestion, Captain?”
Amos sighed as he sank back into his chair. “I’ve been hooked, I
might as well be gutted and cleaned. Send word to Danteen to clear out the
captain’s cabin and discharge the crew. I’ll see to getting a replacement crew
for that band of cutthroats, though there’s mostly drunkards and boys left in port
this time of year. And for the love of the gods, don’t mention to anyone where
we’re bound. If so much as one of those drink-besotted scoundrels learns you
mean to risk the Straits of Darkness this late in the season, you’ll have to
turn out the garrison to comb the woods for deserters.”
Arutha said, “Very well. I’ll leave all preparations to you. We
depart as soon as you judge the ship ready.” He said to Longbow, “I’ll want you
to come as well, Huntmaster.”
Longbow looked a little surprised. “Me, Highness?”
“I’ll want an eyewitness for Lord Dulanic and the Prince.”
Martin frowned, but after a moment said, “I’ve never been to
Krondor, Highness.” He smiled his crooked smile. “I may never have the chance
again.”
Amos Trask’s voice cut through the shriek of the wind. Gusts from
the sea carried his words to a confused-looking lad aloft “No, you
warped-brained landlubber, don’t pull the sheets so damn tight. They’ll be
humming like a lute string. They don’t pull the ship, the mast does. The lines
help when the wind changes quarter.” He watched as the boy adjusted the sheets.
“Yes, that’s it; no, that’s too loose.” He swore loudly. “Now; there you have
it!”
He looked disgusted as Arutha came up the gangway. “Fishing boys who
want to be sailors. And drunkards. And a few of Danteen’s rogues I had to
rehire. This is some crew, Highness.”
“Will they serve?”
“They bloody well better, or they’ll answer to me.” He watched with
a critical eye as the sailors crawled over the spars aloft, checking every knot
and splice, every line and sheet. “We need thirty good men. I can count on
eight. The rest? I mean to put into Carse as well as Tulan on the way down.
Maybe then we can replace the boys and less dependable men with experienced
seamen.”
“What of the delay clearing the straits?”
“If we were there today, we would manage. By the time we get there,
a dependable crew will prove more important than arriving a week earlier. The
season will be full upon us.” He studied Arutha. “Do you know why the passage
is called the Straits of Darkness?”
Arutha shrugged. Amos said, “It’s no simple sailor’s superstition.
It’s a description of what you find there.” He got a far-off look as he said,
“Now, I can tell you about the different currents from the Endless Sea and
Bitter Sea that come together there, or about the changing, crazy tides of
winter when the moons are all in the worst possible aspect in the heavens, or
how winds come sweeping down from the north, blowing snow so thick you can’t
see the decks from the yards. But then. There are no words to describe the
straits in winter. It is one, two, three days traveling blind. And if the
prevailing wind’s not blowing you back into the Endless Sea, then it’s blowing
you to the southern rocks. Or there’s no wind, and fog blots out everything as
the currents turn you around.”
“You paint a bleak picture, Captain,” said Arutha with a grim smile.
“Only the truth. You’re a young man of uncommonly practical wits and
cold nerve, Highness. I’ve seen you stand when many men of greater experience
would have broken and run. I’m not trying to put any scare upon you. I simply
wish you to understand what you propose to do. If any can clear the straits in
winter in this bucket, it is Amos Trask, and that’s no idle boast. I’ve cut the
season so fine before, there’s little to tell between autumn and winter, winter
and spring. But I would also tell you this: before leaving Crydee, say tender
good-byes to your sister, write your father and brother, and leave any testaments
and legacies in order.”
Without changing expression, Arutha said, “The letters and legacies
are written, and Carline and I dine alone tonight.”
Amos nodded. “We’ll leave on the morning tide. This ship’s a
slab-sided, wattle-bottomed, water-rotted coaster, Highness, but she’ll make it
through if I have to pick her up and carry her.”
Arutha took his leave, and when he was out of sight, Amos turned his
attention heavenward. “Astalon,” he invoked the god of justice, “I’m a sinner,
it’s true. But if you had to measure out justice, did it have to be this?” Now
at peace with his fate, Amos returned to the business of seeing everything in
order.
Carline walked in the garden, the withering blooms reflecting her
own sad mood Roland watched her from a short way off, trying to find words of
comfort. Finally he said, “I will be Baron of Tulan someday. It is over nine
years since I’ve been home I must go down the coast with Arutha.”
Softly she said, “I know.”
He saw the resignation on her face and crossed to hold her. “You
will be Baroness there someday, also.”
She hugged him tightly, then stepped away, forcing herself to speak
lightly. “Still, you’d think after all these years your father would have
learned to do without you.”
He smiled. “He was to have wintered in Jonril with Baron Bellamy,
overseeing the enlargement of the garrison I will go in his stead. My brothers
are all too young. With the Tsurani dug in for the winter, it is our only
chance to expand the fort.”
With forced levity she said, “At least I won’t have to worry about
your breaking the hearts of the ladies of your father’s court.”
He laughed “Little chance of that Supplies and men are already
assembling and the barges ready to travel up the river Wyndermeer. After Amos
puts me ashore in Tulan, I’ll spend one or two days at home, no more, then off
I go. It will be a long winter in Jonril with no one for company but soldiers
and a few farmers in that gods-forsaken fort.”
Carline covered her mouth as she giggled “I hope your father doesn’t
discover you’ve gambled away his barony to the soldiers come spring.”
Roland smiled at her. “I’ll miss you.”
Carline took his hands in hers. “And I you.”
They stood in tableau for a time, then suddenly Carline’s facade of
bravery cracked, and she was in his arms “Don’t let anything happen. I couldn’t
bear losing you.”
“I know,” he said gently. “But you must continue to put on a brave
face for others. Fannon will need your help in conducting court, and you will
have the responsibility for the entire household. You are mistress of Crydee,
and many people will depend upon your guidance.”
They watched the banners on the walls snapping in the late-afternoon
wind. The air was harsh, and he drew his cloak about them. Trembling, she said,
“Come back to me, Roland.”
Softly he said, “I’ll come back, Carline.” He tried to shake a cold,
icy feeling that had risen within, but could not.
They stood on the dock, in the darkness of morning before the
sunrise. Arutha and Roland waited by the gangway. Arutha said, “Take care of everything,
Swordmaster.”
Fannon stood with his hand upon his sword, still proud and erect
despite advancing years. “I will, Highness.”
With a slight smile Arutha said, “And when Gardan and Algon return
from patrol, instruct them to take care of you.”
Fannon’s eyes blazed as he shot back. “Insolent pup! I can best any
man of the castle, save your father. Step down from the gangway and draw your
sword, and I’ll show you why I still wear the badge of Swordmaster.”
Arutha held his hands up in mock supplication. “Fannon, it is good
to see such sparks again. Crydee is well protected by her Swordmaster.”
Fannon stepped forward and placed his hand upon Arutha’s shoulder.
“Take care, Arutha. You were always my best student I should hate to lose you.”
Arutha smiled fondly at his old teacher. “My thanks, Fannon.” Then
his manner turned wry. “I would hate to lose me, also I’ll be back. And I’ll
have Erland’s soldiers with me.”
Arutha and Roland sprang up the gangway, while those on the dock
waved good-bye. Martin Longbow waited at the rail, watching as the gangway was
removed and the men upon the quay cast off lines. Amos Trask shouted orders,
and sails were lowered from the yards Slowly the ship moved away from the
quayside into the harbor. Arutha watched silently, with Roland and Martin
beside, as the docks fell behind.
Roland said, “I was glad the Princess chose not to come. One more
good-bye would be more than I could manage.”
“I understand,” said Arutha. “She cares for you greatly, Squire,
though I can’t see why.” Roland looked to see if the Prince was joking and
found Arutha smiling faintly. “I’ve not spoken of it,” the Prince continued.
“But since we may not see each other for some time after you leave us in Tulan,
you should know that when the opportunity comes for you to speak to Father,
you’ll have my word on your behalf.”
“Thank you, Arutha.”
The town slipped by in darkness, replaced by the causeway to the
lighthouse. The false dawn pierced the gloom slightly, casting everything into
greys and blacks. Then after some time the large upthrust form of the Guardian
Rocks appeared off the starboard quarter.
Amos ordered the helm put over, and they turned southwestward, more
sails set to bring them full before the wind. The ship picked up speed, and
Arutha could hear gulls crying overhead. Suddenly he was struck with the
knowledge they were now out of Crydee. He felt chilled and gathered his cloak
tightly around him.
Arutha stood on the quarterdeck, sword held ready, Martin to one
side notching an arrow to his bowstring. Amos Trask and his first mate, Vasco,
also had weapons drawn. Six angry-looking seamen were assembled upon the deck
below, while the rest of the crew watched the confrontation.
One sailor shouted from the deck, “You’ve lied to us, Captain.
You’ve not put back north for Crydee as you said in Tulan. Unless you mean for
us to sail on to Keshian Elarial, there’s nothing south save the straits. Do
you mean to pass the Straits of Darkness?”
Amos roared, “Damn you, man. Do you question my orders?”
“Aye, Captain. Tradition holds there’s no valid compact between
captain and crew to sail the straits in winter, save by agreement. You lied to
us, and we’re not obliged to sail with you.”
Arutha heard Amos mutter, “A bloody sea-lawyer.” To the sailor he
said, “Very well,” and handed his cutlass to Vasco. Descending the ladder to
the main deck, he approached the seaman with a friendly smile upon his face.
“Look, lads,” he began as he reached the six recalcitrant sailors,
all holding belaying pins or marhnespikes. “I’ll be honest with you. The Prince
must reach Krondor, or there’ll be hell to pay come spring. The Tsurani gather
a large force, which may come against Crydee.” He placed his hand upon the
shoulder of the sailors’ spokesman and said, “So what it comes down to is this:
we must sail to Krondor.” With a sudden motion Amos had his arm around the
man’s neck. He ran to the side of the ship and heaved the helpless sailor over.
“If you don’t wish to come along,” he shouted, “you can swim back to Tulan!”
Another sailor started to move toward Amos when an arrow struck the
deck at his feet. He looked up and saw Martin taking a bead upon him. The
Huntmaster said, “I wouldn’t.”
The man dropped his marhnespike and stepped back. Amos turned to
face the sailors. “By the time I reach the quarterdeck, you had better be in
the rigging—or over the side, it makes no difference to me. Any man not working
will be hanged for the mutinous dog he is.”
The faint cries for help of the man in the water could be heard as
Amos returned to the quarterdeck. To Vasco he said, “Toss that fool a rope, and
if he doesn’t relent, pitch him overboard again.” Amos shouted, “Set all sails!
Make for the Straits of Darkness.”
Arutha blinked seawater out of his eyes and held on to the guide
rope with all the strength he possessed. Another wave crashed over the side of
the ship, and he was blinded once more. Strong hands grabbed him from behind,
and in the darkness he heard Martin’s voice. “Are you all right?”
Spitting water, he shouted, “Yes,” and continued to make his way
toward the quarterdeck, Martin close behind. The Wind of Dawn pitched and
rolled beneath his feet, and he slipped twice before he reached the ladder. The
entire ship had been rigged with safety lines, for in the rough sea it was
impossible to keep a footing without something to hang on to.
Arutha pulled himself up the ladder to the quarterdeck and stumbled
as much as walked to Amos Trask. The captain waited beside the helmsman,
lending his weight to the large tiller when needed. He stood as if rooted to
the wood of the deck, feet wide apart, weight shifting with each move of the
ship, his eyes peering into the gloom above. He watched, listened, each sense
tuned to the ship’s rhythm. Arutha knew he had not slept for two days and a
night, and most of this night as well.
“How much longer?” Arutha shouted.
“One, two days, who can say?” A snap from above sounded like
cracking spring ice upon the river Crydee. “Hard aport!” Amos shouted, leaning
heavily into the tiller. When the ship heeled, he shouted to Arutha, “Another
day of these gods-cursed winds buffeting this ship, and we’ll be lucky if we
can turn and run back to Tulan.”
They were nine days out of Tulan, the last three spent in the storm.
The ship had been relentlessly pounded by waves and wind, and Amos had been in
the hold three times, inspecting the repairs to the keelson. Amos judged them
due west of the straits, but couldn’t be sure until the storm passed. Another
wave struck the ship, and it shuddered.
“Weather break!” came the shout from above.
“Where away?” cried Amos.
“Dead starboard!”
“Come about!” ordered Amos, and the helmsman leaned against the
tiller.
Arutha strained his eyes against the stinging salt spray and saw a
faint glow seem to swing about until it stood off the bow. Then it grew larger
as they drove for the thinning weather. As if walking out of a dark room, they
moved from gloom to light. The heavens seemed to open above them, and they
could see grey skies. The waves still ran high, but Arutha sensed the weather
had turned at last. He looked over his shoulder and saw the black mass of the
storm as it moved away from them.
Moment by moment the combers subsided, and after the raging clamor
of the storm, the sea seemed suddenly silent. The sky was quickly brightening,
and Amos said, “It’s morning. I must have lost track of time. I thought it
still night.”
Arutha watched the receding storm and could see it clearly outlined,
a churning mass of darkness against the lighter grey of the sky above. The grey
quickly turned to slate, then blue-grey as the morning sun broke through the
storm. For the better part of an hour. Arutha watched the spectacle, while Amos
ordered his men about their tasks, sending the night watch below and the day
watch above.
The storm raced eastward, leaving a choppy sea behind Time seemed
frozen as Arutha stood in awe of the scene on the horizon. A portion of the
storm seemed to have stopped, between distant fingers of land. Great spouts of
water spun between the boundaries of the narrow passage in the distance. It
looked as if a mass of dark, boiling clouds had been trapped within that area
by a supernatural force.
“The Straits of Darkness,” said Amos Trask at his shoulder.
“When do we put through them?” Arutha asked quietly.
“Now,” answered Amos. The captain turned and shouted, “Day watch
aloft! Midwatch turn to and stand ready! Helmsman, set course due east!”
Men scrambled into the rigging, while others came from below, still
haggard and showing little benefit from the few hours’ sleep since they last
stood watch. Arutha pulled back the hood of his cloak and felt the cold sting
of the wind against his wet scalp. Amos gripped him by the arm and said, “We
could wait for weeks and not have the wind favorable again. That storm was a
blessing in disguise, for it will give us a bold start through.”
Arutha watched in fascination as they headed for the straits. Some
freak of weather and current had created the conditions that held the straits
in water-shrouded gloom all winter. In fair weather the straits were a
difficult passage, for though they appeared wide at most points, dangerous
rocks were hidden just below the water in many critical places. In foul weather
they were considered impossible for most captains to negotiate. Sheets of water
or flurries of snow blown down from the southernmost peaks of the Grey Towers
tried to fall, only to be caught by blasts of wind and tossed back upward
again, to try to fall once more. Waterspouts suddenly erupted upward to spin
madly for minutes, then dissolve into blinding cascades. Ragged bolts of
lightning cracked and were followed by booming thunder as all the fury of
colliding weather fronts was unleashed.
“The sea’s running high,” yelled Amos. “That’s good. We’ll have more
room to clear the rocks, and we’ll be through or dashed to pieces in short
order. If the wind holds, we’ll be through before the day is done.”
“What if the winds change?”
“That is not something to dwell on!”
They raced forward, attacking the edge of the swirling weather
inside the straits. The ship shuddered as if reluctant once again to face foul
weather. Arutha gripped the rail tightly as the ship began to buck and lurch.
Amos picked his way along, avoiding the sudden wayward gusts, keeping the ship
in the westerly trail of the passed storm.
All light disappeared. The ship was illuminated only by the dancing
light of the storm lanterns, casting flickering yellow darts into murk. The
distant booming of waves upon rocks reverberated from all quarters, confusing
the senses. Amos shouted to Arutha, “We’ll keep to the center of the passage;
if we slip to one side or the other, or get turned, we’ll stave in the hull on
rocks.” Arutha nodded, as the captain shouted instructions to his crew.
Arutha fought his way to the forward rail of the quarterdeck and
shouted Martin’s name. The Huntmaster answered from the main deck below that he
was well, though waterlogged Arutha held tight to the rail as the ship dipped
low into a trough and then started to rise as it met a crest. For what seemed
minutes the ship strained upward, climbing and climbing, then suddenly water
swept over the bow and they were heading downward again. The rail became his
only contact with a solid world amid a cold, wet chaos. Arutha’s hands ached
from the effort of hanging on.
Hours passed in cacophonous fury, while Amos commanded his crew to
answer every challenge of wind and tide. Occasionally the darkness was
punctuated by a blinding flash of lightning, bringing every detail into sharp
focus, leaving dazzling afterimages in the darkness.
In a sudden lurch, the ship seemed to slip sideways, and Arutha felt
his feet go out from under him as the ship heeled over. He held to the rail
with all his strength, his ears deafened by a monstrous grinding. The ship
righted itself, and Arutha pulled himself around to see, in the flickering glow
of the storm lanterns, the tiller swinging wildly back and forth and the
helmsman slumped down upon the deck, his face darkened by blood flowing from
his open mouth. Amos was desperately scrambling upright, reaching for the
lashing tiller. Risking broken ribs as he seized it, he fought desperately to
hang on and bring the ship back under control.
Arutha half stumbled to the tiller and threw his weight against it.
A long, low grinding sound came from the starboard side, and the ship
shuddered.
“Turn, you motherless bitch!” cried Amos as he heaved against the
tiller, marshaling what strength he had left. Arutha felt his muscles
protesting in pain as he strained against the seemingly immobile tiller. Slowly
it moved, first an inch, then another. The grinding rose in volume, until
Arutha’s ears rang from the sound of it.
Suddenly the tiller swung free once more. Arutha overbalanced and
went flying across the deck. He struck the hard wood and slid along the wet
surface until he crashed into the bulwark, gasping as wind exploded from his
lungs. A wave drenched him and he spluttered, spitting out a lungful of
seawater. Groggily he pulled himself up and staggered back to the tiller.
In the faint light Amos’s face was white from exertion, but it was
set in a wide-eyed, manic expression as he laughed. “Thought you’d gone over
the side for a moment.”
Arutha leaned into the tiller, and together they forced it to move
once more. Amos’s mad laughter rang out, and Arutha said, “What’s so damn
funny?”
“Look!”
Panting,
Arutha looked where Amos indicated. In the darkness he saw huge forms rearing
up alongside the ship, blacker shapes against the blackness. Amos yelled,
“We’re clearing the Great South Rocks Pull, Prince of Crydee! Pull if you wish
to ever see dry land again!”
Arutha hauled upon the tiller, forcing the balky ship away from the
terrible stone embrace mere yards away. Again they felt the ship shudder as
another low grinding sound came from below Amos whooped. “If this barge has a
bottom when we’re through, I’ll be amazed.”
Arutha felt a gut-wrenching stab of panic, followed immediately by a
strange exultation. He found himself seized by a nameless, almost joyous
feeling as he struggled to hold the ship on course. He heard a strange sound
amid the cacophony and discovered he was laughing with Amos, laughing at the
fury erupting around him. There was nothing left to fear. He would endure or he
wouldn’t. It didn’t matter now. All he could do was give himself over to one
task, keeping the ship heading past the jagged rocks. Every fiber of his being
laughed in terror, in joy at being reduced to this lower level of existence,
this primal state of being. Nothing existed save the need to do this one thing,
upon which all was wagered.
Arutha entered a new state of awareness. Seconds, minutes, hours
lost all meaning. He struggled, with Amos, to keep the ship under control, but
his senses recorded everything around him in minute detail. He could feel the
grain of the wood through the wet leather of his gloves. The fabric of his
stockings was gathered between his toes in his water-soaked boots. The wind
smelled of salt and pitch, wet wool caps, and rain-drenched canvas. Every groan
of timber, smack of rope against wood, and shout of men above could be clearly
heard. Upon his face he felt the wind and cold touch of melting snow and
seawater, and he laughed. Never had he felt so close to death, and never had he
felt more alive. Muscles bunched, and he pitted himself against forces primeval
and formidable. On and on they plunged, deeper and deeper into the madness of
the Straits of Darkness.
Arutha heard Amos as he shouted orders, orchestrating every man’s
move by the second. He played his ship as a master musician played a lute,
sensing each vibration and sound, striving for that harmony of motion that kept
the Wind of Dawn moving safely through perilous seas. The crew answered his
every demand instantly, risking death in the treacherous rigging, for they knew
their safe passage rested solely upon his skill.
Then it was over. One moment they were fighting with mad strength to
clear the rocks and pass through the fury of the straits, the next they were
running before a stiff breeze with the darkness behind.
Ahead the sky was overcast, but the storm that had held them for
days was a distant gloom upon the eastern horizon. Arutha looked at his hands,
as if at things apart, and willed them to release their hold upon the tiller.
Sailors caught him as he collapsed, and lowered him to the deck. For
a time his senses reeled, then he saw Amos sitting a short way off as Vasco
took the tiller. Amos’s face was still mirthful as he said, “We did it, boy.
We’re in the Bitter Sea.”
Arutha looked about. “Why is it still so dark?”
Amos laughed. “It’s nearly sundown. We were on that tiller for
hours.”
Arutha began to laugh too. Never had he felt such triumph. He
laughed until tears of exhaustion ran down his face, until his sides hurt. Amos
half crawled to his side. “You know what it is to laugh at death, Arutha.
You’ll never be the same man again.”
Arutha caught his breath. “I thought you mad there for a time.”
Amos took a wineskin a sailor handed him and drew a deep drink. He
passed it to Arutha and said, “Aye, as you were. It is something only a few
know in their lives. It is a vision of something so clear, so true, it can only
be a madness. You see what life is worth, and you know what death means.”
Arutha looked up at the sailor standing by them, and saw it was the
man Amos had pitched over the rail to head off the mutiny. Vasco threw the man
a frown as he watched, but the man didn’t move. Amos looked up at him, and the
seaman said, “Captain, I just wanted to say . . . I was wrong. Thirteen years a
sailor, and I’d have wagered my soul to Lims-Kragma no master could pilot a
ship such as this through the straits.” Lowering his eyes, he said, “I’d
willingly stand for flogging for what I done, Captain. But after, I’d sail to
the Seven Lower Hells with you, and so would any man here.”
Arutha looked about and saw other sailors gathering upon the
quarterdeck or looking down from the rigging Shouts of “Aye, Captain,” and “He
has the truth of it” could be heard.
Amos pulled himself up, gripping the rail of the ship, his legs
wobbling a little. He surveyed the men gathered around, then shouted, “Night
watch above! Midwatch and day watch stand down.” He turned to Vasco. “Check
below for damage to the hull, then open the galley. Set course for Krondor.”
Arutha came awake in his cabin Martin Longbow was sitting by his
side. “Here.” The Huntmaster held out a steaming mug of broth.
Arutha levered himself up on his elbow, his bruised and tired body
protesting. He sipped at the hot broth. “How long was I asleep?”
“You fell asleep on deck last night, just after sundown. Or passed
out, if you want the truth. It’s three hours after sunrise.”
“The weather?”
“Fair, or at least not storming. Amos is back on deck. He thinks it
might hold most of the way. The damage below is not too bad, we’ll be all right
if we don’t have to withstand another gale. Even so, Amos says there are a few
fair anchorages to be found along the Keshian coast should the need arise.”
Arutha pulled himself out of his bunk, put on his cloak, and went up
on deck Martin followed. Amos stood by the tiller, his eyes studying the way
the sail held the wind. He lowered his gaze to watch as Arutha and Martin
climbed the ladder to the quarterdeck. For a moment he studied the pair, as if
struck by some thought or another, then smiled as Arutha asked, “How do we
fare?”
Amos said, “We’ve a broad reach to the winds; had it since we
cleared the straits. If it holds from the northwest, we should reach Krondor quickly
enough. But winds rarely do hold, so we may take a bit longer.”
A lookout shouted, “Sail ho!”
“Where away?” shouted Amos.
“Two points abaft port!”
Amos studied the horizon, and soon three tiny white specks appeared.
To the lookout he shouted, “What ships?”
“Galleys, Captain!”
Amos mused aloud. “Quegan. This is a bit south for their usual
patrols if they’re warships, and I don’t think it likely they’re merchantmen.”
He ordered more canvas on the yards. “If the wind holds, we’ll be past before
they can close. They’re fat-bottomed tubs under sail, and their rowers can’t
maintain speed over this distance.”
Arutha watched in fascination as the ships grew on the horizon. The
closest galley turned to cut them off, and after a while he could make out the
hulking outline of the galley, its majestic sails above a high fore and aft
deck. Arutha could see the sweep of oars, three banks per side, as the captain
attempted a short burst of speed. But Amos was right, and soon the galley was
falling away behind. As the distance between the Wind of Dawn and the galleys
slowly increased, Arutha said, “They were flying the Royal Quegan standard.
What would Quegan war galleys be doing this far south?”
“The gods only know,” said Amos. “Could be they’re out looking for
pirates, or they could be keeping an eye out for Keshian ships straying north.
It’s hard to guess. Queg treats the whole of the Bitter Sea as her pond. I’d as
soon avoid finding out what they’re up to as not.”
The rest of the day passed uneventfully, and Arutha enjoyed a sense
of respite after the dangers of the last few days. The night brought a clear
display of stars; he spent several hours on deck studying the bright array in
the heavens. Martin came on deck and found him looking upward. Arutha heard the
arrival of the Huntmaster and said, “Kulgan and Tully say the stars are suns
much like our own, made small by vast distances.”
Martin said, “An incredible thought, but I think they are right.”
“Have you wondered if one of those is where the Tsurani homeworld
lies?”
Martin leaned upon the rail. “Many times, Highness. In the hills you
can see the stars like this, after the campfires are out. Undimmed by lights
from town or keep, they blaze across the sky. I also have wondered if one of
them might be where our enemies live. Charles has told me their sun is brighter
than ours, and their world hotter.”
“It seems impossible. To make war across such a void defies all logic.”
They stood quietly together watching the glory of the night,
ignoring the bite of the crisp wind that carried them to Krondor. Footfalls
behind caused them to turn as one, and Amos Trask appeared. He hesitated a
moment, studying the two faces before him, then joined them at the rail.
“Stargazing, is it?”
The others said nothing, and Trask watched the wake of the ship,
then the sky. “There is no place like the sea, gentlemen. Those who live on
land all their lives can never truly understand. The sea is basic, sometimes
cruel, sometimes gentle, and never predictable. But it is nights like this that
make me thankful the gods allowed me to be a sailor.”
Arutha said, “And something of a philosopher as well.”
Amos chuckled. “Take any deep-water sailor who’s faced death at sea
as many times as I have, and scratch him lightly. Underneath you’ll find a
philosopher, Highness. No fancy words, I’ll warrant you, but a deep abiding
sense of his place in the world. The oldest known sailor’s prayer is to Ishap.
‘Ishap, thy sea is great and my boat is small, have mercy on me.’ That sums it
up.”
Martin spoke quietly, almost to himself. “When I was a boy, among
the great trees, I knew such feelings. To stand by a bole so ancient it is
older than the oldest living memory of man gives such a sense of place in the
world.”
Arutha stretched. “It is late. I shall bid you both a good night.”
As he started to leave, he seemed taken by some thought. “I am not given to
your philosophies, but . . . I am pleased to have shared this voyage with you
both.”
After he was gone, Martin watched the stars for a time, then became
aware Amos was studying him. He faced the seaman and said, “You seem taken by
some thought, Amos.”
“Aye, Master Longbow.” Leaning against the rail, he said, “Nearly
seven full years have passed since I came to Crydee. Something has tickled my
mind since first meeting you.”
“What is that, Amos?”
“You’re a man of mysteries, Martin. There’re many things in my own
life I’d not wish recounted now, but with you it’s something else.”
Martin appeared indifferent to the course of conversation, but his
eyes narrowed slightly. “There’s little about me not well known in Crydee.”
“True, but it is that little which troubles me.”
“Put your mind at ease, Amos. I am the Duke’s Huntmaster, nothing
more.”
Quietly Amos said, “I think more, Martin. In my travels through the
town, overseeing the rebuilding, I’ve met a lot of people, and in seven years
I’ve heard a lot of gossip about you. Some time back I put the pieces together
and came up with an answer. It explains why I see your manner change—only a
little, but enough to notice—when you’re around Arutha, and especially when
you’re around the Princess.”
Martin laughed. “You spin an old and tired bard’s tale, Amos. You
think I am the poor hunter desperate for love of a young Princess? You think me
in love with Carline?”
Amos said, “No, though I have no doubt you love her. As much as any
brother loves his sister.”
Martin had his belt knife half out when Amos’s hand caught his
wrist. The thickset seaman held the hunter’s wrist in a viselike grip, and
Martin could not move his arm. “Stay your anger, Martin. I’d not like to have
to pitch you over the side to cool you off.”
Martin ceased his struggling against Amos and released his knife,
letting it slide back into its sheath. Amos held the hunter’s wrist a moment
longer, then let go. After a moment Martin said, “She has no knowledge, nor do
her brothers. Until this time I thought only the Duke and one or two others
might know. How did you learn of it?”
Amos said, “It was not hard. People most often don’t see what is
right before them.” Amos turned and watched the sails above, absently checking
each detail of the ship’s crew as he spoke. “I’ve seen the Duke’s likeness in
the great hall. Should you grow a beard like his, the resemblance would shout
for the world to see. Everyone in the castle remarks how Arutha grows to
resemble his mother less and father more each passing year, and I’ve been
nagged since we first met why no one else noticed he resembles you as well. I
expect they don’t notice because they choose not to. It explains so much: why
you were granted special favor by the Duke in placing you with the old Huntmaster,
and why you were chosen Huntmaster when a new one was needed. For some time now
I’ve suspected, but tonight I was certain. When I came up from the lower deck
and you both turned in the darkness, for a moment I couldn’t tell which of you
was which.”
Martin spoke with no emotion, just a statement of fact. “It’s your
life should you breathe a word of it to anyone.”
Amos settled himself against the rail. “I’m a bad man to threaten,
Martin Longbow.”
“It is a matter of honor.”
Amos crossed his arms over his chest. “Lord Borric is not the first
noble to father a bastard, nor will he be the last. Many are even given offices
and rank. How is the Duke of Crydee’s honor endangered?”
Martin gripped the rail, standing like a statue in the night. His
words seemed to come from a great distance. “Not his honor, Captain. Mine.” He
faced Amos, and in the night his eyes seemed alive with inner light as they
reflected the lantern hung behind the seaman. “The Duke knows of my birth, and
for his own reasons chose to bring me to Crydee when I was still little more
than a boy. I am sure Father Tully has been told, for he stands highest in the
Duke’s trust, and possibly Kulgan as well. But none of them suspect I know.
They think me ignorant of my heritage.”
Amos stroked his beard. “A knotty problem, Martin. Secrets within
secrets, and such. Well, you have my word—from friendship, not from threat—I’ll
not speak to anyone of this, save by your leave. Still, if I judge Arutha
right, he would sooner know as not.”
“That is for me to decide, Amos, no one else. Someday perhaps I’ll
tell him, or I may not.”
Amos pushed himself from the rail. “I’ve much to do before I turn
in, Martin, but I’ll say one more thing. You’ve plotted a lonely course. I do
not envy you your journey upon it Good night.”
“Good night.” After Amos had returned to the quarterdeck, Martin
watched the familiar stars in the sky. All the companions of his solitary
travels through the hills of Crydee looked down upon him. The constellations
shone in the night, the Beasthunter and the Beasthound, the Dragon, the Kraken,
and the Five Jewels. He turned his attention to the sea, staring down into the
blackness, lost in thoughts he had once imagined buried forever.
“Land ho!” shouted the lookout.
“Where away?” answered Amos.
“Dead ahead, Captain.”
Arutha, Martin, and Amos left the quarterdeck and quickly made their
way to the bow. As they stood waiting for land to heave into sight, Amos said,
“Can you feel that trembling each time we breast a trough? It’s that keelson,
if I know how a ship’s made, and I do. We’ll need to put in at a shipyard for
refitting in Krondor.”
Arutha watched as the thin strip of land in the distance grew
clearer in the afternoon light. While not bright, the day was relatively fair,
only slightly overcast. “We should have time. I’ll want to return to Crydee as
soon as Erland’s convinced of the risk, but even if he agrees at once, it will
take some time to gather the men and ships.”
Martin said, dryly, “And I for one would not care to pass the
Straits of Darkness again until the weather is a bit more agreeable.”
Amos said, “Man of faint heart. You’ve already done it the hard way.
Going to the Far Coast in the dead of winter is only slightly suicidal.”
Arutha waited in silence as the distant landfall began to resolve in
detail. In less than an hour they could clearly make out the sights of
Krondor’s towers rising into the air, and ships at anchor in the harbor.
“Well,” said Amos, “if you wish a state welcome, I’d better have
your banner broken out and run up the mast.”
Arutha held him back, saying, “Wait, Amos. Do you mark that ship by
the harbor’s mouth?”
As they closed upon the harbor, Amos studied the ship in question.
“She’s a beastly bitch. Look at the size of her. The Prince’s building them a
damn sight bigger than when I was last in Krondor. Three-masted, and rigged for
thirty or better sail from flying jib to spanker. From the lines of her hull,
she’s a greyhound, no doubt. I’d not want to run up against her with less than
three Quegan galleys. You’d need the rowers, for those oversized crossbows she
mounts fore and aft would quickly make a hash of your rigging.
“Now we know why those Quegan galleys were so far from home. If the
Kingdom’s bringing warships like this to the Bitter Sea, Queg’s—”
“Mark the banner at her masthead, Amos,” said Arutha.
Entering
the harbor, they passed near the ship. On her bow was painted her name, Royal
Griffin. Amos said, “A Kingdom warship, no doubt, but I’ve never seen one
under any banner but Krondor’s.” Atop the ship’s highest mast a black banner
emblazoned with a golden eagle snapped in the breeze. “I thought I knew every
banner seen on the Bitter Sea, but that one is new to me.”
“The same banner lies above the docks, Arutha,” said Martin,
pointing toward the distant city.
Quietly Arutha said, “That banner has never been seen on the Bitter
Sea before.” His expression turned grim as he said, “Unless I say otherwise, we
are Natalese traders, nothing more.”
“Whose banner is that?” asked Amos.
Gripping the rail, Arutha replied, “It is the banner of the
second-oldest house in the Kingdom. It announces that my distant cousin, Guy,
the Duke of Bas-Tyra, is in Krondor.”
24
KRONDOR
The inn was crowded.
Amos led Arutha and Martin through the common room to an empty table
near the fireplace. Snatches of conversation reached Arutha’s ears as they took
their seats. On close inspection the mood in the room was more restrained than
it had first appeared.
Arutha’s thoughts raced His plans for securing Erland’s help had
been crushed within minutes of reaching the harbor Everywhere in the city were
signs that Guy du Bas-Tyra was not simply guesting in Krondor, but was now
fully in control. Men of the city watch followed officers wearing the black and
gold of Bas-Tyra, and Guy’s banner flew over every tower in the city.
When a dowdy serving wench came, Amos ordered three mugs of ale, and
the men waited in silence until they were brought When the servingwoman was
gone, Amos said, “We’ll have to pick our way carefully now.”
Arutha’s expression remained fixed. “How long before we can sail?”
“Weeks, at least three. We’ve got to get the hull repaired, and the
keelson replaced correctly. How long will depend on the shipwrights. Winter’s a
bad time: the fair-weather traders haul out their ships, so they’ll be fit come
spring. I’ll begin inquiries first thing tomorrow.”
“That may take too long. If needs be, buy another.”
Amos raised an eyebrow “You’ve funds?”
“In my chest aboard ship.” With a grim smile he said, “The Tsurani
aren’t the only ones who play politics with war. To many of the nobles in
Krondor and the East, the war is a distant thing, hardly imaginable. It has
gone on for nearly nine years, and all they ever see is dispatches.
“And our loyal Kingdom merchants don’t donate supplies and ships out
of love for King Rodric. My gold is a hedge against underwriting the cost of
bringing Krondorian soldiers to Crydee, both in expenses and bribes.”
“Well then,” said Amos, “even so it will be a week or two. You don’t
usually stroll into a ship’s brokerage and pay gold for the first ship offered,
not if you wish to avoid notice. And most of the ships sold are fairly
worthless. It will take time.”
“And,” put in Martin, “there’re the straits.”
“That’s true,” agreed Amos, “though we could take a leisurely turn
up the coast to Sarth and wait to time our run through the straits.”
“No,” said Arutha. “Sarth is still in the Principality. If Guy’s in
control of Krondor, he’ll have agents and soldiers there. We won’t be safe
until we’re out of the Bitter Sea. We’ll attract less attention in Krondor than
in Sarth: strangers are not uncommon here.”
Amos looked long at Arutha, then said, “Now, I don’t claim to know
you as well as some men I’ve met, but I don’t think you’re as concerned for
your own skin as something else.”
Arutha glanced about the room. “We’d better find a less public place
to talk.”
With a sound between a sigh and a groan, Amos heaved himself out of
his chair. “The Sailor’s Ease is not where I’d prefer to stay, but for our
purposes it will serve.” He made his way to the long bar and spoke at length to
the innkeeper. The heavyset owner of the inn pointed up the stairs, and Amos
nodded. He signed for his companions to accompany him and led them through the
press of the common room, up the stairs, and down a long hall to the last door.
Pushing it aside, he motioned for them to enter.
Inside they found a room with little to recommend itself by way of
comforts. Four straw-stuffed pallets rested on the floor. A large box in the
corner served as a common closet. A crude lamp, a simple wick floating in a
bowl of oil, sat upon a rude table, it burned with a pungent odor when Longbow
struck a spark to it.
Amos closed the door as Arutha said, “I can see what you meant about
choices in rooms.”
“I’ve slept in far worse,” answered Amos, settling down on one of
the pallets. “If we’re to keep our liberty, we’d best establish believable
identities. For the time being, we’ll call you Arthur. It’s close enough to
your own to afford a passable explanation should someone call out your real
name and cause you to turn or answer. Also, it will be easy to remember.”
Arutha and Martin sat down, and Amos continued. “Arthur—get used to
that name—of navigating cities you know less than a thimbleful, which is twice
as much as Martin knows. You’ll do well to play the role of some minor noble’s
son, from some out-of-the-way place. Martin, you are a hunter from the hills of
Natal.”
“I can speak the language passing well.”
Arutha gave a half-smile. “Get him a grey cloak and he’d make a fair
ranger. I don’t speak the language of Natal, or the Keshian tongue, so I’ll be
the son of a minor eastern noble, visiting for recreation. Few in Krondor could
know half the barons of the East.”
“Just so long as it’s not too close to Bas-Tyra. With all those
black tabards about, it would be a pretty thing to run into a supposed cousin
among Guy’s officers.”
Arutha’s expression turned dark. “You were correct about my
concerns, Amos. I’ll not leave Krondor until I’ve discovered exactly what Guy
is doing here and what it means for the war.”
“Even should I find us a ship tomorrow,” said Amos, “which is
unlikely, you should have plenty of time to snoop about. Probably find out more
than you’ll want to know. The city’s a lousy place for secrets. The
rumormongers will be plying their trade in the market, and every commoner in
the city will know enough to give you a fair picture of what’s taken place.
Just remember to keep your mouth shut and ears open. Rumormongers’ll sell you
what you want to know, then turn around and sell news of your asking to the
city guard so fast it’d make you spin to watch.” Amos stretched, then said,
“It’s still early, but I think we should have a hot meal, then to bed. We’ve a
lot of prowling about to accomplish.” With that he rose and opened the door,
and the three men returned to the common room.
Arutha munched upon a nearly cold meat pie. Lowering his head, he
forced himself to continue consuming the pieman’s greasy ware. He refused to
consider what was contained within the soggy crust in addition to the beef and
pork the seller claimed.
Casting a sidelong glance across the busy square, Arutha studied the
gates to Prince Erland’s palace. Finishing the pie, he quickly crossed to an
ale stand and ordered a large mug to wash away the aftertaste. For the last
hour he had moved, seemingly without purpose, from seller’s cart to seller’s
cart, purchasing this and that, posing as a minor noble’s son. And in that hour
he had learned a great deal.
Martin and Amos came into sight, nearly an hour before the appointed
time. Both wore grim expressions and kept glancing nervously about. Without
comment Amos motioned for Arutha to follow as they walked by. They pushed
through the midday throng and passed quickly away from the great-square
district. Reaching a less hospitable-looking though no less busy area, they
continued until Amos indicated they should enter a particular building.
Once through the door, Arutha was met by a hot, steamy atmosphere as
an attendant came to greet them. “A bathhouse?” said Arutha.
Without humor Amos said, “You need to get rid of some road dirt,
Arthur.” To the attendant he said, “A steam for us all.”
The man led them to a changing room and handed each a rough towel
and a canvas bag for belongings. They undressed, wrapped the towels about them,
and carried their clothing and weapons in the bags into the steam room.
The large room was completely tiled, though the walls and floors
were stained and showed patches of green. The air was close and fetid. A small
half-naked boy squatted in the center of the room, before the bed of rocks that
supplied the steam. He alternately fed wood to the huge brazier below the
stones and poured water upon them, generating giant clouds of steam.
When they were seated upon a bench, in the farthest corner of the
room, Arutha said, “Why a bathhouse?”
Amos whispered, “Our inn has very thin walls. And a great deal of
business is conducted in places such as these, so three men whispering in the
corner won’t draw undue attention.” He shouted to the boy, “You, lad, run and
fetch some chilled wine.” Amos tossed a silver coin at the boy, who caught it
in midair. When he didn’t move, Amos tossed him another, and the boy scampered
off. With a sigh Amos said, “The price of chilled wine has doubled since I was
last here. He’ll be gone for a while, but not too long.”
“What is this?” asked Arutha, not taking pains to hide his ill
humor. The towel itched and the room stank, and he doubted if he’d be any
cleaner for the time spent here than if he’d stayed in the square.
“Martin and I both have troublesome news.”
“As do I. I already know Guy is Viceroy in Krondor. What else have
you learned?”
Martin said, “I overheard some conversation that makes me believe
Guy has imprisoned Erland and his family in the palace.”
Arutha’s eyes narrowed, and his voice was low and angry. “Even Guy
wouldn’t dare harm the Prince of Krondor.”
Martin said, “He would should the King give his leave. I know little
of this trouble between the King and the Prince, but it is clear Guy is now the
power in Krondor and acts with the King’s permission, if not his blessing. You
told me of Caldric’s warning when you were last in Rillanon. Perhaps the King’s
sickness has grown worse.”
“Madness, if you mean to speak clearly,” snapped Arutha.
“To further cloud things in Krondor,” said Amos, “it seems we are at
war with Great Kesh.”
“What!” said Arutha.
“A rumor, nothing more.” Amos spoke quietly and quickly. “Before
finding Martin, I was nosing around a local joy house, not too far from the
garrison barracks. I overheard some soldiers at their ease saying they were to
leave at first light for a campaign. When the object of one soldier’s momentary
ardor asked when she would see him again, he said, ‘As long as it takes to
march to the vale and back, should luck be with us,’ at which point he invoked
Ruthia’s name, so that the Lady of Luck would not view his discussion of her
province disfavorably.”
“The vale?” said Arutha. “That can only mean a campaign down into
the Vale of Dreams. Kesh must have hit the garrison at Shamata with an
expeditionary force of dog-soldiers. Guy’s no fool. He’ll know the only
answer’s a quick, unhesitating strike from Krondor, to show Great Kesh’s
Empress we can still defend our borders. Once the dog soldiers have been driven
south of the vale, we’ll have another round of useless treaty talks over who
has the right to it. That means even should Guy wish to aid Crydee, which I
doubt, he could not. There’s no time to deal with Kesh, return, and reach
Crydee by spring, or even early summer.” Arutha swore. “This is bitter news,
Amos.”
“There is still more. Earlier today I took the trouble to visit the
ship, just to ensure Vasco had everything in hand, and that the men weren’t
chafing too much at being kept aboard. Our ship is being watched.”
“Are you sure?”
“Certain. There’s a couple of boys who stand around, playing at net
mending, but they do no real work. They watched closely as I rowed out and
back.”
“Who do you think they are?”
“I can’t begin to guess. They could be Guy’s men, or men still loyal
to Erland. They could be agents of Great Kesh, smugglers, even Mockers.”
“Mockers?” asked Martin.
“The Guild of Thieves,” said Arutha. “Little goes on in Krondor
without notice by their leader, the Upright Man.”
Amos said, “That mysterious personage runs the Mockers with tighter
control than a captain has over his crew. There are places in the city where
even the Prince cannot reach, but no place in Krondor is beyond the Upright
Man. If he’s taken an interest in us, for whatever reason, we have much to
fear.”
The conversation was interrupted by the serving boy’s return. He set
down a chilled pewter pitcher of wine and three cups. Amos said, “Fetch
yourself to the nearest incense vendor, boy. This place stinks. Buy something
sweet to toss upon the fire.”
The boy regarded them a little warily, then shrugged as Amos tossed
him another coin. He ran from the room, and Amos said, “He’ll be back soon, and
I’ve run out of reasons to send him away. In any event this place will soon be
thick with merchants taking an afternoon steam.
“When the boy comes back, sip some wine, try to relax, and don’t
leave too soon. Now, in all this bleak mess, there is one small glimmer of
light.”
“Then I would hear what it is,” said Arutha.
“Guy will soon be gone from the city.”
Arutha’s eyes narrowed. “Still, his men will be left in charge. But
what you say does have some aspect of comfort. There are few in Krondor likely
to mark me by sight, for it’s nearly nine years since I was last here, and most
of those have likely disappeared with the Prince. Also, there is a plan I’ve
been considering. With Guy out of Krondor, I would have an even better chance
of success.”
“What plan?” asked Amos.
“I’ll
tell you when I’ve had more time to dwell upon it. Where could we safely meet?”
Amos considered. “Brothels, drug houses, and gambling halls are all
as bad as inns. Either the Mockers control them and note everyone coming and
going, or there are others about looking for information to sell. If someone
overheard you speaking the wrong phrase, the Mockers or the city guards could
be down on you in minutes.” He was quiet for a moment. Then he smiled. “I have
the very place! When the town watch rings the hour bell, two hours after
sunset, meet me at the east end of Temple Square.”
The boy returned and tossed a small bundle of incense upon the fire,
cutting off conversation. Arutha settled back and drank the chilled wine,
rapidly warming in the heat of the steam room. He closed his eyes, but was not
relaxing, as he considered the situation. After a while he began to feel his
plan might work if he could reach Dulanic. Running out of patience, he was the
first to rise, rinse off, dress, and leave.
***
Arutha
waited as Martin and Amos approached from different parts of the city, crossing
Temple Square. On all sides the temples of the greater and lesser gods rose up.
Several were busy with pilgrims and worshipers entering and leaving, while
others were nearly deserted.
Reaching the Prince, Amos said, “How fared you this afternoon?”
Arutha spoke softly. “I occupied my time in a tavern, keeping to
myself. I did overhear some conversation about Erland, but when I tried to get
closer, the speakers moved off. Otherwise I considered the plan I spoke of.”
Martin glanced about, then said, “An ill-omened place you picked,
Amos. Gathered at this end of the square are all the gods and goddesses of
darkness and chaos.”
Amos shrugged. “Which means few travelers nearby after night fall.
And a clear view of anyone approaching.” To Arutha he said, “Now, what is this
plan?”
Quietly and quickly, Arutha said, “I noticed two things this
morning: Erland’s personal guards still patrol the palace grounds, so there
must be limits to Guy’s control. Second, several of Erland’s courtiers entered
and left freely enough, so some large portion of the daily business of
governing the Western Realm must remain unchanged.”
Amos stroked his chin, thinking “That would seem logical Guy brought
his army with him, not his administrators. They’re still back running
Bas-Tyra.”
“Which means Lord Dulanic and others not entirely sympathetic to Guy
might still be able to aid us. If Dulanic will help, I can still succeed with
my mission.”
“How?” asked Amos.
“As Erland’s Knight-Marshal, Dulanic has control of vassal garrisons
to Krondor. Upon his signature alone he could call up the garrisons at
Durrony’s Vale and Malac’s Cross. If he ordered them to march to Sarth, they
could join the garrison there and take ship for Crydee. It would be a hard
march, but we could still bring them to Crydee by spring.”
“And no hardship to your father, either. I was going to tell you: I
have heard Guy has sent soldiers from the Krondonan garrison to your father.”
Arutha said, “That seems strange. I can’t imagine Guy wishing to aid
Father.”
Amos shook his head. “Not so strange. To your father it will seem as
if Guy has been sent by the King only to aid Erland, for I suspect the rumors
of Erland’s being a prisoner in his own palace are not as yet widespread. Also,
it is a fine pretext to rid the city of officers and men loyal to the Prince.
“Still, it is no small boon to your father. From all accounts nearly
four thousand men have left or are leaving for the north. That might be enough
to deal with the Tsurani should they come against the Duke.”
Martin said, “But should they come against Crydee?”
“For that we must seek aid. We must get inside the palace and find
Dulanic.”
“How?” Amos asked.
“It was my hope you might have a suggestion.”
Amos looked down, then said, “Is there anyone in the palace you know
to be trustworthy?”
“Before, I could have named a dozen, but this business makes me
doubt everyone. Who stands with the Viceroy and who with the Prince I can’t
begin to guess.”
“Then we’ll have to nose about some more. And we’ll have to listen
for news of likely ships for transport. Once we’ve hired a few, we’ll slip them
out of Krondor one or two at a time, every few days. We’ll need at least a
score to carry the men of three garrisons. Assuming you get Dulanic’s support,
which brings us back to gaining entrance to the palace.” Amos swore softly.
“Are you sure you wouldn’t care to chuck this business and become a privateer?”
Arutha’s expression clearly showed he was unamused. Amos sighed. “I thought
not.”
Arutha said, “You seem to know the underside of the city well, Amos.
Use your experience to find us a way into the palace, even if through the
sewer. I’ll keep my eyes open for any of Erland’s men who might wander through
the great square. Martin, you’ll have to simply keep your ears open.”
With a long sigh of resignation, Amos said, “Getting into the palace
is a risky plan, and I don’t mind telling you I don’t care for the odds.” He
hiked his thumb at a nearby temple. “I may even bounce into Ruthia’s temple and
ask the Lady of Luck to smile upon us.”
Arutha dug a gold coin from his purse and tossed it to Amos. “Say a
prayer to the Lady for me as well I’ll see you back at the tavern later.”
Arutha strode off into the gloom, and Amos inclined his head toward
the temple of the Goddess of Luck. “Care to make a votive offering, Martin?”
The night’s silence was ruptured by trumpets calling men to arms
Arutha was the first to the window, thrusting aside the wooden shutters and
peering through. With most of the city asleep, there were few lights to mask
the glow in the east. Amos reached Arutha’s side, Martin a step behind.
Martin said, “Campfires, hundreds of them.” The Huntmaster glanced
heavenward, marking the stars’ positions in the clear sky, and said, “Two hours
to dawn.”
“Guy’s readying his army for the march,” said Arutha quietly.
Amos leaned far out the window. By craning his neck, he could catch
a glimpse of the harbor. In the distance men were calling aboard ships “Sounds
like they’re readying ships as well.”
Arutha leaned with both hands upon the table by the window. “Guy
will send his foot soldiers by ship down the coast, into the Sea of Dreams, to
Shamata, while his cavalry rides to the south. His foot will reach the city
fresh enough to help bolster the defense, and when his horses arrive, they
aren’t sick from traveling by ship. And they’ll arrive within days of one
another.”
As if to prove his words, from the east came the sounds of marching
men. Then a few minutes later the first company of Bas-Tyra’s foot soldiers
came into view. Arutha and his companions watched them march past the open gate
of the inn’s courtyard. Lanterns gave the soldiers a strange, otherworld
appearance as they marched in columns down the street. They stepped in cadence,
their golden-eagle banners snapping above their heads Martin said, “They are
well-schooled troops.”
Arutha said, “Guy is many things, most of them unpleasant, but one
thing cannot be argued: he is the finest general in the Kingdom. Even Father is
forced to admit that, though he’ll say nothing else good about the man. Were I
the King, I would send the Armies of the East under his command to fight the
Tsurani. Three times Guy has marched against Kesh, and three times he has
thrashed them. If the Keshians do not know he’s come west, the very sight of
his banner in the field may drive them to the peace table, for they fear and
respect him.” Arutha’s voice became thoughtful in tone. “There is one thing. When
Guy first came to be Duke of Bas-Tyra, he suffered some sort of personal
dishonor—Father never told what that shame was—and took to wearing only black
as a badge of sorts, earning him the name Black Guy. That type of thing takes a
strange brand of personal courage. Whatever else can be said of Black Guy du
Bas-Tyra, none will call him craven.”
While the soldiers continued to pass below, Arutha and his
companions watched in silence. Then, with the sun rising in the east, the last
soldiers disappeared along the streets to the harbour.
***
The
morning after Guy’s army had marched, it was announced the city was sealed, the
gates closed to all travelers and the harbor blockaded. Arutha judged it a
normal practice, to prevent Keshian agents from leaving the city by fast sloop
or fast horse to carry word of Guy’s march. Amos used a visit to the Wind of
Dawn to view the harbor blockade and discovered it was a light one, for Guy had
ordered most of the fleet to stand off the coast at sea ambush, watching for
any Keshian flotillas should Kesh learn the city was stripped of her garrison.
The city was now policed by city guards in Guy’s livery, as the last Krondorian
soldiers departed for the north Rumor had it Guy would also send the garrison
at Shamata to the front once the fighting with Kesh had been settled, leaving
every garrison in the Principality manned by soldiers loyal to Bas-Tyra.
Arutha spent most of his time in taverns, places of business, and
the open markets most likely to be frequented by those from the palace. Amos
prowled near the docks or in the city’s seedier sections, especially the
infamous Poor Quarter, and began making discreet inquiries about the
availability of ships. Martin used his guise as a simple woodsman to blunder
into any place that looked promising.
Nearly a week went by this way, with little new information being
unearthed. Then, late the sixth day after Guy had quit the city, Arutha found
himself being hailed in the middle of the busy square by Martin.
“Arthur!” shouted the hunter as he ran up to Arutha. “Best come
quickly.” He set off toward the waterfront and the Sailor’s Ease.
Back at the inn they found Amos already in the room, resting upon
his pallet before his nightly sojourn into the Poor Quarter. Once the door was
closed, Martin said, “I think they may know Arutha’s in Krondor.”
Amos bolted upright as Arutha said, “What? How . . . ?”
“I wandered into a tavern near the barracks, just before the midday
meal. With the army gone from the city, there was little business. One man did
enter, just as I was readying to leave. A scribe with the city’s Quartermaster,
he was fit to burst with a rumor and in need of someone to tell it to. So, with
the aid of some wine, I obliged him by playing the simple woodsy, and by
showing respect for so important a personage.
“Three things this man told me Lord Dulanic has disappeared from
Krondor, gone the night Guy left. There’s some business of his having retired
to nameless estates to the north, now that Guy’s Viceroy, but the scribe thought
that unlikely. The second thing was news of Lord Barry’s death.”
Arutha’s face showed shock. “The Prince’s Lord-Admiral dead?”
“This man told me Barry had died under mysterious circumstances,
though there’s no official announcement planned. Some eastern lord, Jessup, has
been given command of the Krondonan fleet.”
“Jessup is Guy’s man,” said Arutha. “He commanded the Bas-Tyra
squadrons of the King’s fleet.”
“And lastly, the man made a display of knowing some secret
concerning a search for someone he only called ‘the Viceroy’s royal cousin.’ ”
Amos swore. “I don’t know how, but someone’s marked you. With Erland
and his family virtual captives in the palace, there’s hardly a chance another
royal cousin’s come wandering into Krondor in the last few days, unless you’ve
a few out and about you’ve not told us of.”
Arutha ignored Amos’s feeble humor. In the span of time it took for
Longbow to tell his tale, all his plans for aiding Crydee were dashed. The city
was firmly in control of those either loyal to Guy or indifferent to who ruled
in the King’s name. There was no one in the city he could turn to for help, and
his failure in bringing aid home was a bitter thing Quietly he said, “Then
there’s no other course but to return to Crydee as soon as possible.”
“That may not be so easy,” said Amos. “There’s more strange things
occurring. I’ve been in places where a man can usually make contact with those
needed for a dishonest task or two, but everywhere I’ve made
inquiries—discreet, have no doubt—I come up against only hard silence. If I
didn’t know better, I’d swear the Upright Man’s closed up shop and all the
Mockers are now serving in Guy’s army. I’ve never seen such a collection of
dumb barmen, ignorant whores, uninformed beggars, and tongueless gamblers. You
don’t need to be a genius to see the word’s gone out. No one is to talk to
strangers, no matter how promising a transaction’s being offered. So we can
look for no aid in getting free of the city, and if Guy’s agents know you’re in
Krondor, there’ll be no lifting of the blockade or opening of the gates until
you’ve been found, no matter how loudly the merchants scream.”
“We’re deep in the snare,” agreed Martin.
“But if Guy’s men only suspect I’m in Krondor, they may tire of the
search.”
“True,’’ agreed Amos, “and after a while, the Mockers may open up as
well. Should they agree to help—for a significant price, you can be
certain—we’ll have powerful help in leaving the city.”
Arutha balled his fist and struck the pallet upon which he sat.
“Damn Bas-Tyra I’d gladly murder him this instant. Not only does he imperil the
west, he risks a greater schism between the two realms by taking the
Principality under his own banner. Should anything happen to Erland and his
family, it’s almost certainly civil war.”
Amos slowly shook his head. “A bollixed mission this, and through no
fault of yours, Arutha.” He sighed. “Still, we can’t be startled into panic.
Friend Martin may have misunderstood the scribe’s last remark, or the man may
have been speaking simply to hear himself talk. We’ll have to be cautious, but
we can’t bolt and run. Should you vanish from sight completely, someone might
take notice. Best if you stay close to the inn, but act as you have been, for
the time being. I’ll continue to make attempts at reaching someone who may have
ways to get us clear of the city—smugglers, if not the Mockers.”
Arutha rose from the pallet and said, “I’ve no appetite, but we’ve
eaten together in the common room every night. I expect we’d best go down for
supper soon.”
Amos waved him back to his bed. “Stay awhile longer. I’m going to
run down to the docks and visit the ship. If Martin’s scribe was not just
breaking wind, they’ll certainly search the ships in the harbor. I’d better
warn Vasco and the crew to be ready to go over the side if necessary and find
someplace to store your chest. We aren’t due to be hauled out for refitting for
another week, so we must act with care. I’ve run blockades before. I wouldn’t
want to risk it in a hulk as leaky as the Wind of Dawn, but if I can’t find
another ship . . .” At the door he turned back to face Arutha and Martin. “It’s
a black storm, boys, but we’ve weathered worse.”
Arutha and Martin sat quietly as Amos entered the common room. The
seaman pulled out a chair and called for ale and a meal. Once he was served, he
said, “Everything is taken care of. Your chest is safe as long as the ship is
left moored.”
“Where did you hide it?”
“It’s snugly wrapped in oilcloth and tied securely to the anchor.”
Arutha looked impressed. “Underwater?”
“You can buy new clothes, and gold and gems don’t rust.”
Martin said, “How are the men?”
“Grumbling over being in port another week and still aboard ship,
but they’re good lads.”
The door to the inn opened and six men entered. Five took chairs
near the door while one stood surveying the room. Amos hissed, “See that
rat-faced fellow who just sat down? He’s one of the boys who’ve been watching
the docks for the last week. Look’s like I’ve been followed.”
The man who remained standing spotted Amos and approached the table.
He was a plain-looking man, of open countenance. His reddish-blond hair was
flyaway around his head, and he wore a common sailor’s clothing. He clutched a
wool cap in hand as he smiled at them.
Amos nodded, and the man said, “If you’re the master of the Wind of
Dawn, I’d have words with you.”
Amos raised an eyebrow, but said nothing. He indicated the free
chair and the man sat. “Name’s Radburn. I’m looking for a berth, Captain.”
Amos looked about, seeing Radburn’s companions were pretending not
to notice what was transpiring at the table. “Why my ship?”
“I’ve tried others. They’re all full up. Just thought I’d ask you.”
“Who was your last master, and why did you leave his service?”
Radburn
laughed, a friendly sound. “Well, I last sailed with a company of barge
ferrymen, taking cargo from ship to shore in the harbor. Been stuck doing that
for a year.” He fell silent as the serving wench approached. Amos ordered
another round of ale, and when one was set before Radburn, he said, “Thank you,
Captain.” He took a long pull and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
“Before I came to be beached, I sailed with Captain John Avery, aboard the Bantamma.”
“I know the Little Rooster, and John Avery, though I haven’t seen
him since I was last in Durbin, five or six years back.”
“Well, I got a little drunk, and the captain told me he’d have none
who drank aboard his ship I drink no more than the next man, Captain, but you
know Master Avery’s reputation, being an abstentious follower of Sung the
White.”
Amos looked at Martin and Arutha, but said nothing Radburn said,
“These your officers, Captain?”
“No, business partners.” When it was clear Amos was going to say
nothing more, Radburn let the topic of identities drop. Amos finally said,
“We’ve been in the city little more than a week, and I’ve been busy with
personal matters. What news?”
Radburn shrugged. “The war goes on Good for the merchants, bad for
the rest. Now we’ve the business with Kesh. Before the troubles was along the
Far Coast, but now . . . Krondor might not prove such a healthy spot if the
Viceroy doesn’t chase the dogs of Kesh back home. Otherwise, there’s the usual
gossip . . .” He glanced around, as looking for anyone who might overhear. “. .
. and some not so usual.”
Amos lifted his mug to his lips saying nothing. “Since the Viceroy’s
come,” said Radburn quietly, “things haven’t been the same in Krondor. An
honest man isn’t safe on the streets anymore, what with Durbin slavers running
about and the press gangs almost as bad. That’s why I need a ship, Captain.”
“Press gangs!” Amos exploded. “There hasn’t been a press gang in a
Kingdom city in thirty years.”
“Once was, but now things have changed again. You get a little drunk
and don’t find a safe berth for the night, the press gang comes along and slaps
you into the dungeon. It just isn’t right, no sir. Just because a man’s between
ships doesn’t give anyone the right to ship him out with Lord Jessup’s fleet
for seven years. Seven years of chasing pirates and fighting Quegan war
galleys!”
Amos’s eyes narrowed. “How is it that Guy rules in Krondor? We’ve
heard stories, but they seem confused.”
Radburn nodded. “Right you are, Captain. For it is confusing. A
month ago, Lord Guy rides in with his army behind, flags a’wavmg, drums
beating, and the rest. The Prince, so they say, welcomes him and treats him
real friendly, even though du Bas-Tyra is carrying the King’s writ naming him
Viceroy. The Prince even helps him, they say, until this business of the press
gangs and such comes to his ears.” Lowering his voice more, he said, “I heard
that when he complained, Guy locks him up in his rooms. Nice rooms, I expect,
but same as a cell if you can’t leave. So I hear.”
Arutha was so outraged by the story, he was on the verge of
speaking. Amos gripped his arm quickly, warning silence, then said, “Well,
Radburn, I can always use a good man who’s sailed with John Avery. I’ll tell
you what. I’ve one more trip to the ship to make tonight, and there’re some personal
belongings in my room I’ll want aboard. Come along and carry them.”
Amos rose and, giving the man no time to object, gripped him by the
arm and propelled him toward the stairs. Arutha shot a glance at the group who
entered with Radburn. They seemed unaware for the moment of what was
transpiring across the crowded common room as Amos took Radburn up the stairs,
Arutha and Martin following behind.
Amos hustled Radburn down the hall and, once through the door to
their room, spun and delivered a staggering blow to Radburn’s stomach, doubling
him over. A brutal knee to the face, and Radburn lay stunned upon the floor.
“What is this all about?” said Arutha.
“That man’s a liar. John Avery’s a marked man in Kesh. He betrayed
the Durbin captains to a Quegan raiding fleet twenty years ago. Yet Radburn
didn’t bat an eye when I said I saw Avery in Durbin six years ago. And he’s too
free in showing disrespect to the Viceroy. His story stinks like a week-dead
fish. We go out the door with him, and inside of two blocks a dozen men or more
will be upon us.”
“What shall we do?” said Arutha.
“We leave. His friends will be up those stairs in a minute.” He
pointed to the window. Martin stood by the door as Arutha ripped aside a dirty
canvas shade and pushed open the wooden shutters. Amos said, “Now you see why I
chose this room.” Less than a yard below the window’s ledge was the roof of the
stable.
Arutha stepped out, Amos and Martin following. They hurried
carefully down the steeply sloping roof until they reached the edge. Arutha
leaped down, landing quietly, followed a moment later by Martin. Amos landed
more heavily, but suffered only a minor bruise to his dignity.
They heard a cough and an oath, and looked up to see a bloodied face
at the window. Radburn shouted, “They’re in the courtyard!” as the three
fugitives started for the gate.
Amos swore. “I should have cut his throat.”
They ran to the gate, and as they entered the street, Amos grabbed
at Arutha. A group of men were running down the street toward them. Arutha and
his companions fled the opposite way, ducking into a dark alley.
Hurrying along between the blank walls of two buildings, they cut
across a busy street, overturning several pushcarts, and ducked into another
alley, the cart owners’ curses following. They continued to run, the sounds of
pursuit never far behind, following a twisting maze of back alleys and side
streets through darkened Krondor.
Turning a corner, they found themselves intersecting a long narrow
street, little more than an alley, flanked on both sides by tall buildings Amos
rounded the corner first and motioned for Arutha and Martin to halt. In low
tones, he said, “Martin, hurry down to the corner and take a look around.
Arutha, go the other way.” He pointed toward a spot where dim light could be
seen. “I’ll stand watch here. If we become separated, make for the ship. It’ll
be a desperate chance, breaking the blockade, but should you win free, have
Vasco make for Durbin. Your gold will buy you enough protection there to get
the ship refitted and you back to Crydee. Now go.”
Arutha and Martin ran down the street in opposite directions, and
Amos stood watch behind. Abruptly shouts came down the narrow street, and
Arutha looked back. At the other end of the street he could see the dim figure
of Martin struggling with several men. He started back, but Amos shouted, “Go
on I’ll help him. Get away!”
Arutha hesitated, then resumed his run toward the distant light. He
was panting when he reached the corner and nearly skidded to a halt as he
entered a well-traveled, brightly lit avenue. From carts decorated with
lanterns, hawkers sold their wares to passing citizens out for a stroll after
supper. The weather was mild—there looked to be little chance of snow this
winter—and large numbers of people were about. From the condition of the
buildings and the fashions of those in the area, Arutha knew he was in a more
prosperous section of the city.
Arutha stepped into the street and forced himself to walk at a
leisurely pace. He turned and made a display of examining a garment seller’s
wares as several men appeared from the street he had just fled. He tugged a
garish red cloak from among the goods and swirled it about his shoulder,
pulling the hood over his head. “Here now, what do you think you’re doing?”
asked a dried-faced old man in a reedy whisper.
Affecting a nasal voice, Arutha said, “My good man, you don’t expect
me to purchase a garment without seeing if it fits?”
Suddenly confronted by a buyer, the man became unctuously friendly.
“Oh no, certainly, sir.” Looking at Arutha in the ill-tailored cloak, he said,
“It’s a perfect fit, sir, and the color suits you well, if I may say.”
Arutha chanced a glance at his pursuers. The man called Radburn
stood at the corner, blood dried upon his face and his nose swollen, but still
able to direct his men’s search. Arutha adjusted the cloak, a great, cumbersome
thing that hung nearly to the ground. In a display of fussiness, he said, “You
think so? I wouldn’t care to appear at court looking like a vagabond.”
“Oh, court is it, sir? Well, it’s just the thing, mark me It adds a
certain elegance to your appearance.”
“How much is it?” Arutha saw Radburn’s men walking through the busy
crowd, some looking into each tavern and storefront as they passed, others
hurrying on to other destinations. More followed from the smaller street, and
Radburn spoke quickly to them. He set some to watching those in the street,
then turned and led the rest back the way they had come.
“It’s the finest cloth made in Ran, sir,” said the seller. “It was
brought at great expense from the shore of the Kingdom Sea. I couldn’t let it
go for less than twenty golden sovereigns.”
Arutha blanched, and for a moment was so struck by the outrageous
price he nearly forgot himself. “Twenty!” He lowered his voice as a passing
member of Radburn’s company threw him a quick glance “My dear man,” he said,
returning to character, “I seek to purchase a cloak, not establish an annuity
for your grandchildren.” Radburn’s man turned away and disappeared into the
press of the crowd. “It is rather a plain wrap, after all. I should think two
sovereigns more than sufficient.”
The man looked stricken “Sir, you seek to beggar me I couldn’t think
of parting with it for a sum of less than eighteen sovereigns.”
They haggled for another ten minutes, and Arutha finally departed
with the cloak for the price of eight sovereigns and two silver royals. It was
double the price he should have paid, but the searchers had ignored a man
haggling with a street seller, and escaping detection was worth the price a
hundred times over.
Arutha kept alert for signs he was being watched as he made his way
along the street. Unfortunately he knew little of Krondor and had no idea where
he was after the flight. He kept to the busier part of the street, staying
close to larger groups, seeking to blend in.
Arutha saw a man standing at the corner, seemingly idling the night
away, but clearly watching those who passed. Arutha looked around and saw a
tavern on the other side of the street, marked by a brightly painted sign of a
white dove. He quickly crossed the street, keeping his face turned away from
the man at the corner, and approached the doorway of the tavern. As he reached
for the door, a hand gripped his cloak, and Arutha spun, his sword halfway out
of its scabbard. A boy of about thirteen stood there, wearing a simple,
oft-patched tunic and men’s trousers cut off at the knees. He had dark hair and
eyes, and his smudged face was set in a grin. “Not there, sir,” he said with a
merry note in his voice.
Arutha slipped his sword back into the scabbard and fell into
character. “Begone, boy. I’ve no time for beggars or panderers, even those of
limited stature.”
The boy’s grin broadened “If you insist, but there are two of them
in there.”
Arutha dropped his nasal accent. “Who?”
“The men who chased you from the side street.”
Arutha glanced about. The boy appeared alone. He looked into the
boy’s eyes and said, “What are you talking about?”
“I saw how you acted. Quick on your feet, sir. But they’ve blanketed
the area, and you’ll not be slipping by them yourself.”
Arutha leaned forward “Who are you, boy?”
With a toss of his ragged hair he said, “Name’s Jimmy I work
hereabouts. I can get you out. For a fee, of course.”
“And what makes you think I wish to get out?”
“Don’t play the fool with me, like you did with the merchant, sir.
You need to get clear of somebody who’s likely to pay me to show him where you
are. I’ve run afoul of Radburn and his men before, so you have more of my
sympathy than he’s likely to get. As long as you can bid more for your freedom
than he will for your capture.”
“You know Radburn?”
Jimmy grinned. “Not so as I’d care to admit, but yes, we’ve had
dealings before.”
Arutha was struck by the boy’s cool manner, not what he would have
expected from the boys he knew back home. Here stood an old hand at negotiating
the treacherous byways of the city. “How much?”
“Radburn will pay me twenty-five gold to find you, fifty if he
especially wants your skin.”
Arutha took out his com pouch and handed it to the boy. “Over a
hundred sovereigns in there, boy. Get me out of here and to the docks, and I’ll
double it.”
The boy’s eyes flickered wide a moment, but he never lost his grin.
“You must have offended someone with a lot of influence. Come along.”
He darted away so quickly, Arutha almost lost him in the heavy
crowd. The boy moved with the ease of experience through the press, while
Arutha had to struggle to keep from jostling people in the street.
Jimmy led him into an alley, several blocks away. When they were a
short way down the alley, Jimmy stopped. “Better toss that cloak. Red’s not my
favorite color for looking inconspicuous.” When Arutha had pitched the cloak
into an empty barrel, Jimmy said, “You’ll be pointed at the docks in a moment.
If someone tumbles onto us, you’re on your own. But for that other hundred
gold, I’ll try to see you all the way.”
They worked their way to the end of the alley, apparently seldom
used from the heavy accumulation of trash and discarded objects, packing
crates, broken furniture, and nameless goods against the walls around them
Jimmy pulled aside a crate, revealing a hole. “This should put us outside
Radburn’s net, at least I hope so,” said Jimmy.
Arutha found he had to crouch to follow the boy through the small passage
From the rank odor in the tunnel, it was clear something had crawled in here to
die fairly recently. As if reading his mind, Jimmy said, “We toss a dead cat in
here every few days. Keeps others from sticking their noses too far in.”
“We?” said Arutha.
Jimmy ignored the question and kept moving Soon they exited into
another alley overburdened with trash. At the mouth of the alley, Jimmy
motioned for Arutha to stop and wait. He hurried along the dark street, then
returned at a run. “Radburn’s men. They must have known you’d head for the
harbor.”
“Can we slip past them?”
“No chance. They’re as thick as lice on a beggar.” The boy took off
in the opposite direction down the street they had entered from the alley.
Arutha followed as Jimmy turned up another small byway. Arutha hoped he hadn’t
bargained wrongly in trusting the street boy. After a few minutes of traveling,
Jimmy stopped. “I know a place you can hole up awhile, until I can find some
others to help get you to your ship. But it’ll cost you more than a hundred.”
“Get me to my ship before dawn, and I’ll give you whatever you ask.”
Jimmy grinned. “I can ask a lot.” He regarded Arutha for a moment
longer, then with a curt nod of his head led off. Arutha followed, and they
wound their way deeper into the city. The sounds of people in the streets fell
off, and Arutha judged they were moving into an area less well traveled at
night. The buildings around them showed they were heading into another poor
area of the city, though not close to the docks as far as Arutha could tell.
Several sharp turns through dark, narrow alleys, and Arutha was
completely lost. Abruptly Jimmy turned and said, “We’re there.” He pulled open
a door in an otherwise blank wall and stepped through. Arutha climbed a long
flight of stairs after him.
Jimmy led him down a long hall at the top of the stairs, to a door.
The boy opened it and indicated Arutha should enter. Arutha took a single step,
then halted as he discovered three sword points leveled at his stomach.
25
ESCAPE
The man motioned for Arutha to enter.
He sat behind a small table facing the door. Leaning forward into
the light of the small lamp on the table, he said, “Please come in.” The light
revealed his face was covered with pockmarks and he possessed a large hooked
nose. His eyes never strayed from Arutha as the three swordsmen stepped back,
allowing the Prince entrance. Arutha hesitated as he saw the bound and
unconscious forms of Amos and Martin slumped against the wall. Amos groaned and
stirred, but Martin remained motionless.
Arutha measured the distance between himself and the three
swordsmen, his hand hovering near the hilt of his rapier. Any notion of leaping
back and drawing his sword vanished when he felt a dagger point pressed against
the small of his back. A hand snaked around from behind and relieved him of his
sword.
Jimmy then stepped around the Prince, examining the rapier as he
carefully hid his dagger in the folds of his loose tunic. He grinned broadly.
“I’ve seen a few of these about. It’s light enough I could use it.”
Dryly Arutha said, “Under the circumstances, it might not be
inappropriate to make it my legacy to you. Use it in good health.”
The pock-faced man said, “You keep your wits about you,” as Arutha
was ushered farther into the room by a swordsman. Another put away his weapon
and tied Arutha’s arms behind him. He was then roughly thrust into a chair,
opposite the man who had spoken, who continued, “My name is Aaron Cook, and
you’ve already met Jimmy the Hand.” He indicated the boy. “These others prefer
to remain anonymous at present.”
Arutha looked at the boy. “Jimmy the Hand?”
The boy executed a fair imitation of a courtly bow, and Cook said,
“The finest pickpocket in Krondor and well on his way to becoming the finest
thief as well, should you be inclined to believe his self-appraisal.
“Now, to matters of business. Who are you?”
Arutha related the story of being Amos’s business partner, calling
himself Arthur, and Cook studied him stoically. With a sigh, he nodded, and one
of the silent men stepped forward and struck Arutha across the mouth. Arutha’s
head snapped back from the force of the blow, and his eyes watered. “Friend
Arthur,” said Aaron Cook, shaking his head, “we can go about this interview two
ways. I’d advise you not to make the choice of the difficult way. It will prove
most unpleasant, and we shall know what we want in the end in any event. So
please consider your answer carefully.” He stood and came around the table.
“Who are you?”
Arutha began to repeat his story, and the man who struck him stepped
forward again, ending his answer with another ringing blow. The man called Cook
leaned down so his face was level with Arutha’s Arutha blinked to clear the
tears from his eyes, and Cook said, “Friend, tell us what we ask. Now, so as
not to waste time”—he pointed at Amos —“that he is the captain of your ship we
concede, but you his business partner . . . I think not. That other fellow
played the part of a hunter from the mountains in several taverns about town,
and I think it no mummery; he has the look of one who knows mountains better
than city streets, a look hard to forge.” He studied Arutha “But you you are a
soldier at least, and your rich boots and fine sword mark you a gentleman. But
I think there is more.” Looking into Arutha’s eyes, he said, “Now, why is Jocko
Radburn so intent upon finding you?”
Arutha looked Aaron Cook squarely in the eyes. “I don’t know.”
The man who had struck Arutha began to step forward again, but Cook
held up his hand. “That may be true. You’ve been something of a fool, the way
you’ve been popping up here and there, hanging around the gates of the palace,
playing the innocent. You are either poor spies, or poor fools, but there is no
doubt you’ve aroused the interest of the Viceroy’s men, and therefore ours.”
“Who are you?”
Cook ignored the question “Jocko Radburn’s the senior officer in the
Viceroy’s secret police. Despite that open, honest face on him, Radburn’s one
of the most steel-nerved, immovable bastards the gods ever graced this world
with. He’d happily cut his grandmother’s heart out if he thought the old girl
was making free with state secrets. The fact he put in a personal appearance
shows he, at the very least, judges you potentially important.
“We first learned three men were nosing about town a day or two
after you arrived, and when our people heard some of Radburn’s men were keeping
an eye upon you, we decided to do likewise. When they began offering small
bribes for information about you three, we became especially interested. We
were content to simply keep watching you, waiting until you showed your hand.
“But when Jocko and his men showed at the Sailor’s Ease, we were
forced to act. We snatched those two from under Jocko’s nose, but Jocko and his
bully boys came down the alley between you and us, so we hurried them away.
Jimmy’s finding you was a bit of luck, for he didn’t know we were ready to
bring you in.” He nodded approval to the boy. “You did right bringing him
here.”
Jimmy laughed. “I was on the rooftops, watching the whole thing. I
knew you wanted him in as soon as you grabbed the other two.”
One of the men swore. “You’d better not have been trying for a boost
without writ from the Nightmaster, boy.”
Cook raised his hand, and the man fell silent. “It will not hurt for
you to know that some here are Mockers, others are not, but we are all united
in an undertaking of great importance. Mark me well, Arthur. Your only hope of
leaving here alive rests upon our being satisfied you do not endanger that
undertaking I spoke of. It may be Radburn’s interest in you is only
coincidental to his interest in other matters. Or there may be a weaving of
threads here, some pattern as yet unseen. In any event, we shall have the
truth, and when we are satisfied with what you have told us, we shall set you
free—perhaps even aid you and your companions—or we shall kill you. Now start
at the beginning. Why did you come to Krondor?”
Arutha considered. There was little but pain to be gained by lying,
yet he was not willing to tell the entire truth. That these men were not
working with Guy’s men wasn’t proved. This could be a ploy, with Radburn in the
next room listening to every word. He decided what part of the truth to tell.
“I’m an agent for Crydee. I came to speak to Prince Erland and Lord Dulanic in
person, to ask for aid against a coming Tsurani offensive. When we learned Guy
du Bas-Tyra was in possession of the city, we decided to gauge the temper of
things before committing ourselves to a course of action.”
Cook listened closely, then said, “Why should an emissary of Crydee
slip into the city? Why not come in with banners flying and receive a state
welcome?”
“Because Black Guy’d just as soon toss him into a cell as not, you
stupid bastard.”
Cook’s head snapped around: Amos was sitting up against the wall,
groggily shaking his head. “I think you busted my skull, Cook.”
Aaron Cook looked hard at Amos. “You know me?”
“Aye, you wooden-headed sea rat, I know you. I know you well enough
to know we’re not speaking another word until you go fetch Trevor Hull.”
Aaron Cook rose from the table, an uncertain expression on his face.
He motioned to one of the men by the door, who also looked discomforted by
Amos’s words. The man nodded to Cook and left the room. Minutes later he
returned, followed by another man, tall, with a shock of grey hair, but still
powerful looking. A ragged scar ran from his forehead through his right eye,
which was milky white, and down his cheek. He took a long look at Amos, then
laughed aloud and pointed at the captives. “Untie them.”
Amos was lifted by two men, then untied. As his ropes were loosened,
he said, “I thought they’d hung you years ago, Trevor.”
The man clapped Amos on the back. “And I you, Amos.”
Cook looked questioningly at the new arrival, while Arutha was
untied and Martin revived with a cup of water thrown in his face. The man
called Trevor Hull looked at Cook and said, “Have your wits fled, man? He’s
grown a beard and cut his famous flowing locks—lost some on top and put on a
few pounds as well—but he’s still Amos Trask.”
Cook studied Amos a moment longer, then his eyes widened. “Captain
Trenchard?”
Amos nodded, and Arutha looked on in astonishment. Even in far
Crydee they had heard of Trenchard the Pirate, the Dagger of the Sea. He’d had
a short career, but a famous one. It was reputed even Quegan war galleys had
turned and fled at sight of Trenchard’s fleet, and there wasn’t a town along
the coasts of the Bitter Sea that did not fear his marauders.
Aaron Cook extended his hand. “Sorry, Captain. It’s been so many
years since we last met. We couldn’t be certain you weren’t part of some plot
of Radburn’s to locate us.”
“Who are you?” asked Arutha.
“All in good time,” answered Hull. “Come.”
One of the men helped the still-groggy Martin to his feet, and Cook
and Hull led them to a more comfortable room, with chairs enough for all. When
all were sitting, Amos said, “This old rogue is Trevor Hull, Captain White-eye,
master of the Red Raven.”
Hull shook his head sadly. “No longer, Amos. Burned off of Elarial
she was, three years ago, by imperial Keshian cutters. My mate Cook here and a
few of my boys got to shore with me, but most of the crew went down with the
Red Raven. We made our way back to Durbin, but things are changing, what with
the wars and all. Came to Krondor a year ago and have been working here since.”
“Working? You, Trevor?”
The man smiled, his scar wrinkling, as he said, “Smuggling, in fact.
That’s what brought us together with the Mockers. Not much can happen in
Krondor along those lines without the Upright Man’s permission.
“When the Viceroy first came to Krondor, we started running up
against Jocko Radburn and his secret police. He’s been a thorn in our side from
the first. This business of guards sneaking about dressed as common folk,
there’s just no honor in it.”
Amos muttered, “I knew I should have cut his throat when I had the
chance. Next time I won’t be so damned civilized.”
“Slowing down a bit, Amos? Well, a week ago we got word from the
Upright Man he had a precious cargo to leave the city. We’ve had to bide our
time until the right ship was ready. Radburn’s very anxious to find that cargo
before it leaves Krondor. So, you see, it’s a most delicate situation, for we
can’t ship it until the blockade’s lifted, or we find a blockade captain we can
bribe. When we first caught wind you three were asking questions, we thought it
might be some grand plot of Jocko’s to find that cargo. Now we’ve cleared the
air, I’d like to hear the answer to Cook’s question explained. Why should an
emissary from Crydee fear discovery by the Viceroy’s men?”
“Listening in, were you?” Amos turned to Arutha, who nodded. “This
is no simple emissary, Trevor. Our young friend is Prince Arutha, son of Duke
Borric.”
Aaron Cook’s eyes went wide, and the man who struck Arutha paled.
Trevor Hull nodded understanding. “The Viceroy’d pay handsomely to get his
hands upon the son of his old enemy, especially when it came time to press his
claim in the Congress of Lords.”
“What claim?” said Arutha.
Hull leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees. “You’d not
know, of course. We only heard the news a few days ago ourselves, and it’s not
common knowledge. Still, I’m not free to speak plainly without permission.”
He rose and left the room. Arutha and Amos exchanged questioning
glances, then Arutha looked toward Martin. “Are you all right?”
Martin carefully touched his head. “I’ll recover, though they must
have hit me with a tree.”
One of the men grinned in a friendly, almost apologetic way. Patting
a wooden billy in his belt sash, he said, “He’s a hard one to bring down,
that’s for certain.”
Hull returned to the room, followed by another. The men in the room
rose, and Arutha, Amos, and Martin slowly followed suit. Behind Hull came a
young girl no more than sixteen years of age. Arutha was instantly struck by
the promise of beauty in her features: large sea-green eyes, straight and
delicate nose, and slightly full mouth. A faint hint of freckles dusted her
otherwise fair skin. She was tall and slender and walked with poise. She came
across the room to Arutha, rose up on tiptoes, and kissed him lightly upon the
cheek. Arutha looked surprised at this gesture and watched as she stepped back
with a smile upon her lips. She wore a simple dress of dark blue, and her
red-brown hair hung loosely to her shoulders. After a second she said, “Of
course, how silly I am. You’d not know me. I saw you when you were last in
Krondor, but we never met. I’m your cousin Anita, Erland’s daughter.”
Arutha stood thunderstruck. Besides the girl’s disquieting effect
upon his composure, with her winning smile and clear gaze, he was doubly
surprised to find her in this company of brigands. He sat down slowly, and she
took a chair. So used to the informality of his father’s court, he was somewhat
surprised when she gave the others permission to sit.
“How . . . ?” Arutha began.
Amos interrupted. “The Upright Man’s precious cargo?”
Hull nodded, and the Princess spoke Her pretty face clouded with
emotion. “When the Duke of Bas-Tyra came with orders from the King, Father
greeted him warmly and offered no resistance. At first Father did all he could
to aid him in taking command of the army, but when he heard of the things Guy
was doing with his secret police and press gangs, Father protested. Then when
Lord Barry died and Guy put Lord Jessup in command of the fleet over Father’s
objections, and Lord Dulanic disappeared so mysteriously, Father sent a letter
to the King, demanding Guy’s recall. Guy intercepted the message and ordered us
kept under guard in a wing of the palace. Then Guy came to my room one night.”
She shuddered Arutha nearly spat when he said, “You don’t have to
speak of such things.” The sudden rage startled the girl.
“No,” she said, “it was nothing like that. He was very proper,
nearly formal. He simply informed me we were to be wed, and that King Rodric
was to name him heir to the throne of Krondor. If anything, he seemed irritated
by the bother of having to take such a course.”
Arutha slammed his fist against the wall behind. “That tears it! Guy
means to have Erland’s crown and Rodric’s after. He means to be King.”
Anita looked at Arutha shyly. “So it seems. Father’s not well and
couldn’t resist, though he refused to sign the proclamation of betrothal. Guy
had him taken to the dungeon until he would sign.” Her eyes teared as she said,
“Father cannot live long in such cold and damp quarters. I fear he will die
before agreeing to Guy’s wishes.” She continued to speak, her face a mask of
control, though tears ran down her cheeks as she talked of her mother and
father’s imprisonment. “Then one of my ladies told me a maid knew some people
in the city who might be willing to help.”
Trevor Hull said, “With your permission, Highness. One of the girls
in the palace is sister to a Mocker. With everything up in the wind, the
Upright Man decided it might be to his advantage to take a hand. He arranged to
smuggle the Princess out of the palace the night of Guy’s departure, and she’s
been here since.”
Amos said, “Then the rumor we overheard before we fled the Sailor’s
Ease about there being a hunt on for a ‘royal cousin’ was about Anita, not
Arutha.”
Hull pointed at the Prince. “It may be Radburn and his boys still
have no idea who you are. Most likely, they jumped on you in the hope you’d
turn out to be party to the Princess’s escape. We’re almost certain the Viceroy
has no idea she’s gone from the palace, for she fled after he rode out. I
expect Radburn is desperate to get her back before his master returns from the
war with Kesh.”
Arutha studied the Princess, feeling a strong desire to do something
on her behalf, a desire beyond the consideration of foiling Guy. He shunted
aside the strange tug of emotions. He asked Trevor Hull, “Why does the Upright
Man wish to contend with Guy? Why isn’t he turning her in for a reward?”
Trevor Hull looked to Jimmy the Hand, who answered with a grin. “My
master, a most perceptive man, saw at once his own interests were best served
by aiding the Princess. Since Erland has been Prince of Krondor, the business
of the city runs smoothly, an environment conducive to the success of my
master’s many undertakings. Stability profits us all, you see. With Guy here,
we’ve his secret police about, upsetting the normal commerce of our guild. And
whatever else, we are most loyal subjects of His Highness the Prince of
Krondor. If he does not wish his daughter to marry the Viceroy, we do not wish
it as well.” With a laugh, Jimmy added, “Besides, the Princess has agreed to
pay twenty-five thousand gold sovereigns to our master should the guild get her
free of Krondor, to be delivered when her father returns to power, or some
other fate places her upon the throne.”
Arutha took Anita’s hand and said, “Well, cousin, there is nothing
else to be done. We must take you to Crydee at the first chance.”
Anita smiled, and Arutha found himself smiling back Trevor Hull
said, “As I said before, we were waiting for the right opportunity to smuggle
her from the city.” He turned to Amos. “You’re the man for this, Amos. There’s
no better blockade runner on the Bitter Sea—excepting myself, of course, but
I’ve other matters to take care of here.”
Trask said, “We can’t leave for a few weeks yet. Even if the
blockade was lifted, my ship’s in desperate need of refitting. And if we left
now, we’d have to sail about until the weather in the straits breaks. With
Jessup’s fleet at sea ambush, that would be risky. I’d rather hide here awhile,
then a quick run west, through the straits, and up the Far Coast with no
delay.”
Hull slapped him on the shoulder. “Good, that will give us time.
I’ve heard of your ship; the boys tell me it’s little better than a barge.
We’ll find you another. I’ll send word to your men when the time is right.
Radburn’ll most likely leave your crew alone, hoping you’ll turn up. We’ll slip
them aboard the new ship a few at a time at night and replace them with my own
boys, so Radburn’s men won’t notice anything unusual aboard.”
He turned to Arutha. “You’ll be safe enough here, Highness. This
building is one of many owned by the Mockers, and none will get close without
our having ample warning When the time is right, we’ll get you all free of the
city. Now we’ll take you to your room, so you may rest.”
Arutha, Martin, and Amos were shown to a room down the hall from the
one where they had met Anita, while the Princess returned to her own quarters.
The room they entered was a simple affair, but clean. All three men were tired
Martin fell heavily on one pallet and was quickly asleep. Amos lowered himself
slowly, and Arutha watched him for a moment. With a slight smile he said, “When
you first came to Crydee, I thought you a pirate.”
Struggling to remove a boot, Amos said, “In truth, I tried to leave
that behind me, Highness.” He laughed “Perhaps it was the gods working their
revenge upon me, but you know, for fifteen years, man and boy, I was a corsair
and a captain, then when I try my hand at honest trading for the first time, my
ship is captured and burned, my crew slaughtered, and I find myself beached as
far from the heart of the Kingdom as you can get and still be in it.”
Arutha lay down upon his pallet. “You’ve been a good counselor, Amos
Trask, and a brave companion. Your help over the years has earned you a good
deal of forgiveness for past wrongdoings, but”—he shook his head—“Trenchard the
Pirate! Gods, man, there’s so much to forgive.”
Amos yawned and stretched. “When we return to Crydee, you can hang
me, Arutha, but for now please have the good grace to keep silent and put out
the light. I am getting too old for this foolishness. I need some sleep.”
Arutha reached over and covered the wick of the lamp with a snuff.
He lay back in the darkness, images and thoughts crowding his mind. He thought
of his father and what he would do were he here, then wondered how his brother
and sister were. Thoughts of Carline caused him to think of Roland, and to
speculate how the fortifications of Jonril were progressing. He forced aside
the buzzing thoughts and let his mind drift. Then before sleep took him, he
remembered Anita, as she rose up on tiptoes to kiss his cheek, and felt again a
not entirely comfortable churning within. A faint smile crossed his lips as he
fell asleep.
Anita clapped appreciatively as Arutha turned aside the point of
Jimmy’s sword. The boy thief blushed at his awkwardness, but Arutha said, “That
was better.”
He and Jimmy were practicing basic swordwork, Jimmy using a rapier
purchased with some of the gold Arutha had given him. For a month they had
passed the time this way, and Anita had taken to watching. Whenever the
Princess was around, the usually brash Jimmy the Hand became subdued, and he
blushed furiously whenever she spoke to him. Arutha was now certain the boy
thief was afflicted by the worst sort of infatuation for the Princess, only
three years older than himself. Arutha appreciated Jimmy’s distress, for he
also found the girl’s presence a distraction. Still in the first years of
womanhood, she nevertheless carried herself with court-bred grace, had wit and
education and showed the promise of mature beauty. Arutha found it easier to
turn his thoughts to other topics than the Princess.
The basement where they worked on their swordplay was damp and
poorly ventilated, so it soon became close and humid. Arutha said, “That’s
enough for today, Jimmy. You’re still impatient to close, and that can be
fatal. You’ve plenty of speed, and it’s good you learn young, but you lack arm
strength to bash about as many older men do; with the rapier, that can also
prove fatal. Remember, the edge is for cutting—”
“—and the point is for killing,” finished Jimmy, with a
self-conscious grin. “I can see how you’d have to be cautious against a man
with a broadsword. He could break your blade if you tried to block instead of
parry, but what do you do if one of those alien warriors comes at you with that
greatsword you described?”
Arutha laughed “You find out who can run faster.” Anita’s laughter
joined with Arutha’s and Jimmy’s. Arutha said, “Seriously, you must stay to the
off-hand side. With the big swords, your opponent gets one swing, then you’ve
got an opening—”
The door opened, and Amos walked in with Martin and Trevor Hull.
Amos said, “The worse damn luck—begging the Princess’s pardon. Arutha, the
worst has occurred.”
Arutha wiped the perspiration off his brow with a towel and said,
“Don’t stand there waiting for me to guess. What?”
“News came this morning,” said Hull. “Guy is returning to Krondor.”
“Why?” asked Anita.
Amos said, “It seems our Lord of Bas-Tyra rode into Shamata and ran
his banner up above the walls. The Keshian commander had the good grace to
mount one more attack, for the sake of form, then nearly gave himself a
ruptured gut racing back home. He left a handful of minor nobles haggling with
Guy’s lieutenants over the conditions of armistice until a formal treaty can be
drawn up between the King and the Keshian Empress. There’s only one reason Guy
can be hurrying back here.”
Quietly Anita said, “He knows I’ve escaped.”
Trevor Hull said, “Yes, Highness. This Black Guy’s a wily one. He
must have a spy in Radburn’s company. It appears he doesn’t even trust his own
secret police overmuch. Luckily we still have people inside the palace loyal to
your father, or we would never have learned of this turn.”
Arutha sat down near the Princess. “Well, then we must soon be gone.
It’s either sail for home or toward Ylith to reach Father.”
Amos said, “Looking at the choices, it seems there is little to
recommend one course over the other. Both have dangers and advantages.”
Martin looked at the girl, then said, “Though I don’t think the
Duke’s war camp any place for a young woman.”
Amos sat down by Arutha. “Your presence in Crydee is not vital, at
least not for now. Fannon and Gardan are able men, and should the need arise, I
think your sister would prove no mean commander. They should be able to keep
things under control as well as you.”
Martin said, “But you must ask yourself this: what will your father
do when he learns Guy does not simply rule in Krondor as Erland’s aide but
holds the city completely in his power, that he’s sending no aid to the Far
Coast, and that he means to have the throne?”
Arutha nodded vigorously “You are right, Martin You know Father
well. It will mean civil war.” There was sorrow on his face. “He’ll withdraw
half the Armies of the West and march down the coast to Krondor and not stop
until Guy’s head is on a pole before the city’s gates. Then the course will be
set. He’ll have to turn east and march against Rodric. He’d never wish the
crown for himself, but once begun, he cannot stop short of total victory or
defeat. But we’d lose the West to the Tsurani in time. Brucal couldn’t hold
them long with only half an army.”
Jimmy said, “This civil war sounds a nasty sort of business.”
Arutha sat forward. Wiping his forehead, he looked up from under
damp locks. “We’ve not had one in two hundred fifty years, since the first
Borric slew his half brother, Jon the Pretender. Compared to what this would
be, with all the East marshaled against the West, that was only a skirmish.”
Amos looked at Arutha with concern upon his face. “History’s not my
strong suit, but it seems to me you’d do best by your father keeping him in
ignorance of this turn of events until the Tsurani spring offensive is
finished.”
Arutha exhaled a long, low breath. “There’s nothing else for it. We
know no aid will be forthcoming for Crydee. I can best decide what to do when I
return. Perhaps in council with Fannon and the others we can work out some
defense for when the Tsurani come.” His tone was one of near-resignation.
“Father will learn of Guy’s plotting in due time, his sort of news is too hard
to keep. The best we can hope for is he’ll lot hear of it until after the
Tsurani offensive. Perhaps by then the situation will have changed.” It was
obvious from his tone he didn’t think that likely.
Martin said, “It may be the Tsurani will choose to march against
Elvandar, or carry the battle to your father. Who can say?”
Arutha leaned back and became aware of Anita’s hand resting gently
upon his arm. “What a choice we have,” he said quietly. “To face the possible
loss of Crydee and the Far Coast to the Tsurani or to plunge the Kingdom into
civil war. Truly the gods must hate the Kingdom.”
Amos stood. “Trevor tells me he has a ship. We can sail in a few
days. With luck, the straits will be clearing when we arrive.”
Lost in the gloom of his own personal defeat, Arutha barely heard
him. He had come to Krondor in such confidence. He would win Erland’s support
for his cause, and Crydee would be rescued from the Tsurani. Now he faced an
even more desperate situation than had he stayed home. Everyone left him alone,
save for Anita, who spent silent minutes just sitting at his side.
***
Dark
figures moved quietly toward the waterfront. Trevor Hull led a dozen men with
Arutha and his companions down the silent street. They hugged the walls of the
buildings, and every few yards Arutha would cast a backward glance to see how
Anita fared. She returned his concern with brave smiles, faintly perceived in the
predawn darkness.
Arutha knew that over a hundred men moved down adjacent streets,
sweeping the area of the city watch and Radburn’s agents. The Mockers had
turned out in force so Arutha and the others could safely quit the city. Hull
had carried word the night before that for a considerable cost the Upright Man
had arranged for one of the blockade ships to “drift” off station. Since
learning the true situation, including Guy’s plan to become Prince of Krondor,
the Upright Man had given over his not inconsiderable resources to aid the
Prince’s and Anita’s escape. Anita wondered if anyone outside the Guild of
Thieves would ever learn the mysterious leader’s true identity. From what
chance remarks Arutha had overheard, it seemed only a few within the Mockers
knew who he was.
With Guy on his way back to the city, Jocko Radburn’s men had
increased their searching to a near-frenzied pitch Curfew had been instituted
and homes randomly entered and searched in the middle of the night. Every known
informant in the city, and many of the beggars and rumormongers as well, had
been dragged off to the dungeons and questioned, but whatever else Radburn’s
men accomplished, they did not learn where the Princess was hidden. No matter
how much the denizens of the street feared Radburn, they feared the Upright Man
more.
Anita
heard Hull speaking quietly to Amos. “She’s a blockade runner, called the Sea
Swift, and she’s well named. There’s no faster ship left in the harbor,
with all the big warships out with Jessup’s fleet. You should make good time
westward. The prevailing winds are northerly, so you’ll have a broad reach most
of the way.”
Amos said, “Trevor, I’ve sailed the Bitter Sea a bit I know how the
winds blow this time of year as well as any man.”
Hull
snorted “Well then, as you say. Your men and the Prince’s gold are all safely
aboard, and Radburn’s watchdogs don’t seem to have a notion. They still watch
the Wind of Dawn like a mouser a rathole, but the Sea Swift is left
alone. We’ve arranged for false papers to be posted with a broker, announcing
she’s for sale, so even if there was no blockade, they’d not imagine she’d be
leaving harbor for some time.”
They reached the docks and hurried along to a waiting longboat.
There were muffled noises, and Arutha knew the Mockers and Trevor’s smugglers
were disposing of Radburn’s watchmen.
Then to the rear, shouts erupted. The clamor of steel broke the
still of the morning, and Arutha heard Hull shout, “To the boat!”
The pounding of boots upon the wood of the docks set up a racket as
Mockers came swarming out of nearby streets, intercepting whoever sought to cut
off the escape.
They reached the end of the dock and hurried down the ladder to the
longboat. Arutha waited at the top of the ladder until Anita was safely down,
then turned. As he stepped upon the top rung, he heard the sound of hoofbeats
approaching and saw horses crashing through the press of Mockers, who fell
before the onslaught. Riders in the black and gold of Bas-Tyra hacked down with
swords, to break free of those seeking to slow them.
Martin shouted from the boat, and Arutha hurried down the ladder. As
he reached the boat, a voice from above shouted, “Farewell!”
Anita looked up and saw Jimmy the Hand hanging over the edge of the
dock, a nervous grin on his face. How the boy had managed to join them when
everyone thought him safely back at the hiding place, Arutha couldn’t guess.
Seeing the unarmed boy gave the Prince a momentary start. He unbuckled his
rapier and tossed it high. “Here, use it in good health!” As quick as a
striking serpent, Jimmy caught the scabbard, then vanished.
Sailors pulled hard against the oars, and the boat sped away from
the docks Lanterns appeared upon the wharves as the sound of battle became
louder. Even in the predawn hour, many cries of “What passes?” and “Who goes
there?” came from those set to guard ships and cargo in the harbor. Anita
watched over his shoulder, trying to see what was occurring behind. More
lanterns were being brought, and a fire erupted on the docks. Large bales of
something, stored under canvas, exploded into flames.
Those in the boat could now clearly see the fight. Many of the
thieves were escaping down city streets, or leaping into the icy water of the
harbor. Arutha couldn’t see the grey-haired figure of Trevor Hull anywhere, or
the small one of Jimmy the Hand. Then clearly he saw Jocko Radburn, dressed in
a simple tunic, as before. Radburn came to the edge of the dock and watched the
retreating boat. He pointed at the fleeing longboat with his sword and shouted
something lost in the clamor.
Arutha
turned and saw Anita sitting opposite him, her hood thrown back, her face
clearly visible in the blaze of light from the wharf. Her gaze was caught by
the spectacle on shore, and she seemed unaware of her discovery. Arutha quickly
pulled her cloak hood about her face, snapping her from her glamour, but he
knew the damage was done. He looked back again and saw Radburn ordering his men
after the fleeing Mockers, retreating down the docks. He stood there alone,
then turned away, vanishing in the gloom by the time the longboat reached the Sea
Swift.
As soon
as they were all aboard, Amos’s crew cast mooring lines and scrambled aloft to
set sails. The Sea Swift began to move from the harbor.
The promised gap in the harbor blockade appeared, and Amos set
course for it. He was through before any attempt to cut them off could
materialize, and suddenly they were outside the harbor, in the open sea.
Arutha felt a strange elation as it struck him they were free of
Krondor. Then he heard Amos swear. “Look!”
In the
faint light of the false dawn, Arutha saw the dim shape where Amos pointed. The
Royal Griffin, the three-masted warship they had seen when coming into
the harbor, was at anchor beyond the breakwater, hidden from the view of any in
the city. Amos said, “I thought her out with Jessup’s fleet. Damn that Radburn
for a crafty swine. She’ll be on our wake as soon as he can get aboard.” He
shouted for all sails to be set and then watched the retreating ship behind.
“I’d say a prayer to Ruthia, Highness. If we can steal enough time before she
gets under way, we still may be free. But we’ll need all the good fortune the
Lady of Luck can spare.”
The
morning was clear and cold. Amos and Vasco watched the crew work with approval.
The less experienced men had been replaced by men handpicked by Trevor Hull.
They did their work quickly and well, and the Sea Swift raced westward.
Anita had been shown to a cabin below, and Arutha and Martin stood
on deck with Amos. The lookout reported the horizon clear.
Amos said, “It’s a close thing, Highness. If they’ve gotten that
brute of a ship underway as quickly as possible, we’ve only stole an hour or
two on them. Their captain may choose the wrong course, but seeing as we’re
trying to stay free of Jessup’s sea ambush, they’re a good bet to follow close
to the Keshian coast, and risk running into a Keshian warship, rather than
losing us. I’ll not feel comfortable until we’re two days free of pursuit.
“But even if they started at once, they’ll only make up a small
distance each hour. So until we know for certain they have us in sight, we’d
all do with a bit of rest. Go below, and I’ll call you should anything occur.”
Arutha nodded and left Martin followed. He bid Martin a good rest
and watched as the Huntmaster entered the cabin he shared with Vasco. Arutha
entered his own cabin and stopped when he saw Anita sitting on his bunk. Slowly
he closed the door and said, “I thought you were asleep in your own cabin.”
She shook her head slightly, then suddenly she was across the short
space separating them, her head buried against his chest. Sobs shook her as she
said, “I’ve tried to be brave, Arutha, but I’ve been so frightened.”
He stood there awkwardly for a moment, then gently placed his arms
around her. The self-reliant pose had crumbled, and Arutha now realized how
young she was. Her court training and manners had served her well in
maintaining poise among the rough company of the Mockers over the month, but
her mask could no longer withstand the pressure. He stroked her hair and said,
“You’ll be fine.”
He made other reassuring sounds, not aware of what he was saying,
finding her closeness disturbing. She was young enough to make him judge her
still a girl, but old enough to make him doubt that judgment. He had never been
able to banter lightly with the young women of the court like Roland,
preferring a straightforward conversation, which seemed to leave the ladies
cold. And he had never commanded their attention the way Lyam had, with his
blond good looks and his laughing, easy manner. On the whole women made him
uncomfortable, and this woman—or girl, he couldn’t decide which—more than
usual.
When the tears subsided, he ushered her to the single chair in the
cramped cabin and sat upon the bunk. She sniffed once, then said, “I’m sorry,
this is so unseemly.”
Suddenly Arutha laughed. “What a girl you are!” he said with genuine
affection. “Were I in your place, smuggling myself from the palace, hiding amid
cutthroats and thieves, dodging Radburn’s weasels and all, I’d have fallen
apart long since.”
She drew a small handkerchief from her sleeve and delicately wiped
her nose. Then she smiled at him. “Thank you for saying that, but I think you’d
have done better. Martin has told me a lot about you over the last few weeks,
and you are a rather brave man by his accounts.”
Arutha felt embarrassed by the attention. “The Huntmaster has a
tendency to overboast,” he said, knowing it to be untrue, and changed the
subject. “Amos tells me if we don’t sight that ship for two days, we’ll have
won free.”
She lowered her eyes. “That’s good.”
He leaned forward and brushed a tear from her cheek, then, feeling self-conscious,
pulled his hand away. “You will be safe with us in Crydee, free from Guy’s
plottings. My sister will make you a welcome guest in our house.”
She smiled faintly. “Still, I am worried about Father and Mother.”
Arutha tried his best to lay her fears to rest. “With you safely
gone from Krondor, Guy cannot gain by causing your parents harm. He may still
force a consent to marry from your father, but Erland could do no harm by
giving it now. With you out of reach, it’s a hollow betrothal. Before this is
all done, we shall have an accounting with dear cousin Guy.”
She sighed, and her smile broadened. “Thank you, Arutha. You’ve made
me feel better.”
He rose and said, “Try to sleep. I’ll use your cabin for the time
being.” She smiled as she went to his bunk. He closed the door behind him. All
at once he felt little need for rest and returned to the deck. Amos stood by
the helmsman, eyes fixed astern Arutha came to stand at his side. Amos said,
“There, on the horizon, can you see it?”
Arutha squinted and made out a faint white speck against the blue of
the sky. “Radburn?”
Amos spat over the transom. “My guess. Whatever start we’ve had is
being slowly eaten away. But a stern chase is a long chase, as the saying goes.
If we can keep far enough ahead for the rest of the day, we might blip them at
night—if there’s enough cloud cover so the moons don’t mark our passage.”
Arutha said nothing, watching the faint speck in the distance.
Throughout the day they had watched the pursuing ship grow slowly in
size. At first the tiny speck grew with maddening slowness, but now with
alarming speed. Arutha could see the sails clearly defined, no longer a simple
blur of white, and he could see a hint of a black speck at the masthead,
undoubtedly Guy’s banner.
Amos
regarded the setting sun, directly ahead of the fleeing Sea Swift, then
watched the following ship. He shouted to the watch aloft, “Can you mark her?”
The lookout cried down, “Three-masted warship, Captain.”
Amos
looked at Arutha. “It’s the Royal Griffin. She’ll overtake us at
sundown. If we had but ten more minutes, or some weather to hide in, or she was
just a trifle slower . . .”
“What can you do?”
“Little. In a broad reach she’s faster, fast enough that we can’t
shake her with any sort of fancy sailing. If I tried to turn to a beam reach
just as she came near, I could put a bit of space between us, for we’d both
lose speed, but she’d fall off faster for a time. Then as soon as they trimmed
sails, they’d overhaul us. But that’d send us southward, and there’re some
fairly nasty shoals and reefs along this stretch of coast, not far from here.
It’d be chancy. No, she’ll come in somewhat to the windward. When she’s
alongside, her taller masts will cut our wind, and we’ll slow enough for them
to board without so much as a by-your-leave.”
Arutha watched the closing ship for another half hour Martin came on
deck and watched as the distance between the two ships shrank by a few feet
each minute. Amos held the ship tight to the wind, driving her to the limit of
her speed, but still the other closed.
“Damn!” said Amos, nearly spitting from frustration. “If we were
running east, we’d lose them in the dark, but westward we’ll be outlined
against the evening sky for some time after the sun sets. They’ll still be able
to see us when we’ll be blind to them.”
The sun sank and the chase continued. As the sun neared the horizon,
an angry red ball above the black-green sea, the warship followed by less than
a thousand yards.
Amos said, “They might try to foul the rigging or sweep the decks
clear with those oversized crossbows, but with the girl aboard, Radburn might
not risk it for fear of injuring her.”
Nine
hundred, eight hundred yards, the Royal Griffin came on, rolling
inexorably toward them. Arutha could see figures, small silhouettes in the
rigging, black against sails turned blood-red by the setting sun.
When the pursuing ship was five hundred yards behind, the lookout
shouted, “Fog!”
Amos looked up. “Where away?”
“South by west. A mile or more.”
Amos sped for the bow and Arutha followed. In the distance they
could see the sun setting, while off to the left a hazy white band stretched
across the top of the black sea. “Gods!” shouted Amos. “We have a chance.”
Amos shouted for the helmsman to come to a southwest heading, then
sprinted for the stern, Arutha behind him by a step. When they reached the
stern, they saw the turn had halved the distance between the ships. Amos said,
“Martin, can you mark their helmsman?”
Martin squinted, then said, “It’s a bit gloomy, but he’s not a
difficult mark.”
Amos said, “See if you can take his mind off holding course.”
Martin uncovered his ever-present bow and strung it. He drew out a
cloth-yard shaft and sighted on the pursuing ship. He waited, shifting weight
to compensate for the rolling of the ship, then let fly. Like an angry bird,
the arrow arched over the water, clearing the stern of the following ship.
Martin watched the shaft’s flight, then quietly hummed an “Ah” to
himself. In a single fluid motion he drew out another arrow, fitted it to the
bowstring, pulled, and released. It followed the path of the first, but instead
of clearing the rear of the other ship, struck in the transom, quivering mere
inches from the helmsman’s head.
From
the Sea Swift they could see the Royal Griffin’s helmsman dive
for the deck, releasing the tiller. The warship swung over and began to fall
away. Martin said, “A little gusty for fine shooting,” and sent another arrow
to strike within inches of the first, keeping the tiller unmanned.
Slowly the distance between the ships began to widen, and Amos
turned to his crew. “Pass the word. When I give the order for silence, any man
who drops so much as a whisper is fish bait.”
The warship wobbled behind a minute, then swung back on course
Martin said, “Looks like they’ll keep a little less broad to us, Amos. I can’t
shoot through sails.”
“No, but if you’d oblige me by keeping those lads in the bow away
from their ballista, I’d be thankful I think you irritated Radburn.”
Martin and Arutha saw the ballista crew readying their weapons. The
Huntmaster sent a flurry of arrows at the pursuing ship’s bow, one arrow
following the last before it was halfway to the target. The first struck a man
in the leg, felling him, and the other men dove for cover.
“Fog dead ahead, Captain!” came the shout from above.
Amos turned to the helmsman. “Hard to port.”
The Sea
Swift angled to the south. The Royal Griffin came hard after, now
less than four hundred yards behind. As they changed course, the wind died.
Approaching the fog bank, Amos said to Arutha, “The winds fall off to less than
a bilious fart in there; I’m reefing sails, so the sound of flapping canvas
doesn’t give us away.”
Abruptly they entered a wall of grey, murky fog, quickly becoming
black as the sun sank over the horizon. As soon as the warship vanished from
sight, Amos said, “Reef sails!”
The crew hauled in sails, quickly slowing the ship. Then Amos said,
“Hard to starboard, and pass the word for silence.”
Suddenly the ship became graveyard quiet. Amos turned to Arutha and
whispered, “There’s currents here running to the west. We’ll let them carry us
away from here and hope Radburn’s captain is a Kingdom Sea man.
“Tiller to midships,” he whispered to the helmsman. To Vasco, he
said, “Pass the word to lash down the yards. And those aloft are to remain
motionless.”
Suddenly Arutha became aware of the quiet. After the clamor of the
chase, with the fresh north wind blowing, the ropes and sheets singing in the
yards, the canvas snapping constantly, this muffled fogbank was unnaturally
silent. An occasional groan of a yard moving, or the snap of a rope, were the
only sounds in the murk. Fear dragged the minutes out in the seemingly endless
vigil.
Then,
like an alarm ringing out, they heard voices and the sounds of a ship. Creeking
yards and the snap of canvas as it moved in the faint wind echoed from all
quarters. Arutha couldn’t see anything for minutes, until a faint glow pierced
through the murk to the rear, passing from northeast to southwest, lanterns
from the pursuing Royal Griffin. Every man aboard the Sea Swift,
on deck and above, stayed at his station, afraid to move for the noise that
would carry over the water like a clarion In the distance they could hear a
shout from the other ship, “Quiet, damn it! We can’t hear them for our own
noise!” Then it was suddenly still, save for the rippling of canvas and ropes
from the Royal Griffin.
Time passed without measure as they waited in the blackness. Then
came a hideous grinding sound, ringing like a thunder peal, a tearing, cracking
shriek of wood being crushed. Instantly the cries of men could be heard, shouts
of panic.
Amos turned to the others, half-seen in the darkness. “They’ve
shoaled out. From the sound, they’ve torn the hull right out from under.
They’re dead men.” He ordered the helm put over to the northwest, away from the
shoals and reefs, as sailors hurriedly set sail.
“A bad way to die,” said Arutha.
Martin shrugged, half-lit by the lanterns being brought up on deck.
“Is there a good way? I’ve seen worse.”
Arutha left the quarterdeck, the faint, pitiful cries of the
drowning men still carrying across the water, a grisly counterpoint to Vasco’s
more mundane shout to open the galley. He closed the door to the companion way
and shut out those unhappy sounds. He quietly opened the door to his cabin and
saw Anita lying asleep in the faint light of a shuttered candle. Her red-brown
hair looked nearly black as it lay spread about her head. He started to close
the door, when he heard her say, “Arutha?”
He stepped in, finding her watching him in the dim light. He sat on
the edge of the berth. “Are you well?” he asked.
She stretched and nodded. “I’ve been sleeping soundly.” Her eyes
widened. “Is everything all right?” She sat up, bringing her face close to his.
He reached out and put his arms around her, holding her close.
“Everything is fine. We’re safe now.”
She sighed as she rested her head on his shoulder. “Thank you for
everything, Arutha.”
He said nothing, suddenly caught up in strong emotion, a protective
feeling, a need to keep Anita from harm’s way, to care for her. For long
moments they sat this way, then Arutha regained control over his surging
feelings. Pulling away a little, he said, “You’d be hungry, I’d think.”
She laughed, an honestly merry sound. “Why yes, as a matter of fact
I’m famished.”
He said, “I’ll have something sent down, though it will be plain
fare, I’m afraid, even compared to what you were given by the Mockers.”
“Anything.”
He went on deck and ordered a seaman to the galley to fetch
something for the Princess, then returned to find her combing her hair. “I must
look a mess,” she said.
Arutha suddenly found himself fighting the urge to grin. He didn’t
know why, but he was inexplicably happy. “Not at all,” he said. “You look quite
nice, actually.”
She stopped her combing, and Arutha marveled at how she looked so
young one minute, so womanly the next. She smiled at him. “I remember sneaking
a peek at you during Father’s court dinner, when you were last in Krondor.”
“At me? What in heaven’s name for?”
She seemed to ignore the question “I thought you looked nice then as
well, though a bit stern. There was a boy there who held me up to see. He was
with your father’s party. I’ve forgotten his name, but he said he was
apprentice to a magician.”
Arutha’s smile faded. “That was Pug.”
“What ever happened to him?”
“He was lost in the first year of the war.”
She put aside her comb. “I’m sorry. He was kind to a bothersome
child.”
“He was a kind lad, given to doing brave things, and he was very
special to my sister. She grieved for a long time when he was lost.” Fighting
back a gloomy mood, he said, “Now, why did a Princess of Krondor want to sneak
a look at a distant and rural cousin?”
Anita watched Arutha for a long moment, then said, “I wanted to see
you because our fathers thought it likely we would marry.”
Arutha was stunned. It took all his control to retain his composure.
He pulled over the single chair and sat. Anita said, “Didn’t your father ever
mention it to you?”
For want of anything clever to say, Arutha merely shook his head.
Anita nodded. “I know, the war and all. Things did get quite frantic
soon after you left for Rillanon.”
Arutha swallowed hard, finding his mouth suddenly dry. “Now, what is
this about our fathers’ plans for . . . our marriage?”
Arutha looked at Anita, her green eyes flickering with reflected
candlelight, and something else. “Matters of state, I’m afraid. Father wanted
my claim to the throne bolstered, and Lyam’s too dangerous a match, being the
older. You’d be ideal, for the King would not likely object . . . or wouldn’t
have then, I guess. Now, with Guy set upon having me, I suppose the King is in
agreement.”
Arutha became suddenly irritated, though he wasn’t certain why “And
I suppose we’re not to be consulted in the matter!” His voice rose.
“Please, it’s not my doing.”
“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to offend you. It’s only I’d never given
much thought to marriage, and certainly not for reasons of state.” The wry grin
reappeared. “That is usually the province of eldest sons. We second-born as a
rule are left to get by as best we can, an old widowed countess, or a rich
merchant’s daughter.” He tried to make light of it. “A rich merchant’s
beautiful daughter, if we’re lucky, which we usually are not.” He couldn’t
manage a light tone and sat back Finally he said, “Anita, you will stay at
Crydee as long as need be. It may prove dangerous because of the Tsurani for a
time, but we’ll see that through, somehow, send you down to Carse, perhaps.
When this war is over, you’ll go home in safety; I promise you. And never,
never shall anyone force you to do anything against your will.”
The conversation was interrupted by a knock on the door, and a
seaman entered with a steaming bowl of chowder, hard bread, and salted pork on
a platter. As the seaman placed the food on the table and poured a cup of wine,
Arutha watched Anita. When the sailor was gone, Anita began to eat.
Arutha spoke of little things with Anita, finding himself once more
captivated by the girl’s open, appealing manner. When he finally bade her good
night and closed the door, he was abruptly aware the idea of a state marriage
was causing him only a little discomfort. He went up on deck; the fog had
lifted, and once more they were running before a light breeze. He watched the
stars above and, for the first time in years, whistled a happy air.
Near the helm Martin and Amos shared a wineskin and spoke low. “The
Prince seems unusually cheerful tonight,” said Amos.
Martin blew a puff of smoke from a pipe, which was quickly carried
away on the wind. “And it’s a good bet he’s not even aware why he feels so
cheerful. Anita’s young, but not so young he’ll be able to ignore her
attentions for very long. If she’s made up her mind, and I think she has,
she’ll have him snared within the year. And he’ll be glad to be caught.”
Amos laughed “Though it will be some time before he owns up to it.
I’m willing to wager young Roland is hauled up before the altar sooner than
Anita.”
Martin shook his head. “That’s no wager. Roland’s been caught for
years. Anita has some work to do yet.”
“You’ve never been in love, then, Martin?”
Martin said, “No, Amos. Foresters, like sailors, make poor husbands.
Never at home long and spending days, even weeks, alone. Tends to make them a
brooding, solitary lot. You?”
“Not so you’d notice.” Amos sighed “The older I get, the more I
wonder what I’ve missed.”
“But would you change anything?”
With a chuckle Amos said, “Probably not, Martin, probably not.”
As the ship put in at the quayside, Fannon and Gardan dismounted.
Arutha led Anita down the gangway and introduced her to the Swordmaster of
Crydee.
“We’ve no carriages in Crydee, Highness,” Fantion said to her, “but
I’ll have a cart sent for at once. It’s a long walk to the castle.”
Anita smiled “I can ride, Master Fannon. Any horse that’s not too
spirited will do.”
Fannon ordered two of his men to ride to the stable and bring one of
Carline’s palfreys with a proper sidesaddle. Arutha asked, “What news?”
Fannon led the Prince off a short distance and said, “A late thaw in
the mountains, Highness, so there has been no major Tsurani movement as yet. A
few of the smaller garrisons have been raided, but there is nothing to indicate
a spring offensive here Perhaps they’ll move against your father.”
“I hope you’re right, for Father’s received most of the Krondonan
garrison.” He quickly outlined what had occurred in Krondor, and Fannon
listened closely.
“You did well not sailing for your father’s camp. I think you judged
things correctly. Nothing could prove more disastrous than a major Tsurani
offensive against Duke Borric’s position as he was marshaling to march against
Guy. Let us keep this to ourselves for a time. Your father will learn what has
occurred soon enough, but the more time it takes for him to discover Guy’s
treachery, the more chance we have of keeping the Tsurani at bay another year.”
Arutha looked troubled. “This cannot continue much longer, Fannon.
We must soon see an end to this war.” He turned for a moment and saw
townspeople begin to gawk at the Princess. “Still, we at least have a little
time to come up with something to counter the Tsurani, if we can but think of
it.”
Fannon thought a moment, started to speak, then stopped His
expression became grim, almost painful. Arutha said, “What is it, Swordmaster?”
“I have grave and sorry news to greet you with, Highness. Squire
Roland is dead.”
Arutha was rocked by the news. For a brief moment he wondered if
Fannon made some tasteless joke, for his mind would not accept what he had
heard Finally he said, “What . . . how?”
“News came three days ago from Baron Tolburt, who is most sorely
grieved. The Squire was killed in a Tsurani raid.”
Arutha looked at the castle upon the hill. “Carline?”
“As you would expect. She weeps, but she also bears up well.”
Arutha fought back a choking sensation. His face was a grim mask as
he moved back to Anita, Amos, and Martin. Word had spread that the Princess of
Krondor was upon the wharf. The soldiers who had ridden with Fannon and Gardan
formed a quiet ring around her, keeping the townsfolk at a respectful distance,
while Arutha shared the sad news with Amos and Martin.
Soon the horses arrived and they were in the saddle, riding toward
the castle. Arutha spurred his horse on and was dismounted before the others
had entered the courtyard. Most of the household staff awaited him, and with
little ceremony he shouted to Housecarl Samuel, “The Princess of Krondor is
guesting with us. See rooms are made ready. Escort her to the great hall and
tell her I will join her shortly.”
He hurried through the entrance of the keep, past guards who snapped
to attention as their Prince strode by. He reached Carline’s suite and knocked
upon the door.
“Who is it?” came the soft voice from within.
“Arutha.”
The door flew open, and Carline rushed into her brother’s arms,
holding him tightly. “Oh, I’m so glad you are back. You don’t know how glad.”
She stepped back and looked at him. “I’m sorry. I was going to ride down to
meet you, but I just couldn’t seem to gather myself together.”
“Fannon just told me. I’m so very sorry.”
She regarded him calmly, her face set in an expression of
acceptance. She took him by the hand and led him to her chambers. Sitting upon
a divan, she said, “I always knew it might happen. It was the silliest thing,
you know. Baron Tolburt wrote a very long letter, the poor man. He saw so
little of his son and was stricken.” Tears began to come, and she swallowed
hard, looking away from Arutha. “Roland died . . .”
“You don’t have to tell me.”
She shook her head. “It’s all right. It hurts . . .” Again tears
came, but she spoke through them. “Oh, it hurts, but I’ll get over the pain.
Roland taught me that, Arutha. He knew there were going to be risks, and should
he die, I’d have to keep living my own life. He taught me well I think because
I finally learned how much I loved him, and told him so, I gained the strength
to cope with this loss.
“Roland died trying to save some farmer’s cows.” Through the tears,
she smiled. “Isn’t that like him? He spent the entire winter building up the
fort, and then the first time there’s trouble, it’s some hungry Tsurani trying
to steal some skinny cows Roland went riding out with his men to chase them
away, but got shot by an arrow. He was the only one hurt, and he died before
they could get him back to the fort.” She sighed long. “He was such a jester at
times, I almost think he did it on purpose.”
She began to weep, and Arutha watched in silence. Quickly she
regained control over herself and said, “No good comes from this, you know.”
She rose and looked out a window and said, quietly, “Damn this stupid war.”
Arutha came over to her, holding her tightly for a moment. “Damn all
wars,” he said.
For a few more minutes they were quiet, then she said, “Now tell me,
what news from Krondor?”
Arutha gave her a brief account of his experiences in Krondor, half
his attention on her. She seemed much more accepting of Roland’s loss than she
had when grieving for Pug. Arutha shared her pain, but also felt certain she
would be all right. He was pleased to discover just how much Carline had
matured over the last few years. When he finished telling of Anita’s rescue,
Carline interrupted “Anita, the Princess of Krondor, is here?”
Arutha nodded, and Carline said, “I must look a fright, and you
bring the Princess of Krondor here. Arutha, you are a monster.” She rushed to a
polished metal mirror and fussed with her face, daubing at it with a damp
cloth.
Arutha smiled. Under the mantle of mourning, his sister still showed
a spark of her natural spirit.
Combing her hair out, Carline turned to face her brother. “Is she
pretty, Arutha?”
Arutha’s wry smile was replaced by a grin. “Yes, I’d say she is
pretty.” Carline studied Arutha’s face. “I can see I’ll have to get to know her
well.” She put down her comb and straightened her gown. Extending her hand to
him, she said, “Come, we can’t keep your young lady waiting.”
Hand in hand they left the room and walked down the stairs to the
main hallway, to welcome Anita to Crydee.
26
GREAT ONE
An abandoned house overlooked the city.
The site upon which the house had been constructed had once seen the
lights of a great family manse On top of the highest of many rolling hills
surrounding the city of Ontoset, it was considered the choicest view of the
city and the sea beyond. The family had come to low estate, the result of being
on the losing side in one of the Empire’s many subtle but lethal political
struggles. The house had fallen into disrepair and the property been ignored,
for while it was as fine a building site as any found in the area, the
association of ill fortune with the property was too real for the superstitious
Tsurani.
One day news reached the city that some kula herders had awakened to
the sight of a single black-robed figure walking up the hill toward the old
house. They all acted with haste to avoid him, in the socially correct fashion
for their station. They stayed within the area, tending their animals—the
source of their meager income: kula wool—when, near midday, they heard a great
noise, as if the heavens above them had erupted with the grandfather of all
thunder peals. The herd scattered in terror, some running up the hill. The
herders were no less terrified, but true to their trade, they put aside their
fears and chased after the animals.
One herder, a man named Xanothis, came to the top of the once-famous
hill to be greeted by the sight of the black-robed magician he had seen
earlier, standing upon the crest. Where the run-down great house had stood
moments before, a large patch of smoking land was laid bare, several feet below
the level of the grass that surrounded it. Fearing he had intruded upon some
business of a Great One, Xanothis started to back away, hoping to avoid
detection, for the Great One’s back was to the herder and his cowl was drawn
over his head. As he took the first step backward, the magician turned to face
him, fixing him with a pair of unsettlingly deep brown deep eyes.
The herder lowered himself as custom demanded, on his knees, eyes
cast downward. He did not fully abase himself, for he was a freeman, and while
not a noble, he was head of his family.
“Stand up,” the magician ordered.
Slightly confused, Xanothis rose, eyes still cast downward.
“Look at me.”
He looked up and found the face in the cowl regarding him closely. A
beard as dark as the eyes framed a fair face, a fact that added to Xanothis’s
discomfort, as only slaves wore beards. The magician smiled at this obvious
confusion and walked around the herder, inspecting him.
The magician saw a man tall for a Tsurani, an inch or two taller
than his own five feet eight. His skin was dark, like unclouded chocha or
coffee. His eyes were black, and his hair was black as well, save where it was
shot with white. The herder’s short green robe revealed the powerful build of a
former soldier, a fact the magician gleaned from the man’s erect posture and
several scars. Past fifty he looked, but still capable of the strenuous life of
a herder. Though shorter, this man resembled Gardan of Crydee slightly.
“Your name?” asked the magician, as he came round to stand before
the herder. Xanothis answered, his voice betraying his unease. The magician
then startled him by asking, “Would you agree that this is a good place for a
home, herdsman?”
Confused, Xanothis stammered, “If . . . if it . . . is your will,
Great One.”
The magician snapped, “Ask not what I think! I ask your thoughts!”
Xanothis could barely hide his anger at his own shame. Great Ones
were sacrosanct, and to be false with one was to do a dishonor. “Forgive me,
Great One. It is said this spot is ill favored by the gods.”
“And who is it that says so?”
The sharpness in the magician’s voice caused the older man’s head to
snap up as if he had been struck. His eyes hid little of his anger, but his
voice remained calm as he said, “Those who live in the city, Great One, and
others about the countryside.” The herdsman met the magician’s gaze and held
it.
The corners of the magician’s eyes wrinkled in mirth, and his mouth
turned up a little, but his voice still rang out. “But not you, herder?”
“I was fifteen years a soldier, Great One. I have found it often the
case that the gods favor those who take care of their own welfare.”
The magician smiled at this, though it was not an entirely warm
expression. “A man of self-reliance. Good. I am glad we are of a like mind, for
I plan to build my estate here, as I have a taste for the view of the sea.”
A certain stiffness of posture in the herder’s stance at this remark
caught the magician’s notice, and he said, “Have I your approval, Xanothis of
Ontoset?”
Xanothis shifted his weight from one foot to the other, then said,
“The Great One jests with me. My approval or disapproval is of no consequence,
I am certain.”
“True, but you still avoid my question Have I your approval?”
Xanothis’s shoulders sagged a little as he said, “I will have to
move my herds, Great One That is all. I mean no disrespect.”
“Tell me of this house, Xanothis, that stood here before this day.”
“It was the home of the Lord of the Almach, Great One. He backed the
wrong cousin against Almecho when the office of Warlord was contested.” He
shrugged. “I was once a Patrol Leader of that house I was a prideful man, which
limited my advancement as a soldier. My lord gave me permission to leave his
service and marry, so I took over my wife’s father’s herds. Had I stayed a
soldier, I would now be a slave, dead, or a grey warrior.” He glanced out
toward the sea. “What more would you know, Great One?”
The magician said, “You may keep your herds upon this hill,
Xanothis. The grazers keep the grass neat, and I have no liking for unkempt
grounds. Just keep them away from the main house where I will be working, else
I cook one for my supper now and again.”
Without another word, the magician pulled a device from within his
robe and activated it. A strange hum was emitted for a moment; then the
black-robed figure disappeared with a small popping sound. Xanothis stood
quietly for a few minutes, then resumed his search of his lost animals.
Later that night, around a campfire, he told his family and the
other herders of his meeting with the Great One. None doubted his word, for
whatever his other faults might be, Xanothis was not one to expand upon the
truth, but they were amazed. And they never quite got used to one other thing:
over the following months while a new great house was being built, one or
another of the herdsmen would occasionally catch sight of Xanothis engaged in
conversation with a Great One, atop the hill while kula grazed below them.
Now a new and strange house stood atop the hill. It was the source
of both some speculation and a little envy. The speculation was about its
owner, the strange Great One. The envy was over its design and construction,
something of a revolution in Tsurani architecture. Gone was the traditional
three-story, open-center building. In its place was a long, single-story
building, with several smaller ones attached to it by covered walkways. It was
a rambling affair, with many small gardens and waterways winding between the
structures. Its construction was as much a sensation as its design, for it
consisted mainly of stone, with fired brick tiles upon the roof. Some
speculated that it offered cool protection during the heat of summer.
Two other facts added to the fascination evidenced over the house
and its owner. First was the manner in which the project had been commissioned.
The magician had first appeared in Ontoset one day, at the home of Tumacel, the
richest moneylender in the city. He appropriated over thirty thousand imperials
in funds and left the moneylender stricken over his loss of liquidity. This was
Milamber’s method of dealing with the Tsurani passion for bureaucracy. Any
merchant or tradesman commanded to render service to a Great One was forced to
petition the imperial treasury for repayment. This resulted in slow delivery of
ordered materials, less than enthusiastic service, and resentment Milamber
simply paid in advance and left it to the moneylender—-who was better able to
account for his losses than most other merchants, by nature of his
bookkeeping—to recover from the treasury. The second fact was the style of
decoration. Instead of the garishly bold wall paintings, the building was left
mostly unpainted, except for an occasional landscape in muted, natural colors.
Many fine young artists were employed on this project, and when it was done,
the demand for their services was phenomenal. Within a month a new wave in
Tsurani art was in progress.
Fifty slaves now worked the outlying fields, all free to come and go
as they wished, dressed in the garb of their homeworld, Midkemia. All had been
taken from the slave market one day, without payment, by the Great One.
Many travelers to Ontoset would make an afternoon of climbing the
hills nearby to see the house. From a respectable distance, of course. The
herder, Xanothis, was questioned many times about the strange Great One who
lived in that house, but the former soldier said nothing, only smiling a great
deal.
“The belief that the current great rift to Midkemia is controllable
is only partially correct.” Milamber paused, allowing his scribe to finish
copying the dictation. “It can be stated that rifts may be established without
the release of destructive energies associated with their accidental creation,
either through poorly effected magic spells or by the proximity of too many
unstable magic devices.”
Milamber’s research into the special aspects of rift energies would
be added to the Assembly’s archives when completed Like other projects he had
read of in the archives, research into rifts had shown what Milamber took to be
a grievous flaw in most of his brother magicians’ work. In general, projects
were not carried through to completion, showing a lack of thoroughness. Once
the procedure to establish rifts safely had been developed, further research
into their nature had been halted.
Continuing, he dictated: “What is lacking in the concept of control
is the ability to select the terminus of contact, the ability to ‘target’ the
rift. It has been shown by the appearance of the ship carrying Fanatha on the
shores of Crydee, on the world of Midkemia, that a certain affinity between a
newly forming rift and an existing one is probable. However, as shown by
further testing, this affinity is limited, such limits being as yet not fully
understood. While there is increased probability of a second rift appearing
within a regional proximity to the first, it is by no means a certainty.”
When the scribe was caught up, Milamber added, “Also, there is a
question of why rifts show certain inconsistencies. Size appears relative to
the energy employed in their formation, but other characteristics seem without
pattern. Some rifts are single direction”—Milamber had lost several valuable
devices discovering this fact—“while others allow movement in two directions.
And then there are ‘bonded pairs,’ two single-direction rifts that appear
simultaneously, both allowing one-way travel between origin and terminus.
Though they may appear miles apart, they are related—”
Milamber’s narration was interrupted by the sound of the chimes
announcing the arrival of someone from the Assembly. He dismissed his scribe
and made his way to the pattern room. As he walked, he mused on the real reason
for his submersion in research over the last two months. He was avoiding the
decision he must soon make, whether or not to return to the Shinzawai estate
for Katala.
Milamber knew there was a chance she had become the wife of another,
for their separation had been nearly five years, and she would have no reason
to think he’d ever be returning. But time and training had done nothing to dull
his feelings toward her. As he reached the transporting room with its tiled
pattern, he made his decision: tomorrow he would go to see her.
As he entered the room, he saw Hochopepa step off the pattern in the
tile floor. “Ah,” said the plump magician, “there you are. Since it has been
two weeks since I last saw you, I decided to pay a visit.”
“I am glad to see you I have been deeply involved in study and could
do with a short respite.”
They walked from the room into one of the several gardens nearby
Hochopepa said, “I have been meaning to ask you: what is the significance of
the pattern you chose? I don’t recognize it.”
Milamber said, “It is a stylized recreation of a pattern I once saw
in a fountain. Three dolphins.”
“Dolphins?”
Milamber explained about the Midkemian sea mammals, while they
seated themselves upon cushions between a pair of dwarf fruit trees.
“Why the dolphins from that fountain?”
“I don’t know. A compulsion, perhaps. Also, when I underwent my
final testing on the tower, I saw something that didn’t register for a month or
two after.”
“What does one have to do with the other?”
“In the representation of the final challenge to the Stranger, do
you remember a single brown-robed magician, who bent the rift to keep Kelewan
from entering the Enemy’s universe?”
Hochopepa looked thoughtful. “I can’t say as I do, Milamber. But
then the spell used to create that image affects each of us differently. If you
compare visions with others, you’ll discover a great deal of variation. But at
the time of the Stranger, we were all black robes. Who could this odd
brown-robed magician be?”
Milamber said, “A man I have met, years ago.”
“Impossible. That scene took place centuries ago.”
Milamber smiled and said, “Nevertheless, I have met him. I made my
pattern of three dolphins as something of a commemorative to our meeting.”
“How very strange. There has been some speculation on time travel,
which would have to be the answer in this case, unless your barbaric mind
played false with you upon the tower.” He said the last with a smile.
Milamber clapped his hands, and a servant arrived with a platter of
refreshments. The servant, Netoha, at one time had been hadonra for the family
that resided there previously. Milamber had found him while securing someone to
plant the varieties of vegetation he wanted in his gardens. The man was bold
enough to approach, something that singled him out from the common Tsurani. Unable
to find the work he was trained for since the demise of his employer’s estate,
Netoha had scratched out a meager living over the years. Milamber had taken him
on as much out of sympathy as out of any real need. He had quickly made himself
useful in a hundred ways the young magician had never dreamed of, and the
relationship was mutually satisfactory.
Hochopepa took the offered sweets and drink “I have come to tell you
some news. There is to be an Imperial Festival in two months’ time, with games.
Will you come?”
Milamber found his curiosity piqued. With a wave he dismissed
Netoha. “And what makes this festival so special? I can’t remember having seen
you so animated before.”
“This festival is being given by the Warlord in honor of his nephew,
the Emperor. He has plans for a new major offensive the week before the games,
and it is hoped he will announce the success of the campaign.” He lowered his
voice. “It is no secret to those with access to court gossip he is under a
great deal of pressure to justify his conduct of the war before the High
Council. Rumor has it he has been forced to offer major concessions to the Blue
Wheel Party to regain their support in the war.
“But what will make the games unusual is that the Light of Heaven
will leave his Palace of Contemplation, breaking with ancient tradition. It
would be a proper occasion for you to make some sort of entrance into court
society.”
“I’m sorry, Hocho,” Milamber said, “I have little desire to attend
any festivals. I have been to one earlier this month, in Ontoset, as part of my
studies. The dances are boring, the food tends toward the awful, and the wine
is as flat as the speeches. The games are of less interest still. If this is
the court society you speak of, then I’ll be fine without it.”
“Milamber, there are many holes left in your education. Gaining the
black robe did not mean instant mastery of our craft. There is quite a bit more
involved in protecting the Empire than sitting about dreaming up new ways of
tossing energy around, or creating economic chaos with the local moneylenders.”
He took another sweet and returned to his chiding. “There are several reasons
you must come with me to the festivities, Milamber. First, you are something of
a celebrity to the nobles of the realm, for news of your wondrous house has
spread from one corner of the Empire to the other, mostly by aid of those young
bandits you paid so well to execute the delicate paintings you love so much. It
is now considered the mark of some distinction to have the same sort of work done.
“And this place”—his hand inscribed an arc before them, mock wonder
upon his face—“anyone who could be so clever to design such an edifice must
surely be worthy of attention.” His mocking tone vanished as he added, “By the
way, this entire bit of nonsense has not been diminished one whit by your
mysterious isolation here in the hinterlands. If anything, it has added to your
reputation.
“Now to more important reasons than social ones. As you no doubt
know, there is growing concern that the news from the war is somehow being
downplayed. In all these years there has been little gain, and some talk is
going about that the Emperor may take a stand against the Warlord’s policies.
If so . . .” He let the thought go unfinished.
Milamber was silent for a time. “Hocho, I think it is time that I
told you something, and if you feel it’s sufficient to warrant my life, then
you may return to the Assembly and bring charges.”
Hochopepa was raptly attentive, all quips and sharp remarks put
aside.
“You who trained me did your work well, for I am filled with a need
to do what is best for the Empire. I hold only a little feeling for the land of
my birth anymore, and you will never know what that signifies. But in the
process of making me what I am, you could never create the love of home within
my being that I once felt for my own Crydee. What you have created is a man
with a strong sense of duty, untempered by any love for that thing he feels
duty toward.” Hochopepa remained silent as the impact of what Milamber had said
penetrated, then he nodded as Milamber continued.
“I may be the greatest threat to the Empire since the Stranger
invaded your skies, for if I become involved with its politics, I will be
justice without mercy.
“I have known of the factions within the parties, the crossover of
families from one party to another, and the consequences of those acts. Do you
think because I sit atop my hill in the eastlands, I am unaware of the shifts
and stirrings of the political animals in the capital? Of course not. If the
Blue Wheel Party collapses and its members realign with the War Party or the
Imperials, every street merchant in Ontoset is speculating on the news the next
day to the marketplace. I know what is taking place as well as any other who is
not directly involved. And in the months since I came to live here, I have come
to one conclusion: the Empire is slowly killing itself.”
The older magician said nothing for a moment, then asked, “Have you
wondered at all why our system is such that we are killing ourselves?”
Milamber stood and paced a little. “Of course. I am studying it, and
have chosen to wait before I act. I need more time to understand the history
you taught me so well. But I do have some speculations of sorts on what’s
wrong, and they will give me a starting point.” He inclined his head, asking if
he should go on. Hochopepa nodded that he should. “It seems to me there are
several major problems here, problems I can only guess at in terms of impact
upon the Empire.
“First”—he held up his index finger—“those in power are more
concerned with their own grandeur than with the well-being of the Empire. And
as they are those who appear to the casual eye to be the Empire, it is an easy
thing not to notice.”
“What do you mean?” the older magician asked.
“When you think of the Empire, what comes to mind? A history of
armies warring across the lands? Or the rise of the Assembly? Perhaps you think
of a chronicle of rulers? Whatever it is, most likely the single most obvious truth
is overlooked. The Empire is all those who live within its borders, from the
nobles to the lowest servant, even the slaves who work the fields. It must be
seen as a whole, not as being embodied by some small but visible part, such as
the Warlord or the High Council. Do you understand that?”
Hochopepa looked troubled. “I’m not sure, but I think . . . Go on.”
“If that is true, then consider the rest. Second, there must never
be a time when the need for stability overrules the need for growth.”
“But we have always grown!” objected Hochopepa.
“Not true,” countered Milamber. “You have always expanded, and that
seems like growth if you don’t investigate closely. But while your armies have
been bringing new lands into your borders, what has happened to your art, your
music, your literature, your research? Even the vaunted Assembly does little
more than refine that which is already known. You implied earlier that I was
wasting my time finding new ways to ‘toss energy around.’ Well, what is wrong
with that? Nothing. But there is something wrong with the type of society that
looks upon the new as suspect.
“Look around you, Hocho. Your artists are in shock because I
described what I had seen in paintings in my youth, and a few young artists
became excited. Your musicians spend all their time learning the old songs,
perfectly, to the note, and no one composes new ones, just clever variations on
melodies that are centuries old. No one creates new epics, they only retell old
ones. Hocho, you are a people stagnating. This war is but one example. It is
unjustified, fought from habit, to keep certain groups in power, to reap wealth
for those already wealthy, and to play the Game of the Council. And the cost!
Thousands of lives are wasted each year, the lives of those who are the Empire,
its own citizens. The Empire is a cannibal, devouring its own people.”
The older magician was disturbed by what he heard, in total
contradiction with what he believed he saw: a vibrant, energetic, alive
culture.
“Third,” said Milamber, “if my duty is to serve the Empire, and the
social order of the Empire is responsible for its own stagnation, then it is my
duty to change that social order, even if I must destroy it.”
Now Hochopepa was shocked. Milamber’s logic was without fault, but
the suggested solution was potentially fraught with danger to everything
Hochopepa knew and revered. “I understand what you say, Milamber, but what you
speak of is too difficult to contemplate all at once.”
Milamber’s voice took on reassuring tones “I do not mean to imply
that the destruction of the present social order is the only solution, Hocho. I
used that to shock and to drive home a point. That is what much of my research
is about, not only the visible mastery of energy, but also investigations into
the nature of the Tsurani people and the Empire. Believe me, I am more than
willing to spend as much time on the question as I need. I plan on spending
some time in the archives.”
Hochopepa’s brows furrowed, and he studied his younger friend’s
face. “Be warned, you may find some unsettling things in those archives. As I
said, your education is not complete.”
Milamber let his voice drop. “I have already found some unsettling
things, Hocho. Much of what is held to be common truth by the nations is based
upon falsehoods.”
Hochopepa became concerned. “There are things that are forbidden for
any but members of the Assembly to know, Milamber, and even then it is unwise
to speak about them to even one of your brethren.” He glanced away, thinking,
then said, “Still, when you have finished prowling around in those musty old
vaults, if you need to discuss your findings, I’ll be a willing ear.” He looked
back at his friend. “I like you and think you’re a refreshing change of pace
for us, Milamber, but there are many who would rather see you dead as not.
Don’t go chattering on to anyone but Shimone or myself about this social
research you’re doing.”
“Agreed. But when I reach a judgment as to what must be done, I
shall act.”
Hochopepa stood, an expression of concern on his face. “It is not
that I disagree with you, my friend, it is simply that I must have time to
assimilate what you have said.”
“I could only speak the truth to you, Hocho, no matter how
disturbing.”
Hochopepa smiled. “A fact I appreciate, Milamber. I must spend some time
considering the proposition.” Some of his usual humor crept back into his
voice. “Perhaps you will accompany me to the Assembly? You have been absent
much of the time with this house building and all; you would do well to put in
an appearance now and again.”
Milamber smiled at his friend. “Of course.” He indicated that
Hochopepa should lead the way to the pattern. As they walked, Hochopepa said,
“If you wish to study our culture, Milamber, I still suggest you come to the
Imperial Festival. There will be more political activity in the seats of the
arena in that one day than could be observed in a month in the High Council.”
Milamber turned toward Hochopepa. “Perhaps you’re right I shall
think about it.”
When they appeared on the pattern of the Assembly, Shimone was
standing close by. He bowed slightly in greeting and said, “Welcome I was about
to go looking for you two.”
Hochopepa said with mild amusement, “Are we so vital to the business
of the Assembly that you must be sent to fetch us back?”
Shimone inclined his head a little. “Perhaps, but not today. I
merely thought you would find the business at hand interesting.”
Milamber asked, “What is happening?”
“The Warlord has sent messages to the Assembly, and Hodiku raises
questions about them. We best hurry, for they are nearly ready to begin.”
They walked quickly to the central hall of the Assembly and entered.
Arrayed about a large open area was an amphitheater of open benches, they took
seats in a lower row. Already several hundred black-robed Great Ones were in
place. In the center of the floor they could see Fumita, the one-time brother
of the Shinzawai lord, standing alone, he would be presiding over the business
of the day. The presidency was allotted by chance to one of those in
attendance. Milamber had seen Fumita in the Assembly only twice since being
brought here.
Shimone said, “It has been nearly three weeks since I saw you in the
Assembly, Milamber.”
“I must apologize, but I have been busy getting my home in order.”
“So I hear. You’re something of a source of gossip in the imperial
court. I hear the Warlord himself is anxious to meet you.”
“Perhaps someday.”
Hochopepa said to Shimone, “Who can understand such a man? Taking to
building such a strange home.” He turned to Milamber. “Next you’ll be telling
me that you’re taking a wife.”
Milamber laughed. “Why, Hocho, how did you guess?”
Hochopepa’s eyes grew wide. “You’re not! ‘
“And why shouldn’t I?”
“Milamber, it is not a wise course, believe me. To this day I have
regretted my own marriage.”
“Hocho, I didn’t know you were a married man.”
“I choose not to speak of it much. My wife is a fine woman, though
given to an overly sharp tongue and scathing wit. In my own home I’m not much
more than another servant to be ordered about. That is why I see her only on
prescribed holidays, it would be bad for my nerves to see her more often.”
Shimone said, “Who is your intended, Milamber? A noble daughter?”
“No. She was a slave with me at the Shinzawai estate.”
Hochopepa mused, “A slave girl . . . hmm. That might work out.”
Milamber laughed, and Shimone chuckled. Several other magicians
regarded them with curiosity, for the Assembly was not a regular forum for
mirth.
Fumita held up his hand, and the Assembly became quiet. “Today there
is a matter being brought before the Assembly by Hodiku.”
A thin Great One, with shaved head and hooked nose, walked from his
seat in front of Milamber and Hochopepa to the center of the floor.
He surveyed the magicians in the hall, then spoke. “I come today so
that I may speak about the Empire.” It was the formal opening of any business
brought before the Assembly. “I speak for the good of the Empire,” he added,
completing the ritual. “I am concerned about the demand made today by the
Warlord for aid so he may broaden the war against the Midkemian world.”
A chorus of jeers and cries of “Politics” and “Sit down!” erupted
from around the room. Soon Shimone and Hochopepa were on their feet with others
crying, “Let him speak!”
Fumita held up a hand for silence, and soon the room quieted Hodiku
continued “We are precedented. Fifteen years ago the Assembly sent an order to
the Warlord to end the war against the Thunl Confederation.”
Another magician jumped to his feet “If the Thuril conquest had
continued, there would have been too few in the north to repulse the Thьn
migration that year. It was a clear case of the salvation of Szetac Province
and the Holy City. Now our borders in the north are secure. The situation is
not the same.”
Arguments erupted over the entire hall, and it took several minutes
for Fumita to restore order. Hochopepa rose and said, “I would like to hear
Hodiku’s reasons for considering this request vital to the security of the
Empire. Any magician who is willing is free to work on behalf of the conquest.”
“That is the point,” responded Hodiku. “There is no reason for any
magician who feels this war into another space-time is right and proper for the
Empire not to work in support of the conquest. Without the Black Robes who
already serve the Warlord, the rift would never have been prepared for such an
undertaking. It is that he now makes demands of the Assembly itself I find
objectionable If five or six magicians choose to serve in the field, even to
traveling to this other world to risk their lives in the battle, then it is
their own concern. But if one magician responds to this demand without
considering the issues, it will appear the Assembly is now subject to the will
of the Warlord.”
Several magicians applauded this sentiment, and others seemed to
weigh its merits. Only a few booed and jeered. Hochopepa stood again. “I would
like to offer a proposal. I will undertake on behalf of the Assembly to send a
message to the Warlord expressing our regret that the Assembly as a body may
not order any magician to perform as requested, but that he is free to seek the
services of any magician willing to work on his behalf.”
A general murmur of approval ran through the room, and Fumita asked,
“Hochopepa offers a proposition to send a statement of policy to the Warlord on
behalf of the Assembly. Does anyone find this objectionable?” When no
objections were forthcoming, he said, “The Assembly thanks Hochopepa for his
wisdom.”
He paused for a moment, then said, “Another matter needs our
attention: the novice Shiro has been found lacking in the moral qualities
necessary for the Greater Art. The mind probes reveal that he harbors
anti-Imperial feelings, learned as a youth from his maternal grandmother, a
Thuril woman. Is the Assembly agreed?”
Hands were raised, and each bore a nimbus of light as the magicians
voted. Green for life, red for death, and blue for abstention. Milamber
abstained, but the vote was otherwise unanimous for death. One Black Robe rose,
and Milamber knew that within minutes the novice would be stunned senseless,
then teleported to the bottom of the lake, where his lifeless body would
remain, too cold to rise to the surface.
After the meeting broke up, Shimone said, “You should make a point
of coming more often, Milamber. We hardly see you anymore. And you spend too
much time alone.”
Milamber smiled. “That is true, but I plan to remedy the situation
tomorrow.”
The chime sounded throughout the house, and servants jumped to make
ready for the Great One’s visit. Kamatsu, Lord of the Shinzawai, knew that a
Great One had struck a chime in the halls of the Assembly, willing the sound to
come here, to announce his imminent appearance.
In Kasumi’s room, Laurie and the elder son of the house sat
engrossed in a game of pashawa, played with painted pieces of stiff paper. It
was common to alehouses and inns in Midkemia and was one more detail in the
young Tsurani’s drive to master every facet of Midkemian life.
Kasumi stood. “It is most likely he who once was my uncle; I had
best go.”
Laurie smiled. “Or could it be that you wish to stem your losses?”
The Tsurani shook his head. “I fear I have created a problem in my
own house. You were never a good slave, Laurie, and if anything, you have grown
more intractable. It is a good thing I like you.”
They both laughed, and the elder son of the house left. A few
minutes later a house slave came running to Laurie and informed him that the
lord of the house commanded him to come at once. Laurie jumped up, more from
the slave’s obvious agitation than from any inbred obedience. He hurried to the
lord’s room and knocked on the doorjamb. The door slid to one side, and Kasumi
held it. Laurie stepped through and saw the Shinzawai lord and his guest, and
then confusion overtook him.
The guest was wearing the black robe of the Tsurani Great Ones, but
the face was Pug’s. He started to speak, stopped, and started again “Pug?”
The lord of the house looked outraged at this forward behavior by
the slave, but his nearly voiced command was stopped by the Great One. “May I
have the use of this room for a few minutes, lord? I wish to speak to this
slave in private.”
Kamatsu, Lord of the Shinzawai, bowed stiffly. “Your will, Great
One.” He left the room with his son behind, he was still in shock over the
appearance of the former slave and confused at the conflicts within himself.
The Great One he was, there could be no thought of fraud: his manner of arrival
proved it. But Kamatsu couldn’t help feeling that his arrival heralded disaster
for the plan he and his son had so carefully nurtured for the last nine years.
Milamber spoke “Shut the door, Laurie.”
Laurie shut it, then studied his former friend. He looked fit, but
vastly changed. His bearing was nearly regal, as if the mantle of power he now
wore reflected some inner strength he had lacked before.
“I . . . ,” Laurie began, then lapsed into silence, confused about
what to say. Finally he said, “Are you well?”
Milamber nodded. “I am well, old friend.”
Laurie smiled and crossed the room and embraced his friend, then
pushed himself away. “Let me look at you.”
Milamber smiled. “I am called Milamber, Laurie. The boy you knew as
Pug is as dead as last year’s flowers. Come, sit and we will talk.”
They sat at the table and poured two cups of chocha Laurie sipped at
the bitter brew and said, “We heard nothing about you. After the first year I
gave you up for lost I’m sorry.”
Milamber nodded, “It is the way of the Assembly. As a magician I am
expected to forgo all my former ties, except for those that can be maintained
in a socially acceptable manner. Being without clan or family, I had nothing to
forgo. And you were always a poor slave who never knew his place. What better
friend for a renegade, barbarian magician?”
Laune nodded. “I am glad you have returned. Will you stay?”
Milamber shook his head no “I have no place here. Besides, there is
work I must be about. I now have an estate of my own, near the city of Ontoset.
I have come for you. And Katala, if . . .” His voice trailed off, as if he were
fearful of asking about her.
Sensing his distress, Laurie said, “She is still here and has not
taken a husband. She would not forget you.” He broke into a grin. “Gods of
Midkemia! It completely slipped my mind. You would have no way of knowing.”
“What?”
“You have a son.”
Milamber sat dumbstruck. “A son?”
Laurie laughed “He was born eight months after you were taken. He is
a fine boy, and Katala is a fine mother.”
Milamber felt overwhelmed at the news and said, “Please. Would you
bring her here?”
Laurie jumped to his feet “At once.”
He rushed from the room Milamber sat fighting down the upsurge of
emotion. He composed himself, using his magician’s skills to relax his mind.
The door slid open, and Katala was revealed, uncertainty on her face
Laurie stood behind, a boy of about four in his arms.
Milamber rose and spread his arms to her Katala rushed to him, and
he nearly cried in his joy. They clung quietly for a moment, then she murmured,
“I thought you gone. I hoped . . . but I thought you gone.”
They stood for several minutes, each lost in the pure pleasure of
the other’s presence, until she pushed herself away “You must meet your son,
Pug.”
Laurie brought the boy forward. He regarded Milamber with large
brown eyes. He was a well-formed boy, with a stronger likeness to his mother,
but something in the way he tilted his head made him resemble the boy from
Crydee keep. Katala took him from Laurie and passed him to Milamber. “William,
this is your father.”
The boy seemed to take this in with some skepticism. He ventured a
shy smile, but leaned back, keeping his distance. “I want down,” he said
abruptly. Milamber laughed and put the boy down. He looked at his father, then immediately
lost interest in the stranger in black. “Ooh!” he cried, and rushed over to
play with the Lord of the Shinzawai’s shah pieces.
Milamber watched him for a moment, then said, “William?”
Katala stood next to him with her arm around his waist, hugging him
as if afraid he would disappear again. Laurie said, “She wanted a Midkemian
name for him, Milamber.”
Katala started. “Milamber?”
“It is my new name, love. You must get used to calling me that.” She
frowned, not entirely pleased with the thought. “Milamber,” she repeated,
testing the sound. She then shrugged. “It is a good name.”
“How did he become William?”
Laurie went over to the boy, who was trying to stand the pieces one
atop the other, and gently took them away. The boy threw him a black look. “I
want to play,” he said indignantly.
Laurie picked him up and said, “I gave her a bunch of names, and she
picked that one.”
“I liked its sound,” she said; “William.”
At the sound of his name the boy looked at his mother. “I’m hungry.”
“I favored James or Owen, but she insisted,” Laurie said, while the
boy tried to wriggle out of his arms.
Katala took him. “I must feed him. I’ll take him to the kitchen.”
She kissed Milamber and left the room.
The magician stood quietly for a moment. “It is all more than I had
hoped for. I was afraid she’d have found another.”
“Not that one, P—Milamber. She would have nothing to do with any of
the men who paid court to her, and there were a few. She’s a good woman. You
need never doubt her.”
“I never will, Laurie.”
They seated themselves; a discreet cough at the door made them turn.
Kamatsu stood at the door “May I enter, Great One?”
Milamber and Laurie started to rise, and the lord of the house waved
them back into place. “Please, stay seated.” Kasumi entered behind his father
and closed the door. Milamber noticed for the first time that the son of the
house was wearing garments that were Midkemian in fashion. He raised an
eyebrow, but said nothing.
The head of the Shinzawai family looked deeply troubled and tried to
collect his thoughts. After a few moments he said, “Great One, may I be frank
with you? Your arrival today is something unexpected and the source of some
possible difficulty.”
“Please,” said Milamber. “I do not intend to cause disruption in
your household, lord. I want only my wife and son. And I will require this
slave also.” He indicated Laurie.
“Your will, Great One. The woman and the boy should, of course, go
with you. But if I may beg of you, please allow the slave to remain.”
Milamber looked from face to face. The two Shinzawai maintained
control, but by the way they glanced from one to the other and at Laurie, their
distress was poorly hidden. Something had changed here in the last five years.
The relationship between the men in the room was not what it should have been
between masters and slave.
“Laurie?” Milamber looked at his friend. “What is this?”
Laurie looked at the other two men, then at Milamber “I will have to
ask you to promise me something.”
Kamatsu’s shock was signaled by a sharp intake of breath “Laurie!
You dare too much. One does not bargain with a Great One His words are as law.”
Milamber held up a hand. “No. Let him speak.”
In imploring tones Laurie said to his friend, “I know little of
these matters, Milamber. You know I have no sense about protocol. I may be
violating custom, but I ask you for the sake of our former friendship, will you
keep a trust and vow to keep what you hear in this room to yourself?”
The magician pondered the matter. He could command the Shinzawai
lord to tell all, and the man would, as automatically as a soldier following
orders, but his friendship with the troubadour was important to him. “I give
you my word that I will not repeat what you tell me.”
Laurie gave a sigh and smile, and the Shinzawai seemed to lose some
of their tension Laurie said, “I have struck a bargain with my lord here. When
we have completed certain tasks, I am to be given my freedom.”
Milamber shook his head. “That is not possible. The law does not
permit a slave to be freed. Even the Warlord cannot free a slave.”
Laurie smiled. “And yourself?”
Milamber looked stern. “I am outside the law. None may command me.
Are you claiming to be a magician?”
“No, Milamber, nothing like that. It is true that I can only be a
slave here. But I won’t be here. I will return to Midkemia.”
Milamber looked puzzled. “How is that possible? There is only one
rift into Midkemia, and that is controlled by the Warlord’s pet magicians.
There are no others, or I would know of them.”
“We have a plan. It is involved and will take much explaining, but
simply put, it is this: I will accompany Kasumi, disguised as a priest of
Turakamu the Red. He will be leading soldiers replacing troops at the front No
one is likely to notice my height, for the Red One’s priests are given wide
berth. The troops are all loyal to the Shinzawai. Once in Midkemia, we will
slip through the lines and find our way to the Kingdom forces.”
Milamber nodded. “Now I understand the language lessons and the
clothes. But tell me, Laurie. Are you willing to spy for the Tsurani in
exchange for your freedom?” There was no disapproval in his voice, it was a
simple question.
Laurie flushed. “I am not going as a spy. I am going as a guide. I
am to take Kasumi to Rillanon, for an audience with the King.”
“Why?” Milamber was surprised.
Kasumi interrupted. “I go to meet the King and bring him an offer of
peace.”
Milamber raised an argument. “How can you possibly expect to end the
war with the War Party still in control of the High Council?”
“There is one thing in our favor,” responded Kamatsu. “This war has
lasted for nine years, and the end is nowhere in sight. Great One, I don’t
presume to instruct you, but if I may explain some things?”
Milamber nodded that he should continue Kamatsu sipped his drink and
went on. “Since the end of the war with the Thuril Confederation, the War Party
has been pressed to maintain its dominance over the High Council. Each border
clash with Thuril brought the call for a renewal of the conflict. Between the
fighting on the border, and the constant attempts by the Thьn to break through
the passes in the north and regain their former southern range, the War Party
managed barely to maintain a majority. A coalition led by the Blue Wheel Party
was on the verge of dislodging them ten years ago, when the Assembly discovered
the rift into your former homeland. The call for war rang out in the council as
soon as the rich metals of your homeland were known to exist. All the progress
we had made over the years was lost in that instant.
“So we began at once to counter this madness. The metals being mined
on your former world are, from what Laurie has told us, the leavings of
abandoned mines, not considered worth the bother by those you call dwarves.
There is nothing in this for Tsuranuanni but an excuse to raise the War Banner
again and shed blood.
“You know our history. You know how difficult it is for us to settle
our differences in a peaceful manner. I have been a soldier and know the
glories of war. I also know its waste Laurie has convinced me that my
suspicions about those who live in the Kingdom were correct. You are not a very
warlike people, in spite of your nobles and their armies You would have been
willing to trade.”
Milamber interrupted. “This is all true. But I am not sure that it
has any bearing on things as they stand now. My former nation had not fought a
major war in nearly fifty years, except for skirmishes with the goblins of the
north and along the Keshian border. But now the battle drums sound in the West.
The Armies of the Kingdom have been blooded. The nation has been invaded
without cause. They would not, I think, be willing simply to stop and forgive.
There would be demands for retribution, or at least reparation Would the High
Council be willing to surrender the honor of Tsuranuanni and make restitution
for the wrong done at the hands of its soldiers?”
The Shinzawai lord looked troubled. “The council would not, I am
sure. But the Emperor would.”
“The Emperor?” Milamber said, surprised “What has he to do with this?”
“Ichindar, may heaven bless him, feels the war is bleeding the
Empire of its resources. When we campaigned against the Thuril, we learned that
some frontiers are simply too vast and far from the Empire to control, save at
costs far greater than the victories are worth. The Light of Heaven understands
that nowhere could there be a frontier as vast or far as that we have found on
Midkemia. He is taking a hand in the Game of the Council. It is perhaps the
greatest game ever played in the history of Tsuranuanni. The Light of Heaven is
willing to command the Warlord to peace, to have him removed from office if
need be. But he will not take the risk of so great a break with tradition
unless he is guaranteed the willingness of King Rodric to come to terms. He
must go before the High Council with peace a fait accompli; otherwise he risks
too much.
“Regicide has been committed only once in the history of the Empire,
Great One. The High Council hailed the killer and named him Emperor. He was the
son of the man he slew. His father had tried to order taxes imposed upon the
temples, the last time an Emperor played in the Game of the Council. We can be
a hard people, Great One, even with ourselves, and never has an Emperor sought
to do what Ichmdar seeks, what others, many others, will see as laying down the
honor of the Empire, an unthinkable act.
“But if he can deliver peace to the council, then it will clearly
show the gods give their blessing to such an undertaking, and none will dare
challenge him.”
“You risk much, Lord of the Shinzawai.”
“I love my nation and the Empire, Great One. I would willingly die
in the field for her, and I risked that often when I was younger, during the
Thunl campaigns. I would also risk my life, my sons, the honor of my house,
family, and clan to bring the Empire to sanity. As would the Emperor. We are a
patient people. This plan is years in preparation. The Blue Wheel Party has
long been secretly allied with the Party for Peace. We withdrew in the third
year of the war to embarrass the Warlord and set the stage for Kasumi’s
training for the coming journey. Over a year was spent in traveling to various
lords within the Blue Wheel and Peace parties, ensuring cooperation, that every
member would play his part in the Game of the Council, before you and Laurie
were brought here to be his tutors.
“We are Tsurani, and the Light of Heaven would not allow an overture
to be made until he had a ready messenger. We have made Kasumi that messenger,
seeking to give him the best possible chance of reaching your former King
safely. It must be this way, for should any outside our faction learn of the
attempt if it fails, many heads, including my own, would fall, the price of
losing the game If you take Laurie away, Kasumi has little chance of reaching
your former King, and the peace effort will be postponed until we can find
another trustworthy guide, a delay almost certain to last one or two more
years. The situation is now critical. The Blue Wheel Party is again part of the
Alliance for War, after years of negotiation with the War Party, and thousands
of men are being sent to fight so that Kasumi may slip through Kingdom lines
into your former homeland. The time will soon be ripe. You must consider what
even another year of war would mean. With the conquest of your former homeland,
the Warlord could become invulnerable to any move we may make.”
Milamber considered, then to Kasumi said, “How soon?”
Kasumi said, “Soon, Great One, a matter of weeks. The Warlord has
spies everywhere and has some hint of our plans. He has little trust of the
Blue Wheel’s sudden shift in the council, but he cannot refuse the aid. He
feels the need to strike a great victory. He plans the major spring offensive
against the forces of Lords Borric and Brucal, the Kingdom’s main strength. It
will be timed to occur just before the Imperial Festival, orchestrated so he
can announce the victory at the Imperial Games, for his own personal glory.”
Kamatsu said, “It is much like an end-game gambit in shah, Great
One.
“A smashing victory will gain the Warlord all he needs to take
control of the High Council, but we risk this to play for our final move. The
front will be in confusion as preparations are being made for the offensive
Kasumi and Laurie will have their best opportunity to slip through the lines.
Should King Rodric agree, then the Light of Heaven can appear in the High Council
with an announcement of peace, and all that the Warlord’s power and influence
is based upon will crumble In terms of shah, we expose our last piece to
capture so that our Emperor may checkmate a Warlord.”
Milamber was thoughtful for a time. “I think you have embarked on a
bold plan, Lord of the Shinzawai. I will honor my pledge to say nothing Laurie
may continue here.” He looked at Laurie. “May the gods of our forefathers
protect you and bring you success. I pray this war may end soon.” He stood up. “If
you don’t mind, I will take my leave. I would have my wife and child home now.”
Kasumi rose and bowed. “I should like to say one thing more, Great
One.”
Milamber indicated he should proceed. “Years ago, when you asked for
Katala for your wife, and I told you the request would be refused, I also told
you there was a reason. It was our plan you would also return to your homeworld
I trust you understand that now. We are a hard people, Great One, but not
cruel.”
“It was apparent as soon as the plan was revealed.” He looked at
Laurie. “For what I am now, this is my homeland, but there is still a part of
me unchanged within, and for that reason I envy you your homecoming. You will
be well remembered, old friend.”
So saying, Milamber left the room. Outside the great house he found
Katala waiting in a garden, watching their son at play. She came to him and
they embraced, savoring sweet reunion. After a long moment he said, “Come,
beloved, let us take our son home.”
27
FUSION
Longbow wept in silence.
Alone in a glade near the edge of the elven forests, the Huntmaster
of Crydee stood over three fallen elves. Their lifeless bodies lay sprawled
upon the ground with arms and legs bent at impossible angles, their fair faces
covered in blood. Martin knew what death meant to the elves, where one or two
children to a family in a century was the norm. One face he knew well,
Algavins, Galain’s companion since boyhood, less than thirty years of age,
still a child by the elven folk’s measure.
Footsteps from behind caused Martin to wipe away the tears and
resume his usually impassive expression From behind he heard Garret say,
“There’s another bunch down the trail, Huntmaster. The Tsurani went through
this part of the forest like a bad wind.”
Martin nodded, then set out without comment Garret followed. For all
his youth, Garret was Longbow’s best tracker, and they both moved lightly along
the trail toward Elvandar.
After traveling for hours, they crossed the river west of a Tsurani
enclave, and when they were safely into the elven forests, a voice hailed them
from the trees. “Well met, Martin Longbow.”
Martin and Garret halted and waited as three elves appeared from
among the trees, seemingly forming out of the air Galain and his two companions
approached the Huntmaster and Garret. Martin inclined his head slightly back
toward the river, and Galain nodded. It was all the communication they needed
to exchange the fact both knew of Algavins’s death, along with the others.
Garret noticed the exchange, though he was far from conversant with the
subtleties of elvish ways.
“Tomas? Calin?” asked Martin.
“In council with the Queen. Do you bring news?”
“Messages from Prince Arutha. Are you bound for council?”
Galain smiled the elvish half-smile that indicated ironic humor. “It
has fallen to us to guard the way. We must remain for a time. We will come as
soon as the dwarves cross the river. They are due anytime now.”
The comment was not lost on Martin as he bade them good-bye and
continued toward Elvandar. Approaching the clearing surrounding the elvish
tree-city, he wondered at the exclusion of Galain and the other young elves
from council. They were all constant companions of Tomas since he came to take
up permanent residency in Elvandar. Martin had not been there since just before
the siege of Crydee, but in those years he had spoken to some of the Natalese
Rangers who ran messages from the Duke to Elvandar to Crydee. On several
occasions he had spent hours talking with Long Leon and Grimsworth of Natal.
While close-mouthed when not among their own kind, they were less guarded with
Longbow, for in the Huntmaster of Crydee they sensed a kindred spirit. He was
the only man not a Ranger of Natal who could enter Elvandar unbidden. The two
Natalese Rangers had indicated great changes in the Elf Queen’s court, and
Martin felt a strange sort of silent disquiet.
As they approached Elvandar in an easy, loping run, Garret said,
“Huntmaster, will they not send someone to fetch the fallen?”
Martin stopped and leaned upon his bow. “Garret, it is not their
way. They will let the forest reclaim them, for they believe their true spirits
are now abiding in the Blessed Isles.” He thought a moment, then said, “Among
my trackers, you are perhaps the best I’ve known.” The still young man blushed
at the compliment, but Longbow said, “No flattery, but simply fact I mention it
because you are the one most likely to replace me should anything happen.”
Garret’s usual hangdog expression gave way to one of close attention
to what Martin was saying. Martin continued, “If something should occur that
takes me from this life, I would hope that someone would continue to keep
Elvandar and the human world from drifting apart.”
Garret nodded. “I think I understand.”
“You must, for it would be a sad thing for the two races to grow
away from one another.” He spoke softly. “About their beliefs you must learn as
you can, but a few things you should know, especially in this time of war. Do
you remember how it is claimed that certain priests can recall the dead, if
they are no more than an hour departed?”
Garret said, “I have heard the story, but I have never met anyone
who claims to have seen it done, or even claims to know someone who has seen
it.”
“It is true. Father Tully says so, and he’s not the sort to be less
than forthright on matters of faith.” Martin looked down at the soil. “There is
a story: an important priest—of which order I do not know—found himself grown
away from the gods and caught up in the human world. He cast off his fine robes
and golden ornaments and donned the simple homespun of an itinerant monk. He
wandered the wilderness, seeking humility. Time and chance brought him to
Elvandar, where he came upon a newly fallen elf, dead by accident but a few
minutes before the priest arrived. He began to recall the elf from death, for
he was a priest of great powers, and sought to share his abilities with all in
need. He was halted by the elf’s wife, and when he asked her why, she said, ‘It
is not our way. He is now in a far better place, and should you recall him, he
will not return but against his will and to our sorrow. That is why we will not
speak his name, lest he hear longing in our voices and return to comfort us at
cost of his own.’ From what I know, no elf has ever been recalled from death.
“I have been told by some that no elf can be revived by human arts.
Others have said that elves have no true souls, which is why they do not
return. I think both are false, and they have a finer sense of where they live
in the world.”
Garret was quiet for a moment while he digested this information.
“It is a strange tale, Huntmaster. What brought it to mind?”
“The death of those elves and your question. It is to show you how
they differ from us, and how you must work to learn their ways. You will spend
time among them.”
“Is the tale of the dead elf true?”
“Yes. The newly fallen elf was the late Elf King, Queen Aglaranna’s
husband. I was but a boy then, thirty years ago, but I remember it. I was with
the hunting party when the accident happened, and I met the priest.”
Garret said nothing, and Martin picked up his weapon and resumed his
journey.
They soon came to the edge of Elvandar. Martin stopped while Garret
stood enraptured by the sight of the great trees. The late-afternoon sun cast
long shadows through the forest, but the high boughs were already glimmering
with their own fairy light.
Martin took Garret by the elbow and gently guided the gawking
tracker along to the Queen’s court. He reached the council ring and entered,
saluting the Queen.
Aglaranna smiled at sight of him. “Welcome, Martin Longbow. It has
been too long since you last came to us.”
Martin introduced Garret, who bowed awkwardly before the Queen. Then
another figure entered the court, from where he had stood in the shadows.
Martin had grown alongside elven children and was as able as any man
in hiding his emotions when need be, but the sight of Tomas rocked him to the
point of nearly exclaiming. Biting back a comment, he forced himself not to
stare and heard Garret’s indrawn breath of amazement. They had heard of the
changes in Tomas, but nothing had prepared either Martin or Garret for the
sight of the towering man before him. Alien eyes regarded them. There was
little remaining of the happy, grinning boy who had once followed Martin
through the woods begging for tales of the elves, or played barrel ball with
Garret. Without cordiality Tomas stepped forward and said, “What word from
Crydee?”
Martin leaned upon his bow. “Prince Arutha sends his greetings,” he
said to the Queen, “and his affections, as well as his hope for your good
health.” Turning to Tomas, who had obviously usurped some position of command
within the Queen’s council, he said, “Arutha sends the following news: Black
Guy, Duke of Bas-Tyra, now rules in Krondor, so no help will be forthcoming to
the Far Coast. Also, the Prince has good cause to believe the outworlders plan
to mount a major offensive soon, whether against Crydee, Elvandar, or the
Duke’s army he cannot tell. However, the southern enclaves are not being
reinforced through the dwarven mines, though they are strongly dug in. My
trackers have had some signs of northward movement, but nothing on a large
scale. It is Arutha’s guess the most likely offensive will be against his
father and Brucal’s army.” Then he said, “And I bring word that Arutha’s Squire
has been slain.” He observed the elven avoidance of naming the dead.
Tomas’s eyes betrayed a glint of emotion at the news of Roland’s
death, but all he said was, “In war men die.”
Calin realized the exchange was something of a personal matter
between Longbow and Tomas. No one else in the court had known Roland well,
though Calin remembered him from the dinner that night so many years ago in
Crydee. Martin was troubled by Tomas’s reaction to the news of his boyhood
friend’s death. Returning to the business of the war, the Elf Prince said, “It
is a logical thing. Should the Kingdom army in the West be broken, the
outworlders could then turn their full attention on the other fronts, gaining
the Free Cities and Crydee quickly. Within a year, two at the most, all of what
once was Keshian Bosania would be under their banners. Then they could march
easily upon Yabon. In time they could march to the gates of Krondor.”
Tomas faced Calin, as if to speak, his eyes narrow. A flash of
communication passed between the Queen and Tomas, and he stepped back into his
place in the council circle. Calin continued, “If the outworlders are not
staging to the west of the mountains, then we should be joined by the dwarves
soon. We’ve had sorties across the river from the outworlders, but no sign of
major attacks to come. I think Arutha is correct in his surmise, and should the
dukes call, we should try to aid them.”
Tomas turned upon the Elf Prince. “Leave Elvandar unprotected!” His
face showed outrage. Martin was startled by the ferocity of Tomas’s barely
checked anger “Without stripping the elven forests of defenders, we could not
mount enough numbers to matter in such a battle.”
Calin’s face remained impassive, but his eyes mirrored Tomas’s
anger. His words came forth quietly. “I am Warleader of Elvandar. I would not
leave our forests unprotected. But should the outworlders mount a major
offensive against the dukes, they will not leave sufficient soldiers along the
river to menace our forests. They have not come against us since we defeated
them with the sorcerer’s aid and their Black Robes were killed. But should they
battle Lords Borric and Brucal, and should the battle be a close thing, our
numbers might tip the balance, especially as we can strike against their weaker
flank.”
Tomas maintained his self-control, standing rigidly for a moment,
then in icy tones he said, “The dwarves follow Dolgan, and Dolgan follows my
lead. They will not come unless I call them to battle.” Without another word he
left the council circle.
Martin watched Tomas leave. His skin crawled as he felt for the
first time the power contained within this strange blend of man and whatever
else lived inside the boy from Crydee. He had caught only a glimpse of what was
within Tomas, but it had been enough Tomas was a being to be feared.
Martin then saw a flicker of expression on Aglaranna’s face. She
rose and said, “I had better have words with Tomas. He has been overwrought of
late.”
As she left, Martin was struck by a certainty. Whatever else he had
seen, he had witnessed a conflict between the Elf Queen’s son and her lover,
and a deep conflict within herself, as well. Aglaranna had worn the expression
of one caught in a hopeless fate.
When the Queen had left, Calin said, “You have come at a propitious
time, Martin. We have need of your wisdom.”
Martin nodded. He sent Garret away to get something to eat, and when
he was gone, Martin studied the Elf Prince, then the others in the council.
Tathar stood at his usual place, to the right of the Queen’s throne. Others he
knew, all old and trusted advisers of the Queen. Many were ancient
Spellweavers.
Martin sat down, patiently waiting for Calin to speak. The Elf
Prince remained silent for a time. Martin studied Calin, for he knew him and
could sense his disquiet. As a boy, Martin had thought the Elf Prince the
finest embodiment of all elven virtues. While his boyish hero worship had
passed, he still regarded Calin with undiminished respect.
Calin said, “Martin, of all here you are the only one to have known
Tomas before this change. What can you say of the transformation you’ve seen?”
Martin spent time considering his reply. “I have only glimpsed these
changes over the years, until this day. That they are great is obvious. But as
to what they herald, I cannot begin to guess. He was a good enough boy; one not
overly given to mischief, though with enough curiosity to find it. He had a
tender side and did not hold back in his affections. His temper was moderate,
though he could lose control when a friend was threatened or struck. In all, he
was much like other boys, a dreamer.”
“And now?”
Martin was troubled and took no pains to hide this. “He is something
beyond my understanding.”
Tathar said, “Your words are clear to us, Martin, and true, for he
has also gone beyond our understanding.”
Calin spoke softly. “Of men, you know our history more than any. You
know of our hatred for the ages spent in bondage to the Valheru. You know we
reject the Dark Path they trod. We fear the return of that power as much as we
do this invasion of outworlders and their Black Robes. You have seen Tomas. You
must know what we are forced to consider.”
Martin nodded. “Yes. You weigh his life.”
“Many of the younger elves follow him blindly,” said Tathar. “They
lack the maturity and wisdom to withstand the subtle influence of the Valheru
magic with him. And while the dwarves do not follow blindly, still they follow,
for they have none of our heritage of fear, and they put great faith in his
leadership. He has proved the means of their survival for eight years now,
saving many of them from death repeatedly.
“But while Tomas has been a boon to us in this struggle against the
invaders, we may have to put aside all other considerations save one: will this
half man, half Valheru attempt to become our master?” Tathar frowned. “If so,
he must be destroyed.”
Martin felt cold inside. Of all the boys he had known at Crydee, he
had held special affection for three, Garret, Tomas, and Pug. He had mourned
silently when Pug had been taken by the Tsurani, and had often wondered if it
had been to his death or captivity. Now he mourned for Tomas, for whatever else
might occur, Tomas would never again be as he once was.
Martin said to Calin. “Can nothing be done?”
Calin indicated Tathar should answer the question. The old
Spellweaver looked around the circle, gaining silent agreement from the other
Spellweavers. To Martin he said, “We do what we can to bring this to a good
ending. But should the Valheru come forth in his might, we would not withstand,
so we are fearful. We harbor no hatred for Tomas. But even as you pity a rabid
wolf, you must kill it.”
Martin looked grimly out at the lights of Elvandar, as darkness
deepened. As long as he remembered, it had been a comforting sight. Now he felt
only cold bitterness. “When shall you decide?”
Tathar said, “You understand our ways. We shall decide when we must
decide.”
Martin rose slowly to his feet. “My counsel to you then is this:
until the change has clearly shown itself to be toward the Dark Path, do not
mistakenly give too much weight to ancient fears. I have long been taught that
those who now rule in Elvandar are of heartier nature and more independent mind
than those who were first set free by the Valheru. Stay your hand until the
last. Something good may come of this yet, or if not that, something that is
not entirely ill.”
Tathar nodded. “Your counsel is given well. It is well received.”
Martin looked heavily burdened “I will do what I can. Once I was
able to influence Tomas, perhaps I may yet again. I will go meditate upon the
matter, then seek him out and speak with him.” None in the circle around the
Queen’s court spoke as he left. They knew his heart was as troubled as their
own.
The throbbing had become worse, not quite a pain, but a discomfort
that grew unnervingly more persistent Tomas sat in the cool glade, near the
quiet pool, struggling within himself. Since coming to live in Elvandar, he had
found his dreams little more than vague shadowy images, with half-remembered
phrases and names to grasp. They were less troublesome, less fearful, less a
presence in his daily life, but the pressure within his head, the dull
near-ache had grown. When he was in battle, he became lost in red rage, and
there was no sense of the ache, but when the battle lust subsided, especially
when he was slow to return to Elvandar, the throbbing returned.
Footsteps sounded lightly behind, and without turning, he said, “I
wish to be alone.”
Aglaranna said, “The pain, Tomas?”
A faint stirring of some strange feeling rose briefly within, and he
cocked his head as if listening for something. Then he answered curtly, “Yes. I
will return to our rooms soon. Leave now and prepare for me to join you later.”
Aglaranna stepped back, her proud features showing pain at being
addressed in such a tone. She turned quickly and left.
As she walked through the woods, her emotions churned within. Since
surrendering to Tomas’s desire, and her own, she had lost the ability to
command him, or to resist his commands. He was now lord over her, and she felt
shame. It was a joyless union, not the return of lost happiness she had hoped
for. But there was a will-sapping compulsion, a need to be with him, to belong
to him, that stripped away her defenses. Tomas was dynamic, powerful, and
sometimes cruel. She corrected herself: not cruel, just so removed from any
other being, no comparison could be made. He was not indifferent to her needs;
he simply was unaware she had any. As she approached Elvandar, the soft fairy
lights reflected in the shimmering tears that touched her cheeks.
Tomas was only partially aware of her departure. Under the dull ache
within his head, a voice faintly called to him. He strained to listen, knowing
its timbre, its color, knowing who called. . . .
“Tomas?”
Yes.
Ashen-Shugar
looked across the desolation of the plains, dry cracked lands devoid of
moisture save for bubbling alkali pots that spewed foul odors into the air.
Aloud, to his unseen companion, he said, “It has been some time since we last
spoke.”
Tathar
and the others seek to keep us apart. You are often forgotten.
The fetid winds blew from the north, cold but cloying. The smell of
decay was everywhere, and in the residue of the mighty madness that had gripped
the universe around, only faint stirrings of life reasserting itself were felt.
“No matter. We are together again.”
What
is this place?
“The
Desolation of the Chaos Wars. Draken-Korin’s monument, the lifeless tundra that
was once great grasslands. Few living things abide here. Most creatures flee to
the south, and more hospitable climes.”
Who
are you?
Ashen-Shugar
laughed “I am what you are becoming. We are one. So you have said many times.”
I
had forgotten.
Ashen-Shugar
called, and Shuruga sped toward him over a grey landscape, while black clouds
thundered overhead. The mighty dragon landed, and his master climbed upon his
back. Casting a glance at the spot marked by ash, the only reminder of
Draken-Konn’s existence, the Valheru said, “Come, let us see what fate has
wrought.”
Shuruga leaped into the heavens, and above the desolation they flew.
Ashen-Shugar was silent as he rode upon Shuruga’s broad back, feeling the wind
blowing across his face. They flew, and time passed them by, as they shared the
death of one age and the birth of another. High in the blue sky they soared,
free of the horror of the Chaos Wars.
It
is worthy of sorrow.
“I
think not. There is a lesson, though I cannot bring myself to know it Yet I
sense you do.” Ashen-Shugar closed his eyes as the throbbing returned.
Yes,
I remember
“Tomas?”
Tomas’s eyes snapped open. He found Galain standing a short way off,
near the edge of the clearing. “Shall I return later?”
Tomas rose slowly from where he had sat dreaming. His voice was
rough and tired. “No, what is it?”
“Dolgan’s dwarven band has reached the outer forest and waits for
you near the winding brook. The dwarves struck an outworld enclave as they
crossed the river.” There was a merry smile upon the young elf’s face. “They have
finally captured prisoners.”
A strange look of mixed delight and fury passed over Tomas’s face.
Galain felt strange emotions as he regarded the reaction of the warrior in
white and gold to this news. As if listening to a distant call, Tomas spoke
distractedly. “Go to the dwarven camp. I will join you there presently.”
Galain withdrew, and Tomas listened. A distant voice grew louder.
“Have I erred?”
The hall echoed with the words, for now it was vacant, the servants
having slipped away. Ashen-Shugar brooded upon his throne. He spoke to shadows.
“Have I erred?”
Now
you know doubt, answered the ever-present voice.
“This strange quietness within, what is it?”
It
is death approaching.
Ashen-Shugar
closed his eyes. “I thought as much. So few of my kind lived beyond battle. It
was a rare thing. I am the last. Still, I would like to fly Shuruga once more.”
He
is gone. Dead, ages past.
“But I
flew him this morning.”
It
was a dream. As is this.
“Am I
then also mad?”
You
are but a memory. This is but a dream.
“Then I
will do what is planned. I accept the inevitable. Another will come to take my
place.”
So
it has happened already, for I am the one who came, and I have taken up your
sword and put upon your mantle; your cause is now mine I stand against those
who would plunder this world.
“Then
am I content to die.”
Opening his eyes, he took one last look at his hall now cloaked in
ancient dust. Closing them for the last time, the Ruler of the Eagles’ Reaches
cast his final spell. His waning powers, still unmatched upon this world by any
save the new gods, flowed from his tired body, infusing his armor. Smoky wisps
wafted upward from where his body had rested, and soon only the golden armor,
white tabard, shield, and sword of white and gold remained.
I am
Ashen-Shugar; I am Tomas.
Tomas’s eyes opened, and for a moment he was confused to find
himself in the glade. A strange passion grew within as he felt a new strength
flowing throughout his being. In his mind rang a clarion call: I am
Ashen-Shugar, the Valheru. I will destroy all who seek to plunder my world.
With a terrible resolve he left the glade, to find the place the
dwarves had brought his enemies.
“It is good to see you again, friend Longbow,” said Dolgan, puffing
away on his pipe. They had not seen each other since a chance meeting several
years before when the dwarves passed through the forest east of Crydee on their
way to Elvandar.
Martin, Calin, and a few elves had come to see the dwarves’
prisoners, who were still bound. They waited in a group in a corner of the
clearing, glaring at their captors. Galain entered the clearing and said,
“Tomas is coming soon.”
Martin said, “How is it, Dolgan, after all these years, you managed
to capture prisoners, and an entire enclave at that?”
Behind the eight bound warriors stood a fearful group of Tsurani
slaves, unbound but huddled together, uncertain of their fate Dolgan gave an
offhanded wave. “Usually we’re raiding across the river, and prisoners tend to
slow things down during a withdrawal, being either unconscious or
uncooperative. This time we had little choice in the matter, as we needed to
cross the river Crydee. In past years we’d wait to sneak across in darkness,
but this year they’re as close as nettles in a thicket everywhere along the
river.
“We found this band in a relatively isolated spot, with only these
eight to guard the slaves. They were repairing an earthwork, one that I judge
was overrun a short while ago during an elven sortie. We slipped around them,
then a few of the lads climbed into the trees—though they liked it little. We
dropped down upon the three outer guards, silencing them before they could
shout the alert. The other five were napping, the lazy louts. We slipped into
camp, and after a few well-placed strokes with our hammers, we bound them.
These others”—he indicated the slaves—”were too timid to make a sound. When it
was clear we had not alarmed the nearby enclaves, we thought to bring them
along. Seemed a waste to leave them behind. Thought we might learn something
useful.” Dolgan tried to keep an impassive expression, but pride over his
company’s work shone through like a beacon in the night.
Martin smiled his approval and said to Calin, “I hope we may learn
what is coming, if the feared offensive is really to be mounted and where. I’ve
learned a few phrases of their tongue, but not enough to make any sense of what
they might tell us. Only Father Tully and Charles, my Tsurani tracker, can
speak to them fluently. Perhaps we should attempt to move them to Crydee?”
Calin said, “We have the means to learn their tongue, given time. I
doubt they would lend much cooperation in their transport. Most likely they
would try to raise the alarm every step of the way.”
Martin conceded the point. Then a disturbance caused him to turn.
Tomas came striding into the clearing Dolgan began to greet him, but
something in the young warrior’s manner and expression silenced him. There was
madness in Tomas’s eyes, something the dwarf had glimpsed before as a glimmer,
but which now shone forth brightly.
Tomas regarded the bound prisoners, then pulled his sword slowly and
pointed at them. The words he spoke were alien to both Martin and the dwarves,
but the elves were rocked by what they heard. Several of the older elves
dropped to their knees in supplication, and the younger ones drew away in
reflexive fear. Only Calin stood his ground, though he appeared shaken. Then
slowly the Elf Prince turned to Martin, his face drained of color. In terrified
tones he said, “At last the Valheru is truly among us.”
Ignoring all others in the clearing, Tomas walked up to the first
Tsurani prisoner. The bound soldier looked up with a mixture of fear and
defiance. Suddenly the golden sword was raised high and arced down, severing
the man’s head from his shoulders. Blood splattered the white tabard, then
flowed off, leaving it spotless. A low moan of fear came from the huddled
slaves, and the remaining soldiers’ eyes were wide in terror. Slowly Tomas
turned to face the next prisoner, and again his sword took a life.
Martin freed himself from shocked paralysis, forcing his eyes away
from the butchery. He felt terrible dread, but it appeared as nothing to what
the elves revealed in their abasement before Tomas. Calin’s face showed a
struggle within as he tried to overcome a nearly instinctive obedience to the
words spoken in the ancient language of the Valheru, masters of all, ages past.
The younger elves, less studied in the old wisdom, simply had no understanding
of the overwhelming need to obey this man in white and gold. The language of
the Valheru was still the language of power.
Tomas turned away from his slaughter, and Martin felt struck by the
strength of his gaze. Gone was any vestige of the boy from Crydee. Now an alien
presence suffused his being Tomas’s arm drew back, and Martin tensed to dodge
the blow. Any human was a potential victim, and even the dwarves drew back at
the awesome menace Tomas projected. Then a faint spark of recognition entered
Tomas’s eyes, and he said, in a distant voice, “Martin, by the love I once bore
you, be gone or your life is forfeit.”
Mustering courage against the most consuming fear he had ever felt,
Martin shouted, “I’ll not stand and watch you slaughter helpless men!”
Again a distant voice answered, steeped in ancient majesty and lost
grandeur regained. “These come into my world, Martin. None may seek that which
is my domain, my preserve, mine alone! Shall you, too, come into my world,
Martin?” With inhuman speed Tomas wheeled, and two Tsurani died.
Martin charged, crossing the gap between them in a bound, and
knocked Tomas away from the prisoners. They went down in a heap, and Martin
grabbed at the wrist that held the golden sword.
A strong man capable of carrying a freshly killed buck for miles,
Martin was no match for Tomas. As easily as picking up a bothersome infant,
Tomas pushed Martin aside and came lightly to his feet. Martin sprang at Tomas
again, but this time Tomas stood ready. He simply seized Martin by the tunic
and said, “None may interfere with my will.” He tossed Martin across the
clearing as if he weighed less than a tenth his weight. Martin’s arms flailed
the air as he arced high over the ground, striving to control his fall. He
landed hard, and all around could hear the breath explode from his lungs as he
struck.
Dolgan rushed to his side, for the elves were still held in thrall
by what they had witnessed. The dwarven chief poured water from a skin at his
side upon Martin’s face and shook him awake. The strangled cries of terror from
the Tsurani slaves watching soldiers being butchered greeted Martin as he
regained his wits.
Martin struggled to focus his vision, the scene before him swimming
and shifting. When he could see, he drew a hissing breath in horror.
Tomas struck down the last Tsurani soldier and began to advance upon
the cringing slaves. They appeared unable to move, watching with wide eyes the
bringer of their destruction, looking like nothing so much to Martin as a band
of deer startled by a sudden light in the night.
A ragged cry came from Martin’s lips as Tomas killed the first
Tsurani slave, a pitiful-looking willow of a man. Longbow struggled to rise,
senses reeling, and Dolgan helped him to his feet.
Tomas raised his sword and another died. Again the golden blade was
raised, and he looked into the face of his victim. Eyes round with fear, a
young boy, no more than twelve years old, stood waiting for the blow that would
end his life.
Suddenly time expanded for Tomas, the moment frozen in his mind. He
studied the shock of dark hair and the large brown eyes of the boy. The child
crouched awaiting the death he saw over him, his head shaking no, as his lips
formed a single phrase over and over.
In the faint light of the clearing, Tomas saw an old ghost, the
specter of a friend long forgotten. A remembered bond, from his earliest
memories as a child, reassociated itself with his consciousness. Images
blurred, past and present confused, and he said, “Pug?”
Within his mind, pain exploded, and another will sought to overwhelm
him.
Pug!
it shrieked.
Kill
him! came a raging answer, and within him two wills
battled.
No! screamed the other.
To everyone in the glade, Tomas stood frozen, shaking with some
inner struggle, his sword still held high, waiting for release.
These
are the enemy! Slay them.
He is a boy! Only a boy!
He is the enemy!
A boy!
Tomas’s
face became a mask of pain; his teeth clenched, and every muscle drew taut,
stretching skin tightly over skull. His eyes grew round, and perspiration began
to flow from under his helm, down his brows and cheeks.
Martin stumbled to his feet. He moved slowly, every gesture bringing
pain from the battering he had taken.
Tomas’s hand slowly moved downward, each inch a shaking, trembling
passage as he warred within. The boy was transfixed, unable to move, his eyes
following the movement of the blade.
I am
Ashen-Shugar! I am Valheru! sang a voice within, in
a torrent of anger, battle madness, and bloodlust.
Against
this sea of rage stood a single rock, a calm, small voice within that said,
simply, I am Tomas.
Again
and again the sea of hate crashed over the rock of calm, each time engulfing
it, then sliding back, to come again. But each time the tide diminished and the
rock stood clear, rising above the mad surf. A shattering of something, the
thundering of ages lost and passing, rocked Tomas’s mind. He reeled, then swam
within an alien landscape, seeking a pinpoint of light he knew was his way to
freedom. Tides swept him along, and he battled, struggling to keep his head
above the strangling black sea. A shrieking, evil wind blew overhead, and to
his ears it sang a song of woeful meter. He struck out, and again he saw a
pinpoint of light. Again the tide engulfed him, forcing him away from his goal,
but this time it was weaker. Once more he struggled toward the light. Then came
a surge, a last, terrifying assault culminating in a total attack upon him I
am Ashen-Shugar! There came a breaking of the will, something snapping like
the dead branch of a tree under the weight of newly fallen snow, like the sound
of old winter ice breaking at spring’s touch, as if the last assault took too
great a toll.
The
black sea lost its fury and subsided, and he was again standing upon firm
ground, a single rock I am Tomas. In the distance the pinpoint of light
began to expand before his eyes, racing forward to engulf him.
I am
Tomas.
“Tomas!”
He blinked and saw he was again in the glade. Before him crouched
the boy, waiting to die. He turned his head and saw Martin, sighting along a
cloth-yard arrow, drawn hard against his cheek. The Huntmaster of Crydee said,
“Put down your sword, or by the gods, I’ll kill you where you stand.”
Tomas’s gaze wandered about the glade, and he saw the dwarves with
weapons drawn, as had some of the older elves. Calin, still shaking, had his
sword out and was slowly advancing upon him.
Martin watched Tomas closely, not fearing him, but respectful of his
awesome strength and speed. He waited and saw the flicker of madness still in
Tomas’s eyes, then, as if a veil were lifted, saw them clear. Abruptly the golden
sword fell from his hand, and the pale, nearly colorless eyes filled with
tears. Tomas dropped to his knees, and a moan of terrible anguish was torn from
his lips, and Tomas cried out, “Oh, Martin, what have I become?”
Martin lowered his bow, watching as Tomas gathered his arms about
himself. Into the glade came Tathar and the other Spellweavers. They approached
Tomas and then surveyed the others in the glade. So terrible were Tomas’s sobs
of anguish, so filled with sorrow and remorse, that many of the elves
discovered they also wept.
Tathar said to Martin Longbow, “We felt the fabric of our spells
torn asunder a short while ago, and came at once. We feared the Valheru had
come, rightly it seems.”
Martin said, “Now?”
“The other side of the balance. That the Valheru is at last
displaced by the boy there can be no doubt, but the boy now must feel the
weight of ages of slaughter, and the guilt over joy felt when taking other
lives. The burdens felt by mortals are again his, and we shall now see if he can
withstand them. This agony may prove his end.”
Martin left the ancient elf and crossed to Tomas. In the dim light
he was the first to perceive the change. Gone were the alien cast to his
features, the gleaming eyes, the haughty brow. Again he was Tomas, a man,
though there were still legacies of his experience that would forever proclaim
him something more than a man: the elven ears, the pale eyes. Gone was the Lord
of Power, the Old One, the Valheru. Where before a Dragon Lord had stood now
crouched a troubled, sick man in torment over what he had done.
Tomas raised his head as Martin touched him upon the shoulder.
Red-rimmed eyes, nearly mad from grief, regarded Martin for a brief moment,
then closed as if seeking oblivion to all around. For some time the elves and
dwarves watched, and the Tsurani slaves were silent, aware that some miracle
had occurred, not understanding, but suddenly sure they were spared. For some
time they watched, as Martin Longbow cradled the sobbing man in white and gold,
who cried in anguish so terrible to hear.
***
Aglaranna
sat upon her sleeping pallet, brushing her long red-gold hair. As before, she
waited for Tomas, half hoping, half fearing he would come.
A shout from outside caused her to rise. She gathered her robes
around her and left her quarters. Standing upon a platform, she watched as a
group of elves and dwarves came toward Elvandar’s heart. With them came Martin
Longbow and some humans, clearly out-worlders from their dress.
Her hands went to her mouth as she gasped. In the center of the
group walked Tomas, at his side a young boy with eyes wide at the splendor of
Elvandar.
Aglaranna was unable to move, fearful that what she witnessed was
the product of delusion born of hope. Time sped past as she waited, then Tomas
stood before her. Leaving the boy, he stepped forward. Martin took the boy by
the hand and led him away, the others following, giving the Elf Queen and Tomas
the solitude they needed.
Tomas reached out slowly and touched her face, and he drank in the
sight of her, as if seeing her as he had first at Crydee. Then, without words,
he slowly, gently enfolded her in his arms. He held her in silence, letting her
feel the warmth of the love that filled him at sight of her.
After a time he whispered in her ear, “For each moment of sorrow I
have visited upon you, O my lady, I pray the gods grant me a year to gift you
with joy. I am again your adoring subject.”
Too filled with happiness to speak, the Elf Queen simply clung to
him, her sorrow only a dim memory.
28
EMISSARY
The troops stood quietly.
Long columns of men awaited their turn at passing through the rift
into Midkemia. Officers walked by, their presence ensuring discipline in the
lines. Laurie, in the mask and robe of a Red Priest, was impressed at the level
of control these officers had over their men. He judged the Tsurani code of
honor, where orders were followed without question, a very alien thing.
He and Kasumi moved quickly down the line, heading for the first
detachment behind the one now entering the rift. Laurie bent his knees and
stooped, to detract from his noticeable height. As they had hoped, more
soldiers than not looked away as the bogus Red Priest passed.
When they reached the head of the column, Kasumi fell in. His
younger brother, who had been promoted to Strike Leader for this offensive,
seemed to pay no attention to his commander’s late arrival, or to the priest of
Turakamu who arrived with him.
After a seemingly interminable delay, the command came, and they
stepped forward into the shimmering glow of “nothingness” that marked the rift
between the two worlds. There was a brief flash of lights, a momentary
dizziness, and they found themselves walking forward into a light Midkemian
rain. Sheets of wetness, little more than a heavy mist, fell around them. The
Tsurani soldiers, hot-weather-bred, wrapped cloaks about themselves.
A staging officer briefly conferred with Kasumi, and the troops were
ordered to move off to the northeast a specified distance and erect a camp.
Kasumi and Hokanu were then to report to the Warlord’s tent for briefings. The
Warlord himself was back in Kentosani, the Holy City, preparing for the
Imperial Games, but his subcommander was to instruct them in their duties and
areas of responsibility until his return.
They quickly moved up toward the front and set up camp Once the
commander’s tent was up, Laurie and the Shinzawai brothers ducked inside. While
bundles containing Midkemian clothing and weapons were unpacked, Kasumi said,
“As soon as we return from our meeting with the subcommander, we will eat.
Tonight we will lead a patrol of our area and try to slip through the lines.”
Kasumi looked at his brother. “After we have gone, brother, it will be your responsibility
to hide our departure for as long as possible Once there has been fighting
reported, you may claim we have been lost to the enemy.”
Hokanu agreed. “We had best report now.”
Kasumi looked at Laurie. “Stay inside. We want no risk. You are the tallest
damned priest I have ever seen.”
Laurie nodded. He sat upon some cushions and waited.
The patrol moved silently through the trees. The rain had stopped,
but the weather had turned colder, and Laurie suppressed a shiver. Years in the
hot climes of Kelewan had driven away his ability to ignore the chill. He
wondered about the new troops from Tsuranuanni and how they would react when
the first snowfalls came. Most likely with studied indifference, regardless of
what they felt inside. A Tsurani soldier would never let himself appear upset
by something as trivial as solid water falling from the sky.
They elected the North Pass, for it led to the largest front, and
they were less likely to be noticed passing through the lines. They reached the
head of the pass, and a station guard passed them along. Once outside the
valley they struck slightly more eastward than their patrol called for.
Beyond the rolling hills and light woods was the road from LaMut to
Zun. Once the two travelers had left their patrol and reached the road, they
would head for Zun, buy horses, and ride south. With luck they would reach
Krondor in two weeks. There they would change mounts and head for Salador,
where they would find passage on a ship for Rillanon.
The only obstacle between them and the road was a large portion of
the Kingdom’s Army. If they were discovered by a Kingdom patrol, they would try
to pass themselves off as travelers who had been captured by the Tsurani and
escaped. There could be no question of Laurie being Tsurani, and Kasumi’s
command of the King’s Tongue was so complete that he could easily pass for a Kingdom
citizen from the Vale of Dreams; several languages were spoken in that border
area with Great Kesh, so Kasumi’s slight accent would be reasonable.
The patrol moved at a dogtrot that ate up miles. Laurie ran beside
Kasumi, marveling at the soldiers’ stamina. They might not be showing fatigue,
but he was feeling it. Hokanu signaled for the patrol to stop at the head of a
large, flat area near the woods. “Here we will start our swing back to our
patrol area. We should not see any Tsurani soldiers from here. Let us hope, for
your sake, we don’t meet with Kingdom troops either.”
He gave a signal, and they moved out. Laurie and Kasumi were handed
backpacks and clothing. They quickly changed, then followed the route taken by
the patrol. They would follow for a short distance, using the patrol for cover
should any Kingdom troops be nearby.
They moved into a small vale and found the patrol held up by
something ahead. The last man in line motioned them for quiet. They moved to
the head of the line, and Laurie looked around for a quick exit route should
there be any trouble. Hokanu said softly, “I thought I heard something, but
there has been no sound for several minutes.”
Kasumi nodded. “Then move forward. We will wait until you have
crossed that open area ahead, then follow to the woods.” He indicated a stand
of trees, on the other side of the clearing.
When the patrol had reached the center of the open area, the clouds
parted and shafts of moonlight lit up the area “Damn!” Kasumi swore under his
breath. “They might as well light torches now.”
Suddenly the trees erupted with motion and sound. The ground
trembled as riders came charging forward, out from the trees that hid them.
Each wore heavy chain mail and a full helm. Long lances were leveled at the
surprised Tsurani soldiers.
The Tsurani had barely enough time to ready a rude line for defense
before the riders were upon them. Cries of horses and men filled the air, and
the Tsurani fell before the charge. The riders rode over the Tsurani and
re-formed at the end of the vale where the two fugitives hid. They wheeled
about and charged again. The Tsurani survivors of the last charge, less than
half the men, moved quickly up the west side of the vale, where the trees and
incline of the hillside would counter the horsemen’s ability to charge.
Laurie touched Kasumi’s arm and motioned to the right. It was
evident the Tsurani officer was barely holding himself in check from joining
his men. Suddenly Kasumi was off, hugging the edge of the trees as he ran low.
Laurie followed and spotted what appeared to be a rough path heading eastward.
He grabbed Kasumi’s sleeve and pointed. They turned their backs to the fighting
and moved off.
The next day found two travelers moving down the road to Zun. Both
wore woolen shirts, trousers, and cloaks. Closer examination by a trained eye
would have revealed that the material was not really wool, but something like
it. Their belts and boots were made from needra hide dyed to resemble leather.
The fashion was Midkemian, as were the swords they wore on their belts.
One was obviously a minstrel, for he wore a lute slung over his
backpack. The other looked to be a freebooter mercenary. Any casual observer
would have been unlikely to guess their origins, or the riches carried in those
backpacks, for each had a small fortune in gems tucked away in the bottom of
his pack.
A northbound troop of light cavalry passed them on the road, and
Laurie said, “Things have changed since I was last here. Those men in the
forest were Royal Krondonan Lancers, and those who just passed wore the colors
of Quester’s View. All the forces of the Armies of the West must be marshaling
here. Something seems to be in the air. Perhaps they have somehow gleaned your
Warlord’s plan for a major offensive?”
“I don’t know. Whatever is happening does not seem to indicate that
things are as stable as we have been led to believe back home. Alliances are
very uneasy since the death of the Lord of the Minwanabi and the emergence of
new forces in the Great Game. The Warlord may be more desperate than my father
judged. And the concentration of troops here makes me think the Warlord’s
victory may not be easily won.” Kasumi was quiet for a moment as they walked
along the road. “I hope that Hokanu was among those who reached the trees.” It
was the first time he had mentioned his brother, and Laurie could think of
nothing to say.
Two days later, Laurie, a minstrel late of Tyr-Sog, and Kenneth, a
mercenary from the Vale of Dreams, sat in the Green Cat Inn in the city of Zun.
Both ate with hearty appetite, for they had lived on soldiers’ rations—cakes of
grain and dried fruit—for two days.
Laurie had spent over an hour negotiating with a less than reputable
gem broker for several smaller stones’ value. He had settled for one third
their actual worth, stating, “If he thinks they are stolen, he will not be too
quick to ask questions.”
Kasumi asked, “Why didn’t you sell him all the stones?”
“Your father has given us enough to retire on for the rest of our
days. I doubt if all the brokers in Zun could raise the gold to pay for them.
We will sell a few as we travel; besides, they weigh less than gold.”
Finishing their meal, the two men paid and left. Kasumi could only
just refrain from staring at all the metal he could see everywhere, a
lifetime’s riches on Kelewan. Just the cost of the meal in silver could support
a Tsurani family for a year.
They hurried along one of the city’s business streets, heading to
the south gate Near there, they had been informed, a reputable trader in horses
would sell them mounts and tack for a fair price. They found the man, a thin,
hawk-beaked fellow by the name of Brin. Laurie spent the better part of an hour
haggling with the horse trader for two of his better mounts. They left him
expressing concern over their ability to sleep nights after cheating an honest
businessman out of the money he needed to feed his starving children.
As they rode through the gate that put them on the road to Ylith,
Kasumi said, “Much of this land of yours seems odd, but as you haggled with
that merchant, I was reminded of home. Our traders are much more polite and
would never think of raising their voices in such a manner, but it is still the
same thing. They all have starving children.”
Laurie laughed and spurred his mount forward. Soon they were out of
sight of the city.
South of Quester’s View they passed more troops on the road, this
time Kingdom regulars and auxiliaries trudging along on foot while their
officers rode Laurie and Kasumi had stopped to untack and graze their horses
while the column moved past. The fighter watched the soldiers passing with an
expert’s eye. Red-uniformed soldiers marched in tight formation, while the more
ragged auxiliaries still managed a look of organization. The baggage train
moved in good order, experienced cart drivers keeping the animals in proper
intervals. When they passed, Kasumi said, “Those soldiers are better than any
I’ve seen so far on your world, Laurie Those in red look like professionals.
They march well. And those others seem experienced, despite their motley look.”
Laurie nodded. “I recognize the standard. That’s the garrison of
Shamata, in the Vale of Dreams. They have had their fair share of fighting
Kesh’s dog-soldiers and are a veteran outfit. Those others are auxiliaries,
Valemen mercenaries; a less tender band of lads you’d be hard pressed to find.”
Laurie started to resaddle his horse. “They’re as seasoned a force of men as
your countrymen will have faced, in truth.”
When the horses were tacked up, Laurie and Kasumi remounted and rode
on. Soon they could see the Bitter Sea, as the road rounded the hills of
Quester’s View.
Laurie pulled up his horse and stared out to sea. “What is it?”
asked Kasumi.
Laurie shaded his eyes. “Ships! A whole fleet of them sailing
north.” He sat for a moment watching, and at last Kasumi could see dots of
white upon the blue of the sea.
“Where are they bound?” Kasumi asked.
“Ylith is the only major point north of here. They must be carrying
supplies for the war.”
They resumed their ride. A sense of urgency descended upon them
both, as everything they saw pointed to an intensification of the war, and the
longer they tarried, the less likely the success of their mission.
Fourteen days later, they reached the northern gate of Krondor. As
they rode through, they were regarded suspiciously by several guards dressed in
black and gold. Once beyond earshot of the gate guards, Laurie said, “Those are
not the Prince’s tabards. The banner of Bas-Tyra flies over Krondor.”
They rode slowly for a minute, then Kasumi said, “What does it
mean?”
“I don’t know. But I think I know a place we can find out.” They
rode through a series of streets bounded on each side by warehouses and
commercial enterprises. Sounds from the docks, several streets away, could be
heard. Otherwise the district was quiet. “Strange,” remarked Laurie, as they
rode on. “This part of the city is usually busiest at this time of day.”
Kasumi looked around, not sure of what he expected to see. The
Midkemian cities, compared to those of the Empire, seemed small and dirty.
Still, there was something strange about the lack of activity here. Both Zun
and Ylith had been teeming with soldiers, traders, and citizens at midday, even
though they were smaller cities than Krondor. As they rode, a feeling of
disquiet visited Kasumi.
They entered a section of the city even more run-down than the
warehouse district. Here the streets were narrow, with four- and five-story
buildings hugging closely to either side Dark shadows abounded, even at noon.
Those in the street, a few traders and women going to market, moved quietly and
with speed. Everywhere the riders looked, they could see expressions of caution
and distrust.
Laurie led Kasumi to a gate, behind which the upper part of a
three-story building could be seen. Laurie leaned over in the saddle and pulled
on a bell rope. When there was no answer after a few minutes, he pulled again.
A moment later a peek window in the door slid aside, two eyes could
be seen, and a voice said, “What’s your business?”
Laurie’s tone was sharp. “Lucas, is that you? What is happening when
travelers can’t gain entrance?”
The eyes widened, and the peek window slid shut. The gate swung open
with a creaking protest, and a man stepped out to push it wide. “Laurie, you
scoundrel!” he said as he admitted the riders. “It’s been five—no, six years.”
They rode in, and Laurie was shocked by the condition of the inn.
Off to one side was a dilapidated stable. Opposite the gate a sign hung over
the main entrance, depicting in faded hues a parrot of many colors with wings
spread. They could hear the gate close behind them.
The man called Lucas, tall and gaunt, with grey hair, said, “You’ll
have to stable the animals yourself. I am alone here and must return to the
common room before my guests steal everything there. I’ll see you and your
friend inside and we can talk.” He turned away, and the two riders were left to
tend to their mounts.
As they removed the saddles from the horses, Laurie said, “There is
a lot happening here that I don’t understand. The Rainbow Parrot was never a
showplace, but it was always one of the better taverns in the Poor Quarter.” He
quietly rubbed down his animal. “If there is any place we can find out what is
truly going on in Krondor, this is it. And one thing I have learned over my
years of traveling through the Kingdom is when gate guards are watching
travelers closely, it is time to stay somewhere they are not likely to visit.
You can get your throat cut quickly in the Poor Quarter, but you’ll rarely see
a guardsman about. And if they do come, the man who was trying to cut your
throat will more than likely hide you until they are gone.”
‘And then try to cut your throat.”
Laurie laughed. “You learn quickly.”
When the horses were cared for, the two travelers carried their
saddles and packs into the inn. Inside they were greeted by the sight of a
dimly lit common room, with a long bar along the rear wall. On the left stood a
large fireplace, and on the right a stairway leading upward. There were a
number of empty tables in the room, and two with customers. The newcomers were
given a quick look by the guests, who then returned to their drinks and quiet
conversation.
Laurie and Kasumi crossed over to the bar, where Lucas stood
cleaning some wine cups with a less than clean rag. They dropped their packs at
their feet, and Laurie said, “Any Keshian wine?”
Lucas said, “A little, but it is expensive. There has been little
trade with Kesh since the trouble started.”
Laurie looked at Lucas, as if weighing the cost “Then two ales.”
Lucas drew two large tankards of ale and said, “It is good to see
you, Laurie. I’ve missed that tender voice of yours.”
Laurie said, “That’s not what you said the last time. As I recall,
you likened it to the screeching of a cat looking for a fight.”
They chuckled over that, and Lucas said, “With things so bleak, I
have mellowed toward those who were true friends. There are few of us left.” He
threw a pointed look at Kasumi.
Laurie said, “This is Kenneth, a true friend of mine, Lucas.”
Lucas continued to regard the Tsurani for a moment, then smiled
“Laurie’s recommendation counts heavily. Welcome.” He extended his hand, and
Kasumi shook with him, Kingdom fashion.
“I am pleased at your welcome.”
Lucas frowned at the sound of his accent. “An outlander?”
“From the Vale of Dreams,” said Kasumi.
“The Kingdom side,” added Laurie.
Lucas studied the fighter. After a moment he shrugged. “Whatever. It
matters not a whit to me, but be wary. These are suspicious times, and there is
little love wasted on strangers. Take care who you speak with, for there are
rumors that Kesh’s dog-soldiers are ready to move north again, and you are not
far from being Keshian.”
Before Kasumi could say anything, Laurie said, “Is there to be
trouble with Kesh, then?”
Lucas shook his head. “I can’t say. The market has more rumors than
a beggar has boils.” His voice lowered. “Two weeks back, traders arrived with
word the Empire of Great Kesh was again fighting far to the south, seeking to
subdue their former vassals in the Confederacy once more. So things should stay
quiet for a while. They learned the folly of a two-front war over a hundred
years back when they managed to lose all of Bosania and still not beat the
Confederacy.”
Laurie said, “We have been traveling for a very long time and have
heard little news. Why is Bas-Tyra’s banner over Krondor?”
Lucas quickly looked around the room. The drinkers seemed oblivious
to the conversation at the bar, but Lucas motioned for silence. “I will show
you a room,” he said loudly. Both Laurie and Kasumi were a little surprised,
but picked up their belongings and followed Lucas upstairs without comment.
He led them to a small room, with two beds and a nightstand. When
the door was closed behind, he said, “I trust you, Laurie, so I’ll ask no
questions, but know things have changed greatly since last you were here. Even
in the Poor Quarter there are ears that belong to the Viceroy. Bas-Tyra has the
city under his boot-heel, and it is a foolish man who speaks without seeing who
is listening.”
Lucas sat down on one of the beds, and Laurie and Kasumi sat across
from him Lucas continued, “When Bas-Tyra came to Krondor he carried the King’s
warrant naming him ruler of Krondor, with full viceregal powers. Prince Erland
and his family were locked up in the palace, though Guy calls it ‘protective
custody.’ Then Guy came down hard on the city. Press-gangs roamed the
waterfront, and many a man now sails in Lord Jessup’s fleet without his wife or
children knowing what became of their old pa. Since then, any who speak against
the Viceroy or King simply vanish, ‘cause Guy’s got a secret police listening
at every door in the city.
“Taxes increase each year to pay for the war, and trade’s drying up,
except for those selling to the army for the war, and they’re getting paid in
worthless vouchers. These are hard times, and the Viceroy’s doing nothing to
make them easier. Food is scarce, and there is little money to pay for what
there is. Many farmers have lost their farms for taxes, and now the land lies
fallow for want of someone to till it. So the farmers wander into the city,
swelling the population. Most of the young men have been drafted into the army
or the fleet. Be careful you aren’t picked up by the guards, for whatever
reason, and be wary of the press-gangs.
“Still,” Lucas said with a chuckle, “things got lively around here
for a time when Prince Arutha came to Krondor.”
“Borric’s son? He’s in the city?” asked Laurie.
A twinkle of pleasure showed in Lucas’s eyes. “No longer.” He
chuckled again. “Last winter, as bold as bright brass, the Prince comes sailing
into Krondor. He must have taken the Straits of Darkness during the winter, or
he never would have reached the city when he did.” He quickly told them of
Arutha and Anita’s escape.
Laurie said, “Did they return to Crydee?”
Lucas nodded. “A trader in from Carse a week ago was full of news of
this and that. One thing he heard was some Tsurani were acting up around
Jonril, and the Prince of Crydee was ready to come down to help if needed. So
Arutha must have made it back.”
Laurie said, “Guy must have been fit to burst at the news.”
Lucas’s smile vanished. “Well, he was, Laurie. He’d tossed Prince
Erland into the dungeon to get his permission to marry Anita. He kept him there
after he heard of Anita’s escape. I guess he thought the girl would come back
rather than let her father stay in a damp cell, but he was wrong. Now the
word’s on the street the Prince is near death from the chill. That’s why the
city’s in such a state. No one knows what will happen if Erland dies. He’s well
liked, and there might be trouble.” Laurie looked at Lucas with an unspoken
question. “Nothing like rebellion,” Lucas answered. “We’re too dispirited. But
a few of Guy’s guards may turn up missing at muster, and there’ll be many
inconveniences getting supplies to the garrison and palace and the like. And I
wouldn’t wish to be the Viceroy’s taxman when he’s next sent into the Poor
Quarter.”
Laurie considered what he had heard “We are headed east. What about
conditions on the road?”
Lucas slowly shook his head. “There is still some traveling done.
Once past Darkmoor, you should have scant trouble, I’m thinking. We hear that
things in the East are more as they used to be. Still, I’d move carefully.”
Kasumi asked, “Will we be troubled leaving the city?”
“The north gate is still the best way. It is undermanned, as usual.
For a small fee, the Mockers can see you safely through.”
“Mockers?” asked the fighter.
Lucas raised his brows in surprise “You are from a long way off. The
Guild of Thieves. They remain in control of the Poor Quarter, and the Upright
Man still has influence with the merchants and traders, especially along the
docks. The warehouse district is their second home, after the Poor Quarter.
They can get you out, if you have any trouble at the gate.”
Laurie said, “We will keep that in mind, Lucas. What of your family?
I have not seen them around.”
Lucas seemed to shrink into himself, “My wife is dead, Laurie, of
the fever, a year ago. My sons are both in the army. I have heard little of
them in a year. Last time I received a message, they were in the north with
Lords Borric and Brucal.
“The city is full of veterans of the war. You can see them
everywhere. They are the ones with missing limbs, or blind eyes. But they
always wear their old tabards. And a pathetic sight they are, too.” He got a
faraway look in his eyes. “I just hope my boys don’t end up like that.”
Laurie and Kasumi said nothing. Lucas came out of his reverie. “I
must return downstairs . . . Supper will be ready in four hours, though nothing
like I used to serve.” As the innkeeper turned to go, he said, “If you need to
contact the Mockers, let me know.”
After he had left, Kasumi said, “It is a hard thing to know your
country, Laurie, and still look upon the war as glorious.”
Laurie nodded.
The warehouse was dark and musty. Except for Laurie and Kasumi and
two fresh horses, it was empty. They had stayed at the Rainbow Parrot the night
before and had purchased new mounts at great expense, then had tried to leave
the city. When they had reached the city gates, they had been stopped by a
detachment of Bas-Tyra’s guards. When it was obvious that the guards were not
likely to let them leave without trouble, Laurie and Kasumi had broken away
from them, and a mad dash through the city had followed. They had lost their
pursuers in the Poor Quarter and had returned to the Rainbow Parrot. Lucas had
sent word to the Upright Man, and now they waited for a thief to guide them out
of the city.
A whistle broke the silence, and Laurie and Kasumi had their swords
in hand in an instant. A high-pitched chuckle greeted them, and a small figure
dropped from above. In the dark it was difficult to see where the figure sprang
from, but Laurie suspected their visitor had been hiding in the rafters for
some time.
The figure stepped forward, and in the dim light they could see it
was a boy, no older than thirteen. “There’s a party at Mother’s,” the newcomer
said.
“And a good time will be had by all,” Laurie answered.
“You’re the travelers, then.”
“You’re the guide?” asked Kasumi, taking no effort to hide the
surprise in his voice.
The boy’s voice was filled with bravado. “Aye. Jimmy the Hand is
your guide. And a better one in all Krondor you’ll not find.”
Laurie said, “What’s to be done?”
“First there’s the matter of payment. It’s a hundred sovereigns
each.”
Without comment Laurie dug out several small gems and handed them
over “Will these do?”
The boy turned to the warehouse door and cracked it slightly,
admitting a shaft of moonlight. He inspected the gems with an expert’s eye and
returned to stand before the two fugitives. “These’ll do. For another hundred,
you can have this.” He offered a piece of parchment.
Laurie took it, but couldn’t make out what was written on it in the
dim light. “What is it?”
Jimmy chuckled. “A royal warrant, allowing the bearer to travel the
King’s Highway.”
“Is it genuine?” asked the minstrel.
“My word. I nicked it myself from a trader from Ludland this
morning. It’s valid for another month.”
“Done,” said Laurie, and the minstrel gave the boy another gem.
When the gems were safely in the thief’s pouch, he said, “Soon we’ll
be hearing a brouhaha at the gate. A few of the boys will put on some mummery
for the guards. When everything’s up in the wind, we’ll slip through.”
He returned to the door and looked out without further comment.
While they waited, Kasumi whispered, “Can he be trusted?”
“No, but we have no choice. If the Upright Man could show a larger
profit by turning us in, he might. But the Mockers have little love for the
guards, and now less than usual, according to Lucas, so it is unlikely. Still,
keep your wits about you.”
Time stretched on interminably, then suddenly shouts could be heard.
Jimmy signaled with a sharp whistle, which was answered by another from
outside. “It’s time,” he said, and was out the door.
Laurie and Kasumi led their horses out after him. “Follow closely
and quickly,” their small guide said as he set off.
They rounded the corner of a building and could see the north gate.
A group of men were involved in a brawl, many appearing to be sailors from the
docks. The guards were doing their best to restore order, but each time one
pushed a combatant away from the fray, another would appear from the shadows
around the gate and join in. In a few minutes every guard was involved in
breaking up the fight, and Jimmy said, “Now!”
He broke from the building, with the travelers close behind, and
dashed to the wall next to the gatehouse. They edged their way along in the
shadows, the horses’ clatter covered by the noise of the brawl. When they were
near the gate, a single guard could be seen, on the other side, whom they
hadn’t been able to see from their previous location.
Laurie gripped Jimmy’s shoulder “We’ll have to take him quickly.”
Jimmy said, “No. If weapons are drawn, the guards will leave that
little bit of fun like a burning whorehouse. Leave him to me.”
Jimmy sprang forward and ran to the guard. As the guard brought his
spear forward across his chest and shouted, “Halt!” Jimmy kicked him hard in
the leg, above the boot. The man let out a howl, then looked at his small
assailant with fury on his face “Why you little—”
Jimmy stuck out his tongue and started to run toward the docks. The
guard set out in hot pursuit, and the two travelers slipped through the gate.
Once outside the city, they mounted quickly and rode off. As they rode away
from Krondor, they could hear the sounds of the brawl.
They rested a day at Darkmoor, in an inn in the town below the
castle. They had been two days in the hills and needed to rest their mounts
before journeying over the grasslands to Malac’s Cross. The town was quiet, and
little of interest occurred until the inn door opened and a man in dirty brown
robes entered. The man was old and bent with years, and thin to the point of
gauntness. The innkeeper looked up from cleaning ale cups and said, “What do
you wish?”
Softly the old man said, “Please, sir, a little food.”
“Can you pay?”
“I can fashion spells to rid your inn of vermin, should you be
plagued by rats, sir. Perhaps—”
“Begone! I have no food for beggars or magicians. Get out! And if I
find my milk clabbered, I’ll set my dogs upon you!”
The magician looked around. Laurie reached across the table and
touched Kasumi upon the arm. His Tsurani heritage was betraying him, as he was
showing open astonishment at what he saw. Before him stood a magician, being
treated as shabbily as his clothes. Laurie’s touch caused him to regain his
composure. The magician slowly turned and left the inn.
Laurie sprang up and crossed to the innkeeper. Slapping some coins
on the table, he said, “Quick. A joint of cold meat, a loaf of bread, and a
skin of wine.”
The innkeeper looked surprised, but the coins on the bar convinced
him to do as ordered. When the items ordered were upon the bar, Laurie scooped
them up. He paused a moment to grab a wedge of cheese off a platter and rushed
out the door. Kasumi was as amazed as the innkeeper appeared to be.
Laurie looked down the road and saw the old man, his posture erect
as he moved along with a staff in one hand, using it as a walking stick. He ran
after the man and, when he had overtaken him, said, “Excuse me, but I was in
the tavern a moment ago, and . . .” He held out the food and wineskin.
He saw pride diminish in the old man’s eyes. “Why are you doing
this, minstrel?”
Laurie said, “I have a friend who is a magician, a special friend.
He did me a great kindness once, and I . . . it’s something of a repayment.”
The magician accepted this explanation and took the food. While he
struggled with the burden, Laurie slipped a pair of gems into the magician’s
empty belt pouch. There would be enough there to insure the magician never had
to go hungry again if he lived modestly. “What is this magician’s name; perhaps
I know him?”
“Milamber.”
The old man shook his head. “I have not heard of him. Where does he
abide?”
Laurie looked to the west, where the sun set behind the hills. With
strong emotions in his voice, he said, “Far from here, my friend. Very far from
here.”
The ship beat against the waves, while the crew reefed the sails
Laurie and Kasumi stood on deck watching the spires and towers of Rillanon as
the ship put into harbor. “A fabulous city,” said the former Tsurani officer.
“Not as large as the cities of home, but so different. All those tiny fingers
of stone and the colors of the banners make it look like a city of legend.”
“Strange,” said Laurie, “Pug and I felt the same when we first saw
Jamar. I suppose it is simply that they’re so different from each other.”
They stood on the open deck, cool in the breezes, but still able to
feel the warmth of the sun. Both were dressed in the finest clothing they could
buy in Salador, for they wished to be presentable at court and knew they had
little chance of being admitted to see the King should they look like simple
vagabonds.
The ship’s captain ordered the last sails taken in, and the ship
slid into place alongside the docks a few moments later. Ropes were thrown, to
men waiting on the quay, and the vessel was quickly made fast.
As soon as they were able, the two travelers were down the gangway
and making their way through the city Rillanon, the fabled and ancient capital
of the Kingdom of the Isles, stood bedecked in colors, flashing brightly in the
sunlight, but there was an undercurrent of tension in the atmosphere of the
streets and markets. Everywhere they passed, people spoke in hushed tones, as
if they feared someone might overhear them, and even the hawkers in the street
stalls seemed to offer their wares halfheartedly.
It was nearly the noon hour, and without seeking rooms, they headed
straight for the palace. When they reached the main gate, an officer in the
purple and gold of the Royal Household Guard inquired their business.
Laurie said, “We bring messages of the greatest importance to the
King, regarding the war.”
The officer considered. They were dressed well enough and didn’t
appear to be the usual madmen with predictions of doom, or prophets of some
nameless truth, but they were not officials of the court or army either. He
decided on the course of action followed most often in the armies of all
nations in all times: passing them along to a higher authority.
A guard escorted them to the office of an assistant to the Royal
Chancellor. Here they were made to wait for a half hour before the assistant
would see them. They entered the man’s office and were confronted by the
Steward of the Royal Household, a self-important little man with a potbelly and
a chronic wheeze when he spoke. “What business do you gentlemen have?” he
inquired, making it clear that his estimation of them was provisional.
“We carry word to the King regarding the war,” Laurie answered.
“Oh?” he sniffed, “and why aren’t these documents or messages or
whatever they are being delivered by the proper military pouch?”
Kasumi, obviously frustrated with the wait now that they were in the
palace, said, “Let us speak with someone who can take us to the King.”
The Steward of the Royal Household looked outraged. “I am Baron
Gray. I am the one to whom you will speak, man! And I have a good mind to have
the guards toss you into the street. His Majesty cannot be bothered with every
charlatan who tries to seek an audience. I am the one you must satisfy, and you
have not.”
Kasumi stepped forward and gripped the man by the front of his
tunic. “And I am Kasumi of the Shinzawai. My father is Kamatsu, Lord of the
Shinzawai, and Warchief of the Kanazawai Clan. I will see your King!”
Lord Gray paled visibly. He frantically pulled at Kasumi’s hand and
tried to speak. His shock at what he had just heard and what he felt at being
handled this way raced within him. It all proved to be too much for him to
speak. He nodded frantically until Kasumi released him.
Brushing at his tunic front, the man said, “The Royal Chancellor
will be informed—at once.”
He walked to a door, and Laurie watched him in case he called for
guards, thinking them madmen. Whatever else the man thought, Kasumi’s manner
convinced him he was something quite different from anything heretofore seen. A
messenger was sent, and in a few minutes an elderly man entered the room.
He simply said, “What is it?”
“Your Grace,” said the Steward, “I think you had best talk to these
men and consider if His Majesty should see them.”
The man turned to study the two other men in the office. “I am Duke
Caldric, the Royal Chancellor. What reason do you have to see His Majesty?”
Kasumi said, “I bring a message from the Emperor of Tsuranuanni.”
The king sat in a pavilion on a balcony overlooking the harbour.
Below, a mountain river passed directly before the palace, part of the original
defense design though no longer needed as a moat. Graceful bridges could be
seen arching above it, carrying people from one side of the river to the other.
King Rodric sat, seemingly attentive to what Kasumi was saying. He
toyed absently with a golden ball in his right hand, while Kasumi outlined in
detail the Emperor’s message of peace.
Rodric was silent for a while after Kasumi finished, as if weighing
what he had heard. Kasumi handed a sheaf of documents to Duke Caldric, then
waited for the King’s answer. After another moment of silence Kasumi added,
“The Emperor’s proposals are outlined in these parchments in detail, Your
Majesty, should you wish to study them at your leisure. I will wait upon your
convenience to carry your reply.”
Still Rodric was silent, and the courtiers gathered nearby looked at
one another nervously Kasumi was about to speak again when the King said, “I am
always amused when watching my little subjects hurrying about the city, like so
many ants. I often wonder what they think, living out their simple little
lives.” He turned to look at the two emissaries. “You know, I could order any
one of them put to death. Just pick one out, from this very balcony, should I
choose I could just say to my guards, ‘See that fellow in the blue cap? Go hack
his head off,’ and they would, you know. That’s because I’m King.”
Laurie felt a chill run up his back. This was worse than anything he
had imagined. The King seemed not to have heard a single word spoken Kasumi
said very quietly in the Tsurani language, “If we should fail, one of us must
carry word back to my father.”
At this, the King’s head snapped up His eyes grew wide, and he spoke
with a tremble in his voice “What is this?” His voice rose in pitch “I will
have no one whispering!” His face took on a feral appearance “You know they are
always whispering about me, the disloyal ones. But I know who they are, and I
will see them on their knees before me, yes I will. That traitor Kerus was on
his knees before I had him hanged. I would have hanged his family had they not
fled to Kesh.” He then studied Kasumi. “You think to trick me with your strange
story and these so-called documents. Any fool could see through your guise. You
are spies!”
Duke Caldric looked pained and tried to calm the King. Several
guards stood nearby, shifting their weight from foot to foot, uncomfortable at
what they were hearing.
The King pushed the solicitous Duke away. His voice took on a
near-hysterical tone “You are agents of that traitor Borric. He and my uncle
were plotting to take my throne. But I stopped that. My uncle Erland is dead .
. .” He paused for a moment, as if confused. “No, I mean he is ill. That is why
my loyal Duke Guy was sent from Bas-Tyra to rule Krondor until my beloved uncle
was well . . .” His eyes seemed to clear for a moment, then he said, “I am not
feeling well Please excuse me I will speak to you again tomorrow.” He rose from
his chair. After he had taken a step, he turned back to look at Laurie and
Kasumi “What was it you wanted to see me about? Oh yes, peace. Yes, that is
good. This war is a terrible thing. We must end it so that I can go back to my
building. We must begin the building again.”
A page took the King’s arm and led him away. The Royal Chancellor
said, “Follow me, and say nothing.”
He hurried them through the palace and led them to a room with two
guards before the door. One guard opened the door for them, and they entered
Inside they found a bedroom with two large beds and a table with chairs in the
corner. The Chancellor said, “Your arrival is poorly timed. Our King is, as you
no doubt can see, a sick man, and I fear that he will not recover. I hope he
will be better able to understand your message tomorrow. Please stay here until
you are sent for. A meal will be brought to you.”
He crossed over to the door, and before he left said, “Until
tomorrow.”
A shout awoke them in the night. Laurie rose quickly and went to the
window Peering through the curtains, he could see a figure on the balcony
below. In his nightshirt, King Rodric stood sword in hand, poking into the
bushes. Laurie opened the window as Kasumi joined him. From below they could
hear the King’s cries: “Assassins! They have come!” Guards ran out and searched
the bushes, while court pages led the shrieking monarch back to his room.
Kasumi said, “In truth, the gods have touched him. They must surely
hate your nation.”
Laurie said, “I am afraid, friend Kasumi, that the gods have little
to do with this. Right now I think we had best see to finding a way out of
here. I have a feeling that His Royal Majesty is ill suited for the finer
points of negotiating a peace. I think we had best make our way west and speak
with Duke Borric.”
“Will he be able to stop the war, this Duke?”
Laurie crossed over to the chair upon which his clothing was draped.
Picking up his tunic, he said, “I hope so. If the lords here can watch the King
behave in such a manner and do nothing, then we will have civil war soon.
Better to settle one war before beginning another.”
They dressed quickly Laurie said, “Let us hope we can find a ship
putting out on the morning tide. If the King orders the port closed, we are
trapped. It is a long swim.”
As they gathered up their belongings, the door opened and the Royal
Chancellor entered. He stopped and saw them standing there, fully dressed.
“Good,” he said, quickly closing the door. “You have as much sense as I had
hoped you would. The King has ordered the spies put to death.”
Laurie was incredulous “He thinks us spies?”
Duke Caldric sat in one of the chairs by the table, fatigue clearly
showing on his face. “Who knows what His Majesty is thinking, these days? There
are a few of us who try to stay his more terrible impulses, but it becomes more
and more difficult each day. There is a sickness in him that is terrible to
watch. Years ago he was an impetuous man, it is true, but there was also a
vision to his plans, a certain mad brilliance that could have made this the
greatest nation in Midkemia.
“There are many in the court now who take advantage of him, using
his fears to further their own designs. I am afraid that soon I will be branded
traitor and join the others in death.”
Kasumi buckled on his sword. “Why stay, Your Grace? If this is true,
why not come with us to Duke Borric?”
The Duke looked at the older son of the Shinzawai. “I am a noble of
the Kingdom, and he is my King I must do whatever I can to keep him from
harming the Kingdom, even if the price is my life, but I cannot raise arms
against him, nor aid those who do. I don’t know how things are with your world,
Tsurani, but here I must stay. He is my King.”
Kasumi nodded “I understand. In your place, I would do the same. You
are a brave man, Duke Caldric.”
The Duke stood. “I am a tired man. The King has taken strong drink,
from my hand. He will drink from no other, for he fears poison. I had the
chirurgeon give him something for sleep. You should be out to sea when he
awakens. I don’t know if he will remember your visit, but rest assured that
someone will remind him within a day, or two at the outside So do not linger.
Make straight for Lord Borric and tell him what has happened.”
Laurie said, “Is Prince Erland truly dead?”
“Yes. Word reached us a week ago His failing health could not
withstand the cold dungeon. Borric is now heir to the throne. Rodric has never
wed: his fear of others is too deep. The fate of the Kingdom rests with Borric
Tell him so.”
They crossed to the door. Before the Duke opened it, he said, “Also
tell him that it is likely I will be dead should he come to Rillanon. It will
be a good thing, for I would have to stand against any who raised arms against
the Royal Standard.”
Before
Laurie or Kasumi could say anything, he opened the door. Two guards stood
outside, and the Duke ordered them to escort Laurie and Kasumi to the docks.
“The Royal Swallow is anchored in the harbour. Give this to the
captain.” He held out a piece of paper to Laurie. “It is a royal warrant,
commanding him to carry you to Salador.” He held out a second paper. “This is
another, commanding any of the Armies of the Kingdom to aid your travel.”
They grasped each other by the hand, then the two emissaries
followed the guards down the corridor. Laurie looked over his shoulder at
Caldric as they left. The old Duke waited, stoop-shouldered and tired, his face
lined by worry and sorrow, as well as fear. As they turned a corner, losing
sight of the Duke, Laurie thought no price in the world would make him exchange
places with that old man.
The
horses were lathered. The riders whipped them up the hill. They were on the
last leg of their journey to Lord Borric, begun over a month before, and the
end was in sight. The Royal Swallow had sped them to Salador, where they
had left at once for the West. They had slept little along the way, trading for
fresh mounts or commandeering them, whenever possible, from horse patrols with
the royal warrant given them by Caldric Laurie wasn’t sure, but he suspected
they had covered the distance faster than it had ever been traveled before.
Several times since leaving Zun, they had been challenged by
soldiers. Each time they had presented the Chancellor’s warrant and were passed
through. Now they approached the Duke’s camp.
The Tsurani Warlord had unleashed his major offensive. The Kingdom
forces had held for a week, then collapsed, when ten thousand fresh Tsurani
soldiers had come pouring through their lines, tipping the balance. The
fighting had been bitter then, a raging, running battle lasting three days,
before the Kingdom army was finally routed. When it was over, a large portion
of the front had fallen, and the Tsurani had thrown up a salient out of the
North Pass.
Now the elves and dwarves, as well as the castles of the Far Coast,
were cut off from the main force of the Kingdom army. There was no
communication of any sort, for the pigeons used to carry messages had been
destroyed when the old camp had been overrun. The fate of the other fronts was
unknown.
The Armies of the West were regrouping, and it took Laurie and
Kasumi some time to find the headquarters camp. As they rode up to the command
pavilion, they saw signs of bitter defeat on every side. It was the worst
setback of the war for the Kingdom. Everywhere they looked they saw wounded or
sick men, and those who showed no wounds had the look of despair.
A guard sergeant inspected their warrant and sent a guard with them
to show them where the Duke’s tent stood. They reached the large command tent,
and a lackey took their mounts from them as the guard went inside. A moment
later a tall young man, blond-bearded and wearing the tabard of Crydee, came
out. Behind him appeared a stout man with a grey beard—a magician by his
garb—and another man, large, with a ragged scar down his face. Laurie wondered
if they might be old friends Pug had spoken of, but quickly focused his
attention on the young officer, who stopped before him. “I bring a message to
Lord Borric.”
The young man smiled a bitter smile, then said, “You may give me the
message, sir. I am Lyam, his son.”
Laurie said, “I mean no disrespect, Highness, but I must speak with
the Duke in person. So I was instructed by Duke Caldric.”
At mention of the Royal Chancellor’s name, Lyam exchanged glances
with his companions, then held aside the tent flap. Laurie and Kasumi entered,
the others following. Inside, there was a small brazier burning and a large
table with maps upon it. Lyam led them to another section of the huge tent,
curtained off from the rest. He pulled back the hanging, and they saw a man
lying upon a sleeping pallet.
He was a tall man, with dark hair streaked with grey. His face was
drawn, drained of blood, his lips nearly blue. His breathing was ragged, each
breath rattling loudly as he slept. He wore clean bed clothing, but heavy
bandages could be seen beneath his loose collar.
Lyam put back the hanging as another man entered the tent. Old, with
a near-white mane of hair, he was still erect and broad-shouldered. Softly he
said, “What is this?”
Lyam answered, “These men bring messages for Father from Caldric.”
The old warrior stuck out his hand. “Give them to me.”
When Laurie hesitated, the man nearly barked, “Damn it, fellow, I’m
Brucal. With Borric wounded, I’m commander of the Armies of the West.”
Laurie said, “I’ve no written message, Your Grace. Duke Caldric says
to introduce my companion. This is Kasumi of the Shinzawai, emissary of the
Emperor of Tsuranuanni, who carries an offering of peace to the King.”
Lyam said, “Is there to be peace at last?”
Laurie shook his head. “Sadly, no. The Duke also said to say this:
the King is mad, and the Duke of Bas-Tyra has slain Prince Erland. He fears
only Lord Borric can save the Kingdom.”
Brucal was visibly shaken by the news. To Lyam he quietly said, “Now
we know the rumors to be true. Erland was Guy’s prisoner. Erland dead. I can
scarcely believe it.” Shaking off his shock, he said, “Lyam, I know your mind
is upon your father now, but you must bend thought to this: your father is near
death; you will soon be Duke of Crydee. And with Erland dead, you will also be
heir to the throne by right of birth.”
Brucal sat heavily upon a stool near the map table. “This is a heavy
burden thrust upon you, Lyam, but others in the West will look to you for
leadership as they once looked to your father. If there was ever any love
between the two realms, it is now strained to the breaking point, with Guy upon
the throne in Krondor. It is now clear for all to see, Bas-Tyra means to be
King, for a mad Rodric cannot be allowed his throne much longer.” He fixed Lyam
with a steady gaze. “You will soon have to decide what we in the West shall do.
Upon your word, we have civil war.”
29
DECISION
The Holy City was festive.
Banners flew from every tall building People lined the streets,
throwing flowers before the nobles who were carried on their litters to the
stadium. It was a day of high celebration, and who could feel troubled on such
a day?
One who did feel troubled arrived in the pattern room of the
stadium, the final reverberations of a chime signaling the appearance of a
Great One of Tsuranuanni Milamber shrugged off his preoccupation for a moment
as he left the pattern room, near the central gallery of the Grand Imperial
Stadium. The crowd of Tsurani nobles, idling away the time before the games
began, parted to allow Milamber to pass through the archway leading to the magicians’
seats. Glancing around the small sea of black robes, he noticed Shimone and
Hochopepa, who were keeping a place for him.
They signaled greetings as he left the aisle between the magicians’
section and the Imperial Party’s and joined them. Below, on the arena floor,
some of the dwarf-like folk from Tsubar—the so-called Lost Land across the Sea
of Blood—were fighting large insect creatures, like cho-ja but without
intelligence. Soft wooden swords and essentially harmless bites from mandibles
provided a conflict more comic than dangerous. The commoners and lesser nobles
already in their seats laughed in appreciation. These contests kept them amused
while the great and near-great were waiting to enter the stadium. Tardiness in
Tsuranuanm became a virtue when one reached a certain social level.
Shimone said, “It is a shame you took so long getting here,
Milamber. There was a singularly fine match a short while ago.”
“I was under the impression the killing wasn’t to begin just yet.”
Hochopepa, munching nuts cooked in sweet oils, said, “True, but our
friend Shimone is something of an aficionado of the games.”
Shimone said, “Earlier young officers of noble family fought with
training weapons to first blood, to better display their skills and win honors
for their clans—”
“Not to mention the fruits of some rather heavy wagering,”
interjected Hochopepa.
Ignoring the remark, Shimone continued. “There was a spirited match
between sons of the Oronalmar and the Keda. I’ve not seen a better display in
years.”
While Shimone described the match, Milamber let his gaze wander. He
could see the small standards of the Keda, Minwanabi, Oaxatucan, Xacatecas,
Anasati, and other great families of the Empire. He noticed that the banner of
the Shinzawai was absent, and wondered at it Hochopepa said, “You seem much
preoccupied, Milamber.”
Milamber nodded agreement “Before leaving for today’s festival, I
received word that a motion to reform land taxes and abolish debt slavery had
been introduced in the High Council yesterday. The message came from the Lord
of the Tuclamekla, and I couldn’t for the life of me understand why he sent it
until, near the end, he thanked me for providing the concepts of social reform
the motion was intended to enact. I was appalled at such an action.”
Shimone laughed “Had you been so thick-witted a student, you’d still
be wearing the white robe.”
Milamber looked back blankly, and Hochopepa said, “You go about
causing all sorts of rumblings with your speeches before the Assembly, constantly
harping on all manner of social ills, and then sit dumbfounded because someone
out there listened?”
“What I said to our brother magicians was not intended for
discussion outside the Assembly halls.”
“How unreasonable,” said Hochopepa. “Someone in the Assembly spoke
to a friend who wasn’t a magician!”
“What I’d like to know,” said Shimone, “is how this potful of
reforms placed before the High Council by the Hunzan Clan has your name
appended to it?”
Milamber looked uncomfortable, to the delight of his friends. “One
of the young artists who worked on the murals at my estate is a son of the
Tuclamekla. We did discuss differences between Tsurani and Kingdom cultures and
social values, but only as an outgrowth of our discussions of the differences
in styles of art.”
Hochopepa looked skyward, as if seeking divine guidance. “When I
heard the Party for Progress—which is dominated by the Hunzan Clan, which is
dominated by the Tuclamekla Family—cited you as inspiration, I could scarcely
believe my hearing, but now I can see your hand is in every problem plaguing
the Empire.” He looked at his friend with a mock-serious expression. “Tell me,
is it true the Party for Progress is going to change its name to the Party of
Milamber?”
Shimone laughed while Milamber fixed Hochopepa with a baleful look.
“Katala thinks it amusing when I get upset by this sort of thing, Hocho. And
you might think it funny as well, but I want it publicly known I did not intend
for this to happen. I simply offered some observations and opinions, and what
the Hunzan Clan and the Party for Progress does with them is not my doing.”
Hochopepa said in chiding tones, “I fear that if so famous a
personage as yourself wishes not to have such things occur, then such a
personage should have his mouth sewn shut.”
Shimone laughed, and Milamber felt his own mirth rise. “Very well,
Hocho,” answered Milamber. “I will take the blame. Still, I don’t know if the
Empire is yet ready for the changes I think needed.”
Shimone said, “We have heard your arguments before, Milamber, but
today is not the time, nor is this the place for social debate. Let us attend
to the matters at hand Remember, many of the Assembly are offended by your
concerns over matters they judge political. And while I tend to support your
notions as refreshing and progressive, keep in mind you are making enemies.”
Trumpets and drums sounded, signaling the approach of the Imperial
Party and cutting off further conversation. The Tsubar folk and the insectoids
were chased from the arena, handlers herding them away. When the field was
cleared, grounds keepers hurried out with rakes and drags to smooth the sand.
The sound of the trumpets could be heard again, and the first members of the
imperial procession, heralds in the imperial white, entered. They carried long,
curved trumpets, fashioned from the horns of some large beast, which curled
around their shoulders to end above their heads. They were followed by drummers
who beat a steady tattoo.
When they were in position in the front of the imperial box, the
Warlord’s honor guard entered. Each wore armor and helm finished in needra hide
bleached free of all color. Around the breastplate and helm of each, precious
gold trim gleamed in the sun Milamber heard Hochopepa mutter at the waste of
this rare metal.
When they were stationed, a senior herald shouted, “Almecho,
Warlord!” and the crowd rose, cheering. He was accompanied by his retinue
including several in black robes—the Warlord’s pet magicians, as the others of
the Assembly referred to them. Chief among these were the two brothers, Elgahar
and Ergoran.
Then the herald cried, “Ichindar! Ninety-one times Emperor!” The
crowd roared its approval as the young Light of Heaven made his entrance. He
was attended by priests of each of the twenty orders. The crowd stood
thundering. On and on it went, and Milamber wondered if the love of the Tsurani
people would sustain the Light of Heaven should a confrontation between Warlord
and Emperor take place. In spite of the Tsurani reverence for tradition, he did
not think the Warlord a man to step down meekly from his office—a thing unheard
of in history— should the Emperor so order.
As the noise died down, Shimone said, “It seems, friend Milamber,
that the contemplative life doesn’t suit the Light of Heaven. Can’t say that I
blame him, sitting around all day with no one for company but a lot a priests
and silly girls chosen for their beauty instead of conversational ability. Must
become frightfully boring.”
Milamber laughed. “I doubt most men would agree.”
Shimone shrugged. “I constantly forget you were quite old when you
were trained, and you have a wife also.”
At mention of wives, Hochopepa looked pained. He interrupted. “The
Warlord is going to make an announcement.”
Almecho rose and held his hands aloft for silence. When the stadium
fell quiet, his voice rang out. “The gods smile upon Tsuranuanni! I bring news
of a great victory over the otherworld barbarians! We have crushed their
greatest army, and our warriors celebrate! Soon all the lands called the
Kingdom will be laid at the Light of Heaven’s feet.” He turned and bowed
deferentially to the Emperor.
Milamber felt a stab at the news. Without being aware, he began to
stand, only to have Hochopepa grip his arm and hiss, “You are Tsurani!”
Milamber shook himself free of the unexpected shock and composed
himself “Thank you, Hocho. I nearly forgot myself.”
“Hush!” said Hochopepa.
They returned their attention to the Warlord. “. . . and as a sign
of our devotion to the Light of Heaven, we dedicate these games to his honor.”
A cheer rang through the arena, and the Warlord sat down.
Milamber spoke quietly to his friends. “It seems the Emperor is less
than ecstatic at the news.” Hochopepa and Shimone turned to watch the Emperor,
who was sitting with a stoic expression upon his face.
Hochopepa said, “He hides it well, but I think you are right,
Milamber Something in all this disturbs him.”
Milamber said nothing, knowing well enough the cause, this victory
would blunt the Blue Wheel peace initiative, and would gain the Warlord more
power at the Emperor’s expense.
Shimone tapped Milamber upon the shoulder “The games begin.”
As the doors on the arena floor opened to admit the combatants,
Milamber studied the Emperor. He was young, in his early twenties, and
possessed a look of intelligence. His brow was high, and his reddish-brown hair
was allowed to grow to his shoulders. He turned in Milamber’s direction, to
speak with a priest at his side, and Milamber could see his clear green eyes
glint in the sun. Their eyes made contact for a moment, and there was a brief
flicker of recognition, and Milamber thought: So you have been told of my part
in your plan. The Emperor continued his conversation, without missing a beat,
and no one else saw the exchange.
Hochopepa said, “This is a clemency spectacle. They will all fight
until only one stands. He will be pardoned for his crimes.”
“What are their crimes?” Milamber asked.
Shimone answered. “The usual Petty theft, begging without temple
authority, bearing false witness, avoiding taxes, disobeying lawful orders, and
the like.”
“What about capital crimes?”
“Murder, treason, blasphemy, striking one’s master, all are
unpardonable crimes.” His voice rose to carry over the crowd noises. “They are
put in with war prisoners who will not serve as slaves. They are sentenced to
fight over and over until they are killed.”
A guard of soldiers left the floor, abandoning the sand to the
prisoners. Hochopepa said, “Common criminals. There will be little sport.”
There seemed to be accuracy in the remark, for the prisoners were a
sad-looking lot. Naked but for loincloths, they stood with weapons and shields
that were foreign to them. Many were old and sick, seemingly lost and confused,
holding their axes, swords, and spears loosely at their sides.
The trumpet sounded the start of combat, and the old and sick ones
were quickly killed. Several had never even raised their weapons in defense,
being too confused to try to stay alive. Within minutes nearly half the
prisoners lay dead or dying on the sand. Shortly the action slackened, as
combatants came to face opponents of more equal skill and cunning. Slowly the
numbers diminished, and the free-flowing notous nature of the contest changed.
Occasionally when an opponent fell, a combatant was left standing next to
another fighting pair. Often this resulted in three-way combat, which the mob
approved with loud cheering, as the awkward combat would result in an excess of
bloodshed and pain.
At the end three fighters remained. Two of them had not managed to
resolve their conflict. Both were on the verge of exhaustion. The third man
approached cautiously, keeping equal distance between himself and both men,
looking for an advantage.
He had it a few seconds later. Using knife and sword, he jumped
forward and dealt one of the combatants a blow to the side of the head that
felled him. Shimone said, “The idiot! Couldn’t he see the other man is the
stronger fighter? He should have waited until one man was clearly at an
advantage, then struck at him, leaving the weaker opponent to fight.”
Milamber felt shaky. Shimone, his former teacher, was his closest
friend after Hochopepa. Yet for all his education, all his wisdom, he was
howling after the blood of others as if he were the most ignorant commoner in
the least expensive seat. No matter how he tried, Milamber could not master the
Tsurani enthusiasm .for the death of others. He turned to Shimone and said,
“I’m sure he was a little too busy to trouble himself over the finer points of
tactics.” His sarcasm was lost on Shimone, closely watching the combat.
Milamber noticed Hochopepa was ignoring the contest. The wily
magician was taking note of every conversation in the stands: to him the games
were only another opportunity to study the subtle aspects of the Game of the
Council. Milamber found this blindness to the death and suffering below as
disturbing as Shimone’s enthusiasm.
The fight was quickly over, the man with the knife winning. The
crowd greeted the victory with enthusiasm. Coins were thrown on the sand, so
that the victor would return to society with a small amount of capital.
While the arena was being cleared, Shimone called over a herald and
inquired about the balance of the day’s activities. He turned to the others,
obviously pleased at the news. “There are only a few matched pairs, then two
special matches, a team of prisoners against a starving harulth, and a match
between some soldiers from Midkemia and captured Thuril warriors. That should
prove most interesting.”
Milamber’s expression indicated that he didn’t agree. Judging the
time right for the question, he said, “Hocho, have you noticed any of the
Shinzawai Family in attendance?”
He glanced around the stadium, looking for the family banners of the
more prominent houses of the Empire. “Minwanabi, Anasati, Keda, Tonmargu,
Xacatecas, Acoma . . . No, Milamber. I can’t say if any of your former, ah,
benefactors are to be seen about. Not that I would expect them to be.”
“Why?”
“They find themselves in the Warlord’s bad graces of late. Something
to do with failing some task or another he gave them. And I have heard that
they are considered suspect, despite their clan’s suddenly rejoining the war
effort. The Kanazawai Clan is lost in its past glories, and the Shinzawai are
the most old-fashioned of the lot.”
Through the afternoon the matches wore on, each more artful than the
previous as the skill level of the opponents increased Soon the last pairs were
done. Now the crowd waited in hushed anticipation, even the nobles quieted, for
the next event was unusual. A team of twenty fighters, Midkemian from their
size, marched out into the center of the arena. They carried ropes, weighted
nets, spears, and long curved knives. They wore only loincloths, their bodies
oiled and gleaming in the late afternoon light. They stood around looking
relaxed, but the soldiers in the crowd recognized the subtle signs of tension
common to fighters before a battle. After a minute the large double doors at
the opposite end of the stadium opened, and a six-legged horror came shambling
into the arena.
The harulth was all long teeth and sharp claws, complete with a
belligerent attitude and a hidelike armor, and close to the size of a Midkemian
elephant. It hesitated only long enough to blink at the light, then charged
straight at the party of men before it.
They scattered before the creature, seeking to confuse it. The
harulth, through simple- or single-mindedness, pursued one hapless fellow. In
three enormous strides he ground the man underfoot, then gobbled him down in
two bites. The others regrouped behind the animal and quickly deployed the
nets. The hexapod spun about, faster than looked possible for a creature of such
bulk, and charged again. This time the men waited until the last moment, tossed
the nets, then dived away. The nets were edged with hooks to catch in the thick
hide of the beast. It stepped into them and soon was busily tearing apart the
mesh. While it was momentarily occupied, the spearmen ran in to strike. The
harulth reacted in confusion, not being sure from which quarter its torment
originated. The spears were proving ineffectual, for they could not penetrate
the hide of the beast. Quickly realizing the futility of this approach, one
fighter grabbed another and pointed to the rear of the creature. They dashed
back toward the tail, which was sweeping back and forth along the ground with
the force of a battering ram.
They conferred momentarily, then dropped their spears as the
creature decided upon a target. It lashed forward and had another man in its
maw. For a moment it was still as it swallowed its prey. The two men at the
rear ran forward, leaping high up onto the tail of the animal. It seemed not to
notice for a moment, then reacted by swinging around violently, throwing the
second man off. Having come completely about, it stopped to devour the stunned
man. The other somehow contrived to hang on and employed the few moments the
harulth used to eat his comrade to pull himself higher on the creature’s tail,
where it joined the animal’s haunches. With an overhand stroke he plunged his
long-bladed knife between two vertebrae where they were outlined by
loose-hanging skin. It was a desperate gamble, and the stadium crowd screamed
approval. The knife penetrated the tough cartilage between the bone segments
and pierced the spinal column. The creature bellowed with rage and started to
spin, threatening to toss the unwelcome rider, but in a moment the rearmost
pair of legs collapsed. The harulth stood baffled for a moment, its two forward
pairs of legs pulling against the dead weight of its hind quarters. Twice it
tried vainly to snap at its small tormentor, but its thick neck was
insufficient for the task. The man pulled the blade loose and crawled forward
along the spine while the surviving spearmen darted in and out, distracting the
creature. Three times he was nearly tossed off the animal’s back, but somehow
he managed to retain his position. When he found himself slightly forward of
the middle pair of legs, he drove his blade between vertebrae. The central legs
collapsed an instant later, and the man was thrown clear of the animal’s back.
The harulth screamed its rage and pain, but was effectively immobilized. The
fighters backed away and waited. Two spinal cuts proved to be enough, for
minutes later the harulth fell over in shock, thrashed its forelegs for a time,
and lay still.
The crowd shouted its enthusiastic approval of the contest, for
never had a group of fighters bested a harulth without losing at least five
times as many men. In this contest only three had died. The fighters stood
around, exhaustion causing weapons to fall from limp fingers. The battle had
lasted less than ten minutes, but the expenditure in energy, concentration,
sweat, and fear had worn each man to near-prostration. Numbly oblivious to the
crowds cheering, they stumbled toward the exit. Only the man who had actually
driven in the knife showed any expression, and he was openly weeping as he
moved across the sand.
“Why do you think that man is so distraught?” asked Shimone. “It was
a grand triumph.”
Milamber said in a voice forced to calmness, “Because he is
exhausted and afraid, and sick from it.” He then added softly, “And he is very
far from home.” He swallowed hard, struggling against outrage, then said, “He
knows it is for nothing. Again and again he will march into this arena, to
fight other creatures, other men, even friends from his homeland, and sooner or
later he will die.” Hochopepa stared at Milamber, and Shimone looked confused.
“But for chance, I might have been with those below,” added Milamber. “Those
who fought are men. They had families and homes, they loved and laughed. Now
they wait to die.”
Hochopepa waved a hand absently. “Milamber, you have a disturbing
habit of taking things personally.”
Milamber felt sickened and angered by the bloody spectacle, but
forced those emotions down within himself. He was determined to stay. He would
be Tsurani.
The sand was cleared and trumpets blew again, signaling the final
match of the afternoon. A dozen proud-looking warriors dressed in leather
battle harnesses, wristbands set with studs, and headdresses plumed in many
colors came striding out of one end of the arena. Milamber had never seen their
like in person, but recognized their dress from his vision on the tower. These
were the descendants of the proud Serpent Riders, the Thuril Each wore a
hard-eyed expression of grim determination.
From the other end, twelve warriors in color-splashed imitations of
Midkemian armor marched out. Their own metal armor had been deemed both too
valuable and too dull for the contest, and Tsurani artisans had provided
stylized imitations.
The Thuril stood watching the newcomers with implacable contempt. Of
all the races of humanity, only the Thuril had been able to withstand the
Empire. The Thuril were uncontestedly the finest mountain fighters in Kelewan,
and their mountain holds and high farm pastures were impossible to conquer.
They had held the Empire at bay for years until peace had been declared. They
were a tall people, the result of their lack of interbreeding with the shorter
races of Kelewan, whom they considered inferior.
The trumpets blew again, and a hush fell over the crowd. A herald
shouted in a clear voice, “As these soldiers of the Thuril Confederacy have
violated the treaty between their own nations and the Empire, by making war
upon the soldiers of the Emperor, they have been cast out by their own people,
who have named them outlaws and bound them over for punishment. They will fight
the captives from the world of Midkemia. All will strive until one is left
standing.” The crowd cheered.
The trumpet sounded, and the fighters squared off. The Midkemians
crouched, weapons at the ready, but the Thuril stood tall, defiant looks upon
their faces. One of the Thuril strode forward, halting before the nearest
Midkemian. With contemptuous tones he spoke rapidly and made a sweeping motion
around the arena.
Milamber felt a hot flush of anger begin to grow inside, coupled
with shame at what he was seeing. There were games in Midkemia—he had heard of
them—but they were nothing like this. The men who fought in Krondor and other
places throughout the Kingdom were professionals who made a living by fighting
to first blood. Occasionally a duel to the death would be fought, but it was
always a personal matter, after all other means of settling the dispute had
been exhausted. This was a mindless waste of human life for the titillation of
the bored and idle, the satiated in search of more and more vivid reminders
that their own lives were worth something. Milamber looked around and felt
disgust at the expressions on the faces of those nearby.
The Thuril warrior continued his ranting, while the Midkemian
watched, with something in their manner suggesting a shift of mood. Before,
they were tensed, battle-ready, now they seemed almost relaxed. The Thuril
continued pointing up at the assembled throng.
Then a Midkemian, tall and broad-shouldered, stepped forward as if
to speak. The Thuril came on guard, his sword high, ready to strike. A voice
rang out from behind, as another warrior said something that carried a note of
reassurance. The first Thuril visibly relaxed.
The Midkemian slowly removed his helm, revealing a tired, haggard
face, framed by damp, stringy black hair. He looked about the arena while the
crowd began to whisper and grumble at the unexpected behavior of the warriors,
and then gave a curt nod. He dropped his sword and shield and said something to
his companions. Quickly the other fighters in the arena followed suit, and soon
all weapons were lying upon the ground.
Milamber wondered at this strange behavior, and Shimone said, “This
will end a shambles. The Thuril will not fight their own kind, and it seems
they won’t fight the barbarians either. I once saw six Thuril kill everyone
sent against them, then refuse to fight one another. When the guards came to
kill them, they fought, driving them back. Finally bowmen on the wall had to
shoot them down It was a disgrace. The crowd rioted, and the games director was
torn to bits. Over a hundred citizens died.”
Milamber felt relief: at least he would be spared the spectacle of
Katala’s people and his own killing one another. Then the crowd began to shout
their disapproval, jeering the reluctant combatants.
Hochopepa nudged Milamber and said, “The Warlord appears less than
amused by this.”
Milamber saw the Warlord’s livid expression as he watched his
presentation to the Emperor turned into a farce. Almecho slowly rose from his
place near the Light of Heaven and bellowed, “Let the fighting begin!”
Burly handlers, guards who worked on behalf of the games director,
ran into the arena, wielding whips. They circled the motionless fighters and
began lashing out at them Milamber felt his gorge rise as the handlers laid
about, tearing the exposed skin from the arms and legs of the Thuril and
Midkemian soldiers. No stranger to the whip when in the swamp, he knew its
terrible touch. He felt each stroke as it fell upon those on the sand below.
The crowd began to grow restive, for watching motionless men being
whipped was not what they had come to see. Jeers and catcalls rang down upon
those in the imperial box, and a few bolder souls threw litter and small coins
into the arena, showing what they thought of such sport. Finally one of the
handlers grew impatient, stepped up to a Thuril warrior, and struck him across
the face with a whip handle. Before the handler could react, the Thuril sprang
forward and tore the whip from the startled man’s hands. In an instant he had
it firmly wrapped about the man’s throat, choking him.
The other handlers turned their attention to the warrior attacking
their companion and began to flail wildly at him. After a dozen or so blows the
Thuril began to wobble, and fell to his knees. But he held tightly to the whip,
strangling the gasping handler. Again and again blows rained down upon the
Thunl, until all his armor ran red with blood from the lashing. Still he held on
to his victim.
When the handler died, eyes protruding from a blue face, whatever
strength left to the Thuril seemed to die as well. As the handler’s limp body
came to rest on the sand, the Thuril warrior fell beside him.
It was a Midkemian soldier who reacted first. With cold detachment
he simply picked up a sword and ran one of the handlers through. Then, as one,
the Thuril and Midkemian soldiers had weapons in hand, and within a minute all
the handlers were dead. Then, again as one, the prisoners threw their weapons
to the ground.
Milamber battled to stay calm in the face of such display. He felt
nothing but admiration for those men. They accepted death rather than slay one
another. Possibly some of those men had ridden through the valley with him on
the raid to discover the rift machine so many years before. Outwardly he
appeared calm, a Tsurani, but inwardly he seethed.
Hochopepa whispered, “I have a bad feeling here. Whatever gain
Almecho sought from this day to bolster his position with the Emperor is badly
shaken. I fear he is not taking well your former countrymen’s reluctance to die
for the entertainment of the Light of Heaven.”
Milamber nearly spit when he said, “Damn such entertainment.” He
looked at Hochopepa with a burning expression, one never seen by the fat
magician before. Milamber half stood as he added, “And damn all those who find
pleasure in such bloody sport.”
Hochopepa seized him by the arm and tried to pull him firmly into
his seat, saying, “Milamber, remember yourself!”
Milamber pulled himself free, ignoring the command.
Milamber and his companions looked to the imperial box, where a
guard captain conferred with the Warlord. Milamber felt a strange hot flush
inside and for a moment battled a sudden impulse to use his powers to put the
Warlord amid those below, to see how he fared against those who refused to die
gracefully at his command.
Then Almecho’s voice rang out, silencing all those nearby. “No, no
bowmen. Those animals will not die a warrior’s death.” He turned to one of his
pet magicians and issued instructions. The black-robed man nodded and began to
incant. Milamber felt his neck hairs rise as the presence of magic made itself
known.
A hushed sound of awe swept about the stadium as those on the sand
below fell senseless, to roll about in a daze.
The
Warlord shouted, “Now go bind them, build a platform, and hang them for all to
see.”
Stunned
silence greeted his words, then shouts of “No!” — “They are warriors!” — and —
“This is without honor!” rang throughout the crowd.
Hochopepa
closed his eyes and sighed audibly. He spoke to himself much as his companions
“The Warlord lets his famous temper get the best of him once more, and now we
have a debacle before us. This will not help his position in the High Council
or the stability of the Empire.” Like an enraged beast at bay, the Warlord
turned, and all nearby fell silent, but those at greater distances picked up
the cries. By Tsurani standards this was too much of an indignity to be visited
on any save those without honor. While balking the mob’s sport, the prisoners
had shown they were still fighting men, and as such deserved an honorable
death.
Hochopepa turned to speak to Milamber, then stopped himself as he
saw the expression on his friend’s face. Milamber’s anger was now fully
revealed, his rage a match for the Warlord’s. Sensing something terrible was
about to occur, Hochopepa sought Shimone’s attention, only to find he was also
silently watching Milamber’s fearsome countenance. All Hochopepa could manage
to say was a quiet “Milarnber, no!” Then the slave-become-magician was moving.
He swept past the shocked Hochopepa, saying only, “See to the
Emperor’s safety.” Milamber was reeling with the impact of sudden emotion
bottled up for years, now surging free. A strange and powerful certainty struck
him. I am not Tsurani! he acknowledged to himself. I could not be a party to
this. For the first time since donning the black robe, his two natures were in
harmony. This was a dishonor by the standards of both cultures, something that
filled him with a dread purpose free of any doubt.
Save those near the imperial box, the entire crowd was chanting,
“The sword, the sword, the sword,” demanding a warrior’s death for each man
below. The rhythm became a pounding pulse beat for Milambcr, heightening’his
nearly unchecked fury.
Reaching a point between the magicians and the imperial box,
Milamber regarded the soldiers and carpenters rushing onto the arena floor. The
stunned Midkemians and Thuril were being bound like animals for slaughter, and
the crowd’s anger was reaching a dangerous level. Some of the younger officers
of noble families in the lower levels of the stadium seemed ready to take
swords and jump onto the sand, to contest personally for the prisoners’ right
to die as warriors. These had been valiant foemen, and many of those watching
had fought against both Thuril and Kingdom soldiers. They would willingly kill
these men on the field of battle, but would not watch this humiliation visited
on brave enemies.
A black flood of anger, loathing, and sorrow poured through
Milamber. His mind screamed in outrage, despite his attempts to control it. His
head tilted back, and his eyes rolled up into his head, and as had happened
twice before in his life, letters of fire appeared in his mind’s eye. But never
before had he had the strength to seize the moment, and with a nearly animal
joy he dived into the newly opening well of power within. His right arm shot
forward, and energy exploded from his hand. A bolt of blue flame, scintillating
even in the sunlight, hurled downward, to strike the sand amid the Warlord’s
guards. Living men were swept in all directions, like leaves before the wind.
Those just entering with the materials for the scaffolding were knocked to
their knees by the blast, and those in the lower seats were stunned by its
fury. All noise in the arena stopped as the crowd fell into mute shock.
All eyes turned to the source of that bolt, while those near him
reflexively drew back. He was red-faced with anger, and the whites of his eyes
showed around dark irises as he scanned the arena. With a short chopping motion
of one hand, the magician said, “No more!”
No one moved save Hochopepa and Shimone. They had no idea what
Milamber’s intentions were, but in the face of this act they took his command
seriously. They hurried to where a half-stunned, half-fascinated young Emperor
sat watching with everyone else in the stadium. They quickly conferred with
Ichindar, and a moment later the Emperor’s seat was empty.
Milamber looked to his left as a bellow of outrage sounded. “Who
dares this!”
Milamber was confronted by the sight of the Warlord, standing like
an enraged demigod in his white armor. The Warlord’s expression matched
Milamber’s.
“I dare this!” Milamber shouted back. “This cannot be; will not be!
No more will men die for the sport of others!”
Barely holding himself in check, Almecho, Warlord of the Nations of
Tsuranuanni, screamed, “By what right do you do this thing!” The cords on his
neck stood out clearly, and every muscle of his body quivered as sweat beaded
his brow.
Milamber’s voice lowered, and his words came carefully measured with
controlled, defiant rage. “By my right to do as I see fit.” He then spoke to a
nearby guard. “Those on the arena floor are to be released. They are free!”
The guard hesitated for a moment, then his Tsurani training came to
the fore. “Your will, Great One.”
The Warlord shouted, “You will stay!”
The crowd hissed with intaken breath. In the history of the Empire
such a confrontation between Great One and Warlord had never occurred. The
guard stopped, and Milamber spoke through a snarl. “My words are as law. Go!”
Suddenly the guard was moving, and the Warlord screamed his rage.
“You break the law! No one may free a slave!”
His anger boiling back up again, Milamber shouted back, “I can! I am
outside the law!”
The Warlord fell back, as if struck an invisible blow. In his life
no one had dared to thwart his will in this manner. No Warlord in history had
ever been forced to endure such public shame. He was dazed.
Near the Warlord another magician leaped to his feet. “I call you
traitor and false Great One. You seek to undermine the Warlord’s rule and bring
chaos to the order of the Empire. You will recant this effrontery!”
Instantly there was frantic activity as all within earshot scrambled
to get clear of the two magicians. Milamber regarded the Warlord’s pet. “Do you
think to match your powers against mine?”
The Warlord looked at Milamber with naked hatred on his face. He never
took his eyes from the young magician’s face as he said to his pet, “Destroy
him!”
Milamber’s arms shot upward, crossing at the wrists Instantly a soft
golden nimbus of light surrounded him. The other magician hurled a bolt of
energy, and the blue ball of fire struck harmlessly against the gold shield.
Milamber tensed, suffused with anger. Twice before in his life, when
attacked by the trolls and when fighting with Roland, he had reached into
hidden reservoirs of power and drawn upon them. Now he tore aside the last
barriers between his conscious mind and those hidden reserves. They were no
longer a mystery to him but the wellspring from which all his power stemmed.
For the first time in his experience, Milamber came to understand fully what he
was, who he was: not a Black Robe, limited by the ancient teachings of one
world, but an adept of the Greater Art, a master in full possession of all the
energy provided by two worlds.
The Warlord’s magician regarded him in fear. Here was more than a
curiosity, a barbarian magician. Here stood a figure to awe, arms stretched
upward, body trembling with rage, eyes seemingly aglow with strength.
Milamber clapped his hands above his head, and thunder pealed,
rocking those around him. Energy exploded upward from his hands, held high
above his head. A vortex of coruscating forces spun above him, rising like a
bowshot. The fountain continued until it was high overhead. It began to
flatten, covering the stadium like a great canopy. The dazzling display
continued briefly, then the skies seemed to explode, blinding many who were
looking upward. The sky turned dark, and the sun faded as if grey veils were
slowly being drawn before it.
Milamber’s voice carried to the farthest corner of the stadium as he
said, “That you have lived as you have lived for centuries is no license for
this cruelty. All here are now judged, and all are found wanting.”
More magicians departed, disappearing from their seats, but many yet
remained. More judicious commoners fled by nearby exits, but still many waited,
thinking this but another contest for their amusement. Many were too drunk or
excited by the spectacle for the magician’s warning to reach them.
Milamber’s arm swept an arc around him. “You who would take pleasure
from the death and dishonor of others, see then how well you face destruction!”
A gasp from the crowd answered his pronouncement.
Milamber raised one hand high overhead, and all became silent. Even
the light summer breeze ceased. Then with a terrible strength, he spoke. They
paled at his words, for it was as if death had become incarnate and had spoken.
Echoing throughout the stadium were the words of Milamber: “Tremble and
despair, for I am Power!”
A shrill keening sound began, with Milamber at its source. The very
air shuddered as mighty magic was forged “Wind!” Milamber cried.
A bitter breeze reeking of carrion, foul and loathsome in its touch,
blew through the stadium. A low moan of sorrow and fear was carried away by the
wind. It blew stronger and, each moment it grew, carried more menace, more
despair. It turned colder, until it was stinging to those who had rarely known
cold. Men wept at its biting caress, and high above the stadium, clouds formed
in the murk.
The winds howled, drowning out the cries of the multitude in the
arena. Nobles tried to flee, now too terrified to do anything but claw past
their own families, trampling the old and slow underfoot. Many were buffeted to
their knees, or knocked from the seats to the sands of the arena floor.
Great thunderheads, black and grey, raced overhead, seeming to swirl
around a point directly over Milamber’s head. The magician was engulfed in an
eerie light, pulsating with energy. He stood at the center of the storm, a
terrible figure in the dark. The wind shrieked its fury, but Milamber’s voice
cut through the sound like a knife.
“Rain!”
A cold rain fell, blown hard before the gale. Quickly it grew in
tempo, becoming a pounding torrent, then a deluge. The cascade pelted those
below, painfully driving them down, beating them senseless with a frightening
strength clearly unnatural. A few managed to flee to the tunnels, while others
clutched at one another in terror.
Other magicians tried to counter the spells but could not, and
fainted from the exertion. Never had there been such a display of raw power.
Here was a true master of magic, one who could control the very elements, come
into his own. The magician who had challenged Milamber lay back across his
seat, stunned, his eyes blinking as he struggled to sort some semblance of
order out of the chaos around. The Warlord tried to withstand the storm,
struggling to remain upright and refusing to submit to the terror of those
around him.
Milamber dropped his arm, then raised one hand before him,
stretching outward. “Fire!” he shouted, and again all could hear him.
The clouds seemed to burn. The heavens erupted as sheets of terrible
colors, flames of every hue, ran not through the darkness. Jagged bolts of
lightning flashed across the sky, as if the gods were announcing the final
judgment of mankind. People screamed in primitive terror at the element gone
mad.
Then the rain of fire began. Drops struck arms and clothing, faces
and cloaks, and began to burn. Shrieks of pain came from all sides, and people
tried vainly to swat out the fires that burned their flesh. More magicians
disappeared from the arena, taking their unconscious comrades. Milamber stood
alone in the magicians’ section. The stink of burned flesh filled the air,
mixed with the acrid odor of fear.
Milamber crossed his arms before him. He turned his gaze downward.
“Earth!”
From below a deep rumbling commenced. The ground under the stadium
began to tremble slightly. The vibrations grew in intensity, and the air was
filled with an angry buzzing, as if a swarm of giant insects had surrounded the
arena. Then a low rumbling added its harmony to the buzzing, and the ground
began to move.
The vibrations became a shaking, then a violent rolling, surging,
motion. Milamber stood calmly, as if on an island. It was as if the soil, the
earth, had become fluid. People were thrown down onto the arena floor. The huge
stadium throbbed from forces primeval. Statues tumbled from their pedestals,
and the huge gates were ripped from their hinges, in a crackling splintering of
ancient wood. They moved from before the tunnels in a staggering, drunken walk,
then fell to the sand, crushing those who lay before them. Many of the beasts
below the arena were driven mad by the earthquake and thrashed in their cages,
smashing locks and opening doors. They fled the tunnels and raced over the
fallen gates; they bellowed, howled, and roared at the fire rain Enraged by
terror, they fell upon the stunned spectators lying on the sand, killing at
random. A man would sit dazed, absently slapping at the burning drops from the
skies, while another a few feet away was being gutted by some horror from the
distant forests.
Now the arena itself began to wail as the ancient stones moved,
slipping across one another. Mortar a millennium old turned to dust in an
instant as the very stadium crumbled. Cries for mercy were swept away by the
winds or drowned in the cacophony of destruction. The fury mounted, and the
world seemed ready to be torn asunder. Milamber raised his hands above his head
again. He brought his palms together, and the mightiest thunder peal of all
sounded. Then, abruptly, the chaos ceased.
Above, the sky was clear and sunny, a light breeze once more blowing
from the east. The ground stood as it should, motionless and solid, and the
rain of fire was a memory.
The silence that followed was deafening. Then the groans of the
injured and the sobs of the terrified could be heard. The Warlord remained
standing, his face drained of all color, small burns scarring his features and
arms. In place of the mighty leader of the Empire stood a man bereft of any
emotion save terror. His eyes were wide enough to show whites His mouth moved,
as if he were trying to speak, but no words were forthcoming.
Milamber raised his hands overhead again, and the Warlord fell back
with a sob of fear. The magician clapped his hands and was gone.
The afternoon breeze carried the scent of summer flowers. In the
garden Katala was playing a word game with William, she had insisted they
should both learn the language of her husband’s homeland.
It was almost evening, for they were farther east than the Holy
City. The sun was low in the west, and the shadows in the garden were long.
Without the chime announcing Milamber’s arrival, Katala was startled when her
husband appeared in the doorway of their home. She rose slowly from her seat,
for she sensed at once something was wrong. “Husband, what is it?”
William ran up to his father, while Milamber said, “I will tell you
everything later. We must take William and flee.”
William tugged on his father’s black robe. “Papa!” he cried,
demanding attention. Milamber picked up his son and hugged him tightly, then
said, “William, we are going on a journey to my homeland. You must be a brave
boy and not cry.”
William stuck out his lower lip, for if his father was asking him
not to cry, then there must be a very good reason to do so, but he nodded and
held back the tears.
“Netoha! Almorella!” Milamber called, and in a moment the two
servants entered the garden. Netoha bowed, but Almorella rushed to Katala’s
side Katala had insisted she accompany them to Milamber’s new home when he
brought his family from the Shinzawai estate. She was more sister to Katala and
aunt to William than a slave. She could see at once that something was wrong,
and tears came unbidden to her eyes.
“You’re leaving,” she said, a statement more than a question.
Netoha looked at his master “Your will, Great One?”
Milamber said, “We are leaving. We must. I am sorry.” Netoha took
the news stoically, in the proper Tsurani fashion, but Almorella embraced
Katala, openly weeping.
Milamber said, “I wish to ensure that you are both provided for. I
have prepared documents against this day. When we have gone, you will find all
my work cataloged in my study. Above my study table, on the top shelf, you will
find a parchment with a black seal upon it. I am giving the estate to you,
Netoha.” He said to Almorella, “I know you two care for each other. The
document giving Netoha the estate also contains a provision granting you your
freedom, Almorella. He will make you a good husband. Even the Emperor cannot
set aside a document bearing a Great One’s seal, so do not worry.”
Almorella’s expression was a mixture of complete disbelief,
happiness, and sorrow. She nodded slowly that she understood, thanks clearly
showing in her eyes.
Milamber returned his attention to Netoha. “I am deeding the lower
pasture land to Xanothis the herdsman. Provide well for the others of this
household, Netoha.
“Now, in my study you will also find several parchments sealed with
red wax. These must be burned at once. Whatever you do, do not break the seals
before you burn them. All other works are to be sent to Hochopepa of the
Assembly, with my deepest affection and the wish that he find them useful. He
will know what to do with them.”
Almorella again embraced Katala, then kissed William. Netoha said,
“Quickly, girl. You’re not mistress of this estate yet, and there is important
work to do.” The hadonra started to bow, then said, haltingly, “Great One, I .
. . I wish you well.” He quickly bowed and started for the study Milamber could
see a hint of moisture in his eyes.
Almorella, tears running down her cheeks, followed Netoha into the
house. Katala turned to Milamber “Now?”
“Now.” As he took them to the pattern room, he said, “There is one
thing I must find out before we attempt the rift.” He held his wife, with their
son between them, and willed himself to another pattern.
They were shrouded in a white haze for an instant, then were in a
different room. They hurried through the door, and Katala saw they went into
the home of the Shinzawai lord.
They hurried to Kamatsu’s study and opened the door without
ceremony. Kamatsu looked up, annoyed at the interruption. His expression
changed immediately when he saw who was at his door. “Great One, what is it?”
he asked, as he arose.
Milamber quickly conveyed the events of the day, and Katala paled at
the recounting. The Lord of the Shinzawai shook his head. “You may have set
processes in motion that will forever change the internal order of the Empire, Great
One. I hope it is not a death blow. In any event, it will take years to gauge
their effects. Already the Party for Progress is making overtures to the Party
for Peace for alliance. In a short time you have had great effect upon my
homeland.”
Kamatsu continued, preventing Milamber from speaking. “That is not a
thing of the moment, though. You who were once my slave have learned greatly,
but you are still not Tsurani. You must understand the Warlord cannot allow
such a setback and save face. He most likely will take his life in shame, but
those who follow his lead—his family, his clan, his subordinates—will all mark
you for death. Already there may be assassins hired, or magicians who are ready
to act against you. You have no choice but to flee to your homeland with your
family.”
William decided it was appropriate now to cry, for in spite of his
attempts at bravery his mother was frightened, and the boy felt it. Milamber
turned away from Kamatsu and incanted a spell, and William was immediately
asleep. “He will sleep until we are safe.” Katala nodded and knew it was for
the best, but still she disliked the necessity.
“I have no fear of any magician, Kamatsu,” Milamber said, “but I
fear for the Empire. I know now that, no matter how hard my teachers in the Assembly
tried, I can never be Tsurani. But I do serve the Empire. In my disgust over
what I witnessed in the arena, I became sure of what I’ve suspected for some
time now. The Empire must change its course, or it is doomed to fall. The
rotten, weak heart of this culture cannot support its own weight much longer,
and like a ngaggi tree with a rotten core, it will collapse under its own
weight. There are other things, things of which I may not speak, that I have
learned in my time here, that tell me great change must come.
“I must leave, for should I stay, the Assembly, the High Council,
all the Empire will be divided. I would have difficulty leaving the Empire were
it not in the best interest of Tsuranuanni for me to depart. That is my
training. But before I leave, I must know, has there been word from Laurie and
your son of the Emperor’s overture of peace?”
“No. We know they disappeared during a skirmish the first night
Hokanu’s men searched the area after the fight and found no signs of them, so
it is assumed they were safely away. My younger son is certain they reached a
road behind Kingdom lines. Since then we have had no further word. Other
members of our faction wait with as much trepidation as I.”
Milamber considered. “Then the Emperor is still not ready to act. I
had hoped it might be soon, so we could safely leave under the truce, before
opposition to me becomes organized. Now, with the Warlord’s announcement of
victory over Duke Borric’s army, we may never see peace.”
Kamatsu said, “It is clear you are not Tsurani, Great One. With the
Warlord in disgrace from your destruction of games he dedicated to the Light’
of Heaven, the War Party will be in disorder. Now the Kanazawai Clan will once
more remove itself from the Alliance for War. Our allies in the Blue Wheel will
work doubly hard to press for a truce in the High Council. The War Party is
without an effective leader. Even should the Warlord prove shameless and not
kill himself, he will be quickly removed, for the War Party needs a strong
leader, and the Minwanabi are ambitious; for three generations they have sought
the white and gold. But others in the High Council will press the claims as
well. The War Party will be in disarray, and we shall gain time to strengthen
our position, as the Game of the Council continues.”
Kamatsu looked long at Milamber. “As I have said, there are those
who are already plotting to take your life. Make for your homeworld now. Do not
delay, and you should likely win safely through. It might not occur to any but
a few that you will strike for the rift at once. Any other Great One would take
a week putting his house in order.” He smiled at Milamber. “Great One, you were
a fresh breeze in a stale room while you were with us. I am sorry to see you
leave our land, but you must go at once.”
“I hope the day will come when we may meet again as friends, Lord of
the Shinzawai, for there is much that our two people could learn from one
another.”
The Shinzawai lord placed his hand upon Milamber’s shoulder. “I hope
also for that day, Great One I will send prayers with you. One thing more. If
you should perchance see Kasumi in your homeworld, tell him his father thinks
of him. Now go, and good-bye.”
“Good-bye,” said Milamber. He took his wife by the arm and hurried
back toward the pattern room. When they reached it, a chime sounded, and
Milamber pushed his wife and son behind him. A brief haze of white appeared
over the pattern in the floor, and Fumita stood there, startled.
“Milamber!” he said, stepping forward.
“Stop, Fumita!”
The older magician stood still “I mean you no harm. Word of what
occurred has reached those of the Assembly not attending the games. The
Assembly is in turmoil. Tapek and the other Warlord’s pets demand your life.
Hochopepa and Shimone argue on your behalf. Never has such discord been seen In
the High Council, the War Party demands an end to the independence of the
Assembly during times of war, and the Party for Progress and the Party for
Peace are in open alliance with the Blue Wheel Party. The Empire is upside
down.”
The older magician seemed to droop visibly as he related this. He
looked years older than Milamber had ever remembered seeing him. “I think you
may have been right in many of your beliefs, Milamber. We must have changes in
the Empire if we are not to decay, but so many changes so quickly? I don’t
know.”
There was a moment of silence between them; Milamber said, “What I
did was for the Empire, Fumita. You must believe that.”
The older magician nodded slowly. “I believe you, Milamber, or at
least I wish to.” He seemed to stand more erect. “Whatever the outcome there
will be much for the Assembly to do when things have settled. Perhaps we can
steer the Empire to a healthier course.
“But you must go quickly. No soldier will try to stop you, for only
a few outside the Holy City know of your actions, but the Warlord’s pets may
already be seeking you out. You caught our brothers by surprise at the games,
and none singly could stand against you, but if they coordinate against you,
even your vaunted powers will avail you little. You would have to kill another
magician, or be killed in turn.”
“Yes, Fumita, I know. I must go. I have no desire to kill another
magician, but I shall if I must.”
Fumita looked pained at hearing this. “How are you to reach the
rift? You haven’t been to the staging area, have you?”
“No, but I go to the City of the Plains, and from there I can
command litter.”
“It is too slow. The litter will take over an hour to reach the
staging area.” He reached into his robe and pulled out a transfer device. He
held it out to Milamber. “The third setting will take you directly to the rift
machine.”
Milamber took it. “Fumita, I mean to try to close the rift.”
Fumita shook his head. “Milamber, even with your powers I don’t
think you can. Scores of magicians worked to create the great rift, and the
controlling spells were established only on the Kelewan side. The Midkemian
machine is only to stabilize the rift’s location.”
“I know, Fumita. You’ll soon know, for I’ve sent my works to Hocho.
My ‘mysterious’ research has been an intensive study of rift energies.
“I may now know more about them than any other magician in the
Assembly. I know it would be a desperate, possibly destructive, action from the
Midkemian side, but this war must end.”
“Then get free to your homeworld and wait. The Emperor will act
soon, I am sure. The Warlord could not have been handed a bigger blow by losing
the war than the one you handed him in the arena. If the Light of Heaven orders
peace, then perhaps we can deal with the question of the rift. Stay your hand
until you’ve learned what the King’s reaction to the peace offer is.”
“Then you also play the Great Game?”
Fumita smiled. “I am not the only magician to descend into playing
politics, Milamber. Hochopepa and I have been a part of this from the onset. Go
now, and may the gods be with you. I wish you a safe journey and a long,
prosperous life on your homeworld.”
He then walked past Milamber and his family. Once he was out of
sight, Milamber activated the device.
The soldier jumped. One moment he had been sitting under a tree,
shaded from the setting sun’s heat, then the next moment a magician with a
woman and child suddenly appeared before him. By the time he was on his feet,
they were moving toward the rift machine, several hundred yards away. When they
reached the machine, a platform with tall poles rising up on either side of it,
between which a glimmering “nothingness” could be seen, an officer who was in
charge of the troops moving through snapped to attention.
“Get these men back from the platform.”
“Your will, Great One.” He barked orders, and the men fell back.
Milamber took Katala by the hand and led her through the rift.
One step, a moment of disorientation, and they were standing in the
middle of the Tsurani camp in the valley in the Grey Towers. It was night, and
campfires burned brightly. Several officers were startled at the unusual
arrival, but stepped out of their way.
Milamber said, “Have you captured horses?”
One of the officers nodded dumbly.
“Bring two, at once. Saddled.”
“Your will, Great One,” said the man, and rushed off. Soon a soldier
brought two horses toward him. When the soldier came close, Milamber could see
it was Hokanu. The younger Shinzawai son looked quickly about as he handed the
reins to Milamber. “Great One, we have just received word something terrible
has occurred at the Imperial Games, though the reports are vague. I suspect
your sudden appearance here has something to do with those reports. You must be
away quickly, for these are the Warlord’s men in camp, and should they arrive at
the same conclusion, there is no telling what they might risk.”
Milamber held William while Katala mounted with Hokanu’s aid. He
handed their son up to her and mounted his own steed. “Hokanu, I have just seen
your father. Go to him; he has need of you.”
“I will return to my father’s estate, Great One.” The young Tsurani
hesitated, then added, “Should you see my brother, tell him I live, for he does
not know.”
Milamber said he would, then turned to Katala and took the reins of
her horse. “Hold to the saddle horn, beloved. I will carry William.”
Without another word they rode out of camp. Several times guards
started to challenge them, but the sight of the black robe stopped them. They
rode for hours in the moonlight. Milamber could hear the shouts of soldiers as
he led his family to safety.
Katala bore up under it all like the warriors she was descended
from, and Milamber marveled at her. She had never sat a horse before, but she
made no complaint. To be taken from her home and whisked away to a strange, dark
world, where she knew no one, must be a frightening experience. She revealed a
tough fiber to her character he had only guessed at before.
After the seemingly endless ride, a voice sounded from out of the
darkness. Dim shadowy figures could be seen moving among the trees. “Halt! Who
rides this night?” The voice was speaking the King’s Tongue. The three riders
halted, and the man in front, with relief in his voice, shouted, “Pug of
Crydee!”
30
UPHEAVAL
Kulgan sat quietly.
It was a reunion tempered with sadness. Pug stood near Lord Bornc’s
bed, openly showing his grief as the dying Duke smiled wanly up at him. Lyam,
Brucal, and Meecham waited a short way off, speaking softly, and Katala
distracted William while the Duke and Pug spoke.
Bornc’s voice came softly, weak from his illness, and his face
contorted with pain as he struggled for breath. “I am glad to see you . . .
returned to us, Pug. And doubly glad to see your wife and child.” He coughed,
and a foam appeared at the corner of his mouth, flecked with blood.
Katala’s eyes were tearing, for the open affection her husband held
for this man touched her. Borric motioned toward Kulgan, and the stout magician
came to stand next to his former pupil. “Yes, Your Grace.”
Borric whispered, and Kulgan turned to Meecham “Will you see Katala
and the boy to our tent? Laurie and Kasumi are waiting there.”
Katala threw Pug a questioning look, and he nodded Meecham had
already picked up the boy, who regarded him with some skepticism. When they had
left, Borric struggled to sit higher, and Kulgan helped him, placing pillows
behind his back. The Duke coughed loudly and long, his eyes clenched tightly
shut from pain.
When at last he could breathe again, he sighed, then spoke slowly.
“Pug, do you remember when I rewarded you for saving Carline from
the trolls?” Pug nodded, afraid to speak for the emotions he felt. Borric
continued, “Do you remember my promise of another gift?” Again Pug nodded.
“Would that Tully were here to give it to you now, but I will tell you in brief.
I have long thought the Kingdom wastes one of its greatest resources by
regarding magicians as outcasts and beggars. Kulgan’s faithful service over the
years has shown me I was right. Now you return, and though I understand only a
little of what you’ve told, I can see you have become a master of your arts. It
was my hope you would, for I have had a vision.
“I had left a sum of gold in trust for you, against the day you
became a master magician. With it, I would like you and Kulgan, and other
magicians, to establish a center for learning, where all may come and share.
Tully will give you the documents with my instructions, explaining in detail my
design. But for now I can only ask: Will you accept this charge? Will you build
an academy for the study of magic and other knowledge?”
Pug nodded, tears in his eyes. Kulgan stood agape, not trusting what
he had heard His fondest wish, his life’s ambition, shared with the Duke in the
idle hours of speaking of dreams over cups of wine, was now granted.
Borric began to cough again, then when the fit passed, said, “I hold
title to an island, in the heart of the Great Star Lake, near Shamata. When
this war is at last done, go there and build your academy Perhaps someday it
will be the greatest center for learning in the Kingdom.”
Again the Duke was racked by coughing, the sound more terrible than
before. He gasped after the attack, barely able to talk. He motioned for Lyam
to come close, pointed to Pug, and said, “Tell him,” then fell back upon his
pillows.
Lyam swallowed hard, fighting back the tears, and spoke to Pug.
“When you were taken by the Tsurani, Father wished for some memorial in
remembrance. He considered what would be proper, for you had shown bravery on
three occasions, twice saving Kulgan’s life in addition to my sister’s. He
judged the only thing you lacked was a name, for none knew your parentage. So
he ordered a document drawn up and sent to the Royal Archives, inscribing your
name on the rolls of the family conDoin, adopting you into our house.” Lyam
forced a smile. “I only wish times were gladder to share such news with you.”
Overcome with emotion, Pug sank to his knees at the Duke’s side. He
took the Duke’s hand and kissed his signet, unable to speak. Softly Borric
said, “I could be no more proud of you than were you my own son.” He gasped for
breath. “Bear our name with honor.”
Pug squeezed the once powerful hand, now weak and limp. Bornc’s eyes
began to close, and he struggled for breath. Pug released his hand, and the
Duke motioned for all to come closer. Even old Brucal was red-eyed as they
waited for the Duke’s life to slip away.
To Brucal he whispered, “You are witness, old companion.”
The Duke of Yabon raised an eyebrow and looked questioningly toward
Kulgan. “What does he mean?”
Kulgan said, “He wishes you to witness his dying declaration. It is
his right.”
Borric looked at Kulgan and said, “Care for all my sons, old friend.
Let the truth be known.”
Lyam said to Kulgan, “Why does he say ‘all my sons’? What truth?”
Kulgan stared at Borric, who nodded weakly. The magician’s words
came quietly. “Your father acknowledges his eldest son, Martin.”
Lyam’s eyes grew wide. “Martin?”
Borric’s arm shot out in a sudden surge of strength, catching at
Lyam’s sleeve. He pulled Lyam to him and whispered, “Martin is your brother. I
have wronged him, Lyam. He is a good man, and well do I love him.” To Brucal he
croaked a single word, “Witness!”
Brucal nodded. With tears streaming down into his white moustache,
he swore, “So do I, Brucal, Duke of Yabon, bear witness.”
Suddenly Borric’s eyes went blank. His death rattle sounded deep in
his chest, and he lay still.
Lyam fell to his knees and wept, and the others also let their grief
come unrestrained. Never to Pug had a moment been so bittersweet.
That night it was a quiet group in the tent that Meecham had
commandeered for Pug and his family. The news of Borric’s death had cast a pall
over the camp, and much of Kulgan’s joy at seeing his apprentice returned
safely had been blunted. The day slowly passed, with everyone becoming
reacquainted, though they spoke softly and felt little joy. Occasionally one
would leave the tent, wandering off to be alone with his thoughts for a while.
Nine years of history had been exchanged slowly, and now Pug spoke of his flight
from the Empire.
Katala kept one eye on William, who lay curled up on a bed with one
arm thrown over Fantus. The firedrake and the boy had taken one look at each
other and decided they were friends. Meecham sat by the cook fire, watching the
others carefully Laurie and Kasumi sat on the floor, Tsurani fashion, while Pug
finished his narrative.
Kasumi was the first to speak. “Great One, how is it that you could
leave the Empire now, and not before?”
Kulgan raised one eyebrow. He was still absorbing the changes in his
former apprentice. This talk of Greater Path and Lesser Path was still
difficult to understand, and he couldn’t believe the Tsurani attitude toward
the boy. He amended that, the young man.
“After my confrontation with the Warlord, it became clear to me that
I would serve the Empire by leaving, for my continued presence could only bring
divisiveness at a time the Empire needs to heal itself. The war must be ended,
and peace established, for the Empire is being drained.”
“Aye,” added Meecham, “as is the Kingdom. Nine years of war are
bleeding us dry.”
Kasumi was equally discomforted by the casual tone these people took
toward Pug. “Great One, what if the Emperor cannot stop the new Warlord? The
council will surely be quick to elect one.”
“I don’t know, Kasumi. I will then have to try to close the rift.”
Kulgan pulled long on his pipe, then blew a thick cloud. “I am still
not clear on everything you have said, Pug. From what you have said, I can see
nothing that will prevent them from opening another rift.”
“There is nothing, except that rifts are unstable things. There is
no way to control where a rift will go; it was mere chance that caused the one
between this world and Kelewan. Once that one was established, others could
follow, as if the path between the two worlds acted to other rifts like a
lodestone to metal.
“The Tsurani could attempt to re-establish the rift, but each
attempt would probably take them to other, new worlds. If they returned here,
it would be by the merest chance, one in thousands. If the rift is closed, it
would be years before they returned, if ever.”
“From what you said about the Warlord’s taking his own life,” said
Kulgan, “can we expect a respite in the fighting?”
It was Kasumi who answered. “I fear not, friend Kulgan, for I know
this Warlord’s Subcommander. He is Minwanabi, a proud family from a powerful
clan, and it would serve his cause well when the High Council meets for his
clan to bring word of a great victory. Most likely he will attack in force
within days.”
Kulgan shook his head. “Meecham, you had best ask Lord Lyam to join
us; he must hear this.” The tall franklin rose and left the tent.
Kasumi frowned. “I have come to know this world a little, and I
agree with the Great One. Peace would surely profit us both, but I do not see
it coming.”
The young Duke followed Meecham into the tent a few minutes later,
and Kasumi repeated his warning. “We had best be ready, then, for the attack,”
said Lyam.
Kasumi looked uncomfortable. “Lord, I must beg your pardon, but
should fighting come, I cannot stand against my own people. May I have your
permission to return to my own lines?”
The Duke considered this, and Pug noticed that his face was becoming
lined with the strain of command. Gone were the laughing eyes and ever present
smile. Now he resembled his father more than ever “I understand. I will order
you passed through the lines, if I have your parole that you will repeat
nothing you have heard here.”
Kasumi agreed and rose to leave. Pug stood also and said, “I will
issue one last order to you, Kasumi, as a magician of Tsuranuanni. Return to
your father, for he has need of you. One more soldier dying will aid your
nation little.”
Kasumi bowed his head. “Your will, Great One.”
Kasumi embraced Laurie and left with Lyam.
Kulgan said, “You have told me so much that is difficult to absorb I
think for now we had best retire, for I feel the need of resting.”
As the old magician rose, Pug said to him, “There is one thing I
have been waiting to ask. What of Tomas?”
“Your childhood friend is well and with the elves of Elvandar. He is
a warrior of great renown, as he had wished to be.”
Pug smiled. “I am glad to hear that Thank you.”
Kulgan, Laurie, and Meecham bade them good night and left Katala
said, “Husband, you are tired. Come rest.”
Pug crossed over to the bed she sat upon “You amaze me. You have
been through so much tonight, and yet you fret about me.”
She took his hand “When I am with you, everything is as it should
be. But you look as if the weight of the world sits upon you.”
“The weight of two worlds, I fear, love.”
They were awakened by the sound of trumpets. As they rose from the
bed, Pug and Katala were startled by Laurie rushing into the tent. From the
light behind him as he tossed aside the tent flap, it was evident that they had
slept late. “The King comes!” He held out some clothing to Pug. “Put these on.”
Seeing the wisdom of not walking the camp in the black robe, Pug
complied Katala pulled her robe on over her head, while Laurie turned his back.
She went over to William, who was sitting up in his bed. looking frightened. He
quickly calmed down and started to pull on Fantus’s tail, causing the drake to
snort a protest over such indignities.
Pug and Laurie left the tent and walked to the commander’s pavilion,
overlooking the camp of the Kingdom armies. Away to the southeastern end of the
camp they could see the royal party quickly approaching, and could hear the
cheers of the soldiers as they saw the royal banner pass. Thousands of soldiers
took up the cheer, for they had never seen the King before, and his presence
served to lift their spirits, badly sagging since the rout by the Tsurani.
Laurie and Pug stood off to one side of the command tent, but close
enough to ensure they could hear what transpired. Duke Brucal kept his eyes on
the King, but Lyam noticed the two and nodded his approval of their presence.
The two lines of Royal Household Guard rode up to the front of the
tent, then parted so the King might ride to the fore. Rodric, King of the
Realm, rode on a huge black war-horse, who pawed at the ground as he came to a
halt before the two dukes. Rodric was dressed in a gaudy array of gold-trimmed
battle armor, with many flutings and reliefs fashioned into the breastplate.
His helm was golden, with a circlet crown. A royal purple plume flew from the
crest, blown by the morning wind.
When he had been sitting for a moment, he removed his helm and
handed it to a page. He stayed atop his horse and studied the two commanders,
looking down at them with a crooked smile. “What, have you no greeting for your
liege lord?”
The dukes bowed. Brucal said, “Your Majesty. We were just surprised.
We had no word.”
Rodric laughed, and the sound was tinged with madness. “That is
because I sent no word. I wanted to surprise you.” He looked at Lyam. “Who is
this in the tabard of Crydee?”
“Lyam, Your Majesty,” answered Brucal. “The Duke of Crydee.”
The King shouted, “He is Duke only if I say he is Duke.” With a
sudden change of mood, he said, in solicitous tones, “I am sorry to hear of
your father’s death.” He then giggled. “But he was a traitor, you know. I was
going to hang him.” Lyam tensed at Rodric’s words, and Brucal gripped his arm.
The King saw and screamed, “You would attack your King? Traitor! You
are one with your father and the others. Guards, seize him!” He pointed at the
young man.
Royal guards dismounted, and the soldiers of the West who stood
nearby moved to stop them. “Stop!” commanded Brucal, and the western soldiers
stopped. He turned to Lyam. “On your word, we have civil war,” he hissed.
Lyam said, “I submit, Your Majesty.” The western soldiers grumbled.
The King said coldly, “I shall have to hang you, you know. Take him
to his tent and keep him there.” The guards complied. The King turned his
attention to Brucal. “Are you loyal to me, my lord Brucal, or shall there be a
new Duke in Yabon as well as Crydee?”
“I am ever loyal to the crown, Your Majesty,” came the answer.
The King dismounted. “Yes, I believe that.” He giggled again. “You
knew my father thought highly of you, didn’t you?” He took the Duke’s arm, and
they entered the command tent.
Laurie touched Pug’s shoulder and said, “We had best stay in our
tents. If one of those courtiers recognizes me, I may join the Duke on the
gibbet.”
Pug nodded. “Get Kulgan and Meecham, and have them meet us in my
tent.”
Laurie hurried off, and Pug returned to his tent Katala was feeding
William from a bowl of stew from the night before. “I fear we have found
another pot of trouble, love,” Pug said. “The King is in camp, and he is madder
than I dreamed possible. We must leave soon, for he has ordered Lyam
imprisoned.”
Katala looked shocked. “Where will we go?”
“I can manage to take us to Crydee, to Prince Arutha I know the
court of Castle Crydee as well as if there were a pattern there I should have
no trouble transporting us.”
Laurie, Meecham, and Kulgan joined them a few minutes later, and Pug
outlined his plan for escape Kulgan shook his head. “You take the boy and
Katala, Pug, but I must stay.”
Meecham added, “And I.”
Pug looked incredulous. “Why?”
“I served Lyam’s father, and now I serve him. If the King tries to
execute Lyam, there will be fighting. The Armies of the West will not stand
idly by and watch Lyam hanged. The King has only the Royal Guard, and they will
be easily defeated. Once that happens, it is civil war. Bas-Tyra will lead the
Armies of the East. Lyam will need my aid.”
Meecham said, “The issue won’t be quickly decided. The Armies of the
West are veteran, but they’re tired. There’s little spirit left in them. The
Armies of the East are fresh, and Black Guy is the best general in the Kingdom.
Lyam’s unproved. It’ll be a long struggle.” Pug understood what they were saying.
“It may not reach that point, though. Brucal seems ready to follow Lyam’s lead,
but if he changes his mind? Who knows if Ylith, Tyr-Sog, and the others will
follow Lyam without Yabon’s lead?”
Kulgan sighed. “Brucal will not waver. He hates Bas-Tyra as much as
Borric did, though for less personal reasons. He sees Guy’s hand in every move
to break the West. I think the Duke of Yabon would happily take Rodric’s head,
but even so, Lyam may submit rather than risk a civil war and lose the West to
the Tsurani. We shall have to see what passes.
“Which is all the more reason you must go to Crydee, Pug. If Lyam
dies, then Arutha is heir to the crown. Once begun, the King cannot stop the
killing until Arutha is dead. Even Martin—whose claim would be blemished by his
illegitimacy—and Carline would be hunted down and killed. Perhaps Anita as
well. Rodric would not risk a western heir to the throne. Upon Lyam’s death,
the bloodletting will not end until either Rodric or Arutha sits the throne of
the Kingdom uncontested. You are the most powerful magician in the Kingdom.”
Pug started to protest “I know enough of the arts to know your skills from the
events you related to us. And I remember your promise as a boy. You are capable
of feats unmatched by any in our world. Arutha will have grave need of your
aid, for he would not let his brother’s death go unpunished. Crydee, Carse, and
Tulan will march once the Tsurani have been dealt with. Others, especially
Brucal, would join them. Then we would have civil war.”
Meecham spat out of the tent. He froze, holding aside the tent flap
for a moment, then said, “I think the argument is over. Look.”
They joined him at the opening. None had the franklin’s sharp
eyesight, and at first they couldn’t see what he was pointing out. Then slowly
they recognized the cloud of dust hanging in the air, far to the southeast. It
spread across the horizon for miles, a dirty brown ribbon that ran below the
blue of the sky.
The franklin turned to look at the others “The Armies of the East.”
They stood near the command pavilion, among a group of LaMutian
soldiers. With Laurie, Kulgan, Pug, and Meecham was Earl Vandros of LaMut, the
former cavalry officer who had commanded the raid through the valley years ago,
when they had first seen the rift. He had gained the title upon his father’s
death, less than a year after Pug’s capture, and had proven to be one of the
Kingdom’s most able field commanders.
A company of nobles was riding up the hill toward the pavilion. The
King and Brucal stood waiting for them. Next to each lord rode a
standard-bearer, who held the banner of that noble Vandros announced the name
of each army represented. “Rodez, Timons, Sadara, Ran, Cibon, they’re all
here.” He turned to Kulgan. “I doubt there are a thousand soldiers left between
here and Rillanon.” Laurie said, “There is one whose banner I don’t see.
Bas-Tyra.” Vandros looked. “Salador, Deep Taunton, Pointer’s Head . . . no, you
are right. The golden eagle on black is not among the standards.”
Meecham said, “Black Guy is no fool. He is already upon the throne
of Krondor. Should Lyam be hanged, and Rodric fall in battle, it would be only
a short step to the throne in Rillanon.”
Vandros looked back at the gathering nobles. “Nearly the entire
Congress of Lords is present. Should they return to Krondor without the King,
then Guy would be King in short order. Many of these are his men.”
Pug said, “Who is that under the banner of Salador? It is not Lord
Kerus.”
Vandros spat upon the ground. “It is Richard, formerly Baron of
Dolth, now Duke of Salador. The King hung Kerus, and his family fled to Kesh.
Now Richard rules the third most powerful duchy in the East. He is one of Guy’s
favorites.”
When the nobles, were assembled before the King, Richard of Salador,
a red-faced bear of a man, said, “My liege, we are assembled. Where are we to
camp?”
“Camp? We make no camp, my lord Duke We ride!” He turned to Lord
Brucal. “Marshal the Armies of the West, Brucal.” The Duke gave the signal, and
heralds ran through the camp, shouting the order to muster. The battle drums
and war trumpets were shortly sounding throughout the western camp.
Vandros left to join his soldiers, and soon there were few observers
nearby. Kulgan, Pug, and the others moved off to one side, keeping clear of the
King’s gaze.
The King said to the assembled nobles, “We have had nine years of
the western commander’s tender ways. I shall lead the attack that will drive
the foe from out of our lands.”He
turned to Brucal. “In deference to your advancing years, my lord Duke, I am
giving command of the infantry to Duke Richard. You will stay here.”
The old Duke of Yabon, who was in the process of donning his armor,
looked stung. He said nothing save, “Your Majesty,” his tone cold and strained.
He stiffly turned and entered the command tent.
The King’s horse was brought, and Rodric mounted. A page handed up
his crowned helm, and the King placed it upon his head. “The infantry shall
follow as quickly as possible. Now we ride!”
The King spurred his horse down the hill, followed by the Royal
Guard and the assembled nobles. When he was out of sight, Kulgan turned to the
others and said, “Now we wait.”
The day grew long. Every hour that passed was like a slowly
unfolding day. They sat in Pug’s tent, wondering what was occurring to the
west.
The army had marched forward, under the King’s banner, with drums
and trumpets sounding. Over ten thousand horsemen and twenty thousand foot
soldiers had advanced upon the Tsurani. There were only a few soldiers left in
camp, the wounded and an orderly company. The quiet outside was unnerving after
the almost constant camp noise of the previous day.
William had grown restless, and Katala had taken him outside to play.
Fantus welcomed the opportunity to rest untroubled by his tireless playmate.
Kulgan sat quietly, puffing on his pipe. He and Pug passed the time
by occasionally speaking of matters magical, but mostly were silent.
Laurie was the first to break the tension. He stood and said, “I
can’t take this waiting anymore. I think we should go to Lord Lyam and help
decide what is to be done once the King returns.”
Kulgan waved him back into his seat. “Lyam will do nothing, for he
is his father’s son and would not start a civil war, not here.”
Pug sat absently toying with a dagger. “With the Armies of the East
in camp, Lyam knows that an outbreak of fighting would hand the West to the
Tsurani and crown to Bas-Tyra. He’ll walk to the gibbet and put the rope around
his own neck rather than see that.”
“It’s the worst kind of foolishness,” countered Laurie.
“No,” answered Kulgan, “not foolishness, minstrel, but a matter of
honor. Lyam, like his father before him, believes that the nobility have a
responsibility to give their lives’ work, and their lives if need be, for the
Kingdom. With Borric and Erland dead, Lyam is next in line for the throne. But
the succession is unclear, for Rodric has not named an heir. Lyam could not
bear to wear the crown if he would be thought a usurper Arutha is another
matter, for he would simply do what was expedient, take the throne—though he
would not wish to—and worry about what was said of him when it was said.”
Pug nodded. “I think that Kulgan has the right of things. I do not
know the brothers as well as he, but I think it might have been a better thing
had the order of their birthing been reversed. Lyam would make a good king, but
Arutha would make a great one. Men would follow Lyam to their deaths, but the
younger brother would use his shrewdness to keep them alive.”
“A fair assessment,” conceded Kulgan. “If there is anyone who could
find a way out of this mess, it is Arutha. He has his father’s courage, but he
also has a mind as quick as Bas-Tyra’s. He could weather the intrigues of court,
though he hates them.” Kulgan smiled “When they were boys, we called Arutha the
‘little storm cloud,’ for when he got angry, he would turn to black looks and
rumbles, while Lyam would be quick to anger, quick to fight, and quick to
forget.”
Kulgan’s reminiscences were interrupted by the sound of shouting
from outside. They jumped up and rushed out of the tent.
A blood-covered rider, in the tabard of LaMut, sped past them, and
they ran to follow. They reached the command tent as Lord Brucal came out. The old
Duke of Yabon said, “What news?”
“The Earl Vandros sends word. Victory!” Other riders could be heard
approaching the camp. “We rode through them like the wind. The line on their
east is breached, and the salient is rent. We broke them, isolating those in
the salient, then wheeled to the west and rolled back those who sought to aid
them. The infantry now holds fast, and the cavalry drives the Tsurani back into
the North Pass. They flee in confusion! The day is ours!”
A wineskin was handed to the rider, who sounded as if his voice
would fail. He tilted it over his face and let the wine pour into his mouth. It
ran down his chin, joining the deeper red splattered over his tabard. He threw
aside the wineskin. “There is more. Richard of Salador has fallen, as has the
Earl of Silden. And the King has been wounded.”
Concern showed on Brucal’s face “How does he fare?”
“Badly, I fear,” said the rider, holding his nervous horse as it
pranced around. “It is a grievous wound. His helm was cleaved by a broadsword
after his horse was killed beneath him. A hundred died to protect him, for his
royal tabard was a beacon to the Tsurani. He comes now.” The rider pointed back
the way he had come.
Pug and the others turned to see a troop of riders approaching. In
the van rode a royal guardsman with the King held before him. The monarch’s
face was covered in blood, and he held to the saddle horn with his right hand,
his other arm dangling limply at his side. They stopped before the tent, and
soldiers helped the King from the horse. They started to carry him inside, but
he said, in a weak and slurred voice, “No Do not take me from the sun. Bring a
chair so I may sit.”
Nobles were riding up even as a chair was placed for the King. He
was lowered into it and leaned back, his head lolling to the left. His face was
covered with blood, and white bone could be seen showing through his scalp
wound.
Kulgan moved to Rodric’s side “My King, may I attend?”
The King struggled to see who was speaking. His eyes seemed to lose
focus for a moment, then became clear. “Who is speaking? The magician? Yes,
Borric’s magician. Please, I am in pain.”
Kulgan closed his eyes, willing his powers to ease the King’s
suffering. He placed his hand upon Rodric’s shoulder, and those nearby could
see the ruler of the Kingdom visibly relax. “Thank you, magician. I feel more
at ease.” Rodric struggled to turn his head slightly. “My lord Brucal, please
bring Lyam to me.”
Lyam was in his tent, under guard, and a soldier was sent to bring
him out. Moments later the young man knelt before his cousin. “My liege, your
wound?”
Kulgan was joined by a Priest of Dala, who agreed with his
assessment of the wound. He looked at Brucal and shook his head slowly. Herbs
and bandages were brought, and the King was cared for. Kulgan left the priest
to his ministrations and returned to stand where the others looked on. Katala
had joined them, holding William in her arms. Kulgan said, “I fear it is a mortal
wound. The skull is broken, and fluids seep through the crack.”
In silence they watched. The priest stood to one side and began
praying for Rodric. All the nobles, save those commanding the infantry, were
now arrayed before the King. More horsemen could be heard riding into camp.
They joined the others who stood watching and were told what had happened. A
hush fell over the assembly as the King spoke.
“Lyam,” he said in a faint voice. “I have been ill, haven’t I?” Lyam
said nothing, his face betraying conflicting emotions. He had little love for
his cousin, but he was still the King.
Rodric ventured a weak smile. One side of his face moved only
slightly, as if he could not control the muscles well Rodric reached out with
his good right hand, and Lyam took it. “I do not know what I have been thinking
of late. So much of what has happened seems like a dream, dark and frightening.
I have been trapped within that dream, but now I am free of it.” Sweat appeared
upon his brow, and his face was nearly white. “A demon has been driven from me,
Lyam, and I can see much of what I have done was wrong, even evil.”
Lyam knelt before his King. “No, my King, not evil.”
The King coughed violently, then gasped as the attack subsided.
“Lyam, my time grows short.” His voice rose a little, and he said, “Brucal,
bear witness.” The old Duke looked on, his face an implacable mask. He stepped
over next to Lyam and said, “I am here, Your Majesty.”
The King gripped Lyam’s hand, pulling himself a little more upright
His voice rose as he said, “We, Rodric, fourth of that name, hereditary ruler
of the Kingdom of the Isles, do hereby proclaim that Lyam conDoin, our blood
cousin, is of the royal blood. As oldest conDoin male, he is named Heir to the
throne of our Kingdom.”
Lyam shot Brucal an alarmed look, but the old Duke gave him a curt
shake of his head, commanding silence. Lyam bowed his head, and his sorrow was
heartfelt. He tightly gripped the King’s hand. Brucal said, “So do I, Brucal,
Duke of Yabon, bear witness.”
Rodric’s voice sounded faint. “Lyam, one boon do I ask. Your cousin
Guy has done what he has done at my command. I grieve for the madness that
drove me to have Erland deposed. I knew his going to the dungeon was his death
warrant, and I did nothing to halt it. Have mercy on Guy. He is an ambitious
man, but not an evil one.”
The King then spoke of his plans for the Kingdom, asking that they
be continued, though with more regard for the populace. He spoke of many other
things: of his boyhood, and his sorrow that he had never married. After a time
his speech became too slurred to understand, and his head fell forward upon his
chest.
Brucal ordered guards to attend the King. They gently raised him and
carried him inside. Brucal and Lyam entered the tent, while the other nobles waited
outside. More new arrivals were gathering, and they were told the news. Nearly
a third of the Armies of the Kingdom stood before the commander’s pavilion, a
sea of upturned faces extending down the hill. Each stood without speaking,
waiting out the death watch.
Brucal closed the tent flap behind and shut out the red glow of the
sunset. The Priest of Dala examined the King, then looked at the two dukes “He
will not regain consciousness, my lords. It is only a matter of time.”
Brucal took Lyam by the arm and led him to one side. In a hushed
whisper he said, “You must say nothing when I proclaim you Heir, Lyam.”
Lyam pulled his arm from Brucal’s grasp, fixing his gaze upon the
old warrior “You bore witness, Brucal,” he whispered back. “You heard my father
acknowledge Martin as my brother, legitimizing him. He is the oldest conDoin
male. Rodric’s proclamation of succession is invalid. It presumed I was the
oldest!”
Brucal spoke quietly, but his words were ungentle. “You have a war
to end, Lyam. Then, if you should accomplish that small feat, you have to take
your father and Rodric back to Rillanon, to bury them in the tomb of your
ancestors. From the day Rodric is interred, there will be twelve days of
mourning, then on noon of the thirteenth, all the claimants for the crown will
present themselves before the priests of Ishap, and the entire, bloody damn
Congress of Lords. Between now and then you’ll have plenty of time to decide
what to do. But for now, you needs must be Heir. There is no other way.
“Have you forgotten Bas-Tyra? Should you dither, he’ll be in
Rillanon with his army a month before you. Then you’ll have bitter civil war,
boy. As soon as you agree to keep your mouth shut, I’m ordering my own trusted
troops to Krondor, under royal seal, to arrest Black Guy. They’ll toss Bas-Tyra
into the dungeon before his own men can stop them— there’ll be enough loyal
Krondorians around to ensure that. You can have him held until you reach
Krondor, then cart him off to Rillanon for the coronation, either your own or
Martin’s. But you must act, or by the gods, we’ll have Guy’s lackeys brewing
civil war within a day of your naming Martin the true Heir. Do you understand?”
Lyam nodded silently. With a sigh he said, “But will Guy’s men let
him be taken?”
“Even the captain of his own guard will not stand against a royal
warrant, especially countersigned by the representatives of the Congress of
Lords I shall guarantee signatures on the warrant,” he said, clenching his
gloved fist before his face.
Lyam was quiet for some time, then said, “You are right. I have no
wish to visit trouble upon the Kingdom. I will do as you say.”
The two men returned to the King’s side and waited. Nearly another
two hours passed before the priest listened at the King’s chest and said, “The
King is dead.”
Brucal and Lyam joined the priest in a silent prayer for Rodric.
Then the Duke of Yabon took a ring from Rodric’s hand and turned to Lyam.
“Come, it is time.”
He held aside the tent flap, and Lyam looked out. The sun had set,
and the night sky glittered with stars. Fires had been lit and torches brought,
so that now the multitude appeared to be an ocean of firelight. Not one man in
twenty had left, though they were all tired and hungry after the victory.
Brucal and Lyam appeared before the tent, and the old Duke said,
“The King is dead.” His face was stony, but his eyes were red-rimmed. Lyam
looked pale but stood erect, his head high.
Brucal held something above his head. A glint of deep red fire
reflected off the small object as it caught the torchlight. The nobles who
stood close nodded in understanding, for it was the royal signet, worn by all
the conDoin kings since Delong the Great had crossed the water from Rillanon to
plant the banner of the Kingdom of the Isles upon the mainland shore.
Brucal took Lyam’s hand and placed the ring upon his finger. Lyam
studied the old and worn ring, with its device cut into the ruby, still
undimmed by age. As he raised his eyes to behold the crowd, a noble stepped
forward. It was the Duke of Rodez, and he knelt before Lyam. “Your Highness,”
he said. One by one the others before the tent, nobles of both East and West,
knelt in homage, and like a wave rippling, all those assembled knelt, until
Lyam alone was standing.
Lyam looked at those before him, overcome with emotion and unable to
speak. He placed his hand upon Brucal’s shoulder and motioned for them all to
stand.
Suddenly the multitude was upon its feet, and the cheer went up,
“Hail, Lyam! Long live the Heir!” The soldiers of the Kingdom roared their approval,
doubly so, for many knew that hours ago the threat of civil war had hung over
their heads. Men of both East and West embraced and celebrated, for a terrible
future had been avoided.
Lyam raised his hands, and soon all were silent. His voice rang out
over their heads, and all could hear him say, “Let no man rejoice this night.
Let the drums be muffled and the trumpets blown low, for tonight we mourn a
King.”
Brucal pointed at the map. “The salient is surrounded, and each
attempt to break through to the main body has been turned back. We have
isolated nearly four thousand of their soldiers there.” It was late night.
Rodric had been buried with what honor could be afforded in the camp.
There had been none of the trappings common to a royal funeral, but the
business of war made it necessary. He had been quickly embalmed and buried in
his armor next to Borric, on a hillside overlooking the camp. When the war was
over, they would be returned to the tombs of their ancestors in Rillanon.
Now the young Heir looked over the map, gauging the situation in
light of the latest communique from the front. The Tsurani held in the North
Pass, at the entrance to the valley. The infantry had dug in before them,
bottling up those in the valley, and isolating both the forces along the river
Crydee and what was left of the salient.
“We have broken their offensive,” said Lyam, “but it is a two-edged
sword. We cannot attempt to fight on two fronts. We must also be ready should
the Tsurani try to move against us from the south. I see no quick ending yet,
in spite of our gains.”
Brucal said, “But surely those in the salient will surrender soon.
They are cut off, with little food or water, and cannot expect to be resupplied
In a matter of days they will be starving.”
Pug interrupted. “Forgive me, Lord Brucal, but they will not.”
“What can they gain by resisting? Their position is hopeless.”
“They tie up your forces that would otherwise be attacking the main
camp. Soon the situation in Tsuranuanni will be resolved enough for magicians
to return from the Assembly. Then food and water can be transported in without
interference. And each day they hold strengthens the Tsurani as reinforcements
arrive from Kelewan. They are Tsurani and will gladly die rather than be taken
captive.”
Lyam asked, “Are they so honor bound to die, then?”
“Yes. On Kelewan they know only that captives become slaves. The
idea of a prisoner exchange is unknown to them.”
“Then we must bring all our weight to bear upon the salient at
once,” said Brucal. “We must crush them and free our soldiers to deal with
other threats.”
“It will prove costly,” Lyam observed. “This time there will be no
element of surprise, and they are dug in like moles. We could lose two men for
each of theirs.”
Kulgan had been sitting off to one side with Laurie and Meecham. “It
is a tragedy that we have gained only a broadening of the fighting. And so soon
after the Emperor’s offer of peace.”
Pug said, “Perhaps it is still not too late.”
Lyam looked at Pug. “What do you mean? Kasumi must have already sent
word that the peace was refused.”
“Yes, but there may still be time to send word that there will be a
new king who is willing to talk peace.”
“Who will carry the message?” asked Kulgan. “Your life might be
forfeit if you return to the Empire.”
“We may be able to solve two problems at once. Your Highness, may I
have your leave to promise the Tsurani in the salient safe passage to their
lines?”
Lyam considered this. “I will, if I have their parole not to return
for a year’s time.”
“I will go to them, then,” said Pug. “Perhaps we can still end this
war in spite of the calamities that have befallen us.”
The Tsurani guards, nervous and alert, tensed at the sound of an
approaching rider. “They come!” one shouted, and men seized weapons and hurried
to the barricades. The southern earthworks were still intact, but here at the
western edge of the former salient the pickets had thrown up a hasty barrier of
felled trees and shallow trenches.
Bowmen stood ready, arrows notched, but the expected charge did not
come. A single figure on horseback came into view. His hands were raised
overhead, palms together in the sign for parley. And more, he wore the black
robe.
The rider walked his horse to the edge of the barricade and asked,
in perfect Tsurani, “Who commands here?”
A startled officer said, “Commander Wataun.”
The rider snapped, “You forget your manners, Strike Leader.” He took
note of the colors and devices on the man’s breastplate and helm. “Are the
Chilapaningo so lacking in civility?”
The officer came to attention. “Your pardon, Great One,” the man
stammered. “It is only that you were unexpected.”
“Bring Commander Wataun here.”
“Your will, Great One.”
The commander of the Tsurani salient came a short time later. He was
a bandy-legged, barrel-chested old fighter, and Great One or not, his first
concern was for the welfare of his troops. He looked at the magician
suspiciously. “I am here, Great One.”
“I have come to order you and your soldiers back to the valley.”
Commander Wataun smiled ruefully and shook his head. “I regret,
Great One, that I may not. Word of your exploits has been carried to us here,
and that the Assembly has called your status into question. You may be no
longer outside the law by now. If you had not come under a sign of parley, I
would have you taken, though it would cost us dearly.”
Pug felt a hot flush come to his cheeks. He had known it was likely
the Assembly would cast him out, but to hear this still caused him pain.
Ruefully, he knew that because of the training he had undergone, he would still
feel a sense of loyalty to that alien place and would never fully feel at home
in his native land.
With a sigh Pug said, “What then will you do?”
The Force Commander shrugged “Hold our position. Die if we must.”
“Then I will make you an offer, Commander. You must decide if it is
a trick or not. Kasumi of the Shinzawai carried an offer from the Light of
Heaven to the Midkemian King. It was an offer of peace. The King rejected it,
but now there is to be a new king who is willing to make peace. I would ask you
to carry word to the Holy City, to the Emperor, that Prince Lyam will accept
peace. Will you do so?”
The commander considered. “If what you say is true, then I would be
a fool to waste my men. What guarantees are you willing to make?”
“I give you my word, as a Great One—if that means anything still—
that what I say is true. I also promise that your men will be given safe
conduct back to the valley, on promise they return to the Empire for a year’s
time. And I will ride to the valley entrance, to your lines, as hostage. Is
that enough?”
The commander thought it over for a moment as he surveyed his tired,
thirsty troops. “I will agree, Great One. If it is the Light of Heaven’s will
that the war end, who am I to prolong it?”
“The Oaxatucan have long been known for their bravery. Let it be
said they are also worthy of honor for their wisdom.”
The commander bowed, then turned to his soldiers. “Pass the word. We
march home.”
Word that the Emperor would agree to peace reached the camp four
days later. Pug had given a message to Wataun to be carried through the rift.
It bore the black seal of the Assembly, and no one would impede its swift
delivery. It had been addressed to Fumita, asking him to carry word to the Holy
City that the new King of the Realm would not require retribution but would
accept peace.
Lyam had shown visible emotion when Pug had read the message. The
Emperor himself would come through the rift in a month’s time and would sign
formal treaties with the Kingdom. Pug had felt close to tears when he read the
news, which soon spread through the camp that the war was over. A great
cheering could be heard.
Pug and Kulgan sat in the older magician’s tent. For the first time
in years they had been feeling something like their old relationship. Pug was
finishing up a long explanation of the Tsurani system of instructing novices.
“Pug,” said Kulgan around a long pull on his pipe. “It seems that
now the war is over, we can return to the business of magicians. Only now it is
you who are master, and I who would be student.”
“There is much we may learn from each other, Kulgan. But I fear old
habits die hard I don’t think I could ever get used to the idea of your being a
student. And there are many things you are capable of that I still cannot do.”
Kulgan seemed surprised. “Really? I would have thought my simple
arts beneath your greatness.”
Pug felt the old embarrassment from when he had been Kulgan’s student.
“You make sport of me yet.”
Kulgan laughed. “Only a little, boy. And you are still a boy to one
of my advancing years. It is not easy for me to see an indifferent apprentice
become the most powerful magician of another world.”
“Indifferent was the proper word for it. At first I only wanted to
be a soldier. I think you knew that. Then when I had finally decided to devote
myself to study, the invasion began.” Pug smiled. “I think you felt sorry for
me that day when I stood alone before the Duke’s court, the only boy not
called.”
“That is partly true, though I was the first to sense the power in
you. And the judgment was borne out, no matter the amazing events required to
bring your ability to fruition.”
Pug sighed. “Well, the Assembly is nothing if not complete in its
training. Once the power is detected, there are but two options, success or
death. With all other thoughts banished, there is little to concern the student
but the study of magic. Without that, I doubt I would ever have amounted to
much.”
Kulgan said, “I think not. Had the Tsurani never come, there would
still have been a path to greatness for you to follow.”
They sat and talked and were comforted by each other’s presence.
After a while they lit fires, for darkness was falling. Katala came to the tent
to see if her husband was to join her and the boy at the celebration feast
being given by King Lyam. She looked inside and saw the two of them lost in
conversation.
She backed out and, with a faint smile on her lips, returned to her
son.
31
DECEPTIONS
Tomas awoke with a start.
In the predawn darkness something strange called to him. He sat up,
every sense extended, trying to recapture what had awakened him.
Aglaranna stirred next to him. Since his return from the
confrontation with Martin over the Tsurani prisoners, he had been free of the
alien dreams and the blind rages. He was no longer the boy from Crydee or the
ancient Dragon Lord, but a new being possessing qualities of both.
She came awake and slowly reached out to touch his shoulder. The
muscles were relaxed, free of the tension that marked his grappling with an
ancient dream. She breathed a long sigh, then said, “Tomas, what is it?”
He reached up to cover her hand with his own. “I don’t know.
Something odd occurred a moment ago.” He sat with his head slightly turned, as
if listening to something distant. “A change . . . a shift in the pattern of
things, perhaps.”
The Elf Queen said nothing. Since becoming his lover she had grown
used to his uncanny ability to sense events elsewhere, an ability unmatched by
even the most gifted of the ancient Spellweavers. A remnant of his Valheru
heritage, this awareness had come fully into bloom since he recovered his humanity.
She thought it strange, yet reassuring, that his Valheru powers had become more
pronounced and acute only since regaining his humanity. It was as if some force
had conspired to keep them blunted until he possessed the wisdom to use them.
Tomas stopped listening. “It is something to the east, a mixture of
rejoicing and a great sadness.” His voice sounded thick with emotion. “An age
is dying.”
He rolled off the sleeping pallet and stood, powerful muscles
revealed to Aglaranna’s elven eyes in the dim light. He stood at the door of
their sleeping chamber, looking out over Elvandar, listening to the sounds of
the night. Everything appeared calm.
The scent of the forest, thick, sweet, and heady, was overlaid with
the faint hints of aromas from last night’s supper, and the smell of bread
fresh from the oven for this morning’s meal. Night birds sang, while day birds
began their predawn warbling, and the sun prepared to rise in the east. The
touch of cool air upon his naked skin was a caress to Tomas, and he felt more
complete and at peace than he had ever been in his young life.
Aglaranna’s arms went around his waist, and he felt her press tight
against him. He could feel the beat of her heart as she held him close. “My
lord, my love,” she said, “return to our bed.”
He turned within the circle of her arms and felt the warmth of her
body against his. “There is something . . . “He gripped her close, but gently.
“There is a feeling of hope.”
She could feel his heat as his desire answered hers. “Hope. Would
that it is true.”
He looked down at her face, his senses as acute in the gloom as
hers, drinking in the sight of her. “Never lose hope, my Queen.”
He kissed her deeply, and whatever awakened him was quickly
forgotten.
Lyam sat quietly in his tent. He was composing the message he would
send to Crydee when a guard entered and announced the arrival of Pug and
Kulgan. Lyam rose and greeted them, and when the guards left, indicated they
should sit. “I am sorely in need of your wisdom.” He sat back and waved at the
parchments before him. “If Arutha is to reach us in time for the peace
conference, these must leave today. But I have never been much for letters, and
I also confess to great difficulty in sharing the events of the last week.”
Kulgan said, “May I?” pointing to the letter.
Lyam waved consent, and the magician picked up the parchment and
began to read. “ ‘To my beloved brother and sister: It is with the deepest
sorrow I must tell you of our father’s death. He was injured mortally in the
great Tsurani offensive, leading a counterattack to rescue surrounded soldiers,
mainly Hadati hillmen, auxiliaries to the garrison of Yabon. The Hadati sing
his name and make sagas in his honor, such was his bravery. He passed thinking
of his children, and his love for us all was undiminished.
“ ‘The King has also passed, and it has fallen to me to lead our
armies. Arutha, I would have you here, for we now are at the war’s end. The
Emperor is willing to make peace. We shall meet in the north valley of the Grey
Towers in twenty-nine days time, at noon. Carline, I would have you take ship
to Krondor with Anita, for there is much to be done there, and Princess Alicia
will have need of her daughter. I will join you with Arutha once peace has been
made. With love, and sharing in your sorrow, I am, your most loving brother,
Lyam.’ ”
Kulgan was quiet for a moment, and Lyam said, “I thought you might
be able to add something or other, to lend elegance to it.”
Kulgan said, “I think you announced your father’s passing with
simplicity and gentleness. It is a fine message.”
Lyam shifted uncomfortably in his chair. “There is so much yet to
write. I have said nothing about Martin.”
Kulgan took up a quill. “I will copy this again, for your pen is a
bit strangled, Lyam.” With a warm smile he added, “You were always one to
prefer the sword to the quill. I’ll add some instructions to the end, asking
that Martin go to Krondor with your sister. Gardan and Fannon should also make
the journey. And an honor company of the castle garrison. It will make it seem
you mean to honor those who served so well in Crydee. Then you will have ample
time to decide how to tell Martin what you must.”
Pug shook his head sadly. “I only wish you could add Roland’s name
to that list.” Since coming to the camp, he had learned of the Squire of
Tulan’s death. Kulgan had told him of what he knew of events in Crydee and
elsewhere concerning his old friends over the last few years.
Lyam said, “Curse me for a fool! Carline has no idea you are back,
Pug. You must add that, Kulgan.”
Pug said, “I hope it will not come as too much of a shock.”
Kulgan chuckled. “Not so much of a shock as discovering you’ve a
wife and child.”
Memories of his boyhood and his tempestuous relationship with the
Princess returned, and Pug said, “I hope also she has outgrown some of the
notions she held nine years ago.”
Lyam laughed for the first time since his father’s death, genuinely
entertained by Pug’s discomfort. “Rest assured, Pug I’ve had many long
communications with my brother and sister over the years, and I judge Carline a
greatly changed young woman from the girl you once knew. She was fifteen years
old when last you saw her. Think of your own changes in the last nine years.”
Pug nodded.
Kulgan finished his copy work and handed the document to Lyam. He
read it and said, “Thank you, Kulgan. You’ve added just the right note of
gentleness.”
The tent flap opened and Brucal entered, his old, lined face
animated with glee. “Bas-Tyra’s fled!”
“How?” asked Lyam. “Our soldiers must still be a week from Krondor,
maybe more.”
The old Duke sat heavily in a chair. “We found a hidden cage of
messenger pigeons, belonging to the late Richard of Salador. One of his men
sent word to Guy of Rodric’s death, and your being named Heir. We’ve questioned
the fellow, a valet of Richard’s He’s admitted to being one of Bas-Tyra’s spies
in Richard’s court. Guy’s fled the city, knowing one of your first acts as King
will be to have him hung. My guess is he will make straight for Rillanon.”
“I would have thought that would be the last place on Midkemia he
would wish to be,” remarked Kulgan.
“Black Guy is no man’s fool, whatever else may be said of him. He’ll
be underground, no doubt, but you’ll see his handiwork again before we are
through. Until the crown is resting upon Lyam’s head, Guy is still a power in
the Kingdom.”
Lyam looked troubled at the last remark, thinking of his father’s
dying declaration. Since Brucal’s admonition to say nothing of Martin, everyone
had spoken only of Lyam’s coronation, nothing of Martin’s possible claim to the
crown.
Lyam let these disturbing thoughts pass by as Brucal continued
speaking: “Still, with Bas-Tyra on the sly, most of our troubles are now
behind. And with the war near an end, we can get back to the business of
rebuilding the Kingdom. And I for one am glad I am getting too old for much
more of this nonsense of war and politics. I only regret I am without a son, so
I could announce in his favor and retire.”
Lyam studied Brucal with affectionate disbelief. “You’ll never bow
down gracefully, old war dog. You’ll go to your deathbed scratching and clawing
every inch of the way, and that day is years off.”
“Who’s talking of dying?” snorted Brucal. “I mean to hunt my hounds
and fly my falcons, and do some fishing as well. Who knows? I may find some
comely wench hearty enough to keep up with me, say about seventeen or eighteen
years of age, and remarry and father a son yet. If that young fool Vandros ever
gathers his wits about him and marries my Felinah, you just see how fast he’ll
become Duke of Yabon when I retire.
“Why she still waits for him is anybody’s guess.” He heaved himself
up from his chair. “I am for a hot bath and some sleep before supper. By your
leave?”
Lyam motioned he might leave and, when he was gone, said, “I will
never get used to this business of people needing my permission to come and
go.”
Pug and Kulgan rose from their chairs. Kulgan said, “You had better,
for everyone will ask it of you from now on. With your permission . . . ?”
Feigning disgust, Lyam motioned they might go.
The council sat in assembly as Aglaranna took her place upon the
throne. Besides the normal council, Martin Longbow was present, standing beside
Tomas. When all were in place, Aglaranna said, “You have asked for council,
Tathar. Now tell us what cause you bring before us.”
Tathar bowed slightly to the Queen. “We of the council felt it time
for an understanding.”
“Of what, Tathar?” asked the Elf Queen.
Tathar said, “We have labored long to bring a peaceful, secure
ending to this business of Tomas. It is known by all here that our arts were
turned to calming the rage within, softening the might of the Valheru, so the
young man who was transformed would not be overwhelmed in the course of time.”
He paused, and Martin leaned close to Tomas. “Trouble.”
Tomas startled him with a slight smile and a wink. Once more Martin
was reassured that the mirthful boy he had known in Crydee was as much present
in this young man as the Dragon Lord. “Everything will be fine,” said Tomas in
a whisper.
“We have,” said Tathar, “come to judge this business done, for Tomas
is no longer to be feared as an Old One.”
Aglaranna said, “That is happy news indeed. But is this then cause
for a council?”
“No, lady. Something else must also be laid to rest. For while we no
longer fear Tomas, still we will not place ourselves under his rule.”
Aglaranna stood, outrage clear upon her face. “Who dares to presume
this? Has there been a single word from any to suggest that Tomas seeks to
rule?”
Tathar stood firm before his Queen’s displeasure. “My lady, you see
with a lover’s eyes.” Before she could answer, he held up his hand. “Speak not
sharp words with me, daughter of my oldest friend; I make no accusations. That
he shares your bed is no one’s concern save yourself. We begrudge you nothing.
But he now has the means of a claim, and we would have the matter settled now.”
Aglaranna paled, and Tomas stepped forward. “What means?” he said,
his voice commanding.
Tathar looked slightly surprised. “She carries your child. Did you
not know?”
Tomas was bereft of words. Conflicting feelings ran through him. A
child! Yet he had not been told. He looked at Tathar “How do you know?”
Tathar smiled, and there was no mockery in it. “I am old, Tomas I
can see the signs.”
Tomas looked to Aglaranna. “It is true?”
She nodded. “I would not tell you until it was no longer possible to
hide the truth.”
He felt a stab of uncertainty. “Why?”
“To spare you any worry. Until the war is through, you must put your
mind to nothing else. I would not burden you with other thoughts.”
Tomas stood quietly for a moment, then threw back his head and
laughed, a clear, joyous sound. “A child Praise the gods!”
Tathar looked thoughtfully at Tomas. “Do you claim the throne?”
“Aye, I do, Tathar,” Tomas said, a smile upon his face.
Calin spoke for the first time. “It is my inheritance, Tomas. You
will have to contest with me for it.”
Tomas smiled at Calin. “I will not cross swords with you, son of my
beloved.”
“If you seek to be King among us, then you must.”
Tomas walked over to Calin. There had never been any affection
between them, for more than the others, Calin had feared Tomas’s potential
threat to his people and now stood ready to fight if need be.
Tomas placed his hand upon Calin’s shoulder and looked deeply into
his eyes. “You are Heir. I speak not of being your King.” He stepped away and
addressed the council. “I am what you see before you, a being of two heritages.
I possess the power of the Valheru, though I was not born to it, and my mind
remembers ages long gone to dust. But I can remember a boy’s memories and can
again feel the joy in laughter and a lover’s touch.” He looked at the Elf
Queen. “I claim only the right to sit beside my Queen, with your blessings, as her
consort. I will take only what rule she and you give, nothing more. Should you
give none, still I will remain at her side.” Then, with firmness, he added,
“But I will not stand down from this: our child shall have a heritage
unblemished by a sinister birth.”
There was a general murmur of approval, and Tomas faced Aglaranna.
“If you will take me as husband?” he said in the ancient elven language.
Aglaranna sat with eyes gleaming. She looked to Tathar “I will. Is
there any who denies me the right?”
Tathar looked around at the other councillors. Seeing no dissension,
Tathar said, “It is permitted, my lady.”
Abruptly there was a shout of approval from the gathered elves, and
soon others were coming to investigate the unusual display of activity in the
council. They in turn joined in the celebration, for all knew of the Queen’s
love for the warrior in white and gold, and they judged him a fit consort.
Calin said, “You are wise in our ways, Tomas. Had you done
otherwise, there would have been strife, or lingering doubt. I thank you for
your prudence.”
Tomas took his hand in a firm grip. “It is only just, Calin. Your
claim is without question. When your Queen and I have journeyed to the Blessed
Isles, then our child will be your loyal subject.”
Aglaranna came to Tomas’s side, and Martin joined them, to say, “Joy
in all things.” Tomas embraced his friend, as did the Queen.
Calin shouted for silence. When the noise had died, he said, “It is
time for clear speaking. Let all know that what has been fact for years is now
openly acknowledged. Tomas is Warleader of Elvandar, and Prince Consort to the
Queen. His words are to be obeyed by all save the Queen. I, Calin, have
spoken.”
“And I, too, say this is true,” echoed Tathar. Then the council
bowed before the Queen and her husband-to-be.
Martin said, “It is well I shall leave Elvandar as happiness
returns.”
Aglaranna said, “You are leaving?”
“I fear I must. There is still a war, and I am still Huntmaster of
Crydee. Besides,” he said with a grin, “I fear young Garret is growing overly
content to rest and partake of your largess. I must harry him along the trail
before he gets fat.”
“You’ll stay for the wedding?” asked Tomas.
As Martin began to apologize, Aglaranna said, “The ceremony can be
tomorrow.”
Martin conceded. “One more day? I will be pleased.”
Another shout went up, and Tomas could see Dolgan pushing through
the crowd When the dwarf chief stood before them, he said, “We were not invited
to the council, but when we heard the shouts, we came.” Behind him Tomas and
Aglaranna could see the other dwarves approaching.
Tomas placed his hand upon Dolgan’s shoulder. “Old companion, you
are welcome. You have come to a celebration. There is to be a wedding.”
Dolgan fixed them both with a knowing smile. “Aye, and high time.”
The rider spurred his horse past the lines of Tsurani soldiers. He
was still discomforted by the sight of so many of them passing to the east, and
the recent enemy watched him ride by with guarded expressions as he headed
toward Elvandar.
Laurie pulled in his horse near a large outcropping of rock where a
Tsurani officer in black-and-orange armor supervised the passing soldiers. From
his officer’s plume and insignia, he was a Force Leader, surrounded by his
cadre of Strike Leaders and Patrol Leaders. To the Force Leader he said, “Where
lies the closest ford across the river?”
The other officers regarded Laurie with suspicion, but if the Force
Leader felt any surprise at the barbarian’s nearly perfect Tsurani, he did not
show it. He inclined his head back the way his men marched from and said, “A
short way from here. Less than an hour’s march. Faster on your beast, I’m sure.
It is marked by two large trees on either side of a clearing, above a place
where the river falls a short way.”
Laurie had no difficulty identifying the house colors the man wore,
as it was one of the Five Great Families, and said, “Thank you, Force Leader.
Honor to your house, son of the Minwanabi.”
The Force Leader stood erect. He did not know who this rider was,
but he was courteous, and that courtesy must be returned. “Honor to your house,
stranger.”
Laurie rode forward past the dispirited Tsurani soldiers plodding
along the banks of the river. He found the clearing above the small falls and
rode into the water. The river ran swiftly here, but the horse managed to cross
without incident Laurie could feel the spray from the falls as the wind blew it
back in his direction. It felt cool and refreshing after the hot ride. He had
been in the saddle since before daybreak and would not finish his ride until
after night had fallen. By then he would be close enough to Elvandar to be
intercepted by elven sentries. They would certainly be watching the Tsurani
withdrawal with interest, and one could guide him to their Queen.
Laurie had volunteered to carry the message, for it was felt that
the messenger would be less likely to encounter trouble if he could speak
Tsurani. He had been challenged three times during his ride, and each time he
had explained his way past suspicious Tsurani officers. There might be a truce,
but there was little trust yet.
When he was clear of the river, Laurie dismounted, for his horse was
tired. He walked the animal to cool it off. He pulled the saddle from the
mount’s back and was rubbing him down with a brush carried in his saddlebags
when a figure stepped out from among the trees. Laurie was startled, for the
figure was not an elf. He was a dark-haired man with grey at the temples,
dressed in a brown robe, and holding a staff. He approached the minstrel,
without hurry and seemingly at ease. He stopped a few feet away and leaned on
his staff. “Well met, Laurie of Tyr-Sog.”
The man possessed a strange manner, and Laurie did not remember
having met him before. “Do I know you?”
“No, but I have knowledge of you, troubadour.”
Laurie edged closer to his saddle, where his sword lay. The man
smiled and waved his hand in the air. Abruptly Laurie was filled with calm, and
he stopped moving for his sword. Whoever this man was, he was obviously
harmless, he thought.
“What brings you to the elven forest, Laurie?”
Without knowing why, Laurie answered. “I bring messages to the Elf
Queen.”
“What are you to say?”
“That Lyam is now Heir, and peace has been restored. He invites the
elves and the dwarves to the valley in three weeks’ time, for there will they
seal the peace.”
The man nodded. “I see. I am on my way to see the Elf Queen. I will
carry word. You must have better things you can do with your time.”
Laurie started to protest, but stopped. Why should he travel to
Elvandar when this man was bound there anyway? It was a waste of time.
Laurie nodded. The man chuckled. “Why don’t you rest here for the
night? The sound of water is soothing, and there is little chance of rain.
Tomorrow return to the Prince and tell him that you carried the message to
Elvandar. You spoke with the Queen and Tomas, and they were agreed to the
Prince’s wishes. The dwarves of Stone Mountain will hear also. Then tell Lyam
that the elves and the dwarves will come. He may rest assured, they will come.”
Laurie nodded. What the man was saying made a great deal of sense.
The stranger turned to leave, then said, “By the way, I think you’d best not
mention our meeting.”
Laurie said nothing, but accepted what the stranger said without
question. After the man was gone, he felt a great sense of relief that he was
on his way back from Elvandar and that his message had been received.
The ceremony took place in a quiet glade, with Aglaranna and Tomas
exchanging vows before Tathar. No one else was there, as was the elven way,
while they pledged their love. Tathar invoked the blessings of the gods and
instructed them on their duty, one to the other.
When the ceremony was complete, Tathar said, “Now return to
Elvandar, for it is time for feasting and celebration. You have brought joy to
your people, my Queen and my Prince.”
They rose from their kneeling positions and embraced. Tomas stepped
back and said, “I would have this day remembered, beloved.” He turned and
cupped his hands around his mouth. In the ancient language of the elves he
cried, “Belegroch! Belegroch! Attend us.”
The sound of hooves pounding the earth could be heard. Then a small
band of white horses raced into the glade, ran toward them, and reared in
salute to the Elf Queen and her consort Tomas leaped upon the back of one. The
elf steed stood quietly, and Tathar said, “By no other way could you have shown
so well that you are now one with us.”
Aglaranna and Tathar mounted, and they rode back to Elvandar. When
they came into sight of the tree-city, a great shout went up from the assembled
elves. The sight of the Queen and her Prince Consort riding the elf steeds was,
as Tathar said, a confirmation of Tomas’s place in Elvandar.
The feasting went on for hours, and Tomas observed that the joy he
felt was shared by everyone. Aglaranna sat next to him, for a second throne had
been placed in the council hall, acknowledging Tomas’s rank. Every elf who was
not keeping watch over the outworlders came to stand before them, pledging
loyalty and offering blessings on the union. The dwarves also offered their
congratulations and joined in the festivities wholeheartedly, filling the
glades of Elvandar with their boisterous singing.
Long into the night the celebration wore on Suddenly Tomas
stiffened. A chilled wind seemed to pass through him. Aglaranna gripped his
arm, sensing something amiss “Husband, what is it?”
Tomas stared into space “Something . . . strange . . . like the
other night: hopeful, but sad.”
Abruptly there was a shout from the edge of the clearing below
Elvandar. It cut through the sound of the celebration, but what was being said
was unclear. Tomas rose, with Aglaranna at his side, and crossed to the edge of
the huge platform. Looking down, he could see an elven scout below, clearly out
of breath. “What is afoot?” Tomas shouted.
“My lord,” came the reply, “the outworlders—they withdraw.”
Tomas was rooted in place. Those simple words struck him like a
blow. His mind couldn’t comprehend the Tsurani’s leaving after all these years
of fighting. He shook off the feeling. “To what ends? Do they marshal?”
The scout shook his head. “No, my lord, they are not staging. They
move slowly, without alarm. Their soldiers look dispirited. They break camp
along every mile of the Crydee and turn east.” The guard’s upturned face showed
an expression of stunned but joyful understanding. He looked at those nearby,
then with a smile said simply, “They are leaving.”
A shout of incredible joy went up, and many openly wept, for it
seemed that at last the war was ended. Tomas turned and saw tears on the face
of his wife. She embraced him, and they stood quietly for a moment. After a
time the new Prince Consort of Elvandar said to Calin, who stood nearby, “Send
runners to follow, for it may be a trick.”
Aglaranna said, “Do you truly think so, Tomas?”
He shook his head. “I only wish to make sure, but something inside
tells me this is truly the end. It was the hope of peace with the sadness of
defeat mingled together that I felt.”
She touched his cheek, and he said, “I will send runners to the
Kingdom camp and inquire of Lord Borric what is happening.”
She said, “If it is peace, he will send word.”
Tomas looked at her. “True. We shall wait, then.” He studied her
face, centuries old, but still filled with the beauty of a woman in her first
bloom. “This day will doubly be remembered as a day to celebrate.”
Neither Tomas nor Aglaranna was surprised when Macros arrived in
Elvandar, for they had ceased being amazed at the sorcerer after his first
visit. Without ceremony he stepped forward from the trees surrounding the
clearing and crossed toward the tree-city.
The entire court was assembled, including Longbow, when Macros came
to stand before the Queen and Tomas. He bowed and said, “Greetings, lady, and to
your consort.”
“Welcome, Macros the Black,” said the Queen. “Have you come to
unravel the mystery of the outworlders’ withdrawal?”
Macros leaned upon his staff and nodded “I bring news.” He seemed to
consider his words carefully. “You should know that both the King and the Lord
of Crydee are dead. Lyam is now Heir.”
Tomas noticed Martin. The Huntmaster’s face was drained of blood.
His features remained impassive, but it was clear to Tomas that Martin was
rocked by the news. Tomas turned toward Macros. “I knew not the King, but the
Duke was a fine man. I am sorry for such news.”
Macros went over to Martin. Martin watched the sorcerer, for while
he had never met him, he knew him by reputation, having been told by Arutha of
the meeting upon his island and by Tomas of his intervention during the Tsurani
invasion of Elvandar. “You, Martin Longbow, are to go at once to Crydee. There
you will sail with the Princesses Carline and Anita for Krondor.” Martin was
about to speak when Macros raised his hand; those of the court paused as if
taking a breath. In a near-whisper Macros said, “At the last, your father spoke
your name in love.” Then his hand dropped, and all was as it had been.
Martin felt no alarm, but rather a sense of comfort from the
sorcerer’s words, he knew no one else had been aware of the brief remark.
Macros said, “Now hear more glad tidings. The war is over Lyam and
Ichindar meet in twenty days’ time to sign a peace treaty.”
A cheer went up in the court, and those above shouted the news to
those below. Soon all of the elven forests echoed with the sound of rejoicing.
Dolgan again entered the council, wiping his eyes. “What’s this? Another
celebration without us while I nap? You’ll make me think we’re no longer
welcome.”
Tomas laughed “Nothing of the kind, Dolgan. Fetch your brethren and
have them join our celebration. The war is over.”
Dolgan took out his pipe and knocked the dottle from it, kicking the
burned-out tabac over the edge of the platform. “Finally,” he said as he opened
his pouch. He turned away, as if intent upon filling his pipe, and Tomas
pretended not to notice the wetness upon the dwarven chief’s face.
Arutha sat upon his father’s throne, alone in the great hall. He
held the message from his brother, which he had read several times, trying to
understand that their father was truly gone. Grief sat heavy upon him.
Carline had taken the news well She had gone to the quiet garden
beside the keep, to be alone with her thoughts.
Thoughts ran not through Arutha’s mind. He remembered the first time
his father had taken him hunting, then another time when he had come back from
hunting with Martin Longbow and how proudly he had listened to his father
exclaim over the large buck he had taken. He vaguely recalled the ache when he
had learned of his mother’s death, but it was a distant thing, dulled by time.
The image of his father enraged in the King’s palace suddenly came to him, and
Arutha let out a slow sigh. “At least,” he said to himself, “most of what you
had wished has come to pass, Father. Rodric is gone and Guy is in disgrace.”
“Arutha?” said a voice from the other side of the hall.
Arutha looked up: stepping from the shadows of the doorway came
Anita, her satin-slippered feet making no sound as she crossed the stone floor
of the hall.
Lost in his thoughts, he hadn’t noticed her enter. She carried a
small lamp, for evening had cast the hall into deep gloom. “The pages were
reluctant to disturb you, but I couldn’t see you sitting alone in the
darkness,” she said. Arutha felt pleasure at the sight of her and relief she
had come. A young woman of uncommon sense and tender ways, Anita was the first
person Arutha had known to see beneath his surface calm and dry humor. More
than those who had known him since boyhood, she understood his moods and could
lighten them, knowing the right words to comfort him.
Without waiting for him to answer, she said, “I have heard the news,
Arutha. I am so terribly sorry.”
Arutha smiled at her. “Not yet over your own grief at your father’s
passing, and you share mine. You are kind.”
Word of Erland’s death had come a week before on a ship from
Krondor. Anita shook her head, her soft red hair moving in a rippling wave
around her face. “Father was very ill for many years. He prepared us well for
his death. It was a near-certainty when he was put into the dungeon. I knew
that when we left Krondor.”
“Still, you show strength. I hope I am able to bear up as well.
There is so much to be done.”
She spoke quietly. “I think you will rule wisely, Lyam in Rillanon,
you in Krondor.”
“I? In Krondor? I’ve avoided thinking about that.”
She sat at his side, taking the throne Carline sat in when at her
father’s side in court. She reached over and placed her hand upon Arutha’s,
resting on the arm of the throne. “You must. After Lyam, you are Heir to the
crown. The Prince of Krondor is the Heir’s office. There is no one to rule
there but you.”
Arutha looked uncomfortable. “Anita, I have always assumed I would
someday become Earl of some minor keep, or perhaps seek a career as an officer
in one of the Border Barons’ armies. But I had never thought to rule. I am not
sure I welcome being Duke of Crydee, let alone Prince of Krondor. Besides, Lyam
will marry, I am sure—he always caught the girls’ eyes, and as King he’ll certainly
have his pick. When he has a son, the boy can be Prince of Krondor.”
Anita shook her head firmly. “No, Arutha. There is too much work to
be done now. The Western Realm needs a strong hand, your hand. Another Viceroy
is not likely to win trust, for each lord will suspect any other who is named.
It must be you.”
Arutha
studied the young woman. In the five months she had been at Crydee, he had come
to care dearly for her, though he had been unable to express his feelings,
finding words lacking when they were together. She was each day more a
beautiful woman, less a girl. She was still young, which made him
uncomfortable. With the war in progress, he had kept his thoughts away from
their respective fathers’ plans for a possible marriage, revealed to him that
night aboard the Sea Swift. Now, with peace at hand, Arutha was suddenly
confronted with that question.
“Anita, what you say is possibly true, but you also have a claim to
the throne. Didn’t you say your father’s plan for our marriage was designed to
bolster your claim to Krondor?”
She looked at him with large green eyes. “That was a plan to foil
Guy’s ambitions. It was to strengthen your father’s or brother’s claim to the
crown should Rodric die heirless. Now you need not feel bound to those plans.”
“Should I take Krondor, what will you do?”
“Mother and I have other estates. We can live quite well upon the
revenues, I am sure.”
Struggling with emotions within himself, Arutha spoke slowly. “I
have not had time to weigh this in my mind. When I was last in Krondor, I
learned how little I know of cities, and I know less than that of governing.
“You were raised for such undertakings. I . . . I was only a second
son. My education is lacking.”
“There are many able men, here and in Krondor, who will advise you.
You have a good head for things, Arutha, the ability to see what must be done,
and the courage to act. You will do well as Prince of Krondor.”
She rose and leaned over to kiss his cheek. “There is time for you
to decide how best to serve your brother, Arutha Try not to let this new
responsibihty weigh too heavily upon you.”
“I will try Still, I would feel better knowing vou were close by—you
and your mother.” he added with a rush.
She smiled warmly “We will be close at hand should you have need of
our advice, Arutha. We will likely stay upon our estate in the hills near
Krondor, just a few hours’ ride from the palace. Krondor is the only home I’ve
known, and Mother has lived nowhere else since she was a girl. Should you wish
to see us, you have but to command, and we will happily come to court. And
should you wish to find respite from the burdens of office, you will be a
welcome guest.”
Arutha smiled at the girl “I suspect I will be visiting with
regularity, and I hope I do not wear out my welcome.”
“Never, Arutha.”
Tomas stood alone on the platform, watching the stars through the
branches above. His elven senses informed him someone had come up behind. With
a nod he greeted the sorcerer. “I am but twenty-five years in this life,
Macros, though I bear memories of ages. All my adult life I have been waging
war. It seems a dream.”
“Let us not turn this dream into a nightmare.”
Tomas studied the sorcerer. “What do you mean?”
Macros said nothing for a time, and Tomas awaited his words with
patience. At last the sorcerer spoke. “There is this thing which must be done,
Tomas, and it has fallen to you to finish this war.”
“I like little the tone of your words. I thought you said the war
was finished.”
“On the day of the meeting between Lyam and the Emperor, you must
marshal the elves and dwarves to the west of the field. When the monarchs meet
in the center of the field, then will there be treachery.”
“What treachery?” Tomas’s face showed his anger.
“I may say little more, save that when Ichindar and Lyam are seated,
you must attack the Tsurani with all your forces. Only this way can Midkemia be
saved from utter destruction.”
A look of suspicion crossed Tomas’s face. “You ask much for one
unwilling to give more.”
Macros stood tall, holding his staff to one side, like a ruler his
sceptre.
His dark eyes narrowed, and his brows met over his hooked nose. His
voice stayed soft, but his words were hot with anger. Even Tomas felt something
akin to awe in his presence.
“More!” he said, biting off the word. “I gave you all, Valheru! You
are here by dint of my actions over many years. More of my life than you will
know has been given to preparing for your coming. Had I not bested, then
befriended Rhuagh, you would never have survived in the mines of Mac Mordain
Cadal. It was I who prepared the armor and sword of Ashen-Shugar, leaving them
with the Hammer of Tholin and my gift to the dragon, so that centuries later
you would discover them. It was I who set your feet upon the path, Tomas. Had I
not come to aid you, years past, Elvandar would now be ashes. Do you think
Tathar and the other Spellweavers of Elvandar were the only ones to work on
your behalf? Without my aid over these last nine years, you would have been
destroyed utterly by the dragon’s gifts. No mere human could have withstood
such ancient and powerful magic without the intervention only I could make.
When you were swept along upon your dream quests to the past, it was I who
guided you back to the present, I who returned you to sanity.” The sorcerer’s
voice rose. “It was I who gave you the power to influence Ashen-Shugar! You
were my tool!” Tomas stepped back before the controlled fury of the sorcerer’s
words. “No, Tomas, I have not given you much. I have given you everything!”
For the first time since donning the armor in Mac Mordain Cadal,
Tomas felt fear. In the most basic fiber of his being he suddenly was aware of
how much power the sorcerer possessed, and that should Macros choose, he could
brush him aside like a nettlesome insect “Who are you?” he asked quietly,
controlled fear in his voice.
Macros’s anger vanished. He leaned once again upon his staff, and
Tomas’s fears fled and with them all memory of his fears. With a chuckle,
Macros said, “I tend to forget myself upon occasion. My apologies.” Then he
grew serious once again. “I do not ask this thing from any demand of gratitude.
What I have done is done, and you owe me nothing. But know this: both the
creature called Ashen-Shugar and the boy called Tomas shared an abiding love of
this world, each in his own way, incomprehensible to each other as that love
was. You possess both aspects of the love of land: the desire of the Valheru to
protect and control, and the desire of the keep boy to nurture and nourish. But
should you fail in this task I set before you, should you stint in resolve when
the moment is nigh, then know with dread certainty, this world upon which we
stand shall be lost, lost beyond recalling. This on my most holy oath is the
truth.”
“Then I shall do as you instruct.”
Macros smiled. “Go then to your wife, Prince Consort of Elvandar,
but when it is time, marshal your army. I go to Stone Mountain, for Harthorn
and his soldiers will join you. Every sword and war hammer is needed.”
“Will they know you?”
Macros gazed at Tomas. “Indeed they will know me, Tomas of Elvandar,
never doubt.”
“I shall gather all the might of Elvandar, Macros.” A grim note
entered his voice. “And for all time, we will put an end to this war.”
Macros waved his staff and vanished. Tomas waited alone for a time,
struggling with a newfound fear, that this war would last forever.
32
BETRAYAL
The armies stood facing one another.
Seasoned veterans eyed each other across the open valley floor, not
quite ready to feel at ease in the presence of an enemy they had fought for
nine years and longer. Each side was composed of honor companies, representing
the nobles of the Kingdom and clans of the Empire. Each numbered in excess of a
thousand men. The last of the Tsurani invasion army was now entering the rift,
returning home to Kelewan, leaving only the Emperor’s honor detachment behind.
The Kingdom army was still camped at the mouths of the two passes into the
valley and would not leave the area until the treaty was finalized. There was still
a cautious aspect to the newfound trust.
On the Kingdom side of the valley, Lyam sat astride a white
war-horse, awaiting the Emperor’s arrival. Nearby the nobles of the Kingdom,
their armor cleaned and polished, sat their horses. With them were the leaders
of the Free Cities militia and a detachment of Natalese Rangers.
Trumpets sounded from across the field, and the Emperor’s party
could be seen emerging from the rift. Imperial banners fluttered in the breeze
as the procession moved to the head of the Tsurani contingent.
Awaiting the Tsurani herald, who was walking across the several
hundred yards that separated the opposing monarchs, Prince Lyam turned to
regard those who sat on horseback nearby. Pug, Kulgan, Meecham, and Laurie were
accorded their position of honor by dint of their service to the Kingdom Earl
Vandros and several other officers who had distinguished themselves were also
close by. Next to Lyam sat Arutha, astride a chestnut war-horse, who pranced in
place out of high spirits.
Pug looked around, feeling a giddy sensation at the sight of all the
symbols of two mighty nations with whose fates he had been so closely tied.
Across the open field he could see the banners of the powerful families of the
Empire, all familiar to him: the Keda, the Oaxatucan, the Minwanabi, and the
rest. Behind him were the fluttering banners of the Kingdom, all the duchies
from Crydee in the west to Ran in the east.
Kulgan noticed his former student’s far-off gaze and tapped him on
the shoulder with the long staff he was holding. “Are you all right?”
Pug turned. “I’m fine. I was just a little overwhelmed for a moment,
engulfed in memories. It seems strange to see this day, in a way. Both sides of
the war were bitter enemies, and yet I have ties with both lands. I find I have
feelings I’ve yet to explore.”
Kulgan smiled. “There will be much time for introspection later
Perhaps Tully and I can offer some aid.” The old cleric had accompanied Arutha
on his brutal ride, not wishing to miss the peace meeting. The fourteen days in
the saddle had taken a toll, however, and now he lay ill in Lyam’s tent. It had
taken a command from Lyam to keep him there, for he had been determined to
accompany the royal party.
The Tsurani herald reached a place before Lyam. He bowed low, then
said something in Tsurani. Pug rode forward to translate. “He says, ‘His Most
Imperial Majesty, Ichindar, ninety-one times Emperor, Light of Heaven, and
ruler of all the nations of Tsuranuanni, sends greetings to his brother
monarch, His most Royal Highness, Prince Lyam, ruler of the lands known as the
Kingdom. Will the Prince accept his invitation to join with him at the center
of the valley?’ ”
Lyam said, “Tell him that I return his greetings and will be pleased
to meet with him at the appointed place.” Pug translated, with the appropriate
Tsurani formality, and the herald bowed low and returned to his own lines.
They could see the imperial litter being carried forward Lyam
signaled that his escort should accompany him, and they rode out to meet the
Emperor in the center of the valley floor Pug, Kulgan, and Laurie rode with the
honor escort, Meecham waited with the soldiers.
The Kingdom horsemen reached the designated place first and waited while
the imperial retinue approached. The litter was born on the backs of twenty
slaves, chosen for their uniformity in height and appearance. Their thick
muscles bunched under the strain of carrying the heavy, gold-encrusted litter.
Gauzy white curtains hung from gold-inlaid wooden supports, decorated with gems
of great value and beauty. The rare metal and gems caught the sun’s rays and
glittered brightly.
Behind the litter marched representatives of the most powerful
families in the Empire, clan Warchiefs. There were five of them, one for each
family eligible to elect a new Warlord.
The litter was lowered, and Ichindar, Emperor of the nations of
Tsuranuanni, stepped out. He was dressed in golden armor, its value
immeasurable by Tsurani standards. Upon his head was a crested helm covered in
the same metal. He walked over to Lyam, who had dismounted to meet him. Pug,
who was to translate, dismounted and walked to stand to one side of the two
rulers. The Emperor nodded curtly to him.
Lyam and Ichindar studied one another, and both seemed surprised at
the other’s youthfulness. Ichindar was only three years older than the new
Heir.
Lyam began by welcoming the Emperor with friendship and the hope of
peace Ichindar responded in kind. Then the Light of Heaven stepped forward and
extended his right hand. “I understand this is your custom?”
Lyam took the hand of the Emperor of Tsuranuanni. Suddenly the
tension broke, and cheers went up from both sides of the valley. The two young
monarchs were smiling, and the handshake was vigorous and firm.
Lyam said, “May this be the beginning of a lasting peace for our two
nations.”
Ichindar answered, “Peace is a new thing to Tsuranuanni, but I trust
we will learn quickly. My High Council is divided over my actions. I hope the
fruits of trade and the prosperity gained by learning from one another will
unify attitudes.”
“That is my wish also,” said Lyam. “To mark the truce, I have
ordered a gift prepared for you.” He signaled, and a soldier trotted out from
the Kingdom lines, leading a beautiful black war-horse behind. A black saddle
set with gold was upon its back, and from the saddle horn hung a broadsword,
with a jeweled scabbard and hilt.
Ichindar regarded the horse with a little skepticism, but was awed
by the workmanship of the sword. He hefted the great blade and said, “You honor
me, Prince Lyam.”
Ichindar turned to one of his escorts, who ordered a chest carried
forward. Two slaves set it before the Emperor. It was carved ngaggi wood,
finished to a deep and beautiful shine. Scrollwork surrounded bas-relief
carvings of Tsurani animals and plants. Each had been cleverly stained in
lighter and darker tones, in nearly lifelike detail. In itself it was a fine
gift, but when the lid was thrown back, a pile of the finest cut stones, all
larger than a man’s thumb, glistened in the sun.
The Emperor said, “I would have difficulty justifying reparation to
the High Council, and my position with them is not the best at present, but a
gift to mark the occasion they cannot fault. I hope this will repair some of
the destruction my nation has caused.”
Lyam bowed slightly. “You are generous and I thank you. Will you
join me for refreshments?” The Emperor nodded, and Lyam gave a command for a
pavilion to be erected. A dozen soldiers galloped forward and dismounted
Several carried poles and bolts of material. In short order a large, open-sided
pavilion was erected. Chairs and a table were set up under the covering. Other
soldiers brought wine and food and placed them upon the table.
Pug pulled out a large cushioned chair for the Emperor, as Arutha
did for his brother. The two rulers sat, and Ichindar said, “This is quite a
bit more comfortable than my throne. I must have a cushion made.”
Wine was poured, and Lyam and the Emperor toasted each other. Then a
toast to peace was offered. Everyone present drank it.
Ichindar turned to Pug. “Great One, it seems that this meeting will
prove more salubrious to those around than our last.”
Pug bowed. “I trust so, Your Imperial Majesty I hope I am forgiven
my disruption of the Imperial Games.”
The Emperor frowned. “Disruption? It was closer to destruction.”
Pug translated for the others while Ichindar smiled ruefully in
appreciation. “This Great One has done many innovative things in my Empire. I
fear we will not see the end of his handiwork long after his name is forgotten.
Still, that is a thing of the past. Let us concern ourselves with the future.”
The honored guests from both camps stood in the pavilion as the two
monarchs began their discussion of the best way to establish relationships
between the two worlds.
Tomas watched the pavilion Calin and Dolgan waited on either side.
Behind them more than two thousand elves and dwarves stood ready. They had
entered the valley through the North Pass, moving by the Kingdom forces that
were gathered. They had circled around the clearing, gathering in the woods to
the west, where they were accorded a clear view of the proceeding. Tomas said
to both his comrades, “I see little to indicate trickery.”
A second dwarf, Harthom of Stone Mountain, walked over to them.
“Aye, elfling. All looks peaceful enough, in spite of the sorcerer’s warning.”
Abruptly there was a heat shimmer across the field, as if their
vision swam and flickered, then Tomas and the others could see Tsurani soldiers
drawing weapons.
Tomas turned to those behind and said, “Be ready!”
A kingdom soldier rode up to the pavilion. The Tsurani lords looked
at him with distrust, for so far the only soldiers who neared the pavilion were
those serving refreshments.
“Your Highness!” he shouted. “Something strange is occurring.”
“What?” said Lyam, disturbed at the man’s excitement.
“From our position we can see figures moving through the woods to
the west.”
Lyam rose and saw figures near the edge of the trees. After a moment,
while Pug translated the exchange for the Emperor, Lyam said, “That would be
the dwarves and elves.” He turned to Ichindar. “I sent word to the Elf Queen
and the dwarven Warleaders of the peace. They must be now approaching.”
The Emperor came over to Lyam and studied the woods “Why are they
remaining in the trees? Why do they stay hidden?”
Lyam turned to the horseman. “Ride and bid those in the trees join
us.”
The guard obeyed. When he was halfway to the woods, a shout went up
from the trees, and green-clad elves and armored dwarves came running forward.
Battle chants and cries filled the air. Ichindar looked at the onrushing
figures in confusion. Several of his companions drew weapons. A soldier from
the Tsurani lines dashed to the pavilion and cried, “Majesty, we are undone. It
is a trap!”
Every Tsurani backed away, swords drawn. Ichindar shouted, “Is this
how you treat for peace? Mouthing pledges while you plot treachery?”
Lyam didn’t understand his words, but the tone made the meaning
clear. He gripped Pug’s arm and said, “Tell him I know nothing of this!”
Pug tried to raise his voice over the commotion in the pavilion, but
the Tsurani nobles were backing away, surrounding the Light of Heaven, while
soldiers were rushing forward from the Tsurani lines to join in protecting
Ichindar.
Lyam shouted, “Back! Back to our own lines!” as the Tsurani soldiers
approached. The Midkemians quickly mounted.
Pug heard Ichindar’s voice carrying over the noise: “Treacherous
one, you show your true nature. Never will Tsuranuanni deal with those without
honor. We will grind your Kingdom into dust!”
Sounds of fighting erupted as the elves and dwarves clashed with the
Tsurani soldiers. Lyam and the others raced back to their own soldiers, who sat
waiting to join the fight. As Lyam reined up, Lord Brucal said, “Shall we
advance, Highness?”
Lyam shook his head. “I will not be a party to treachery.”
He regarded the scene before him. The elves and dwarves were pushing
the Tsurani back toward the rift machine. The Emperor and his guards were
circling, avoiding the fighting, keeping the thousand honor guards between the
attackers and themselves. Runners could be seen disappearing into the rift.
A moment later Tsurani soldiers erupted from the rift. They rushed
forward to engage the attackers. The collapsing Tsurani line held, then started
to push the elves and dwarves back.
Arutha moved his horse next to Lyam’s. “Lyam! We must attack. Soon
the elves and the dwarves will be overwhelmed. There are ten thousand more
Tsurani on the other side of that rift, only a step away. If you ever hope to
end this bloody war, we must capture and hold that machine.”
Pug forced his own horse to the other side of Lyam’s mount “Lyam!”
he shouted. “You must do as Arutha says.”
Doubt still held the young Heir. Pug raised his voice even louder
“Understand this: for nine years you’ve faced only a part of the might within
the Empire, only those soldiers belonging to the clans of the War Party. Until
now you had many hidden allies, blocking a major effort against the Kingdom.
But now this betrayal has inflamed the one man who can command unquestioned
obedience from all the clans of the Empire. Ichindar can order every clan of
Tsuranuanni to marshal!
“You’ve never faced more than thirty thousand warriors along all
fronts. By tomorrow those thirty thousand can be back in this valley. In a week
double again that number. Lyam, you have no idea how vast his powers are.
Within a year he can send a million men and a thousand magicians against us!
You must act!”
Lyam sat stiffly, the bitterness of the moment clearly showing in
his expression. “Can you aid us?”
“I may, should you open a path for me to reach the machine, but I
don’t know if I have the ability to shut off the rift. Other powers I have, but
even if I overcame my conditioning and could oppose the Empire and I killed
every man on this field, it would avail little, for a greater host would still
be but a step away.”
Lyam gave a curt nod. Slowly he faced Arutha. “Send gallopers to the
North and South passes. Call all the Armies of the Kingdom to arms.” Arutha
wheeled and shouted the order, and riders sped away toward both passes.
Lyam looked back toward Pug. “If you can help, do so, but not until
the way is safe. You are the only master of your arts upon this world.”
Indicating Laurie, Meecham, and Kulgan, he said, “Keep them from the fighting
as well, for they have no part in it. Stay back, and should we fail, use your
arts to go to Krondor. Carline and Anita must be taken to the east, to their
grand-uncle Caldric, for the West will surely be Tsurani.” He drew his sword
and gave the order to advance.
The thousand horsemen lumbered forward, a moving wall of steel
gaining momentum as officers shouted orders, keeping the columns orderly. Then
Lyam signaled the charge, and the lines became ragged as horsemen rushed across
the clearing toward the Tsurani. The Tsurani heard the rumbling of cavalry, and
many fell back from the elves and dwarves to form a shield wall. Pug, Laurie,
Meecham, and Kulgan watched while the Kingdom horsemen collided with it. Horses
and men screamed as long spears bent and broke. The shield wall wavered as men
died, but others leaped forward to take their places, and the Kingdom host was
turned back. Lyam re-formed his troops and charged again, this time breaking
through the shields.
Pug could see the right side of the Tsurani forces rolled back
before the horsemen, but the Emperor himself rallied the balance of his
soldiers, and the center of the line held. Even at this distance Pug could see
the Tsurani nobles entreating the Emperor to flee.
The emperor stood with sword drawn, shouting orders. He refused to
leave the field. He was forming his men into a tight circle protecting the rift
machine, so others could return to this valley from Kelewan. He looked and saw
that soldiers were now rushing forth from the rift in greater numbers Soon
there would be enough of them to destroy the King’s small force.
A faint trembling could be felt beneath his feet, then one of the
Tsurani lords pointed behind the Emperor Ichindar saw hundreds of horsemen
erupting from the trees to the north. The northern cavalry units were the first
to answer Lyam’s call. The Emperor directed newly arriving soldiers to the
north line to meet the new threat.
A shout from the left caused him to turn. A tall warrior, clad in
white and gold, was cutting a swath through the Tsurani guards, heading
straight for the Light of Heaven. All the Tsurani lords rushed to cut him off.
A clan Force Leader stood nearby. He raced to the Emperor and shouted, “Your
Majesty, you must leave. We can hold only a short while. If you are lost, the
Empire is without a heart, and the gods will turn their faces from us.”
The Emperor tried to push past him, as the gold-and-white giant cut
down another Tsurani lord. The officer said, “May heaven understand,” and
struck Ichindar across the back of the head with the flat of his sword. The
Emperor crumpled to the ground, and the Force Leader shouted for soldiers to
carry him through the rift. “The Emperor is overcome! Take him to safety!”
Without question the soldiers picked up the supreme ruler and conveyed him to
the machine.
A Strike Leader rushed to the Force Leader’s side, shouting, “Sir,
all our lords have been killed!” The Force Leader saw that the tall warrior was
being forced back by the sheer number of Tsurani soldiers intercepting him, but
not until after he had butchered every senior Warchief who had accompanied the
Emperor. A quick glance informed the Force Leader the Emperor was near safety,
as the guards carrying Ichindar disappeared from view at the far side of the
rift. More soldiers came streaming through from the near side of the rift.
Seeing no more time to waste, the Force Leader said, “I will act as Force
Commander! You are acting Subcommander. More men to the north!” The man rushed
off to place more men along the north line as the cavalry from the North Pass
bore down in a mad gallop.
The attackers from the north hit the Tsurani position with a
thunderous crash. The hastily erected shield wall wavered, but finally held.
The Force Commander looked about and prayed they could hold until sufficient
reinforcements arrived.
Pug and his three companions could see the northern elements of the
Kingdom army hit the shield wall. Spears shattered and horses fell, while
screaming men were trampled underfoot. The wall still held, and the Kingdom
forces withdrew to re-form for another charge. Lyam’s command was being pushed
back, and he ordered a withdrawal, so that he could coordinate his attack with
the one from the north. The elves and dwarves under Tomas were among the
Tsurani, to the west, and were causing them the most difficulty, though they
also were being slowly repulsed.
As the horsemen pulled back, the Tsurani’s attention was turned to
the elves and dwarves. Those behind the north and south shield positions left
their posts to lend support to their comrades on the west flank.
Seeing this, Meecham observed, “If the elves don’t withdraw, the
Tsurani will overwhelm them.” As if he had been heard, the four observers could
see the western confrontation broken off Elves and dwarves retreated under
cover of elven bowmen.
Kulgan said to Pug, “This respite serves to strengthen the Tsurani.”
They could see the flood of Tsurani soldiers coming through the rift. “If Lyam
does not reach the machine after the next charge, the Tsurani will gain in
strength as we weaken.”
Pug said, “He can bottle them up only if he can station bowmen at
the entrance to the rift. A steady stream of bowfire through it should keep
them back long enough to erect some sort of barrier. Then we might be able to
render it inoperative.”
Laurie said, “Can’t it be destroyed? The other way is fraught with
risk.”
Pug sat quietly for a moment. “I don’t know if my powers are
sufficient to destroy the rift. But I think it is time to try.”
As he started to spur his horse, a voice behind rang out: “No!”
They all turned and saw a brown-clad figure standing, staff in hand,
where no one had been a moment earlier. “Even your powers are not equal to the
task, Great One.”
“Macros!” Kulgan exclaimed.
Macros smiled a bitter smile. “As I foretold, I am here when the
need is greatest, the hour most grave.”
Pug said, “What is to be done?”
“I will close the rift, but I have need of your aid.” He returned
his attention to Kulgan. “I see you still have the staff I gave you. Good.
Dismount.”
Pug and Kulgan got down from their mounts. Pug had forgotten that
Kulgan’s ever present staff had been the one Macros had given him.
Macros went over to stand before Kulgan “Plant the end of the staff
firmly in the ground.” He turned and handed the staff he carried to Pug. “This
staff is twin to that one. Hold it tightly, and never for an instant release
your hold, if you have any hope of surviving our task.” He regarded the
conflict a short distance away. “It is almost the appointed hour, but not
quite. Listen carefully, for time grows short.” He looked at Pug, then Kulgan.
“When this is all over, if the rift is destroyed, then return to my island.
There you will find explanations for everything that has occurred, though
perhaps not to your full satisfaction.” Again there was a bitter smile.
“Kulgan, if you have any hope of seeing your former pupil again, hold to that
staff with all the strength you possess. Keep Pug in your mind, and never let
the staff break contact with Midkemian soil. Is that understood?”
Kulgan said, “But what of yourself?”
Macros’s tone was harsh. “My safety is my own concern. Trouble not
yourself about me. My place in this drama was as foreordained as your own. Now
watch.”
They returned their attention to the battle. The northern elements
of the Kingdom army charged, and Lyam and Tomas gave orders for their own units
to join in the attack. The horsemen hit the shield walls again, and the Tsurani
lines broke. For a moment the Kingdom cavalry was in command of the field, and
the Tsurani collapsed inward. Then, as the advantage of the charge was offset
by the milling swarm of foot soldiers who cut horses out from under riders, or
conspired to pull horsemen to the ground, the balance returned. A sea of
battling figures could be seen around the rift machine. There was no
organization, and little discipline. Men fought to survive, not for any gain in
position. The sounds of metal clashing against hardened wood and hides rang
through the valley. Everywhere the onlookers turned their attention, blood
flowed, and the sound of death was terrible.
Macros looked at Pug and said, “Now is the time. Walk with me.”
Pug walked behind the brown-robed sorcerer. He held tightly to
Macros’s staff, for he believed the sorcerer’s warning that it was his only
hope of surviving what lay before them. They walked through the battle, as if
some agent were protecting them. Several times a soldier turned to strike, only
to be intercepted by one from the other side. Horses would be ready to trample them
only to wheel away at the last instant. It was as if a path opened before them
and closed behind.
They approached what was left of the Tsurani line. A shield holder
fell to a horseman’s lance. They stepped over the fallen body and entered the
small, relatively calm circle around the rift Soldiers were still pouring forth
from the rift, and the circle was widening. Macros and Pug mounted the platform
to the far side of the rift, while soldiers rushed out of the near side. The
soldiers seemed oblivious to the two magicians.
Macros stepped into the void of the rift Pug entered behind Instead
of the expected emergence into Kelewan, they hung in a colorless place. There
was little sensation of direction. The place was without light, but not dark,
only various shades of grey. Pug found himself alone, with only the sound of
his heart beating in his ear to reassure him that existence had not ceased.
Softly he said, “Macros?”
Macros’s voice came to him: “Here, Pug.”
“I cannot see you.”
A chuckle was heard. “No, for there is no light. What you see is a
faint illusion granted by my arts so you might have some point of reference
here. Without ample preparation, even your vaunted powers would avail you
little in keeping your sanity, Pug. Simply accept that the human mind is poorly
equipped to deal with this place.”
“What is this place?”
“This is the place between. Here the gods struggled during the Chaos
Wars, and here we shall do our work.”
“Men are dying, Macros We should hurry.”
“Here there is no time, Pug Relative to those who battle, we are
frozen in an instant. We could grow old and die, and not a full second would
pass upon the battlefield.
“But we must still be quickly about our task. Even I could not do
this without spending a bit of energy to keep us alive, energy we’ll need to
finish this business. We dare not tarry long, but there are a few things I
would say to you. I have waited a long while for you to fulfill your promise. I
could not close the rift without your aid.”
Pug spoke, though his senses rebelled at the grey landscape on all
sides and the disembodied voice that seemed a short distance away from him. “It
was you who turned the rift aside, when the Stranger came and the Enemy sought
to reclaim the nations of Tsuranuanni. Surely that took awesome power.”
He could hear the sorcerer chuckle. “You remember that detail? Well,
I was younger then.” As if he knew it was an unsatisfactory answer, Macros
added, “Then the rift was a wild thing, created by the wills of those who stood
atop the towers of the Assembly. I only turned it to another place, balking the
Enemy’s design, and that at great risk. Now this rift is a controlled thing,
firmly anchored in Kelewan, managed by a machine. That which controls it, many
intricate spells, keeping it in harmony with Midkemia, keeps me from
manipulating it. All I may do is end it, but for that I need help.
“Before we end this particular drama, I would say this to you: you
will understand most things after you reach my island. But one thing above all
I ask of you to bear in mind as you hear my message. Please remember I did what
I did because it was my fate. I would ask you to think of me kindly.”
While he could not see the sorcerer, Pug felt his presence close by.
He started to speak, but was interrupted by Macros’s voice. “When I am done,
use whatever shred of energy you have left to will yourself to Kulgan. The
staff will aid you, but you must bend all your efforts to that task. If you
fail, you will perish.”
It was Macros’s second warning, and Pug felt dread for the first
time in years. “What of yourself?”
“Take care of yourself, Pug. I have other concerns.”
There came a sensation of change, as if the fabric of nothingness
around them was subtly altering. Macros said, “At my command, you must unleash
the full fury of your power. All that you did at the Imperial Games was but a
shadow of what you must do now.”
“You know of that?”
Again there was a chuckle. “I was there, though my seat was poor
compared to your own. I must admit it was quite impressive. Even I would have
been hard-pressed to provide as spectacular a show. Now, there is no more time.
Await my command, then let your power flow toward me.”
Pug said nothing. He could feel the sorcerer’s presence before him,
as if it were being defined for him by Macros. Again he felt the sensation of
twisting change around him. Suddenly there was a blinding light, then darkness.
An instant later all around him erupted in mad displays of energy, much like
those he witnessed in the rift of the Golden Bridge. On every side blinding
colors exploded, primal forces he did not recognize.
“Now, Pug!” came Macros’s cry.
Pug bent his will to the task. He reached down into the deepest
recesses of his being. From there he brought forth all he could of the magic
power he had gained from two worlds. Forces sufficient to destroy mountains,
move rivers from their courses, and level cities to rubble, all these he
focused. Then, like casting away something painful to hold, he directed all
this energy toward where he sensed the sorcerer to be. There came an
unimaginable, insane explosion of those forces, and the primal matter of time
and space screamed in protest at its presence Pug could feel it writhe and
twist around him, as if the fundamental universe were trying to cast the
invaders out. Then there came a sudden release, and they were expelled.
Pug found himself floating in total blackness. He drifted, numb and
without coherent thought. His mind was unable to accept what he had sensed, and
he was close to losing consciousness. He felt his fingers go lax, and the staff
began to slip from his hand. He clutched spasmodically at it from blind
instinct. He then felt a faint tugging. His mind resisted the cool blackness
that was trying to overtake him, and he tried to remember something. It was
growing cold around him, and he could feel his lungs burning for lack of air.
He tried to remember something once-more, but it would not come to him. Then he
felt the tug again, and a faint but familiar voice seemed to sound close by.
“Kulgan?” he said weakly, and let the darkness take him.
***
The
Tsurani Force Commander was alive. He wondered at that miracle as he saw those
around him who lay dead before the rift machine. The explosion a minute before
had killed hundreds, and others lay dazed a little way beyond.
He rose and took stock of what was occurring. The terrible
destruction of the rift had not served to aid the Kingdom forces, either.
Riders frantically tried to control near-hysterical horses, and other mounts
could be seen running madly away, their riders thrown from their backs. All about,
confusion reigned. But those at the edge of the conflict were less dazed than
the others, and the fighting was resuming.
There was little hope; now that Kelewan was cut off to them, either
of aid or of a safe return. Still, they numbered only slightly less than the
enemy, and there was a chance that the field could yet be theirs. There might
be time to worry about the rift later.
Abruptly the sounds of fighting stopped as the Kingdom forces
withdrew. The Force Commander looked about and, still seeing no officer of
greater rank, started shouting orders to ready the shield wall for another
assault.
The Kingdom forces were slowly regrouping. They did not attack, but
took up position opposite the Tsurani. The Force Commander waited, while his
soldiers made ready the lines. On all sides Kingdom horsemen stood ready, but
still they did not come.
Slowly the tension grew. The Force Commander ordered a platform
raised. Four Tsurani grabbed a shield, he stood upon it, and they lifted him
up. His eyes widened. “They have reinforcements.” Far to the south he could see
the advancing columns of the South Pass Kingdom forces. They had been farther
removed from the parley site and were only now reaching the battlefield.
A shout from the opposite direction caused him to look to the north:
lines of the Kingdom infantry were advancing from the trees. Again he turned
his attention southward and strained his eyes. In the distant haze he could see
the signs of a large force of infantry following behind the cavalry. The officer
ordered the shield lowered, and his Subcommander said, “What is it?”
“Their entire army is in the field.” He swallowed hard, the usual
Tsurani impassivity broken. “Mother of gods! There must be thirty thousand of
them.”
“Then we shall give them a battle worthy of a ballad before we die,”
said the Subcommander.
The Force Commander looked about him. On all sides stood bleeding,
wounded, and dazed soldiers. Of the Kingdom armies arrayed against them, only a
third had fought. Fully twenty thousand rested soldiers approached four
thousand Tsurani, half of them unable to fight at their normal efficiency.
The Force Commander shook his head. “There will be no fighting. We
are cut off from home, perhaps for all time. There is no purpose.”
He stepped past his startled Subcommander and walked beyond the
shield wall. Raising both hands above his head in the sign of parley, he walked
toward Lyam, slowly, dreading the moment when he would be the first Tsurani
officer in living memory to surrender his forces. It took only a matter of
minutes to reach the Prince. He removed his helm and knelt.
He looked up at the tall, golden-haired Prince of the Kingdom and
said, “Lord Lyam. Into your care I give my men. Will you accept surrender?”
Lyam nodded. “Yes, Kasumi. I will accept surrender.”
Darkness. Then a gathering greyness. Pug forced his heavy eyelids
open. Above him was the familiar face of Kulgan.
The face of his old teacher split into a wide smile “It is good to
see you are with us again. We did not know if you were really alive. Your body
was so cold to the touch. Can you sit up?”
Pug took the offered arm and found that Meecham knelt next to him,
aiding him to sit up. He could feel the cold leave his limbs as the bright
sunlight warmed his body. He sat still for a moment, then said, “I think I will
live.” As he said it, he could feel strength returning to him. After a moment
he felt able to stand and did so.
Around him he could see the assembled armies of the Kingdom. “What
has happened?”
Laurie said, “The rift is destroyed, and the Tsurani who remain have
surrendered. The war is over.”
Pug felt too weak for emotion. He looked at the faces of those
around him and could see deep relief in their eyes. Suddenly Kulgan engulfed
him in a hug. “You risked your life to end this madness. It is your victory as
much as any man’s.”
Pug stood quietly, then stepped away from his former master. “It is
Macros who ended the war. Did he return?”
“No. Only you, and as soon as you were here, both of the staffs
disappeared. There is no sign of him.”
Pug shook his head, clearing away the fogginess. “What now?”
Meecham looked over his shoulder. “It might be wise if you joined
Lyam. There seems to be some commotion taking place.”
Laurie and Kulgan assisted Pug, for he was still weak from his
ordeal within the rift. They walked to where Lyam, Arutha, Kasumi, and the
assembled Kingdom nobles stood waiting. Across the field they could see the
elves and dwarves approaching, with the northern Kingdom forces behind.
Pug was surprised to see the older son of the Shinzawai present, for
he had thought him back on Kelewan. He looked a figure of deletion, standing
without weapon or helm, and with head downcast, so he didn’t see Pug and the
others arrive.
Pug turned his attention to the elves and dwarves. Four figures
walked at their head. Two he recognized, Dolgan and Calin. There was another
dwarf with them who was unknown to the magician. As the four reached a place
before the Prince, Pug realized that the tall warrior in white and gold was his
boyhood friend. He stood speechless, amazed at the change in Tomas, for his old
friend was now a towering figure who resembled an elf as much as a human.
Lyam was too exhausted for outrage. He looked at the Warleader of
Elvandar and said quietly, “What cause did you have to attack, Tomas?”
The Prince Consort of the elves said, “The Tsurani drew weapons,
Lyam. They were ready to attack the pavilion. Could you not see?”
In spite of his fatigue, Lyam’s voice rose. “I saw only your host
attack a conference of peace. I saw nothing in the Tsurani camp that was
untoward.”
Kasumi raised his head. “Your Highness, on my word, we drew weapons
only when we were set upon by those.” He pointed at Tomas’s forces.
Lyam turned his attention back to Tomas. “Did I not send word that
there was to be a truce, and a peace?”
“Aye,” answered Dolgan, “I was there when the sorcerer brought
word.”
“Sorcerer?” said Lyam. He turned and shouted, “Laurie! I would have
words with you.”
Laurie stepped forward and said, “Highness?”
“Did you carry word to the Elf Queen as I bid?”
“On my honor. I spoke with the Elf Queen herself.”
Tomas looked Lyam in the eye, head tilted back, an expression of
defiance upon his face. “And I swear that I have never seen that man before
this moment. Word of the planned Tsurani treachery was carried to us by
Macros.”
Kulgan and Pug came forward “Your Highness,” said Kulgan, “if the
sorcerer’s hand is in this—and it has been in everything else, it seems— then
it may be best to unravel this mystery at leisure.”
Lyam still fumed, but Arutha said, “Let it be. We can sort out this
mess back at the camp.”
Lyam gave a curt nod. “We return to camp.” The Heir turned to Brucal
and said, “Form a proper escort for the prisoners and bring them along.” He
then looked at Tomas. “You I would also have in my tent when we return. There
is much we must explain.” Tomas agreed, though he did not look happy at the
prospect. Lyam shouted, “We return to camp at once. Give the order.”
Kingdom officers rode toward their companies, and the order was
given. Tomas turned away and found a stranger standing next to him. He looked
at the smiling face, then Dolgan said, “Are you blind, boy? Can’t you recognize
your own boyhood companion?”
Tomas looked at Pug as the exhausted magician moved close “Pug?” he
said softly. Then he reached out and embraced his once-lost foster brother.
“Pug!”
They stood together quietly, amid the clamor of armies on the move,
both with tears upon their faces. Kulgan placed his hands upon both men’s
shoulders. “Come, we must return. There is much to speak of, and thank the
gods, there is now ample time to do so.”
The camp was in full celebration. After more than nine years, the
soldiers of the Kingdom knew they would not have to risk death or injury
tomorrow. Songs rang out from around campfires, and laughter came from all
quarters. It mattered little to most that others lay wounded in tents, tended
by the priests, and that some would not live to see the first day of peace, or
taste the fruits of victory. All the celebrants knew was that they were among
the living, and they reveled in the fact. Later there would be time for
mourning lost comrades. Now they drank in life.
Within Lyam’s tent, things were more subdued. Kulgan had given a
great deal of thought to the day’s occurrences as they had ridden back. By the
time they had reached the tent, the magician from Crydee had pieced together a
rough picture of what had occurred. He had presented his opinion to those
assembled there, and was now finishing.
“It would seem, then,” said Kulgan, “that Macros intended for the
rift to be closed. Everything points to the terrible duplicity as having been
used for that purpose.”
Lyam sat with Arutha and Tully by his side. “I still can’t understand
what would possess him to undertake such grave measures. Today’s conflict cost
over two thousand lives.”
Pug spoke up. “I suspect we may find the answer to that and other
questions when we reach his island. Until then I don’t think we can begin to
guess.”
Lyam sighed. He said to Tomas, “At least I am convinced that you
acted in good faith. I am pleased. It would have been a hard thing to imagine
you responsible for all the carnage today.”
Tomas held a wine cup, from which he sipped. “I also am pleased that
we have no cause for contention. But I feel ill-used in this matter.”
“As were we all,” echoed Harthorn and Dolgan.
Calin said, “It is likely that we have all played a part in some
scheme of the Black One’s. Perhaps it is as Pug has said, and we shall learn
the truth at Sorcerer’s Isle, but I for one resent this bloody business.”
Lyam looked to where Kasumi sat stiffly, eyes forward, seemingly
oblivious to what was being said around him. “Kasumi,” Lyam said, “what am I to
do with you and your men?”
Kasumi’s eyes came into focus at mention of his name. He said, “Your
Highness, I know something of your ways, for Laurie has taught me much. But I
am still Tsurani. In our land the officers would be put to death, and the men
enslaved. I may not advise you in this matter. I do not know what is the usual
method of dealing with war prisoners in your world.”
His tone was flat, without emotion. Lyam was about to say something,
but a signal from Pug silenced him. There was something the magician wanted to
say. “Kasumi?”
“Yes, Great One?” Tomas looked surprised at the honorific, but said
nothing. There had been time only for the most superficial exchange of
histories between the two boyhood friends as they had returned to the camp.
“What would you have done if you had not surrendered to the Prince’s
custody?”
“We would have fought to the death, Great One.”
Pug nodded “I understand. Then you are responsible for preserving
the lives of nearly four thousand of your men? And thousands more Kingdom
soldiers?”
Kasumi’s expression softened, revealing his shame. “I have been
among your people, Great One. I may have forgotten my Tsurani training. I have
brought dishonor upon my house. When the Prince has disposed of my men, I will
ask permission to take my own life, though it may be too much of an honor for
him to grant.”
Brucal and others looked shocked at this. Lyam showed no expression,
but simply said, “You have earned no dishonor. You would have aided no cause in
dying. There ceased to be one when the rift was destroyed.”
Kasumi said, “It is our way.”
Lyam said, “No longer. This is now your homeland, for you have no
other. What Kulgan and Pug have said about rifts makes it unlikely you shall
ever return to Tsuranuanni. Here you will remain, and it is my intention to see
that prospect turned to good advantage for us all.”
A faint flicker of hope entered Kasumi’s eyes. The Heir turned
toward Lord Brucal and said, “My lord Duke of Yabon. How do you judge the
Tsurani soldiers?”
The old Duke smiled. “Among the finest I have ever beheld.” Kasumi
showed a little pride at-the remark. “They match the Dark Brotherhood for
ferocity and are of nobler nature, they are as disciplined as Keshian
dog-soldiers and have the stamina of Natalese Rangers. On the whole they are
without question superior soldiers.”
“Would an army of such provide additional security for our troubled
northern borders?”
Brucal smiled. “The LaMutian garrison was among the hardest hit
during the war. They would be a valuable addition there.”
The Earl of LaMut echoed his Duke’s comment Lyam turned to Kasumi.
“Would you still take your life if your men could remain freemen and soldiers?”
The Shinzawai son said, “How is that possible, Your Highness?”
“If you and your men will swear loyalty to the crown, I will place
you under the command of the Earl of LaMut. You will be both freemen and
citizens and will be given the charge to defend our northern border against the
enemies of humanity who abide in the Northlands.”
Kasumi sat silently, unsure of what to say. Laurie stepped over to
Kasumi and said, “There is no dishonor.”
Kasumi’s face broke into an expression of open relief. “I accept, as
I am sure my men will.” He paused, then added, “We came as an honor guard for the
Emperor. From what I have heard said here, we have been used by this sorcerer
as much as anyone. I would not have any more blood spilled on his account. I
thank Your Highness.”
Lord Vandros said, “I think a Knight-Captaincy would be proper for
the leader of nearly four thousand Do you agree, my lord Duke?” Brucal nodded
in agreement, and Vandros said, “Come, Captain, we should speak with your new
command.”
Kasumi rose, bowed to Lyam, and left with the Earl of LaMut. Arutha
touched his brother on the shoulder. Lyam turned his head, and the Prince said,
“Enough of matters of state. It is time to celebrate the ending of the war.”
Lyam smiled. “True.” He turned to Pug. “Magician, run and fetch your
lovely wife and fine son. I would have things that smack of home and family
about.”
Tomas looked at Pug “Wife? Son? What is this?”
Pug laughed. “There is much to talk about. We can catch up with each
other after I bring my family.”
He made his way to his own tent, where Katala was telling William a
story. They both jumped up and ran to him, for they had not seen him since his
return. He had sent a soldier with the news that he was well but busy with the
Prince.
“Katala, Lyam would like you to join us for dinner.”
William tugged at his father’s robe. “I want to come too, Papa.”
Pug picked up his son. “You too, William.”
The celebration within the tent was of a quieter sort than the one
taking place outside. Still, they had been entertained by Laurie’s ballads and
had enjoyed the exhilaration of knowing that peace had finally come. The food
was the same camp fare as before, but somehow it tasted better. A great deal of
wine had also added to the festive mood.
Lyam sat with a cup of wine in his hand. Around the tent the others
were engaged in quiet conversation. The Heir was a little drunk, and none
grudged him that relief, for he had endured much in the last month Kulgan,
Tully, and Arutha, who knew him best, understood that Lyam was thinking of his
father, who but for a Tsurani arrow would now be sitting here with them. With
the responsibility of first the war, then the succession thrust upon him, Lyam
had not found time for mourning as his brother had. Now he was fully feeling
the loss.
Tully stood. In a loud voice he said, “I am tired, Your Highness.
Have I your leave to withdraw?”
Lyam smiled at his old teacher. “Of course. Good night, Tully.”
The others in the tent quickly followed suit and took leave of the
Heir. Outside the pavilion the guests bade each other good night. Laurie,
Kulgan, Meecham, and the dwarves also left, leaving Pug and his family standing
with Calin and Tomas.
The childhood friends had spent the evening exchanging histories of
the last nine years. Each was equally amazed at the other’s story. Pug had
expressed interest in the Dragon Lords’ magic, as had Kulgan. They expressed an
interest in visiting the Dragon’s Hall someday. Dolgan allowed he would be
willing to guide them should they wish to make the journey.
Now the reawakened friendship glowed within the two young men,
though they understood it was not what it had once been, for there had been
many and great changes in both. As much as by the dragon armor and the black
robe, this point was dramatized by the presence of William and Katala.
Katala had found the dwarves and elves fascinating—William had found
everything fascinating, especially the dwarves, and now lay asleep in his
mother’s arms. Of Tomas she didn’t know what to make. He resembled Calin in
many ways, but still looked a great deal like the other men in camp.
Tomas regarded the sleeping boy. “He has his mother’s looks, but
there is enough devil in him to put me in mind of another boy I knew.”
Pug smiled at that. “His life will be far calmer, I hope.”
Arutha left his brother’s tent and came to join them. He stood
beside the two boys who had ridden with him to the mines of Mac Mordain Cadal
so many years ago. “I should probably not say this, but years ago — when you
first came to visit my father, Calin — two boys were overheard in conversation
while they tussled in a hay wagon.”
Tomas and Pug both looked at the Prince uncomprehendingly. “You
don’t remember, do you?” Arutha asked “A blond thin-ribbed lad was sitting atop
a shorter boy promising he would someday be a great warrior who would be
welcomed in Elvandar.”
Pug and Tomas both laughed at that. “I remember,” said Pug.
“And the other promised to become the greatest magician in the
Kingdom.”
Katala said, “Perhaps William will also grow up to realize his dream.”
Arutha smiled with a wicked light in his eyes. “Then watch him
closely. We had a long chat before he went to sleep, and he told me he wanted
to grow up to be a dwarf.” All of them laughed, except Katala, who looked at
her son for a moment with worry upon her face, but then she, too, joined in the
merriment.
Arutha and Calin bade the others good night, and Tomas said, “I,
too, will be to bed.”
Pug said, “Will you come to Rillanon with us?”
“No, I may not I would be with my lady. But when the child is born,
you must guest with us, for there will be a great celebration.” They promised
they would come Tomas said, “We are for home in the morning. The dwarves will
return to their villages, for there is much work to be done there. They have
been overlong from their families. And with the return of Tholin’s hammer,
there is talk of a moot, to name Dolgan King in the West.” Lowering his voice,
he added, “Though my old friend will most likely use that hammer on the first
dwarf to openly suggest it in his presence.” Placing his hand upon Pug’s
shoulder, he said, “It is well we both came through this; even in the depths of
my strange madness, I never forgot about you.”
Pug said, “I never forgot you either, Tomas.”
“When you unravel this mystery on Sorcerer’s Isle, I trust you will
send word?”
Pug said he would. They embraced, saying good-bye, and Tomas walked
away, but stopped and looked back, a boyish glint in his eyes. “Still, I would
love to be there when you meet Carline again with a wife and son in tow.”
Pug flushed, for he viewed that coming reunion with mixed feelings.
He waved to Tomas as he walked from sight, then found Katala regarding him with
a determined look upon her face. In even, measured tones she said, “Who is
Carline?”
Lyam looked up as Arutha entered the command tent. The younger
brother said, “I thought you would have retired by now. You’re exhausted.”
“I wanted some time to think, Arutha. I have had little time alone
and wanted to put things in order.” His voice was tired and troubled.
Arutha sat next to his brother “What sort of things?”
“This war, Father, you, I”—he thought of Martin— “other things . . .
Arutha, I don’t know if I can be King.”
Arutha raised his eyebrows a little. “It is not as if you had a
choice, Lyam. You will be King, so make the best of it.”
“I could refuse the crown in favor of my brother,” said Lyam slowly,
“as Erland renounced it in favor of Rodric.”
“And what a fine kettle of soup that became. Should you want a civil
war, that would be one way to get it. The Kingdom cannot afford a debate in the
Congress of Lords. There are still too many wounds to be healed between East
and West. And du Bas-Tyra is still at large.”
Lyam sighed. “You would make a better king, Arutha.”
Arutha laughed. “Me? I am little pleased at the prospect of being
Prince of Krondor Look, Lyam, when we were boys, I envied you the affection you
gained so quickly People always preferred you to me. As I grew older, I
understood it wasn’t that I was disliked; it was simply there was something
about you that brings out trust and love in people. That is a good quality for
a king to possess. I never envied the fact you would follow Father as Duke, nor
do I now envy your crown. I once thought I might take some time after the war
to travel, but now that will not be possible, for I must rule Krondor. So do
not wish this additional burden of the entire Kingdom upon me. I would not take
it.”
“Still, you would make a better king.” Lyam caught Arutha’s gaze and
held it.
Arutha paused, frowned, then fixed his brother with a skeptical
look. “Perhaps, but you are to be King, and I expect you will remain King for
quite some time.” He stretched as he rose. “I am for bed. It has been a long
and hard day.” Nearing the entrance to the tent, he said, “Ease your doubts,
Lyam. You will be a good ruler. With Caldric to advise you, and the others,
Kulgan, Tully, and Pug, you will lead us through this time of rebuilding.”
Lyam said, “Arutha, before you go . . .” Arutha waited, as Lyam made
a decision. “I wish you to go with Kulgan and Pug to Sorcerer’s Isle. You’ve
been there once before, and I’d like your judgment on what is found there.”
Arutha was displeased and started to object. Lyam cut him off. “I know you wish
to go to Krondor, but it will take only a few days. There will be twelve days
between the time we reach Rillanon and the coronation, ample time for you to
join us.”
Arutha again began to object, then with a wry smile, acceded. “Trust
in yourself, Lyam. If I won’t take the crown, you’re left with it.” As he
departed the tent, he added with a laugh, “There’s no other brother to claim
it.”
Lyam sat alone, absently sipping at his wine. With another long sigh
he said to himself, “There is one other, Arutha, and may the gods help me
decide what is right to do.”
33
LEGACY
The ship dropped anchor.
The crew secured the sails aloft while the landing party made ready
Meecham watched the preparation of the longboat. The magicians were anxious to
reach the castle of Macros, for they had more questions than the others. Arutha
was also curious, after resigning himself to the voyage. He found he also had
little desire to take part in the long funeral procession that had left from
Ylith the day they sailed. He had buried his grief for his father deep inside
and would deal with it in his own time. Laurie had stayed with Kasumi to aid
the assimilation of the Tsurani soldiers into the LaMutian garrison, and would
meet them later in Rillanon.
Lyam and his nobles had shipped for Krondor, escorting the bodies of
Borric and Rodric. They would be joined by Anita and Carline, then all would
convey the dead in a procession of state to Rillanon, where they would be laid
to rest in the tomb of their ancestors. After the traditional period of twelve
days’ mourning, Lyam would be crowned King. By then all who would attend the
coronation would have gathered in Rillanon. Pug and Kulgan’s business should be
completed in ample time for them to reach the capital.
The boat was readied, and Arutha, Pug, and Kulgan joined Meecham.
The longboat was lowered, and six guards bent their backs to the oars.
The sailors had been greatly relieved that they were not required to
accompany the landing party, for in spite of the magicians’ reassurances, they
had no desire to set foot upon Sorcerer’s Isle.
The boat was beached, and the passengers stepped out. Arutha looked
about. “There seems to have been no change here since we last came.”
Kulgan stretched, for the ship’s quarters had been cramped, and he
enjoyed the sensation of dry land under his feet again. “I would have been
surprised to find it otherwise. Macros was one to keep his house in order, I
wager.”
Arutha turned and said, “You six will stay here. If you hear our
call, come quickly.” The Prince started toward the path up the hill, and the
others fell in without comment. They reached the place where the path forked,
and Arutha said, “We come as guests. I thought it best not to appear invaders.”
Kulgan said nothing, being occupied with observing the castle they
were approaching. The strange blue light that had been so visible when they had
last visited the island was absent from the window of the high tower. The
castle had the look of a place deserted, without movement or sound. The
drawbridge was down and the portcullis raised. Meecham observed, “At least we
won’t have to storm the place.”
When they reached the edge of the drawbridge, they halted. The
castle rose above them, its high walls, and taller towers, forbidding. It was
built of dark stone, unfamiliar to them. Around the great arch over the bridge,
strange carvings of alien creatures regarded them with fixed gazes. Horned and
winged beasts sat perched atop ledges, seemingly frozen in an instant, so
cleverly were they fashioned.
They stepped on the bridge and crossed the deep ravine that separated
the castle from the rest of the island Meecham looked down, seeing the rock
walls of the crevice fall away to the level of the sea, where waves crashed
through the passage between. “It serves better than most moats I’ve seen. You’d
think twice before trying to cross this while someone was shooting at you from
the walls.”
They entered the court and looked about, as if expecting to see
someone appear at one of the many doors in the walls at any moment. Nowhere was
there sign of any living creature, yet the grounds about the central keep were
well tended and in order.
When no one was forthcoming, Pug said, “I imagine we’ll find what
we’re after in the keep.” The others moved with him toward the broad stairs
that led to the main doors. As they mounted the steps, the large doors began to
swing open, until they could all see a figure standing in the darkness beyond.
As the doors finished their movement with a loud thump against the keep walls,
the figure stepped forward into the sunlight.
Meecham’s sword was in his hand without thinking, for the creature
before them bore a strong resemblance to a goblin. After a brief examination,
Meecham put up his weapon; the creature had made no threatening gesture, but
simply stood waiting for them at the top of the stairs.
It was taller than the average goblin, being nearly Meecham’s
height. Thick ridges dominated its forehead, and a large nose was the focus of
its face, but it was nobler in features than a goblin. Two black, twinkling
eyes regarded them as they resumed their climb. As they came up to it, the
creature gave a toothy grin. Its head was covered with a thick mat of black
hair, and its skin was tinged with the faint green of the goblin tribe, but it
lacked the hunched-shouldered posture of a goblin, instead standing erect much
like a man. It wore a finely fashioned tunic and trousers, both bright green.
Upon its feet were a pair of polished black boots, reaching nearly to its
knees.
The creature said, grinning, “Welcome, masters, welcome. I am
Gathis, and I have the honor of acting as your host in my master’s absence.”
There was a slight hiss to its speech.
Kulgan said, “Your master is Macros the Black?”
“Of course. It has been ever thus. Please enter.”
The four men accompanied Gathis into the large entry hall and stopped
to look about. Except for the absence of people and of the usual heraldic
banners, this hall looked much like the one in Castle Crydee.
“My master has left explicit instructions for your visit, as much as
was possible to anticipate, so I have prepared the castle for your arrival.
Would you care for some refreshments? There are food and wine ready.”
Kulgan shook his head. He was unsure of what this creature was, but
he was not overly comfortable with anything that so resembled a servant of the
Dark Brotherhood. “Macros said there would be a message. I would see it at
once.”
Gathis bowed slightly. “As you will. Please come with me.”
He led them along a series of corridors to a flight of stairs that
spiraled up into the large tower. They mounted the steps and soon came to a
locked door. “My master said you would be able to open this door. Should you
fail, you are impostors, and I am to deal with you harshly.”
Meecham gripped his sword at hearing this, but Pug placed his hand
on the big franklin’s arm. “Since the rift is closed, half my power is lost,
that which I gained from Kelewan, but this should prove no obstacle.”
Pug concentrated upon opening the door. Instead of the usual
response of the door swinging open, a change occurred in the door itself. The
wood seemed to become fluid, flowing and ebbing as it fashioned its surface
into a new form. In a few moments a face could be seen, formed in the wood. It
looked like a bas-relief, with a slight resemblance to Macros. It was very
lifelike in detail and appeared to be asleep. Then its eyelids opened, and they
could see that the eyes were alive, black centers showing against white. Its
mouth moved, and a voice issued from it, the sound deep and resonant as it
spoke in perfect Tsurani. “What is the first duty?”
Without thinking, Pug answered, “To serve the Empire.”
The face flowed back into the door, and when there was no trace of
it before them, the door swung aside. They entered and found themselves in the
study of Macros the Black, a large room occupying the entire top of the tower.
Gathis said, “I take it I have the honor of hosting Masters Kulgan,
Pug, and Meecham?” He then studied the fourth member of the party. “And you
must be Prince Arutha?” When they nodded, he said, “My master was unsure if
Your Highness would attend, though he thought it likely. He was certain the
other three gentlemen would be here.” He indicated the room with a sweep of his
hand. “All that you see is at your disposal. If you will excuse me, I will
return with your message and some refreshments.”
Gathis left, and all four looked at the contents of the room. Except
for one bare wall where it was obvious that a bookcase or cupboard had recently
been removed, the entire room was surrounded with tall shelves from floor to
ceiling, all heavily laden with books and scrolls. Pug and Kulgan were almost
paralyzed by indecision about where to begin their investigation.
Arutha solved that problem by crossing over to a shelf where lay a
large parchment bound with a red ribbon. He took it down and laid it upon the
round table in the center of the room. A shaft of sunlight from the room’s
single large window fell across the parchment as he unrolled it.
Kulgan came over to see what he had found “It is a map of Midkemia!”
Pug and
Meecham crossed over to stand behind Kulgan and Arutha. “Such a map!” Prince
Arutha exclaimed “I have never seen its like.” His finger stabbed at a spot
upon a large landmass in the center “Look! Here is the Kingdom.” Across a small
portion of the map were inscribed the words Kingdom of the Isles. Below
could be seen the larger borders of the Empire of Great Kesh. To the south of
the Empire, the states of the Keshian Confederacy were clearly shown.
“To the best of my knowledge,” said Kulgan, “few from the Kingdom
have ever ventured into the Confederacy. Our only knowledge of its members is
through the Empire and a few of our more venturesome captains who’ve visited
some of their ports. We hardly know the names of these nations, and nothing
about them.”
Pug
said, “We learn much about our world in an instant. Look at how small a part of
this continent the Kingdom is.” He pointed to the great sweep of the Northlands
to the north of the Kingdom, and the far-reaching mass of land below the
Confederacy. The entire continent bore the inscription Triagia.
Kulgan
said, “It appears there is a great deal more to our Midkemia than we had
dreamed.” He indicated additional landmasses across the sea. These were labeled
Wiсet and Novindus. Upon each, cities and states were delineated.
Two large chains of islands were also shown, many with cities marked. Kulgan
shook his head. “There have been rumors of traders from far distant lands,
venturing into the trading ports in the Keshian Confederacy, or treating with
the pirates of Sunset Islands, but they are only rumors. It is small wonder we
have never heard of these places. It would be a brave captain who set his ship
upon a course for so far a port.”
They were brought out of their study by the sound of Gathis
returning to the room. He carried a tray with a decanter and four wine cups.
“My master bade me say that you are to enjoy the hospitality of his home as
long as you desire.” He placed the tray on the table and poured wine into the
cups. He then removed a scroll from within his tunic and handed it to Kulgan.
“He bade me give you this. I will retire while you consider my master’s
message. Should you need me, simply speak my name, and I will return quickly.”
He bowed slightly and left the room.
Kulgan regarded the scroll. It was sealed with black wax, impressed
with the letter M. He broke the seal and unrolled the parchment. He started to
read to himself, then said, “Let us sit.”
Pug rolled up the large map and put it away, then returned to the
table where the others were sitting. He pulled out a chair and waited with
Meecham and Arutha while Kulgan read. Kulgan shook his head slowly. “Listen,”
he said, and read aloud:
“ ‘To the magicians Kulgan and Pug, greetings. I have anticipated
some of your questions and have endeavored to answer them as best I can. I fear
there are others that must go begging, as much about myself must remain known
only to me. I am not what the Tsurani would call a Great One, though I have
visited that world, as Pug knows, upon a number of occasions. My magic is
peculiar to myself and defies description in your terms of Greater and Lesser
Paths Suffice it to say I am a walker of many paths.
“ ‘I see myself as a servant of the gods, though that may be only my
vanity speaking. Whatever the truth is, I have traveled to many lands and
worked for many causes.
“ ‘Of my early life I will say little. I am not of this world,
having been born in a land distant both in space and time. It is not unlike
this world, but there are ample reasons to count it strange by your standards.
“ ‘I am older than I care to remember, old even by the elves’
reckoning. For reasons I do not understand, I have lived for ages, though my
own people are as mortal as yours. It may be that when I entered into the magic
arts, I unwittingly gave this near-immortality to myself, or it may be the
gift—or curse—of the gods.
“ ‘Since becoming a sorcerer, I have been fated to know my own
future, as others know their pasts. I have never retreated from what I knew to
be before me, though often I wished to I have served great kings and simple
peasants both. I have lived in the greatest cities and the rudest huts. Often I
have understood the meaning of my participation, sometimes not, but always I
have followed the foreordained path that was set for me.’ ”
Kulgan stopped for a moment “This explains how he knew so much.” He
resumed his reading.
“ ‘Of all my labors, my role in the rift war was the hardest. Never
have I experienced such desire to turn from the path before me. Never have I
been responsible for the loss of so many lives, and I mourn for them more than
you can know. But even as you consider my “treachery,” consider my situation.
“ ‘I was unable to close the rift without Pug’s aid. It was fated
for the war to continue while he learned his craft on Kelewan. For the terrible
price paid, consider the gain. There now is one upon Midkemia who practices the
Greater Art, which was lost in the coming of man during the Chaos Wars. The
benefit will be judged only by history, but I think it a valuable one.
“ ‘As to my closing the rift once peace was at hand, I can only say
it was vital. The Tsurani Great Ones had forgotten that rifts are subject to
the Enemy’s detection.’ ” Kulgan looked up in surprise. “Enemy? Pug, this
refers to something I think you need explain.”
Pug told them quickly of what he knew of the legendary Enemy. Arutha
said, “Can such a terrible being really exist?” His expression betrayed
disbelief.
Pug said, “That it once existed, there is no doubt, and for a being
of such power still to endure is not beyond imagining. But of all conceivable
reasons for Macros’s actions, this is the last I would have thought possible.
No one in the Assembly had dreamed of it. It’s incredible.”
Kulgan resumed reading. “ ‘It is to him like a beacon, drawing that
terrible entity across space and time. It might have been years more before he
would have appeared, but once here, all the powers of your world would be
hard-pressed, perhaps even insufficient, to dislodge him from Midkemia. The
rift had to be closed. The reasons I chose to ensure its closing at the cost of
so many lives should be apparent to you.’ ”
Pug interrupted. “What does he mean, ‘should be apparent’?”
Kulgan said, “Macros was nothing, it seems, if not a student of
human nature. Could he alone have convinced the King and Emperor to close the
rift, with so much to be gained by keeping it open? Perhaps, perhaps not, but
in any event there would have been the all-too-human temptation to keep it open
‘just a little longer.’ I think he knew that and was ensuring there would be no
choice.” Kulgan returned to reading the scroll. “ ‘As to what will happen now,
I cannot say. My seeing of the future ends with the explosion of the rift.
Whether it is, finally, my appointed hour, or simply the beginning of some new
era of my existence, I do not know In the event you have witnessed my death, I
have decided upon the following course. All my research, with some exceptions,
is contained within this room. It is to be used to further the Greater and
Lesser Arts. It is my wish that you take possession of the books, scrolls, and
tomes contained here and use them to that end. A new epoch of magic is
beginning in the Kingdom, and it is my wish for others to benefit from my
works. In your hands I leave this new age.’
“It is signed, ‘Macros.’ ”
Kulgan placed the scroll upon the table Pug said, “One of the last
things he said to me was he wished to be remembered kindly.”
They said nothing for a time, then Kulgan called, “Gathis!”
Within seconds the creature appeared at the doorway “Yes, Master
Kulgan?”
“Do you know what is contained within this scroll?”
“Yes, Master Kulgan. My master was most explicit in his
instructions. He made sure that we were aware of his requirements.”
“We?” said Arutha.
Gathis smiled his toothy grin. “I am but one of my master’s
servants. The others are instructed to keep from your sight, for it was feared
their presence might cause you some discomfort. My master lacked most of the
human prejudices and was content to judge each creature he met on its own
merits.”
“What exactly are you?” asked Pug.
“I am of a race akin to the goblins, as the elves are to the Dark
Brotherhood. We were an old race and perished but for a few, long before humans
came to the Bitter Sea. Those that were left were brought here by Macros, and I
am the last.”
Kulgan regarded the creature. In spite of his appearance, there was
something about him that was likable. “What will you do now?”
“I will wait here for my master’s return, keeping his home in order.”
“You expect him to return?” asked Pug.
“Most likely. In a day, or a year, or a century. It does not matter.
Things will be ready for him should he return.”
“What if he has perished?” asked Arutha.
“In that event, I shall grow old and die waiting, but I think not. I
have served the Black One for a very long time. Between us is . . . an
understanding. If he were dead, I think I would know. He is merely . . .
absent. Even if he is dead, he may return. Time is not to my master as it is to
other men. I am content to wait.”
Pug thought about this. “He must truly have been the master of all
magic.”
Gathis’s smile broadened. “He would laugh to hear that, master. He
was always complaining of there being so much to learn and so little time to
learn it. And that from a man who had lived years beyond numbering.”
Kulgan said, as he rose from his chair, “We will have to fetch men
to carry all these things back to the ship.”
Gathis said, “Worry not, master. Retire to your ship when you are
ready. Leave two boats on the beach at the cove. At first light the next day
you will find everything placed aboard, packed for shipment.”
Kulgan nodded. “Very well; then we should start at once to catalog
all these works, before we move them.”
Gathis went over to a shelf and returned with a rolled parchment.
“In anticipation of your needs, master, I have prepared such a listing of all
the works here.”
Kulgan
unrolled the parchment and began reading the inventory of works. His eyes
widened. “Listen,” he said, excitedly. “There’s a copy of Vitalus’s Expectations
of Matter Transformation here.” His eyes grew bigger still. “And Spandric’s
Temporal Research. That work was thought lost a hundred years ago!” He
looked at the others, wonder upon his face. “And hundreds of volumes with
Macros’s name on them. This is a treasure beyond measure.”
Gathis said, “I am pleased that you find it so, master.”
Kulgan started to ask for those volumes to be brought to him, but
Arutha said, “Wait Kulgan. Once you begin, we’ll have to tie you up to get you
out of here. Let us return to the ship and wait for all this to be brought. We
must be off soon.”
Kulgan looked like a child whose sweets had been taken from him.
Arutha, Pug, and Meecham all chuckled at the stout magician Pug said, “There is
no good reason to stay now. We shall have years to study these after the
coronation. Look around, Kulgan. Do you mean to inhale all this in one breath?”
A look of resignation crossed Kulgan’s face. “Very well.”
Pug surveyed all in the room “Think of it. An academy for the study
of magic, with Macros’s library at the heart.”
Kulgan’s eyes grew luminous. “I had all but forgotten the Duke’s
bequest. A place to learn. No longer will an apprentice learn from this master
or that, but from many. With this legacy and your own teachings, Pug, we have a
wonderful start.”
Arutha said, “Let us be on our way if we’re to have any sort of
start. There’s a new king to crown, and the longer you tarry, the more likely
you’ll lose yourself in here.”
Kulgan looked as if his good name were impugned. “Well, I will take
a few things to study while on the ship—if you have no objections?”
Arutha raised a placating hand. “Whatever you wish,” he said with a
rueful smile “But please, no more than we can reasonably lug down to the boat.”
Kulgan smiled, his mood lightening. “Agreed.” He turned to Gathis.
“Would you fetch those two volumes I mentioned.”
Gathis held out the two volumes, old and well read. Kulgan looked
surprised, while Gathis said, “I thought you might reach such an understanding
and removed them from the shelves while you discussed the matter.”
Kulgan walked toward the door, shaking his head slowly as he
regarded the two books he held. The others followed, and Gathis closed the door
behind them. The goblinlike creature guided them to the courtyard and bid them
a safe journey at the door of the keep.
When the large doors had closed behind them, Meecham said, “This
fellow Macros seems to have raised five questions for each he answered.”
Kulgan said, “You have that right, old friend. Perhaps we will gain
additional knowledge from his notes, and other works. Perhaps not, and maybe
that’s the right of it.”
34
RENAISSANCE
Rillanon was in a festive mood.
Everywhere banners rippled in the breeze, and garlands of summer
flowers replaced the black bunting that had marked the period of mourning for
the late King and his cousin Borric. Now they would be crowning a new king, and
the people rejoiced. The people of Rillanon knew little of Lyam, but he was
fair to view, and generous with his smile in public. To the populace it was as
if the sun had come out from behind the dark clouds that had been Rodric’s
reign.
Few among the people were aware of the many royal guards who
circulated throughout the city, always alert for signs of Guy du Bas-Tyra’s
agents and possible assassins. And fewer still noticed the plainly dressed men
who were always near when groups gathered to speak of the new King, listening
to what was said.
Arutha cantered his horse toward the palace, leaving Pug, Meecham,
and Kulgan behind. He cursed the fate that had delayed them nearly a week,
becalmed less than three days from Krondor, then the slowness of their journey
to Salador. It was midmorning, and already the Priests of Ishap were bearing
the King’s new crown through the city. In less than three hours they would
appear before the throne and Lyam would take the crown.
Arutha reached the palace, and shouts from the guards echoed across
the vast courtyard, “Prince Arutha arrives!”
Arutha gave his mount to a page and hurried up the steps to the
palace. As he reached the entranceway, Anita came running in his direction, a
radiant smile on her face. “Oh,” she cried, “it is so good to see you!”
He smiled back at her and said, “It is good to see you, also. I must
get ready for the ceremony. Where is Lyam?”
“He has secreted himself in the Royal Tomb. He left word you were to
come straight away to him there.” Her voice was troubled. “There is something
strange taking place here, but no one seems to know what it is. Only Martin
Longbow has seen Lyam since supper last night, and when I saw Martin, he had
the strangest look upon his face.”
Arutha laughed. “Martin is always full of strange looks. Come, let
us go to Lyam.”
She refused to let him ignore the warning. “No, you go alone, that
is what Lyam ordered. Besides, I must dress for the ceremony. But, Arutha,
there is something very queer in the wind.”
Arutha’s manner turned more reflective. Anita was a good judge of
such things. “Very well. I’ll have to wait for my things to be brought from the
ship, anyway I will see Lyam, then when this mystery is cleared up, join you at
the ceremony.”
“Good.”
“Where is Carline?”
“Fussing over this and that. I’ll tell her you’ve arrived.”
She kissed his cheek and hurried off. Arutha hadn’t been to the
vault of his ancestors since he was a boy, the first time he had come to
Rillanon, for Rodric’s coronation. He asked a page to lead him there, and the
boy guided him through a maze of corridors.
The palace had been through many transformations over the ages, new
wings being added on, new constructions over those destroyed by fire,
earthquake, or war, but in the center of the vast edifice the ancient first
keep remained. The only clue they were entering the ancient halls was the
sudden appearance of dark stone walls, worn smooth by time. Two guards stood
watch by a door over which was carved a bas-relief crest of the conDoin kings,
a crowned lion holding a sword in its claws. The page said, “Prince Arutha,”
and the guards opened the door. Arutha stepped through into a small anteroom,
with a long flight of stairs leading down.
He followed the stairs past rows of brightly burning torches that
stained the stones of the walls with black soot. The stairs ended, and Arutha
stood before a large, high-arched doorway. On both sides loomed heroic statues
of ancient conDoin kings. To the right, with features dulled with age, stood
the statue of Dannis, first conDoin King of Rillanon, some seven hundred fifty
years past. To the left stood the statue of Delong, the only King called “the
Great,” the King who first brought the banner of Rillanon to the mainland with
the conquest of Bas-Tyra, two hundred fifty years after Dannis.
Arutha passed between his ancestors’ likenesses and entered the
burial vault. He walked between the ancient forebears of his line, entombed in
the walls and upon great catafalques Kings and queens, princes and princesses,
scoundrels and rogues, saints and scholars lined his way. At the far end of the
huge chamber he found Lyam sitting next to the catafalque that supported his
father’s stone coffin. A likeness of Borric had been carved in the coffin’s
surface, and it looked as if the late Duke of Crydee lay sleeping.
Arutha approached slowly, for Lyam seemed deep in thought. Lyam
looked up and said, “I feared you might come late.”
“As did I. We had wretched weather and slow progress, but we are all
here. Now, what is this strange business? Anita told me you’ve been here all
night, and there is some mystery. What is it?”
“I have given great thought to this matter, Arutha. The whole of the
Kingdom will know within a few hours’ time, but I wanted you to see what I have
done and hear what I must say before any others.”
“Anita said Martin was here with you this morning. What is this,
Lyam?”
Lyam stepped away from his father’s catafalque and pointed.
Inscribed upon the stones of the burial place were the words:
HERE LIES BORRIC, THIRD DUKE OF
CRYDEE,
HUSBAND OF CATHERINE,
FATHER OF
MARTIN,
LYAM,
ARUTHA,
AND CARLINE
Arutha’s
lips moved, but no words came forth. He shook his head, then said, “What
madness is this?”
Lyam came between Arutha and the likeness of their father. “No
madness, Arutha. Father acknowledged Martin on his deathbed. He is our brother.
He is the eldest.”
Arutha’s face became contorted with rage. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
His voice was tormented. “What right had you to hide this from me?”
Liam raised his own voice. “All who knew were sworn to secrecy. I
could not risk anyone knowing until the peace was made. There was too much to
lose.”
Arutha shoved past his brother, looking in disbelief at the
inscription. “It all makes an evil sense. Martin’s exclusion from the Choosing.
The way Father always kept an eye on his whereabouts. His freedom to come and
go as he pleased.” Bitterness rang in Arutha’s words. “But why now? Why did
Father acknowledge Martin after so many years of denial?”
Lyam tried to comfort Arutha. “I’ve pieced together what I could
from Kulgan and Tully. Besides them, no one knew, not even Fannon. Father was a
guest of Brucal’s when he was in his first year of office, after Grandfather’s
death. He tumbled a pretty serving girl and conceived Martin. It was five years
before Father knew of him. Father had come to court, met Mother, and married.
When he learned of Martin, he had already been abandoned by his mother to the
monks of Silban’s Abbey. Father chose to let Martin remain in their care.
“When I was born, Father began to feel remorse over having a son
unknown to him, and when I was six, Martin was ready for Choosing. Father
arranged to have him brought to Crydee. But he wouldn’t acknowledge him, for
fear of shaming Mother.”
“Then why now?”
Lyam looked at the likeness of their father. “Who knows what passes
through a man’s mind in the moments before death? Perhaps more guilt, or some
sense of honor. Whatever the reason, he acknowledged Martin, and Brucal bore
witness.”
Anger still sounded in Arutha’s voice. “Now we must deal with this
madness, regardless of Father’s reasons for creating it.” He fixed Lyam with a
harsh stare. “What did he say when you brought him down to see this?”
Lyam looked away, as if pained by what he now said “He stood silently,
then I saw him weep. Finally he said, ‘I am pleased he told you.’ Arutha, he
knew.” Lyam gripped his brother’s arm. “All those years Father thought him
ignorant of his birthright, and he knew. And never once did he seek to turn
that knowledge to his own gain.”
Arutha’s anger subsided. “Did he say anything more?”
“Only ‘Thank you, Lyam,’ and then he left.”
Arutha paced away for a moment, then faced Lyam. “Martin is a good
man, as good a man as I’ve ever known. I’ll be the first to say so. But this acknowledgment!
My gods, do you know what you’ve done?”
“I’m aware of my actions.”
“You’ve placed all we’ve won over the last nine years in the
balance, Lyam. Shall we fight ambitious eastern lords who might rally in
Martin’s name? Do we end one war simply to begin an even more bitter one?”
“There will be no contestation.”
Arutha stopped his pacing. His eyes narrowed. “What do you mean? Has
Martin promised to voice no claim?”
“No. I have decided not to oppose Martin should he choose the
crown.”
Arutha was speechless for a moment, in shock as he regarded Lyam.
For the first time he understood the terrible doubts his brother had been
voicing over being King. “You don’t want to be King,” he said, his tone
accusatory.
Lyam laughed bitterly. “No sane man would. You have said as much
yourself, brother. I don’t know if I am a match for the burdens of kingship.
But the matter is out of my hands now. If Martin speaks for himself as King, I
will acknowledge his right.”
“His right! The royal, signet passed to your hand, before most of
the Lords of the Kingdom. You are not sick Erland deferring to his brother’s
son because of ill health and by reason of no clear succession. You are the
named Heir!”
Lyam lowered his head. “The announcement of succession is invalid,
Arutha. Rodric named me Heir as ‘eldest conDoin male,’ which I am not. Martin
is.”
Arutha confronted his brother. “A pretty point of law, Lyam, but one
that may prove the destruction of this Kingdom! Should Martin voice a claim
before the congress assembled, the Priests of Ishap will break the crown, and
the matter passes to the Congress of Lords for resolution. Even with Guy in
hiding, there are dozens of dukes, scores of earls, and a host of barons who
would willingly cut their neighbors’ throats to convene such a congress. Such
bargaining would end with half the estates in the Kingdom switching hands in
trade for votes. It would be a carnival!
“If you take the crown, Bas-Tyra cannot act. But if you back Martin,
many will refuse to follow. A deadlocked congress is exactly what Guy wishes.
I’ll bet all I own he is somewhere in the city at this very moment, plotting
against such an event. If the eastern lords bolt, Guy will emerge, and many
will flock to his banner.”
Lyam appeared overwhelmed by his brother’s words. “I cannot say what
will happen, Arutha. But I know I could not do other than I have done.”
Arutha looked on the verge of striking Lya.m “You may have inherited
the burden of Father’s sense of family honor, but it will fall to the rest of
us to deal with the killing! Heaven’s mercy, Lyam, what do you think will
happen if some heretofore nameless huntsman sits the conDoin throne simply
because our father tumbled a pretty maid nearly forty years ago! We shall have
civil war!”
Lyam stood firm. “Should our positions have been reversed, would you
have robbed Martin of his birthright?”
Arutha’s anger vanished. He looked at his brother with open
amazement on his face. “Gods! You feel guilt because Father denied Martin all
his life, don’t you?” He stepped away from Lyam, as if trying to gain
perspective on him. “Should our positions have been reversed, I most assuredly
would deny Martin his birthright. After thirty-seven years, what matter a few
more days? After I was King, firm on my throne, then I would make him a duke,
give him an army to command, name him First Adviser, whatever need be to salve
my conscience, but not until the Kingdom was secure. I would not wish Martin to
play Borric the First to Guy’s Jon the Pretender, and I would do whatever must
be done to see that would not come to pass.”
Lyam sighed with deep regret. “Then you and I are two different
sorts of men, Arutha. I told you back at camp I thought you would make a better
king than I. Perhaps you are right, but what’s done is done.”
“Does Brucal know of this?”
“Only we three.” He looked directly at Arutha “Only our father’s
sons.”
Arutha flushed, irritated at the remark. “Don’t misunderstand me,
Lyam. I hold Martin in no little affection, but there are issues here much
larger than any personal consideration.” He thought quietly for a moment. “Then
it is in Martin’s hands. If you had to do this, at least you did right in not
making it a public matter. There will be shock enough should Martin come forth
at the coronation. At least with advance warning we can prepare.”
Arutha moved toward the stairs, then stopped and faced his brother.
“What you said cuts both ways, Lyam. Perhaps because you cannot deny Martin,
you’ll make a better king than I. But as much as I love you, I’ll not let the
Kingdom be destroyed over the succession.”
Lyam seemed unable to contest with his brother any longer. Fatigue,
a weary resignation toward what fate would bring, sounded in his words. “What
will you do?”
“What must be done. I will ensure that those who are loyal to us are
forewarned. If there comes a need to fight, then let us have the advantage of
surprise.” He paused for a moment. “I have nothing but the greatest affection
for Martin, Lyam, you must know that I hunted with him as a boy, and he was in
no small part responsible for my safely getting Anita away from Guy’s
watchdogs, a debt beyond repaying. In another time and place, I would gladly
accept him as my brother. But should it come to bloodshed, Lyam, I’ll willingly
kill him.”
Arutha left the vault of his ancestors. Lyam stood alone, feeling
the chill of ages press in upon him.
Pug looked out the window, reminiscing. Katala came to his side, and
he came out of his reverie. “You look lovely,” he said. She was dressed in a
brilliant gown of deep red, with golden trim at the bodice and sleeves. “The
finest Duchess of the court could not match your beauty.”
She smiled at his flattery. “I thank you, husband.” She spun,
showing off the gown. “Your Duke Caldric is the true magician, I am thinking.
How his staff could manage to find all these things and have them ready in two
short hours is true magic.” She patted at the full skirt. “These heavy gowns
will take some practice getting around in. I think I prefer the short robes of
home.” She stroked the material. “Still, this is a lovely cloth. And in this
cold world of yours, I can see the need.” The weather had turned cooler, now
that summer was waning. In less than two months snow would begin falling.
“Wait until winter, Katala, if you think it’s cold now.”
William came running into the room, from the bedroom that adjoined
their own. “Mama, Papa,” he yelled in boyish exuberance. He was dressed in a
tunic and trousers befitting a little noble, of fine material and workmanship.
He leaped into his father’s outstretched arms. “Where are you going?” he asked
with a wide-eyed look.
Pug said, “We go to see Lyam made King, William. While we are gone,
you mind the nurse and don’t tease Fantus.”
He said he would and wouldn’t, respectively, but his impish grin put
his credibility in doubt. The maid who was to act as William’s nurse entered
and took the boy in tow, leading him back into his own room.
Pug and Katala left the suite Caldric had given them and walked
toward the throne room. As they turned a corner, they saw Laurie leaving his
room, with Kasumi standing nervously to one side.
Laurie brightened upon seeing them and said, “Ah! There you are. I
was hoping we’d see you two before all the ceremonies had begun.”
Kasumi bowed to Pug, though the magician now wore a fashionable
russet-colored tunic and trousers in place of his black robe. “Great One,” he
said.
“That is a thing of the past here, Kasumi. Please call me Pug.”
“You two look so handsome in your new clothes and uniform,” said
Katala. Laurie wore bright clothing in the latest fashion, a yellow tunic with
a sleeveless overjacket of green, and tight-fitting black trousers tucked into
high boots. Kasumi wore the uniform of a Knight-Captain of the LaMutian
garrison, deep green tunic and trousers, and the grey wolf’s-head tabard of
LaMut.
The minstrel smiled at her. “In all the excitement of the last few
months, I had forgotten I had a small fortune in gems with me. Since I cannot
conspire to return them to the Lord of the Shinzawai, and his son refuses to
take them, I suppose they are mine by rights. I will no longer have to worry
about finding a widow with an inn.”
Pug said, “Kasumi, how goes it with your men?”
“Well enough, though there is still some discomfort between them and
the LaMutian soldiers. It should pass in time. We had an encounter with the
Brotherhood the week after we left. They can fight, but we routed them. There
was much celebrating among all the men in the garrisons, both Tsurani and
LaMutian. It was a good beginning.”
It had been more than an encounter. Word had reached Rillanon of the
battle. The Dark Brothers and their goblin allies had raided into Yabon,
overrunning one of the border garrisons, weakened during the war. The Tsurani
had turned from their march to Zun, dashed northward, and relieved the
garrison. The Tsurani had fought like madmen to save their former enemies from
the larger goblin host, which they had driven back into the mountains north of
Yabon.
Laurie winked at Pug. “Having made something of heroes of
themselves, our Tsurani friends were given quite a welcome when they arrived
here in Rillanon.” Being distant from the center of the war, the city’s
citizens felt little fear or hatred toward their former enemies, giving them a
welcome that would have been unimaginable in the Free Cities, in Yabon, or
along the Far Coast. “I think Kasumi’s men were a little overcome by it all.”
“In truth they were,” agreed Kasumi. “Such a reception on our
homeworld would have been impossible, but here . . .”
“Still,” continued Laurie, “they seemed to take it in stride. The
men have developed a rapid appreciation for Kingdom wines and ale, and they’ve
even managed to overcome their distaste for tall women.”
Kasumi looked away with an embarrassed smile on his face. Laurie
said, “Our dashing Knight-Captain was guested a week ago by one of the richer
merchant families—one seeking to develop broader trade with the West. He has
since been seen often in the company of a certain merchant’s daughter.”
Katala laughed, and Pug smiled at Kasumi’s embarrassment Pug said,
“He was always a quick student.”
Kasumi lowered his head, cheeks flushed, but grinning broadly.
“Still, it is a hard thing learning that your countrywomen have such freedom.
Now I see why you two were always so strong-willed. You must have learned from
your mothers.”
Laurie’s attention was diverted by someone approaching. Pug noticed
a look of open admiration upon the singer’s face. The magician turned and was
greeted by the sight of a beautiful young woman approaching with a guard
escort. Pug’s eyes widened as he recognized Carline. She was as lovely a woman
as her girlhood had promised. She came up to them and with a wave of her hand
dismissed the guard. She looked regal in a fine green gown, with a pearl-studded
tiara crowning her dark hair.
“Master magician,” she said, “have you no greeting for an old
friend?”
Pug bowed before the Princess, and Kasumi and Laurie did also.
Katala curtseyed as she had been shown by one of the maids. Pug said, “Princess,
you flatter me by remembering a simple keep boy.”
Carline smiled, with a gleam in her blue eyes “Oh, Pug . . . you
were never a simple anything.” She looked past him to Katala. “Is this your
wife?” When he nodded and introduced them, the Princess kissed Katala’s cheek
and said, “My dear, I had heard you were lovely, but the reports my brother
gave did you little justice.”
Katala said, “Your Highness is gracious.”
Kasumi had returned to his nervous posture, but Laurie stood unable
to take his eyes from the young woman in green Katala had to grip his arm
firmly to recapture his attention. “Laurie, will you show Kasumi and me about
the palace a little, before the ceremonies begin?”
Laurie smiled broadly, bowed to the Princess, and accompanied Kasumi
and Katala down the hallway Pug and the Princess watched their retreating
backs.
Carline said, “Your wife is a most perceptive woman.”
Pug smiled. “She is indeed remarkable.”
Carline looked genuinely glad to see him. “I understand you also
have a son.”
“William. He is a little devil, and a treasure.”
There was a trace of envy in Carline’s expression “I would like to
meet him.” She paused, then added, “You’ve been most fortunate.”
“Most fortunate, Highness.”
She took his arm and they slowly started to walk “So formal, Pug? Or
should I call you Milamber, as I have heard you were known?”
He saw her smile and returned it. “I sometimes don’t know, though
here Pug seems more proper.” He grinned. “You seem to have learned a great deal
about me.”
She feigned a small pout “You were always my favorite magician.”
They shared a laugh. Then, lowering his voice, Pug said, “I am so
very sorry about your father’s death, Carline.”
She clouded a little. “Lyam told me you were there at the last. I am
glad he saw you safely back before he died. Did you know how much he cared for
you?”
Pug felt himself flush with emotion. “He gave me a name; there is
little more he could have done to show me. Did you know that?”
She brightened. “Yes, Lyam also told me that. We’re cousins of
sorts,” she said with a laugh. As they walked, she spoke softly. “You were my
first love, Pug, but even more, you were always my friend. And I am pleased to
see my friend once more home.”
He stopped and kissed her lightly upon the cheek. “And your friend
is most pleased to be home.”
Blushing slightly, she led him to a small garden on a terrace. They
walked out into bright sunlight and sat upon a stone bench. Carline let out a
long sigh. “I only wish Father and Roland, could be here.”
Pug said, “I was also grieved to hear of Roland’s death.”
She shook her head. “That jester lived as much in his few years as
most men do in their entire lives. He hid much behind his raffish ways, but do
you know, I think he may have been one of the wisest men I’ll ever know. He
took every passing minute and squeezed all the life from it he could.” Pug
studied her face and saw her eyes were bright with memory. “Had he lived, I
would have married him. I suspect we would have fought every day, Pug; oh, how
he could make me angry. But he could make me laugh as well. He taught me so
very much about living I shall always treasure his memory.”
“I am pleased you are at peace with your losses, Carline. So many
years a slave, then a magician, in another land have changed me much. It seems
you have greatly changed as well.”
She tilted her head to look at him. “I don’t think you’ve changed
all that much, Pug. There’s still some of the boy in you, the one who was so
rattled by my attentions.”
Pug laughed. “I guess you’re right. And in some ways you are also
unchanged, or at least you still have the knack of rattling men if friend
Laurie’s reaction is any measure.”
She smiled at him, her face radiant, and Pug knew a faint tugging,
an echo of what he had felt when he was a boy. But now there was no discomfort,
for he knew he would always love Carline, though not in the way he had imagined
as a boy. More than any tumultuous passion, or the deep bond he had with
Katala, he knew what he felt was affection and friendship.
She pursued his last comment. “That beautiful blond man who was with
you a few minutes ago? Who is he?”
Pug smiled knowingly. “Your most devoted subject, from all
appearances. He is Laurie, a troubadour from Tyr-Sog, and a rascal of limitless
wit and charm. He has a loving heart and a brave spirit, and is a true friend.
I’ll tell you sometime of how he saved my life at peril of his own.”
Carline again cocked her head to one side. “He sounds a most
intriguing fellow.” Pug could see that while she was older and more
self-possessed and had known sorrow, much about her remained unchanged.
“I once, in jest, promised him an introduction to you. Now I am sure
he would be most delighted to make Your Highness’s acquaintance.”
“Then we must arrange it.” She rose. “I fear I must go make ready
for the coronation. Any time now the bells will sound and the priests will
arrive. We shall speak again, Pug.”
Pug came to his feet as well. “I shall enjoy it, Carline.”
He presented his arm. A voice from behind said, “Squire Pug, may I
speak with you.”
They turned around and found Martin Longbow standing some distance
away, farther back in the garden. He bowed to the Princess. Carline said,
“Master Longbow! There you are I’ve not seen you since yesterday.”
Martin smiled slightly. “I’ve had a need to be alone. In Crydee when
such a mood strikes, I return to the forest. Here”—he indicated the large
terraced garden—“this was the best I could manage.”
She looked quizzically at him, but shrugged off the remark. “Well, I
expect you will manage to attend the coronation. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I
must be off.” She accepted their polite good-byes and left.
Looking at Pug, Martin said, “It is good to see you once again,
Pug.”
“And you, Martin. Of all my old friends here, you are the last to
greet me. Except for those still in Crydee I’ve yet to see, you’ve made my
homecoming complete.” Pug could see Martin was troubled. “Is something wrong?”
Martin looked out over the garden, toward the city and sea beyond.
“Lyam told me, Pug. He told me you know as well.”
Pug understood at once. “I was there when your father died, Martin,”
he said, his voice remaining calm.
In silence Martin began to walk, and when he came to the low stone
wall around the garden he gripped it hard. “My father,” he said, bitterly. “How
many years I waited for him to say, ‘Martin, I am your father.’ ” He swallowed hard.
“I never cared for inheritance and such things I was content to remain
Huntmaster of Crydee. If only he had told me himself.”
Pug thought over his next words. “Martin, many men do things they
regret later. Only a few are granted the opportunity to make amends. Had a
Tsurani arrow taken him quickly, had a hundred other things come to pass, he
might not have had the chance to do what little he did.”
“I know, but still that is cold comfort.”
“Did Lyam tell you his last words? He said, ‘Martin is your brother.
I have wronged him, Lyam. He is a good man, and well do I love him.’ ”
Martin’s knuckles turned white gripping the stone wall. Quietly he
replied, “No, he did not.”
“Lord Borric was not a simple man, Martin, and I was only a boy when
I knew him, but whatever else may be said of him, there was no meanness of
spirit in the man. I don’t pretend to understand why he acted as he did, but
that he loved you is certain.”
“It was all such folly. I knew he was my father, and he never knew I
had been told by Mother. What difference in our lives had I gone to him and
proclaimed myself?”
“Only the gods might know.” He reached out and touched Martin’s arm.
“What matters now is what you will do. That Lyam told you means he will make
public your birthright. If he’s already told others, the court will be in an
uproar. You are the eldest and have the right of first claim. Do you know what
you will do?”
Studying Pug, Martin said, “You speak calmly enough of this. Doesn’t
my claim to the throne disturb you at all?”
Pug shook his head. “You would have no way of knowing, but I was
counted among the most powerful men in Tsuranuanni. My word was in some ways
more important than any king’s command. I think I know what power can do, and
what sort of men seek it. I doubt you have much personal ambition as such,
unless you’ve changed a great deal since I lived in Crydee. If you take the
crown, it will be for what you believe are good reasons. It may be the only way
to prevent civil war, for should you choose the mantle of King, Lyam will be
the first to swear fealty. Whatever the reason, you would do your best to act
wisely. And if you take the purple, you will do your best to be a good ruler.”
Martin looked impressed. “You have changed much, Squire Pug, more
than I would have expected. I thank you for your kind judgment of me, but I
think you are the only man in the Kingdom who would believe such.”
“Whatever the truth may be, you are your father’s son and would not
bring dishonor upon his house.”
Again Martin’s words were tinged with bitterness. “There are those
who will judge my birth itself a dishonor.” He looked out over the city below,
then turned to stare at Pug. “If only the choice were simple, but Lyam’s seen
that it is not. If I take the crown, many will balk. If I renounce in Lyam’s
favor, some may use me as an excuse to refuse Lyam their allegiance.
“Gods above, Pug. Were the issue between Arutha and myself, I would
not hesitate for an instant to stand aside in his favor. But Lyam? I’ve not
seen him for seven years, and those years have changed him. He seems a man
beset with doubts. An able field commander, no question, but a king? I am faced
with the fearful prospect I would prove a more able king.”
Pug spoke softly. “As I have said, should you claim the throne, you
will do so for what you,judge good reasons, reasons of duty.”
Martin’s right hand closed into a fist, held before his face. “Where
ends duty and begins personal ambition? Where ends justice and begins revenge?
There is a part of me, an angry part of me, that says, ‘Wring all you can from
this moment, Martin.’ Why not King Martin? And then another part of me wonders
if Father may have placed this upon me knowing someday I must be King. Oh, Pug,
what is my duty?”
“That is something each of us must judge for himself alone. I can
offer you no counsel.”
Martin leaned forward upon the rail, hands covering his face. “I
think I would like to be alone for a time, if you do not mind.”
Pug left, knowing a troubled man considered his fate. And the fate
of the Kingdom.
Pug found Katala with Laurie and Kasumi, speaking with Duke Brucal
and Earl Vandros. As he approached, he could hear the Duke saying, “So we’ll
finally have a wedding, now that this young slow-wit”—he indicated Vandros—“has
asked for my daughter’s hand. Maybe I’ll have some grandchildren before I die,
after all. See what comes of waiting so many years to marry. You’re old before
your children marry—” He inclined his head when he saw Pug. “Ah, magician,
there you are.”
Katala smiled when she saw her husband. “Did you and the Princess
have a nice reunion?”
“Very nice.”
Prodding him in the chest with her forefinger, she said, “And when
we’re alone, you’ll repeat every single word.”
The others laughed at Pug’s embarrassment, though he could see she
was only having fun with him.
Brucal said, “Ah, magician, your wife is so lovely, I wish I were
sixty again.” He winked at Pug. “Then I’d steal her from you, and damn the
scandal.” He took Pug by the arm and said to Katala, “If you’ll forgive me,
lady, instead I’ll have to steal a moment of your husband’s time.”
He steered Pug away from the surprised group and when they were out
of earshot said, “I have grave news.”
“I know.”
“Lyam is a fool, a noble fool.” He looked away for a moment, his
eyes filming over with memory. “But he is his father’s son, and his
grandfather’s grandson as well, and like both before him has a strong sense of
honor.” The old eyes came into sharp focus again. “Still, I wish his sense of
duty were as clear.” Lowering his voice even more, he said, “Keep your wife
close about. The guards in the hall wear the purple and will die defending the
King, whoever he may be. But it may get messy. Many of the eastern lords are
impulsive men, overly used to having their petty demands instantly gratified. A
few might open their mouths and find themselves chewing steel.
“My men and Vandros’s are positioned throughout the palace, while
Kasumi’s Tsurani are outside, at Lyam’s request. The eastern lords don’t like
it, but Lyam is Heir, and they cannot say no. With those who will stand with
us, we can seize the palace and hold it.
“With du Bas-Tyra hiding, and Richard of Salador dead, the eastern
lords have lost their leadership. But there are enough of them on the island,
with enough of their ‘honor guards’ in and around the city, to turn this island
into a pretty battleground should they flee the palace before a king is named.
No, we’ll hold the palace. No traitorous easterner will leave to plot treason
with Black Guy. Each one will bend a knee before whichever brother takes the
crown.”
Pug was surprised by this. “You’ll support Martin, then?”
Old Brucal’s voice became harsh, though he kept it low. “No one will
plunge my Kingdom into civil war, magician. Not while I have a breath left to
spend. Arutha and I have spoken. Neither of us likes the choices, but we are
clear on our course. Should Martin be King, all will bow before him. Should
Lyam take the crown, Martin will swear fealty or not leave the palace alive.
Should the crown be broken, we hold this palace, and no lord leaves until a
congress has named one brother King, even if we’re a year in that bloody damned
hall. We’ve already picked up several of Guy’s agents in the city. He’s here in
Rillanon, there’s no doubt. If even a handful of nobles can win free of the palace
before a congress is convened, we have civil war.” He struck his fist into his
open hand. “Damn these traditions. As we speak, the priests walk toward the
palace, each step bringing them closer to the moment of choice. If only Lyam
had acted sooner, given us more time, or not acted at all. Or if we could have
caged Guy. If we could have spoken to Martin, but he’s vanished . . .”
“I’ve spoken to Martin.”
Brucal’s eyes narrowed. “What is his mood? What are his plans?”
“He’s a troubled man, as well you might imagine. To have all this
put upon him with scant time to adjust. He has always known who his father was,
and was resigned to take the secret with him to the grave, I’ll wager, but now
he is suddenly thrust into the heart of the matter. I don’t know what he will
do. I don’t think he’ll know, until the priests put the crown before him.”
Brucal stroked his chin. “That he knew and tried not to use that
knowledge for his own gain speaks well of him. But there’s still no time.” He
indicated the group by the main door to the hall. “You’d best be back to your
wife. Keep your wits sharp, magician, for we may have need of your arts before
this day is through.”
They returned to the others, and Brucal led Vandros and Kasumi
inside, speaking with them in low tones. Before Katala could speak, Laurie
said, “What is afoot? When I took Katala and Kasumi outside to a balcony
overlooking the courtyard, I saw Kasumi’s men everywhere. For a moment I
thought the Empire had won the war. I couldn’t get a thing from him.”
Pug said, “Brucal knows they can be trusted to follow Kasumi’s
orders without question.”
Katala said, “What is this, husband? Trouble?”
“There is little time to explain. There may be more than one
claimant to the crown. Stay near Kasumi, Laurie, and keep your sword loose. If
there’s trouble, follow Arutha’s lead.”
Laurie nodded, his face set in a grim expression of understanding.
He entered the hall, and Katala said, “William?”
“He is safe. If there is trouble it will be in the great hall, not
in the guest quarters. It will be afterward the true grief will begin.” Her
expression showed she didn’t understand fully, but she quietly accepted what he
said. “Come, we must take our places inside.”
They hurried into the great hall, to a place of honor near the
front. As they passed by the throng gathered to see the King crowned, they
could hear the buzz of voices as rumor swept the room. They came up to Kulgan,
and the stout magician nodded greeting. Meecham waited a few paces behind, his
back to a wall. His eyes surveyed the room, marking the positions of all within
a sword’s length of Kulgan. Pug noticed the old, long-bladed hunter’s knife was
loose in its scabbard. He might not know what the problem was, but he would be
instantly ready to protect his old companion.
Kulgan hissed, “What is going on? Everything was calm until a few
minutes ago, now the room is abuzz.”
Pug leaned his head closer to Kulgan’s and said, “Martin may
announce for the crown.”
Kulgan’s eyes widened “Gods and fishes! That’ll set this court on
its ear.” He looked around and saw most of the Kingdom’s nobles had taken their
places within the hall. With a sigh of regret he said, “It’s too late to do
anything now but wait.”
Amos crashed through the garden, swearing furiously. “Why the hell
does anyone want all these bloody posies about anyway?”
Martin looked up and barely caught the crystal goblet thrust at him
by Amos Trask. “What—” he said, as Amos filled it with wine from a crystal
decanter he held.
“Thought you might be in need of a bracer, and a shipmate to share
it with.”
Martin’s eyes narrowed. “What do you mean?”
Amos filled his own goblet and took a long pull. “It’s all over the
palace now, fellow-me-lad. Lyam’s a good enough sort, but he’s got rocks for
ballast if he thinks he can have a crew of stonecutters put your name on your
father’s tomb, then hush them up with something as petty as a royal command.
Every servant in the palace knew you were the new first mate within an hour
after those boys finished work. It’s all up in the wind, you can believe me.”
Martin drank the wine and said, “Thank you, Amos.” He studied the
deep red wine in the glass. “Shall I be King?”
Amos laughed, a good-natured, hearty sound. “I have two thoughts on
that, Martin. First, it’s always better to be captain than deckhand, which is
why I’m a captain and not a deckhand. Second, there’s some difference between a
ship and a kingdom.”
Martin laughed. “Pirate, you’re no help at all.”
Amos looked stung. “Blast me, I got you to laugh, didn’t I?” He
leaned over, resting an elbow on the garden wall while he poured more wine into
his cup. “See here, there’s this pretty little three-master in the royal
harbor. I’ve not had much time, but with the King’s pardon being declared,
there’s plenty of good lads fresh from the brig who’d jump to sail with Captain
Trenchard. Why don’t we cast off from here and go a’roving?”
Martin shook his head. “That sounds fine. I’ve been on a ship three
times in my life, and with you I nearly got killed all three times.”
Amos looked injured. “The first two times were Arutha’s fault, and
the third time wasn’t my fault I didn’t send those Ceresian pirates to chase us
from Salador to Rillanon. Besides, if you sign aboard with me, we’ll do the
chasing. The Kingdom Sea’s a whole new sea for Trenchard to sail. What do you
say?”
Martin’s voice turned somber. “No, Amos, though I’d almost as soon
sail with you as return to the forest. But what I must decide cannot be run
from. For good or ill, I am the eldest son, and I have the first claim to the
crown.” Martin looked hard at Amos. “Do you think Lyam can be King?”
Amos shook his head. “Of course, but that’s not the question, is it?
What you want to know is, can Lyam be a good King? I don’t know, Martin. But
I’ll tell you one thing. I’ve seen many a sailor gone pale with fear in battle,
yet fight without hesitation. Sometimes you can’t know what a man’s capable of
until the time comes for him to act.” Amos paused for a moment, considering his
words. “Lyam’s a good enough sort, as I said. He’s scared silly of becoming
King, and I don’t blame him. But once upon the throne . . . I think he could be
a good enough King.”
“I wish I could know you were right.”
A chime sounded, then great bells began to ring. “Well,” said Amos,
“you don’t have much time left to decide. The Priests of Ishap are at the outer
gates, and when they reach the throne room, there’s no cutting grapples and
sailing away. Your course will be set.”
Martin turned away from the wall. “Thank you for your company, Amos,
and the wine. Shall we go change the fate of the Kingdom?”
Amos drank the last of the wine from the crystal decanter. He tossed
it aside and over the sound of shattering glass said, “You go decide the fate
of the Kingdom, Martin. I’ll come along later, perhaps, if I can’t arrange for
that little ship I spoke of. Maybe we’ll sail together again. If you change
your mind about being King, or decide you’re in need of quick transportation
from Rillanon, fetch yourself down to the docks before sundown. I’ll be about
somewhere, and you’ll always be welcome in my crew.”
Martin gripped his hand tightly. “Always fare well, pirate.”
Amos
left and Martin stood alone, ordering his thoughts as best he could, then,
making his decision, he began his journey to the throne room.
***
By
craning his neck, Pug could see those entering the great hall. Duke Caldric
escorted Erland’s widow, Princess Alicia, down the long isle toward the throne.
Anita and Carline followed. From Kulgan came the observation, “By those grim
expressions and pale complexions, I wager Arutha has told them what may come.”
Pug noticed how Anita held tightly to Carline’s hand when they
reached their appointed places. “What a thing, to discover you’ve an elder
brother in these circumstances.”
Kulgan whispered, “They all seem to be taking it well enough.”
Gongs announced the Ishapian priests had entered the anteroom, and
Arutha and Lyam entered. Both wore the red mantles of Princes of the Realm and
walked quickly to the front of the hall. Arutha’s eyes darted around the room,
as if trying to judge the temper of those on all sides. Lyam looked calm, as if
somehow resigned to accept whatever fate brought.
Pug saw Arutha whisper a short word to Fannon, and the old
Swordmaster in turn spoke to Sergeant Gardan. Both looked about tensely, hands
near sword hilts, watching everyone in the room.
Pug could see no sign of Martin. He whispered to Kulgan, “Perhaps
Martin has decided to avoid the issue.”
Kulgan looked about. “No, there he is.”
Pug saw where Kulgan indicated with a bob of his head. By the far
wall, near a corner, a giant column rose Standing deep within its shadow was
Martin. His features were hidden, but his stance was unmistakable.
Bells began to chime, and Pug looked to see the first of the
Ishapian priests entering the great hall. Behind, others followed, all walking
in unison at the same measured pace. From the side doors came the sound of
bolts being driven into place, for the hall traditionally was sealed from the
start of the ceremony to its end.
When sixteen priests had entered the room, the great doors were
closed behind. The last priest paused before the door, a heavy wooden staff in
one hand and a large wax seal in the other. Quickly he affixed the seal to the
doors. Pug could see that the seal bore the seven-sided device of Ishap
inscribed upon it, and he felt the presence of magic within it. He knew the
doors could not be opened save by the one who affixed the seal, or by another
of high arts, and then at great risk.
When the doors were sealed, the priest with the staff walked forward
between the lines of his brother priests, who waited, incanting soft prayers.
One held the new crown, fashioned by the priests, resting upon a cushion of
purple velvet. Rodric’s crown had been destroyed by the blow that had ended his
life, but had it survived, according to custom it would have been interred with
him. Should no new King be crowned today, this new crown would be smashed upon
the stones of the floor, and no new one made until the Congress of Lords
informed the priests they had elected a new king. Pug marveled how much
importance could be attached to such a simple circlet of gold.
The priests moved forward, to stand before the throne, where other
priests of the lesser orders were already waiting. As was the custom, Lyam had
been asked if he wished his family priest to officiate at the investiture, and
he had agreed. Father Tully stood at the head of the delegation from the Temple
of Astalon. Pug knew the old priest would be quick to take charge of things
without question, regardless of which of Borric’s sons took the crown, and
counted it a wise choice.
The chief Ishapian priest struck his staff upon the floor, sixteen
even, measured blows. The sound rang through the hall, and when he was done,
the throne room was silent.
“We come to crown the King!” exclaimed the head priest.
“Ishap bless the King!” answered the other priests.
“In the name of Ishap, the one god over all, and in the name of the
four greater and twelve lesser gods, let all who have claim to the crown come
forth.”
Pug found himself holding his breath as he saw Lyam and Arutha come
to stand before the priests. A moment later Martin stepped from the shadows and
walked forward.
As Martin came into view, there was a hissing of intaken breath, for
many in the hall had either not heard the rumor or not believed it.
When all three were before the priest, he struck the floor with the
heavy staff. “Now is the hour and here is the place.” He then touched Martin
upon the shoulder with his staff, resting it there as he said, “By what right
do you come before us?”
Martin spoke in a clear, strong voice. “By right of birth.” Pug could
feel the presence of magic. The priests were not leaving the claims to the
throne subject to honor and tradition alone. Touched by the staff, no one could
bear false witness.
The same procedure was repeated and the same answer given by Lyam
and Arutha.
Again the staff rested upon Martin’s shoulder as the priest asked,
“State your name and your claim.”
Martin’s voice rang out. “I am Martin, eldest son of Borric, eldest
of the royal blood.”
A slight buzzing ran through the hall, silenced by the priest’s
staff striking the floor. The staff was placed upon Lyam’s shoulder, and he
answered, “I am Lyam, son of Borric, of the royal blood.”
A few voices could be heard saying, “The Heir!”
The priest hesitated, then repeated the question to Arutha, who
answered, “I am Arutha, son of Borric, of the royal blood.”
The priest looked at the three young men, then to Lyam said, “Are
you the acknowledged Heir?”
Lyam answered with the staff resting upon his shoulder. “The right
of succession was given to me in ignorance of Martin. It is a false bequest,
for Rodric thought me the eldest conDoin male.”
The priest removed the staff and conferred with his fellow priests.
The hall remained silent as the priests gathered together to discuss the
unforeseen turn of events. Time passed torturously, until at last the chief
priest turned once more to face them. He surrendered his staff and was handed
the golden circle that was the crown of the Kingdom. He uttered a brief prayer:
“Ishap, give all before us in this matter guidance and wisdom. Let the
appointed one do right.” In a strong voice he said, “That the succession is
flawed is clear.” He placed the crown before Martin. “Martin, as eldest son of
the royal blood you have the right of first claim. Will you, Martin, take up
this burden, and will you be our King?”
Martin looked at the crown. Silence hung heavy in the room as every
eye was fixed upon the tall man in green. Breath was held as the throng in the
hall waited upon his answer.
Then Martin slowly reached out and took the crown from the cushion
upon which it rested. He raised it up, and every gaze in the room followed it,
as it caught a ray of light entering through a high window, scattering
glittering glory throughout the hall.
Holding it above his head, he said, “I, Martin, do hereby abdicate
my claim to the crown of the Kingdom of the Isles, for now and forever, on my
own behalf and on behalf of all my issue from now henceforth to the last
generation.” He moved suddenly and placed the crown upon Lyam’s brow. Martin’s
voice rang out once more, his words a defiant challenge. “All hail Lyam! True
and undoubted King!”
There was a pause, as those in the hall took in what they had seen.
Then Arutha faced a stunned, silent crowd, and his voice filled the air. “Hail
Lyam! True and undoubted King!”
Lyam stood flanked by his brothers, one to each side, and the hall
erupted into shouts and cheers. “Hail Lyam! Hail the King!”
The chief priest let the shouting continue for a time, then
recovered his staff and struck the floor, bringing silence. He looked at Lyam
and said, “Will you, Lyam, take up this burden and be our King?”
Looking at the priest, Lyam answered, “I will be your King.”
Again the room sounded with cheers, and the chief priest let the din
go unchecked. Pug looked and saw relief on the faces of many, Brucal, Caldric,
Fannon, Vandros, and Gardan, all who had stood ready to face trouble.
Again the head priest silenced the room with the striking of his
staff. “Tully of the order of Astalon,” he called, and the old family priest
stepped forward.
Other priests removed Lyam’s red mantle, replacing it with the
purple mantle of kingship. The priests stepped away, and Tully came before
Lyam. To Martin and Arutha he said, “All in the Kingdom thank you for your
forbearance and wisdom.” The brothers left Lyam’s side and returned to stand
with Anita and Carline.
Carline smiled warmly at Martin, took his hand, and whispered,
“Thank you, Martin.”
Tully faced the crowd and intoned, “Now is the hour and here is the
place. We are here to witness the coronation of His Majesty, Lyam, first of
that name, as our true King. Is there any here who challenge his right?”
Several eastern lords looked unhappy, but no objection was raised.
Tully again faced Lyam, who went on his knees before the priest. Tully placed
his hand upon Lyam’s head. “Now is the hour and here is the place. It is to you
this burden has fallen, Lyam, first of that name, son of Borric, of the conDoin
line of kings. Will you take up this burden and will you be our King?”
Lyam answered, “I will be your King.”
Tully removed his hand from Lyam’s head and reached down to take his
hand, gripping the royal signet upon it. “Now is the hour and here is the
place. Do you, Lyam conDoin, son of Borric, of the line of kings, swear to
defend and protect the Kingdom of the Isles, faithfully serving her people, to
provide for their welfare, weal, and prosperity?”
“I, Lyam, do so swear and avow.”
Tully began a long liturgy, then when the prayers were done, Lyam
rose. Tully removed his ritual miter and handed it to the Head Priest of Ishap,
who passed it along to another of Tully’s order. Tully knelt before Lyam and
kissed his signet. He then rose and escorted Lyam to the throne, while the
Ishapian priest incanted, “Ishap bless the King!”
Lyam sat. An ancient sword, once carried by Dannis, the first
conDoin King, was brought to him and rested across his knees, a sign he would
defend the Kingdom with his life.
Tully turned and nodded to the Chief Priest of Ishap, who struck the
floor with his staff. “Now it is past, the hour of our choosing I hereby
proclaim Lyam the First our right, true, and undisputed King.”
The crowd responded with a roar. “Hail Lyam! Long live the King!”
The Priests of Ishap chanted low, and the chief priest led them to
the door. He struck the wax seal with his staff, and it split with a cracking
sound. He struck the door three times more, and the guards outside opened it.
Before stepping out, he intoned the last phrase of the ritual of coronation. To
those outside the hall, not privileged to watch the ceremony, he announced,
“Let the word go forth. Lyam is our King!”
Faster than a bird’s flight, the word went out of the hall, through
the palace, and into the city. Celebrants in the street toasted the new
monarch, and not one in a thousand knew how close disaster had come to visiting
the Kingdom this day.
The Ishapian priests left the hall, and all eyes returned to the new
ruler of the Kingdom.
Tully motioned to the members of the royal family, and Arutha,
Martin, and Carline came before their brother Lyam extended his hand, and
Martin knelt and kissed his brother’s signet. Arutha followed, then Carline.
Alicia led Anita to the throne, the first of the long line of nobles
who followed, and the lengthy business of accepting the fealty of the peers of
the realm began. Lord Caldric bent a trembling knee to his King, and there were
tears of relief upon his face as he rose. When Brucal swore his loyalty, he
briefly spoke to the King as he stood, and Lyam nodded.
Then in turn came the other nobles of the Kingdom until, hours
later, the last of the Border Barons, those guardians of the Northern Marches,
vassal to no Lord but the King, rose and returned to stand with the others in
the hall.
Handing the sword of Dannis to a waiting page, Lyam stood and said,
“It is our wish that a time of celebration be at hand. But there are matters of
state that must be attended to at once. Most are of a happy nature, but first
there is one sad duty that must be discharged.
“There is one absent today, one who sought to gain the throne upon
which we are privileged to sit. That Guy du Bas-Tyra did plot treason cannot be
denied. That he did commit foul murder is unquestioned. But it was the late
King’s wish that mercy be shown in this matter. As it was Rodric’s dying
request, I shall grant this boon, though it would be our pleasure to see Guy du
Bas-Tyra pay in full for his deeds.
“Let the word go from this day that Guy du Bas-Tyra is named outlaw
and banished from our Kingdom, his titles and lands forfeit to the crown. Let
his name and arms be stricken from the role of Lords of the Kingdom. Let no man
offer him shelter, fire, food, or water.” To the assembled lords he added, “Some
here have been allied with the former Duke, so we have little doubt he will
hear our judgment. Tell him to flee, to go to Kesh, Queg, or Roldem. Tell him
to hide in the Northlands if no other will take him, but should he be found
inside our borders within a week’s time, his life is forfeit.”
No one in the hall spoke for a moment, then Lyam said, “It has been
a time of great sorrow and suffering in our realms; now let us embark upon a
new era, one of peace and prosperity.” He indicated that his two brothers
should return to his side, and as they approached, Arutha looked at Martin.
Suddenly he grinned and, in an unexpected display of emotion, hugged both
Martin and Lyam. For a brief instant all in the hall were silent as the three
brothers clung closely to one another, then again cheers filled the room.
While the clamor continued, Lyam spoke to his brothers. At first
Martin smiled broadly, then suddenly his expression changed. Both Arutha and
Lyam nodded vigorously, but Martin’s face drained of color. He started to say
something, his manner intense and remonstrative. Lyam cut him off and held up
his hand for silence.
“There is a new ordering of things in our Kingdom. Let it be known
that from this day forward, our beloved brother Arutha is Prince of Krondor,
and until such time as there is a son in our house, Heir to the throne.” At the
last, Arutha seemed less than pleased. Then Lyam said, “And it is our wish that
the Duchy of Crydee, home of our father, stay within our family so long as his
line remains. To this end I name Martin, our beloved brother, Duke of Crydee,
with all lands, titles, and rights pertaining thereunto.”
A cheer again rose from the crowd. Martin and Arutha left Lyam’s
side, and the new King said, “Let the Earl of LaMut and Knight-Captain Kasumi
of LaMut approach the throne.”
Kasumi and Vandros started. Kasumi had been nervous all day, for
Vandros had placed a great trust in him His Tsurani impassivity asserted
itself, and he fell in beside Vandros as he reached the throne.
Both men knelt before Lyam, who said, “My lord Brucal has asked us
to make this happy announcement. His vassal the Earl Vandros will wed his
daughter, the Lady Felinah.”
From the crowd Brucal’s voice could be heard clearly saying, “And
it’s about time.” Several of the older courtiers from Rodric’s court blanched,
but Lyam joined in the general laughter.
“It is also the Duke’s wish that he be allowed to retire to his
estates, where he may seek the rewards of a long and useful service to his
Kingdom. We have given consent. And as he has no son, it is also his wish that
his title pass to one able to continue in the service of the Kingdom, one who
has shown uncommon ability in commanding the LaMutian garrison of the Armies of
the West during the late conflict. For his many brave actions and his faithful
service, we hereby approve his marriage and are pleased to name Vandros Duke of
Yabon, with all lands, titles, and rights pertaining thereunto. Rise, Lord
Vandros.”
Vandros rose, a little shaken, then returned to the side of his
father-in-law-to-be. Brucal struck him a friendly blow on the back and gripped
his hand. Lyam turned his attention to Kasumi and smiled. “There is one here
before us who was recently counted our enemy. He is now counted as our loyal
subject. Kasumi of the Shinzawai, for your efforts to bring peace to two
warring worlds, and your wisdom and courage in the defense of our lands against
the Brotherhood of the Dark Path, we give to you command of the garrison of
LaMut, and name you Earl of LaMut, with all lands, titles, and rights
pertaining thereunto. Rise, Earl Kasumi.”
Kasumi was speechless. He slowly reached out and took the King’s
hand, as he had seen the other nobles do, and kissed the signet. To the King he
said, “My lord King, my life and my honor do I pledge.”
Lyam said, “My lord Vandros, do you accept Earl Kasumi as your
vassal?”
Vandros grinned. “Happily, Sire.”
Kasumi rejoined Vandros, his eyes illuminated by pride. Brucal
administered another hearty slap on the back.
Several more offices were given, for there were vacancies from the
intrigues of Rodric’s court and from deaths in the war. When it seemed all
business was over, Lyam said, “Let Squire Pug of Crydee approach the throne.”
Pug looked at Katala and Kulgan, surprised at being called “What . .
. ?”
Kulgan pushed him forward “Go and find out.”
Pug came before Lyam and bowed. The King said, “What has been done
was a private matter, between our father and this man. Now it is our wish all
in our realm know that this man, once called Pug, the orphan of Crydee, has had
his name inscribed upon the rolls of our family.” He held out his hand, and Pug
knelt before him. Lyam presented his signet and then took Pug by the shoulders
and bade him rise. “As it was our father’s wish, so it is ours. From this day let
all in our Kingdom know this man is Pug conDoin, member of the King’s family.”
Many in the hall were surprised by Pug’s adoption and elevation, but
those who knew of his exploits cheered lustily as Lyam said, “Behold our cousin
Pug, Prince of the Realm.”
Katala ignored all propriety and ran forward to embrace her husband.
Several of the eastern lords frowned, but Lyam laughed and kissed her upon the
cheek.
“Come!” Lyam cried. “It is now time for celebration. Let the
dancers, musicians, and tumblers come forth. Let tables be brought and food and
wine be placed upon them. Let merriment reign!”
The festivities continued. Celebration had run unchecked throughout
the afternoon. A herald next to the King’s table read messages to the King from
those unable to attend, many nobles and the King of Queg, as well as monarchs
of the small kingdoms of the eastern shores. Important merchants and
Guildmasters from the Free Cities also sent congratulations. There were also
messages from Aglaranna and Tomas, and from the dwarves of the West at Stone
Mountain and the Grey Towers Old King Halfdan, ruler of the dwarves of the East
in Dorgin, sent his best wishes, and even Great Kesh had sent greetings, with a
request for more meetings to settle peacefully the issue of the Vale of Dreams.
The message was personally signed by the Empress.
Hearing the last message, Lyam said to Arutha, “For Kesh to have
sent us a personal message in so short a time, the Empress must boast the most
gifted spies in Midkemia. You’ll have to keep your wits about you in Krondor.”
Arutha sighed, not happy at that prospect. Pug, Laurie, Meecham,
Gardan, Kulgan, Fannon, and Kasumi all sat at the royal table. Lyam had
insisted they join the royal family. The new Earl of LaMut still seemed in
shock at his office, but his happiness was clearly showing, and even in this
noisy hall the sound of his warriors outside singing Tsurani songs of
celebration could be faintly heard. Pug mused over the discomfort that must be
causing the royal porters and pages.
Katala joined her husband, reporting their son napping, and Fantus
as well, exhausted from play. Katala said to Kulgan, “I hope your pet will be
able to withstand such constant aggravation.”
Kulgan laughed. “Fantus thrives on the attention.”
Pug said, “With all those rewards being passed out, Kulgan, I’m
surprised there was no mention of you. You’ve given faithful service to the
King’s family as long as anyone save Tully and Fannon.”
Kulgan snorted. “Tully, Fannon, and I all met with Lyam yesterday,
before we knew he was going to acknowledge Martin and throw the court into
turmoil. He began to mumble something or another about offices and rewards and
such, but we all begged off. When he began to protest, I told him I didn’t care
what he did for Tully and Fannon, but if he tried to haul me up before all
those people, I’d straightway turn him into a toad.”
Anita, overhearing the exchange, laughed. “So it is true!”
Pug, remembering the conversation he had with Anita in Krondor, so
many years ago, joined in the merriment. He looked back on all that had
occurred to him in the years since he had first chanced to come to Kulgan’s
cottage in the forests, and reflected for a moment. After much risk and many
conflicts he was safe with family and friends, with a great adventure, the
building of the academy, yet to come. He wished that a few others—Hochopepa,
Shimone, Kamatsu, Hokanu, as well as Almorella and Netoha—could share in his
happiness. And he wished Ichindar and the Lords of the High Council could know
the true reason for the betrayal on the day of peace. And most of all, he
wished Tomas could have joined them.
“So thoughtful, husband?”
Pug snapped out of his mood and smiled “Beloved, I was thinking that
in all things I am a most fortunate man.”
His wife placed her hand upon his and returned his smile. Tully
leaned across the table and inclined his head toward the other end, where
Laurie sat enraptured by Carline, who was laughing at some witticism he had
made. It was obvious she found him as charming as Pug had promised; in fact,
she looked captivated. Pug said, “I think I recognize that expression on
Carline’s face. I think Laurie may be in for some trouble.”
Kasumi said, “Knowing friend Laurie, it is a trouble he will
welcome.”
Tully looked thoughtful. “There is a duchy at Bas-Tyra now in need
of a duke, and he does seem a competent enough young man Hmmm.”
Kulgan barked, “Enough! Haven’t you had your fill of pomp? Must you
go marrying the poor lad off to the King’s sister so you can officiate in the
palace again? Gods! They just met today!”
Tully and Kulgan seemed about to launch into another of their famous
debates when Martin cut them both off “Let us change the subject. My head is
awhirl, and we don’t need your bickering.”
Tully and Kulgan exchanged startled looks, then both smiled. As one
they said, “Yes, my lord.”
Martin groaned while those close by joined in the laughter. Martin
shook his head. “This seems so strange, after so much fear and worry such a
short time back. Why, I nearly chose to go with Amos—” He looked up. “Where is
Amos?”
Upon hearing the seaman’s name, Arutha also looked up from his
conversation with Anita. “Where is that pirate?”
Martin answered. “He said something about arranging for a ship. I
thought he was only making light, but I haven’t seen him since the coronation.”
Arutha said, “Arranging for a ship! The gods weep!” He stood and said,
“With Your Majesty’s permission.”
Lyam said, “Go and fetch him back. From all you have told me, he
warrants some reward.”
Martin stood and said, “I’ll ride with you.”
Arutha smiled. “Gladly.”
The two brothers hurried from the hall, making quick time to the
courtyard. Porters and pages held horses for guests departing early. Arutha and
Martin grabbed the first two in line, unceremoniously leaving two minor nobles
without mounts. The two noblemen stood with mouths open, caught halfway between
anger and amazement. “Your pardon, my lords,” shouted Arutha as he galloped his
horse toward the gate.
As they rode through the gates of the palace, across the arched
bridge over the river Rillanon, Martin said, “He said he would sail at
sundown!”
“That gives us scant time!” shouted Arutha. Down winding streets
they flew to the harbor.
The city was thick with celebrants, and several times they had to
slow to avoid harming those who crowded the streets. They reached the
harborside and pulled up their mounts.
A single guard sat as if sleeping before the entrance to the royal
docks. Arutha jumped down from his horse and jostled the man. The guard’s helm
fell from his head as he toppled over, slumping to the ground. Arutha checked
him and said, “He’s alive, but he’ll have a head on him tomorrow.”
Arutha remounted and they hurried along Rillanon’s long dockside to
the last wharf. Shouts from men in the rigging of a ship greeted them as they
turned their horses toward the end of a long pier.
A beautiful vessel was slowly moving away from the docks, and as
they pulled up, Martin and Arutha could see Amos Trask standing upon the
quarterdeck. He waved high above his head, still close enough so they could see
his grinning face. “Ha! It seems all ends well!”
Arutha and Martin dismounted as the distance between ship and pier
slowly lengthened. “Amos!” shouted Arutha.
Amos pointed at a distant building. “The boys who stood watch here
are all in that warehouse. They’re a little bruised, but they’re alive.”
“Amos! That’s the King’s ship!” yelled Arutha, waving for the ship
to put back.
Amos
Trask laughed. “I thought the Royal Swallow a grand name. Well, tell
your brother I’ll return it someday.”
Martin began to laugh. Then Arutha joined in. “You pirate!” shouted
the youngest brother. “I’ll have him give it to you.”
With a deep cry of despair, Amos said, “Ah, Arutha, you take all the
fun out of life!”
Riftwar 1
Magician Tenth Anniversary Edition
Book 1 of
The Riftwar Saga
By
Raymond
E. Feist
Fresh scan & proofing by
Allflippedup 20-01-04
Updated by Allflippedup 13-03-04
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Many people have provided me with incalculable aid in bringing this
novel into existence. I would like to offer my heartfelt thanks to:
The Friday Nighters: April and Stephen Abrams; Steve Barett; David
Brin; Anita and Jon Everson; Dave Guinasso; Conan LaMotte; Tim LeSelle; Ethan
Munson; Bob Potter; Rich Spahl; Alan Springer; and Lori and Jeff Velten, for
their useful criticism, enthusiasm, support, belief, wise counsel, wonderful
ideas, and most of all, their friendship.
Billie and Russ Blake, and Lilian and Mike Fessier, for always being
willing to help.
Harold Matson, my agent, for taking a chance on me.
Adrian Zackheim, my editor, for asking rather than demanding, and
for working so hard to build a good book.
Kate Cronin, assistant to the editor, for having a sense of humor
and for so gracefully putting up with all my nonsense.
Elaine Chubb, copy editor, for having such a gentle touch and for
caring so much about the words.
And Barbara A. Feist, my mother, for all of the above and more.
RAYMOND E. FEIST
San Diego, California
July 1982
ACKNOWLEDGMENT TO THE REVISED
EDITION
On this occasion, the publication of the author’s preferred edition,
I would like to add the following names to the preceding list, people who,
though not known to me at the time I made the foregoing acknowledgment, proved
invaluable aid to me in bringing Magician to the public and contributed
materially to my success:
Mary Ellen Curley, who took over from Katie and kept us all on
course. Peter Schneider, whose enthusiasm for the work gave me a valued ally
within Doubleday and a close friend for the last decade. Lou Aronica, who
bought it even when he really didn’t want to do reprints, and for giving me the
chance to return to my first work and “rewrite it one more time.”
Pat Lobrutto, who helped before it was his job, and who took over at
a tough time, and whose friendship endures beyond our business relationship.
Janna Silverstein, who despite her short tenure as my editor has
shown an uncanny knack for knowing when to leave me alone and when to stay in
touch.
Nick Austin, John Booth, Jonathan Lloyd, Malcolm Edwards, and
everyone at Granada, now HarperCollins Books, who made the work an
international bestseller.
Abner Stein, my British agent, who sold it to Nick in the first
place. Janny Wurts, for being my friend, and who, by working with me on the
Empire Trilogy, gave me a completely different perspective on the Tsurani; she
helped turn. The Game of the Council from a vague concept to a murderously real
arena of human conflict. Kelewan and Tsuranuanni are as much her inventions as
mine. I drew the outlines and she colored in the details.
And Jonathan Matson, who received the torch from a great man’s hand
and continued without faltering, for wise counsel and friendship. The acorn
fell very close to the tree.
And most of all, my wife Kathlyn S. Starbuck, who understands my
pain and joy in this craft because she toils in the same vineyard, and who is
always there even when I don’t deserve to have her there, and who makes things
make sense through her love.
RAYMOND E. FEIST
San Diego, California
April 1991
FOREWORD TO THE REVISED EDITION
It is with some hesitation and a great deal of trepidation that an
author approaches the task of revising an earlier edition of fiction. This is
especially true if the book was his first effort, judged successful by most
standards, and continuously in print for a decade.
Magician was all this, and more. In late 1977 I decided to try my hand at
writing, part-time, while I was an employee of the University of California,
San Diego. It is now some fifteen years later, and I have been a full-time
writer for the last fourteen years, successful in this craft beyond my wildest
dreams. Magician, the first novel in what became known as. The
Riftwar Saga, was a book that quickly took on a life of its own. I hesitate
to admit this publicly, but the truth is that part of the success of the book
was my ignorance of what makes a commercially successful novel. My willingness
to plunge blindly forward into a tale spanning two dissimilar worlds, covering
twelve years in the lives of several major and dozens of minor characters,
breaking numerous rules of plotting along the way, seemed to find kindred souls
among readers the world over. After a decade in print, my best judgment is that
the appeal of the book is based upon its being what was known once as a
“ripping yarn.” I had little ambition beyond spinning a good story, one that
satisfied my sense of wonder, adventure, and whimsy. It turned out that several
million readers—many of whom read translations in languages I can’t even begin
to comprehend—found it one that satisfied their tastes for such a yarn as well.
But insofar as it was a first effort, some pressures of the
marketplace did manifest themselves during the creation of the final book.
Magician is by anyone’s measure a large book. When the penultimate manuscript
version sat upon my editor’s desk, I was informed that some fifty thousand
words would have to be cut. And cut I did. Mostly line by line, but a few
scenes were either truncated or excised.
While I could live out my life with the original manuscript as
published being the only edition ever read, I have always felt that some of the
material cut added a certain resonance, a counterpoint if you will, to key
elements of the tale. The relationships between characters, the additional
details of an alien world, the minor moments of reflection and mirth that act
to balance the more frenetic activity of conflict and adventure, all these
things were “close but not quite what I had in mind.”
In any
event, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the original publication of Magician,
I have been permitted to return to this work, to reconstruct and change, to add
and cut as I see fit, to bring forth what is known in publishing as the
“Author’s Preferred Edition” of the work. So, with the old admonition, “If it
ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” ringing in my ears, I return to the first work I
undertook, back when I had no pretensions of craft, no stature as a bestselling
author, and basically no idea of what I was doing. My desire is to restore some
of those excised bits, some of the minor detail that I felt added to the heft
of the narrative, as well as the weight of the book. Other material was more
directly related to the books that follow, setting some of the background for
the mythic underpinning of the Riftwar. The slightly lengthy discussion of lore
between Tully and Kulgan in Chapter Three, as well as some of the things
revealed to Pug on the Tower of Testing were clearly in this area. My editor
wasn’t sold on the idea of a sequel, then, so some of this was cut. Returning
it may be self-indulgent, but as this was material I felt belonged in the
original book, it has been restored.
To
those readers who have already discovered Magician, who wonder if it’s
in their interests to purchase this edition, I would like to reassure them that
nothing profound has been changed. No characters previously dead are now alive,
no battles lost are now won, and two boys still find the same destiny. I ask
you to feel no compulsion to read this new volume, for your memory of the
original work is as valid, perhaps more so, than mine. But if you wish to
return to the world of Pug and Tomas, to rediscover old friends and forgotten
adventure, then consider this edition your opportunity to see a bit more than
the last time. And to the new reader, welcome. I trust you’ll find this work to
your satisfaction.
It is
with profound gratitude I wish to thank you all, new readers and old
acquaintances, for without your support and encouragement, ten years of
“ripping yarns” could not have been possible. If I have the opportunity to
provide you with a small part of the pleasure I feel in being able to share my
fanciful adventures with you, we are equally rewarded, for by your embracing my
works you have allowed me to fashion more. Without you there would have been no
Silverthorn, A Darkness at Sethanon, Faerie Tale, and no Empire
Trilogy. The letters get read, if not answered—even if they sometimes take
months to reach me —and the kind remarks, in passing at public appearances,
have enriched me beyond measure. But most of all, you gave me the freedom to
practice a craft that was begun to “see if I could do it,” while working at the
Residence Halls of John Muir College at UCSD.
So,
thank you. I guess “I did it.” And with this work, I hope you’ll agree that this
time I did it a little more elegantly, with a little more color, weight,
and resonance.
RAYMOND E. FEIST
San Diego, California
August 1991
BOOK I
PUG AND TOMAS
A boy’s will is the wind’s will,
And the
thoughts of youth are
long, long
thoughts.
—LONGFELLOW, My Lost Youth
1
STORM
The storm had broken.
Pug danced along the edge of the rocks, his feet finding scant
purchase as he made his way among the tide pools His dark eyes darted about as
he peered into each pool under the cliff face, seeking the spiny creatures driven
into the shallows by the recently passed storm. His boyish muscles bunched
under his light shirt as he shifted the sack of sandcrawlers, rockclaws, and
crabs plucked from this water garden.
The afternoon sun sent sparkles through the sea spray swirling
around him, as the west wind blew his sun-streaked brown hair about Pug set his
sack down, checked to make sure it was securely tied, then squatted on a clear
patch of sand. The sack was not quite full, but Pug relished the extra hour or
so that he could relax Megar the cook wouldn’t trouble him about the time as
long as the sack was almost full Resting with his back against a large rock,
Pug was soon dozing in the sun’s warmth.
A cool wet spray woke him hours later. He opened his eyes with a
start, knowing he had stayed much too long. Westward, over the sea, dark
thunderheads were forming above the black outline of the Six Sisters, the small
islands on the horizon. The roiling, surging clouds, with rain trailing below
like some sooty veil, heralded another of the sudden storms common to this part
of the coast in early summer To the south, the high bluffs of Sailors Grief
reared up against the sky, as waves crashed against the base of that rocky pinnacle.
Whitecaps started to form behind the breakers, a sure sign the storm would
quickly strike. Pug knew he was in danger, for the storms of summer could drown
anyone on the beaches, or if severe enough, on the low ground beyond.
He picked up his sack and started north, toward the castle. As he
moved among the pools, he felt the coolness in the wind turn to a deeper,
wetter cold. The day began to be broken by a patchwork of shadows as the first
clouds passed before the sun, bright colors fading to shades of grey. Out to
sea, lightning flashed against the blackness of the clouds, and the distant
boom of thunder rode over the noise of the waves.
Pug picked up speed when he came to the first stretch of open beach.
The storm was coming in faster than he would have thought possible, driving the
rising tide before it. By the time he reached the second stretch of tide pools,
there was barely ten feet of dry sand between water’s edge and cliffs.
Pug hurried as fast as was safe across the rocks, twice nearly catching
his foot. As he reached the next expanse of sand, he mistimed his jump from the
last rock and landed poorly. He fell to the sand, grasping his ankle. As if
waiting for the mishap, the tide surged forward, covering him for a moment. He
reached out blindly and felt his sack carried away. Frantically grabbing at it,
Pug lunged forward, only to have his ankle fail. He went under, gulping water.
He raised his head, sputtering and coughing. He started to stand when a second
wave, higher than the last, hit him in the chest, knocking him backward. Pug
had grown up playing in the waves and was an experienced swimmer, but the pain
of his ankle and the battering of the waves were bringing him to the edge of
panic. He fought it off and came up for air as the wave receded. He half swam,
half scrambled toward the cliff face, knowing the water would be only inches
deep there.
Pug reached the cliffs and leaned against them, keeping as much
weight off the injured ankle as possible. He inched along the rock wall, while
each wave brought the water higher. When Pug finally reached a place where he
could make his way upward, water was swirling at his waist. He had to use all
his strength to pull himself up to the path. He lay panting a moment, then
started to crawl up the pathway, unwilling to trust his balky ankle on this
rocky footing.
The first drops of rain began to fall as he scrambled along,
bruising knees and shins on the rocks, until he reached the grassy top of the
bluffs. Pug fell forward exhausted, panting from the exertion of the climb. The
scattered drops grew into a light but steady rain.
When he had caught his breath, Pug sat up and examined the swollen
ankle. It was tender to the touch, but he was reassured when he could move it:
it was not broken. He would have to limp the entire way back, but with the
threat of drowning on the beach behind him, he felt relatively buoyant.
Pug would be a drenched, chilled wretch when he reached the town. He
would have to find a lodging there, for the gates of the castle would be closed
for the night, and with his tender ankle he would not attempt to climb the wall
behind the stables. Besides, should he wait and slip into the keep the next
day, only Megar would have words for him, but if he was caught coming over the
wall, Swordmaster Fannon or Horsemaster Algon would surely have a lot worse in
store for him than words.
While he rested, the rain took on an insistent quality and the sky
darkened as the late-afternoon sun was completely engulfed in storm clouds. His
momentary relief was replaced with anger at himself for losing the sack of
sandcrawlers. His displeasure doubled when he considered his folly at falling
asleep. Had he remained awake, he would have made the return trip unhurriedly,
would not have sprained his ankle, and would have had time to explore the
streambed above the bluffs for the smooth stones he prized so dearly for
slinging. Now there would be no stones, and it would be at least another week
before he could return. If Megar didn’t send another boy instead, which was
likely now that he was returning empty-handed.
Pug’s attention shifted to the discomfort of sitting in the rain,
and he decided it was time to move on. He stood and tested his ankle. It
protested such treatment, but he could get along on it. He limped over the
grass to where he had left his belongings and picked up his rucksack, staff,
and sling. He swore an oath he had heard soldiers at the keep use when he found
the rucksack ripped apart and his bread and cheese missing. Raccoons, or
possibly sand lizards, he thought. He tossed the now useless sack aside and
wondered at his misfortune.
Taking a deep breath, he leaned on his staff as he started across
the low rolling hills that divided the bluffs from the road. Stands of small
trees were scattered over the landscape, and Pug regretted there wasn’t more
substantial shelter nearby, for there was none upon the bluffs. He would be no
wetter for trudging to town than for staying under a tree.
The wind picked up, and Pug felt the first cold bite against his wet
back. He shivered and hurried his pace as well as he could. The small trees
started to bend before the wind, and Pug felt as if a great hand were pushing
at his back. Reaching the road, he turned north. He heard the eerie sound of
the great forest off to the east, the wind whistling through the branches of
the ancient oaks, adding to its already foreboding aspect. The dark glades of
the forest were probably no more perilous than the King’s road, but remembered
tales of outlaws and other, less human, malefactors stirred the hairs on the
boy’s neck.
Cutting across the King’s road, Pug gained a little shelter in the
gully that ran alongside it. The wind intensified and rain stung his eyes,
bringing tears to already wet cheeks. A gust caught him, and he stumbled off
balance for a moment. Water was gathering in the roadside gully, and he had to
step carefully to keep from losing his footing in unexpectedly deep puddles.
For nearly an hour he made his way through the ever growing storm.
The road turned northwest, bringing him almost full face into the howling wind.
Pug leaned into the wind, his shirt whipping out behind him. He swallowed hard,
to force down the choking panic rising within him. He knew he was in danger
now, for the storm was gaining in fury far beyond normal for this time of year
Great ragged bolts of lightning lit the dark landscape, briefly outlining the
trees and road in harsh, brilliant white and opaque black. The dazzling
afterimages, black and white reversed, stayed with him for a moment each time,
confusing his senses. Enormous thunder peals sounding overhead felt like
physical blows. Now his fear of the storm outweighed his fear of imagined
brigands and goblins. He decided to walk among the trees near the road, the
wind would be lessened somewhat by the boles of the oaks.
As Pug closed upon the forest, a crashing sound brought him to a
halt. In the gloom of the storm he could barely make out the form of a black
forest boar as it burst out of the undergrowth. The pig tumbled from the brush,
lost its footing, then scrambled to its feet a few yards away. Pug could see it
clearly as it stood there regarding him, swinging its head from side to side.
Two large tusks seemed to glow in the dim light as they dripped rainwater. Fear
made its eyes wide, and it pawed at the ground. The forest pigs were
bad-tempered at best, but normally avoided humans. This one was panic-stricken
by the storm, and Pug knew if it charged he could be badly gored, even killed.
Standing stock-still, Pug made ready to swing his staff, but hoped
the pig would return to the woods. The boar’s head raised, testing the boy’s
smell on the wind. Its pink eyes seemed to glow as it trembled with indecision.
A sound made it turn toward the trees for a moment, then it dropped its head
and charged.
Pug swung his staff, bringing it down in a glancing blow to the side
of the pig’s head, turning it. The pig slid sideways in the muddy footing,
hitting Pug in the legs. He went down as the pig slipped past. Lying on the
ground, Pug saw the boar skitter about as it turned to charge again.
Suddenly the pig was upon him, and Pug had no time to stand. He
thrust the staff before him in a vain attempt to turn the animal again. The
boar dodged the staff and Pug tried to roll away, but a weight fell across his
body. Pug covered his face with his hands, keeping his arms close to his chest,
expecting to be gored.
After a moment he realized the pig was still. Uncovering his face,
he discovered the pig lying across his lower legs, a black-feathered,
cloth-yard arrow protruding from its side. Pug looked toward the forest. A man
garbed in brown leather was standing near the edge of the trees, quickly
wrapping a yeoman’s longbow with an oilcloth cover. Once the valuable weapon
was protected from further abuse by the weather, the man crossed to stand over
the boy and beast.
He was cloaked and hooded, his face hidden. He knelt next to Pug and
shouted over the sound of the wind, “Are you ‘right, boy?” as he lifted the
dead boar easily from Pug’s legs. “Bones broken?”
“I don’t think so,” Pug yelled back, taking account of himself. His
right side smarted, and his legs felt equally bruised. With his ankle still
tender, he was feeling ill-used today, but nothing seemed broken or permanently
damaged.
Large, meaty hands lifted him to his feet. “Here,” the man
commanded, handing him his staff and the bow. Pug took them while the stranger
quickly gutted the boar with a large hunter’s knife. He completed his work and
turned to Pug. “Come with me, boy. You had best lodge with my master and me.
It’s not far, but we’d best hurry. This storm’ll get worse afore it’s over. Can
you walk?”
Taking an unsteady step, Pug nodded. Without a word the man
shouldered the pig and took his bow. “Come,” he said, as he turned toward the
forest. He set off at a brisk pace, which Pug had to scramble to match.
The forest cut the fury of the storm so little that conversation was
impossible. A lightning flash lit the scene for a moment, and Pug caught a
glimpse of the man’s face. Pug tried to remember if he had seen the stranger
before. He had the look common to the hunters and foresters that lived in the
forest of Crydee: large-shouldered, tall, and solidly built. He had dark hair
and beard and the raw, weather-beaten appearance of one who spends most of his
time outdoors.
For a few fanciful moments the boy wondered if he might be some
member of an outlaw band, hiding in the heart of the forest. He gave up the
notion, for no outlaw would trouble himself with an obviously penniless keep
boy.
Remembering the man had mentioned having a master, Pug suspected he
was a franklin, one who lived on the estate of a landholder.
He would be in the holder’s service, but not bound to him as a
bondsman. The franklins were freeborn, giving a share of crop or herd in
exchange for the use of land. He must be freeborn. No bondsman would be allowed
to carry a longbow, for they were much too valuable—and dangerous. Still, Pug
couldn’t remember any landholdings in the forest. It was a mystery to the boy,
but the toll of the day’s abuses was quickly driving away any curiosity.
After
what seemed to be hours, the man walked into a thicket of trees. Pug nearly
lost him in the darkness, for the sun had set some time before, taking with it
what faint light the storm had allowed. He followed the man more from the sound
of his footfalls and an awareness of his presence than from sight. Pug sensed
he was on a path through the trees, for his footsteps met no resisting brush or
detritus. From where they had been moments before, the path would be difficult
to find in the daylight, impossible at night, unless it was already known. Soon
they entered a clearing, in the midst of which sat a small stone cottage Light
shone through a single window, and smoke rose from the chimney. They crossed
the clearing, and Pug wondered at the storm’s relative mildness in this one
spot in the forest.
Once before the door, the man stood to one side and said, “You go
in, boy. I must dress the pig.”
Nodding dumbly, Pug pushed open the wooden door and stepped in.
“Close that door, boy! You’ll give me a chill and cause me my
death.”
Pug jumped to obey, slamming the door harder than he intended.
He turned, taking in the scene before him. The interior of the
cottage was a small single room. Against one wall was the fireplace, with a
good-size hearth before it. A bright, cheery fire burned, casting a warm glow.
Next to the fireplace a table sat, behind which a heavyset, yellow-robed figure
rested on a bench. His grey hair and beard nearly covered his entire head,
except for a pair of vivid blue eyes that twinkled in the firelight. A long
pipe emerged from the beard, producing heroic clouds of pale smoke.
Pug knew the man. “Master Kulgan . . . ,” he began, for the man was
the Duke’s magician and adviser, a familiar face around the castle keep.
Kulgan leveled a gaze at Pug, then said in a deep voice, given to
rich rolling sounds and powerful tones, “So you know me, then?”
“Yes, sir. From the castle.”
“What is your name, boy from the keep?”
“Pug, Master Kulgan.”
“Now I remember you.” The magician absently waved his hand. “Do not
call me ‘Master,’ Pug—though I am rightly called a master of my arts,” he said
with a merry crinkling around his eyes. “I am higher-born than you, it is true,
but not by much. Come, there is a blanket hanging by the fire, and you are
drenched. Hang your clothes to dry, then sit there.” He pointed to a bench
opposite him.
Pug did as he was bid, keeping an eye on the magician the entire
time. He was a member of the Duke’s court, but still a magician, an object of
suspicion, generally held in low esteem by the common folk. If a farmer had a
cow calve a monster, or blight strike the crops, villagers were apt to ascribe
it to the work of some magician lurking in nearby shadows. In times not too far
past they would have stoned Kulgan from Crydee as like as not. His position
with the Duke earned him the tolerance of the townsfolk now, but old fears died
slowly.
After his garments were hung, Pug sat down. He started when he saw a
pair of red eyes regarding him from just beyond the magician’s table. A scaled
head rose up above the tabletop and studied the boy.
Kulgan laughed at the boy’s discomfort. “Come, boy. Fantus will not
eat you.” He dropped his hand to the head of the creature, who sat next to him
on his bench, and rubbed above its eye ridges. It closed its eyes and gave
forth a soft crooning sound, not unlike the purring of a cat.
Pug shut his mouth, which had popped open with surprise, then asked,
“Is he truly a dragon, sir?”
The magician laughed, a rich, good-natured sound. “Betimes he thinks
he is, boy. Fantus is a firedrake, cousin to the dragon, though of smaller
stature.” The creature opened one eye and fastened it on the magician “But of
equal heart,” Kulgan quickly added, and the drake closed his eye again. Kulgan
spoke softly, in conspiratorial tones. “He is very clever, so mind what you say
to him. He is a creature of finely fashioned sensibilities.”
Pug nodded that he would. “Can he breathe fire?” he asked, eyes wide
with wonder. To any boy of thirteen, even a cousin to a dragon was worthy of
awe.
“When the mood suits him, he can belch out a flame or two, though he
seems rarely in the mood. I think it is due to the rich diet I supply him with,
boy. He has not had to hunt for years, so he is something out of practice in
the ways of drakes. In truth, I spoil him shamelessly.”
Pug found the notion somehow reassuring. If the magician cared
enough to spoil this creature, no matter how outlandish, then he seemed somehow
more human, less mysterious. Pug studied Fantus, admiring how the fire brought
golden highlights to his emerald scales. About the size of a small hound, the
drake possessed a long, sinuous neck atop which rested an alligatorlike head.
His wings were folded across his back, and two clawed feet extended before him,
aimlessly pawing the air, while Kulgan scratched behind bony eye ridges. His
long tail swung back and forth, inches above the floor.
The door opened and the big bowman entered, holding a dressed and
spitted loin of pork before him. Without a word he crossed to the fireplace and
set the meat to cook. Fantus raised his head, using his long neck to good
advantage to peek over the table. With a flick of his forked tongue, the drake
jumped down and, in stately fashion, ambled over to the hearth. He selected a
warm spot before the fire and curled up to doze away the wait before dinner.
The franklin unfastened his cloak and hung it on a peg by the door
“Storm will pass afore dawn, I’m thinking.” He returned to the fire and
prepared a basting of wine and herbs for the pig. Pug was startled to see a
large scar that ran down the left side of the man’s face, showing red and angry
in the firelight.
Kulgan waved his pipe in the franklin’s direction. “Knowing my
tight-lipped man here, you’ll not have made his proper acquaintance. Meecham,
this boy is Pug, from the keep at Castle Crydee.” Meecham gave a brief nod,
then returned to tending the roasting loin.
Pug nodded back, though a bit late for Meecham to notice. “I never
thought to thank you for saving me from the boar.”
Meecham replied, “There’s no need for thanks, boy. Had I not
startled the beast, it’s unlikely it would have charged you.” He left the
hearth and crossed over to another part of the room, took some brown dough from
a cloth-covered bucket, and started kneading.
“Well, sir,” said Pug to Kulgan, “it was his arrow that killed the
pig. It was indeed fortunate that he was following the animal.”
Kulgan laughed. “The poor creature, who is our most welcome guest
for dinner, happened to be as much a victim of circumstance as yourself.”
Pug looked perplexed. “I don’t follow, sir.”
Kulgan stood and took down an object from the topmost shelf on his
bookcase and placed it on the table before the boy. It was wrapped in a cover
of dark blue velvet, so Pug knew at once it must be a prize of great value for
such an expensive material to be used for covering Kulgan removed the velvet,
revealing an orb of crystal that gleamed in the firelight. Pug gave an ah of
pleasure at the beauty of it, for it was without apparent flaw and splendid in
its simplicity of form.
Kulgan pointed to the sphere of glass. “This device was fashioned as
a gift by Althafain of Carse, a most puissant artificer of magic, who thought
me worthy of such a present, as I have done him a favor or two in the past—but that
is of little matter. Having just this day returned from the company of Master
Althafain, I was testing his token. Look deep into the orb, Pug.”
Pug fixed his eyes on the ball and tried to follow the flicker of
firelight that seemed to play deep within its structure. The reflections of the
room, multiplied a hundredfold, merged and danced as his eyes tried to fasten
upon each aspect within the orb. They flowed and blended, then grew cloudy and
obscure. A soft white glow at the center of the ball replaced the red of
firelight, and Pug felt his gaze become trapped by its pleasing warmth. Like
the warmth of the kitchen at the keep, he thought absently.
Suddenly the milky white within the ball vanished, and Pug could see
an image of the kitchen before his eyes. Fat Alfan the cook was making
pastries, licking the sweet crumbs from his fingers. This brought the wrath of
Megar, the head cook, down upon his head, for Megar considered it a disgusting
habit. Pug laughed at the scene, one he had witnessed before many times, and it
vanished. Suddenly he felt tired.
Kulgan wrapped the orb in the cloth and put it away. “You did well,
boy,” he said thoughtfully. He stood watching the boy for a moment, as if
considering something, then sat down. “I would not have suspected you of being
able to fashion such a clear image in one try, but you seem to be more than you
first appear to be.”
“Sir?”
“Never mind, Pug.” He paused for a moment, then said, “I was using
that toy for the first time, judging how far I could send my sight, when I
spied you making for the road. From your limp and bruised condition, I judged
that you would never reach the town, so I sent Meecham to fetch you.”
Pug looked embarrassed by the unusual attention, color rising to his
cheeks. He said, with a thirteen-year-old’s high estimation of his own ability,
“You needn’t have done that, sir. I would have reached the town in due time.”
Kulgan smiled. “Perhaps, but then again, perhaps not. The storm is
unseasonably severe and perilous for traveling.”
Pug listened to the soft tattoo of rain on the roof of the cottage.
The storm seemed to have slackened, and Pug doubted the magician’s words. As if
reading the boy’s thought, Kulgan said, “Doubt me not, Pug This glade is
protected by more than the great boles. Should you pass beyond the circle of
oaks that marks the edge of my holding, you would feel the storm’s fury.
Meecham, how do you gauge this wind?”
Meecham put down the bread dough he was kneading and thought for a
moment. “Near as bad as the storm that beached six ships three years back.” He
paused for a moment, as if reconsidering the estimate, then nodded his
endorsement. “Yes, nearly as bad, though it won’t blow so long.”
Pug thought back three years to the storm that had blown a Quegan
trading fleet bound for Crydee onto the rocks of Sailor’s Grief. At its height,
the guards on the castle walls were forced to stay in the towers, lest they be
blown down. If this storm was that severe, then Kulgan’s magic was impressive,
for outside the cottage it sounded no worse than a spring rain.
Kulgan sat back on the bench, occupied with trying to light his
extinguished pipe. As he produced a large cloud of sweet white smoke, Pug’s
attention wandered to a case of books standing behind the magician. His lips
moved silently as he tried to discern what was written on the bindings, but
could not.
Kulgan lifted an eyebrow and said, “So you can read, aye?”
Pug started, alarmed that he might have offended the magician by
intruding on his domain. Kulgan, sensing his embarrassment, said, “It is all
right, boy. It is no crime to know letters.”
Pug felt his discomfort diminish. “I can read a little, sir. Megar
the cook has shown me how to read the tallies on the stores laid away for the
kitchen in the cellars. I know some numbers, as well.”
“Numbers, too,” the magician exclaimed good-naturedly. “Well, you
are something of a rare bird.” He reached behind himself and pulled out one
volume, bound in red-brown leather, from the shelf. He opened it, squinting at
one page, then another, and at last found a page that seemed to meet his
requirements. He turned the open book around and lay it upon the table before
Pug. Kulgan pointed to a page illuminated by a magnificent design of snakes,
flowers, and twining vines in a colorful design around a large letter in the
upper left corner. “Read this, boy.”
Pug had never seen anything remotely like it. His lessons had been
on plain parchment with letters fashioned in Megar’s blunt script, using a
charcoal stick. He sat, fascinated by the details of the work, then realized
the magician was staring at him. Regaining his wits, he began to read.
“And then there came a sum . . . summons from . . .” He looked at
the word, stumbling over the complex combinations that were new to him. “. . .
Zacara.” He paused, looking at Kulgan to see if he was correct. The magician
nodded for him to continue. “For the north was to be forgot . . . forgotten,
lest the heart of the empire Ian . . . languish and all be lost. And though of
Bosania from birth, those soldiers still were loyal to Great Kesh in their
service. So for her great need, they took up their arms and put on their armor
and quit Bosania, taking ship to the south, to save all from destruction.”
Kulgan said, “That’s enough,” and gently closed the cover of the
book. “You are well gifted with letters for a keep boy.”
“This book, sir, what is it?” asked Pug, as Kulgan took it from him.
“I have never seen anything like it.”
Kulgan looked at Pug for a moment, with a gaze that made him
uncomfortable again, then smiled, breaking the tension. As he put the book
back, he said, “It is a history of this land, boy. It was given as a gift by
the abbot of an Ishapian monastery. It is a translation of a Keshian text, over
a hundred years old.”
Pug nodded and said, “It all sounded very strange. What does it tell
of?”
Kulgan once more looked at Pug as if trying to see something inside
of the boy, then said, “A long time ago, Pug, all these lands, from the Endless
Sea across the Grey Tower Mountains to the Bitter Sea, were part of the Empire
of Great Kesh. Far to the east existed a small kingdom, on one small island
called Rillanon. It grew to engulf its neighboring island kingdoms, and it
became the Kingdom of the Isles. Later it expanded again to the mainland, and
while it is still the Kingdom of Isles, most of us simply call it ‘the
Kingdom.’ We, who live in Crydee, are part of the Kingdom, though we live as
far from the capital city of Rillanon as one can and still be within its
boundaries.
“Once, many long years ago, the Empire of Great Kesh abandoned these
lands, for it was engaged in a long and bloody conflict with its neighbors to
the south, the Keshian Confederacy.”
Pug was caught up in the grandeur of lost empires, but hungry enough
to notice Meecham was putting several small loaves of dark bread in hearth
oven. He turned his attention back to the magician. “Who were the Keshian Con—
. . . ?”
“The Keshian Confederacy,” Kulgan finished for the boy. “It is a
group of small nations who had existed as tributaries to Great Kesh for
centuries. A dozen years before that book was written, they united against
their oppressor. Each alone was insufficient to contest with Great Kesh, but
united they proved its match. Too close a match, for the war dragged on year
after year. The Empire was forced to strip its northern provinces of their
legions and send them south, leaving the north open to the advances of the new,
younger Kingdom.
“It was Duke Borric’s grandfather, youngest son of the King, who
brought the army westward, extending the Western Realm. Since then all of what
was once the old imperial province of Bosania, except for the Free Cities of
Natal, has been called the Duchy of Crydee.”
Pug thought for a moment, then said, “I think I would like to travel
to this Great Kesh someday.”
Meecham snorted, something close to a laugh. “And what would you be
traveling as, a freebooter?”
Pug felt his face flush. Freebooters were landless men, mercenaries
who fought for pay, and who were regarded as being only one cut above outlaws.
Kulgan said, “Perhaps you might someday, Pug. The way is long and
full of peril, but it is not unheard of for a brave and hearty soul to survive
the journey. Stranger things have been known to happen.”
The talk at the table turned to more common topics, for the magician
had been at the southern keep at Carse for over a month and wanted the gossip
of Crydee. When the bread was done baking, Meecham served it hot, carved the
pork loin, and brought out plates of cheese and greens. Pug had never eaten so
well in his life. Even when he had worked in the kitchen, his position as keep
boy earned him only meager fare. Twice during dinner, Pug found the magician
regarding him intently.
When the meal was over, Meecham cleared the table, then began
washing the dishes with clean sand and fresh water, while Kulgan and Pug sat
talking. A single scrap of meat remained on the table, which Kulgan tossed over
to Fantus, who lay before the fire. The drake opened one eye to regard the
morsel. He pondered the choice between his comfortable resting place and the
juicy scrap for a moment, then moved the necessary six inches to gulp down the
prize and closed his eye again.
Kulgan lit his pipe, and once he was satisfied with its production
of smoke, he said, “What are your plans when you reach manhood, boy?”
Pug was fighting off sleep, but Kulgan’s question brought him alert
again. The time of Choosing, when the boys of the town and keep were taken into
apprenticeship, was close, and Pug became excited as he said, “This Midsummer’s
Day I hope to take the Duke’s service under Swordmaster Fannon.”
Kulgan regarded his slight guest. “I would have thought you still a
year or two away from apprenticeship, Pug.”
Meecham gave out a sound somewhere between a laugh and a grunt. “Bit
small to be lugging around sword and shield, aren’t you, boy?”
Pug flushed. He was the smallest boy of his age in the castle.
“Megar the cook said I may be late coming to my growth,” he said with a faint
note of defiance. “No one knows who my parents were, so they have no notion of
what to expect.”
“Orphan, is it?” asked Meecham, raising one eyebrow, his most
expressive gesture yet.
Pug nodded. “I was left with the Priests of Dala, in the mountain
abbey, by a woman who claimed she found me in the road. They brought me to the
keep, for they had no way to care for me.”
“Yes,” injected Kulgan, “I remember when those who worship the
Shield of the Weak first brought you to the castle. You were no more than a
baby fresh from the teat. It is only through the Duke’s kindness that you are a
freeman today. He felt it a lesser evil to free a bondsman’s son than to bond a
freeman’s. Without proof, it was his right to have you declared bondsman.”
Meecham said in a noncommittal tone, “A good man, the Duke.”
Pug had heard the story of his origin a hundred times before from
Magya in the kitchen of the castle. He felt completely wrung out and could
barely keep his eyes open. Kulgan noticed and signaled Meecham. The tall
franklin took some blankets from a shelf and prepared a sleeping pallet. By the
time he finished, Pug had fallen asleep with his head on the table. The large
man’s hands lifted him gently from the stool and placed him on the blankets,
then covered him.
Fantus opened his eyes and regarded the sleeping boy. With a wolfish
yawn, he scrambled over next to Pug and snuggled in close. Pug shifted his
weight in his sleep and draped one arm over the drake’s neck. The firedrake
gave an approving rumble, deep in his throat, and closed his eyes again.
2
APPRENTICE
The forest was quiet.
The slight afternoon breeze stirred the tall oaks and cut the day’s
heat, while rustling the leaves only slightly. Birds who would raise a raucous
chorus at sunrise and sundown were mostly quiet at this time of morning. The
faint tang of sea salt mixed with the sweet smell of flowers and pungency of
decaying leaves.
Pug and Tomas walked slowly along the path, with the aimless weaving
steps of boys who have no particular place to go and ample time to get there.
Pug shied a small rock at an imagined target, then turned to look at his
companion. “You don’t think your mother was mad, do you?” he asked.
Tomas smiled. “No, she understands how things are. She’s seen other
boys the day of Choosing. And truthfully, we were more of hindrance than a help
in the kitchen today.”
Pug nodded. He had spilled a precious pot of honey as he carried it
to Alfan, the pastry cook. Then he had dumped an entire tray of fresh bread
loaves as he took them from the oven. “I made something of a fool of myself
today, Tomas.”
Tomas laughed. He was a tall boy, with sandy hair and bright blue
eyes. With his quick smile, he was well liked in the keep, in spite of a boyish
tendency to find trouble. He was Pug’s closest friend, more brother than
friend, and for that reason Pug earned some measure of acceptance from the
other boys, for they all regarded Tomas as their unofficial leader.
Tomas said, “You were no more the fool than I. At least you didn’t
forget to hang the beef sides high.” Pug grinned. “Anyway, the Duke’s hounds
are happy.” He snickered, then laughed. “She is angry, isn’t she?”
Tomas laughed along with his friend. “She’s mad. Still, the dogs
only ate a little before she shooed them off. Besides, she’s mostly mad at
Father. She claims the Choosing’s only an excuse for all the Craftmasters to
sit around smoking pipes, drinking ale, and swapping tales all day. She says
they already know who will choose which boy.”
Pug said, “From what the other women say, she’s not alone in that
opinion.” Then he grinned at Tomas. “Probably not wrong, either.”
Tomas lost his smile. “She truly doesn’t like it when he’s not in
the kitchen to oversee things. I think she knows this, which is why she tossed
us out of the keep for the morning, so she wouldn’t take out her temper on us.
Or at least you,” he added with a questioning smile. “I swear you’re her
favorite.”
Pug’s grin returned and he laughed again. “Well, I do cause less
trouble.”
With a playful punch to the arm, Tomas said, “You mean you get
caught less often.”
Pug pulled his sling out from within his shirt. “If we came back
with a brace of partridge or quail, she might regain some of her good temper.”
Tomas smiled. “She might,” he agreed, taking out his own sling. Both
boys were excellent slingers, Tomas being undoubted champion among the boys,
edging Pug by only a little. It was unlikely either could bring down a bird on
the wing, but should they find one at rest, there was a fair chance they might
hit it. Besides, it would give them something to do to pass the hours and
perhaps for a time forget the Choosing.
With exaggerated stealth they crept along, playing the part of
hunters. Tomas led the way as they left the footpath, heading for the watering
pool they knew lay not too far distant. It was improbable they would spot game
this time of the day unless they simply blundered across it, but if any were to
be found, it most likely would be near the pool. The woods to the northeast of
the town of Crydee were less forbidding than the great forest to the south.
Many years of harvesting trees for lumber had given the green glades a sunlit
airiness not found in the deep haunts of the southern forest. The keep boys had
often played here over the years. With small imagination, the woods were
transformed into a wondrous place, a green world of high adventure. Some of the
greatest deeds known had taken place here. Daring escapes, dread quests, and
mightily contested battles had been witnessed by the silent trees as the boys
gave vent to their youthful dreams of coming manhood. Foul creatures, mighty
monsters, and base outlaws had all been fought and vanquished, often
accompanied by the death of a great hero, with appropriate last words to his
mourning companions, all managed with just enough time left to return to the
keep for supper.
Tomas reached a small rise that overlooked the pool, screened off by
young beech saplings, and pulled aside some brush so they could mount a vigil.
He stopped, awed, and softly said, “Pug, look!” Standing at the edge of the
pool was a stag, head held high as he sought the source of something that
disturbed his drinking. He was an old animal, the hair around his muzzle nearly
all white, and his head crowned by magnificent antlers.
Pug counted quickly. “He has fourteen points.”
Tomas nodded agreement. “He must be the oldest buck in the forest.”
The stag turned his attention in the boys’ direction, flicking an ear
nervously. They froze, not wishing to frighten off such a beautiful creature.
For a long, silent minute the stag studied the rise, nostrils flaring, then
slowly lowered his head to the pool and drank.
Tomas gripped Pug’s shoulder and inclined his head to one side. Pug
followed Tomas’s motion and saw a figure walking silently into the clearing. He
was a tall man dressed in leather clothing, dyed forest green. Across his back
hung a longbow and at his belt a hunter’s knife. His green cloak’s hood was
thrown back, and he walked toward the stag with a steady, even step. Tomas
said, “It’s Martin.”
Pug also recognized the Duke’s Huntmaster. An orphan like Pug,
Martin had come to be known as Longbow by those in the castle, as he had few
equals with that weapon. Something of a mystery, Martin Longbow was still well
liked by the boys, for while he was aloof with the adults in the castle, he was
always friendly and accessible to the boys. As Huntmaster, he was also the
Duke’s Forester. His duties absented him from the castle for days, even weeks
at a time, as he kept his trackers busy looking for signs of poaching, possible
fire dangers, migrating goblins, or outlaws camping in the woods. But when he
was in the castle, and not organizing a hunt for the Duke, he always had time
for the boys. His dark eyes were always merry when they pestered him with
questions of woodlore or for tales of the lands near the boundaries of Crydee.
He seemed to possess unending patience, which set him apart from most of the
Craftmasters in the town and keep.
Martin came up to the stag, gently reached out, and touched his
neck. The great head swung up, and the stag nuzzled Martin’s arm.
Softly Martin said, “If you walk out slowly, without speaking, he
might let you approach.”
Pug and Tomas exchanged startled glances, then stepped into the
clearing. They walked slowly around the edge of the pool, the stag following
their movements with his head, trembling slightly. Martin patted him
reassuringly and he quieted. Tomas and Pug came to stand beside the hunter, and
Martin said, “Reach out and touch him, slowly so as not to frighten him.”
Tomas reached out first, and the stag trembled beneath his fingers.
Pug began to reach out, and the stag retreated a step. Martin crooned to the
stag in a language Pug had never heard before, and the animal stood still. Pug
touched him and marveled at the feel of his coat—so like the cured hides he had
touched before, yet so different for the feel of life pulsing under his
fingertips.
Suddenly the stag backed off and turned. Then, with a single
bounding leap, he was gone among the trees. Martin Longbow chuckled and said,
“Just as well. It wouldn’t do to have him become too friendly with men. Those
antlers would quickly end up over some poacher’s fireplace.”
Tomas whispered, “He’s beautiful, Martin.”
Longbow nodded, his eyes still fastened upon the spot where the stag
had vanished into the woods. “That he is, Tomas.”
Pug said, “I thought you hunted stags, Martin. How—”
Martin said, “Old Whitebeard and I have something of an
understanding, Pug. I hunt only bachelor stags, without does, or does too old
to calve. When Whitebeard loses his harem to some younger buck someday, I may
take him. Now each leaves the other to his own way. The day will come when I
will look at him down the shaft of an arrow.” He smiled at the boys. “I won’t
know until then if I shall let the shaft fly. Perhaps I will, perhaps not.” He
fell silent for a time, as if the thought of Whitebeard’s becoming old was
saddening, then as a light breeze rustled the branches said, “Now, what brings
two such bold hunters into the Duke’s woods in the early morning? There must be
a thousand things left undone with the Midsummer festival this afternoon.”
Tomas answered. “My mother tossed us out of the kitchen. We were
more trouble than not. With the Choosing today . . .” His voice died away, and
he felt suddenly embarrassed. Much of Martin’s mysterious reputation stemmed
from when he first came to Crydee. At his time for the Choosing, he had been
placed directly with the old Huntmaster by the Duke, rather than standing
before the assembled Craftmasters with the other boys his age. This violation
of one of the oldest traditions known had offended many people in town, though
none would dare openly express such feelings to Lord Borric. As was natural,
Martin became the object of their ire, rather than the Duke. Over the years
Martin had more than justified Lord Borric’s decision, but still most people
were troubled by the Duke’s special treatment of him that one day. Even after
twelve years some people still regarded Martin Longbow as being different and,
as such, worthy of distrust.
Tomas said, “I’m sorry, Martin.”
Martin nodded in acknowledgment, but without humor. “I understand,
Tomas. I may not have had to endure your uncertainty, but I have seen many
others wait for the day of Choosing. And for four years I myself have stood
with the other Masters, so I know a little of your worry.”
A thought struck Pug and he blurted, “But you’re not with the other
Craftmasters.”
Martin shook his head, a rueful expression playing across his even
features. “I had thought that, in light of your worry, you might fail to
observe the obvious. But you’ve a sharp wit about you, Pug.”
Tomas didn’t understand what they were saying for a moment, then
comprehension dawned. “Then you’ll select no apprentices!”
Martin raised a finger to his lips. “Not a word, lad. No, with young
Garret chosen last year, I’ve a full company of trackers.”
Tomas was disappointed. He wished more than anything to take service
with Swordmaster Fannon, but should he not be chosen as a soldier, then he
would prefer the life of a forester, under Martin. Now his second choice was
denied him. After a moment of dark brooding, he brightened: perhaps Martin
didn’t choose him because Fannon already had.
Seeing his friend entering a cycle of elation and depression as he
considered all the possibilities, Pug said, “You haven’t been in the keep for
nearly a month, Martin.” He put away the sling he still held and asked, “Where
have you kept yourself?”
Martin looked at Pug as the boy instantly regretted his question. As
friendly as Martin could be, he was still Huntmaster, a member of the Duke’s
household, and keep boys did not make a habit of questioning the comings and
goings of the Duke’s staff.
Martin relieved Pug’s embarrassment with a slight smile. “I’ve been
to Elvandar. Queen Aglaranna has ended her twenty years of mourning the death of
her husband, the Elf King. There was a great celebration.”
Pug was surprised by the answer. To him, as to most people in
Crydee, the elves were little more than legend. But Martin had spent his youth
near the elven forests and was one of the few humans to come and go through
those forests to the north at will. It was another thing that set Martin
Longbow apart from others. While Martin had shared elvish lore with the boys
before, this was the first time in Pug’s memory he had spoken of his
relationship to the elves. Pug stammered, “You feasted with the Elf Queen?”
Martin assumed a pose of modest inconsequence. “Well, I sat at the
table farthest from the throne, but yes; I was there.” Seeing the unasked
questions in their eyes, he continued. “You know as a boy I was raised by the
monks of Silban’s Abbey, near the elven forest. I played with elven children,
and before I came here, I hunted with Prince Calin and his cousin, Galain.”
Tomas nearly jumped with excitement. Elves were a subject holding
particular fascination for him. “Did you know King Aidan?”
Martin’s expression clouded, and his eyes narrowed, his manner
suddenly becoming stiff. Tomas saw Martin’s reaction and said, “I’m sorry,
Martin. Did I say something wrong?”
Martin waved away the apology. “No fault of yours, Tomas,” he said,
his manner softening somewhat. “The elves do not use the names of those who
have gone to the Blessed Isles, especially those who have died untimely. They
believe to do so recalls those spoken of from their journey there, denying them
their final rest. I respect their beliefs.
“Well, to answer you, no, I never met him. He was killed when I was
only a small boy. But I have heard the stories of his deeds, and he was a good
and wise King by all accounts.” Martin looked about. “It approaches noon. We
should return to the keep.”
He began to walk toward the path, and the boys fell in beside him.
“What was the feast like, Martin?” asked Tomas.
Pug sighed as the hunter began to speak of the marvels of Elvandar.
He was also fascinated by tales of the elves, but to nowhere near the degree
Tomas was. Tomas could endure hours of tales of the people of the elven
forests, regardless of the speaker’s credibility. At least, Pug considered, in
the Huntmaster they had a dependable eye witness. Martin’s voice droned on, and
Pug’s attention wandered, as he again found himself pondering the Choosing. No
matter that he told himself worry was useless: he worried. He found he was
facing the approaching of this afternoon with something akin to dread.
The boys stood in the courtyard. It was Midsummer, the day that
ended one year and marked the beginning of another. Today everyone in the
castle would be counted one year older. For the milling boys this was
significant, for today was the last day of their boyhood. Today was the
Choosing.
Pug tugged at the collar of his new tunic. It wasn’t really new,
being one of Tomas’s old ones, but it was the newest Pug had ever owned. Magya,
Tomas’s mother, had taken it in for the smaller boy, to ensure he was presentable
before the Duke and his court. Magya and her husband, Megar the cook, were as
close to being parents to the orphan as anyone in the keep. They tended his
ills, saw that he was fed, and boxed his ears when he deserved it. They also
loved him as if he were Tomas’s brother.
Pug looked around. The other boys all wore their best, for this was
one of the most important days of their young lives. Each would stand before
the assembled Craftmasters and members of the Duke’s staff, and each would be
considered for an apprentice’s post. It was a ritual, its origins lost in time,
for the choices had already been made. The crafters and the Duke’s staff had
spent many hours discussing each boy’s merits with one another and knew which
boys they would call.
The practice of having the boys between eight and thirteen years of
age work in the crafts and services had proved a wise course over the years in
fitting the best suited to each craft. In addition, it provided a pool of
semiskilled individuals for the other crafts should the need arise. The
drawback to the system was that certain boys were not chosen for a craft or
staff position. Occasionally there would be too many boys for a single
position, or no lad judged fit even though there was an opening. Even when the
number of boys and openings seemed well matched, as it did this year, there
were no guarantees. For those who stood in doubt, it was an anxious time.
Pug scuffed his bare feet absently in the dust. Unlike Tomas, who
seemed to do well at anything he tried, Pug was often guilty of trying too hard
and bungling his tasks. He looked around and noticed that a few of the other
boys also showed signs of tension. Some were joking roughly, pretending no
concern over whether they were chosen or not. Others stood like Pug, lost in
their thoughts, trying not to dwell on what they would do should they not be
chosen.
If he was not chosen, Pug—like the others—would be free to leave
Crydee to try to find a craft in another town or city. If he stayed, he would
have to either farm the Duke’s land as a franklin, or work one of the town’s
fishing boats. Both prospects were equally unattractive, but he couldn’t
imagine leaving Crydee.
Pug remembered what Megar had told him, the night before. The old cook
had cautioned him about fretting too much over the Choosing. After all, he had
pointed out, there were many apprentices who never advanced to the rank of
journeyman, and when all things were taken into account, there were more men
without craft in Crydee than with. Megar had glossed over the fact that many
fishers’ and farmers’ sons forsook the choosing, electing to follow their
fathers. Pug wondered if Megar was so removed from his own Choosing he couldn’t
remember that the boys who were not chosen would stand before the assembled
company of Craftmasters, householders, and newly chosen apprentices, under
their gaze until the last name was called and they were dismissed in shame.
Biting his lower lip, Pug tried to hide his nervousness. He was not
the sort to jump from the heights of Sailor’s Grief should he not be chosen, as
some had done in the past, but he couldn’t bear the idea of facing those who
had been chosen.
Tomas, who stood next to his shorter friend, threw Pug a smile. He
knew Pug was fretting, but could not feel entirely sympathetic as his own
excitement mounted. His father had admitted that he would be the first called
by Swordmaster Fannon. Moreover, the Swordmaster had confided that should Tomas
do well in training, he might be found a place in the Duke’s personal guard. It
would be a signal honor and would improve Tomas’s chance for advancement, even
earning him an officer’s rank after fifteen or twenty years in the guard.
He poked Pug in the ribs with an elbow, for the Duke’s herald had
come out upon the balcony overlooking the courtyard. The herald signaled to a
guard, who opened the small door in the great gate, and the Craftmasters
entered. They crossed to stand at the foot of the broad stairs of the keep. As
was traditional, they stood with their backs to the boys, waiting upon the
Duke.
The large oaken doors of the keep began to swing out ponderously,
and several guards in the Duke’s brown and gold darted through to take up their
positions on the steps. Upon each tabard was emblazoned the golden gull of
Crydee, and above that a small golden crown, marking the Duke a member of the
royal family.
The herald shouted, “Hearken to me! His Grace, Borric conDoin, third
Duke of Crydee, Prince of the Kingdom; Lord of Crydee, Carse, and Tulan; Warden
of the West; Knight-General of the King’s Armies; heir presumptive to the
throne of Rillanon.” The Duke stood patiently while the list of offices was
completed, then stepped forward into the sunlight.
Past fifty, the Duke of Crydee still moved with the fluid grace and
powerful step of a born warrior. Except for the grey at the temples of his dark
brown hair, he looked younger than his age by twenty years. He was dressed from
neck to boot in black, as he had been for the last seven years, for he still mourned
the loss of his beloved wife, Catherine. At his side hung a black-scabbarded
sword with a silver hilt, and upon his hand his ducal signet ring, the only
ornamentation he permitted himself.
The herald raised his voice. “Their Royal Highnesses, the Princes
Lyam conDoin and Arutha conDoin, heirs to the House of Crydee; Knight-Captains
of the King’s Army of the West; Princes of the royal house of Rillanon.”
Both sons stepped forward to stand behind their father. The two
young men were six and four years older than the apprentices, the Duke having
wed late, but the difference between the awkward candidates for apprenticeship
and the sons of the Duke was much more than a few years in age. Both Princes
appeared calm and self-possessed.
Lyam, the older, stood on his father’s right, a blond, powerfully
built man. His open smile was the image of his mother’s, and he looked always
on the verge of laughter. He was dressed in a bright blue tunic and yellow
leggings and wore a closely trimmed beard, as blond as his shoulder-length
hair.
Arutha was to shadows and night as Lyam was to light and day. He
stood nearly as tall as his brother and father, but while they were powerfully
built, he was rangy to the point of gauntness. He wore a brown tunic and russet
leggings. His hair was dark and his face clean-shaven. Everything about Arutha
gave one the feeling of quickness. His strength was in his speed: speed with
the rapier, speed with wit. His humor was dry and often sharp. While Lyam was
openly loved by the Duke’s subjects, Arutha was respected and admired for his
ability, but not regarded with warmth by the people.
Together the two sons seemed to capture most of the complex nature
of their sire, for the Duke was capable of both Lyam’s robust humor and
Arutha’s dark moods. They were nearly opposites in temperament, but both
capable men who would benefit the Duchy and Kingdom in years to come. The Duke
loved both his sons.
The herald again spoke. “The Princess Carline, daughter of the royal
house.”
The slim and graceful girl who made her entrance was the same age as
the boys who stood below, but already beginning to show the poise and grace of
one born to rule and the beauty of her late mother. Her soft yellow gown
contrasted strikingly with her nearly black hair. Her eyes were Lyam’s blue, as
their mother’s had been, and Lyam beamed when his sister took their father’s
arm. Even Arutha ventured one of his rare half smiles, for his sister was dear
to him also.
Many boys in the keep harbored a secret love for the Princess, a
fact she often turned to her advantage when there was mischief afoot. But even
her presence could not drive the day’s business from their minds.
The Duke’s court then entered. Pug and Tomas could see that all the
members of the Duke’s staff were present, including Kulgan. Pug had glimpsed
him in the castle from time to time since the night of the storm, and they had
exchanged words once, Kulgan inquiring as to his well-being, but mostly the
magician was absent from sight. Pug was a little surprised to see the magician,
for he was not properly considered a full member of the Duke’s household, but
rather a sometime adviser. Most of the time Kulgan was ensconced in his tower,
hidden from view as he did whatever magicians do in such places.
The magician was deep in conversation with Father Tully, a priest of
Astalon the Builder and one of the Duke’s oldest aides. Tully had been adviser
to the Duke’s father and had seemed old then. He now appeared ancient—at least
to Pug’s youthful perspective—but his eyes betrayed no sign of senility. Many a
keep boy had been impaled upon the pointed gaze of those clear grey eyes. His
wit and tongue were equally youthful, and more than once a keep boy had wished
for a session with Horsemaster Algon’s leather strap rather than a tongue-lashing
from Father Tully. The white-haired priest could nearly strip the skin from a
miscreant’s back with his caustic words.
Nearby stood one who had experienced Tully’s wrath upon occasion,
Squire Roland, son of Baron Tolburt of Tulan, one of the Duke’s vassals. He was
companion to both Princes, being the only other boy of noble birth in the keep.
His father had sent him to Crydee the year before, to learn something of the
management of the Duchy and the ways of the Duke’s court. In the rather rough frontier
court Roland discovered a home away from home. He was already something of a
rogue when he arrived, but his infectious sense of humor and ready wit often
eased much of the anger that resulted from his prankish ways. It was Roland,
more often than not, who was Princess Carline’s accomplice in whatever mischief
she was embarked upon. With light brown hair and blue eyes, Roland stood tall
for his age. He was a year older than the gathered boys and had played often
with them over the last year, as Lyam and Arutha were frequently busy with
court duties. Tomas and he had been boyish rivals at first, then fast friends,
with Pug becoming his friend by default, because where Tomas was, Pug was
certain to be nearby. Roland saw Pug fidgeting near the edge of the assembled
boys and gave him a slight nod and wink. Pug grinned briefly, for while he was
as often the butt of Roland’s jokes as any other, he still found himself liking
the wild young Squire.
After all his court was in attendance, the Duke spoke. “Yesterday
was the last day of the eleventh year of the reign of our Lord King, Rodric the
Fourth. Today is the Festival of Banapis. The following day will find these
boys gathered here counted among the men of Crydee, boys no longer, but
apprentices and freemen. At this time it is proper for me to inquire if any
among you wishes to be released from service to the Duchy. Are there any among
you who so wish?” The question was formal in nature and no response was
expected, for few ever wished to leave Crydee. But one boy did step forward.
The herald asked, “Who seeks release of his service?”
The boy looked down, clearly nervous. Clearing his throat, he said,
“I am Robert, son of Hugen.” Pug knew him, but not well. He was a netmender’s
son, a town boy, and they rarely mixed with the keep boys. Pug had played with
him upon a few occasions and had a sense the lad was well regarded. It was a
rare thing to refuse service, and Pug was as curious as any to hear the
reasons.
The Duke spoke kindly. “What is your purpose, Robert, son of Hugen?”
“Your grace, my father is unable to take me into his craft, for my
four brothers are well able to ascend to the craft as journeymen and masters
after him, as are many other netmender’s sons. My eldest brother is now married
and has a son of his own, so my family no longer has room for me in the house.
If I may not stay with my family and practice my father’s craft, I beg your
grace’s leave to take service as a sailor.”
The Duke considered the matter. Robert was not the first village boy
to be called by the lure of the sea. “Have you found a master willing to take
you into his company?”
“Yes, Your Grace. Captain Gregson, master of the ship Green Deep
from Margrave’s Port is willing.”
“I know this man,” said the Duke. Smiling slightly he said, “He is a
good and fair man. I recommend you into his service and wish you well in your
travels. You will be welcomed at Crydee whenever you return with your ship.”
Robert bowed, a little stiffly, and left the courtyard, his part in
the Choosing done. Pug wondered at Robert’s adventuresome choice. In less than
a minute the boy had renounced his ties with his family and home and was now a
citizen of a city he had never seen. It was custom that a sailor was considered
to owe his loyalty to the city that was his ship’s home port. Margrave’s Port
was one of the Free Cities of Natal, on the Bitter Sea, and was now Robert’s
home.
The Duke indicated the herald should continue.
The herald announced the first of the Craftmasters, Sailmaker Holm,
who called the names of three boys. All three took service, and none seemed
displeased. The Choosing went smoothly, as no boy refused service. Each boy
went to stand next to his new master.
As the afternoon wore on and the number of boys diminished, Pug
became more and more uncomfortable. Soon there were only two boys besides Pug
and Tomas standing in the center of the court. All the Craftmasters had called
their apprentices, and only two of the Duke’s household staff beside the
Swordmaster had not been heard from. Pug studied the group on the top of the
steps, his heart pounding with anxiety. The two Princes regarded the boys, Lyam
with a friendly smile, Arutha brooding on some thought or another. The Princess
Carline was bored by the entire affair and took little pains to hide the fact,
as she was whispering to Roland. This brought a disapproving look from Lady
Marna, her governess.
Horsemaster Algon came forth, his brown-and-golden tabard bearing a
small horsehead embroidered over his left breast. The Horsemaster called the
name of Rulf, son of Dick, and the stocky son of the Duke’s stableman walked
over to stand behind the master. When he turned, he smiled condescendingly at
Pug. The two boys had never gotten along, the pock-scarred boy spending many
hours taunting and tormenting Pug. While they both worked in the stable under
Dick, the stableman had looked the other way whenever his son sprang a trap on
Pug, and the orphan was always held responsible for any difficulty that arose.
It had been a terrible period for Pug, and the boy had vowed to refuse service
rather than face the prospect of working next to Rulf the rest of his life.
Housecarl Samuel called the other boy, Geoffry, who would become a
member of the castle’s serving staff, leaving Pug and Tomas standing alone.
Swordmaster Fannon then stepped forward, and Pug felt his heart stand still as
the old soldier called, “Tomas, son of Megar.”
There was a pause, and Pug waited to hear his own name called, but
Fannon stepped back and Tomas crossed over to stand alongside him. Pug felt
dwarfed by the gaze of all upon him. The courtyard was now larger than he had
ever remembered it, and he felt ill fashioned and poorly dressed. His heart sank
in his chest as he realized that there was no Craftmaster or staff member
present who had not taken an apprentice. He would be the only boy uncalled.
Fighting back tears, he waited for the Duke to dismiss the company.
As the Duke started to speak, sympathy for the boy showing clearly
in his face, he was interrupted by another voice. “Your Grace, if you would be
so kind.”
All eyes turned to see Kulgan the magician step forward. “I have
need of an apprentice and would call Pug, orphan of the keep, to service.”
A wave of murmuring swept through the assembled Craftmasters. A few
voices could be heard saying it wasn’t proper for a magician to participate in
the Choosing. The Duke silenced them with a sweep of his gaze, his face stern.
No Craftmaster would challenge the Duke of Crydee, the third-ranking noble in
the Kingdom, over the standing of one boy. Slowly all eyes returned to regard
the boy.
The Duke said, “As Kulgan is a recognized master of his craft, it is
his right to choose. Pug, orphan of the keep, will you take service?” Pug stood
rigid. He had imagined himself leading the King’s army into battle as a
Knight-Lieutenant, or discovering someday he was the lost son of nobility. In
his boyish imaginings he had sailed ships, hunted great monsters, and saved the
nation. In quieter moments of reflection he had wondered if he would spend his
life building ships, making pottery, or learning the trader’s skill, and
speculated on how well he would do in each of those crafts. But the one thing
he never thought of, the one dream that had never captured his fantasies, was
that of becoming a magician.
He snapped out of his shocked state, aware the Duke patiently
awaited his response. He looked at the faces of those before him. Father Tully
gave him one of his rare smiles, as did Prince Arutha. Prince Lyam nodded a
slight yes, and Kulgan regarded him intently. There were signs of worry upon
the magician’s face, and suddenly Pug decided. It might not be an entirely
proper calling, but any craft was better than none. He stepped forward and
caught his own heel with his other foot, and landed face down in the dust.
Picking himself up, he half scrambled, half ran to the magician’s side. The
misstep broke the tension, and the Duke’s booming laughter filled the
courtyard. Flushing with embarrassment, Pug stood behind Kulgan. He looked
around the broad girth of his new master and found the Duke watching, his
expression tempered by a kind nod at the blushing Pug. The Duke turned back to
those who stood waiting for the Choosing to end.
“I declare that each boy present is now the charge of his master, to
obey him in all matters within the laws of the Kingdom, and each shall be
judged a true and proper man of Crydee. Let the apprentices attend their
masters. Until the feasting, I bid you all good day.” He turned and presented
his left arm to his daughter. She placed her hand lightly upon it and they
passed into the keep between the ranks of the courtiers, who drew aside. The
two Princes followed, and the others of the court. Pug saw Tomas leave in the
direction of the guard barracks, behind Master Fannon.
He turned his attention back to Kulgan, who was standing lost in
thought. After a moment the magician said, “I trust neither of us has made a
mistake this day.”
“Sir?” Pug asked, not understanding the magician’s meaning. Kulgan
waved one hand absently, causing his pale yellow robe to move like waves
rippling over the sea. “It is no matter, boy. What’s done is done. Let us make
the best of things.”
He placed his hand on the boy’s shoulder. “Come, let us retire to
the tower where I reside. There is a small room below my own that should do for
you. I had intended it for some project or another, but have never managed to
find the time to prepare it.”
Pug stood in awe. “A room of my own?” Such a thing for an apprentice
was unheard of. Most apprentices slept in the workrooms of their master, or
protected herds, or the like. Only when an apprentice became a journeyman was
it usual for him to take private quarters.
Kulgan arched one bushy eyebrow. “Of course. Can’t have you
underfoot all the time. I would never get anything done. Besides, magic
requires solitude for contemplation. You will need to be untroubled as much as
or perhaps more than I will.” He took out his long, thin pipe from a fold of
his robe and started to stuff it full of tabac from a pouch that had also come
from within the robe.
“Let’s not bother with too much discussion of duties and such, boy.
For in truth, I am not prepared for you. But in short order I will have things
well in hand. Until then we can use the time by becoming acquainted with one
another. Agreed?” Pug was startled. He had little notion of what a magician was
about, in spite of the night spent with Kulgan weeks ago, but he readily knew
what Craftmasters were like, and none would have thought to inquire whether or
not an apprentice agreed with his plans. Not knowing what to say, Pug just
nodded.
“Good, then,” said Kulgan, “let us be off to the tower to find you
some new clothes, and then we will spend the balance of the day feasting. Later
there will be ample time to learn how to be master and apprentice.” With a
smile for the boy, the stout magician turned Pug around and led him away.
The late afternoon was clear and bright, with a gentle breeze from
the sea cooling the summer heat. Throughout the keep of Castle Crydee, and the
town below, preparations for the Festival of Banapis were in progress.
Banapis was the oldest known holiday, its origins lost in antiquity.
It was held each Midsummer’s Day, a day belonging to neither the past nor the
coming year. Banapis, known by other names in other nations, was celebrated
over the entire world of Midkemia according to legend. It was believed by some
that the festival was borrowed from the elves and dwarves, for the long-lived
races were said to have celebrated the feast of Midsummer as far back as the
memory of both races could recall. Most authorities disputed this allegation,
citing no reason other than the unlikelihood of humans borrowing anything from
the elven or dwarven folk. It was rumored that even the denizens of the
Northlands, the goblin tribes and the clans of the Brotherhood of the Dark
Path, celebrated Banapis, though no one had ever reported seeing such a
celebration.
The courtyard was busy. Huge tables had been erected to hold the
myriad varieties of foods that had been in preparation for over a week. Giant
barrels of dwarven ale, imported from Stone Mountain, had been hauled out of
the cellars and were resting on protesting, overburdened wood frames. The workmen,
alarmed at the fragile appearance of the barrel ricks, were quickly emptying
some of the contents. Megar came out of the kitchen and angrily shooed them
away. “Leave off, there will be none left for the evening meal at this rate!
Back to the kitchen, dolts! There is much work to be done yet.”
The workers went off, grumbling, and Megar filled a tankard to
ensure the ale was at proper temperature. After he drained it dry and satisfied
himself that all was as it should be, he returned to the kitchen.
There was no formal beginning to the feast. Traditionally, people
and food, wine and ale, all accumulated until they reached a certain density,
then all at once the festivities would be in full swing.
Pug ran from the kitchen. His room in the northmost tower, the
magician’s tower as it had become known, provided him with a shortcut through
the kitchen, which he used rather than the main doors of the keep. He beamed as
he sped across the courtyard in his new tunic and trousers. He had never worn
such finery and was in a hurry to show his friend Tomas.
He found Tomas leaving the soldiers’ commons, nearly as much in a
hurry as Pug. When the two met, they both spoke at once.
“Look at the new tunic—” said Pug.
“Look at my soldier’s tabard—” said Tomas.
Both stopped and broke into laughter.
Tomas regained his composure first. “Those are very fine clothes,
Pug,” he said, fingering the expensive material of Pug’s red tunic. “And the
color suits you.”
Pug returned the compliment, for Tomas did cut a striking figure in
his brown-and-gold tabard. It was of little consequence that he wore his
regular homespun tunic and trouser underneath. He would not receive a soldier’s
uniform until Master Fannon was satisfied with his worthiness as a man-at-arms.
The two friends wandered from one heavily laden table to another.
Pug’s mouth watered from the rich fragrances in the air. They came to a table
heaped with meat pies, steam rising from their hot crusts, pungent cheeses, and
hot bread. At the table a young kitchen boy was stationed with a shoo-fly. His
job was to keep pests from the food, whether of the insect variety or the
chronically hungry apprentice variety. Like most other situations involving
boys, the relationship between this guardian of the feast and the older
apprentices was closely bound by tradition. It was considered ill-mannered and
in poor taste merely to threaten or bully the smaller boy into parting with
food before the start of the feast. But it was considered fair to use guile,
stealth, or speed in gaining a prize from the table.
Pug and Tomas observed with interest as the boy, named Jon,
delivered a wicked whack to the hand of one young apprentice seeking to snag a
large pie. With a nod of his head, Tomas sent Pug to the far side of the table.
Pug ambled across Jon’s field of vision, and the boy watched him carefully. Pug
moved abruptly, a feint toward the table, and Jon leaned in his direction. Then
suddenly Tomas snatched a puff-pastry from the table and was gone before the
shoo-fly lash began to descend. As they ran from the table, Pug and Tomas could
hear the distressed cries of the boy whose table they had plundered.
Tomas gave Pug half the pie when they were safely away, and the
smaller apprentice laughed. “You’re the quickest hand in the castle, I bet.”
“Or young Jon was slow of eye for keeping it on you.”
They shared a laugh. Pug popped his half of the pie into his mouth.
It was delicately seasoned, and the contrast between the salty pork filling and
the sweet puff-pastry crust was delicious.
The sound of pipes and drums came from the side courtyard as the
Duke’s musicians approached the main courtyard. By the time they had emerged
around the keep, a silent message seemed to pass through the crowd. Suddenly
the kitchen boys were busy handing out wooden platters for the celebrants to
heap food upon, and mugs of ale and wine were being drawn from the barrels.
The boys dashed to a place in line at the first table. Pug and Tomas
used their size and quickness to good advantage, darting through the throng,
snagging food of every description and a large mug of foamy ale each.
They found a relatively quiet corner and fell to with ravenous
hunger. Pug tasted his first drink of ale and was surprised at the robust,
slightly bitter taste. It seemed to warm him as it went down, and after another
experimental taste he decided that he liked it.
Pug could see the Duke and his family mingling with the common folk.
Other members of his court could also be seen standing in line before the
tables. There was no ceremony, ritual, or rank observed this afternoon. Each
was served as he arrived, for Midsummer’s Day was the time when all would
equally share in the bounties of the harvest.
Pug caught a glimpse of the Princess and felt his chest tighten a
little. She looked radiant as many of the boys in the courtyard complimented
her on her appearance. She wore a lovely gown of deep blue and a simple,
broad-brimmed hat of the same color. She thanked each author of a flattering
remark and used her dark eyelashes and bright smile to good advantage, leaving
a wake of infatuated boys behind.
Jugglers and clowns made their appearance in the courtyard, the
first of many groups of traveling performers who were in the town for the
festival. The actors of another company had set up a stage in the town square
and would give a performance in the evening. Until the early hours of the next
morning the festivities would continue. Pug knew that many of the boys the year
before had to be excused duty the day following Banapis, for their heads and
stomachs were in no condition for honest work. He was sure that scene would be
repeated tomorrow.
Pug looked forward to the evening, for it was the custom for new
apprentices to visit many of the houses in the town, receiving congratulations
and mugs of ale. It was also a ripe time for meeting the town girls. While
dalliance was not unknown, it was frowned upon. But mothers tended to be less
vigilant during Banapis. Now that the boys had crafts, they were viewed less as
bothersome pests and more as potential sons-in-law, and there had been more
than one case of a mother looking the other way while a daughter used her
natural gifts to snare a young husband. Pug, being of small stature and
youthful appearance, got little notice from the girls of the keep. Tomas,
however, was more and more the object of girlish flirtation as he grew in size
and good looks, and lately Pug had begun to be aware that his friend was being
sized up by one or another of the castle girls. Pug was still young enough to
think the whole thing silly, but old enough to be fascinated by it.
Pug chewed an improbable mouthful and looked around. People from the
town and keep passed, offering congratulations on the boys’ apprenticeship and
wishing them a good new year. Pug felt a deep sense of Tightness about
everything. He was an apprentice, even if Kulgan seemed completely unsure of
what to do with him. He was well fed, and on his way to being slightly
intoxicated—which contributed to his sense of well-being. And, most important,
he was among friends. There can’t be much more to life than this, he thought.
3
KEEP
Pug sat sulking on his sleeping pallet.
Fantus the firedrake pushed his head forward, inviting Pug to
scratch him behind his eye ridges. Seeing that he would get little satisfaction,
the drake made his way to the tower window and with a snort of displeasure,
complete with a small puff of black smoke, launched himself in flight. Pug
didn’t notice the creature’s leaving, so engrossed was he in his own world of
troubles. Since he had taken on the position of Kulgan’s apprentice fourteen
months ago, everything he had done seemed to go wrong.
He lay back on the pallet, covering his eyes with a forearm; he
could smell the salty sea breeze that blew in through his window and feel the
sun’s warmth across his legs. Everything in his life had taken a turn for the
better since his apprenticeship, except the single most important thing, his
studies.
For months Kulgan had been laboring to teach him the fundamentals of
the magician’s arts, but there was always something that caused his efforts to
go awry. In the theories of spell casting, Pug was a quick study, grasping the
basic concepts well. But each time he attempted to use his knowledge, something
seemed to hold him back. It was as if a part of his mind refused to follow
through with the magic, as if a block existed that prevented him from passing a
certain point in the spell. Each time he tried he could feel himself approach
that point, and like a rider of a balky horse, he couldn’t seem to force
himself over the hurdle.
Kulgan dismissed his worries, saying that it would all sort itself
out in time. The stout magician was always sympathetic with the boy, never
reprimanding him for not doing better, for he knew the boy was trying.
Pug was brought out of his reverie by someone’s opening the door.
Looking up, he saw Father Tully entering, a large book under his arm. The
cleric’s white robes rustled as he closed the door. Pug sat up.
“Pug, it’s time for your writing lesson—” He stopped himself when he
saw the downcast expression of the boy. “What’s the matter, lad?”
Pug had come to like the old priest of Astalon. He was a strict
master, but a fair one. He would praise the boy for his success as often as
scold him for his failures. He had a quick mind and a sense of humor and was
open to questions, no matter how stupid Pug thought they might sound.
Coming to his feet, Pug sighed. “I don’t know, Father. It’s just
that things don’t seem to be going right. Everything I try I manage to make a
mess of.”
“Pug, it can’t be all black,” the priest said, placing a hand on
Pug’s shoulder. “Why don’t you tell me what is troubling you, and we can
practice writing some other time.” He moved to a stool by the window and
adjusted his robes around him as he sat. As he placed the large book at his
feet, he studied the boy.
Pug had grown over the last year, but was still small. His shoulders
were beginning to broaden a bit, and his face was showing signs of the man he
would someday be. He was a dejected figure in his homespun tunic and trousers,
his mood as grey as the material he wore. His room, which was usually neat and
orderly, was a mess of scrolls and books, reflecting the disorder in his mind.
Pug sat quietly for a moment, but when the priest said nothing,
started, to speak. “Do you remember my telling you that Kulgan was trying to
teach me the three basic cantrips to calm the mind, so that the working of
spells could be practiced without stress? Well, the truth is that I mastered
those exercises months ago. I can bring my mind to a state of calm in moments
now, with little effort. But that is as far as it goes. After that, everything
seems to fall apart.”
“What do you mean?”
“The next thing to learn is to discipline the mind to do things that
are not natural for it, such as think on one thing to the exclusion of
everything else, or not to think of something, which is quite hard once you’ve
been told what it is. I can do those things most of the time, but now and again
I feel like there are some forces inside my head, crashing about, demanding
that I do things in a different way. It’s like there was something else
happening in my head than what Kulgan told me to expect.
“Each time I try one of the simple spells Kulgan has taught me, like
making an object move, or lifting myself off the ground, these things in my
head come flooding in on my concentration, and I lose my control. I can’t even
master the simplest spell.” Pug felt himself tremble, for this was the first
chance he had had to speak about this to anyone besides Kulgan “Kulgan simply
says to keep at it and not worry.” Nearing tears, he continued. “I have talent.
Kulgan said he knew it from the first time we met, when I used the crystal.
You’ve told me that I have talent. But I just can’t make the spells work the
way they’re supposed to I get so confused by it all.”
“Pug,” said the priest, “magic has many properties, and we
understand little of how it works, even those of us who practice it. In the
temples we are taught that magic is a gift from the gods, and we accept that on
faith. We do not understand how this can be so, but we do not question. Each
order has its own province of magic, with no two quite alike. I am capable of
magic that those who follow their orders are not. But none can say why.
“Magicians deal in a different sort of magic, and their practices
are very different from our practices in the temples Much of what they do, we
cannot. It is they who study the art of magic, seeking its nature and workings,
but even they cannot explain how magic works. They only know how to work it,
and pass that knowledge along to their students, as Kulgan is doing with you.”
“Trying to do with me, Father. I think he may have misjudged me.”
“I think not, Pug I have some knowledge of these things, and since
you have become Kulgan’s pupil, I have felt the power growing in you Perhaps
you will come to it late, as others have, but I am sure you will find the
proper path.”
Pug was not comforted. He didn’t question the priest’s wisdom or his
opinion, but he did feel he could be mistaken “I hope you’re right, Father. I
just don’t understand what’s wrong with me.”
“I think I know what’s wrong,” came a voice from the door. Startled,
Pug and Father Tully turned to see Kulgan standing in the doorway. His blue
eyes were set in lines of concern, and his thick grey brows formed a V over the
bridge of his nose. Neither Pug nor Tully had heard the door open. Kulgan hiked
his long green robe and stepped into the room, leaving the door open.
“Come here, Pug,” said the magician with a small wave of his hand
Pug went over to the magician, who placed both hands on his shoulders “Boys who
sit in their rooms day after day worrying about why things don’t work make
things not work. I am giving you the day for yourself. As it is Sixthday, there
should be plenty of other boys to help you in whatever sort of trouble boys can
find.” He smiled, and his pupil was filled with relief “You need a rest from
study Now go.” So saying, he fetched a playful cuff to the boy’s head, sending
him running down the stairs. Crossing over to the pallet, Kulgan lowered his
heavy frame to it and looked at the priest. “Boys,” said Kulgan, shaking his
head. “You hold a festival, give them a badge of craft, and suddenly they
expect to be men. But they’re still boys, and no matter how hard they try, they
still act like boys, not men.” He took out his pipe and began filling it
“Magicians are considered young and inexperienced at thirty, but in all other
crafts thirty would mark a man a journeyman or master, most likely readying his
own son for the Choosing.” He put a taper to the coals still smouldering in
Pug’s fire pot and lit his pipe.
Tully nodded. “I understand, Kulgan. The priesthood also is an old
man’s calling. At Pug’s age I still had thirteen years of being an acolate
before me.” The old priest leaned forward “Kulgan, what of the boy’s problem?”
“The boy’s right, you know,” Kulgan stated flatly. “There is no
explanation for why he cannot perform the skills I’ve tried to teach. The
things he can do with scrolls and devices amaze me. The boy has such gifts for
these things, I would have wagered he had the makings of a magician of mighty
arts. But this inability to use his inner powers . . .”
“Do you think you can find a solution?”
“I hope so I would hate to have to release him from apprenticeship.
It would go harder on him than had I never chosen him.” His face showed his
genuine concern. “It is confusing, Tully I think you’ll agree he has the
potential for a great talent. As soon as I saw him use the crystal in my hut
that night, I knew for the first time in years I might have at last found my
apprentice. When no master chose him, I knew fate had set our paths to cross.
But there is something else inside that boy’s head, something I’ve never met
before, something powerful. I don’t know what it is, Tully, but it rejects my
exercises, as if they were somehow . . . not correct, or . . . ill suited to
him. I don’t know if I can explain what I’ve encountered with Pug any better.
There is no simple explanation for it.”
“Have you thought about what the boy said?” asked the priest, a look
of thoughtful concern on his face.
“You mean about my having been mistaken?”
Tully nodded. Kulgan dismissed the question with a wave of his hand
“Tully, you know as much about the nature of magic as I do, perhaps more. Your
god is not called the God Who Brought Order for nothing. Your sect unraveled
much about what orders this universe. Do you for one moment doubt the boy has
talent?”
“Talent, no. But his ability is the question for the moment.”
“Well put, as usual. Well, then, have you any ideas? Should we make
a cleric out of the boy, perhaps?”
Tully sat back, a disapproving expression upon his face. “You know
the priesthood is a calling, Kulgan,” he said stiffly.
“Put your back down, Tully. I was making a joke.” He sighed. “Still,
if he hasn’t the calling of a priest, nor the knack of a magician’s craft, what
can we make of this natural ability of his?”
Tully pondered the question in silence for a moment, then said,
“Have you thought of the lost art?”
Kulgan’s eyes widened. “That old legend?” Tully nodded. “I doubt
there is a magician alive who at one time or another hasn’t reflected on the
legend of the lost art. If it had existed, it would explain away many of the
shortcomings of our craft.” Then he fixed Tully with a narrowed eye, showing
his disapproval. “But legends are common enough Turn up any rock on the beach
and you’ll find one. I for one prefer to look for real answers to our
shortcomings, not blame them on ancient superstitions.”
Tully’s expression became stern and his tone scolding. “We of the
temple do not count it legend, Kulgan! It is considered part of the revealed
truth, taught by the gods to the first men.”
Nettled by Tully’s tone, Kulgan snapped, “So was the notion the
world was flat, until Rolendirk—a magician, I’ll remind you—sent his magic
sight high enough to disclose the curvature of the horizon, clearly
demonstrating the world to be a sphere! It was a fact known by almost every
sailor and fisherman who’d ever seen a sail appear upon the horizon before the
rest of the ship since the beginning of time!” His voice rose to a near shout.
Seeing Tully was stung by the reference to ancient church canon long
since abandoned, Kulgan softened his tone “No disrespect to you, Tully. But
don’t try to teach an old thief to steal. I know your order chops logic with
the best of them, and that half your brother clerics fall into laughing fits
when they hear those deadly serious young acolytes debate theological issues
set aside a century ago. Besides which, isn’t the legend of the lost art an
Ishapian dogma?”
Now it was Tully’s turn to fix Kulgan with a disapproving eye. With
a tone of amused exasperation, he said, “Your education in religion is still
lacking, Kulgan, despite a somewhat unforgiving insight into the inner workings
of my order.” He smiled a little. “You’re right about the moot gospel courts,
though. Most of us find them so amusing because we remember how painfully grim
we were about them when we were acolytes.” Then turning serious, he said, “But
I am serious when I say your education is lacking. The Ishapians have some
strange beliefs, it’s true, and they are an insular group, but they are also
the oldest order known and are recognized as the senior church in questions
pertaining to interdenominational differences.”
“Religious wars, you mean,” said Kulgan with an amused snort.
Tully ignored the comment. “The Ishapians are caretakers for the
oldest lore and history in the Kingdom, and they have the most extensive
library in the Kingdom I have visited the library at their temple in Krondor,
and it is most impressive.”
Kulgan smiled and with a slight tone of condescension said, “As have
I, Tully, and I have browsed the shelves at the Abbey of Sarth, which is ten
times as large. What’s the point?”
Leaning forward, Tully said, “The point is this: say what you will
about the Ishapians, but when they put forth something as history, not lore,
they can usually produce ancient tomes to support their claims.”
“No,” said Kulgan, waving aside Tully’s comments with a dismissive
wave. “I do not make light of your beliefs, or any other man’s, but I cannot
accept this nonsense about lost arts. I might be willing to believe Pug could
be somehow more attuned to some aspect of magic I’m ignorant of, perhaps
something involving spirit conjuration or illusion— areas I will happily admit
I know little about—but I cannot accept that he will never learn to master his
craft because the long-vanished god of magic died during the Chaos Wars! No,
that there is unknown lore, I accept. There are too many shortcomings in our
craft even to begin to think our understanding of magic is remotely complete.
But if Pug can’t learn magic, it is only because I have failed as a teacher.”
Tully now glared at Kulgan, suddenly aware the magician was not
pondering Pug’s possible shortcomings but his own. “Now you are being foolish.
You are a gifted man, and were I to have been the one to discover Pug’s talent,
I could not imagine a better teacher to place him with than yourself. But there
can be no failing if you do not know what he needs to be taught.” Kulgan began
to sputter an objection, but Tully cut him off. “No, let me continue. What we
lack is understanding. You seem to forget there have been others like Pug, wild
talents who could not master their gifts, others who failed as priests and
magicians.”
Kulgan puffed on his pipe, his brow knitted in concentration.
Suddenly he began to chuckle, then laugh. Tully looked sharply at the magician.
Kulgan waved offhandedly with his pipe. “I was just struck by the thought that
should a swineherd fail to teach his son the family calling, he could blame it
upon the demise of the gods of pigs .”
Tully’s eyes went wide at the near-blasphemous thought, then he too
laughed, a short bark. “That’s one for the moot gospel courts!” Both men
laughed a long, tension-releasing laugh at that Tully sighed and stood up.
“Still, do not close your mind entirely to what I’ve said, Kulgan. It may be
Pug is one of those wild talents. And you may have to reconcile yourself for
letting him go.”
Kulgan shook his head sadly at the thought. “I refuse to believe
there is any simple explanation for those other failures, Tully. Or for Pug’s
difficulties, as well. The fault was in each man or woman, not in the nature of
the universe. I have often felt where we fail with Pug is in understanding how
to reach him Perhaps I would be well advised to seek another master for him,
place him with one better able to harness his abilities.”
Tully sighed. “I have spoken my mind of this question, Kulgan Other
than what I’ve said, I cannot advise you Still, as they say, a poor master’s
better than no master at all. How would the boy have fared if no one had chosen
to teach him?”
Kulgan bolted upright from his seat. “What did you say?”
“I said, how would the boy have fared if no one had chosen to teach
him?”
Kulgan’s eyes seemed to lose focus as he stared into space. He began
puffing furiously upon his pipe. After watching for a moment, Tully said, “What
is it, Kulgan?”
Kulgan said, “I’m not sure, Tully, but you may have given me an
idea.”
“What sort of idea?”
Kulgan waved off the question. “I’m not entirely sure Give me time
to ponder. But consider your question, and ask yourself this: how did the first
magicians learn to use their power?”
Tully sat back down, and both men began to consider the question in
silence. Through the window they could hear the sound of boys at play, filling
the courtyard of the keep.
Every
sixthday, the boys and girls who worked in the castle were allowed to spend the
afternoon as they saw fit. The boys, apprentice age and younger, were a loud
and boisterous lot. The girls worked in the service of the ladies of the
castle, cleaning and sewing, as well as helping in the kitchen. They all gave a
full week’s work, dawn to dusk and more, each day, but—on the sixth day of the
week they gathered in the courtyard of the castle, near the Princess’s garden.
Most of the boys played a rough game of tag, involving the capture of a ball of
leather, stuffed hard with rags, by one side, amid shoves and shouts, kicks and
occasional fistfights. All wore their oldest clothes, for rips, bloodstains,
and mud-stains were common.
The girls would sit along the low wall by the Princess’s garden,
occupying themselves with gossip about the ladies of the Duke’s court. They
nearly always put on their best skirts and blouses, and their hair shone from
washing and brushing. Both groups made a great display of ignoring each other,
and both were equally unconvincing.
Pug ran to where the game was in progress. As was usual, Tomas was
in the thick of the fray, sandy hair flying like a banner, shouting and
laughing above the noise. Amid elbows and kicks he sounded savagely joyous, as
if the incidental pain made the contest all the more worthwhile. He ran through
the pack, kicking the ball high in the air, trying to avoid the feet of those
who sought to trip him. No one was quite sure how the game had come into
existence, or exactly what the rules were, but the boys played with battlefield
intensity, as their fathers had years before.
Pug ran onto the field and placed a foot before Rulf just as he was
about to hit Tomas from behind. Rulf went down in a tangle of bodies, and Tomas
broke free. He ran toward the goal and, dropping the ball in front of himself,
kicked it into a large overturned barrel, scoring for his side While other boys
yelled in celebration, Rulf leaped to his feet and pushed aside another boy to
place himself directly in front of Pug Glaring out from under thick brows, he
spat at Pug, “Try that again and I’ll break your legs, sand squint!” The sand
squint was a bird of notoriously foul habits—not the least of which was leaving
eggs in other birds’ nests so that its offspring were raised by other birds.
Pug was not about to let any insult of Rulf’s pass unchallenged. With the
frustrations of the last few months only a little below the surface, Pug was
feeling particularly thin-skinned this day.
With a leap he flew at Rulf’s head, throwing his left arm around the
stockier boy’s neck. He drove his right fist into Rulf’s face and could feel
Rulf’s nose squash under the first blow. Quickly both boys were rolling on the
ground. Rulf’s greater weight began to tell, and soon he sat astride Pug’s
chest, driving his fat fists into the smaller boy’s face.
Tomas stood by helpless, for as much as he wanted to aid his friend,
the boys’ code of honor was as strict and inviolate as any noble’s. Should he
intervene on his friend’s behalf, Pug would never live down the shame. Tomas
jumped up and down, urging Pug on, grimacing each time Pug was struck, as if he
felt the blows himself.
Pug tried to squirm out from under the larger boy, causing many of
his blows to slip by, striking dirt instead of Pug’s face. Enough of them were
hitting the mark, however, so that Pug soon began to feel a queer detachment
from the whole procedure. He thought it strange that everybody sounded so far
away, and that Rulf’s blows seemed not to hurt. His vision was beginning to
fill with red and yellow colors, when he felt the weight lifted from his chest.
After a brief moment things came into focus, and Pug saw Prince
Arutha standing over him, his hand firmly grasping Rulf’s collar. While not as
powerful a figure as his brother or father, the Prince was still able to hold
Rulf high enough so that the stableboy’s toes barely touched the ground. The
Prince smiled, but without humor “I think the boy has had enough,” he said
quietly, eyes glaring “Don’t you agree?” His cold tone made it clear he wasn’t
asking for an opinion. Blood still ran down Rulf’s face from Pug’s initial blow
as he choked out a sound the Prince took to mean agreement. Arutha let go of
Rulf’s collar, and the stable-boy fell backward, to the laughter of the
onlookers. The Prince reached down and helped Pug to his feet.
Holding the wobbly boy steady, Arutha said, “I admire your courage,
youngster, but we can’t have the wits beaten out of the Duchy’s finest young
magician, can we?” His tone was only slightly mocking, and Pug was too numb to
do more than stand and stare at the younger son of the Duke. The Prince gave
him a slight smile and handed him over to Tomas, who had come up next to Pug, a
wet cloth in hand.
Pug came out of his fog as Tomas scrubbed his face with the cloth,
and felt even worse when he saw the Princess and Roland standing only a few
feet away as Prince Arutha returned to their side. To take a beating before the
girls of the keep was bad enough, to be punished by a lout like Rulf in front
of the Princess was a catastrophe.
Emitting a groan that had little to do with his physical state, Pug
tried to look as much like someone else as he could Tomas grabbed him roughly.
“Try not to squirm around so much. You’re not all that bad off. Most of this
blood is Rulf’s anyway. By tomorrow his nose will look like an angry red
cabbage.”
“So will my head.”
“Nothing so bad. A black eye, perhaps two, with a swollen cheek
thrown in to the bargain On the whole, you did rather well, but next time you
want to tangle with Rulf, wait until you’ve put on a little more size, will
you?” Pug watched as the Prince led his sister away from the site of battle
Roland gave him a wide grin, and Pug wished himself dead.
***
Pug and
Tomas walked out of the kitchen, dinner plates in hand. It was a warm night,
and they preferred the cooling ocean breeze to the heat of the scullery. They
sat on the porch, and Pug moved his jaw from side to side, feeling it pop in
and out. He experimented with a bite of lamb and put his plate to one side.
Tomas watched him. “Can’t eat?”
Pug nodded “Jaw hurts too much.” He leaned forward, resting his
elbows on his knees and chin on his fists. “I should have kept my temper. Then
I would have done better.”
Tomas spoke from around a mouthful of food. “Master Fannon says a
soldier must keep a cool head at all times or he’ll lose it.”
Pug sighed. “Kulgan said something like that I have some drills I
can do that make me relax. I should have used them.”
Tomas gulped a heroic portion of his meal “Practicing in your room
is one thing Putting that sort of business into use while someone is insulting
you to your face is quite another. I would have done the same thing, I
suppose.”
“But you would have won.”
“Probably. Which is why Rulf would never have come at me.” His
manner showed he wasn’t being boastful, merely stating things as they were.
“Still, you did all right. Old cabbage nose will think twice before picking on
you again, I’m sure, and that’s what the whole thing is about, anyway.”
Pug said, “What do you mean?”
Tomas put down his plate and belched. With a satisfied look at the
sound of it, he said, “With bullies it’s always the same: whether or not you
can best them doesn’t matter. What is important is whether or not you’ll stand up
to them Rulf may be big, but he’s a coward under all the bluster. He’ll turn
his attention to the younger boys now and push them around a bit I don’t think
he’ll want any part of you again. He doesn’t like the price.” Tomas gave Pug a
broad and warm smile “That first punch you gave him was a beaut. Right square
on the beak.”
Pug felt a little better. Tomas eyed Pug’s untouched dinner “You
going to eat that?”
Pug looked at his plate. It was fully laden with hot lamb, greens,
and potatoes. In spite of the rich smell, Pug felt no appetite. “No, you can
have it.”
Tomas scooped up the platter and began shoving the food into his
mouth Pug smiled. Tomas had never been known to stint on food.
Pug returned his gaze to the castle wall. “I felt like such a fool.”
Tomas stopped eating, with a handful of meat halfway to his mouth.
He studied Pug for a moment. “You too?”
“Me too, what?”
Tomas laughed. “You’re embarrassed because the Princess saw Rulf
give you a thrashing.”
Pug bridled. “It wasn’t a thrashing. I gave as well as I got!”
Tomas whooped. “There! I knew it. It’s the Princess.”
Pug sat back in resignation. “I suppose it is.”
Tomas said nothing, and Pug looked over at him. He was busy
finishing off Pug’s dinner. Finally Pug said, “And I suppose you don’t like her?”
Tomas shrugged. Between bites he said, “Our Lady Carline is pretty
enough, but I know my place. I have my eye on someone else, anyway.”
Pug sat up. “Who?” he asked, his curiosity piqued.
“I’m not saying,” Tomas said with a sly smile.
Pug laughed. “It’s Neala, right?”
Tomas’s jaw dropped. “How did you know?”
Pug tried to look mysterious. “We magicians have our ways.”
Tomas snorted. “Some magician. You’re no more a magician than I am a
Knight-Captain of the King’s army. Tell me, how did you know?”
Pug laughed. “It’s no mystery. Every time you see her, you puff up
in that tabard of yours and preen like a bantam rooster.”
Tomas looked troubled “You don’t think she’s on to me, do you?”
Pug smiled like a well-fed cat “She’s not on to you, I’m sure.” He
paused. “If she’s blind, and all the other girls in the keep haven’t pointed it
out to her a hundred times already.”
A woebegone look crossed Tomas’s face. “What must the girl think?”
Pug said, “Who knows what girls think? From everything I can tell,
she probably likes it.”
Tomas looked thoughtfully at his plate “Do you ever think about
taking a wife?”
Pug blinked like an owl caught in a bright light. “I . . . I never
thought about it. I don’t know if magicians marry. I don’t think they do.”
“Nor soldiers, mostly. But Master Fannon says a soldier who thinks
about his family is not thinking about his job.” Tomas was silent for a minute.
Pug said, “It doesn’t seem to hamper Sergeant Gardan or some of the
other soldiers.”
Tomas snorted, as if those exceptions merely proved his point. “I
sometimes try to imagine what it would be like to have a family.”
“You have a family, stupid. I’m the orphan here.”
“I mean a wife, rock head.” Tomas gave Pug his best “you’re too
stupid to live” look “And children someday, not a mother and father.”
Pug shrugged. The conversation was turning to provinces that
disturbed him. He never thought about these things, being less anxious to grow
up than Tomas. He said, “I expect we’ll get married and have children if it’s
what we’re supposed to do.”
Tomas looked very seriously at Pug, so the younger boy didn’t make
light of the subject. “I’ve imagined a small room somewhere in the castle, and
.I can’t imagine who the girl would be.” He chewed his food. “There’s something
wrong with it, I think.”
“Wrong?”
“As if there’s something else I’m not understanding . . . I don’t
know.”
Pug said, “Well, if you don’t, how am I supposed to?”
Tomas suddenly changed the topic of conversation. “We’re friends,
aren’t we?”
Pug was taken by surprise. “Of course we’re friends. You’re like a
brother. Your parents have treated me like their own son. Why would you ask
something like that?”
Tomas put down his plate, troubled. “I don’t know. It’s just that
sometimes I think this will all somehow change. You’re going to be a magician,
maybe travel over the world, seeing other magicians in faraway lands. I’m going
to be a soldier, bound to follow my lord’s orders I’ll probably never see more
than a little part of the Kingdom, and that only as an escort in the Duke’s
personal guard, if I’m lucky.”
Pug became alarmed. He had never seen Tomas so serious about
anything. The older boy was always the first to laugh and seemed never to have
a worry. “I don’t care what you think, Tomas,” said Pug “Nothing will change.
We will be friends no matter what.”
Tomas smiled at that. “I hope you’re right.” He sat back, and the
two boys watched the stars over the sea and the lights from the town, framed
like a picture by the castle gate.
Pug tried to wash his face the next morning, but found the task too
arduous to complete. His left eye was swollen completely shut, his right only
half-open Great bluish lumps decorated his visage, and his jaw popped when he
moved it from side to side. Fantus lay on Pug’s pallet, red eyes gleaming as
the morning sun poured in through the tower window.
The door to the boy’s room swung open, and Kulgan stepped through,
his stout frame covered in a green robe. Pausing to regard the boy for a
moment, he sat on the pallet and scratched the drake behind the eye ridges,
bringing a pleased rumble from deep within Fantus’s throat. “I see you didn’t
spend yesterday sitting about idly,” he said.
“I had a bit of trouble, sir.”
“Well, fighting is the province of boys as well as grown men, but I
trust that the other boy looks at least as bad. It would be a shame to have had
none of the pleasure of giving as well as receiving.”
“You’re making sport of me.”
“Only a little, Pug. The truth is that in my own youth I had my
share of scraps, but the time for boyish fighting is past. You must put your
energies to better use.”
“I know, Kulgan, but I have been so frustrated lately that when that
clod Rulf said what he did about my being an orphan, all the anger came boiling
up out of me.”
“Well, knowing your own part in this is a good sign that you’re
becoming a man. Most boys would have tried to justify their actions, by
shifting blame or by claiming some moral imperative to fight.”
Pug pulled over the stool and sat down, facing the magician Kulgan
took out his pipe and started to fill it “Pug, I think in your case we may have
been going about the matter of your education in the wrong way.” Searching for
a taper to light in the small fire that burned in a night pot and finding none,
Kulgan’s face clouded as he concentrated for a minute; then a small flame
erupted from the index finger of his right hand. Applying it to the pipe, he
soon had the room half-filled with great clouds of white smoke. The flame
disappeared with a wave of his hand “A handy skill, if you like the pipe.”
“I would give anything to be able to do even that much,” Pug said in
disgust.
“As I was saying, I think that we may have been going about this in
the wrong way. Perhaps we should consider a different approach to your
education.”
“What do you mean?”
“Pug, the first magicians long ago had no teachers in the arts of
magic. They evolved the skills that we’ve learned today. Some of the old
skills, such as smelling the changes in the weather, or the ability to find
water with a stick, go back to our earliest beginnings I have been thinking
that for a time I am going to leave you to your own devices. Study what you
want in the books that I have. Keep up with your other work, learning the
scribe’s arts from Tully, but I will not trouble you with any lessons for a
while I will, of course, answer any question you have. But I think for the time
being you need to sort yourself out.”
Crestfallen, Pug asked, “Am I beyond help?”
Kulgan smiled reassuringly. “Not in the least. There have been cases
of magicians having slow starts before. Your apprenticeship is for nine more
years, remember. Don’t be put off by the failures of the last few months.
“By the way, would you care to learn to ride?”
Pug’s mood did a complete turnabout, and he cried, “Oh, yes! May I?”
“The Duke has decided that he would like a boy to ride with the
Princess from time to time. His sons have many duties now that they are grown,
and he feels you would be a good choice for when they are too busy to accompany
her.”
Pug’s head was spinning. Not only was he to learn to ride, a skill
limited to the nobility for the most part, but to be in the company of the
Princess as well! “When do I start?”
“This very day. Morning chapel is almost done.” Being Firstday,
those inclined went to devotions either in the Keep’s chapel, or in the small
temple down in the town. The rest of the day was given to light work, only that
needed to put food on the Duke’s table. The boys and girls might get an extra
half day on Sixthday, but their elders rested only on Firstday “Go to
Horsemaster Algon, he has been instructed by the Duke and will begin your
lessons now.”
Without a further word, Pug leaped up and sped for the stables.
4
ASSAULT
Pug rode in silence.
His horse ambled along the bluffs that overlooked the sea. The warm
breeze earned the scent of flowers, and to the east the trees of the forest
swayed slowly. The summer sun caused a heat shimmer over the ocean. Above the
waves, gulls could be seen hanging in the air, then diving to the water as they
sought food. Overhead, large white clouds drifted.
Pug remembered this morning, as he watched the back of the Princess
on her fine white palfrey. He had been kept waiting in the stables for nearly
two hours before the Princess appeared with her father. The Duke had lectured
Pug at length on his responsibility toward the lady of the castle Pug had stood
mute throughout as the Duke repeated all of Horsemaster Algon’s instructions of
the night before. The master of the stables had been instructing him for a week
and judged him ready to ride with the Princess—if barely.
Pug had followed her out of the gate, still marveling at his
unexpected fortune. He was exuberant, in spite of having spent the night
tossing and then skipping breakfast.
Now his mood was changing from boyish adulation to outright
irritation. The Princess refused to respond to any of his polite attempts at
conversation, except to order him about. Her tone was imperious and rude, and
she insisted on calling him “boy,” ignoring several courteous reminders that
his name was Pug. She acted little like the poised young woman of the court
now, and resembled nothing as much as a spoiled, petulant child.
He had felt awkward at first as he sat atop the old grey dray horse
that had been judged sufficient for one of his skills. The mare had a calm
nature and showed no inclination to move faster than absolutely necessary.
Pug wore his bright red tunic, the one that Kulgan had given to him,
but still looked poorly attired next to the Princess. She was dressed in a
simple but exquisite yellow riding dress trimmed in black, and a matching hat.
Even sitting sidesaddle, Carline looked like one born to ride, while Pug felt
as if he should be walking behind his mare with a plow between. Pug’s horse had
an irritating tendency to want to stop every dozen feet to crop grass or nibble
at shrubbery, ignoring Pug’s frantic kicks to the side, while the Princess’s
excellently trained horse responded instantly to the slightest touch of her
crop. She rode along in silence, ignoring the grunts of exertion from the boy
behind, who attempted by force of will as much as horsemanship to keep his
recalcitrant mount moving.
Pug felt the first stirring of hunger, his dreams of romance
surrendering to his normal, fifteen-year-old’s appetite. As they rode, his
thoughts turned more and more to the basket of lunch that hung from his saddle
horn. After what seemed like an eternity to Pug, the Princess turned to him.
“Boy, what is your craft?”
Startled by the question after the long silence, Pug stammered his
reply. “I . . . I’m apprenticed to Master Kulgan.”
She fixed him with a gaze that would have suited her had an insect
been found crawling across a dinner plate. “Oh You’re that boy.” Whatever brief
spark of interest there had been went out, and she turned away from him. They
rode awhile longer, then the Princess said, “Boy, we stop here.”
Pug pulled up his mare, and before he could reach the Princess’s
side, she was nimbly down, not waiting for his hand as Master Algon had
instructed him she would. She handed him the reins of her horse and walked to
the edge of -the cliffs.
She stared out to sea for a minute, then, without looking at Pug,
said, “Do you think I am beautiful?”
Pug stood in silence, not knowing what to say. She turned and looked
at him. “Well?”
Pug said, “Yes, Your Highness.”
“Very beautiful?”
“Yes, Your Highness. Very beautiful.”
The Princess seemed to consider this for a moment, then returned her
attention to the vista below. “It is important for me to be beautiful, boy.
Lady Mama says that I must be the most beautiful lady in the Kingdom, for I
must find a powerful husband someday, and only the most beautiful ladies in the
Kingdom can choose. The homely ones must take whoever will ask for them. She
says that I will have many suitors, for Father is very important.” She turned,
and for a brief moment Pug thought he saw a look of apprehension pass over her
lovely features. “Have you many friends, boy?”
Pug shrugged. “Some, Your Highness.”
She studied him for a moment, then said, “That must be nice,”
absently brushing aside a wisp of hair that had come loose from under her
broad-brimmed riding hat. Something in her seemed so wounded and alone that
moment, that Pug found his heart in his throat again. Obviously his expression
revealed something to the Princess, for suddenly her eyes narrowed and her mood
shifted from thoughtful to regal In her most commanding voice she announced,
“We will have lunch now.” Pug quickly staked the horses and unslung the basket.
He placed it on the ground and opened it.
Carline stepped over and said, “I will prepare the meal, boy. I’ll
not have clumsy hands overturning dishes and spilling wine.” Pug took a step
back as she knelt and began unpacking the lunch. Rich odors of cheese and bread
assailed Pug’s nostrils, and his mouth watered.
The Princess looked up at him “Walk the horses over the hill to the
stream and water them. You may eat as we ride back. I’ll call you when I have
eaten.” Suppressing a groan, Pug took the horses’ reins and started walking. He
kicked at some loose stones, emotions conflicting within him as he led the
horses along. He knew he wasn’t supposed to leave the girl, but he couldn’t
very well disobey her either. There was no one else in sight, and trouble was
unlikely this far from the forest. Additionally he was glad to be away from
Carline for a little while.
He reached the stream and unsaddled the mounts, he brushed away the
damp saddle and girth marks, then left their reins upon the ground. The palfrey
was trained to ground-tie, and the draft horse showed no inclination to wander
far. They cropped grass while Pug found a comfortable spot to sit. He
considered the situation and found himself perplexed. Carline was still the
loveliest girl he had ever seen, but her manner was quickly taking the sheen
off his fascination. For the moment his stomach was of larger concern than the
girl of his dreams. He thought perhaps there was more to this love business
than he had imagined.
He amused himself for a while by speculation on that. When he grew
bored, he went to look for stones in the water. He hadn’t had much opportunity
to practice with his sling of late, and now was a good time. He found several
smooth stones and took out his sling. He practiced by picking out targets among
the small trees some distance off, startling the birds in residence there. He
hit several clusters of bitter berries, missing only one target out of six.
Satisfied his aim was still as good as always, he tucked his sling in his belt.
He found several more stones that looked especially promising and put them in
his pouch. He judged the girl must be nearly through, and he started toward the
horses to saddle them so that when she called, he’d be ready.
As he reached the Princess’s horse, a scream sounded from the other
side of the hill. He dropped the Princess’s saddle and raced to the crest and,
when he cleared the ridge, stopped in shock. The hair on his neck and arms
stood on end.
The Princess was running, and close in pursuit were a pair of trolls
Trolls usually didn’t venture this far from the forest, and Pug was unprepared
for the sight of them. They were humanlike, but short and broad, with long,
thick arms that hung nearly to the ground. They ran on all fours as often as
not, looking like some comic parody of an ape, their bodies covered by thick
grey hide and their lips drawn back, revealing long fangs. The ugly creatures
rarely troubled a group of humans, but they would attack a lone traveler from
time to time.
Pug hesitated for a moment, pulling his sling from his belt and
loading a stone, then he charged down the hill, whirling his sling above his
head. The creatures had nearly overtaken the Princess when he let fly with a
stone It caught the foremost troll in the side of the head, knocking it for a
full somersault. The second stumbled into it, and both went down in a tangle
Pug stopped as they regained their feet, their attention diverted from Carline
to their attacker. They roared at Pug, then charged. Pug ran back up the hill.
He knew that if he could reach the horses, he could outrun them, circle around
for the girl, and be safely away. He looked over his shoulder and saw them
coming—huge canine teeth bared, long foreclaws tearing up the ground. Downwind,
he could smell their rank, rotting-meat odor.
He cleared the top of the hill, his breath coming in ragged gasps.
His heart skipped as he saw that the horses had wandered across the stream and
were twenty yards farther away than before. Plunging down the hill, he hoped
the difference would not prove fatal.
He could hear the trolls behind him as he entered the stream at a
full run. The water was shallow here, but still it slowed him down.
Splashing through the stream, he caught his foot on a stone and
fell. He threw his arms forward and broke his fall with his hands, keeping his
head above water. Shock ran up through his arms as he tried to regain his feet.
He stumbled again and turned as the trolls approached the water’s edge. They
howled at the sight of their tormentor stumbling in the water and paused for a
moment. Pug felt blind terror as he struggled with numb fingers to put a stone
in his sling. He fumbled and dropped the sling, and the stream carried it away
Pug felt a scream building in his throat.
As the trolls entered the water, a flash of light exploded behind
Pug’s eyes. A searing pain ripped across his forehead as letters of grey seemed
to appear in his mind. They were familiar to Pug, from a scroll that Kulgan had
shown him several times. Without thinking, he mouthed the incantation, each
word vanishing from his mind’s eye as he spoke it.
When he reached the last word, the pain stopped, and a loud roar
sounded from before him. He opened his eyes and saw the two trolls writhing in
the water, their eyes wide with agony as they thrashed about helplessly,
screaming and groaning.
Dragging himself out of the water, Pug watched while the creatures
struggled. They were making choking and sputtering noises now as they flopped
about. After a moment one shook and stopped moving, lying facedown in the
water. The second took a few minutes longer to die, but like its companion, it
also drowned, unable to keep its head above the shallow water.
Feeling light-headed and weak, Pug recrossed the stream. His mind
was numb, and everything seemed hazy and disjointed. He stopped after he had
taken a few steps, remembering the horses. He looked about and could see
nothing of the animals. They must have run off when they caught wind of the
trolls and would be on the way to safe pasture.
Pug resumed his walk to where the Princess had been. He topped the
hillock and looked around. She was nowhere in sight, so he headed for the
overturned basket of food. He was having trouble thinking, and he was ravenous.
He knew he should be doing or thinking about something, but all he could sort
out of the kaleidoscope of his thoughts was food.
Dropping to his knees, he picked up a wedge of cheese and stuffed it
in his mouth. A half-spilled bottle of wine lay nearby, and he washed the
cheese down with it. The rich cheese and piquant white wine revived him, and he
felt his mind clearing. He ripped a large piece of bread from a loaf and chewed
on it while trying to put his thoughts in order. As Pug recalled events, one
thing stood out. Somehow he had managed to cast a magic spell. What’s more, he
had done so without the aid of a book, scroll, or device. He was not sure, but
that seemed somehow strange. His thoughts turned hazy again. More than anything
he wanted to lie down nd sleep, but as he chewed his food, a thought pushed
through the crazy quilt of his impressions. The Princess!
He jumped to his feet, and his head swam. Steadying himself, he
grabbed up some bread and the wine and set off in the direction he had last
seen her running. He pushed himself along, his feet scuffing as he tried to
walk. After a few minutes he found his thinking improving and the exhaustion
lifting. He started to call the Princess’s name, then heard muted sobbing
coming from a clump of bushes. Pushing his way through, he found Carline
huddled behind the shrubs, her balled fists pulled up into her stomach. Her
eyes were wide with terror, and her gown was soiled and torn. Startled when Pug
stepped into view, she jumped to her feet and flew into his arms, burying her
head in his chest. Great racking sobs shook her body as she clutched the fabric
of his shirt. Standing with his arms still outstretched, wine and bread
occupying his hands, Pug was totally confused over what to do. He awkwardly
placed his arm around the terrified girl and said, “It’s all right. They’re
gone. You’re safe.”
She hung on to him for a moment, then, when her tears subsided, she
stepped away. With a sniffle she said, “I thought they had killed you and were
coming back for me.”
Pug found this situation more perplexing than any he had ever known
Just when he had come through the most harrowing experience of his young life,
he was faced with one that sent his mind reeling with a different sort of
confusion. Without thinking, he held the Princess in his arms, and now he was
suddenly aware of the contact, and her soft, warm appeal. A protective,
masculine feeling welled up inside him, and he started to step toward her.
As if sensing his mood change, Carline retreated. For all her
courtly ways and education, she was still a girl of fifteen and was disturbed
by the rush of emotions she had experienced when he had held her. She took
refuge in the one thing she knew well, her role as Princess of the castle.
Trying to sound commanding, she said, “I am glad to see you are unhurt, boy.”
Pug winced visibly at that. She struggled to regain her aristocratic bearing,
but her red nose and tearstained face undermined her attempt. “Find my horse,
and we shall return to the keep.”
Pug felt as if his nerves were raw. Keeping tight control over his
voice, he said, “I’m sorry, Your Highness, but the horses have run off. I’m
afraid we’ll have to walk.”
Carline felt abused and mistreated. It was not Pug’s fault any of
the afternoon’s events had taken place, but her often-indulged temper seized on
the handiest available object. “Walk! I can’t walk all the way to the keep,”
she snapped, looking at Pug as if he were supposed to do something about this
matter at once and without question.
Pug felt all the anger, confusion, hurt, and frustration of the day
surge up within him. “Then you can bloody well sit here until they notice
you’re missing and send someone to fetch you.” He was now shouting. “I figure
that will be about two hours after sunset.”
Carline stepped back, her face ashen, looking as if she’d been
slapped. Her lower Up trembled, and she seemed on the verge of tears again. “I
will not be spoken to in that manner, boy!”
Pug’s eyes grew large, and he stepped toward her, gesturing with the
wine bottle. “I nearly got myself killed trying to keep you alive,” he shouted.
“Do I hear one word of thanks? No! All I hear is a whining complaint that you
can’t walk back to the castle. We of the keep may be lowborn, but at least we
have enough manners to thank someone when it’s deserved.” As he spoke, he could
feel the anger flooding out of him. “You can stay here if you like, but I’m
going . . . ” He suddenly realized that he was standing with the bottle raised
high overhead, in a ridiculous pose. The Princess’s eyes were on the loaf of
bread, and he realized that he was holding it at his belt, thumb hooked in a
loop, which only added to the awkward appearance. He sputtered for a moment,
then felt his anger evaporate and lowered the bottle. The Princess looked at
him, her large eyes peeking over her fists, which she held before her face Pug
started to say something, thinking she was afraid of him, when he saw she was
laughing. It was a musical sound, warm and unmocking. “I’m sorry, Pug,” she
said, “but you look so silly standing there like that. You look like one of
those awful statues they erect in Krondor, with bottle held high instead of a
sword.”
Pug shook his head. “I’m the one who’s sorry, Your Highness I had no
right to yell at you that way Please forgive me.”
Her expression abruptly changed to one of concern. “No, Pug. You had
every right to say what you did I really do owe you my life, and I’ve acted
horribly.” She stepped closer to him and placed a hand on his arm. “Thank you.”
Pug was overcome by the sight of her face. Any resolutions to rid
himself of his boyhood fantasies about her were now carried away on the sea
breeze. The marvelous fact of his using magic was replaced by more urgent and
basic considerations. He started to reach for her; then the reality of her
station intruded, and he presented the bottle to her. “Wine?”
She laughed, sensing his sudden shift in thought. They were both
wrung out and a little giddy from the ordeal, but she still held on to her wits
and understood the effect she was having on him. With a nod she took the bottle
and sipped. Recovering a shred of poise, Pug said, “We’d better hurry. We might
make the keep by nightfall.”
She nodded, keeping her eyes upon him, and smiled. Pug was feeling
uncomfortable under her gaze and turned toward the way to the keep “Well, then.
We’d best be off.”
She fell into step beside him. After a moment she asked, “May I have
some bread too, Pug?”
Pug had run the distance between the bluffs and the keep many times
before, but the Princess was unused to walking such distances, and her soft
riding boots were ill suited to such an undertaking. When they came into view
of the castle, she had one arm draped over Pug’s shoulder and was limping
badly.
A shout went up from the gate tower, and guards came running toward
them. After them came the Lady Marna, the girl’s governess, her red dress
pulled up before her as she sprinted toward the Princess. Although twice the
size of court ladies—and a few of the guards as well—she outdistanced them all.
She was coming on like a she-bear whose cub was being attacked. Her great bosom
heaved with the effort as she reached the slight girl and grasped her in a hug
that threatened to engulf Carline completely. Soon the ladies of the court were
gathered around the Princess, overwhelming her with questions. Before the din
subsided, Lady Marna turned and fell on Pug like the sow bear she resembled.
“How dare you allow the Princess to come to such a state! Limping in, dress all
torn and dirty. I’ll see you whipped from one end of the keep to the other.
Before I have done with you, you’ll wish you’d never seen the light of day.”
Backing away before the onslaught, Pug was overwhelmed by confusion, unable to
get a word in. Sensing that somehow Pug was responsible for the Princess’s
condition, one of the guards stepped up and seized him by the arm.
“Leave him alone!”
Silence descended as Carline forced her way between the governess
and Pug. Small fists struck at the guard as he let go of Pug and fell back with
a look of astonishment on his face. “He saved my life! He almost got killed
saving me.” Tears were running down her face. “He’s done nothing wrong. And I
won’t have any of you bullying him.” The crowd closed in around them, regarding
Pug with newfound respect. Hushed voices sounded from all sides, and one of the
guards ran to carry the news to the castle. The Princess placed her arm around
Pug’s shoulder once more and started toward the gate. The crowd parted, and the
two weary travelers could see the torches and lanterns being lit on the wall.
By the time they had reached the courtyard gate, the Princess had
consented to let two of her ladies help her, much to Pug’s relief. He could not
have believed that such a slight girl could become such a burden. The Duke
hurried out to her, having been told of Carline’s return. He embraced his
daughter, then started to speak with her. Pug lost sight of them as curious,
questioning onlookers surrounded him. He tried to push his way toward the
magician’s tower, but the press of people held him back.
“Is there no work to be done?” a voice roared.
Heads turned to see Swordmaster Fannon, followed closely by Tomas.
All the keep folk quickly retired, leaving Pug standing before Fannon, Tomas,
and those of the Duke’s court with rank enough to ignore Fannon’s remark. Pug
could see the Princess talking to her father, Lyam, Arutha, and Squire Roland.
Fannon said, “What happened, boy?”
Pug
tried to speak, but stopped when he saw the Duke and his sons approaching.
Kulgan came hurrying behind the Duke, having been alerted by the general
commotion in the courtyard. All bowed to the Duke when he approached, and Pug
saw Carline break free of Roland’s solicitations and follow her father, to
stand at Pug’s side. Lady Marna threw a besieged look heavenward, and Roland
followed the girl, an open expression of surprise upon his face. When the
Princess took Pug’s hand in her own, Roland’s expression changed to one of
black-humored jealousy.
The Duke said, “My daughter has said some very remarkable things
about you, boy. I would like to hear your account.” Pug felt suddenly
self-conscious and gently disengaged his hand from Carline’s. He recounted the
events of the day, with Carline enthusiastically adding embellishments. Between
the two of them, the Duke gained a nearly accurate account of things. When Pug
finished, Lord Borric asked, “How is it the trolls drowned in the stream, Pug?”
Pug looked uncomfortable. “I cast a spell upon them, and they were
unable to reach the shore,” he said softly. He was still confused by this
accomplishment and had not given much thought to it, as the Princess had pushed
all other thoughts aside. He could see surprise registered on Kulgan’s face.
Pug began to say something, but was interrupted by the Duke’s next remark.
“Pug, I can’t begin to repay the service you’ve done my family. But
I shall find a suitable reward for your courage.” In a burst of enthusiasm
Carline threw her arms around Pug’s neck, hugging him fiercely. Pug stood in
embarrassment, looking frantically about, as if trying to communicate that this
familiarity was none of his doing.
Lady Mama looked ready to faint, and the Duke pointedly coughed,
motioning with his head for his daughter to retire. As she left with the Lady
Marna, Kulgan and Fannon simply let their amusement show, as did Lyam and
Arutha. Roland shot Pug an angry, envious look, then turned and headed off
toward his own quarters. Lord Borric said to Kulgan, “Take this boy to his
room. He looks exhausted. I’ll order food sent to him. Have him come to the
great hall after tomorrow’s morning meal.” He turned to Pug. “Again, I thank
you.” The Duke motioned for his sons to follow and walked away. Fannon gripped
Tomas by the elbow, for the sandy-haired boy had started to speak with his
friend. The old Swordmaster motioned with his head that the boy should come
with him, leaving Pug in peace. Tomas nodded, though he was burning with a
thousand questions.
When they had all left, Kulgan placed his arm around the boy’s
shoulder. “Come, Pug. You’re tired, and there is much to speak of.”
Pug lay back on his pallet, the remains of his meal lying on a
platter next to him. He couldn’t remember ever having been this tired before
Kulgan paced back and forth across the room. “It’s absolutely incredible.” He
waved a hand in the air, his red robe surging over his heavy frame like water
flowing over a boulder. “You close your eyes, and the image of a scroll you saw
weeks before appears. You incant the spell, as if you were holding the scroll
in your hand before you, and the trolls fall. Absolutely incredible.” Sitting
down on the stool near the window, he continued. “Pug, nothing like this has
ever been done before. Do you know what you’ve done?”
Pug started from the edge of a warm, soft sleep and looked at the
magician. “Only what I said I did, Kulgan.”
“Yes, but do you have any idea what it means?”
“No.”
“Neither do I.” The magician seemed to collapse inside as his
excitement left, replaced by complete uncertainty. “I don’t have the slightest
idea what it all means. Magicians don’t toss spells off the top of their heads.
Clerics can, but they have a different focus and different magic. Do you
remember what I taught you about focuses, Pug?”
Pug winced, not being in the mood to recite a lesson, but forced
himself to sit up. “Anyone who employs magic must have a focus for the power he
uses. Priests have power to focus their magic through prayer; their
incantations are a form of prayer Magicians use their bodies, or devices, or
books and scrolls.”
“Correct,” said Kulgan, “but you have just violated that truism.” He
took out his long pipe and absently stuffed tabac into the bowl. “The spell you
incanted cannot use the caster’s body as a focus It has been developed to
inflict great pain upon another. It can be a very terrible weapon. But it can
be cast only by reading from a scroll that it is written upon, at the time it’s
cast. Why is this?”
Pug forced leaden eyelids open. “The scroll itself is magic.”
“True. Some magic is intrinsic to the magician, such as taking on
the shape of an animal or smelling weather. But casting spells outside the
body, upon something else, needs an external focus Trying to incant the spell
you used from memory should have produced terrible pain in you, not the trolls,
if it would have worked at all! That is why magicians developed scrolls, books,
and other devices, to focus that sort of magic in a way that will not harm the
caster. And until today, I would have sworn that no one alive could have made
that spell work without the scroll in hand.”
Leaning against the windowsill, Kulgan puffed on his pipe for a
moment, gazing out into space. “It’s as if you have discovered a completely new
form of magic,” he said softly. Hearing no response, Kulgan looked down at the
boy, who was deeply asleep. Shaking his head in wonder, the magician pulled a
cover over the exhausted boy. He put out the lantern that hung on the wall and
let himself out. As he walked up the stairs to his own room, he shook his head.
“Absolutely incredible.”
Pug waited as the Duke held court in the great hall. Everyone in the
keep and town who could contrive a way to gain entrance to the audience was
there. Richly dressed Craftmasters, merchants, and minor nobles were in
attendance. They stood regarding the boy with expressions ranging from wonder
to disbelief. The rumor of his deed had spread through the town and had grown
in the telling.
Pug wore new clothing, which had been in his room when he awoke In
his newfound splendor he felt self-conscious and awkward. The tunic was a
bright yellow affair of the costliest silk, and the hose were a soft pastel
blue. Pug tried to wiggle his toes in the new boots, the first he had ever
worn. Walking in them seemed strange and uncomfortable. At his side a jeweled
dagger hung from a black leather belt with a golden buckle in the form of a
gull in flight. Pug suspected the clothing had once belonged to one of the
Duke’s sons, put aside when outgrown, but still looking new and beautiful.
The Duke was finishing the morning’s business: a request from one of
the shipwrights for guards to accompany a lumber expedition to the great
forest. Borric was dressed, as usual in black, but his sons and daughter wore
their finest court regalia. Lyam was listening closely to the business before
his father Roland stood behind him, as was the custom. Arutha was in rare good
humor, laughing behind an upraised hand at some quip Father Tully had just
made. Carline sat quietly, her face set in a warm smile, looking directly at
Pug, which was adding to his discomfort—and Roland’s irritation.
The Duke gave his permission for a company of guards to accompany
the craftsmen into the forest. The Craftmaster gave thanks and bowed, then
returned to the crowd, leaving Pug alone before the Duke. The boy stepped
forward as Kulgan had told him to do and bowed properly, albeit a little
stiffly, before the Lord of Crydee. Borric smiled at the boy and motioned to
Father Tully. The priest removed a document from the sleeve of his voluminous
robe and handed it to a herald. The herald stepped forward and unrolled the
scroll.
In a loud voice he read: “To all within our demesne: Whereas the
youth Pug, of the castle of Crydee, has shown exemplary courage in the act of
risking life and limb in defense of the royal person of the Princess Carline,
and; Whereas the youth, Pug of Crydee, is considered to hold us forever in his
debt; It is my wish that he be known to all in the realm as our beloved and
loyal servant, and it is furthermore wished that he be given a place in the
court of Crydee, with the rank of Squire, with all rights and privileges
pertaining thereunto. Furthermore let it be known that the title for the estate
of Forest Deep is conferred upon him and his progeny as long as they shall
live, to have and to hold, with servants and properties thereupon. Title to
this estate shall be held by the crown until the day of his majority. Set this day
by my hand and seal. Borric conDoin, third Duke of Crydee; Prince of the
Kingdom; Lord of Crydee, Carse, and Tulan; Warden of the West; Knight-General
of the King’s Armies; heir presumptive to the throne of Rillanon.”
Pug felt his knees go slack but caught himself before he fell. The
room erupted in cheers. People were pressing around him, offering their
congratulations and slapping him on the back. He was a Squire and a landholder
with franklins, a house, and stock. He was rich. Or at least he would be in
three years when he reached his majority. While he was considered a man of the
Kingdom at fourteen, grants of land and titles couldn’t be conferred until he
reached eighteen. The crowd backed away as the Duke approached, his family and
Roland behind. Both Princes smiled at Pug, and the Princess seemed positively
aglow. Roland gave Pug a rueful smile, as if in disbelief.
“I’m honored, Your Grace,” Pug stammered. “I don’t know what to
say.”
“Then say nothing, Pug. It makes you seem wise when everyone is babbling.
Come, and we’ll have a talk.” The Duke motioned for a chair to be placed near
his own, as he put an arm around the boy’s shoulders and walked him through the
crowd. Sitting down, he said, “You may all leave us now. I would speak with the
Squire.” The crowd pressing around muttered in disappointment, but began to
drift out of the hall. “Except you two,” the Duke added, pointing toward Kulgan
and Tully.
Carline stood by her father’s chair, a hesitant Roland at her side.
“You as well, my child,” said the Duke.
Carline began to protest, but was cut off by her father’s stern
admonition: “You may pester him later, Carline.” The two Princes stood at the
door, obviously amused at her outrage, Roland tried to offer his arm to the
Princess, but she pulled away and swept by her grinning brothers. Lyam clapped
Roland on the shoulder as the embarrassed Squire joined them. Roland glared at
Pug, who felt the anger like a blow.
When the doors clanged closed and the hall was empty, the Duke said,
“Pay no heed to Roland, Pug My daughter has him firmly under her spell, he
counts himself in love with her and wishes someday to petition for her hand.”
With a lingering look at the closed door, he added almost absently, “But he’ll
have to show me he’s more than the rakehell he’s growing into now if he ever
hopes for my consent.”
The Duke dismissed the topic with a wave of his hand. “Now, to other
matters. Pug, I have an additional gift for you, but first I want to explain
something to you.
“My family is among the oldest in the Kingdom. I myself am descended
from a King, for my grandfather, the first Duke of Crydee, was third son to the
King. Being of royal blood, we are much concerned with matters of duty and
honor. You are now both a member of my court and apprentice of Kulgan. In
matters of duty you are responsible to him. In matters of honor you are
responsible to me. This room is hung with the trophies and banners of our
triumphs. Whether we have been resisting the Dark Brotherhood in their
ceaseless effort to destroy us, or fighting off pirates, we have ever fought
bravely. Ours is a proud heritage that has never known the stain of dishonour.
No member of our court has ever brought shame to this hall, and I will expect
the same of you.”
Pug nodded, tales of glory and honor remembered from his youth
spinning in his mind. The Duke smiled. “Now to the business of your other gift.
Father Tully has a document that I asked him to draw up last night. I am going
to ask him to keep it, until such time as he deems fit to give it to you. I
will say no more on the subject, except that when he gives it to you, I hope
you will remember this day and consider long what it says.”
“I will, Your Grace.” Pug was sure the Duke was saying something
very important, but with all the events of the last half hour, it did not
register very well.
“I will expect you for supper, Pug. As a member of the court, you
will not be eating meals in the kitchen anymore.” The Duke smiled at him.
“We’ll make a young gentleman out of you, boy. And someday when you travel to
the King’s city of Rillanon, no one will fault the manners of those who come
from the court of Crydee.”
5
SHIPWRECK
The breeze was cool.
The last days of summer had passed, and soon the rams of autumn
would come. A few weeks later the first snows of winter would follow. Pug sat
in his room, studying a book of ancient exercises designed to ready the mind
for spell casting. He had fallen back into his old routine once the excitement
of his elevation to the Duke’s court had worn off.
His marvelous feat with the trolls continued to be the object of
speculation by Kulgan and Father Tully. Pug found he still couldn’t do many of
the things expected of an apprentice, but other feats were beginning to come to
him. Certain scrolls were easier to use now, and once, in secret, he had tried
to duplicate his feat.
He had memorized a spell from a book, one designed to levitate
objects. He had felt the familiar blocks in his mind when he tried to incant it
from memory. He had failed to move the object, a candleholder, but it trembled
for a few seconds and he felt a brief sensation, as if he had touched the
holder with a part of his mind. Satisfied that some sort of progress was being
made, he lost much of his former gloom and renewed his studies with vigor.
Kulgan still let him find his own pace. They had had many long
discussions on the nature of magic, but mostly Pug worked in solitude.
Shouting came from the courtyard below. Pug walked to his window.
Seeing a familiar figure, he leaned out and cried, “Ho! Tomas! What is afoot?”
Tomas looked up.
“Ho! Pug! A ship has foundered in the night. The wreck has beached
beneath Sailor’s Grief. Come and see.”
“I’ll be right down.”
Pug ran to the door, pulling on a cloak, for while the day was
clear, it would be cold near the water. Racing down the stairs, he cut through
the kitchen, nearly knocking over Alfan, the pastry cook. As he bolted out the
door, he heard the stout baker yell, “Squire or not, I’ll box your ears if you
don’t watch where you’re going, boy!” The kitchen staff had not changed their
attitude toward the boy, whom they considered one of their own, beyond feeling
proud of his achievement.
Pug shouted back with laughter in his voice, “My apologies,
Mastercook!”
Alfan gave him a good-natured wave as Pug vanished through the
outside door and around the corner to where Tomas was waiting. Tomas turned
toward the gate as soon as he saw his friend.
Pug grabbed his arm. “Wait. Has anyone from the court been told?”
“I don’t know. Word just came from the fishing village a moment
ago,” Tomas said impatiently. “Come on, or the villagers will pick the wreck
clean.” It was commonly held that salvage could be legally carried away before
any of the Duke’s court arrived. As a result, the villagers and townsfolk were
less than timely in informing the authorities of such occurrences. There was
also a risk of bloodshed, should the beached ship still be manned by sailors
determined to keep their master’s cargo intact so that they would get their
fair sailing bonus. Violent confrontation, and even death, had been the result
of such dispute. Only the presence of men-at-arms could guarantee no commoner
would come to harm from lingering mariners.
“Oh, no,” said Pug. “If there is any trouble down there and the Duke
finds out I didn’t tell someone else, I’ll be in for it.”
“Look, Pug. Do you think with all these people rushing about, the
Duke will be long in hearing of it?” Tomas ran his hand through his hair.
“Someone is probably in the great hall right now, telling him the news. Master
Fannon is away on patrol, and Kulgan won’t be back awhile yet.” Kulgan was due
back later that day from his cottage in the forest, where he and Meecham had
spent the last week. “It may be our only chance to see a shipwreck.” A look of
sudden inspiration came over his face. “Pug, I have it! You’re a member of the
court now. Come along, and when we get there, you declare for the Duke.” A
calculating expression crossed his face. “And if we find a rich bauble or two,
who’s to know?”
“I would know.” Pug thought a moment. “I can’t properly declare for
the Duke, then take something for myself . . .” He fixed Tomas with a
disapproving expression. “. . . or let one of his men-at-arms take something
either.” As Tomas’s face showed his embarrassment, Pug said, “But we can still
see the wreck! Come one!”
Pug was suddenly taken with the idea of using his new office, and if
he could get there before too much was earned away or someone was hurt, the
Duke would be pleased with him. “All right,” he said, “I’ll saddle a horse and
we can ride down there before everything is stolen.” Pug turned and ran for the
stable Tomas caught up with him as he opened the large wooden doors. “But, Pug,
I have never been on a horse in my life. I don’t know how.”
“It’s simple,” Pug said, taking a bridle and saddle from the tack
room. He spied the large grey he had ridden the day he and the Princess had
their adventure. “I’ll ride and you sit behind me. Just keep your arms around
my waist, and you won’t fall off.”
Tomas looked doubtful. “I’m to depend on you?” He shook his head
“After all, who has looked after you all these years?”
Pug threw him a wicked smile. “Your mother. Now fetch a sword from
the armory in case there’s trouble. You may get to play soldier yet.”
Tomas looked pleased at the prospect and ran out the door. A few
minutes later the large grey with the two boys mounted on her back lumbered out
the main gate, heading down the road toward Sailor’s Grief.
The surf was pounding as the boys came in sight of the wreckage.
Only a few villagers were approaching the site, and they scattered as soon as a
horse and rider appeared, for it could only be a noble from the court to
declare the wreck’s salvage for the Duke. By the time Pug reined in, no one was
about.
Pug said, “Come on. We’ve got a few minutes to look around before
anyone else gets here.”
Dismounting, the boys left the mare to graze in a little stand of
grass only fifty yards from the rocks Running through the sand, the boys
laughed, with Tomas raising the sword aloft, trying to sound fierce as he
yelled old war cries learned from the sagas. Not that he had any delusions
about his ability to use it, but it might make someone think twice about
attacking them—at least long enough for castle guards to arrive.
As they neared the wreck, Tomas whistled a low note. “This ship
didn’t just run on the rocks, Pug. It looks like it was driven by a storm.”
Pug said, “There certainly isn’t much left, is there?”
Tomas scratched behind his right ear. “No, just a section of the
bow. I don’t understand. There wasn’t any storm last night, just a strong wind.
How could the ship be broken up so badly?”
“I don’t know.” Suddenly something registered on Pug. “Look at the
bow. See how it’s painted.”
The bow rested on the rocks, held there until the tide rose. From
the deck line down, the hull was painted a bright green, and it shone with reflected
sunlight, as if it had been glazed over Instead of a figurehead, intricate
designs were painted in bright yellow, down to the waterline, which was a dull
black. A large blue-and-white eye had been painted several feet behind the
prow, and all the above-deck railing that they could see was painted white.
Pug grabbed Tomas’s arm. “Look!” He pointed to the water behind the
prow, and Tomas could see a shattered white mast extending a few feet above the
surging foam.
Tomas took a step closer. “It’s no Kingdom ship, for certain.” He
turned to Pug. “Maybe they were from Queg?”
“No,” answered Pug. “You’ve seen as many Quegan ships as I have.
This is nothing from Queg or the Free Cities. I don’t think a ship like this
has ever passed these waters before. Let’s look around.”
Tomas seemed suddenly timid. “Careful, Pug. There is something
strange here, and I have an ill feeling. Someone may still be about.”
Both boys looked around for a minute, before Pug concluded, “I think
not, whatever snapped that mast and drove the ship ashore with enough force to
wreck it this badly must have killed any who tried to ride her in.”
Venturing closer, the boys found small articles lying about, tossed
among the rocks by the waves. They saw broken crockery and boards, pieces of
torn red sailcloth, and lengths of rope Pug stopped and picked up a
strange-looking dagger fashioned from some unfamiliar material. It was a dull
grey and was lighter than steel, but still quite sharp.
Tomas tried to pull himself to the railing, but couldn’t find a
proper footing on the slippery rocks. Pug moved along the hull until he found
himself in danger of having his boots washed by the tide; they could board the
hulk if they waded into the sea, but Pug was unwilling to ruin his good
clothing. He walked back to where Tomas stood studying the wreck.
Tomas pointed behind Pug. “If we climb up to that ledge, we could
lower ourselves down to the deck.”
Pug saw the ledge, a jutting single piece of stone that started
twenty feet back on their left, extending upward and out to overhang the bow.
It looked like an easy climb, and Pug agreed. They pulled themselves up and
inched along the ledge, backs flat to the base of the bluffs. The path was
narrow, but by stepping carefully, they ran little risk of falling. They reached
a point above the hull; Tomas pointed. “Look. Bodies!”
Lying on the deck were two men, both dressed in bright blue armor of
unfamiliar design. One had his head crushed by a fallen spar, but the other,
lying facedown, didn’t show any injuries, beyond his stillness Strapped across
that man’s back was an alien-looking broadsword, with strange serrated edges.
His head was covered by an equally alien-looking blue helmet, potlike, with an
outward flaring edge on the sides and back. Tomas shouted over the sound of the
surf, “I’m going to let myself down. After I get on the deck, hand me the
sword, and then lower yourself so I can grab you.”
Tomas handed Pug the sword, then turned around slowly. He knelt with
his face against the cliff wall. Sliding backward, he let himself down until he
was almost hanging free. With a shove he dropped the remaining four feet,
landing safely Pug reversed the sword and handed it down to Tomas, then
followed his friend’s lead, and in a moment they both stood on the deck. The foredeck
slanted alarmingly down toward the water, and they could feel the ship move
beneath their feet.
“The tide’s rising,” Tomas shouted “It’ll lift what’s left of the
ship and smash it on the rocks. Everything will be lost.”
“Look around,” Pug shouted back “Anything that looks worth saving we
can try to throw up on the ledge.”
Tomas nodded, and the boys started to search the deck. Pug put as
much space as he could between the bodies and himself when he passed them. All
across the deck, debris created a confused spectacle for the eye. Trying to
discern what might prove valuable and what might not was difficult. At the rear
of the deck was a shattered rail, on either side of a ladder to what was left
of the main deck below: about six feet of planking remaining above the water.
Pug was sure that only a few feet more could be underwater, or else the ship
would be higher on the rocks. The rear of the ship must have already been
carried away on the tide.
Pug lay down on the deck and hung his head over the edge. He saw a
door to the right of the ladder. Yelling for Tomas to join him, he made his way
carefully down the ladder. The lower deck was sagging, the undersupports having
been caved in. He grasped the handrail of the ladder for support. A moment
later Tomas stood beside him, stepped around Pug, and moved to the door. It
hung half-open, and he squeezed through with Pug a step behind. The cabin was
dark, for there was only a single port on the bulkhead next to the door. In the
gloom they could see many rich-looking pieces of fabric and the shattered
remnants of a table. What looked like a cot or low bed lay upside down in a
corner. Several small chests could be seen, with their contents spread around
the room as if tossed about by some giant hand.
Tomas tried to search through the mess, but nothing was recognizable
as important or valuable. He found one small bowl of unusual design glazed with
bright colored figures on the sides, and he put it inside his tunic.
Pug stood quietly, for something in the cabin commanded his
attention. A strange, urgent feeling had overtaken him as soon as he had
stepped in.
The wreck lurched, throwing Tomas off balance. He caught himself on
a chest, dropping the sword. “The ship’s lifting. We’d better go.”
Pug didn’t answer, his attention focused on the strange sensations
Tomas grabbed his arm. “Come on. The ship’ll break up in a minute.”
Pug shook his hand off. “A moment. There is something.” His voice
trailed off. Abruptly he crossed the disordered room and pulled open a drawer
in a latched chest. It was empty. He yanked open another, then a third. In it
was the object of his search. He drew out a rolled parchment with a black
ribbon and black seal on it and thrust it into his shirt.
“Come on,” he shouted as he passed Tomas. They raced up the ladder
and scrambled over the deck. The tide had raised the ship high enough for them
to pull themselves up to the ledge with ease, and they turned to sit.
The ship was now floating on the tide, rocking forward and back,
while the waves sent a wet spray into the boys’ faces. They watched as the bow
slid off the rocks, timbers breaking with a loud and deep tearing sound, like a
dying moan. The bow lifted high, and the boys were splashed by waves striking
the cliffs below their ledge.
Out to sea the hulk floated, slowly leaning over to its port side,
until the outward surging tide came to a halt.
Ponderously, it started back toward the rocks Tomas grabbed at Pug’s
arm, signaling him to follow. They got up and made their way back to the beach.
When they reached the place where the rock overhung the sand, they jumped down.
A loud grinding sound made them turn to see the hull driven onto the
rocks Timbers shattered, and separated with a shriek. The hull heaved to
starboard, and debris started sliding off the deck into the sea.
Suddenly Tomas reached over and caught Pug’s arm. “Look.” He pointed
at the wreck sliding backward on the tide.
Pug couldn’t make out what he was pointing at. “What is it?”
“I thought for a moment there was only one body on deck.”
Pug looked at him. Tomas’s face was set in an expression of worry.
Abruptly it changed to anger. “Damn!”
“What?”
“When I fell in the cabin, I dropped the sword. Fannon will have my
ears.”
A sound like an explosion of thunder marked the final destruction of
the wreck as the tide smashed it against the cliff face. Now the shards of the
once fine, if alien, ship would be swept out to sea, to drift back in along the
coast for miles to the south over the next few days.
A low groan ending in a sharp cry made the boys turn Standing behind
them was the missing man from the ship, the strange broadsword held loosely in
his left hand and dragging in the sand. His right arm was held tightly against
his side; blood could be seen running from under his blue breastplate, and from
under his helmet. He took a staggering step forward. His face was ashen, and
his eyes wide with pain and confusion. He shouted something incomprehensible at
the boys. They stepped back slowly, raising their hands to show they were
unarmed.
He took another step toward them, and his knees sagged. He staggered
erect and closed his eyes for a moment. He was short and stocky, with
powerfully muscled arms and legs. Below the breastplate he wore a short skirt
of blue cloth. On his forearms were bracers, and on his legs, greaves that
looked like leather, above thonged sandals. He put his hand to his face and
shook his head. His eyes opened, and he regarded the boys again. Once more he
spoke in his alien tongue. When the boys said nothing, he appeared to grow
angry and yelled another series of strange words, from the tone seemingly
questions.
Pug gauged the distance necessary to run past the man, who blocked
the narrow strip of beach. He decided it wasn’t worth the risk of finding out
if the man was in a condition to use that wicked-looking sword. As if sensing
the boy’s thoughts, the soldier staggered a few feet to his right, cutting off
any escape. He closed his eyes again, and what little color there was in his
face drained away. His gaze began to wander, and the sword slipped from limp
fingers Pug started to take a step toward him, for it was now obvious that he
could do them no harm.
As he neared the man, shouts sounded up the beach Pug and Tomas saw
Prince Arutha riding before a troop of horsemen. The wounded soldier turned his
head painfully at the sound of approaching horses, and his eyes widened. A look
of pure horror crossed his face, and he tried to flee. He took three staggering
steps toward the water and fell forward into the sand.
Pug stood near the door of the Duke’s council chamber. Several feet
away a concerned group sat at Duke Borric’s round council table. Besides the
Duke and his sons, Father Tully, Kulgan, who had returned only an hour before,
Swordmaster Fannon, and Horsemaster Algon sat in assembly. The tone was
serious, for the arrival of the alien ship was viewed as potentially dangerous
to the Kingdom.
Pug threw a quick glance at Tomas, standing on the opposite side of
the door Tomas had never been in the presence of nobility, other than serving
in the dining hall, and being in the Duke’s council chamber was making him
nervous. Master Fannon spoke, and Pug returned his attention to the table.
“Reviewing what we know,” said the old Swordmaster, “it is obvious
that these people are completely alien to us.” He picked up the bowl Tomas had
taken from the ship. “This bowl is fashioned in a way unknown to our
Masterpotter. At first he thought it was simply a fired and glazed clay, but
upon closer inspection it proved otherwise. It is fashioned from some sort of
hide, parchment-thin strips being wound around a mold—perhaps wood—then
laminated with resins of some type. It is much stronger than anything we know.”
To demonstrate, he struck the bowl hard against the table. Instead
of shattering, as a clay bowl would have, it made a dull sound. “Now, even more
perplexing are these weapons and armor.” He pointed to the blue breastplate,
helmet, sword, and dagger. “They appear to be fashioned in a similar manner.”
He lifted the dagger and let it drop. It made the same dull sound as the bowl.
“For all its lightness, it is nearly as strong as our best steel.”
Borric nodded. “Tully, you’ve been around longer than any of us.
Have you heard of any ship constructed like that?”
“No.” Tully absently stroked his beardless chin. “Not from the
Bitter Sea, the Kingdom Sea, or even from Great Kesh have I heard of such a
ship I might send word to the Temple of Ishap in Krondor. They have records
that go further back than any others. Perhaps they have some knowledge of these
people.”
The Duke nodded “Please do. Also we must send word to the elves and
dwarves. They have abided here longer than we by ages, and we would do well to
seek their wisdom.”
Tully indicated agreement. “Queen Aglaranna might have knowledge of
these people if they are travelers from across the Endless Sea. Perhaps they
have visited these shores before.”
“Preposterous,” snorted Horsemaster Algon. “There are no nations
across the Endless Sea. Otherwise it wouldn’t be endless.”
Kulgan took on an indulgent expression. “There are theories that
other lands exist across the Endless Sea. It is only that we have no ships
capable of making such a long journey.”
“Theories,” was all Algon said.
“Whoever these strangers are,” said Arutha, “we had best make sure
we can find out as much as possible about them.”
Algon and Lyam gave him a questioning look, while Kulgan and Tully
looked on without expression. Borric and Fannon nodded as Arutha continued.
“From the boys’ description, the ship was obviously a warship. The heavy prow
with bowsprit is designed for ramming, and the high foredeck is a perfect place
for bowmen, as the low middle deck is suitable for boarding other vessels when
they have been grappled. I would imagine the rear deck was also high If more of
the hull had survived, I would guess we would have found rowers’ benches as
well.”
“A war galley?” asked Algon.
Fannon looked impatient. “Of course, you simpleton.” There was a
friendly rivalry between the two masters, which at times degenerated to some
unfriendly bickering. “Take a look at our guest’s weapon.” He indicated the
broadsword. “How would you like to ride at a determined man wheeling that toy?
He’d cut your horse right out from under you. That armor is light, and
efficiently constructed for all its gaudy coloring. I would guess that he was
infantry. As powerfully built as he is, he probably could run half a day and
still fight.” He stroked his mustache absently. “These people have some
warriors among them.”
Algon nodded slowly. Arutha sat back in his chair, making a tent of
his hands, fingertips flexing. “What I can’t understand,” said the Duke’s
younger son, “is why he tried to run We had no weapons drawn and were not
charging. There was no reason for him to run.”
Borric looked at the old priest. “Will we ever know?”
Tully looked concerned, his brow furrowed. “He had a long piece of
wood embedded in his right side, under the breastplate, as well as a bad blow
to the head. That helmet saved his skull. He has a high fever and has lost a
great deal of blood. He may not survive. I may have to resort to a mind
contact, if he regains enough consciousness to establish it.” Pug knew of the
mind contact; Tully had explained it to him before. It was a method only a few
clerics could employ, and it was extremely dangerous for both the subject and
the caster. The old priest must feel a strong need to gain information from the
injured man to risk it.
Borric turned his attention to Kulgan. “What of the scroll the boys
found?”
Kulgan waved a hand absently. “I have given a preliminary, and
brief, inspection. It has magical properties without a doubt. That is why Pug
felt some compulsion to inspect the cabin and that chest, I think. Anyone as
sensitive to magic as he is would feel it.” He looked directly at the Duke. “I
am, however, unwilling to break the seal until I have made a more involved
study of it, to better determine its purpose. Breaking enchanted seals can be
dangerous if not handled properly. If the seal was tampered with, the scroll
might destroy itself, or worse, those trying to break it It wouldn’t be the
first such trap I’ve seen for a scroll of great power.”
The Duke drummed his fingers on the table for a moment. “All right.
We will adjourn this meeting. As soon as something new has been learned, either
from the scroll or from the wounded man, we will reconvene.” He turned to
Tully. “See how the man is, and if he should wake, use your arts to glean
whatever you can.” He stood, and the others rose also “Lyam, send word to the
Elf Queen and the dwarves at Stone Mountain and the Grey Towers of what has happened.
Ask for their counsel.”
Pug opened the door. The Duke went through and the others followed
Pug and Tomas were the last to leave, and as they walked down the hall, Tomas
leaned over toward Pug.
“We really started something.”
Pug shook his head. “We were simply the first to find the man. If
not us, then someone else.”
Tomas looked relieved to be out of the chamber and the Duke’s
scrutiny “If this turns out badly, I hope they remember that.”
Kulgan went up the stairs to his tower room as Tully moved off toward
his own quarters, where the wounded man was being tended by Tully’s acolytes.
The Duke and his sons turned through a door to their private quarters, leaving
the boys alone in the hallway.
Pug and
Tomas cut through a storage room, and into the kitchen Megar stood supervising
the kitchen workers, several of whom waved greetings to the boys. When he saw
his son and fosterling, he smiled and said, “Well, what have you two gotten
yourselves into, now?” Megar was a loose-jointed man, with sandy hair and an
open countenance. He resembled Tomas, as a rough sketch resembled a finished
drawing. He was a fair-looking man of middle years, but lacked the fine
features that set Tomas apart.
Grinning, Megar said, “Everyone is hushed up about that man in
Tully’s quarters, and messengers are dashing from here to there, one place to
another. I haven’t seen such a to-do since the Prince of Krondor visited seven
years ago!”
Tomas grabbed an apple from a platter and jumped up to sit on a
table. Between bites he recounted to his father what had taken place.
Pug leaned on the counter while listening. Tomas told the story with
a minimum of embellishment. When he was done, Megar shook his head. “Well,
well. Aliens, is it? I hope they’re not marauding pirates. We have had peaceful
enough times lately. Ten years since the time the Brotherhood of the Dark
Path”—he gestured spitting—”curse their murderous souls, stirred up that
trouble with the goblins. Can’t say as I’d welcome that sort of mess again,
sending all those stores to the outlying villages. Having to cook based on what
will spoil first and what will last longest. I couldn’t make a decent meal for
a month.”
Pug smiled. Megar had the ability to take even the most difficult
possibilities and break them down to basics: how much inconvenience they were
likely to cause the scullery staff.
Tomas jumped down from the counter. “I had best return to the
soldiers’ commons and wait for Master Fannon. I’ll see you soon.” He ran from
the kitchen.
Megar said, “Is it serious, Pug?”
Pug shook his head. “I really can’t say I don’t know. I know that
Tully and Kulgan are worried, and the Duke thinks enough of the problem to want
to talk to the elves and dwarves. It could be.”
Megar looked out the door that Tomas had used. “It would be a bad time
for war and killing.” Pug could see the poorly hidden worry in Megar’s face and
could think of nothing to say to a father of a son who had just become a
soldier.
Pug pushed himself away from the counter. “I’d better be off, as
well, Megar.” He waved good-bye to the others in the kitchen and walked out of
the kitchen and into the courtyard. He had little temper for study, being
alarmed by the serious tone of the meeting in the Duke’s chambers. No one had
come out and said as much, but it was obvious they were considering the
possibility that the alien ship was the vanguard of an invasion fleet.
Pug wandered around to the side of the keep and climbed the three
steps to the Princess’s small flower garden. He sat on a stone bench, the
hedges and rows of rosebushes masking most of the courtyard from sight. He
could still see the top of the high walks, with the guards patrolling the
parapets. He wondered if it was his imagination, or were the guards looking
especially watchful today?
The sound of a delicate cough made him turn. Standing on the other
side of the garden was Princess Carline, with Squire Roland and two of her
younger ladies-m-waiting. The girls hid their smiles, for Pug was still
something of a celebrity in the keep. Carline shooed them off, saying, “I would
like to speak with Squire Pug in private.” Roland hesitated, then bowed
stiffly. Pug was irritated by the dark look Roland gave him as he left with the
young ladies.
The two young ladies looked over their shoulder at Pug and Carline,
giggling, which seemed only to add to Roland’s irritation.
Pug stood as Carline approached and made an awkward bow She said, in
short tones, “Oh, sit down. I find that rubbish tiring and get all I need from
Roland.”
Pug sat. The girl took her place next to him, and they were both
silent for a moment. Finally she said, “I haven’t seen you for more than a
week. Have you been busy?
Pug felt uncomfortable, still confused by the girl and her mercurial
moods She had been only warm to him since the day, three weeks ago, when he had
saved her from the trolls, stirring up a storm of gossip among the staff of the
castle. She remained short-tempered with others, however, especially Squire
Roland.
“I have been busy with my studies.”
“Oh, pooh. You spend too much time in that awful tower.”
Pug didn’t consider the tower room the least bit awful—except for
being a bit drafty. It was his own, and he felt comfortable there.
“We could go riding, Your Highness, if you would like.”
The girl smiled. “I would like that. But I’m afraid Lady Mama won’t
allow it.”
Pug was surprised. He thought that after the way he had protected
the Princess, even the girl’s surrogate mother would allow that he was proper
company. “Why not?”
Carline sighed. “She says that when you were a commoner, you would
keep your place. Now that you are a courtier, she suspects you of having
aspirations.” A slight smile played across her lips.
“Aspirations?” Pug said, not understanding.
Carline said shyly, “She thinks that you have ambitions to rise to
higher station. She thinks you seek to influence me in certain ways.”
Pug stared at Carline. Abruptly comprehension dawned on him, and he
said, “Oh,” then, “Oh! Your Highness.” He stood up “I never would do such a
thing. I mean, I would never think to . . . I mean . . .”
Carline abruptly stood and threw Pug an exasperated look. “Boys!
You’re all idiots.” Lifting the hem of her long green gown, she stormed off.
Pug sat down, more perplexed than before by the girl. It was almost
as if . . . He let the thought trail away. The more it seemed possible that she
could care for him, the more anxious the prospect made him. Car-line was quite
a bit more than the fairy-tale Princess he had imagined a short time back. With
the stamp of one little foot, she could raise a storm in a saltcellar, one that
could shake the keep. A girl of complex mind was the Princess, with a
contradictory nature tossed into the bargain.
Further musing was interrupted by Tomas, dashing by. Catching a
glimpse of his friend, he leapt up the three steps and halted breathlessly
before him. “The Duke wants us. The man from the ship has died.”
They hastily assembled in the Duke’s council chamber, except Kulgan,
who had not answered when a messenger knocked at his door. It was supposed he
was too deeply engrossed in the problem of the magic scroll.
Father Tully looked pale and drawn Pug was shocked by his
appearance. Only a little more than an hour had passed, yet the old cleric
looked as if he had spent several sleepless nights. His eyes were red-rimmed
and deep-set in dark circles. His face was ashen, and a light sheen of
perspiration showed across his brow.
Borric poured the priest a goblet of wine from a decanter on a
sideboard and handed it to him. Tully hesitated, for he was an abstemious man,
then drank deeply. The others resumed their former positions around the table.
Borric looked at Tully and said, simply, “Well?”
“The soldier from the beach regained consciousness for only a few
minutes, a final rally before the end. During that time I had the opportunity
to enter into a mind contact with him. I stayed with him through his last
feverish dreams, trying to learn as much about him as I could. I nearly didn’t
remove the contact in time.”
Pug paled. During the mind contact, the priest’s mind and the
subject become as one. If Tully had not broken contact with the man when he
died, the priest could have died or been rendered mad, for the two men shared
feelings, fears, and sensations as well as thought. He now understood Tully’s
exhausted state: the old priest had spent a great deal of energy maintaining
the link with an uncooperative subject and had been party to the dying man’s
pain and terror.
Tully took another drink of wine, then continued “If this man’s
dying dreams were not the product of fevered imaginings, then I fear his
appearance heralds a grave situation.” Tully took another sip of wine and
pushed the goblet aside. “The man’s name was Xomich. He was a simple soldier of
a nation, Honshom, in something called the Empire of Tsuranuanm.”
Borric said, “I have never heard of this nation, nor of that
Empire.”
Tully nodded and said, “I would have been surprised if you had. That
man’s ship came from no sea of Midkemia.” Pug and Tomas looked at each other,
and Pug felt a chilling sensation, as, apparently, did Tomas, whose face had
turned pale.
Tully went on. “We can only speculate on how the feat was managed,
but I am certain that this ship comes from another world, removed from our own
in time and space.” Before questions could be asked, he said, “Let me explain.”
“This man was sick with fever, and his mind wandered.” Tully’s face
flickered with remembered pain. “He was part of an honor guard for someone he
thought of only as ‘Great One.’ There were conflicting images, and I can’t be
sure, but it seems that the journey they were on was considered strange, both
for the presence of this Great One and for the nature of the mission. The only
concrete thought I gained was that this Great One had no need to travel by
ship. Beyond that, I have little but quick and disjointed impressions. There
was a city he knew as Yankora, then a terrible storm, and a sudden blinding
brilliance, which may have been lightning striking the ship, but I think not.
There was a thought of his captain and comrades being washed overboard. Then a crash
on the rocks.” He paused for a moment “I am not sure if those images are in
order, for I think it likely that the crew was lost before the blinding light.”
“Why?” asked Borric.
“I’m ahead of myself,” said Tully. “First I’d like to explain why I
think this man is from another world.
“This Xomich grew to manhood in a land ruled by great armies. They
are a warrior race, whose ships control the seas. But what seas? Never, to my
knowledge, has there been mention of contact with these people. And there are
other visions that are even more convincing. Great cities, far larger than
those in the heart of Kesh, the largest known to us. Armies on parade during
high holiday, marching past a review stand; city garrisons larger than the
King’s Army of the West.”
Algon said, “Still, there is nothing to say they are not from”—he
paused, as if the admission were difficult—”across the Endless Sea.” That
prospect seemed to trouble him less than the notion of some place not of this
world.
Tully looked irritated at the interruption. “There is more, much
more I followed him through his dreams, many of his homeland. He remembers
creatures unlike any I have heard of or seen, things with six legs that pull
wagons like oxen, and other creatures, some that look like insects or reptiles,
but speak like men. His land was hot, and his memory of the sun was of one
larger than ours and more green in color. This man was not of our world.” The
last was said flatly, removing from all in the room any lingering doubts. Tully
would never make a pronouncement like that unless he was certain.
The room was silent as each person reflected on what had been said.
The boys watched and shared the feeling. It was as if no one were willing to
speak, as if to do so would seal the priest’s information forever in fact,
while to stay silent might let it pass like a bad dream. Borric stood and paced
over to the window. It looked out upon a blank rear wall of the castle, but he
stared as if seeking something there, something that would provide an answer
for the questions that spun in his mind. He turned quickly and said, “How did
they get here, Tully?”
The priest shrugged. “Perhaps Kulgan can offer a theory as to the
means. What I construct as being the most likely series of events is this: the
ship foundered in the storm; the captain of the ship and most of its crew were
lost. As a last resort this Great One, whoever he is, invoked a spell to remove
the ship from the storm, or change the weather, or some other mighty feat. As a
result, the ship was cast from its own world into this, appearing off the coast
at Sailor’s Grief. With the ship moving at great speed on its own world, it may
have appeared here with the same movement, and with the westerly blowing
strong, and little or no crew, the ship was driven straight onto the rocks. Or
it simply may have appeared upon the rocks, smashed at the instant it came into
being here.”
Fannon shook his head. “From another world. How can that be
possible?”
The old priest raised his hands in a gesture of mystification. “One
can only speculate. The Ishapians have old scrolls in their temples. Some are
reputed to be copies of older works, which in turn are copies of still older
scrolls. They claim the originals date back, in unbroken line, to the time of
the Chaos Wars. Among them is mention of ‘other planes’ and ‘other dimensions,’
and of concepts lost to us. One thing is clear, however. They speak of lands
and peoples unknown and suggest that once mankind traveled to other worlds, or
to Midkemia from other worlds. These notions have been the center of religious
debate for centuries, and no one could say with certainty what truth there was
in any of them.” He paused, then said, “Until now. If I had not seen what was
in Xomich’s mind, I would not have accepted such a theory to explain this day’s
occurrences. But now . . .”
Borric crossed to his chair to stand behind it, his hands gripping
each side of the high back. “It seems impossible.”
“That the ship and man were here is fact, Father,” said Lyam.
Arutha followed his brother’s comment with another. “And we must
decide what the chances are that this feat may be duplicated.”
Borric said to Tully, “You were right when you said this may herald
a grave situation. Should a great Empire be turning its attention toward Crydee
and the Kingdom . . .”
Tully shook his head. “Borric, have you so long been removed from my
tutelage that you miss the point entirely?” He held up a bony hand as the Duke
started to protest. “Forgive me, my lord. I am old and tired and forget my
manners. But the truth is still the truth. A mighty nation they are, or rather
an empire of nations, and if they have the means to reach us, it could prove
dire, but most important is the possibility that this Great One is a magician
or priest of high art. For if he is not one alone, if there are more within
this Empire, and if they did indeed try to reach this world with magic, then
grave times are truly in store for us.”
When everyone at the table still appeared not to comprehend what he
was alluding to, Tully continued, like a patient teacher lecturing a group of
promising but occasionally slow students. “The ship’s appearance may be the
product of chance and, if so, is only a cause for curiosity. But if it was by
design that it came here, then we may be in peril, for to move a ship to
another world is an order of magic beyond my imagining If these people, the
Tsurani as they call themselves, know we are here, and if they possess the
means to reach us, then not only must we fear armies that rival Great Kesh at
the height of its power, when its reach extended to even this remote corner of
the world, we must also face magic far greater than any we have known.”
Borric nodded, for the conclusion was obvious, once pointed out. “We
must have Kulgan’s counsel on this at once.”
“One thing, Arutha,” said Tully. The Prince looked up from his
chair, for he had been lost in thought. “I know why Xomich tried to run from
you and your men. He thought you were creatures he knew in his own world,
centaurlike creatures, called Thьn, feared by the Tsurani.”
“Why would he think that?” asked Lyam, looking puzzled.
“He had never seen a horse, or any creature remotely like it. I
expect these people have none.”
The Duke sat down again. Drumming his fingers on the table, he said,
“If what Father Tully says is true, then we must make some decisions, and
quickly. If this is but an accident that has brought these people to our
shores, then there may be little to fear. If, however, there is some design to
their coming, then we should expect a serious threat. Here we are the fewest in
number of all the Kingdom’s garrisons, and it would be a hard thing should they
come here in force.”
The others murmured agreement, and the Duke said, “We would do well
to try to understand that what has been said here is still only speculation,
though I am inclined to agree with Tully on most points. We should have
Kulgan’s thoughts upon the matter of these people.” He turned to Pug. “Lad, see
if your master is free to join us.”
Pug nodded and opened the door, then raced through the keep. He ran
to the tower steps and took them two at a time. He raised his hand to knock and
felt a strange sensation, as if he were near a lightning strike, causing the
hair on his arms and scalp to stand up. A sudden sense of wrongness swept over
him, and he pounded on the door. “Kulgan! Kulgan! Are you all right?” he
shouted, but no answer was forthcoming. He tried the door latch and found it
locked. He placed his shoulder against the door and tried to force it, but it
held fast. The feeling of strangeness had passed, but fear rose in him at
Kulgan’s silence. He looked about for something to force the door and, finding
nothing, ran back down the stairs.
He hurried into the long hall. Here guards in Crydee livery stood at
their post. He shouted at the two nearest, “You two, come with me. My master is
in trouble.” Without hesitation they followed the boy up the stairs, their
boots pounding on the stone steps.
When they reached the magician’s door, Pug said, “Break it down!”
They quickly put aside spear and shield and leaned their shoulders against the
door. Once, twice, three times they heaved, and with a protesting groan the
timbers cracked around the lock plate. One last shove and the door flew open.
The guards stopped themselves from falling through the door and stepped back,
amazement and confusion on their faces. Pug shouldered between them and looked
into the room.
On the floor lay Kulgan, unconscious. His blue robes were
disheveled, and one arm was thrown across his face, as if in protection. Two
feet from him, where his study table should have stood, hung a shimmering void.
Pug stared at the place in the air. A large sphere of grey that was not quite
grey shimmered with traces of a broken spectrum. He could not see through it,
but there was nothing solid there. Coming out of the grey space was a pair of
human arms, reaching toward the magician. When they touched the material of his
robe, they stopped and fingered the cloth. As if a decision had been made, they
traveled over his body, until they identified Kulgan’s arm. The hands took hold
of him and tried to lift his arm into the void. Pug stood in horror, for
whoever or whatever was on the other side of the void was trying to pull the
stout magician up and through. Another pair of hands reached through and picked
up the magician’s arm next to where the first held him, and Kulgan was being
pulled toward the void.
Pug turned and grabbed one of the spears from against the wall where
the shocked guards had placed them. Before either of the men-at-arms could act,
he leveled it at the grey spot and threw.
The spear flew across the ten feet that separated them from Kulgan
and disappeared into the void. A brief second after, the arms dropped Kulgan
and withdrew. Suddenly the grey void blinked out of existence, with a clap of
air rushing in to fill it. Pug ran to Kulgan’s side and knelt by his master.
The magician was breathing, but his face was white and beaded with
sweat. His skin felt cold and clammy. Pug ran to Kulgan’s sleeping pallet and
pulled off a blanket. As he was covering the magician, he shouted at the
guards, “Get Father Tully.”
Pug and Tomas sat up that night, unable to sleep. Tully had tended
to the magician, giving a favorable prognosis. Kulgan was in shock but would
recover in a day or two.
Duke Borric had questioned Pug and the guards on what they had
witnessed, and now the castle was in an uproar. All the guards had been turned
out, and patrols to the outlying areas of the Duchy had been doubled. The Duke
still did not know what the connection between the appearance of the ship and
the strange manifestation in the magician’s quarters was, but he was taking no
chances with the safety of his realm. All along the walls of the castle,
torches burned, and guards had been sent to Longpoint lighthouse and the town
below.
Tomas sat next to Pug on a bench in Princess Carlme’s garden, one of
the few quiet places in the castle. Tomas looked thoughtfully at Pug. “I expect
that these Tsurani people are coming.”
Pub ran a hand through his hair. “We don’t know that.”
Tomas sounded tired. “I just have a feeling.”
Pug nodded. “We’ll know tomorrow when Kulgan can tell us what
happened.”
Tomas looked out toward the wall. “I’ve never seen it so strange
around here. Not even when the Dark Brotherhood and the goblins attacked back
when we were little, remember?”
Pug nodded, silent for a moment, then said, “We knew what we were
facing then. The dark elves have been attacking castles on and off as far back
as anyone can remember. And goblins . . . well, they’re goblins.”
They sat in silence for a long time; then the sound of boots on the
pavement announced someone coming Swordmaster Fannon, in chainmail and tabard,
halted before them. “What? Up so late? You should both be abed.” The old
fighter turned to survey the castle walls. “There are many who find themselves
unable to sleep this night.” He turned his attention back to the boys. “Tomas,
a soldier needs to learn the knack of taking sleep whenever he can find it, for
there are many long days when there is none. And you, Squire Pug, should be
asleep as well. Now, why don’t you try to rest yourselves?”
The boys nodded, bade the Swordmaster good night, and left. The
grey-haired commander of the Duke’s guard watched them go and stood quietly in
the little garden for a time, alone with his own disquieting thoughts.
Pug was awakened by the sound of footsteps passing his door. He
quickly pulled on trousers and tunic and hurried up the steps to Kulgan’s room.
Passing the hastily replaced door, he found the Duke and Father Tully standing
over Kulgan’s sleeping pallet. Pug heard his master’s voice, sounding feeble,
as he complained about being kept abed. “I tell you, I’m fine,” Kulgan
insisted. “Just let me walk about a bit, and I’ll be back to normal in no
time.”
Tully, still sounding weary, said, “Back on your back, you mean. You
sustained a nasty jolt, Kulgan. Whatever it was that knocked you unconscious
packed no small wallop. You were lucky, it could have been much worse.”
Kulgan noticed Pug, who stood quietly at the door, not wishing to
disturb anyone. “Ha, Pug,” he said, his voice regaining some of its usual
volume. “Come in, come in. I understand I have you to thank for not taking an
unexpected journey with unknown companions.”
Pug smiled, for Kulgan seemed his old, jovial self, in spite of his
wan appearance. “I really did nothing, sir. I just felt that something was not
right, and acted.”
“Acted quickly and well,” said the Duke with a smile. “The boy is
again responsible for the well-being of one of my household. At this rate I may
have to grant him the title Defender of the Ducal Household.”
Pug smiled, pleased with the Duke’s praise. Borric turned to the
magician. “Well, seeing as you are full of fire, I think we should have a talk
about yesterday. Are you well enough?”
The question brought an irritated look from Kulgan. “Of course I’m
well enough. That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you for the last ten
minutes.” Kulgan started to rise from the bed, but as dizziness overtook him,
Tully put a restraining hand on his shoulder, guiding him back to the large
pile of pillows he had been resting on.
“You can talk here quite well enough, thank you. Now, stay in bed.”
Kulgan made no protest. He shortly felt better and said, “Fine, but
hand me my pipe, will you, please?”
Pug fetched Kulgan’s pipe and pouch of tabac and, as the magician
tamped down the bowl, a long burning taper from the fire pot. Kulgan lit his
pipe and, when it was burning to his satisfaction, lay back with a contented
look on his face. “Now,” he said, “where do we begin?”
The Duke quickly filled him in on what Tully had revealed, with the
priest adding a few details the Duke overlooked. When they were done, Kulgan
nodded “Your assumption about the origin of these people is likely. I suspected
the possibility when I saw the artifacts brought from the ship, and the events
in this room yesterday bear me out.” He paused for a moment, organizing his
thoughts. “The scroll was a personal letter from a magician of these people,
the Tsurani, to his wife, but it was also more. The seal was magically endowed
to force the reader to meant a spell contained at the end of the message. It is
a remarkable spell enabling anyone, whether or not they can normally read, to
read the scroll.”
The Duke said, “This is a strange thing.”
Tully said, “It’s astonishing.”
“The concepts involved are completely new to me,” agreed Kulgan.
“Anyway, I had neutralized that spell so I could read the letter without fear
of magical traps, common to private messages written by magicians. The language
was of course strange, and I employed a spell from another scroll to translate
it. Even understanding the language through that spell, I don’t fully
understand everything discussed.
“A magician named Fanatha was traveling by ship to a city on his
homeworld. Several days out to sea, they were struck by a severe storm. The
ship lost its mast, and many of the crew were washed overboard. The magician
took a brief time to pen the scroll—it was written in a hasty hand—and cast the
spells upon it. It seems this man could have left the ship at any time and
returned to his home or some other place of safety, but was enjoined from doing
so by his concern for the ship and its cargo. I am not clear on this point, but
the tone of the letter suggested that risking his life for the others on the
ship was somehow unusual. Another puzzling thing was a mention of his duty to
someone he called the ‘Warlord.’ I may be reaching for straws, but the tone
leads me to think this was a matter of honor or a promise, not some personal
duty. In any event he penned the note, sealed it, and was then going to
undertake to move the ship magically.”
Tully shook his head in disbelief. “Incredible.”
“And as we understand magic, impossible,” Kulgan added excitedly.
Pug noticed that the magician’s professional interest was not shared
by the Duke, who looked openly troubled. The boy remembered Tully’s comments on
what magic of that magnitude meant if these people were to invade the Kingdom.
The magician continued, “These people possess powers about which we can only
speculate. The magician was very clear on a number of points—his ability to
compress so many ideas into so short a message shows an unusually organized
mind.
“He took great pains to reassure his wife he would do everything in
his power to return. He referred to opening a rift to the ‘new world,
because—and I don’t fully understand this—a bridge was already established, and
some device he possessed lacked some
capacity or another to move the ship on his own world. From all indications, it
was a most desperate gamble. He placed a second spell on the scroll—and this is
what caught me in the end. I thought by neutralizing the first spell I had
countered the second also, but I was in error. The second spell was designed to
activate as soon as someone had finished reading the scroll aloud, another
unheard-of piece of magical art. The spell caused an other of these rifts to
open, so the message would be transported to a place called ‘the Assembly’ and
from there to his wife. I was nearly caught in the rift with the message.”
Pug stepped forward. Without thinking, he blurted, “Then those hands
might have been his friends trying to find him.”
Kulgan looked at his apprentice and nodded. “A possibility In any
event, we can derive much from this episode. These Tsurani have the ability to
control magic that we can only hint at in our speculation. We know a little
about the occurrences of rifts, and nothing of their nature.”
The Duke looked surprised. “Please explain.”
Kulgan drew deep on his pipe, then said, “Magic, by its nature, is
unstable. Occasionally a spell will become warped—why, we don’t know —to such a
degree, it . . . tears at the very fabric of the world. For a brief time a rift
occurs, and a passage is formed, goingsomewhere.
Little else is known about such occurrences, except that they involve
tremendous releases of energy.”
Tully said, “There are theories, but no one understands why every so
often a spell, or magic device, suddenly explodes in this fashion and why this
instability in reality is created. There have been several occurrences like
this, but we have only secondhand observations to go on. Those who witnessed
the creation of these rifts died or vanished.”
Kulgan picked up the narrative again “It’s considered axiomatic that
they were destroyed along with anything within several feet of the rift.”
He looked thoughtful for a moment. “By rights I should have been
killed when that rift appeared in my study.”
The Duke interrupted. “From your description, these rifts, as you
call them, are dangerous.”
Kulgan nodded. “Unpredictable, as well. They are one of the most
uncontrollable forces ever discovered. If these people know how to manufacture
them and control them as well, to act as a gate between worlds, and can pass
through them safely, then they have arts of the most powerful sort.”
Tully said, “We’ve suspected something of the nature of rifts
before, but this is the first time we’ve had anything remotely like hard
evidence.”
Kulgan said, “Bah! Strange people and unknown objects have appeared
suddenly from time to time over the years, Tully. This would certainly explain
where they came from.”
Tully appeared unwilling to concede the point. “Theory only, Kulgan,
not proof. The people have all been dead, and the devices . . . no one
understands the two or three that were not burned and twisted beyond
recognition.”
Kulgan smiled “Really? What about the man who appeared twenty years
ago in Salador?” To the Duke he said, “This man spoke no language known and was
dressed in the strangest fashion.”
Tully looked down his nose at Kulgan. “He was also hopelessly mad
and never could speak a word that could be understood. The temples invested
much time on him—”
Borric paled. “Gods! A nation of warriors, with armies many times
the size of our own, who have access to our world at will. Let us hope they
have not turned their eyes toward the Kingdom.”
Kulgan nodded and blew a puff of smoke. “As yet, we have not heard
of any other appearances of these people, and we may not have to fear them, but
I have a feeling . . .” He left the thought unfinished for a moment. He turned
a little to one side, easing some minor discomfort, then said, “It may be
nothing, but a reference to a bridge in the message troubles me. It smacks of a
permanent way between the worlds already in existence. I hope I’m wrong.” The
sound of feet pounding up the stairs made them turn. A guard hurried in and
came to attention before the Duke, handing him a small paper.
The Duke dismissed the man and opened the folded paper. He read it
quickly, then handed it to Tully. “I sent fast riders to the elves and the
dwarves, with pigeons to carry replies. The Elf Queen sends word that she is
already riding to Crydee and will be here in two days’ time.”
Tully shook his head. “As long as I have lived, I have never heard
of the Lady Aglaranna leaving Elvandar. This sets my bones cold.”
Kulgan said, “Things must be approaching a serious turn for her to
come here. I hope I am wrong, but think that we are not the only ones to have
news of these Tsurani.”
Silence descended over the room, and Pug was struck by a feeling of
hopelessness. He shook it off, but its echoes followed him for days.
6
ELFCOUNSEL
Pug leaned out the window.
Despite the driving rain that had come in early morning, the
courtyard was in an uproar. Besides the necessary preparations for any
important visit, there was the added novelty of these visitors being elves.
Even the infrequent elf messenger from Queen Aglaranna was the object of much
curiosity when one appeared at the castle, for rarely did the elves venture
south of the river Crydee. The elves lived apart from the society of men, and
their ways were thought strange and magical. They had lived in these lands long
before the coming of men to the West, and there was an unvoiced agreement that,
in spite of any claims made by the Kingdom, they were a free people.
A cough caused Pug to turn and see Kulgan sitting over a large tome.
The magician indicated with a glance that the boy should return to his studies.
Pug closed the window shutters and sat on his pallet. Kulgan said, “There will
be ample time for you to gawk at elves, boy, in a few hours. Then there will be
little time for studies. You must learn to make the best use of what time you
have.”
Fantus scrambled over to place his head in the boy’s lap. Pug
scratched absently behind an eye ridge as he picked up a book and started to
read. Kulgan had given Pug the task of formulating shared qualities of spells as
described by different magicians, in the hope it would deepen his understanding
of the nature of magic.
Kulgan was of the opinion that Pug’s spells with the trolls had been
the result of the tremendous stress of the moment. He hoped the study of other
magicians’ research might help the boy break through the barriers that held him
back in his studies. The book work also proved fascinating to Pug, and his
reading had improved greatly.
Pug glanced at his master, who was reading while puffing great
clouds of smoke from his long pipe. Kulgan showed no signs of the weakness of
the day before and had insisted the boy use these hours to study, rather than
sit idly by waiting for the arrival of the Elf Queen and her court.
A few minutes later, Pug’s eyes began to sting from the pungent
smoke, and he turned back to the window and pushed open the shutters. “Kulgan?”
“Yes, Pug?”
“It would be much nicer working with you if we could somehow keep
the fire going for warmth but move the smoke outside.” Between the smoking fire
pot and the magician’s pipe, the room was thick with a blue-white haze.
The magician laughed loudly. “Right you are.” He closed his eyes for
a moment, his hands flew in a furious motion, and he softly mouthed a series of
incantations. Soon he was holding a large sphere of white and grey smoke, which
he took to the window and tossed outside, leaving the room fresh and clear.
Pug shook his head, laughing. “Thank you, Kulgan. But I had a more
mundane solution in mind. What do you think of making a chimney for the fire
pot?”
“Not possible, Pug,” Kulgan said, sitting down. He pointed to the
wall. “If one had been installed when the tower was built, fine. But to try to
remove the stones from the tower, from here past my room, and up to the roof
would be difficult, not to mention costly.”
“I wasn’t thinking of a chimney in the wall, Kulgan. You know how
the forge in the smithy has a stone hood taking the heat and smoke through the
roof?” The magician nodded. “Well, if I could have a metal one fashioned by the
smith, and a metal chimney coming from the hood to carry the smoke away, it
would work the same way, wouldn’t it?”
Kulgan pondered this for a moment. “I don’t see why it wouldn’t. But
where would you put this chimney?”
“There.” Pug pointed to two stones above and to the left of the
window. They had been ill fitted when the tower was built, and now there was a
large crack between them that allowed the wind to come howling into the room
“This stone could be taken out,” he said, indicating the leftmost one. “I checked
it and it’s loose. The chimney could come from above the fire pot, bend
here”—he pointed to a spot in the air above the pot and level with the
stone—”and come out here. If we covered the space around it, it would keep the
wind out.”
Kulgan looked impressed. “It’s a novel idea, Pug. It might work.
I’ll speak to the smith in the morning and get his opinion on the matter. I
wonder that no one thought of it before.”
Feeling pleased with himself for having thought of the chimney, Pug
resumed his studies. He reread a passage that had caught his eye before,
puzzling over an ambiguity. Finally he looked up at the magician and said,
“Kulgan.”
“Yes, Pug?” he answered, looking up from his book.
“Here it is again. Magician Lewton uses the same cantrip here as Marsus
did, to baffle the effects of the spell upon the caster, directing it to an
external target.” Placing the large tome down so as not to lose his place, he
picked up another. “But here Dorcas writes that the use of this cantrip blunts
the spell, increasing the chance that it will not work. How can there be so
much disagreement over the nature of this single construction?”
Kulgan narrowed his gaze a moment as he regarded his student. Then
he sat back, taking a long pull on his pipe, sending forth a cloud of blue
smoke “It shows what I’ve said before, lad. Despite any vanity we magicians
might feel about our craft, there’s really very little order or science
involved. Magic is a collection of folk arts and skills passed along from
master to apprentice since the beginning of time. Trial and error, trial and
error is the way. There has never been an attempt to create a system for magic,
with laws and rules and axioms that are well understood and widelv accepted.”
He looked thoughtfully at Pug. “Each of us is like a carpenter, making a table,
but each of us choosing different woods, different types of saws, some using
pegs and dowel, others using nails, another dovetailing joints, some staining,
others not. In the end there’s a table, but the means for making it are not the
same in each case.
“What we have here is most likely an insight about the limits of
each of these venerable sages you study, rather than any sort of prescription
for magic. For Lewton and Marsus, the cantrip aided the construction of the
spell; for Dorcas, it hindered.”
“I understand your example, Kulgan, but I’ll never understand how
these magicians all could do the same thing, but in so many different ways. I
understand that each of them wanted to achieve his end and found a different
means, but there is something missing in the manner they did it.”
Kulgan looked intrigued. “What is missing, Pug?”
The boy looked thoughtful. “I . . . I don’t know. It’s as if I
expect to find something that will tell me, ‘This is the way it must be done,
the only way,’ or something like that. Does that make any sense?”
Kulgan nodded. “I think I know you well enough to understand. You
have a very well-ordered mind, Pug. You understand logic far better than most,
even those much older than yourself. You see things as a system, rather than as
a haphazard collection of events. Perhaps that is part of your trouble.”
Pug’s expression showed his interest in what the magician was saying
Kulgan continued. “Much of what I am trying to teach is based on a system of
logic, cause and effect, but much is not. It is like trying to teach someone to
play the lute. You can show them the fingering of the strings, but that
knowledge alone will not make a great troubadour. It is the art, not the
scholarship, that troubles you.”
“I think I understand, Kulgan.” He sounded dispirited.
Kulgan stood up. “Don’t dwell on it; you are still young, and I have
hope for you yet.” His tone was light, and Pug felt the humor in it.
“Then I am not a complete loss?” he said with a smile.
“Indeed not.” Kulgan looked thoughtfully at his pupil. “In fact, I
have the feeling that someday you may use that logical mind of yours for the
betterment of magic.”
Pug was a little startled. He did not think of himself as one to
accomplish great things.
Shouts came through the window, and Pug hurried to look out. A troop
of guards was running toward the front gate. Pug turned to Kulgan. “The elves
must be coming! The guard is out.”
Kulgan said, “Very well. We are done with study for this day. There
will be no holding you until you get a look at the elves. Run along.”
Pug raced out the door and down the stairs. He took them two at a
time, jumping to the bottom of the tower landing over the last four and hitting
the floor at a full run. He dashed through the kitchen and out the door. As he
rounded the keep to the front courtyard, he found Tomas standing atop a hay
wagon. Pug climbed up next to him, to be better able to see the arrival over
the heads of the curious keep folk gathered around.
Tomas said, “I thought you weren’t coming, thought you’d be locked
away with your books all day.”
Pug said, “I wouldn’t miss this. Elves!”
Tomas playfully dug his elbow into Pug’s side. “Haven’t you had your
fill of excitement for this week?”
Pug threw him a black look. “If you’re so indifferent, why are you
standing in the rain on this wagon?”
Tomas didn’t answer. Instead he pointed. “Look!”
Pug turned to see the guard company snap to attention as riders in
green cloaks entered through the gate. They rode to the main doors of the keep,
where the Duke waited. Pug and Tomas watched in awe, for they rode the most
perfect white horses the boys had ever seen, using no saddle or bridle. The
horses seemed untouched by wetness, and their coats glowed faintly; whether by
some magic, or a trick of the grey afternoon light, Pug couldn’t tell. The
leader rode on an especially grand animal, full seventeen hands in height, with
a long flowing mane and a tail like a plume. The riders reared the mounts in
salute, and an audible intake of breath could be heard from those in the crowd.
“Elf steeds,” said Tomas, in hushed tones. The horses were the
legendary mounts of the elves. Martin Longbow had once told the boys they lived
in hidden, deep glades near Elvandar. It was said they possessed intelligence
and a magic nature, and no human could sit their backs. It was also said that
only one with royal elvish blood could command them to carry riders.
Grooms rushed forward to take the horses, but a musical voice said,
“There is no need.” It came from the first rider, the one mounted on the
greatest steed. She jumped nimbly down, without aid, landing lightly on her
feet, and threw back her hood, revealing a mane of thick reddish hair. Even in
the gloom of the afternoon rain it appeared to be shot through with golden
highlights. She was tall, nearly a match for Borric. She mounted the steps as
the Duke came forward to meet her.
Borric held out his hands and took hers in greeting. “Welcome, my
lady; you do me and my house a great honor.”
The Elf Queen said, “You are most gracious, Lord Borric.” Her voice
was rich and surprisingly clear, able to carry over the crowd so that all in
the courtyard could hear. Pug felt Tomas’s hand clutching his shoulder. He
turned to see a rapt expression on Tomas’s face. “She’s beautiful,” said the
taller boy.
Pug returned his attention to the welcome. He was forced to agree
that the Queen of the elves was indeed beautiful, if not in entirely human
terms. Her eyes were large and a pale blue, nearly luminous in the gloom. Her
face was finely chiseled, with high cheekbones and a strong but not masculine
jaw. Her smile was full, and her teeth shone white between almost-red lips. She
wore a simple circlet of gold around her brow, which held back her hair,
revealing the lobeless, upswept ears that were the hallmark of her race.
The others in her company dismounted, all dressed in rich clothing.
Each tunic was bright with contrasting leggings below. One wore a tunic of deep
russet, another pale yellow with a surcoat of bright green. Some wore purple
sashes, and others crimson hose. Despite the bright colors, these were elegant
and finely made garments, with nothing loud or gaudy about them. There were
eleven riders with the Queen, all similar in appearance, tall, youthful, and
lithe in movement.
The Queen turned from the Duke and said something in her musical
language. The elf steeds reared in salute, then ran through the gate, past the
surprised onlookers. The Duke ushered his guests inside, and soon the crowd
drifted away. Tomas and Pug sat quietly in the rain.
Tomas said, “If I live to be a hundred, I don’t think that I’ll ever
see her like.”
Pug was surprised, for his friend rarely showed such feelings. He
had a brief impulse to chide Tomas over his boyish infatuation, but something
about his companion’s expression made that seem inappropriate. “Come on,” he
said, “we’re getting drenched.”
Tomas followed Pug from the wagon Pug said, “You had better change
into some dry clothing, and see if you can borrow a dry tabard.”
Tomas said, “Why?”
With an evil grin, Pug said, “Oh? Didn’t I tell you? The Duke wants
you to dine with the court. He wants you to tell the Elf Queen what you saw on
the ship.”
Tomas looked as if he were going to break down and run. “Me? Dine in
the great hall?” His face went white. “Talk? To the Queen?”
Pug laughed with glee. “It’s easy. You open your mouth and words
come out.”
Tomas swung a roundhouse at Pug, who ducked under the blow, grabbing
his friend from behind when he spun completely around. Pug had strength in his
arms even if he lacked Tomas’s size, and he easily picked his larger friend off
the ground. Tomas struggled, and soon they were laughing uncontrollably. “Pug,
put me down.”
“Not until you calm down.”
“I’m all right.”
Pug put him down. “What brought that on?”
“Your smug manner, and not telling me until the last minute ‘
“All right. So I’m sorry I waited to tell you. Now what’s the rest
of it?”
Tomas looked uncomfortable, more than was reasonable from the rain.
“I don’t know how to eat with quality folk. I’m afraid I’ll do something
stupid.”
“It’s easy. Just watch me and do what I do. Hold the fork in your
left hand and cut with the knife. Don’t drink from the bowls of water; they’re
to wash with, and use them a lot, because your hands will get greasy from the
rib bones. And make sure you toss the bones over your shoulder to the dogs, and
not on the floor in front of the Duke’s table. And don’t wipe your mouth on
your sleeves, use the tablecloth, that’s what it’s for.”
They walked toward the soldiers’ commons, with Pug giving his friend
instruction on the finer points of court manners. Tomas was impressed at the
wealth of Pug’s knowledge.
Tomas vacillated between looking sick and pained. Each time someone
regarded him, he felt as if he had been found guilty of the most grievous
breach of etiquette and looked sick. Whenever his gaze wandered to the head
table and he caught sight of the Elf Queen, his stomach tied up in knots and he
looked pained.
Pug had arranged for Tomas to sit next to him at one of the more
removed tables from the Duke’s. Pug’s usual place was at Lord Borric’s table,
next to the Princess. He was glad for this chance to be away from her, for she
still showed displeasure with him. Usually she chatted with him about the
thousand little bits of gossip the ladies of the court found so interesting,
but last night she had pointedly ignored him, lavishing all her attention on a
surprised and obviously pleased Roland. Pug found his own reaction puzzling,
relief mixed with a large dose of irritation. While he felt relieved to be free
of her wrath, he found Roland’s fawning upon her a bothersome itch he couldn’t
scratch.
Pug had been troubled by Roland’s hostility toward him of late,
poorly hidden behind stiff manners. He had never been as close to Roland as
Tomas had, but they had never before had cause to be angry with one another.
Roland had always been one of the crowd of boys Pug’s age. He had never hidden
behind his rank when he had cause to be at odds with the common boys, always
standing ready to settle the matter in whatever way proved necessary. And
already being an experienced fighter when he arrived in Crydee, his differences
soon were settled peacefully as often as not. Now there was this dark tension
between Pug and Roland, and Pug found himself wishing he was Tomas’s equal in
fighting; Tomas was the only boy Roland was unable to best with fists, their
one encounter ending quickly with Roland receiving a sound thumping. For as
certain as the sun was rising in the morning, Pug knew a confrontation with the
hotheaded young Squire was quickly approaching. He dreaded it, but knew once it
came, he’d feel relief.
Pug glanced at Tomas, finding his friend lost in his own discomfort.
Pug returned his attention to Carline. He felt overwhelmed by the Princess, but
her allure was tempered by a strange discomfort he felt whenever she was near.
As beautiful as he found her—her black locks and blue eyes igniting some very
uncomfortable flames of imagination—the images were always somehow hollow,
colorless at heart, lacking the amber-and-rose glow such daydreams had
possessed when Carline had been a distant, unapproachable, and unknown figure.
Observing her closely for even as short a time as he had recently made such
idealized musing impossible. She was proving herself to be just too complicated
to fit into simple daydreams. On the whole he found the question of the
Princess troublesome, but seeing her with Roland made him forget his internal
conflicts over her, as a less intellectual, more basic emotion came to the
fore. He was becoming jealous.
Pug sighed, shaking his head as he thought about his own misery at
this moment, ignoring Tomas’s. At least, thought Pug, I’m not alone. To
Roland’s obvious discomfort, Carline was deeply involved at the moment in
conversation with Prince Calin of Elvandar, son of Aglaranna. The Prince seemed
to be the same age as Arutha, or Lyam, but then so did his mother, who appeared
to be in her early twenties. All the elves, except the Queen’s seniormost
adviser, Tathar, were quite young looking, and Tathar looked no older than the
Duke.
When the meal was over, most of the Duke’s court retired. The Duke
rose and offered his arm to Aglaranna and led those who had been ordered to
attend them to his council chamber.
For the third time in two days, the boys found themselves in the Duke’s
council chamber. Pug was more relaxed about being there than before, thanks in
part to the large meal, but Tomas seemed more disturbed than ever. If the
taller boy had spent the hour before dinner staring at the Elf Queen, in these
close quarters he seemed to be looking everywhere but in her direction. Pug
thought Aglaranna noticed Tomas’s behavior and smiled slightly, but he couldn’t
be sure.
The two elves who came with the Queen, Calin and Tathar, went at
once to the side table that held the bowl and the artifacts taken from the
Tsurani soldier. They examined them closely, fascinated by every detail.
The Duke called the meeting to order, and the two elves came to
chairs on either side of the Queen. Pug and Tomas stood by the door as usual.
The Duke said, “We have told you what has occurred as well as we
know, and now you have seen proof with your own eyes. If you think it would be
helpful, the boys can recount the events on the ship.”
The Queen inclined her head, but it was Tathar who spoke. “I would like
to hear the story firsthand, Your Grace.”
Borric motioned for the boys to approach. They stepped forward, and
Tathar said, “Which of you found this outworlder?”
Tomas threw Pug a look that indicated the shorter boy should do the
talking. Pug said, “We both did, sir,” not knowing the proper address for the
elf. Tathar seemed content with the general honorific. Pug recounted the events
of that day, leaving out nothing he could remember. When he had done, Tathar
asked a series of questions, each jogging Pug’s memory, bringing out small
details he had forgotten.
When he was done, Pug stepped back, and Tathar repeated the process
with Tomas Tomas began haltingly, obviously discomfited, and the Elf Queen
bestowed a reassuring smile on him. That only served to make him more
unsettled, and he was soon dismissed.
Tathar’s questions provided more details about the ship, small
things forgotten by the boys: fire buckets filled with sand tossed about the
deck, empty spear-racks, substantiating Arutha’s surmise that it had been,
indeed, a warship.
Tathar leaned back. “We have never heard of such a ship. It is in
many ways like other ships, but not in all ways. We are convinced.”
As if by silent signal, Calin spoke. “Since the death of my
Father-King, I serve as Warleader of Elvandar. It is my duty to supervise the
scouts and patrols that guard our glades. For some time we have been aware that
there were strange occurrences in the great forest, south of the river Crydee.
Several times our runners have found tracks made by men, in isolated parts of
the forest. They have been found as near as the borders of Elvandar, and as far
as the North Pass near Stone Mountain.
“Our scouts have tried for weeks to find these men, but only tracks
could be seen. There were none of the usual things that would be expected of a
scouting or raiding party. These people were taking great care to disguise
their presence. Had they not passed so close to Elvandar, they might have
remained undetected, but no one may intrude near our home and go unnoticed.
“Several days ago, one of our scouts sighted a band of strangers
passing the river, near the edge of our forests heading in the direction of the
North Pass. He followed for a half day’s march, then lost them.”
Fannon raised his eyebrows. “An elven tracker lost them?”
Calin inclined his head slightly “Not by his lack of skill. They
simply entered a thick glade and never appeared on the other side. He followed
their tracks up to the point where they vanished.”
Lyam said, “I think we know now where they went.” He looked
uncommonly somber, resembling his father more than usual.
Calin continued. “Four days before your message arrived, I led a
patrol that sighted a band near the place of last sighting. They were short and
stocky men, without beards. Some were fair and others dark. There were ten of
them, and they moved through the forest with little ease; the slightest sound
put them on guard. But with all their caution, they still had no idea they were
being tracked.
“They all wore armor of bright colors, reds and blues, some green,
others yellow, save one in black robes. They carried swords like the one on the
table and others without the serration, round shields, and strange bows, short
and curved in an odd doubled-back way.”
Algon sat forward. “They’re recurved bows, like the ones used by
Keshian dog-soldiers.”
Calin spread his hands. “Kesh has long been gone from these lands,
and when we knew the Empire, they used simple bows of yew or ash.”
Algon interrupted in excited tones. “They have a way, secret to
them, of fashioning such bows from wood and animal horn. They are small, but
possess great power, though not as much as the longbow. Their range is
surprisingly—”
Borric cleared his throat pointedly, being unwilling to let the
Horse-master indulge himself in his preoccupation with weaponry. “If His
Highness will please continue?”
Algon sat back, blushing furiously, and Calin said, “I tracked them
for two days. They stopped and made cold camp at night and took great care not
to leave signs of their passing. All food scraps and body wastes were gathered
together in a sack and carried by one of their band. They moved carefully, but
were easy for us to follow.
“When they came to the edge of the forest, near the mouth of North
Pass, they made marks upon a parchment as they had several times during their
trek. Then the one in black activated some strange device, and they vanished.”
There was a stir from the Duke’s company Kulgan especially looked disturbed.
Calin paused. “The thing that was most strange, however, was their
language, for their speech was unlike any we know. They spoke in hushed tones,
but we could hear them, and their words were without meaning.”
The Queen then spoke. “Hearing this, I became alarmed, for these
outworlders are clearly mapping the West, ranging freely through the great
forest, the hills of Stone Mountain, and now the coasts of the Kingdom. Even as
we prepared to send you word, the reports of these outworlders became more
frequent. Several more bands were seen in the area of the North Pass.”
Arutha sat forward, resting his arms on the table. “If they cross
the North Pass, they will discover the wav to Yabon, and the Free Cities. The
snows will have started to fall in the mountains, and they may discover we are
effectively isolated from aid during the winter.”
For a moment alarm flickered on the Duke’s face, betraying his stoic
demeanor. He regained his composure and said, “There is still the South Pass,
and they may not have mapped that far. If they were in that area, the dwarves
would most likely have seen signs of them, as the villages of the Grey Towers
are more widely scattered than those of Stone Mountain.”
“Lord Borric,” said Aglaranna, “I would never have ventured from
Elvandar if I had not thought the situation critical. From what you have told
us of the outworld Empire, if they are as powerful as you say, then I fear for
all the free peoples of the West. While the elves have little love for the
Kingdom as such, we respect those of the Crydee, for you have ever been
honorable men and have never sought to extend your realm into our lands. We
would ally with you should these outworlders come for conquest.”
Borric sat quietly for a moment. “I thank the Lady of Elvandar for
the aid of the elven folk should war come. We are also in your debt for your
counsel, for now we can act. Had we not known of these happenings in the great
forests, we would likely have given the aliens more time for whatever trouble
they are preparing.” He paused again, as if considering his next words. “And I
am convinced that these Tsurani plan us ill. Scouting an alien and strange land
I could see, trying to determine the nature and temper of the people who live
there, but extensive mapping by warriors can only be a prelude to invasion.”
Kulgan sounded fatigued as he said, “They most likely will come with
a mighty host.”
Tully shook his head. “Perhaps not.” All eyes turned to him as he
said, “I am not so certain. Much of what I read in Xomich’s mind was confused,
but there is something about this Empire of Tsuranuanni that makes it unlike
any nation we know of; there is something very alien about their sense of duty
and alliances. I can’t tell you how I know, but I suspect they may choose to
test us first, with but a small part of their might. It’s as if their
attentions are elsewhere, and we’re an afterthought.” He shook his head in
admitted confusion. “I have this sense, nothing more.”
The Duke sat upright, a commanding tone coming into his voice. “We
will act. I will send messages to Duke Brucal of Yabon, and again to Stone
Mountain and the Grey Towers.”
Aglaranna said, “It would be good to hear what the dwarven folk
know.”
Borric said, “I had hoped for word by now, but our messengers have
not returned, nor have the pigeons they carry.”
Lyam said, “Hawks, perhaps. The pigeons are not always reliable, or
perhaps the messengers never reached the dwarves.”
Borric turned to Calin. “It has been forty years since the siege of
Carse, and we have had little traffic with the dwarves since Who commands the
dwarven clans now?”
The Elf Prince said, “As then. Stone Mountain is under the banner of
Harthorn, of Hogar’s line, at village Delmona. The Grey Towers rally to the
banner of Dolgan, of Thohn’s line, at village Caldara.”
“Both are known to me, though I was but a boy when they raised the
Dark Brothers’ siege at Carse,” said Borric “They will prove fierce allies if
trouble comes.”
Arutha said, “What of the Free Cities, and the Prince in Krondor?”
Borric sat back. “I must think on that, for there are problems in
the East, or so I have word. I will give thought to the matter this night.” He
stood. “I thank you all for this counsel Return to your quarters and avail
yourselves of rest and refreshments. I will ask you to consider plans for
dealing with the invaders, should they come, and we will meet again tomorrow.”
As the Elf Queen rose, he offered her his arm, then escorted her
through the doors that Tomas and Pug held open. The boys were the last to exit.
Fannon took Tomas in tow, leading him to the soldiers’ commons, while Kulgan
stood outside the hall with Tully and the two elven advisers.
The magician turned to his apprentice. “Pug, Prince Calin expressed
an interest in your small library of magic books. Would you please show them to
him?”
Pug said he would and led the Prince up the stairs to his door and
opened it for him. Calin stepped through, and Pug followed Fantus was asleep
and woke with a start. He threw the elf a distrustful look.
Calin
slowly crossed over to the drake and spoke a few soft words in a language that
Pug didn’t understand Fantus lost his nervousness and stretched forth his neck
to allow the Prince to scratch his head.
After a moment the drake looked expectantly to Pug. Pug said, “Yes,
dinner is over. The kitchen will be full of scraps.” Fantus moved to the window
with a wolfish grin and used his snout to push it open. With a snap of his
wings he was out, gliding toward the kitchen.
Pug offered Calin a stool, but the Prince said, “Thank you, but your
chairs and stools are of little comfort to my kind. I will just sit on the
floor, with your leave. You have a most unusual pet, Squire Pug.” He gave Pug a
small smile. Pug was a little uncomfortable hosting the Elf Prince in his poor
room, but the elf’s manner was such that the boy started to relax.
“Fantus is less a pet than a permanent guest. He has a mind of his
own. It is not unusual for him to disappear for weeks at a time, now and again,
but mostly he stays here. He must eat outside the kitchen now that Meecham has
gone.”
Calin inquired who Meecham was. Pug explained, adding, “Kulgan has
sent him over the mountains to Bordon, with some of the Duke’s guards, before
the North Pass is snowed in. He didn’t say why he was going, Highness.”
Calin looked at one of the boy’s books. “I prefer to be called
Calin, Pug.”
Pug nodded, pleased. “Calin, what do you think the Duke has in
mind?”
The elf gave him an enigmatic smile. “The Duke will reveal his own
plans, I think. My guess is that Meecham is preparing the way should the Duke
choose to journey east. You will most probably know on the morrow.” He held up
the book he had glanced at. “Did you find this interesting?”
Pug leaned over and read the title. “Dorcas’s Treatise on the
Animation of Objects? Yes, though it seemed a little unclear.”
“A fair judgment. Dorcas was an unclear man, or at least I found him
so.”
Pug started. “But Dorcas died thirty years ago.”
Calin smiled broadly, showing even white teeth. His pale eyes shone
in the lantern light. “Then you know little of elven lore?”
“Little,” Pug agreed. “You are the first elf I have ever spoken
with, though I may have seen another elf once, when I was very little. I’m not
sure.” Calin tossed aside the book. “I know only what Martin Longbow has told
me, that you can somehow speak with animals, and some spirits. That you live in
Elvandar and the surrounding elven forests, and that you stay among your own
kind mostly.”
The elf laughed, a soft, melodic sound. “Nearly all true. Knowing
friend Longbow, I wager some of the tales were colorful, for while he is not a
deceiving man, he has an elf’s humor.” Pug’s expression showed he did not
understand. “We live a very long time by your standards. We learn to appreciate
the humor in the world, often finding amusement in places where men find
little. Or you can call it simply a different way of looking at life. Martin
has learned this from us, I think.”
Pug nodded. “Mocking eyes.”
Calin raised an eyebrow in question. Pug explained, “Many people
here find Martin difficult to be with. Different, somehow. I once heard a
soldier say he had mocking eyes.”
Calin sighed. “Life has been difficult for Martin. He was left on
his own at an early age. The Monks of Silban are good, kindly men, but ill
equipped to raise a boy. Martin lived in the woods like a wild thing when he
could flee his tutors. I found him one day, fighting with two of our
children—we are not very much different from men when very young. Over the
years he has grown to be one of the few humans who is free to come to Elvandar
at will. He is a valued friend. But I think he bears a special burden of
loneliness, not being fully in the world of elves nor of men, but partially in
both.”
Pug saw Martin in a new light and resolved to attempt to know the
Huntmaster better. Returning to the original topic, he said, “Is what he said
true?”
Calin nodded “In some respects. We can speak to animals only as men
do, in tones to make them easy, though we are better at it than most humans,
for we read the moods of wild things more readily. Martin has some of this
knack. We do not, however, speak with spirits. There are creatures we know whom
humans consider spirits—dryads, sprites, pixies—but they are natural beings who
live near our magic.”
Pug’s interest was piqued. “Your magic?”
“Ours is a magic that is part of our being, strongest in Elvandar.
It is a heritage ages old, allowing us to live at peace within our forests.
There we work as others do, hunting, tending our gardens, celebrating our joys,
teaching our young. Time passes slowly in Elvandar, for it is an ageless place.
That is why I can remember speaking with Dorcas, for in spite of my youthful
appearance, I am over a hundred years old.”
“A hundred.” Pug shook his head. “Poor Tomas, he was distressed to
hear you were the Queen’s son. Now he will be desolate.”
Calin inclined his head, a half-smile playing across his face “The
lad who was with us in the council hall?”
Pug nodded. Calin said, “It is not the first time my Mother-Queen
has had such an effect upon a human, though older men can mask the effect with
more ease.”
“You don’t mind?” asked Pug, feeling protective toward his friend.
“No, Pug, of course not. All in Elvandar love the Queen, and it is
acknowledged her beauty is unsurpassed. I find it not surprising your friend is
smitten. Since my Father-King passed, more than one bold noble of your race has
come to press his suit for Aglaranna’s hand. Now her mourning is at an end, and
she may take another should she wish. That it would be one of your race is
unlikely, for while a few such marriages have been made, they are very rare,
and tend to be sad things at the end for our kind. She will live many more
human life spans, the gods willing.”
Calin looked around the room, then added, “It is likely our friend
Tomas will outgrow his feelings for the great lady of the elves. Much as your
Princess will change her feelings toward you, I would think.”
Pug felt embarrassed. He had been curious as to what Carline and the
Elf Prince had spoken about during dinner, but had been uncomfortable asking.
“I noticed you spoke with her at great length.”
“I had expected to meet a hero of seven feet in height, with
lightning dancing around his shoulders. It seems you slew a score of trolls
with a cast of your hand.”
Pug blushed. “It was only two, and mostly by accident.”
Calin’s eyebrows shot up. “Even two is an accomplishment. I had
thought the girl guilty of a flight of fancy. I would like to hear the story.”
Pug told him what had happened. When he was done, Calin said, “It is
an unusual tale, Pug. I know little of human magic, but I do know enough to
think that what you did was as strange as Kulgan said. Elf magic is far
different from human, but we understand ours better than you understand your
own. Never have I heard of such an occurrence, but I can share this with you.
Occasionally, at times of great need, an inner call can be made, bringing forth
powers that lay dormant, deep within.”
Pug said, “I have thought as much, though it would be nice to
understand a little better what happened.”
“That may come in time.”
Pug looked at his guest and sighed deeply. “I wish I could
understand Carline, as well.”
Calin shrugged and smiled “Who can understand another’s mind? I
think for some time to come you will be the object of her attention. Then, it
may be, another will distract her, perhaps young Squire Roland. He seems held
in thrall by her.”
Pug snorted. “Roland! That bother.”
Calin smiled appreciatively. “Then you are fond of the Princess?”
Pug looked upward, as if seeking guidance from some higher source “I
do like her,” he admitted with a heavy sigh. “But I don’t know if I care for
her that special way. Sometimes I think I do—especially when I see Roland
fawning over her—but other times I don’t. She makes it very hard for me to
think clearly, and I always seem to say the wrong things to her.”
“Unlike Squire Roland,” prompted Calin.
Pug nodded. “He’s court born and bred. He knows all the right things
to say.” Pug leaned back on his elbows andsighed wistfully. “I guess I’m just
bothered by him out of envy as much as anything. He makes me feel like an
ill-mannered clod with great lumps of stone for hands and tree stumps for
feet.”
Calin nodded understandingly. “I don’t count myself an expert in all
the ways of your people, Pug, but I’ve spent enough time with humans to know
that you choose how you feel; Roland makes you feel clumsy only because you let
him.
“I would hazard a guess young Roland might feel much the same way
when your positions are reversed. The faults we see in others never seem as
dreadful as those we see in ourselves. Roland might envy your direct speech and
honest manner.
“In any event, what you or Roland do will have little effect on the
Princess so long as she’s determined to have her own way. She has romanticized
you in much the same manner your friend has our Queen. Short of you becoming a
hopeless boor, she will not be shaken from this attitude until she is ready. I
think she has you in mind as her future consort.”
Pug gaped for a moment, then said, “Consort?”
Calin smiled. “The young are often overly concerned with matters to
be settled in later years. I suspect her determination in the matter is as much
a result of your reluctance as from a true appreciation of your worth. She,
like many children, simply wants what she can’t have.” In a friendly tone he
added, “Time will decide the issue.”
Pug leaned forward, a worried expression on his face. “Oh, my, I
have made a hash of things. Half the keep boys think themselves in love with
the Princess. If they only knew how terrifying the real thing can be.” He
closed his eyes, squeezing them tightly shut a moment “My head aches. I thought
she and Roland . . .”
Calin said, “He may be but a tool to provoke your interest. Sadly,
that seems to have resulted in bad feelings between you.”
Pug nodded slowly. “I think so. Roland is a good enough sort on the
whole; we’ve been friends for the most part. But since I was elevated in rank,
he’s been openly hostile. I try to ignore it, but it gets under my skin after a
while. Maybe I should try to talk to him.”
“That would prove wise, I think. But don’t be surprised if he is not
receptive to your words. He is most certainly caught up in her spell.”
Pug was getting a headache from the topic, and the mention of spells
made him ask, “Would you tell me more about elven magic?”
“Our magic is ancient. It is part of what we are and in what we
create. Elven boots can make even a human silent when walking, and elven bows
are better able to strike the mark, for that is the nature of our magic. It is
vested in ourselves, our forests, our creations. It can sometimes be managed,
subtly by those who fully understand it . . . Spellweavers, such as Tathar. But
this is not easily done, for our magic resists manipulation. It is more like
air than anything, always surrounding us, yet unseen. But like air, which can
be felt when the wind blows, it has substance. Our forests are called enchanted
by men, for so long have we dwelled there, our magic has created the mystery of
Elvandar. All who dwell there are at peace. No one may enter Elvandar
uninvited, save by mighty arts, and even the distant boundaries of the elven
forests cause unease in those who enter with evil intent. It has not always
been so; in ages past we shared our lot with others, the moredhel, those you
call the Brotherhood of the Dark Path. Since the great break, when we drove
them from our forests, Elvandar has been changing, becoming more our place, our
home, our essence.”
Pug said, “Are the Brothers of the Dark Path truly cousin to the
elves?”
Calin’s eyes grew hooded. He paused for a moment, then said, “We
speak little of such things, for there is much we wish were not true. I can
tell you this: there is a bond between the moredhel, whom you call the
Brotherhood, and my people, though ancient and long strained. We wish it were
not so, but they are true cousins to us. Once in a great while one comes back
to us, what we call Returning.” He looked as if the topic were making him very
uncomfortable.
Pug said, “I’m sorry if—”
Calin waved away the apology. “Curiosity is nothing to apologize for
in a student, Pug. I just would rather not say more on this subject.”
They spoke late into the night, of many things. Pug was fascinated
by the Elf Prince and was flattered so many things he said seemed to be of
interest to Calin.
At last Calin said, “I should retire. Though I need little rest, I
do need some. And I think you do as well.”
Pug rose and said, “Thank you for telling me so much.” Then he
smiled, half in embarrassment. “And for talking to me about the Princess.”
“You needed to talk.”
Pug led Calin to the long hall, where a servant showed him to his
quarters. Pug returned to his room and lay down for sleep, rejoined by a damp
Fantus, who snorted in indignation at having to fly through the ram. Fantus was
soon asleep Pug, however, lay staring at the flickering light from his fire pot
that danced on the ceiling, unable to call up sleep. He tried to put the tales
of strange warriors out of his mind, but images of brightly clad fighters
stalking through the forests of the westlands made sleep impossible.
There was a somber mood throughout Castle Crydee the next morning.
The servants’ gossip had spread the news about the Tsurani, though the details
were lacking. Everyone went about his duties with one ear open for a tidbit of
speculation on what the Duke was going to do. Everyone was agreed to one thing:
Borric conDoin, Duke of Crydee, was not a man to sit idly by waiting. Something
would be done, and soon.
Pug sat atop a bale of hay, watching Tomas practice with a sword,
swinging at a pell post, hacking backhand, then forehand, over and over. His
blows were halfhearted, and finally he threw his sword down with disgust. “I’m
not accomplishing a thing.” He walked over and sat next to Pug. “I wonder what
they’re talking about.”
Pug shrugged. “They” were the Duke’s council; today the boys had not
been asked to attend, and the last four hours had passed slowly.
Abruptly the courtyard became busy as servants began to rush toward
the front gate. “Come on,” said Tomas Pug jumped off the bale and followed his
friend.
They rounded the keep in time to see the guards turning out as they
had the day before. It was colder than yesterday, but there was no rain. The
boys climbed on the same wagon, and Tomas shivered. “I think the snows will
come early this year. Maybe tomorrow.”
“If they do, it will be the earliest snowfall in memory. You should
have worn your cloak Now you’re all sweaty from the drill, and the air is
chilling you.”
Tomas looked pained. “Gods, you sound like my mother.”
Pug mimicked an exasperated manner. In a tone that was high-pitched
and nasal, he said, “And don’t come running to me when you’re all blue with
chill, and coughing and sneezing, looking for comfort, for you’ll find none
here, Tomas Megarson.”
Tomas grinned. “Now you sound exactly like her.”
They turned at the sound of the great doors opening. The Duke and
Elf Queen led the other guests from the central keep, the Duke holding the
Queen’s hand in a parting gesture of friendship. Then the Queen placed her hand
to her mouth and sang out a musical series of words, not loud, but carrying
over the noise of the crowd. The servants who were standing in the court became
silent, and soon the sound of hoof-beats could be heard outside the castle.
Twelve white horses ran through the gates and reared up in greeting
to the Elf Queen. The elves quickly mounted, each springing up on an elf
steed’s back without assistance. They raised their hands in salute to the Duke,
then turned and raced out the gate.
For a few minutes after they were gone, the crowd stood around, as
if loath to admit that they had seen their last of the elves, probably their
last in this lifetime. Slowly they began to drift back to work.
Tomas looked far away, and Pug turned toward him. “What is it?”
Tomas said softly, “I wish I could see Elvandar, someday.”
Pug understood. “Maybe you will.” Then he added, in lighter tones,
“But I doubt it. For I will be a magician, and you will be a soldier, and the
Queen will reign in Elvandar long after we are dead.”
Tomas playfully jumped atop his friend, wrestling him down in the
straw “Oh! Is that so. Well, I will too go to Elvandar someday.” He pinned Pug
under him, sitting atop his chest. “And when I do, I’ll be a great hero, with
victories over the Tsurani by the score. She’ll welcome me as an honored guest.
What do you think of that?”
Pug laughed, trying to push his friend off. “And I’ll be the
greatest magician in the land.”
They both laughed. A voice broke through their play. “Pug! There you
are.”
Tomas got off, and Pug sat up. Approaching them was the stocky
figure of Gardell the smith. He was a barrel-chested man, with little hair but
a thick black beard. His arms were grimy with smoke, and his apron was burned
through with many small holes. He came to the side of the wagon and placed
fists on hips. “I’ve been looking all over for you. I have that hood Kulgan
asked me to fashion for your fire pot.”
Pug scrambled out of the wagon, with Tomas close behind. They walked
after Gardell toward the smithy behind the central keep. The burly smith said,
“Damned clever idea, that hood I’ve worked the forge for nearly thirty years
and never thought of using a hood for a fire pot. Had to make one as soon as
Kulgan told me of the plan.”
They entered the smithy, a large shed with a large and small forge
and several different-sized anvils. All manner of things lay about waiting for
repair: armor, stirrup irons, and kitchen utensils Gardell walked to the larger
forge and picked up the hood. It was about three feet to a side, about three
feet high, and formed a cone with a hole at the top. Lengths of round metal
pipe lay nearby, fashioned especially thin.
Gardell held out his creation for them to study. “I made it fairly
thin, using a lot of tin for lightness, for were it too heavy, it would
collapse.” With his toe he pointed to several lengths of metal rods. “We’ll
knock some little holes in the floor and use these for support. It may take a
bit of time to get it right, but I think this thing of yours is going to work.”
Pug smiled broadly. He found great pleasure in seeing an idea of his
taking concrete form. It was a novel and gratifying sensation. “When can we
install it?”
“Now if you like. I would like to see it work, I must confess.” Pug
gathered up some of the pipe, and Tomas the rest, as well as the rods. Juggling
the awkward load, they set out toward the magician’s tower, with the chuckling
smith following.
Kulgan was deep in thought as he started to mount the stairs to his
room. Suddenly a shout from above sounded: “Watch out!” Kulgan glanced up in
time to see a block of stone come tumbling down the stairs, bounding over the
steps as if in some fit of drunken craziness. He leapt aside as it struck
against the wall where he had stood and came to rest at the bottom of the stairs.
Mortar dust filled the air, and Kulgan sneezed.
Tomas and Pug came running down the stairs, expressions of worry on
their faces. When they saw no one was hurt, they both looked relieved.
Kulgan leveled a baleful gaze upon the pair and said, “What is all
this?”
Pug appeared sheepish, while Tomas tried to blend in with the wall
Pug spoke first. “We were trying to carry the stone down to the yard, and it
sort of slipped.”
“Sort of slipped? It looked more like a mad dash for freedom. Now,
why were you carrying the stone, and where did it come from?”
“It’s the loose one from my wall,” answered Pug. “We took it out so
that Gardell could put the last pipe in place.” When Kulgan still appeared
uncomprehending, Pug said, “It’s for my fire pot hood, remember?”
“Ah,” said Kulgan, “yes. Now I do.” A servant arrived to investigate
the noise, and Kulgan asked him to fetch a couple of workmen from the yard to
carry the block away. He left, and Kulgan said to the boys, “I think it would
be better to let someone a little larger tote that stone out. Now let us see
this marvel.”
They climbed the stairs to the boy’s room and found Gardell
installing the last length of pipe. The smith turned when they entered and
said, “Well, what do you think?”
The pot had been moved a little closer to the wall, and the hood sat
on four metal rods of equal length over it. All of the smoke was trapped by the
hood and carried away through the light metal pipe. Unfortunately, the hole
where the stone was missing was considerably larger than the pipe, so most of
the smoke was blown back into the room by the wind.
“Kulgan, what do you think?” said Pug.
“Well, boy. It looks rather impressive, but I can’t see much
improvement in the atmosphere here.”
Gardell gave the hood a solid whack with his hand, causing it to
ring out with a tinny sound. His thick calluses kept his hand from being burned
by the hot metal. “She’ll do, soon as I plug up that hole, magician. I’ll fetch
some bull hide that I use for making shields for the horsemen and cut a hole in
a piece, slip it around the pipe, and nail it to the wall. A few slaps of
tanning agent on it, and the heat will dry it out all stiff and hard. It will
take the heat and keep the rain and wind out of the room, as well as the
smoke.” The smith looked pleased with his handiwork. “Well, I’ll fetch the
hide. Back in a moment.”
Pug looked as if he would burst from pride, seeing his invention
before him, and Tomas reflected Pug’s glory. Kulgan chuckled softly to himself
for a moment. Suddenly Pug turned to the magician, remembering where he had
spent the day. “What is the news from the council?”
“The Duke sends messages to all the nobles of the West, explaining
what has occurred in great detail, and asking that the Armies of the West be
made ready. I am afraid Tully’s scribes have some rigorous days ahead of them,
since the Duke wants them all finished as soon as possible. Tully’s in a state,
for he has been commanded to stay and act as Lyam’s adviser, along with Fannon
and Algon, during the Duke’s absence.”
“Yes, the Duke, Arutha, and I are going to journey to the Free
Cities, and on to Krondor, to speak with Prince Erland. I am going to send a
dream message to a colleague of mine tonight, if I can. Belgan lives north of
Bordon. He will send word to Meecham, who should be there by now, to find us a
ship. The Duke feels it best that he should carry the word in person.”
Pug and Tomas looked excited. Kulgan knew they both wanted to come
along. To visit Krondor would be the greatest adventure of their young lives
Kulgan stroked his grey beard. “It will be difficult to continue your lessons,
but Tully can brush you up on a trick or two.”
Pug looked as if he were going to burst. “Please, Kulgan, may I come
too?”
Kulgan feigned surprise. “You come? I never thought of that.” He
paused for a moment while the suspense built. “Well . . .” Pug’s eyes pleaded.
“. . . I guess it would be all right.” Pug let out a yelp and jumped in the
air.
Tomas struggled to hide his disappointment. He forced a thin smile
and tried to look happy for Pug.
Kulgan walked to the door. Pug noticed Tomas’s dejected expression.
“Kulgan?” Pug said. The magician turned, a faint smile on his lips.
“Yes, Pug?”
“Tomas, too?”
Tomas shook his head, for he was neither a member of the court nor
the magician’s charge, but his eyes looked at Kulgan imploringly.
Kulgan smiled broadly. “I guess we’re better off keeping you
together, so we need look for trouble in only one place. Tomas, too. I’ll
arrange things with Fannon.”
Tomas shouted, and the two boys slapped each other on the back.
Pug said, “When do we leave?”
Kulgan laughed. “In five days’ time. Or sooner, if the Duke hears
from the dwarves. Runners are being sent to the North Pass to see if it is
clear. If not, we ride by the South Pass.”
Kulgan departed, leaving the two boys dancing arm in arm and
whooping with excitement.
7
UNDERSTANDING
Pug hurried across the courtyard.
Princess Carline had sent him a note asking him to meet her in her
flower garden. It was the first word from the girl since she had stormed away
from their last meeting, and Pug was anxious. He did not want to be on bad
terms with Carline, regardless of any conflicts he might be feeling. After his
brief discussion with Calin, two days earlier, he had sought out. Father Tully
and talked with him at length.
The old priest had been willing to take time out to speak with the
boy, in spite of the demands the Duke was placing upon his staff. It had been a
good talk for Pug, leaving him with a surer sense of himself. The final message
from the old cleric had been: Stop worrying about what the Princess feels and
thinks, and start discovering what Pug feels and thinks.
He had taken the cleric’s advice and was now sure of what he would
say should Carline start referring to any sort of “understanding” between them.
For the first time in weeks he felt something like a sense of direction—even if
he was not sure what destination he would eventually reach, holding to such a
course.
Reaching the Princess’s garden, he rounded a corner, then stopped,
for instead of Carline, Squire Roland stood by the steps. With a slight smile,
Roland nodded. “Good day, Pug.”
“Good day, Roland.” Pug looked around.
“Expecting someone?” said Roland, forcing a note of lightness that
did little to hide a belligerent tone. He casually rested his left hand on the
pommel of his sword. Apart from his sword, he was dressed as usual, in colorful
breeches and tunic of green and gold, with tall riding boots.
“Well, actually, I was expecting to see the Princess,” Pug said,
with a small note of defiance in his manner.
Roland feigned surprise. “Really? Lady Glynis mentioned something
about a note, but I had come to understand things were strained between the two
of you . . .”
While
Pug had tried to sympathize with Roland’s situation over the last few days, his
offhanded, superior attitude and his chronic antagonism conspired to irritate
Pug. Letting his exasperation get the better of him, he snapped, “As one squire
to another, Roland, let me put it this way: how things stand between
Carline and myself is none of your business!”
Roland’s face took on an expression of open anger. He stepped
forward, looking down at the shorter boy “Be damned it’s none of my business! I
don’t know what you’re playing at, Pug, but if you do anything to hurt her,
I’ll—”
“Me hurt her!” Pug interrupted. He was shocked by the intensity of
Roland’s anger and infuriated by the threat “She’s the one playing us one
against the other—”
Abruptly Pug felt the ground tilt under him, rising up to strike him
from behind Lights exploded before his eyes and a bell-like clanging sounded in
his ears. It was a long moment before he realized Roland had just hit him. Pug
shook his head and his eyes refocused. He saw the older, larger squire standing
over him, both hands balled into fists. Through tightly clenched teeth, Roland
spat his words. “If you ever say ill of her again, I’ll beat you senseless.”
Pug’s anger fired within him, rising each second. He got carefully
to his feet, his eyes upon Roland, who stood ready to fight. Feeling the bitter
taste of anger in his mouth, Pug said, “You’ve had two years and more to win
her, Roland. Leave it alone.”
Roland’s face grew livid and he charged, bowling Pug off his feet.
They went down in a tangle, Roland striking Pug harmlessly on the shoulders and
arms. Rolling and grappling, neither could inflict much damage. Pug got his arm
around Roland’s neck and hung on as the older squire thrashed in a frenzy.
Suddenly Roland wedged a knee against Pug’s chest and shoved him away. Pug
rolled and came to his feet. Roland was up an instant later, and they squared
off. Roland’s expression had changed from rage to cold, calculating anger as he
measured the distance between them. He advanced carefully, his left arm bent
and extended, his right fist held ready before his face Pug had no experience
with this form of fighting, called fist-boxing, though he had seen it practiced
for money in traveling shows. Roland had demonstrated on several occasions that
he had more than a passing acquaintance with the sport.
Pug sought to take the advantage and swung a wild, roundhouse blow
at Roland’s head. Roland dodged back as Pug swung completely around, then the
squire jumped forward, his left hand snapping out, catching Pug on the cheek,
rocking his head back with a stinging blow. Pug stumbled away, and Roland’s
right hand missed Pug’s chin by a fraction.
Pug held up his hands to ward off another blow and shook his head,
clearing it of the dancing lights that obscured his vision, barely managing to
duck beneath Roland’s next blow. Under Roland’s guard, Pug lunged, catching the
other boy in the stomach with his shoulder, knocking him down again. Pug fell
on top of him and struggled to pin the larger boy’s arms to his side. Roland
struck out, catching Pug’s temple with an elbow, and the dazed magician’s apprentice
fell away, momentarily confused.
As he rose to his feet again, pain exploded in Pug’s face, and the
world tilted once more. Disoriented, unable to defend himself, Pug felt
Roland’s blows as distant events, somehow muted and not fully recognized by his
reeling senses. A faint note of alarm sounded in part of Pug’s mind. Without
warning, processes began to occur under the level of pain-dimmed consciousness.
Basic, more animal instincts took hold, and in a disjointed, hardly understood
awareness, a new force emerged. As in the encounter with the trolls, blinding
letters of light and flame appeared in his mind’s eye, and he silently
incanted.
Pug’s being became primitive. In his remaining consciousness he was
a primal creature fighting for survival with murderous intent. All he could
envision was choking the very life from his adversary.
Suddenly an alarm rang within Pug’s mind. A deep sense of wrongness,
of evil, struck him. Months of training came to the fore, and it was as if he
could hear Kulgan’s voice crying, “This is not how the power is to be used!”
Ripping aside the mental shroud that covered him, Pug opened his eyes.
Through blurred vision and sparkling lights, Pug saw Roland kneeling
a mere yard before him, eyes enlarged, vainly struggling with the invisible
fingers around his neck. Pug felt no sense of contact with what he saw, and
with returning clarity of mind knew at once what had occurred. Leaning forward,
he seized Roland’s wrists. “Stop it, Roland! Stop it! It isn’t real. There are
no hands but your own at your throat.” Roland, blind with panic, seemed unable
to hear Pug’s shouts. Mustering what remaining strength he possessed, Pug
yanked Roland’s hands away, then struck him a stinging slap to the face.
Roland’s eyes teared and suddenly he breathed in, a gasping, ragged sound.
Still panting, Pug said, “It’s an illusion. You were choking
yourself.”
Roland gasped and pushed himself back from Pug, fear evident on his
face. He struggled weakly to pull his sword Pug leaned forward and firmly gripped
Roland’s wrist. Barely able to speak, he shook his head and said, “There’s no
reason.”
Roland looked into Pug’s eyes, and the fear in his own began to
subside. Something inside the older squire seemed to break, and there was only
a fatigued, drained young man sitting on the ground. Breathing heavily, Roland
sat back, tears forming in his eyes, and asked, “Why?”
Pug’s own fatigue made him lean back, supporting himself on his
hands. He studied the handsome young face before him, twisted by doubt “Because
you’re held under a spell more compelling than any I could fashion.” He looked
Roland in the eyes “You truly love her, don’t you?”
The last vestige of Roland’s anger slowly evaporated and his eyes
showed some slight fear remaining, but also Pug saw deep pain and anguish as a
tear fell to his cheek. His shoulders slumped and he nodded, his breath ragged
as he tried to speak. For a moment he was on the verge of crying, but he fought
off his pain and regained his poise Taking a deep breath, Roland wiped away the
tears and took another deep breath. He looked directly at Pug, then guardedly
asked, “And you?”
Pug sprawled on the ground, feeling some strength returning. “I . .
. I’m not sure. She makes me doubt myself. I don’t know. Sometimes I think of
no one else, and other times I wish I were as far from her as I could be.”
Roland indicated understanding, the last residue of fear draining
away. “Where she’s concerned, I don’t have a whit of wit.”
Pug giggled. Roland looked at him, then also began to laugh “I don’t
know why,” said Pug, “but for some reason, I find what you said terribly
funny.” Roland nodded and began to laugh too. Soon they were both sitting with
tears running down their faces as the emotional vacuum left by the fleeing
anger was replaced by giddiness.
Roland recovered slightly, holding back the laughter, when Pug
looked at him and said, “A whit of wit!” which sent both of them off on another
kag of laughter.
“Well!” a voice said sharply. They turned and found Carline, flanked
by two ladies-in-waiting, surveying the scene before her. Instantly both boys
became silent. Casting a disapproving look upon the pair as they sprawled upon
the ground, she said, “Since you two seem so taken with each other, I’ll not
intrude.”
Pug and Roland exchanged looks and suddenly erupted into uproarious
laughter. Roland fell over backward, while Pug sat, legs stretched before him,
laughing into his cupped hands. Carline flushed angrily and her eyes widened
With cold fury in her voice she said “Excuse me!” and turned, sweeping by her
ladies. As she left, they could hear her loudly exclaim, “Boys!”
Pug and Roland sat for a minute until the near-hysterical fit
passed, then Roland rose and extended his hand to Pug. Pug took it and Roland
helped him to his feet. “Sorry, Pug. I had no right to be angry with you.” His
voice softened. “I can’t sleep nights thinking of her I wait for the few
moments we’re together each day. But since you saved her, all I ever hear is
your name.” Touching his sore neck, Roland said, “I got so angry, I thought I’d
kill you. Damn near got myself killed instead.”
Pug looked at the corner where the Princess had disappeared, nodding
agreement. “I’m sorry, too, Roland. I’m not very good at controlling magic yet,
and when I lose my temper, it seems all sorts of terrible things can happen.
Like with the trolls.” Pug wanted Roland to understand he was still Pug, even
though he was now a magician’s apprentice. “I would never do something like
that on purpose—especially to a friend.”
Roland studied Pug’s face a moment and grinned, half-wryly,
half-apologetically “I understand I acted badly You were right: she’s only
setting us one against the other I am the fool. It’s you she cares for.”
Pug seemed to wilt. “Believe me, Roland, I’m not so sure I’m to be
envied.”
Roland’s grin widened. “She is a strong-willed girl, that’s clear.”
Caught halfway between an open display of self-pity and mock-bravado, Roland
selected mock-bravado.
Pug shook his head. “What’s to be done, Roland?”
Roland looked surprised, then laughed loudly. “Don’t look to me for
advice, Pug I dance to her tune more than any. But ‘there are as many changes
in a young girl’s heart as in the fickle winds,’ as the old saying goes. I’ll
not blame you for Carline’s actions.” He winked at Pug conspiratorially.
“Still, you won’t mind if I keep an eye out for a change in the weather?”
Pug laughed in spite of his exhaustion. “I thought you seemed a
little too gracious in vour concessions.” A thoughtful look came over his face
“You know, it would be simpler—not better, but simpler—if she’d ignore me
forever, Roland. I don’t know what to think about all this. I’ve got my
apprenticeship to complete. Someday I’ll have estates to manage. Then there’s
this business with the Tsurani. It’s all come so quickly, I don’t know what to
do.”
Roland regarded Pug with some sympathy. He put his hand upon the
younger boy’s shoulder. “I forget this business of being apprentice and noble
is all rather new to you. Still, I can’t say I’ve given too much time to such
weighty considerations myself, even though my lot was decided before I was
born. This worrying about the future is a dry sort of work. I think it would be
benefited by a mug of strong ale.”
Feeling his aches and bruises, Pug nodded agreement. “Would that we
could. But Megar will be of a different mind, I’m afraid.”
Roland placed his finger alongside his nose “We shan’t let the
Mastercook smell us out, then. Come on, I know a place where the boards of the
ale shed are loose. We can quaff a cup or two in private.”
Roland began to walk away, but Pug halted him by saying, “Roland, I
am sorry we came to blows.”
Roland stopped, studied Pug a moment, and grinned. “And I.” He
extended his hand. “A peace.”
Pug gripped it. “A peace.”
They turned the corner, leaving the Princess’s garden behind, then
stopped. Before them was a scene of unalloyed misery. Tomas was walking the
length of the court, from the soldiers’ commons to the side gate, in full
armor—old chain mail over gambeson, full helm, and heavy metal greaves over
knee boots. On one arm he bore a heater shield, and in the other hand he held a
heavy spear, twelve feet long and iron-tipped, which bore down cruelly upon his
right shoulder. It also gave him a comic appearance, as it caused him to lean a
little to the right and wobble slightly as he struggled to keep it balanced
while he marched.
The sergeant of the Duke’s Guard stood counting out cadence for him.
Pug knew the sergeant, a tall, friendly man named Gardan. He was Keshian by
ancestry, evident in his dark skin. His white teeth split his dark, nappy beard
in a grin at the sight of Pug and Roland. He stood nearly as broad in the
shoulders as Meecham, with the same loose-gaited movement of a hunter or
fighter. Though his black hair was lightly dusted with grey, his face was
young-looking and unlined, despite thirty years’ service. With a wink at Pug
and Roland, he barked, “Halt!” and Tomas stopped in his tracks.
As Pug and Roland closed the distance between them, Gardan snapped,
“Right turn!” Tomas obeyed “Members of the court approaching. Present arms!”
Tomas extended his right arm, and his spear dipped in salute. He let the tip
drop slightly too low, and nearly broke from attention to pull it back.
Pug and Roland came up to stand next to Gardan, and the large
soldier gave them a casual salute and a warm smile. “Good day, Squires.” He
turned to Tomas for a moment. “Shoulder arms! March post march!” Tomas set off,
marching the “post” assigned to him, in this case the length of the yard before
the soldiers’ commons.
With a laugh, Roland said, “What is this? Special drills?”
Gardan stood with one hand on his sword, the other pointed at Tomas.
“Swordmaster Fannon felt it might prove beneficial to our young warrior if
someone was here to see his drilling didn’t become sloppy from exhaustion or
some other petty inconvenience.” Dropping his voice a bit, he added, “He’s a
tough lad; he’ll be fine, if a little footsore.”
“Why the special drilling?” asked Roland. Pug shook his head as
Gardan told them.
“Our young hero lost two swords. The first was understandable, for
the matter of the ship was vital, and in the excitement of the moment such an
oversight could be forgiven. But the second was found lying on the wet ground
near the pell the afternoon the Elf Queen and her party left, and young Tomas
was nowhere in sight.” Pug knew Tomas had forgotten all about returning to his
drilling when Gardell had come with the hood for his fire pot.
Tomas reached the end of his appointed route, did an about-face, and
began his return. Gardan regarded the two bruised and dirty boys and said,
“What have you two young gentlemen been up to?”
Roland cleared his throat in a theatrical fashion and said, “Ah . .
. I was giving Pug a fist-boxing lesson.”
Gardan reached out and took Pug’s chin in his hand, turning the
boy’s face for inspection Evaluating the damage, he said, “Roland, remind me
never to ask you to instruct my men in swordplay—we couldn’t withstand the
casualty rate.” Releasing his hold upon Pug’s face, he said, “You’ll have a
beautiful eye in the morning, Squire.”
Changing the topic, Pug said, “How are your sons, Gardan?”
“Well enough, Pug. They learn their craft and dream of making
themselves rich, save for the youngest, Faxon, who is still intent on becoming
a soldier next Choosing. The rest are becoming expert cart-wrights under my
brother Jeheil’s tutelage.” He smiled sadly. “With only Faxon at home the house
is very empty, though my wife seems glad for the peace.” Then he grinned, an
infectious smile that rarely could be viewed and not answered. “Still, it won’t
be too long before the elder boys marry, and then there’ll be grandchildren
under foot and plenty of merry noise again, from time to time.”
As Tomas drew near, Pug asked, “May I speak with the condemned?”
Gardan laughed, stroking his short beard. “I guess I might look the
other way for a moment, but be brief, Squire.” Pug left Gardan talking with
Roland and fell into step beside Tomas as he passed on his way to the opposite
end of the court. “How goes it?” Pug asked.
Out of the side of his mouth, Tomas said, “Oh, just fine. Two more
hours of this and I’ll be ready for burial.”
“Can’t you rest?”
“On the half hour I get five minutes to stand at attention.” He
reached the terminus of his post and did a reasonably sharp about-face, then
resumed walking back toward Gardan and Roland. “After the fire-pot cover was
finished, I came back to the pell and found the sword missing. I thought my
heart would stop I looked everywhere I almost thrashed Rulf, thinking he had
hidden it to spite me. When I returned to the commons, Fannon was sitting on my
bunk, oiling down the blade. I thought the other soldiers would hurt themselves
holding in the laughter when he said, ‘If you judge yourself skilled enough
with the sword, perhaps you’d care to spend your time learning the proper way
to walk post with a poll arm.’ All day walking punishment,” he added woefully
“I’ll die.”
They passed Roland and Gardan, and Pug struggled to feel sympathy.
Like the others, he found the situation comical Hiding his amusement, he
lowered his voice to a conspiratorial tone and said, “I’d better get along.
Should the Swordmaster come along, he might tack on an extra day’s marching.”
Tomas groaned at the thought. “Gods preserve me. Get away, Pug.”
Pug whispered, “When you’re done, join us in the ale shed if you’re
able.” Pug left Tomas’s side and rejoined Gardan and Roland. To the sergeant he
said, “Thank you, Gardan.”
“You are welcome, Pug Our young knight-in-the-making will be fine,
though he feels set upon now. He also chafes at having an audience.”
Roland nodded. “Well, I expect he’ll not be losing a sword again
soon.”
Gardan laughed “Too true. Master Fannon could forgive the first, but
not the second. He thought it wise to see Tomas didn’t make a habit of it. Your
friend is the finest student the Swordmaster has known since Prince Arutha, but
don’t tell Tomas that. Fannon’s always hardest on those with the most
potential. Well, good day to you both, Squires. And, boys,”—they paused—”I
won’t mention the ‘fist-boxing lesson.’ ”
They thank the sergeant for his discretion and walked toward the ale
shed, with the measured cadence of Gardan’s voice filling the court.
***
Pug was
well into his second mug of ale and Roland finishing his fourth when Tomas
appeared through the loose boards. Dirty and sweating, he was rid of his armor
and weapons. With a great display of fatigue, he said, “The world must be
coming to an end; Fannon excused me from punishment early.”
“Why?” asked Pug.
Roland lazily reached over to a storage shelf, next to where he sat
upon a sack of grain soon to be used for making ale, and got a cup from a
stack. He tossed it to Tomas, who caught it, then filled it from the hogshead
of ale that Roland rested his feet upon.
Taking a deep drink, Tomas wiped his mouth with the back of his hand
and said, “Something’s afoot. Fannon swooped down, told me to put away my toys,
and nearly dragged Gardan off, he was in such a hurry.”
Pug said, “Maybe the Duke is getting ready to ride east?”
Tomas said, “Maybe.” He studied his two friends, taking note of
their freshly bruised countenances. “All right. What happened?”
Pug regarded Roland, indicating he should explain the sad state of
their appearance. Roland gave Tomas a lopsided grin and said, “We had a
practice bout in preparation for the Duke’s fist-boxing tourney.”
Pug nearly choked on his ale, then laughed. Tomas shook his head.
“If you two don’t look a pair. Fighting over the Princess?”
Pug and Roland exchanged glances; then as one they leaped at Tomas
and bore him to the floor under their combined weight. Roland pinned Tomas to
the floor, then, while Pug held him in place, took a half-filled cup of ale and
held it high. With mock solemnity Roland said, “I hearby anoint thee, Tomas,
First Seer of Crydee!” So saying, he poured the contents of the cup over the
struggling boy’s face.
Pug belched, then said, “As do I.” He poured what remained in his
cup over his friend.
Tomas spat ale, laughing as he said, “Right! I was right!”
Struggling against the weight upon him, he said, “Now get off! Or need I remind
you, Roland, of who gave you your last bloody nose?”
Roland
moved off very slowly, intoxicated dignity forcing him to move with glacial
precision. “Quite right.” Turning toward Pug, who had also rolled off Tomas, he
said, “Still, it must be made clear that at the time, the only reason
Tomas managed to bloody my nose is that during our fight he had an unfair
advantage.”
Pug looked at Roland through bleary eyes and said, “What unfair
advantage?”
Roland put his finger to his lips indicating secrecy, then said, “He
was winning.”
Roland collapsed back upon the grain sack and Pug and Tomas
dissolved into laughter. Pug found the remark so funny, he couldn’t stop, and
hearing Tomas’s laughter only caused his own to redouble. At last he sat up,
gasping, with his sides hurting.
Catching his breath, Pug said, “I missed that set-to. I was doing
something else, but I don’t remember what.”
“You were down in the village learning to mend nets, if I remember
rightly, when Roland first came here from Tulan.”
With a
crooked grin Roland said, “I got into an argument with someone or another—do
you remember who?” Tomas shook his head no. “Anyway, I got into an argument,
and Tomas came over and tried to break it up I couldn’t believe this skinny
boy—” Tomas began to voice an objection, but Roland cut him off, holding a
finger upright and wiggling it. “Yes, you were Very skinny I couldn’t believe
this skinny boy—skinny common boy—would presume to tell me—a
newly appointed member of the Duke’s court and a gentleman, I must
add—the way to behave. So I did the only thing a proper gentleman could do
under the circumstances.”
“What’“ asked Pug.
“I hit him in the mouth.” The three laughed again.
Tomas shook his head at the recollection, while Roland said, “Then
he proceeded to give me the worst beating I had since the last time my father
caught me out at something.
“That’s when I got serious about fist-boxing.”
With an air of mock gravity, Tomas said, “Well, we were younger
then.”
Pug refilled the cups. Moving his jaw in discomfort, he said, “Well,
right now I feel about a hundred years old.”
Tomas studied them both a moment. “Seriously, what was the fight
about?”
With a mixture of humor and regret, Roland said, “Our liege lord’s daughter,
a girl of ineffable charm . . .”
“What’s ineffable?” Tomas asked.
Roland looked at him with intoxicated disdain “Indescribable, dolt!”
Tomas shook his head. “I don’t think the Princess is an
indescribable dolt—” He ducked as Roland’s cup sailed through the space
occupied by his head an instant before. Pug fell over backward laughing again.
Tomas grinned as Roland, in a display of great ceremony, fetched
down another cup from the shelf. “As I was saying,” he began, filling the cup
from the hogshead, “our lady, a girl of ineffable charms—if somewhat
questionable judgment—has taken it into her head—for reasons only the gods may
fully comprehend—to favor our young magician here with her attentions. Why—when
she could spend time with me—I can’t imagine.” He paused to belch. “In any
event, we were discussing the proper manner in which to accept such largess.”
Tomas looked at Pug, a huge grin on his face. “You have my sympathy,
Pug You most certainly have your hands full.”
Pug felt himself flush. Then with a wicked leer, he said, “Do I? And
what about a certain young apprentice soldier, well-known hereabouts, who has
been seen sneaking into the larder with a certain kitchen girl?” He leaned back
and with a look of mock concern etched upon his face added, “I’d hate to think
what would happen to him should Neala find out . . .”
Roland lay back, holding his sides. “Never have I seen such a fair
impersonation of a freshly landed fish!” He sat up, crossed his eyes, and
opened and shut his mouth rapidly. All three degenerated into helpless mirth
again.
Another round was poured, and Roland held up his cup. “Gentlemen, a
toast!”
Pug and Tomas held up their cups.
Roland’s voice turned serious, and he said, “No matter what
differences we have had in the past, you are two fellows I gladly count
friends.” He held his cup higher and said, “To friendship!”
The three drained their cups and refilled them Roland said, “Your
hand upon it.”
The three boys joined hands, and Roland said, “No matter where we
go, no matter how many years pass, never again shall we be without friends.”
Pug was stuck by the sudden solemnity of the pledge and said,
“Friends!”
Tomas echoed Pug’s words, and the three shook hands in a gesture of
affirmation.
Again the cups were drained, and the afternoon sun quickly fled
beyond the horizon as the three boys lost time in the rosy glow of camaraderie
and ale.
Pug came awake, groggy and disoriented. The faint glow from his
nearly extinguished fire pot cast the room into halftones of rose and black. A
faint but persistent knocking sounded on his door. He slowly stood, then nearly
fell, still intoxicated from his drinking bout. He had stayed with Tomas and
Roland in the storage room all evening and into the night, missing supper
entirely. “Putting a considerable dent” in the castle’s ale supply, as Roland
had described it. They hadn’t partaken of any great amount, but as their
capacity was slight, it seemed a heroic undertaking.
Pug drew on his trousers and wobbled over to the door His eyelids
felt gritty, and his mouth was cotton dry. Wondering who could be demanding
entrance in the middle of the night, he threw aside the door.
A blur of motion passed him, and he turned to find Carline standing
in the room, a heavy cloak wrapped around her. “Close the door!” she hissed.
“Someone might pass the base of the tower and see light upon the stairway.”
Pug obeyed, still disoriented. The only thing that penetrated his
numb mind was the thought that it was unlikely the faint light from the coals
would cast much brightness down the stairwell. He shook his head, gathering his
wits about him, and crossed to the fire pot. He lit a taper from the coals and
lit his lantern. The room sprang into cheery brightness.
Pug’s thinking began to pick up a little as Carline looked about the
room, taking stock of the disorderly pile of books and scrolls next to the
pallet. She peered into every corner of the room, then said, “Where is that
dragon thing you keep about?”
Pug’s eyes focused a little, and marshaling his balky tongue, he
said, “Fantus? He’s off somewhere, doing whatever it is firedrakes do.”
Removing
her cloak, she said, “Good. He frightens me.” She sat on Pug’s unmade pallet
and looked sternly at him. “I want to speak with you.” Pug’s eyes went wide,
and he stared, for Carline was wearing only a light cotton sleeping gown. While
covering her from neck to ankles, it was thin and clung to her figure with alarming
tenacity. Pug suddenly realized he was dressed only in trousers and
hurriedly grabbed up his tunic from where he had dropped it onto the floor and
pulled it over his head. As he struggled with the shirt, the last shreds of
alcoholic fog evaporated. “Gods!” he said, in a pained whisper. “Should your
father learn of this, he’d have my head.”
“Not if you’ve wits enough to keep your voice lowered,” she answered
with a petulant look.
Pug crossed to the stool near his pallet, freed of his drunken
wobble by newly arrived terror. She studied his rumpled appearance and with a
note of disapproval in her voice said, “You’ve been drinking.” When he didn’t
deny it, she added, “When you and Roland didn’t appear at supper, I wondered
where you’d gotten yourselves off to. It’s a good thing Father also skipped the
meal with the court, otherwise he’d have sent someone to find you.”
Pug’s discomfort was growing at an alarming rate as every tale of
what horrible fate awaits lowborn lovers of noblewomen rushed back into his
memory. That Carline was an uninvited guest and that nothing untoward had
occurred were niceties he didn’t think the Duke would find particularly
mitigating. Gulping down panic, Pug said, “Carline, you can’t stay here. You’ll
get us both into more trouble than I can imagine.”
Her expression became determined. “I’m not leaving until I tell you
what I came to say.”
Pug knew it was futile to argue. He had seen that look too many
times in the past. With a resigned sigh, he said, “All right, then, what is
it?”
Carline’s eyes widened at his tone. “Well, if that’s how you’re
going to be, I won’t tell you!”
Pug suppressed a groan and sat back with his eyes closed. Slowly
shaking his head, he said, “Very well. I’m sorry. Please, what do you want me
to do?”
She patted the pallet next to her “Come, sit here.”
He complied, trying to ignore the feeling that his fate—an abruptly
short life—was being decided by this capricious girl. He landed rather than sat
beside her. She giggled at the groan he made. “You got drunk! What’s it like?”
“At this moment, not terribly entertaining. I feel like a used
kitchen rag.”
She tried to look sympathetic, but her blue eyes sparkled with
mirth. With a theatrical pout, she said, “You boys get to do all the
interesting things, like sword work and archery. Being a proper lady can be
such a bore. Father would have a fit if I should ever drink more than a cup of
watered wine with supper.”
With rising desperation in his voice, Pug said, “Nothing compared to
the fit he will have if you’re found here. Carline, why did you come here?”
She ignored the question. “What were you and Roland doing this
afternoon, fighting?” He nodded. “Over me?” she asked, a glimmer in her eyes.
Pug sighed. “Yes, over you.” Her pleased look at the reply nettled
him, and irritation crept into his voice. “Carline, you’ve used him rather
badly.”
“He’s a spineless idiot!” she snapped back. “If I asked him to jump
off the wall, he’d do it.”
“Carline,” Pug nearly whined, “why have—”
His question was cut off as she leaned forward and covered his mouth
with her own. The kiss was one-sided, for Pug was too stunned to respond She
quickly sat back, leaving him agape, and she said, “Well?”
Lacking any original response, Pug said, “What?”
Her eyes flashed. “The kiss, you simpleton.”
“Oh!” said Pug, still in shock. “It was . . . nice.”
She rose and looked down on him, her eyes widening with mixed anger
and embarrassment. She crossed her arms and stood tapping her foot, making a
sound like summer hail striking the window shutters. Her tone was low and
harsh. “Nice! Is that all you have to say?”
Pug watched her, a variety of conflicting emotions surging inside.
At this moment panic was contesting with a nearly painful awareness of how
lovely she looked in the dim lantern light, her features alive and animated,
her dark hair loose around her face, and the thin shift pulled tight across her
bosom by her crossed arms. His own confusion made his pose seem unintentionally
casual, which further fueled her petulance. “You’re the first man—not counting
Father and my brothers—I’ve ever kissed, and all you can say is ‘nice.’ ”
Pug was unable to recover. Still awash with tumultuous emotions, he
blurted, “Very nice.”
She placed her hands upon her hips—which pulled her nightdress in
disturbing new directions and stood looking down on him with an expression of
open disbelief. In controlled tones she said, “I come here and throw myself at
you. I risk getting myself banished to a convent for life!” Pug noticed she failed
to mention his possible fate. “Every other boy—and not a slight number of the
older nobles—in the West fall over themselves to get my attention. And all you
do is treat me like some common kitchen drudge, a passing amusement for the
young lord.”
Pug’s wits returned, less of their own accord than from the
realization that Carline was arguing her case a little more emphatically than
was warranted. Suddenly struck with the insight that there was a fair bit of
dramatics mixed in with her genuine irritation, he said, “Carline, wait. Give
me a moment.”
“A moment! I’ve given you weeks I thought . . . well, I thought we
had an understanding.”
Pug tried to look sympathetic, as his mind raced. “Sit down, please.
Let me try to explain.”
She hesitated, then returned to sit next to him. Somewhat clumsily
he took her hands in his own. Instantly he was struck by the nearness of the
girl, her warmth, the smell of her hair and skin. The feelings of desire he had
felt on the bluffs returned with stunning impact, and he had to fight to keep
his mind upon what he wished to say.
Forcing his thoughts away from the hot surge he experienced, he
said, “Carline, I do care for you. A great deal. Sometimes I even think I love
you as much as Roland does, but most of the time I only get confused when
you’re around. That’s the problem: there’s so much confusion inside of me. I
don’t understand what it is I feel most of the time.”
Her eyes narrowed, for this obviously wasn’t the answer she
expected. Her tone was sharp as she said, “I don’t know what you mean. I’ve
never known a boy so caught up in understanding things.”
Pug managed to force a smile. “Magicians are trained to seek
explanations. Understanding things is very important to us.” He saw a flicker
of comprehension in her eyes at this and pressed on “I have two offices now,
both new to me. I may not become a magician, in spite of Kulgan’s attempts to
make me one, for I have trouble with a lot of my work. I don’t really avoid
you, you see, but with this trouble I have, I must spend as much time with my
studies as I can.”
Seeing his explanation was gaining little sympathy, he changed
tactics. “In any event, I have little time to consider my other office I may
end up another noble of your father’s court, running my estates—small though
they might be—caring for my tenants, answering calls to arms, and the rest. But
I can’t even think of that until I resolve this other matter, my studies of
magic. I must keep trying until I’m satisfied I made the wrong choice Or until
Kulgan dismisses me,” he added quietly.
He stopped and studied her face. Her large blue eyes watched him
intently “Magicians are of little consequence in the Kingdom. I mean, should I
become a master magician . . . Well, could you see yourself married to a
magician, whatever his rank?”
She looked slightly alarmed. Quickly she leaned over and kissed him
again, rupturing his already frayed composure. “Poor Pug,” she said, pulling
away a little. Her soft voice rang sweetly to his ears. “You don’t have to be.
A magician, I mean. You have land and title, and I know Father could arrange
others when the time was right.”
“It’s not a question of what I want, don’t you see? It’s a question
of what I am. Part of the problem may be I haven’t truly given myself over to
my work. Kulgan took me for his apprentice as much from pity as need, you know.
And in spite of what he and Tully have said, I’ve never been really convinced I
was especially talented. But perhaps I need to dedicate myself, commit myself
to becoming a magician.” He took a breath. “How can I do that if I’m concerning
myself with my estates and offices? Or gaining new ones?” He paused “Or you?”
Carline bit her lower lip slightly, and Pug fought down the urge to
take her in his arms and tell her everything would be all right. He had no
doubt that once he did that, matters would quickly be beyond his control. No
girl in his limited experience, even the prettier ones in the town, aroused
such strong feelings in him.
Lowering her lashes a little as she looked down, she softly said, “I’ll
do whatever you say, Pug.” Pug felt relief for a moment, then the full impact
of what she had just said hit him. Oh, gods! he thought. No magician’s trick
could keep him focused in the face of youthful passion. He frantically sought
some way to drive desire from him and then thought of her father. Instantly an
image of a scowling Duke of Crydee standing before the hangman’s gibbet
banished most of his lust.
Taking a deep breath, Pug said, “In my own way, I do love you,
Carline.” Her face came aglow, and forfending disaster, he plunged on. “But I
think I should try to find out about myself before I try to make up my mind
about the rest.” His concentration was sorely tested as the girl seemed to
ignore his remarks, being busy kissing his face.
Then she stopped and sat back. Her happy expression faded into one
of thoughtfulness as her natural intelligence overrode her childish need to get
everything she wanted. Comprehension came into her eyes as he said, “If I chose
now, Carline, I might always doubt the choice. Would you want to face the
possibility I would come to resent you for the choice I made?”
She said nothing for a while, then quietly said, “No. I don’t think
I could stand that, Pug.”
He breathed a sigh of relief as he felt tension drain away. Suddenly
the room seemed cold, and both of them shivered. Carline gripped his hands
tight, with surprising strength. She mustered a smile and said, with forced
calm, “I understand, Pug.” She took a long breath, then softly added, “That’s
why I think I love you. You could never be false with anyone. Least of all with
yourself.”
“Or you, Carline.” Her eyes grew moist, but she maintained her
smile. “This isn’t easy,” Pug said, assaulted by feelings for the girl.
“Please, please, believe me, this is not easy.”
Suddenly the tension broke, and Carline laughed softly, sweet music
to Pug. Caught halfway between tears and laughter, she said, “Poor Pug I’ve
upset you.”
Pug’s face showed his relief at her understanding. He felt buoyant
with his affection for the girl. Shaking his head slowly, with a smile of
released tension that gave him a somewhat silly expression, he said, “You’ve no
idea, Carline. No idea.” He reached out and touched her face tenderly. “We have
time. I’m not going anywhere.”
From under lowered lashes, blue eyes regarded him with worry “You’ll
be leaving with Father soon.”
“I mean when I return. I’ll be here for years.” Gently he kissed her
cheek. Forcing a lighter tone, he said, “I can’t inherit for three more years,
that’s the law. And I doubt your father would part with you for as many years
yet.” Attempting a wry smile, he added, “In three years you might not be able
to stand the sight of me.”
She came softly into his arms, holding him tightly, her face resting
on his shoulder. “Never, Pug. I could never care for another.” Pug could only
marvel at the feel of her. Her body trembled as she said, “I don’t have words,
Pug. You’re the only one who tried to . . . understand me. You see more than
anyone else.” Gently he pulled back a little and raised up her face with his
hand. Again he kissed her, tasting salty tears upon her lips. She suddenly
responded, holding him tighter and kissing him with passion. He could feel the
heat of her body through the thin fabric of her gown, and heard soft sighing
sounds in his ear as he felt himself drifting back into mindless passion, his
own body beginning to respond. Steeling his resolve, he gently disengaged
himself from Carline’s embrace Slowly he forced himself away from her and, with
regret in his voice, said, “I think you should return to your rooms, Carline.”
Carline looked up at Pug, her cheeks flushed and her lips slightly
parted. Her breathing was husky, and Pug fought a mighty struggle to control
himself and the situation. More firmly, he said, “You had best return to your
rooms, now.”
They rose slowly from the sleeping pallet, each intensely aware of
the other. Pug held her hand a moment longer, then released it. He bent and
retrieved her cloak, holding it for her as she slipped into it. Guiding her to
the door, he pulled it open and peered down the steps of the tower. With no
hint of anyone nearby, he opened the door fully. She stepped through, then
turned. Softly she said, “I know you think me a sometimes silly and vain girl,
and there are times when I am, Pug. But I do love you.”
Before he could say a word, she vanished down the stairs, the faint
rustling of her cloak echoing in the darkness. Pug quietly closed the door and
then put out the lamp. He lay upon his pallet, staring up into the darkness. He
could still smell her fresh scent in the air around him, and the remembered
touch of her soft body under his hands made them tingle. Now that she was gone
and the need for self-control gone with her, he let longing rush through
himself. He could see her face alive with desire for him. Covering his eyes
with his forearm, he groaned softly to himself and said, “I’m going to hate
myself tomorrow.”
Pug awoke to pounding on the door. His first thought as he scrambled
toward the door was of the Duke having learned of Carline’s visit. He’s here to
hang me! was all he could think. It was still dark outside, so Pug opened the
door expecting the worst. Instead of the girl’s angry father leading a company
of castle guards, a castle porter stood outside the door.
“Sorry to wake you, Squire, but Master Kulgan wishes you to join him
at once,” he said, pointing up toward Kulgan’s room. “At once,” he repeated,
mistaking Pug’s expression of relief for one of sleepy confusion. Pug nodded
and shut the door.
He took stock. He was still dressed, having fallen asleep again
without undressing. He stood quietly as his pounding heart stilled. His eyes
felt as if they were packed with sand, and his stomach was upset, leaving a
foul taste in his mouth. He went to his small table and splashed cold water on
his face, muttering that he would never have another cup of ale again.
Pug reached Kulgan’s room and found the magician standing over a
pile of personal belongings and books Sitting on a stool by the magician’s
sleeping pallet was Father Tully. The priest watched the magician adding to the
steadily growing pile and said, “Kulgan, you can’t take all those books along.
You would need two pack mules for them, and where you would keep them aboard
ship where they would do you any good is beyond me.”
Kulgan looked at two books he held, like a mother regarding her
young. “But I must take them along to further the boy’s education.”
“Pah! So you’ll have something to mull over around the campfires and
aboard ship, more likely. Spare me excuses. You will be riding hard to clear
the South Pass before it is snowed in. And who can read in a ship crossing the
Bitter Sea in winter? The boy will only be away from his studies a month or
two. He’ll have over eight years more study after that. Give him a rest.”
Pug was perplexed by the conversation and tried to ask a question,
but was ignored by the two old companions as they bickered. After several more
remonstrations from Tully, Kulgan surrendered “I suppose you’re right,” he
said, tossing the books onto his pallet. He saw Pug waiting by the door and
said, “What? Still here?”
Pug said, “You haven’t told me why you sent for me yet, Kulgan.”
“Oh?” Kulgan said, eyes blinking wide like those of a barn owl
caught in a bright light. “I haven’t?” Pug nodded “Well, then. The Duke orders
us ready to ride at first light. The dwarves have not answered, but he will not
wait. The North Pass is almost certain to be closed, and he fears snow in the
South Pass.” Kulgan said as an aside, “Which he should. My weather nose tells
me snow is nearly here. We are in for an early and hard winter.”
Tully shook his head as he stood up. “This from the man who
predicted drought seven years ago, when we had the worst flooding in memory.
Magicians! Charlatans, all of you.” He walked slowly to the door, then stopped
to look at Kulgan, his mock irritation replaced by genuine concern. “Though you
are right this time, Kulgan. My bones ache deeply. Winter is upon us.”
Tully left and Pug asked, “We’re leaving?”
With exasperation, Kulgan said, “Yes! I just said so, didn’t I? Get
your things together and quickly. Dawn’s less than an hour away.”
Pug turned to leave, when Kulgan said, “Oh, a moment, Pug.”
The magician crossed to the door and glanced through it, ensuring
Tully was down the stairs and out of earshot Kulgan turned to Pug and said, “I
have no fault to find with your behavior . . . but should you in the future
find yourself with another late-night caller, I suggest you not subject
yourself to further testing. I’m not so sure you would do as well a second
time.”
Pug blanched. “You heard?”
Kulgan pointed to a spot where the floor and wall met. “That
fire-pot thing of yours exits the wall a foot below there, and it seems a
marvelous conduit for sound.” Absently he said, “I’ll have to look to see how it
conducts sound so well when we return.” Returning to the boy, he said, “In any
event, I was working late and didn’t mean to eavesdrop, but I heard every
word.” Pug flushed. Kulgan said, “I don’t mean to embarrass you, Pug. You acted
rightly and showed surprising wisdom.” Putting his hand upon Pug’s shoulder, he
said, “I’m not one to advise you in such matters, I fear, as I’ve had scant
experience with women, of any age, let alone such young and headstrong ones.”
Looking Pug in the eyes, he said, “But this much I do know, it is almost
impossible in the heat of the moment to understand long-term consequences. I am
proud you were able to do this.”
Pug smiled self-consciously. “It was easy enough, Kulgan, I just
kept my mind focused on something.”
“What?”
“Capital punishment.”
Kulgan laughed, a sharp barking sound, then said, “Very well, but
the potential for disaster would be as high for the Princess, too, Pug. A
city-bred noblewoman of the eastern court may indulge herself in as many lovers
of any rank that she can enjoy while maintaining discretion, but the only
daughter of a frontier duke who is so closely related to the king has no such
luxury. She must be above suspicion in all things. Even suspicion could harm
Carline. One who cares for her would take that into consideration. Do you
understand?”
Pug nodded, fully relieved now that he had resisted temptation the
night before.
“Good, I know you’ll be careful in the future.” Kulgan smiled. “And
don’t mind old Tully. He’s just cross because the Duke ordered him to stay
behind. He still thinks he’s as young as his acolytes. Now run along and get
ready. Dawn’s less than an hour away.”
Pug nodded and hurried off, leaving Kulgan to regard the piles of
books before him. With regret he picked the nearest one up and placed it on a
nearby shelf. After a moment he grabbed another and stuffed it into a sack.
“Just one won’t cause any harm,” he said to the invisible specter of Tully
shaking his head in disapproval. He put the rest of the books back on the
shelf, save the last volume, which he shoved into the sack. “All right, then,”
he said defiantly, “two!”
8
JOURNEY
A light wet snow was falling.
Pug shivered under his greatcloak, sitting astride his horse. He had
been in the saddle for the last ten minutes, waiting as the rest of the Duke’s
company made ready.
The courtyard filled with hurrying, shouting men, lashing supplies
onto the balky mules of the baggage train. Dawn was just commencing, giving the
courtyard a little color instead of the blacks and grey that had greeted Pug
when he came from the tower. Porters had already carried his baggage down and
were securing it among the other items being brought along.
A panicked “Whoa!” erupted behind Pug, and he turned to see Tomas
pulling frantically at the reins of a spirited bay, his head tossing high. Like
Pug’s own sleek, light war-horse, he was a far cry from the old draft animal
they had ridden to the site of the shipwreck. “Don’t pull so hard,” Pug
shouted. “You’ll saw at his mouth and make him mad. Pull back gently and
release a couple of times.”
Tomas did, and the horse quieted down, moving alongside Pug’s own.
Tomas sat as if the saddle had nails sticking through it. His face was a study
in concentration as he tried to guess what the horse would do next.
“If you hadn’t been walking post yesterday, you could have gone
riding, getting in some practice. Now I’ll have to teach you as we go.”
Tomas looked thankful for the promise of aid. Pug smiled. “By the
time we reach Bordon, you’ll be riding like the King’s Lancers.”
“And walking like a ruptured spinster.” Tomas shifted in the saddle.
“Already I feel like I’ve been sitting on a stone block for hours. After just a
little way from the saddling post.”
Pug jumped down from his horse and looked over Tomas’s saddle,
making Tomas move his leg so he could examine under the saddle flap, then
asked, “Who saddled this horse for you?”
“Rulf Why?”
“I thought so. He’s paying you back for threatening him about that
sword, or because we’re friends. He doesn’t dare threaten me anymore, now that
I’m a Squire, but he thinks nothing of knotting your stirrup leathers. A couple
of hours riding like this, and you’d be standing at meals for a month, if you
didn’t get pitched on your head and killed. Here, get down and I’ll show you.”
Tomas dismounted, halfway between a leap and a fall Pug showed him
the knots “They would have rubbed the inside of your thighs raw by the end of
the day. And they’re not long enough.” Pug took out the knots and adjusted the
leathers to the proper length. “It’s going to feel very strange for a while,
but you’ve got to keep your heels down. I’ll remind you until you’re sick of
hearing it, but it’ll keep you out of trouble when you do it without thought.
And don’t try to grip with your knees; that’s wrong, and it’ll make your legs
so sore, you’ll hardly be able to walk by tomorrow.” He went on with a few
basic instructions and inspected the cinch, which was loose. He tried
tightening it, and the horse sucked air. Pug struck the gelding a blow in the
side, and the animal exhaled sharply. Pug quickly pulled the cinch strap and
said, “Sometime today, you most likely would have found yourself listing to one
side, a most discomforting position.”
“That Rulf!” Tomas turned toward the stable. “I’ll thrash him within
an inch of death!”
Pug grabbed his friend’s arm. “Wait We don’t have time for
brawling.”
Tomas stood with fists clenched, then relaxed with a relieved sigh.
“I’m in no condition for fighting, anyway.” He turned to see Pug inspecting the
horse.
Pug shook his head, then winced. “Me too.” He finished inspecting
the saddle and bridle, and the horse shied. Pug gentled the horse. “Rulf’s also
given you a temperamental mount. This fellow would have probably thrown you
before noon, and be halfway back to the stable before you hit the ground With
sore legs and shortened stirrup leathers, you never would have stood a chance.
I’ll trade with you.”
Tomas looked relieved and struggled into the saddle of the other
horse Pug readjusted the stirrups for both riders “We can swap our travel rolls
when we take our noon meal.” Pug then soothed the high-strung war-horse and
climbed nimbly into the saddle. Feeling surer hands at the reins, and a firm
leg on either side, the gelding quieted.
“Ho! Martin,” shouted Tomas as the Duke’s Huntmaster walked into
view. “Are you traveling with us?”
A wry grin split the face of the hunter, who was wearing his heavy
green cloak over his forester’s leathers. “For a short while, Tomas. I’m to
lead some trackers around the boundaries of Crydee. I’ll be heading due
eastward when we come to the south branch of the river. Two of my trackers were
on their way an hour ago, breaking trail for the Duke.”
“What do you think of this Tsurani business, Martin?” Pug asked.
The still-youthful Huntmaster’s face clouded. “If elves are given to
worry, there is something to worry over.” He turned toward the front of the
assembling line. “Excuse me, I must instruct my men.” He left the boys sitting
alone.
Pug asked Tomas, “How’s your head this morning?”
Tomas made a face. “About two sizes smaller than when I awoke.” His
face brightened a bit. “Still, the excitement seems to have stopped the banging
inside. I feel almost good.”
Pug gazed at the keep. Memories of his encounter last night kept
tugging at his mind, and suddenly he regretted the need to travel with the
Duke.
Tomas noticed his friend’s pensive mood and said, “Why so glum?
Aren’t you excited about going?”
“It’s nothing. Just thinking.”
Tomas studied Pug for a moment. “I think I understand.” With a deep
sigh, he sat back in the saddle, and his horse stamped and nickered “I, for
one, am glad to be leaving. I think Neala has tumbled to that little matter we
spoke of yesterday.”
Pug laughed. “That will teach you to be mindful of who you escort
into pantries.”
Tomas smiled sheepishly.
The doors to the keep opened, and the Duke and Arutha came out,
accompanied by Kulgan, Tully, Lyam, and Roland. Carline followed, with Lady
Marna behind. The Duke and his companions made their way to the head of the
column, but Carline hurried down to where Pug and Tomas sat. As she passed,
guardsmen saluted her, but she paid them no heed. She reached Pug’s side, and
when he bowed politely, she said, “Oh, get off that stupid horse.”
Pug climbed down, and Carline threw her arms around his neck,
holding him closely for a moment. “Take care and stay well,” she said. “Don’t
let anything happen to you.” She pulled away, then kissed him briefly. “And
come home.” Holding back tears, she hurried to the head of the line, where her
father and brother waited to say good-bye.
Tomas let out a theatrical whoop and laughed, while Pug remounted;
the soldiers nearby attempted to restrain their own amusement. “It seems the
Princess has made plans for you, m’lord,” Tomas gibed. He ducked as Pug stirred
to give him a backhanded cuff. The motion caused his horse to start forward,
and suddenly Tomas was fighting to bring his horse back into line. The horse
seemed determined to go in any direction except the one Tomas wished; now it
was Pug’s turn to laugh. He finally moved his own horse alongside Tomas’s and
herded the fractious mare back into line. She flattened her ears and turned to
nip at Pug’s horse, and the short boy said, “We both have accounts to settle
with Rulf; he gave us two horses that don’t like each other, too. We’ll trade
your mount off with one of the soldiers.”
With relief Tomas half dismounted, half fell to the ground, and Pug
directed the exchange with a soldier down the line. The exchange was made, and
as Tomas returned to his place, Roland came down to where they stood and
offered them both his hand “You two watch yourselves, now. There’s plenty of
trouble waiting out there without your looking for it.”
They acknowledged they would, and Roland said to Pug, “I’ll keep an
eye on things for you.”
Pug noticed his wry smile, glanced back to where Carline stood with
her father, and said, “No doubt,” then added, “Roland, whatever happens, good
luck to you, too.”
Roland said, “Thank you. I’ll take that as it’s meant.” To Tomas he
said, “And things are certainly going to be dull without you around.”
Tomas said, “Given what’s going on, dull would be welcome.”
Roland said, “As long as it’s not too dull, right? Take good care!
You’re a bothersome pair, but I’d hate to lose you.”
Tomas laughed as Roland walked off with a friendly wave. Watching
the Squire go up to the Duke’s party, and seeing Carline standing next to her
father, Pug turned to Tomas. “That decides it I am glad to be going. I need a
rest.”
Sergeant Gardan came riding back with orders to move the column, and
they set off. The Duke and Arutha rode in the van, with Kulgan and Gardan
behind. Martin Longbow and his trackers set off at a run beside the Duke’s
horse. Twenty pair of mounted guards followed, with Tomas and Pug nestled
between them and the baggage train at the rear with its five pair of guards.
Slowly at first, then with increasing speed, they moved through the gates of
the castle and down the south road.
They had been riding for three days, the last two through dense
woodlands. Martin Longbow and his men had turned east that morning as they
crossed the southern branch of the river Crydee, called river Boundary. It marked
the border between Crydee and the Barony of Carse, one of Lord Borric’s vassal
provinces.
The sudden snows of early winter had come and draped the autumn
landscape in white. Many of the denizens of the forest had been caught unaware
by the sudden winter, rabbits whose coats were still more brown than white, and
ducks and geese who scampered across half-frozen ponds, resting as they
migrated south. The snow fell in flurries of heavy wet flakes, melting slightly
during the day, to refreeze at night, making a thin crust of ice. As the
horses’ and mules’ hooves cracked through the ice, the crunching of leaves
underneath could be heard in the still winter air.
In the afternoon Kulgan observed a flight of firedrakes circling in
the distance, barely visible through the trees. The colorful beasts, red, gold,
green, and blue in color, raced over the treetops and dipped out of sight, then
reappeared as they spiraled upward, with cries and small bursts of flame.
Kulgan reined in as the train passed and waited for Pug and Tomas to overtake
him. When they were alongside, he pointed out the display, saying, “It has the
appearance of a mating flight. See, the more aggressively the males act, the
more responsive the females. Oh, I wish we had time to study this more closely.”
Pug followed the creatures with his eyes as they rode through a
clearing, then, somewhat startled, said, “Kulgan, isn’t that Fantus there,
hovering near the edge?”
Kulgan’s eyes widened. “By the gods! I think it is.”
Pug asked, “Shall I call him?”
The magician chuckled “Given the attention he’s receiving from those
females, I think it would do little good.” They lost sight of the congregation
of drakes as they rode after the Duke’s train. Kulgan said, “Unlike most
creatures, drakes mate at first snow. The females will lay eggs in nests, then
sleep the winter, warming them with their bodies. In the spring the young hatch
and are cared for by their mothers. Fantus will most likely spend the next few
days . . . ahem, fathering a clutch of young. Then he’ll be back at the keep,
annoying Megar and the kitchen staff for the rest of the winter.”
Tomas and Pug laughed. Tomas’s father made a great show of
considering the playful drake a plague from the gods visited upon his
well-ordered kitchen, but on several occasions both boys had spied Megar
lavishing some of the choicest dinner scraps upon the beast. In the fifteen
months since Pug had become Kulgan’s apprentice, Fantus had become a winged,
scaled house pet to most of the Duke’s staff, though a few, like the Princess,
found Fantus’s dragonlike appearance disquieting.
They continued to move east by south, as quickly as the terrain
would permit. The Duke was concerned about reaching the South Pass before the
snows made it impassable, cutting them off from the east until spring. Kulgan’s
weather sense had allowed they had a fair chance of making it before any big
storms struck. Soon they came to the edge of the deepest part of the great
southern forests, the Green Heart.
Deep within the glades, at prearranged locations, two troops of
guards from the keep at Carse were waiting for them with fresh horses Duke
Borric had sent pigeons south with instructions for Baron Bellamy, who sent a
reply the same way that horses would be waiting. The remounts and guards would be
hurrying to the meeting places from the Jonril garrison, maintained by Bellamy
and Tolburt of Tulan near the edge of the great forests. By changing mounts,
the Duke would save three, perhaps four days of travel to Bordon. Longbow’s
trackers had left clear blazes for the Duke to follow, and they were due to
reach the first meeting place later that day.
Pug turned to Tomas. The taller boy was sitting his horse somewhat
better, though he still flapped his arms like a chicken trying to fly when they
were forced to a fast trot. Gardan came riding back down the line, to where the
boys rode before the baggage guards. “Be wary,” he shouted. “From here to the
Grey Towers is the darkest part of the Green Heart. Even the elves pass through
here quickly and in numbers.” The sergeant of the Duke’s Guard turned his horse
and galloped back to the head of the line.
They traveled the balance of the day, every eye searching the forest
for signs of trouble. Tomas and Pug made light conversation, with Tomas
remarking on the chance of a good fight. Both boys’ banter sounded hollow to
the soldiers around them, who sat silent and vigilant. They reached the place
of meeting just before sundown. It was a clearing of considerable size, with
several tree stumps grown over with ground cover that peeked through the snow,
showing that the trees had been harvested long ago.
The fresh horses stood in a picket, each tied to a long line, while
six guards stood careful watch around them. When the Duke’s party had ridden
up, they had weapons ready. They lowered their weapons when they saw the
familiar banner of Crydee. These were men of Carse, who wore the scarlet tabard
of Baron Bellamy quartered by a gold cross, a golden griffin rampant over their
hearts. The shield of each man bore the same device.
The sergeant of the six guards saluted. “Well met, my lord.”
Borric acknowledged the salute “The horses?” he asked simply.
“They are fit, lord, and restless from waiting. As are the men.”
Borric dismounted; another soldier of Carse took his horse’s reins.
“Trouble?”
“None, my lord, but this place is suited for other than honest men.
All last night we stood watches by twos and felt the crawl of eyes upon us.”
The sergeant was a scarred veteran, who had fought goblins and bandits in his
day. He was not the type to give in to flights of imagination, and the Duke
acknowledged this. “Double the watch this night. You will escort the horses
back to your garrison tomorrow. I would rather have them rested a day, but this
is a poor place.”
Prince. Arutha came forward. “I have also felt eyes upon us for the
last few hours, Father.”
Borric turned to the sergeant. “It may be that we have been shadowed
by a band of brigands, seeking to judge our mission. I will send two men back
with you, for fifty men or forty-eight is of little difference, but eight is a
far better number than six.” If the sergeant felt any relief at this, he did
not show it, simply saying, “I thank my lord.”
Borric dismissed the man and with Arutha walked toward the center of
the camp, where a large fire was burning. The soldiers were erecting rude
shelters against the night wind, as they had each night of the journey. Borric
saw two mules with the horses and noted that bales of hay had been brought
along. Arutha followed his gaze. “Bellamy is a prudent man; he serves Your
Grace well.”
Kulgan, Gardan, and the boys approached the two nobles, who stood
warming themselves before the fire. Darkness was descending quickly, even at
noon there was little light in the snow-shrouded forest. Borric looked around
and shivered from more than the cold. “This is an ill-omened place. We will do
well to be away as soon as possible.”
They ate a quick meal and turned in Pug and Tomas lay close,
starting at every strange sound until fatigue lulled them to sleep.
The duke’s company passed deep into the forest, through glades so
thick that often the trackers had had to change their course, doubling back to
find another way for the horses, marking the trail as they went. Much of this
forest was dark and twisted, with choking underbrush that impeded travel.
Pug said to Tomas, “I doubt the sun ever shines here.” He spoke in
soft tones. Tomas slowly nodded, his eyes watching the trees. Since leaving the
men from Carse three days ago, they had felt more tension each passing day. The
noises of the forest had lessened as they moved deeper into the trees, until
they now rode in silence. It was as if the animals and birds themselves shunned
this part of the forest. Pug knew it was only because there were few animals
that hadn’t migrated south or gone into hibernation, but that knowledge didn’t
lessen his and Tomas’s dread.
Tomas slowed down. “I feel something terrible is about to happen.”
Pug said, “You’ve been saying that for two days now.” After a minute
he added, “I hope we don’t have to fight I don’t know how to use this sword, in
spite of what you’ve tried to show me.”
“Here,” said Tomas, holding something out. Pug took it and found a
small pouch inside of which was a collection of small, smooth rocks and a
sling. “I thought you might feel better with a sling. I brought one, too.”
They rode for another hour, then stopped to rest the horses and eat
a cold meal. It was midmorning, and Gardan inspected each horse, ensuring it
was fit. No soldier was given a chance to overlook the slightest possible
injury or illness Should a horse falter, its rider would have to double up with
another, and those two would have to return as best they could, for the Duke
could not wait for such a delay. This far from any safe haven, it was something
no one wished to think about or discuss aloud.
They were due to meet the second detachment of horses at
midafternoon. The breakneck pace of the first four days had given way to a
careful walk, for to rush through the trees would be dangerous. At the rate
they were progressing, they would be on time. Still, the Duke was chafing at
the slow pace.
On and on they rode, at times having to stop while guards drew
swords and cut at the brush before them, their sword blows echoing through the
stillness of the forest as they followed the narrow path left by the trackers.
Pug was lost in thoughts of Carline when, later, a shout erupted
from the front of the column, out of sight of the boys. Suddenly the horsemen
near Pug and Tomas were charging forward, oblivious to the thicket around them,
dodging low-hanging branches by instinct.
Pug and Tomas spurred their horses after the others, and soon their
senses recorded a blur of brown and white, as snow-spotted trees seemed to fly
past. They stayed low, close to the necks of their mounts, avoiding most tree
branches, while they struggled to stay aboard Pug looked over his shoulder and
saw Tomas falling behind. Branches and twigs caught at Pug’s cloak as he
crashed through the forest into a clearing. The sounds of battle assaulted his
ears, and the boy saw fighting in progress. The remount horses were trying to
pull up their stakes, while fighting exploded around them. Pug could only
vaguely make out the form of combatants, dark shrouded shapes slashing upward
with swords at the horsemen.
A figure broke away and came running toward him, avoiding the blow
of a guard a few yards ahead of Pug. The strange warrior grinned wickedly at
Pug, seeing only the boy before him Raising his sword for a blow, the fighter
screamed and clawed at his face as blood ran between his fingers Tomas had
reined in behind Pug and with a yell let fly with another stone. “I thought
you’d get yourself into trouble,” he shouted. He spurred his horse forward and
rode over the fallen figure Pug sat rooted for a moment, then spurred his own
horse. Pulling out his sling, he let fly at a couple of targets, but couldn’t
be sure if the stones struck.
Suddenly Pug was in a place of calm in the fighting. On all sides he
could see figures in dark grey cloaks and leather armor pouring out from the
forest. They looked like elves, save their hair was darker, and they shouted in
a language unpleasant to Pug’s ears. Arrows flew from the trees, emptying
saddles of Crydee horsemen.
Lying about were bodies of both attackers and soldiers. Pug saw the
lifeless bodies of a dozen men of Carse, as well as Longbow’s two lead
trackers, tied to stakes in lifelike poses around the campfire. Scarlet
bloodstains spotted the white snow beside them. The ruse had worked, for the
Duke had ridden straight into the clearing, and now the trap was sprung.
Lord Borric’s voice rang out over the fray “To me! To me! We are
surrounded.”
Pug looked about for Tomas as he frantically kicked his mount toward
the Duke and his gathering men. Arrows filled the air, and the screams of the
dying echoed in the glade. Borric shouted, “This way!” and the survivors
followed him. They crashed into the forest, riding over attacking bowmen Shouts
followed them while they galloped away from the ambush, keeping low over the
necks of their mounts, avoiding arrows and low-hanging branches.
Pug frantically pulled his horse aside, avoiding a large tree. He
looked about, but could not see Tomas. Fixing his gaze upon the back of another
horseman, Pug determined to concentrate on one thing only, not losing sight of
the man’s back. Strange loud cries could be heard from behind, and other voices
answered from one side. Pug’s mouth was dry and his hands sweating in the heavy
gloves he wore.
They sped through the forest, shouts and cries echoing around them
Pug lost track of the distance covered, but he thought it surely a mile or
more. Still the voices shouted in the forest, calling to others the course of
the Duke’s flight.
Suddenly Pug was crashing through the thick underbrush, forcing his
lathered, panting horse up a small but steep rise. All around him was a gloom
of grey and greens, broken only by patches of white. Atop the rise the Duke
waited, his sword drawn, as others pulled up around him. Arutha sat by his
father, his face covered with perspiration in spite of the cold. Panting horses
and exhausted guards gathered around. Pug was relieved to see Tomas beside
Kulgan and Gardan.
When the last rider approached, Lord Borric said, “How many?”
Gardan surveyed the survivors and said, “We’ve lost eighteen men,
have six wounded, and all the mules and baggage were taken.”
Borric nodded. “Rest the horses a moment. They’ll come.”
Arutha said, “Are we to stand, Father?”
Borric shook his head. “There are too many of them. At least a
hundred struck the clearing.” He spat. “We rode into that ambush like a rabbit
into a snare.” He glanced about “We’ve lost nearly half our company.”
Pug asked a soldier sitting beside him, “Who were they?”
The soldier looked at Pug. “The Brotherhood of the Dark Path,
Squire, may Ka-hooli visit every one of the bastards with piles,” he answered,
invoking the vengeance god. The soldier indicated a circle around them with his
hand “Small bands of them travel through the Green Heart, though they mostly
live in the mountains east of here, and way up in the Northlands. That was more
than I’d have bargained was around, curse the luck.”
Voices shouted from behind, and the Duke said, “They come Ride!”
The survivors wheeled and rode off, again racing through the trees
ahead of their pursuers. Time became suspended for Pug as he negotiated the
dangerous course through the dense forest. Twice men nearby screamed, whether
from striking branches or from arrows Pug didn’t know.
Again they came to a clearing, and the Duke signaled a halt Gardan
said, “Your grace, the horses can’t endure much more of this.”
Borric struck his saddle horn in frustration, his face dark with
anger. “Damn them! And where are we?”
Pug looked about. He had no idea of where they stood in relationship
to the original site of attack, and from the looks on the faces around him, no
one else did either.
Arutha said, “We must strike eastward, Father, and make for the
mountains.”
Borric nodded. “But which way lies east?” The tall trees and
overcast sky with its defused sunlight conspired to deny them any point of reference.
Kulgan said, “One moment, your grace,” and closed his eyes. Again
shouts of pursuit echoed through the trees, as Kulgan opened his eyes and
pointed “That way. There lies the east.” Without question or comment, the Duke
spurred his horse in the indicated direction, motioning for the others to
follow. Pug felt a strong urge to be near someone familiar and tried to rejoin
Tomas, but couldn’t make his way through the press of riders. He swallowed hard
and admitted to himself he was badly scared. The grim faces of the nearby
soldiers told him he was not alone in that feeling.
More time passed as they raced through the dark corridors of the
Green Heart Every advance along the escape route was accompanied by the echoing
cries of Dark Brothers as they alerted others of the fugitives’ route.
Occasionally Pug would spy a shape loping along in the distance, quickly lost
in the darkness of the trees as it ran a parallel course. The accompanying
runners did not seek to hinder them, but always they were near.
Once more the Duke ordered a halt. Turning to Gardan, he said,
“Skirmishers! Find out how close they follow. We must have rest.” Gardan
indicated three men, who quickly leapt from their horses and ran back along the
route of their retreat. A single clash of steel and a strangled cry heralded
their encounter with the closest Dark Brother tracker.
“Damn them!” said the Duke. “They’re herding us in a circle, seeking
to bring us back into their main strength. Already we’re moving more north than
east.”
Pug took the opportunity to move next to Tomas. The horses were
panting and shivering as perspiration steamed off them in the cold. Tomas
managed a feeble smile, but said nothing.
Men moved quickly among the horses, checking for injury. In a few
minutes the skirmishers returned at a run. Panting, one said, “Lord, they are
close behind, fifty, sixty at least.”
“How long?”
The man stood with perspiration pouring down his face as he
answered, “Five minutes, my lord.” With grim humor he said, “The two we killed
will make them pause, but no more time than that.”
Borric said to the company, “We rest a moment, then we ride.”
Arutha said, “A moment or an hour, what does it matter? The horses
are done. We should stand before more Brothers come to the call.”
Borric shook his head. “I must get through to Erland. He must know
of the coming of the Tsurani.”
An arrow, quickly followed by a second, flew from the nearby trees,
and another rider fell. Borric shouted, “Ride!”
They cantered the exhausted horses deeper into the woods, then
slowed to a walk, while they kept watch for the coming attack. The Duke used
hand signals to deploy the line of soldiers so they might swing to either flank
and charge on command. Horses blew foam as their nostrils distended, and Pug
knew they were close to dropping.
“Why don’t they attack?” whispered Tomas.
“I don’t know,” answered Pug. “They just harry us from the sides and
behind.”
The Duke raised his hand and the column halted. No sounds of pursuit
could be heard. He turned and spoke in a low tone. “They may have lost us. Pass
the word to inspect your mounts—” An arrow sped past his head, missing him by
inches “Forward!” he shouted, and they began a ragged trot along the path they
had been following.
Gardan snouted, “My lord, it seems they wish us to keep moving.”
In a harsh whisper Borric swore, then asked, “Kulgan, which way lies
east?”
The magician closed his eyes again, and Pug knew he was tiring
himself with this particular spell. Not difficult if one was standing calmly,
it had to be fatiguing him under these conditions. Kulgan’s eyes opened and he
pointed to the right. The column was heading northward.
Arutha said, “Again they slowly turn us, Father, back into their
main strength.”
Raising his voice, Borric said, “Only fools or children would keep
to this route. On my command, wheel to the right and charge.” He waited as
every man readied weapons and made silent prayers to their gods that the horses
could withstand one more gallop. Then the Duke shouted, “Now!” As a body, the
column wheeled to the right, and riders spurred their flagging mounts. Arrows
came pouring from the trees, and men and horses screamed.
Pug ducked under a branch, desperately holding on to the reins while
he fumbled with sword and shield. He felt the shield slipping and, as he
struggled with it, sensed his horse slowing. He couldn’t exercise the needed
control over the animal and manage the weapons at the same time.
Pug reined in, risking a momentary stop to put his equipment right.
A noise made him look to the right. Standing less than five yards away was a
bowman of the Brotherhood of the Dark Path. Pug stayed rooted for a moment, as
did the bowman. Pug was struck by his resemblance to the Elf Prince, Calin.
There was little to distinguish the two races, nearly the same in height and
build, save hair and eyes. The creature’s bowstring had snapped, and he stood
with dark eyes fixed upon Pug while calmly setting about restnnging his bow.
Pug’s astonishment at finding the Dark Brother standing so close to
him momentarily caused him to forget the reason he had halted. He sat numbly
watching the bowman repairing his weapon, entranced by the dark elf’s coolly
efficient manner.
Then he was pulling an arrow from his quiver in a fluid motion and
fitting the shaft to the bowstring. Sudden alarm made Pug act. His staggering
horse answered his frantic kicks and was off again. He didn’t see the bowman’s
arrow, but heard and felt it speed past his ear, then he was back to a gallop,
the bowman lost behind as Pug overtook the Duke’s company.
Noise from ahead made Pug urge his horse on, though the poor animal
was giving every indication it was moving as fast as possible. Pug wove through
the forest, the gloom making it difficult to negotiate.
Abruptly he was behind a rider wearing the Duke’s colors and then
passing the man as Pug’s horse proved fresher for carrying a lighter rider. The
terrain became more hilly, and Pug wondered if they were entering the foothills
of the Grey Towers.
A horse’s scream caused Pug to glance behind. He saw the soldier he
had passed thrown as his mount collapsed, foaming blood spurting from the
animal’s nose. Pug and another rider halted, and the soldier turned back,
riding over to where the first man stood. He extended his hand to offer the
fallen man a double ride. The fallen soldier just shook his head, as he struck
the standing horse on the rump, sending it ahead again. Pug knew the second
man’s horse could barely carry one rider, never two. The fallen rider pulled
his sword and put down the injured horse, then turned to wait for the pursuing
Dark Brothers. Pug found his eyes tearing as he contemplated the man’s courage.
The other soldier shouted something over his shoulder that was lost to the boy,
then suddenly he was riding by. He shouted, “Move, Squire!”
Pug put heels to the sides of his horse, and the animal picked up a
staggering trot.
The fleeing column continued on its stumbling, exhausted flight, Pug
moving up through the company of riders to a place near the Duke. After a few
minutes Lord Borric signaled for them to slow. They entered another clearing.
Borric surveyed his company. A look of helpless rage crossed his face, to be
replaced by surprise. He held his hand aloft, and the riders stopped their
milling about. Shouts sounded in the forest, but from some distance away.
Arutha, eyes wide with wonder, said, “Have we lost them?”
Slowly the Duke nodded, his attention focused on the distant shouts.
“For the moment. When we broke through the archers, we must have slipped behind
their pursuit. They’ll discover that fact shortly and double back. We have ten,
fifteen minutes at best.” He looked over his ragged company. “If only we could
find a place to hide.”
Kulgan moved his staggering horse alongside the Duke “My lord, I
might have a solution, though it is risky and might prove fatal.”
Borric said, “No more fatal than waiting for them to come for us.
What is your plan?”
“I have an amulet, which can control weather I had planned to save
it against possible storms at sea, for its use is limited. I may be able to
mask our whereabouts with it. Let every man gather his horse at the far end of
the clearing, near that outcropping of rock. Have them silence the animals.”
Borric ordered it done, and the animals were moved to the opposite
end of the clearing. Reassuring hands gentled exhausted and excited horses,
quieting the mounts after their long flight.
They had gathered at the highest end of a narrow clearing, their
backs to an outcropping of granite that rose overhead like a grey fist. On
three sides the ground sloped away gently. Kulgan began to walk along the
perimeter of the compact company.
He chanted in a low voice, waving the amulet in an intricate pattern
Slowly the grey afternoon light faded, and a mist began to gather around him.
At first only light wisps appeared nearby, then other, more substantial patches
of moisture formed, becoming light fog.
Soon the air between the Duke’s company and the tree line grew hazy.
Kulgan moved more quickly and the fog deepened, filling the clearing with whiteness,
moving outward from the magician into the trees on all sides. Within a few
minutes it was impossible to see beyond a few yards.
On and on paced Kulgan, sending thicker blankets of haze to obscure
the already grey light in the trees. The clearing slowly became darker as the
gloomy fog deepened with every incantation made by the magician.
Then Kulgan stopped and turned to the Duke, whispering, “All must
remain quiet. Should the dark elves wander blindly into the fog, the sloping
terrain will, I hope, guide them past on one side or the other as they come
around the rocks. But let no man move. Any sound will defeat us.”
Each man nodded, understanding the danger coming fast. They would
stand in the center of this deep fog in the hope the Dark Brothers would walk
past, putting the Duke and his men once more behind them. It was an
all-or-nothing gambit, for should they win free, there was a good chance they
would be far removed from this spot when the Brotherhood once more backtracked.
Pug looked at Tomas and whispered, “It’s a good thing it’s rocky
here, else we’d leave some pretty tracks.”
Tomas nodded, too frightened to speak. A nearby guard motioned for
Pug to be silent, and the young Squire nodded.
Gardan and several guards, with the Duke and Arutha, took up
position near the front of the company, weapons ready should the ploy fail
Shouts grew louder as the Dark Brotherhood returned along their trail. Kulgan
stood near the Duke, enchanting quietly, gathering more mist around him, then
sending it forth. Pug knew the mist would be expanding rapidly, shrouding a
continuously larger area as long as Kulgan continued to meant. Every extra
minute would encompass more of the Green Heart in fog, making it increasingly
more difficult for the attackers to find them.
Pug felt wetness on his cheek and looked up. Snow was beginning to
fall With apprehension he looked to the mist, to see if the newly arriving snow
was affecting it. He watched a tense minute, then silently sighed with relief,
for if anything, the snow was adding to the masking effects of the fog.
A soft footfall could be heard nearby. Pug froze, as did every man
near him. A voice rang out in the Brotherhood’s strange language.
Pug felt an itch between his shoulders, but refused to move,
fighting to ignore the nagging sensation on his back. He glanced sideways at
Tomas. Tomas stood stock-still, his hand on his horse’s muzzle, looking like a
statue in the haze. Like every other remaining horse, Tomas’s mount knew the
hand upon his face was a command for quiet.
Another voice rang out in the mist, and Pug nearly jumped. It
sounded as if the caller were standing directly in front of him. Again the
answering call came, sounding farther away.
Gardan stood directly before Pug, who saw the sergeant’s back
twitch. Gardan slowly knelt, silently laying his sword and shield on the
ground. He rose up, still moving slowly, pulling his belt knife. Then suddenly
he stepped into the mist, his movements as quick and fluid as a cat
disappearing into the night. There was a faint sound, and Gardan reappeared.
Before him struggled the form of a Dark Brother, one of Gardan’s
huge black hands clamped tightly over the creature’s mouth. The other arm was
choking its throat. Pug could see the sergeant couldn’t risk letting go for the
brief instant needed to plunge the knife in its back Gardan gritted his teeth
in pain as the creature raked the sergeant’s arm with clawlike nails. Its eyes
bulged as it fought to breathe. Gardan stood rooted to the spot, holding the
Dark Brother off the ground by main force as it struggled to get free. The
creature’s face turned red, then purple, as Gardan choked the life from it.
Blood from the creature’s raking nails flowed freely down Gardan’s arm; but the
powerful soldier barely moved at all. Then the Dark Brother went limp, and
Gardan gave it a final, throat-crushing jerk of his arm and let the creature
slide silently to the ground.
Gardan’s eyes were wide with exertion, and he panted quietly as he
regained his breath. Slowly he turned, knelt, and replaced his knife.
Recovering his sword and shield, he stood, resuming his watch in the mist.
Pug felt nothing but awe and admiration for the sergeant, but like
the others he could only silently watch. Time passed, and the voices grew more
faint as they sounded their angry inquiries to one another, seeking the
fugitives’ hiding place. The voices moved off, and then, like a long sigh of
relief heaved by all in the clearing, it was silent. The Duke whispered, “They
are past us. Lead the horses. We go east.”
Pug looked
about in the gloom. Ahead, Duke Borric and Prince Arutha led the way. Gardan
stayed beside Kulgan, who was still exhausted from his magical undertaking.
Tomas walked silently beside his friend. Of the fifty guardsmen who had set out
with the Duke from Crydee, thirteen remained. Only six horses had survived the
day. As they had faltered, the others had been quickly put down by silent,
tight-lipped riders.
They trudged upward, climbing higher into the foothills. The sun had
set, but the Duke ordered them onward, fearful of the return of their pursuers.
The men stepped cautiously forward, tentative in the rough terrain at night.
The darkness was punctuated by softly uttered oaths as men lost their footing
on the icy rocks time and again.
Pug plodded along, his body numb with fatigue and cold. The day had
seemed an eternity, and he could not remember when he had last stopped or
eaten. Once he had been handed a waterskin by a soldier, but the lone drink was
a dim memory. He grabbed a handful of snow and put it in his mouth, but the
melting iciness gave him little relief. The snow was falling more heavily, or
at least it seemed so to Pug, he couldn’t see it fall, but it struck his face
with more frequency and force. It was bitterly cold, and he shivered inside his
cloak.
Like a booming call, the Duke’s whisper sounded in the murk. “Stop.
I doubt they are wandering about in the dark. We’ll rest here.”
Arutha’s whisper could be heard from somewhere ahead: “The falling
snow should cover our tracks by morning.”
Pug dropped to his knees and pulled his cloak about himself Tomas’s
voice sounded nearby. “Pug?”
Softly he answered, “Here.”
Tomas dropped heavily beside him. “I think . . .,” he said between
panting breaths, “I’ll never . . . move again.”
Pug could only nod. The Duke’s voice came from a short distance
away. “No fires.”
Gardan answered, “It’s a bitter night for a cold camp, Your Grace.”
Borric said, “Agreed, but if those sons of hell are nearby, a fire
would bring them howling down upon us. Huddle together for warmth, so no one
will freeze. Post guards and tell the others to sleep. When dawn breaks, I want
to put as much distance between ourselves and them as possible.” Pug felt
bodies begin to press around him and didn’t mind the discomfort for the warmth.
Soon he drifted off into a fitful doze, starting awake often during the night.
Then suddenly it was dawn.
Three more horses died during the night, their frozen bodies lying
uncovered in the snow. Pug came to his feet, feeling light-headed and stiff. He
shivered uncontrollably as he stamped his feet, trying to stir some life into
his chilled, aching body Tomas stirred, then awoke with a start, looking to see
what was occurring. He climbed awkwardly to his feet, then joined Pug in
stamping feet and swinging arms. “I’ve never been so cold in my life,” he said
through chattering teeth.
Pug looked around. They were in a hollow between large outcrop-pings
of granite, still bare and grey in patches, which rose up behind them thirty
feet into the air, joining a ridge above. The ground sloped away along the path
of their march, and Pug noticed the trees were thinner here. “Come along,” he
said to Tomas as he began to scramble up the rocks.
“Damn!” sounded from behind, and Pug and Tomas looked back to see
Gardan kneeling over the still form of a guard. The sergeant looked at the Duke
and said, “Died in the night, Your Grace.” He shook his head as he added, “He
took a wound and never spoke of it.”
Pug counted; besides himself, Tomas, Kulgan, the Duke, and his son,
there were now just twelve soldiers. Tomas looked up at Pug, who had climbed
ahead, and said, “Where are we going?”
Pug noticed he whispered. He inclined his head upward and said, “To
see what’s over there.”
Tomas nodded, and they continued their climb. Stiff fingers
protested against the need to grip hard rock, but soon Pug found himself warm
again as exertion heated his body. He reached up and gripped the edge of the
ridge above. He pulled himself up and over and waited for Tomas.
Tomas came over the ridge, panting for breath, looked past Pug, and
said, “Oh, glory!”
Rising up majestically before them were the tall peaks of the Grey
Towers. The sun rose behind, casting rose and golden highlights on the north
faces of the mountains, while the western faces were still veiled in indigo
darkness. The sky was clear, the snowfall over. Everywhere they looked, the
scenery was draped in white.
Pug waved toward Gardan. The sergeant walked up to the base of the
rocks, climbed a short way, and said, “What is it?” Pug said, “The Grey Towers!
No more than five miles away.”
Gardan waved for the boys to return, and they scrambled down,
falling the last few feet to land with a thump. With their destination in
sight, they felt revived. They came to where Gardan stood in conference with
the Duke, Arutha, and Kulgan. Borric spoke softly, his words carrying clearly
in the crisp morning air. “Take whatever is left on the dead animals and divide
it among the men. Bring the remaining horses, but no one rides. No use covering
the animals, for we’ll make broad tracks anyway.”
Gardan saluted and began circulating among the soldiers. They stood
about in pairs or singly, eyes watching for signs of possible pursuit.
Borric said to Kulgan, “Have you an idea where the South Pass lies?”
“I will try to use my magic sight, my lord.” Kulgan concentrated,
and Pug watched closely, for seeing with the mind’s eye was another of the
feats that had eluded him in his studies. It was akin to using the crystal, but
less pictorial, more an impression of where something was in relation to the
spellcaster. After a few minutes of silence, Kulgan said, “I cannot tell, Sire.
If I had been there before, then perhaps, but I get no impression of where the
pass may lie.”
Borric nodded. “I wish Longbow were here. He knows the landmarks of
the area.” He turned to the east, as if seeing the Grey Towers through the
intervening ridge. “One mountain looks much like another to me.”
Arutha said, “Father, to the north?”
Borric smiled a little at Arutha’s logic. “Yes If the pass lies
northward, we still might chance across it before it is impassable. Once across
the mountains, the weather will prove milder in the east—at least that is the
rule this time of year. We should be able to walk to Bordon. If we are already north
of the pass, then we will eventually reach the dwarves. They will shelter us
and perhaps know another route to the east.” He inspected his exhausted
company. “With three horses and snow melted for drinking water, we should last
another week.” He looked around, studying the sky. “If the weather holds.”
Kulgan said, “We should be free of bad weather in two, perhaps three
days. Farther into the future I cannot judge.” A distant shout echoed over the
trees, from deep within the forest below. Instantly everyone was still. Borric
looked to Gardan “Sergeant, how far away do you judge them?”
Gardan listened. “It is hard to say, my lord. One mile, two, maybe
more. Sound carries oddly in the forest, more so when it is this cold.” Borric
nodded. “Gather the men. We leave now.”
Pug’s fingertips bled through his torn gloves. At every opportunity
during the day, the Duke had kept the men traveling over rock, to prevent Dark
Brotherhood trackers from following. Every hour guards had been sent back to
cut false trails over their own, pulling blankets taken from the dead horses
behind, obscuring the tracks as best they could.
They stood at the edge of a clearing, a circle of bare rock
surrounded on all sides by scattered pines and aspens. The trees had grown
progressively thinner as they moved up into the mountains, staying on the
rougher, higher terrain rather than risk being followed. Since dawn they had
moved northeast, following a ridge of rugged hills toward the Grey Towers, but
to Pug’s dismay the mountains seemed no closer.
The sun stood high overhead, but Pug felt little of its warmth, for
a cold wind blew down from the heights of the Grey Towers. Pug hqard Kulgan’s
voice some distance behind. “As long as the wind is from the northeast, we’ll
have no snow, as any moisture will have fallen on the peaks. Should the wind
shift and come from the west, or northwest, from off the Endless Sea, we’ll
have more snow.”
Pug panted as he scrambled along the rocks, balancing on the
slippery surface “Kulgan, must we have lessons, too?”
Several men laughed, and momentarily the grim tension of the last
two days lessened. They reached a large flat, before another upward rise, and
the Duke ordered a halt. “Build a fire and slaughter an animal. We’ll wait here
for the last rear guard.”
Gardan quickly sent men to gather wood in the trees, and one was
given two of the horses to lead away. The high-strung mounts were footsore,
tired, and unfed, and in spite of their training, Gardan wanted them removed
from the smell of blood.
The chosen horse screamed, then was suddenly silent, and when the
fires were ready, the soldiers placed spits over the flames. Soon the aroma of
roasting meat filled the air. In spite of his anticipated distaste, Pug found
his mouth watering at the smell. In a while he was handed a stick, with a large
piece of roasted liver on it, which he wolfed down. Nearby, Tomas was doing
equal justice to a portion of sizzling haunch.
When they were done eating, the still-hot meat left over was wrapped
with strips from horse blankets and torn tabards, then divided among the men.
Pug and Tomas sat by Kulgan as men broke camp, putting out fires,
covering signs of passing, and readying for the resumption of the march.
Gardan came to the Duke. “My lord, the rear guard is overdue.”
Borric nodded. “I know. They should have returned a half hour ago.”
He peered down the hillside, toward the huge forest, mist shrouded in the
distance. “We’ll wait five more minutes, then we will go.”
They waited in silence, but the guards didn’t return. Finally Gardan
gave the order. “All right, lads. Off we go.”
The men formed up behind the Duke and Kulgan, and the boys fell in
at the rear. Pug counted. There were only ten soldiers left.
Two days later the howling winds came, icy knives ripping at exposed
flesh. Cloaks were gathered around each figure tramping slowly northward,
leaning into the wind. Rags had been torn and tied around boots in a feeble
attempt to hold off frostbite Pug tried vainly to keep his eyelashes free of
ice, but the harsh wind made his eyes tear, and the drops quickly froze,
blurring his vision.
Pug heard Kulgan’s voice above the wind. “My lord, a storm comes. We
must find shelter or perish.” The Duke nodded and waved two men ahead to seek
shelter. The two set pff at a stumbling run, moving only slightly faster than
the others, but valiantly putting their remaining meager strength into the
task.
Clouds began to roll in from the northwest, and the skies darkened.
“How much time, Kulgan?” shouted the Duke over the shrieking wind.
The magician waved his hand above his head, as the wind blew his
hair and beard back from his face, exposing his high forehead. “An hour at
most.” The Duke nodded again and exhorted his men to move along.
A sad sound, a neighing cry, pierced the wind, and a soldier called
out that the last horse was down. Borric stopped and with a curse ordered it
slaughtered as quickly as possible. Soldiers butchered the animal, steaming
hunks of meat being cut away, to chill in the snow where they were cast before
they could be wrapped. When they were done, the meat was divided among the men.
“If we can find shelter, we will build a fire and cook the meat,”
the Duke shouted.
Silently Pug added that if they couldn’t find shelter, they’d have
little use for the meat. They resumed their march.
A short time later the two guards returned with the news of a cave
less than a quarter mile distant. The Duke ordered them to show the way.
Snow began to fall, whipped by the driving wind. The sky was now
dark, limiting visibility to only a few hundred feet Pug felt light-headed and
had to struggle to pull his feet from the resisting snow. Both hands were numb,
and he wondered if he was frostbitten.
Tomas looked slightly better, being somewhat hardier by nature, but
he also was too exhausted to speak. He just plodded along beside his friend.
Suddenly Pug was lying face down in the snow feeling surprisingly
warm and sleepy. Tomas knelt beside the fallen magician’s apprentice. He shook
Pug. and the nearly unconscious boy groaned.
“Get up,” Tomas shouted. “It’s only a little way farther.”
Pug struggled upright, aided by Tomas and one of the soldiers. When
he was standing, Tomas indicated to the soldier he could take care of his
friend. The soldier nodded, but stayed near. Tomas loosened one of the main
strips of blanket tied around him for warmth, knotted one end to Pug’s belt,
and half guided, half pulled the smaller boy along.
The boys followed the guard who had helped them around an
outcropping of rock and found themselves at the mouth of a cave. They staggered
forward a few steps into the sheltering darkness, then fell to the stone floor.
In contrast to the biting wind outside, the cave seemed warm, and they lapsed
into an exhausted sleep.
Pug awoke to the smell of cooking horse meat. He roused himself and
saw it was dark outside, beyond the fire. Piles of branches and deadwood were
heaped nearby. and men were carefully feeding the fire Others stood by.
roasting pieces of meat. Pug flexed his fingers and found them painfully sore,
but as he peeled off his tattered gloves, he saw no signs of frostbite. He
nudged Tomas awake, and the other boy raised himself up on his elbows, blinking
at the firelight.
Gardan stood on the other side of the fire, speaking with a guard.
The Duke sat nearby, in quiet conversation with his son and Kulgan. Beyond
Gardan and the guard, Pug could see only blackness. He couldn’t remember what
time of day it had been when they found the cave, but he and Tomas must have
slept for hours.
Kulgan saw them stirring and came over. “How do you feel?” he asked,
a look of concern on his face. The boys indicated they felt all right,
considering the circumstances Pug and Tomas doffed their boots at Kulgan’s
orders, and he was pleased to report they had suffered no frostbite, though one
of the soldiers, he said, hadn’t been as lucky.
“How long were we asleep?” asked Pug.
“Throughout last night and all this day,” said the magician with a
sigh-Then Pug noticed signs that a lot of work had been done. Besides the brush
being cut, he and Tomas had been covered by some of the blankets. A pair of
snared rabbits hung near the cave mouth with a row of freshly filled waterskins
stacked near the fire. “You could have woken us,” Pug said, a note of worry in
his voice.
Kulgan shook his head. “The Duke wouldn’t have moved until the storm
had passed, and that was only a few hours ago. In any event, you and Tomas
weren’t the only tired ones here. I doubt even the hearty sergeant there could
have gone more than another few miles with only one night’s rest. The Duke will
see how things stand tomorrow. I expect we shall leave then, if the weather
holds.”
Kulgan stood and, with a small gesture indicating the boys should
return to sleep if possible, went to stand beside the Duke. Pug was surprised
that, for someone who had slept the day around, he was again tired, though he
thought he would fill his stomach before seeking more sleep. Tomas nodded at
his unspoken question, and the two scooted over by the fire. One of the
soldiers was busy cooking meat and handed them hot portions.
The boys wolfed down the food and after they were done sat back
against one wall of the large cave. Pug started to speak to Tomas but was
distracted when he caught sight of the guard by the cave’s mouth. A queer look
passed over the man’s face as he stood talking to Sergeant Gardan, then his
knees buckled. Gardan reached out to catch him, lowering him to the floor. The
big sergeant’s eyes widened as he saw the arrow protruding from the man’s side.
Time seemed suspended for an instant, then Gardan shouted, “Attack!”
A howling cry sounded from outside the cave’s mouth, and a figure
came bounding into the light, jumping over the low brush, then again bounding
over the fire, knocking down the soldier cooking meat. It landed a short way
from the boys and spun to face those it had leapt past. It was wrapped in a
coat and trousers of animal furs. On one arm it bore a battle-scarred
buckler-size shield, and in the other a curved sword was held high.
Pug staved motionless as the creature regarded the company in the
cave, a snarl on inhuman lips, eyes glowing with reflected firelight and fangs
bared Tomas’s training asserted itself, and the sword he had clung to over the
long march was out of its scabbard in an instant. With a show the creature
swung downward at Pug, who rolled sideways, avoiding the blow. The blade rang
out as it struck the ground, and Tomas made an off-balance lunge, awkwardly
taking the creature low in the chest. It fell to its knees and gurgled as blood
filled its lungs, then fell forward.
Other attackers were leaping into the cave and were quickly engaged
by the men from Crydee. Curses and oaths sounded, and swords rang out in the
close confines of the cave. Guards and attackers stood face-to-face, unable to
move more than a few feet. Several of the Duke’s men dropped swords and pulled
daggers from their belts, better for close fighting.
Pug grabbed his sword and looked for an attacker, but found none. In
the dancing light of the fire, he could see the attackers were outnumbered by
the remaining guards, and as two or three men of Crydee grappled with each
attacker, it was quickly down and killed.
Suddenly the cave was quiet, save for the heavy breathing of the
soldiers. Pug looked and saw only one man down, the one who had taken the
arrow. A few others sported light wounds. Kulgan hurried among the men,
checking the wounds, then said to the Duke, “My lord, we have no other serious
injuries.”
Pug looked at the dead creatures. Six of them lay sprawled upon the
cave floor. They were smaller than men, but not by much. Above thick browndges,
their sloping foreheads were topped by thick black hair. Their blue-green
tinged skins were smooth, save for one who had something like a youth’s beard
upon his cheeks. Their eyes, open in death, were huge and round, with black
irises on yellow. All died with snarls upon their hideous faces, showing long
teeth that came close to being fangs.
Pug crossed to Gardan, peering into the gloom of the night for signs
of more of the creatures. “What are they, Sergeant?”
“Goblins, Pug Though I can’t fathom what they are doing this far
from their normal range.”
The Duke came to stand next to him and said, “Only a half dozen,
Gardan I have never heard of goblins attacking armed men except when the
advantage was theirs. This was suicide.”
“My lord, look here,” came Kulgan’s call, as he knelt over the body
of a goblin. He had pulled away the dirty fur jacket worn by the creature and
pointed to a poorly bandaged long, jagged wound on its chest. “This was not
made by us. It is three, four days old and healing badly.”
Guards inspected the other bodies and reported three others also
bore recent wounds, not caused by this fight One had a broken arm and had
fought without a shield.
Gardan said, “Sire, they wear no armor Only the weapons in their
hands.” He pointed to a dead goblin with a bow slung over its back, and an
empty quiver at its belt. “They had but the one arrow they used to wound
Daniel.”
Arutha glanced at the carnage. “This was madness. Hopeless madness.”
Kulgan said, “Yes, Highness; madness. They were battle weary,
freezing, and starved. The smell of cooking meat must have driven them mad.
From their appearance I’d say they’ve not eaten in some time. They preferred to
gamble all on one last, frantic assault than to watch us eat while they froze
to death.”
Borric looked at the goblins again, then ordered his men to take the
bodies outside the cave. To no one in particular, he said, “But who have they
been fighting?”
Pug said, “The Brotherhood?”
Borric shook his head. “They are the Brotherhood’s creatures, or
when not allied against us, they leave one another alone. No, it was someone
else.”
Tomas looked around as he joined those by the entrance. He wasn’t as
comfortable speaking to the Duke as Pug, but finally he said, “My lord, the
dwarves?”
Borric nodded “If there’s been a dwarven raid on a nearby goblin
village, it would explain why they were unarmored and unprovisioned. They would
have grabbed the nearest weapons and fought their way free, fleeing at first
chance. Yes, perhaps it was the dwarves.”
The guards who had carried the bodies off into the snow ran back
into the cave. “Your Grace,” one of them said, “we hear movement in the trees.”
Borric turned to the others. “Get ready!”
Every man in the cave quickly readied his weapons. Soon all could
hear the tread of feet crunching through the icy snow. It grew louder as they
waited, getting closer. Pug stood tensely, holding his sword, pushing down a
churning feeling inside.
Suddenly the sounds of footfalls stopped, as those outside halted.
Then the sound of a single pair of boots could be heard coming closer.
Appearing out of the dark came a figure directly toward the cave Pug craned his
neck to see past the soldiers, and the Duke said, “Who passes this night?”
A short figure, no more than five feet tall, pulled back the hood of
his cloak, revealing a metal helm sitting over a shock of thick brown hair. Two
sparkling green eyes reflected the firelight. Heavy brows of brown-red hair
came together at a point above a large hooked nose. The figure stood regarding
the party, then signaled behind. More figures appeared from out of the night,
and Pug pressed forward to get a better view, Tomas at his side. At the rear
they could see several of the arrivals leading mules.
The Duke and soldiers visibly relaxed, and Tomas said, “They’re
dwarves!”
Several of the guards laughed, as did the closest dwarf. The dwarf
fixed Tomas with a wry gaze, saying, “What were you expecting, boy? Some pretty
dryad come to fetch you away?”
The lead dwarf walked into the firelight. He stopped before the Duke
and said, “From your tabard, I see you to be men of Crydee.” He struck himself
upon the chest and said, formally, “I hight Dolgan, chief of village Caldara,
and Warleader of the Grey Towers dwarven people.” Pulling a pipe out of his
cloak, from under a long beard that fell below his belt, he filled his pipe as
he looked at the others in the cave. Then in less formal language he said,
“Now, what in the name of the gods brings such a sorry-looking party of tall
folk to this cold and forlorn place?”
9
Mac Mordain Cadal
The
dwarves stood guard.
Pug and the others from Crydee sat around the campfire as they
hungrily ate the meal prepared by Dolgan’s men. A pot of stew bubbled near the
fire. Hot loaves of trail bread, thick hard crust broken to reveal dark sweet
dough thick with honey, were quickly being devoured Smoked fish, from the
dwarves’ pack animals, provided a welcome change from the diet of horse meat of
the last few days.
Pug looked from where he sat beside Tomas, who was hard at work
consuming his third portion of bread and stew. Pug watched as the dwarves
worked efficiently about the camp. Most were outside the cave’s mouth, for they
seemed less inconvenienced by the cold than the humans. Two tended the injured
man, who would live, while two others served the hot meal to the Duke’s men, and
another filled ale cups from a large skin filled with the bubbling brown
liquid.
There were forty dwarves with Dolgan. The dwarven chief was flanked
by his sons, Weylin, the older, and Udell. Both showed a striking resemblance
to their father, though Udell tended to darkness, having black hair rather than
red-brown. Both seemed quiet compared to their father, who gestured expansively
with a pipe in one hand and a cup of ale in the other as he spoke with the
Duke.
The dwarves had been on some sort of patrol along the edge of the
forest, though Pug gained the impression a patrol this far from their villages
was unusual. They had come across the tracks of the goblins who had attacked a
few minutes before and were following closely behind, otherwise they would have
missed the Duke’s party as the night’s storm obliterated all tracks of the men
from Crydee’s passage.
“I remember you, Lord Borric,” said Dolgan, sipping at his ale cup,
“though you were scarcely more than a baby when I was last at Crydee. I dined with
your father. He set a fine table.”
“And should you come again to Crydee, Dolgan, I hope you’ll find my
table equally satisfactory.” They had spoken of the Duke’s mission, and Dolgan
had remained mostly silent during the preparation of the meal, lost in thought.
Suddenly he regarded his pipe, which had gone out. He sighed forlornly, putting
it away, until he noticed Kulgan had pulled out his own and was producing
respectable clouds of smoke. Brightening visibly, he said, “Would you be having
the requirement of an extra pipe upon you, master magician?” He spoke with the
deep, rolling burr the dwarves made when speaking the King’s Tongue.
Kulgan fetched out his tabac pouch and handed it across to the dwarf
“Providentially,” said Kulgan, “my pipe and pouch are two items always kept
upon my person at all times. I can withstand the loss of my other goods—though
the loss of my two books troubles me deeply—but to endure any circumstance
without the comfort of my pipe is unthinkable.”
“Aye,” agreed the dwarf as he lit up his own, “you have the right of
it there. Except for autumn’s ale-—and my loving wife’s company or a good
fight, of course—there’s little to match the pipe for pure pleasure.” He drew
forth a long pull and blew out a large cloud of smoke to emphasize his point. A
thoughtful look crossed his rugged face, and he said, “Now to the matter of the
news you carry. They are strange tidings, but explain away some mysteries we
have been tussling with for some time now.”
Borric said, “What mysteries?”
Dolgan pointed out of the cave mouth. “As we told you, we’ve had to
patrol the area hereabouts. This is a new thing, for in years past the lands
along the borders of our mines and farms have been free from trouble.” He
smiled. “Occasionally a band of especially bold bandits or moredhel—the Dark
Brothers you call them—or a more than usually stupid tribe of goblins troubles
us for a time. But for the most part things remain pretty peaceful.
“But of late, everything’s gone agley. About a month ago, or a bit
more, we began to see signs of large movements of moredhel and goblins from
their villages to the north of ours. We sent some lads to investigate. They
found entire villages abandoned, both goblin and moredhel. Some were sacked,
but others stood empty without sign of trouble.
“Needless to say, the displacement of those miscreants caused an
increase in problems for us. Our villages are in the higher meadows and
plateaus, so they dare not attack, but they do raid our herds in the lower
valleys as they pass—which is why we now mount patrols down the mountainside.
With the winter upon us, our herds are in our lowest meadows, and we must keep
vigilant.
“Most likely your messengers didn’t reach our villages because of
the large number of moredhel and goblins fleeing the mountains down into the
forests. Now at least we’ve some gleaning of what’s causing this migration.”
The Duke nodded. “The Tsurani.”
Dolgan was thoughtful for a moment, while Arutha said, “Then they’re
up there in strength.”
Borric gave his son a questioning look, while Dolgan chuckled and
said, “That’s a bright lad you’ve got, Lord Borric.” He nodded thoughtfully,
then said, “Aye, Prince. They’re up there, and in strength. Despite their other
grievous faults, the moredhel are not without skill in warcraft.” He fell
silent again, lost in thought for a few minutes. Then, tapping out the dottle
of his pipe, he said, “The dwarven folk are not counted the finest warriors in
the West for naught, but we lack the numbers to dispose of our more troublesome
neighbors. To dislodge such a host as have been passing would require a great
force of men, well armed and provisioned.”
Kulgan said, “I would give anything to know how they reached these
mountains.”
“I would rather know how many there are,” said the Duke.
Dolgan refilled his pipe and, after it was lit, stared thoughtfully
into the fire. Weylin and Udell nodded at each other, and Weylin said. “Lord
Borric, there may be as many as five thousand.”
Before the startled Duke could respond, Dolgan came out of his reverie.
Swearing an oath, he said, “Closer to ten thousand!” He turned to look at the
Duke, whose expression showed he clearly didn’t understand what was being said.
Dolgan added, “We’ve given every reason for this migration save invasion.
Plague, internal warfare between bands, pests in their crops causing famine,
but an invading army of aliens was not one of them.
“From the number of towns empty, we guess a few thousand goblins and
moredhel have descended into the Green Heart. South of those villages are a clutch
of huts my two boys could overcome unaided. But others are walled hill forts,
with a hundred, two hundred warriors to man the palisade. They’ve swept away a
dozen such in little over a month. How many men do you judge you’d need to
accomplish such a deed, Lord Borric?”
For the first time in his memory, Pug saw fear clearly etched upon
the Duke’s face. Borric leaned forward, his arm resting across his knee, as he
said, “I’ve fifteen hundred men in Crydee, counting those in the frontier
garrisons along the boundary. I can call another eight hundred or a thousand
each from the garrisons at Carse and Tulan, though to do so would strip them
fully. The levies from the villages and towns number at best a thousand, and
most would be old veterans from the siege at Carse or young boys without
skills.”
Arutha looked as grim as his father as he said, “Forty-five hundred
at the outside, a full third unproved, against an army of ten thousand.”
Udell looked at his father, then at Lord Borric. “My father makes no
boast of our skills, nor of the moredhel’s, Your Grace. Whether there be five
thousand or ten thousand, they’ll be hard, experienced fighters to drive out
the enemies of our blood so quickly.”
“Then I’m thinking,” said Dolgan, “you’d best send word to your older
son and your vassal barons, telling them to stay safely behind the walls of
your castles, and hie yourself to Krondor. It will take all the Armies of the
West to withstand these newcomers this spring.”
Tomas suddenly said, “Is it really that bad?” then looked
embarrassed for interrupting the council. “I’m sorry, my lord.”
Borric waved away the apology. “It may be we are weaving many
threads of fear together into a larger tapestry than exists, but a good soldier
prepares for the worst, Tomas. Dolgan is right. I must enlist the Prince’s
aid.” He looked at Dolgan. “But to call the Armies of the West to arms, I must
reach Krondor.”
Dolgan said, “The South Pass is closed, and your human ships’
masters have too much sense to brave the Straits of Darkness in winter. But
there is another way, though it is a difficult path. There are mines throughout
these mountains, ancient tunnels under the Grey Towers. Many were carved by my
people as we dug for iron and gold. Some are natural, fashioned when the
mountains were born. And still others were here when my people first came to
these mountains, dug by only the gods know whom. There is one mine that passes
completely under the mountains, coming out on the other side of the range, only
a day’s march from the road to Bordon. It will take two days to pass through,
and there may be dangers.”
The dwarven brothers looked at their father, and Weylin said,
“Father, the Mac Mordain Cadal?”
Dolgan nodded his head. “Aye, the abandoned mine of my grandfather,
and his father before him.” He said to the Duke, “We have dug many miles of
tunnels under the mountain, and some connect with the ancient passages I have
spoken of. There are dark and queer tales about Mac Mordain Cadal, for it is
connected with these old passages. Not a few dwarves have ventured deep into
the old mines, seeking legendary riches, and most have returned. But a few have
vanished. Once upon a path, a dwarf can never lose his way back, so they were
not lost in their searching. Something must have befallen them. I tell you this
so there will be no misunderstandings, but if we keep to the passages dug by my
ancestors, we should have small risk.”
“ ‘We,’ friend dwarf?” said the Duke.
Dolgan grinned “Should I simply place your feet upon the path, you’d
be hopelessly lost within an hour. No, I’d care not for traveling to Rillanon
to explain to your King how I’d managed to lose one of his better Dukes. I will
guide you willingly, Lord Borric, for a small price.” He winked at Pug and
Tomas as he spoke the last. “Say, a pouch of tabac and a fine dinner at
Crydee.”
The Duke’s mood lightened a little With a smile he said, “Done, and
our thanks, Dolgan.”
The dwarf turned to his sons. “Udell, you take half the compam and
one of the mules, and the Duke’s men too ill or wounded to continue. Make for
the castle at Crydee. There’s an ink horn and quill, wrapped in parchment,
somewhere in our baggage; find it for his lordship, so he may instruct his men.
Weylin, take the others of our kin back to Caldara, then send word to the other
villages before the winter blizzards strike. Come spring, the dwarves of the
Grey Towers go to war.”
Dolgan looked at Borric. “No one has ever conquered our highland
villages, not in the longest memory of the dwarven folk. But it would prove an
irritation for someone to try. The dwarves will stand with the Kingdom, Your
Lordship. You have long been a friend to us, trading fairly and giving aid when
asked. And we have never run from battle when we were called.”
Arutha said, “And what of Stone Mountain?”
Dolgan laughed “I thank His Highness for the jog to my memory. Old
Harthorn and his clans would be sorely troubled should a good fight come and
they were not invited. I’ll send runners to Stone Mountain as well.”
Pug and Tomas watched while the Duke wrote messages to Lyam and
Fannon, then full stomachs and fatigue began to lull them, despite their long
sleep. The dwarves gave them the loan of heavy cloaks, which they wrapped about
pine boughs to make comfortable mattresses. Occasionally Pug would turn in the
night, coming out of his deep sleep, and hear voices speaking low. More than
once he heard the name Mac Mordain Cadal.
Dolgan led the Duke’s party along the rocky foothills of the Grey
Towers. They had left at first light, the dwarven chieftain’s sons departing
for their own destinations with their men. Dolgan walked before the Duke and
his son, followed by the puffing Kulgan and the boys. Five soldiers of Crydee,
those still able to continue, under the supervision of Sergeant Gardan followed
behind, leading two mules. Walking behind the struggling magician, Pug said,
“Kulgan, ask for a rest. You’re all done in.”
The magician said, “No, boy, I’ll be all right. Once into the mines,
the pace will slow, and we should be there soon.”
Tomas regarded the stocky figure of Dolgan, marching along at the
head of the party, short legs striding along, setting a rugged pace. “Doesn’t
he ever tire?”
Kulgan shook his head. “The dwarven folk are renowned for their
strong constitutions. At the Battle of Carse Keep, when the castle was nearly
taken by the Dark Brotherhood, the dwarves of Stone Mountain and the Grey
Towers were on the march to aid the besieged. A messenger carried the news of
the castle’s imminent fall, and the dwarves ran for a day and a night and half
a day again to fall on the Brotherhood from behind without any lessening of
their fighting ability. The Brotherhood was broken, never again organizing
under a single leader.” He panted a bit. “There was no idle boasting in
Dolgan’s appraisal of the aid forthcoming from the dwarves, for they are
undoubtedly the finest fighters in the West. While they have few numbers
compared to men, only the Hadati hillmen come close to their equal as mountain
fighters.”
Pug and Tomas looked with newfound respect upon the dwarf as he
strode along. While the pace was brisk, the meal of the night before and
another this morning had restored the flagging energies of the boys, and they
were not pushed to keep up.
They came to the mine entrance, overgrown with brush. The soldiers
cleared it away, revealing a wide, low tunnel. Dolgan turned to the company.
“You might have to duck a bit here and there, but many a mule has been led
through here by dwarven miners. There should be ample room.”
Pug smiled. The dwarves proved taller than tales had led him to
expect, averaging about four and a half to five feet tall. Except for being
short-legged and broad-shouldered, they looked much like other people. It was
going to be a tight fit for the Duke and Gardan, but Pug was only a few inches
taller than the dwarf, so he’d manage.
Gardan ordered torches lit, and when the party was ready, Dolgan led
them into the mine. As they entered the gloom of the tunnel, the dwarf said,
“Keep alert, for only the gods know what is living in these tunnels We should
not be troubled, but it is best to be cautious.”
Pug entered and, as the gloom enveloped him, looked over his
shoulder. He saw Gardan outlined against the receding light. For a brief
instant he thought of Carline, and Roland, then wondered how she could seem so
far removed so quickly, or how indifferent he was to his rival’s attentions. He
shook his head, and his gaze returned to the dark tunnel ahead.
The tunnels were damp. Every once in a while they would pass a
tunnel branching off to one side or the other Pug peered down each as he
passed, but they were quickly swallowed up in gloom. The torches sent
flickering shadows dancing on the walls, expanding and contracting as they
moved closer or farther from each other, or as the ceiling rose or fell. At
several places they had to pull the mules’ heads down, but for most of their
passage there was ample room.
Pug heard Tomas, who walked in front of him, mutter, “I’d not want
to stray down here; I’ve lost all sense of direction.” Pug said nothing, for
the mines had an oppressive feeling to him.
After some time they came to a large cavern with several tunnels
leading out. The column halted, and the Duke ordered watches to be posted.
Torches were wedged in the rocks and the mules watered. Pug and Tomas stood
with the last watch, and Pug thought a hundred times that shapes moved just
outside the fire’s glow. Soon guards came to replace them, and the boys joined
the others, who were eating. They were given dried meat and biscuits to eat.
Tomas asked Dolgan, “What place is this?”
The dwarf puffed on his pipe “It is a glory hole, laddie. When my
people mined this area, we fashioned many such places When great runs of iron,
gold, silver, and other metals would come together, many tunnels would be
joined. And as the metals were taken out, these caverns would be formed. There
are natural ones down here as large, but the look of them is different. They
have great spires of stone rising from the floor, and others hanging from the ceiling,
unlike this one. You’ll see one as we pass through.”
Tomas looked above him. “How high does it go?”
Dolgan looked up. “I can’t rightly say. Perhaps a hundred feet,
perhaps two or three times as much. These mountains are rich with metals still,
but when my grandfather’s grandfather first mined here, the metal was rich
beyond imagining. There are hundreds of tunnels throughout these mountains,
with many levels upward and downward from here Through that tunnel there”—he
pointed to another on the same level as the floor of the glory hole—”lies a
tunnel that will join with another tunnel, then yet another. Follow that one,
and you’ll end up in the Mac Bronin Alroth, another abandoned mine. Beyond that
you could make your way to the Mac Owyn Dur, where several of my people would
be inquiring how you managed entrance into their gold mine.” He laughed “Though
I doubt you could find the way, unless you were dwarven born.”
He puffed at his pipe, and the balance of the guards came over to
cat. Dolgan said, “Well, we had best be on our way.”
Tomas looked startled. “I thought we were stopping for the night.”
“The sun is yet high in the sky, laddie. There’s half the day left
before we sleep.”
“But I thought . . .”
“I know. It is easy to lose track of time down here, unless you have
the knack of it.”
They gathered together their gear and started off again. After more
walking they entered a series of twisting, turning passages that seemed to
slant down. Dolgan explained that the entrance on the east side of the mountains
was several hundred feet lower than on the west, and they would be moving
downward most of the journey.
Later they passed through another of the glory holes, smaller than
the last, but still impressive for the number of tunnels leading from it.
Dolgan picked one with no hesitation and led them through.
Soon they could hear the sound of water, coming from ahead. Dolgan
said, over his shoulder, “You’ll soon see a sight that no man living and few
dwarves have ever seen.”
As they walked, the sound of rushing water became louder. They
entered another cavern, this one natural and larger than the first by several
times. The tunnel they had been walking in became a ledge, twenty feet wide,
that ran along the right side of the cavern. They all peered over the edge and
could see nothing but darkness stretching away below.
The path rounded a curve in the wall, and when they passed around
it, they were greeted with a sight that made them all gasp. Across the cavern,
a mighty waterfall spilled over a huge outcropping of stone. From fully three
hundred feet above where they stood, it poured into the cavern, crashing down
the stone face of the opposite wall to disappear into the darkness below. It
filled the cavern with reverberations that made it impossible to hear it striking
bottom, confounding any attempt to judge the fall’s height. Throughout the
cascade luminous colors danced, aglow with an inner light. Reds, golds, greens,
blues, and yellows played among the white foam, falling along the wall, blazing
with brief flashes of intense luminosity where the water struck the wall,
painting a fairy picture in the darkness.
Dolgan shouted over the roar, “Ages ago the river Wynn-Ula ran from
the Grey Towers to the Bitter Sea. A great quake opened a fissure under the
river, and now it falls into a mighty underground lake below. As it runs
through the rocks, it picks up the minerals that give it its glowing colors.”
They stood quietly for a while, marveling at the sight of the falls of Mac
Mordain Cadal.
The Duke signaled for the march to resume, and they moved on.
Besides the spectacle of the falls, they had been refreshed by spray and cool
wind off them, for the caverns were dank and musty. Onward they went, deeper
into the mines, past numberless tunnels and passages. After a time, Gardan
asked the boys how they fared. Pug and Tomas both answered that they were fine,
though tired.
Later they came to yet another cavern, and Dolgan said it was time
to rest the night. More torches were lit, and the Duke said, “I hope we have
enough brands to last the journey. They burn quickly.”
Dolgan said, “Give me a few men, and I will fetch some old timbers
for a fire. There are many lying about if you know where to find them without
bringing the ceiling down upon your head.”
Gardan and two other men followed the dwarf into a side tunnel,
while the others unloaded the mules and staked them out. They were given water
from the waterskins and a small portion of grain carried for the times when
they could not graze.
Borric sat next to Kulgan. “I have had an ill feeling for the last
few hours. Is it my imagining, or does something about this place bode evil?”
Kulgan nodded as Arutha joined them “I have felt something also, but
it comes and goes. It is nothing I can put a name to.”
Arutha hunkered down and used his dagger to draw aimlessly in the
dirt. “This place would give anyone a case of the jumping fits and starts.
Perhaps we all feel the same thing: dread at being where men do not belong.”
The Duke said, “I hope that is all it is. This would be a poor place
to fight”—he paused—”or flee from.” The boys stood watch, but could overhear
the conversation, as could the other men, for no one else was speaking in the
cavern and the sound carried well Pug said in a hushed voice, “I will also be
glad to be done with this mine.”
Tomas grinned in the torchlight, his face set in an evil leer.
“Afraid of the dark, little boy?”
Pug snorted. “No more than you, should you but admit it. Do you
think you could find your way out?”
Tomas lost his smile. Further conversation was interrupted by the
return of Dolgan and the others. They carried a good supply of broken timbers,
used to shore up the passages in days gone by. A fire was quickly made from the
old, dry wood, and soon the cavern was brightly lit.
The boys were relieved of guard duty and ate. As soon as they were
done eating, they spread their cloaks. Pug found the hard dirt floor
uncomfortable, but he was very tired, and sleep soon overtook him.
They led the mules deeper into the mines, the animal’s hooves
clattering on the stone, the sound echoing down the dark tunnels. They had
walked the entire day, taking only a short rest to eat at noon. Now they were
approaching the cavern where Dolgan said they were to spend their second night.
Pug felt a strange sensation, as if remembering a cold chill. It had touched
him several times over the last hour, and he was worried. Each time he had
turned to look behind him. This time Gardan said. “I feel it too, boy, as if
something is near.”
They entered another large glory hole, and Dolgan stood with his
hand upraised. All movement ceased as the dwarf listened for something. Pug and
Tomas strained to hear as well, but no sounds came to them. Finally the dwarf
said, “For a time I thought I heard . . . but then I guess not. We will camp
here.” They had carried spare timber with them and used it to make a fire.
When Pug and Tomas left their watch, they found a subdued party
around the fire. Dolgan was saying, “This part of Mac Mordain Cadal is closest
to the deeper, ancient tunnels. The next cavern we come to will have several
that lead directly to the old mines. Once past that cavern, we will have a
speedy passage to the surface. We should be out of the mine bv midday
tomorrow.”
Borric looked around “This place may suit your nature, dwarf, but I
will be glad to have it behind.”
Dolgan laughed, the rich, hearty sound echoing off the cavern walls.
“It is not that the place suits my nature, Lord Borric, but rather that my
nature suits the place. I can travel easily under the mountains, and my folk
have ever been miners. But as to choice, I would rather spend my time in the
high pastures of Caldara tending my herd, or sit in the long hall with my
brethren, drinking ale and singing ballads.”
Pug asked, “Do you spend much time singing ballads?”
Dolgan fixed him with a friendly smile, his eyes shining in the
firelight. “Aye. For winters are long and hard in the mountains. Once the herds
are safely in winter pasture, there is little to do, so we sing our songs and
drink autumn ale, and wait for spring. It is a good life.”
Pug nodded. “I would like to see your village sometime,
Dolgan.” Dolgan puffed on his ever-present pipe. “Perhaps you will
someday, laddie.”
They turned in for the night, and Pug drifted off to sleep. Once in
the dead of night, when the fire had burned low, he awoke, feeling the chilling
sensation that had plagued him earlier. He sat up, cold sweat dripping down his
body, and looked around. He could see the guards who were on duty, standing
near their torches. Around him he saw the forms of sleeping bodies. The feeling
grew stronger for a moment, as if something dreadful was approaching, and he
was about to wake Tomas when it passed, leaving him tired and wrung out. He lay
back down and soon was lost in dreamless sleep.
He awoke cold and stiff. The guards were readying the mules, and
soon they would all leave Pug roused Tomas, who protested at being pulled from
his dream. “I was in the kitchen at home, and Mother was preparing a large
platter of sausages and corn cakes dripping with honey,” he said sleepily.
Pug threw a biscuit at him “This will have to do until Bordon. Then we
shall eat.”
They gathered together their meager provisions, loaded them on the
mules, and set off. As they made their way along, Pug began to experience the
icy feeling of the night before. Several times it came and went. Hours passed,
and they came to the last great cave. Here Dolgan stopped them while he looked
into the gloom. Pug could hear him saying, “For a moment I thought . . .”
Suddenly the hairs on Pug’s neck stood up, and the feeling of icy
terror swept over him, more horrible than before. “Dolgan, Lord Borric!” he
cried. “Something terrible is happening!”
Dolgan stood stock-still, listening. A faint moan echoed from down
another tunnel.
Kulgan shouted, “I feel something also.”
Suddenly the sound repeated, closer, a chilling moan that echoed off
the vaulted ceiling, making its origins uncertain.
“By the
gods!” shouted the dwarf. “’Tis a wraith! Hurry! Form a circle, or it will be
upon us and we’ll be lost.”
Gardan pushed the boys forward, and the guards moved the mules to
the center of the cavern. They quickly staked the two mules down andi formed a
circle around the frantic animals. Weapons were drawn. Gardan placed himself
before the two boys, forcing them back near the mules. Both had swords out, but
held them uncertainly. Tomas could feel his heart pound, and Pug was bathed in
cold sweat. The terror that gripped him had not increased since Dolgan had put
a name to it, but it had not lessened either.
They heard the sharp hiss of intaken breath and looked to the right.
Before the soldier who had made the sound, a figure loomed out of the darkness:
a shifting man-shape, darker blackness against the black, with two glowing,
red-coal lights where eyes should be.
Dolgan shouted, “Keep close, and guard your neighbor. You can’t kill
it, but they like not the feel of cold iron. Don’t let it touch you, for it’ll
draw your life from your body. It is how they feed.”
It approached them slowly, as if having no need to hurry. It stopped
for a moment, as if inspecting the defense before it.
The wraith let out another low, long moan, sounding like all the
terror and hopelessness of the world given voice. Suddenly one of the guards
struck downward, slashing at the wraith. A shrill moan erupted from the creature
when the sword hit, and cold blue fire danced along the blade for a moment. The
creature shrank away, then with sudden speed struck out at the guard. An
armlike shadow extended from its body, and the guard shrieked as he crumpled to
the ground.
The mules broke, pulling up stakes, terrified by the presence of the
wraith. Guards were knocked to the ground, and confusion reigned. Pug lost
sight of the wraith for a moment, being more concerned with flying hooves. As
the mules kicked, Pug found himself dodging through the melee. He heard
Kulgan’s voice behind him and saw the magician standing next to Prince Arutha.
“Stand close, all of you,” the magician commanded. Obeying, Pug closed to
Kulgan with the others as the scream of another guard echoed through the
gallery Within a moment a great cloud of white smoke began to appear around
them, issuing from Kulgan’s body. “We must leave the mules,” said the magician
“The undead will not enter the smoke, but I cannot keep it together long or
walk far. We must escape now!”
Dolgan pointed to a tunnel, on the other side of the cavern from
where they had entered. “That’s the way we must go.” Keeping close together,
the group started toward the tunnel while a terrified bray sounded. Bodies lay
on the floor: the two mules as well as the fallen guards. Dropped torches
flickered, giving the scene a nightmarish quality, as the black shape closed
upon the party. Reaching the edge of the smoke, it recoiled from its touch. It
ranged about the edge, unable or unwilling to enter the white smoke.
Pug looked past the creature, and the pit of his stomach churned.
Clearly standing in the light of a torch held in his hand was Tomas,
behind the creature. Tomas looked helplessly past the wraith at Pug and the
escaping party. “Tomas!” ripped from Pug’s throat, followed by a sob.
The party halted for a brief second, and Dolgan said, “We can’t
stop. We’d all perish for the sake of the boy. We must press on.” A firm hand
clutched at Pug’s shoulder as he started forward to aid his friend. He looked
back and saw that it was Gardan holding him. “We must leave him, Pug,” he said,
a grim expression on his ebony face. “Tomas is a soldier. He understands.” Pug
was pulled along helplessly. He saw the wraith follow along for a moment, then
stop and turn toward Tomas.
Whether alerted by Pug’s cries or by some evil sense, the undead
creature started toward Tomas, slowly stalking him. The boy hesitated, then
spun and ran to another tunnel. The wraith shrieked and started after him. Pug
saw the glow of Tomas’s torch disappear down the tunnel, then flicker into
blackness.
Tomas saw the pained expression on Pug’s face as Gardan pulled his
friend away. When the mules had broken, he had dodged away from the others and
now found himself separated from them. He looked for a way to circle around the
wraith, but it was too close to the passage his companions were taking. As
Kulgan and the others escaped up the tunnel, Tomas saw the wraith turn toward
him. It started to approach, and he hesitated a moment, then ran toward a
different tunnel.
Shadows and light danced madly on the walls as Tomas fled down the
passage, his footfalls echoing in the gloom. His torch was held tightly in his
left hand, the sword clutched in his right. He looked over his shoulder and saw
the two glowing red eyes pursuing him, though they seemed not to be gaining.
With grim determination he thought, if it catches me, it will catch the fastest
runner in all of Crydee. He lengthened his strides into a long, easy lope,
saving strength and wind. He knew that if he had to turn and face the creature,
he would surely die. The initial fear lessened, and now he felt a cold clarity
holding his mind, the cunning reason of a prey knowing it is hopeless to fight.
All his energy was turned toward fleeing. He would try to lose the creature any
way possible.
He ducked into a side corridor and hurried along it, checking to see
if the wraith would follow. The glowing red eyes appeared at the entrance to
the tunnel he had turned into, following him. The distance between them seemed
to have increased. The thought that many might have died at the thing’s hand
because they were too frightened to run crossed his mind. The wraith’s strength
lay in the numbing terror it caused.
Another corridor and another turn. Still the wraith followed. Ahead
lay a large cavern, and Tomas found himself entering the same hall in which the
wraith had attacked the party. He had circled around and entered through
another tunnel. Racing across the floor, he saw the bodies of mules and guards
lying in his path. He paused long enough to grab a fresh torch, for his was
nearly spent, and transferred the flame.
He looked backward to see the undead creature closing on him and
started off again. Hope briefly flickered in his breast, for if he could pick
the proper corridor, he might catch up to the others. Dolgan had said that from
this cavern it was a straight journey to the surface. He picked what he thought
was the proper one, though he was disoriented and couldn’t be sure.
The wraith let out a howl of rage at its prey’s eluding it again,
and followed. Tomas felt terror bordering on elation as his long legs stretched
out, eating up the distance ahead of him. He gained his second wind and set a
steady pace for himself. Never had he run so well, but then never had he
possessed such a reason.
After what seemed an endless time of running, he found himself
coming to a series of side tunnels, set closely together. He felt hope die, for
this was not the straight path the dwarf had mentioned. Picking one at random,
he turned into a passage and found more tunnels close by. Cutting through
several more, he turned as quickly as possible, weaving his way through a maze
of passages. Ducking around a wall formed between two such tunnels, he stopped
briefly and caught his breath. He listened for a moment and heard only the
sound of his pounding heart. He had been too busy to look behind and was unsure
of the wraith’s whereabouts.
Suddenly a shriek of rage echoed faintly down the corridors,
sounding far off. Tomas sank to the floor of the tunnel and felt his body go
limp. Another shriek echoed more faintly, and Tomas felt certain that the
wraith had lost his trail and was moving off in another direction.
A sense of relief flooded through him, nearly causing him to laugh
giddily. It was closely followed by the sudden realization of his situation. He
sat up and took stock. If he could find his way back to the dead animals, he
would at least have food and water. But as he stood up, he realized that he had
no notion which way the cavern lay. Cursing himself for not counting the turns
as he had made them, he tried to remember the general pattern he had followed.
He had turned mostly to the right, he reminded himself, so if he retraced his
steps mostly to the left, he should be able to find one of the many tunnels
that led to the glory hole. Looking cautiously around the first corner, Tomas
set off, searching his way through the maze of passages.
After an unknown time had passed, Tomas stopped and looked around in
the second large cavern he had come to since he had fled the wraith. Like the
first, this cavern was devoid of mules and men—and the hoped-for food and
water. Tomas opened his pouch and took out the small biscuit he had hoarded to
nibble while walking. It gave him little relief from his hunger.
When he was done, he set off again, trying to find some clue to the
way out. He knew he had only a short time before his torch died, but he refused
to simply sit and wait for a nameless death in the dark.
After some time Tomas could hear the sound of water echoing through
the tunnel. Hurrying forward, his thirst spurring him on, he entered a large
cavern, the biggest yet, as far as he could tell. Far away he could hear the
faint roar of the Mac Mordain Cadal falls, but in which direction he couldn’t
be sure. Somewhere high in the darkness lay the path that they had taken two
days earlier. Tomas felt his heart sink, he had moved deeper into the earth than
he had thought.
The tunnel widened to a landing of some sort and disappeared beneath
what appeared to be a large lake, constantly lapping against the sides of the
cavern, filling it with muted echoes. Quickly he fell to his knees and drank.
The water tasted rich with minerals, but was clear and fresh.
Sitting back on his haunches, he looked about. The landing was
packed earth and sand and appeared to be fashioned rather than natural. Tomas
guessed the dwarves might have used boats to cross the underground lake, but
could only wonder what lay on the other side. Then the thought hit him that
perhaps someone other than the dwarves had used boats to cross the lake, and he
felt fear again.
To his
left he spied a pile of wood, nestled against a junction of the landing and the
cavern wall. Crossing to it, he pulled out several pieces and started a small
fire. The wood was mostly timber pieces, used to shore up the tunnels, but
mixed in were several branches and twigs. They must have been brought down by
the falls from above, where the river enters the mountain, he thought.
Underneath the pile he found some fibrous weeds growing. Wondering at the
plants’ ability to grow without sunlight, the boy was nevertheless thankful,
for after cutting them with his sword, he was able to fashion some rude torches
with the weeds wrapped around some driftwood. He tied them in a bundle, using
his sword belt, forcing him to give up his scabbard. At least, he thought, I’ll
have a little more light. Some extra time to see where he was going was
comforting.
He threw some bigger timber pieces on his small fire, and soon it
was roaring into brightness. Abruptly the cavern seemed to light up, and Tomas
spun around. The entire cavern was glowing with sparkling light, as some sort
of mineral, or crystal, caught the light and reflected it to be caught and
reflected again. It was a glittering, sparkling rainbow of colors cascading
over walls and ceiling, giving the entire cavern a fairy-like quality as far as
the eye could follow.
Tomas stood in awe for a minute, drinking in the sight, for he knew
he would never be able to explain in words what he was seeing. The thought
struck him that he might be the only human ever to have witnessed the display.
It was hard to tear his eyes from the glory of the vision, but Tomas
forced himself. He used the extra illumination to examine the area he was in.
There was nothing beyond the landing, but he did spy another tunnel off to the
left, leaving the cavern at the far end of the sand.
He gathered together his torches and walked along the landing. As he
reached the tunnel, his fire died down, the dry timber being quickly consumed.
Another glorious vision assaulted his senses, for the gemlike walls and ceiling
continued to glimmer and glow. Again he stood silently watching the display.
Slowly the sparkling dimmed, until the cavern was again dark, except for his
torch and the quickly dying fire’s red glow.
He had to stretch to reach the other tunnel, but made it without
dropping his sword or torches, or getting his boots wet. Turning away from the
cavern, he resumed his journey.
He made his way for hours, the torch burning lower. He lit one of
the new ones and found that it gave a satisfactory light. He was still
frightened, but felt good about keeping his head under these conditions and was
sure Swordmaster Fannon would approve of his actions.
After walking for a while, he came to an intersection. He found the
bones of a creature in the dust, its fate unknowable. He spotted the tracks of
some other small creature leading away, but they were faint with age. With no
other notion than the need for a clear path, Tomas followed them. Soon they
also vanished in the dust.
He had no means to reckon time, but thought that it must be well
into night by now. There was a timeless feeling to these passages, and he felt
lost beyond recovery. Fighting down what he recognized as budding panic, he
continued to walk. He kept his mind on pleasant memories of home, and dreams of
the future. He would find a way out, and he would become a great hero in the
coming war. And most cherished dream of all, he would journey to Elvandar and
see the beautiful lady of the elves again.
He followed the tunnel downward. This area seemed different from the
other caverns and tunnels, its manner of fashioning unlike the others. He
thought that Dolgan could tell if this was so, and who had done the work.
He entered another cavern and looked around. Some of the tunnels
that entered the cavern were barely tall enough for a man to walk through
upright. Others were broad enough for a company of men to walk through ten
abreast, with long spears upon their shoulders. He hoped this meant the dwarves
had fashioned the smaller tunnels and he could follow one upward, back to the
surface.
Looking around, he spied a likely ledge to rest upon, within jumping
distance. He crossed to it and tossed up his sword and the bundle of torches.
He then gently tossed up his torch, so as not to put it out, and pulled himself
up. It was large enough to sleep upon without rolling off Four feet up the wall
was a small hole, about three feet in diameter. Looking down it, Tomas could
see that it opened up quickly to a size large enough to stand in and stretched
away into blackness.
Satisfied that nothing lurked immediately above him, and that
anything coming from below would awaken him, Tomas pulled his cloak around him,
rested his head on his hand, and put out the torch. He was frightened, but the
exhaustion of the day lulled him quickly to sleep. He lay in fitful dreams of
red glowing eyes chasing him down endless black corridors, terror washing over
him. He ran until he came to a green place where he could rest, feeling safe,
under the gaze of a beautiful woman with red-gold hair and pale blue eyes.
He started awake to some nameless call. He had no idea of how long
he had slept, but he felt as if it had been long enough for his body to run
again, if need be. He felt in the dark for his torch and took flint and steel
from out of his pouch. He struck sparks into the wadding of the torch and
started a glow. Quickly bringing the torch close, he blew the spark into flame.
Looking about, he found the cavern unchanged. A faint echoing of his own
movements was all he heard.
He realized he could have a chance of survival only if he kept
moving and found a way up. He stood and was about to climb down from the ledge
when a faint noise sounded from the hole above.
He peered down it but could see nothing. Again there came a faint
sound, and Tomas strained to hear what it was. It was almost like the tread of
footfalls, but he could not be sure. He nearly shouted, but held off, for there
was no assurance it was his friends returned to find him. His imagination
provided many other possibilities, all of them unpleasant.
He thought for a moment, then decided. Whatever was making the noise
might lead him out of the mines, even if only by providing a trail to follow.
With no other option appearing more attractive, he pulled himself up through
the small hole, entering the new tunnel.
10
RESCUE
It was a dispirited group that emerged from the mine.
The survivors sank to the ground, near exhaustion. Pug had fought
tears for hours after Tomas had fled, and now he lay on the wet ground staring
upward at the grey sky, feeling numb. Kulgan had fared worst of all, being
completely drained of energy by the spell used to repel the wraith. He had been
carried on the shoulders of the others most of the way, and they showed the
price of their burden. All fell into an exhausted sleep, except Dolgan, who lit
a fire and stood watch.
Pug awoke to the sound of voices and a clear, starry night. The
smell of food cooking greeted him. When Gardan and the three remaining guards
awakened, Dolgan had left them to watch over the others and had snared a brace
of rabbits. These were roasting over a fire. The others awake, except Kulgan,
who snored deeply.
Arutha and the Duke saw the boy wake, and the Prince came to where
he sat. The younger son of the Duke, ignoring the snow, sat on the ground next
to Pug, who had his cloak wrapped around him. “How do you feel. Pug?” Arutha
asked, concern showing in his eyes.
This was the first time Pug had seen Arutha’s gentler nature. Pug
tried to speak and found tears coming to his eyes. Tomas had been his friend as
long as he could remember, more a brother than a friend. As he tried to speak,
great racking sobs broke from his throat, and he felt hot, salty tears run down
into his mouth.
Arutha placed his arm around Pug, letting the boy cry on his
shoulder. When the initial flood of grief had passed, the Prince said, “There
is nothing shameful in mourning the loss of a friend, Pug. My father and I
share your pain.”
Dolgan came to stand behind the Prince. “I also, Pug, for he was a
likable lad We all share your loss.” The dwarf seemed to consider something and
spoke to the Duke.
Kulgan had just awakened, sitting up like a bear waking from
winter’s sleep. He regained his bearings and, seeing Arutha with Pug, quickly
forgot his own aching joints and joined them.
There was little they could say, but Pug found comfort in their
closeness. He finally regained his composure and pulled away from the Prince
“Thank you, Your Highness,” he said, sniffing. “I will be all right.”
They joined Dolgan, Gardan, and the Duke near the fire. Borric was
shaking his head at something the dwarf had said. “I thank you for your
bravery, Dolgan, but I can’t allow it.”
Dolgan puffed on his pipe, a friendly smile splitting his beard.
“And how do you intend to stop me, Your Grace? Surely not by force?”
Borric shook his head. “No, of course not. But to go would be the
sheerest folly.”
Kulgan and Arutha exchanged questioning looks. Pug paid little
attention, being lost in a cold, numb world. In spite of having just awakened,
he felt ready for sleep again, welcoming its warm, soft relief.
Borric told them, “This mad dwarf means to return to the mines.”
Before Kulgan and Arutha could voice a protest, Dolgan said, “I know
it is only a slim hope, but if the boy has eluded the foul spirit, he’ll be
wandering lost and alone. There are tunnels down there that have never known
the tread of a dwarf’s foot, let alone a boy’s. Once down a passage, I have no
trouble making my way back, but Tomas has no such natural sense. If I can find
his trail, I can find him. If he is to have any chance of escaping the mines,
he’ll be needing my guidance. I’ll bring home the boy if he lives, on this you
have the word of Dolgan Tagarson, chief of village Caldara. I could not rest in
my long hall this winter if I did not try.”
Pug was roused from his lethargy by the dwarf’s words. “Do you think
you can find him, Dolgan?”
“If any can, I can,” he said. He leaned close to Pug “Do not get
your hopes too high, for it is unlikely that Tomas eluded the wraith. I would
do you a disservice if I said otherwise, boy.” Seeing the tears brimming in
Pug’s eyes again, he quickly added, “But if there is a way, I shall find it.”
Pug nodded, seeking a middle path between desolation and renewed
hope. He understood the admonition, but still could not give up the faint
flicker of comfort Dolgan’s undertaking would provide.
Dolgan crossed over to where his shield and ax lay and picked them
up. “When the dawn comes, quickly follow the trail down the hills through the
woodlands. While not the Green Heart, this place has menace aplenty for so
small a band. If you lose your way, head due east. You’ll find your way to the
road to Bordon. From there it is a matter of three days’ walk. May the gods
protect you.”
Borric nodded, and Kulgan walked over to where the dwarf made ready
to leave. He handed Dolgan a pouch. “I can get more tabac in the town, friend
dwarf Please take this.”
Dolgan took it and smiled at Kulgan. “Thank you, magician I am in
your debt.”
Borric came to stand before the dwarf and place a hand on his
shoulder. “It is we who are in your debt, Dolgan. If you come to Crydee, we
will have that meal you were promised. That, and more. May good fortune go with
you.”
“Thank you, Your Lordship. I’ll look forward to it.” Without another
word, Dolgan walked into the blackness of Mac Mordain Cadal.
Dolgan stopped by the dead mules, pausing only long enough to pick
up food, water, and a lantern. The dwarf needed no light to make his way
underground—his people had long ago adapted other senses for the darkness. But,
he thought, it will increase the chances of finding Tomas if the boy can see
the light, no matter the risk of attracting unwelcome attention. Assuming he is
still alive, he added grimly.
Entering the tunnel where he had last seen Tomas, Dolgan searched
about for signs of the boy’s passing. The dust was thin, but here and there he
could make out a slight disturbance, perhaps a footprint Following, the dwarf
came to even dustier passages, where the boy’s footfalls were clearly marked.
Hurrying, he followed them.
Dolgan came back to the same cavern, after a few minutes, and
cursed.
He felt little hope of finding the boy’s tracks again among all the
disturbance caused by the fight with the wraith. Pausing briefly, he set out to
examine each tunnel leading out of the cavern for signs. After an hour he found
a single footprint heading away from the cavern, through a tunnel to the right
of where he had entered the first time. Moving up it, he found several more
prints, set wide apart, and decided the boy must have been running. Hurrying
on, he saw more tracks, as the passage became dustier.
Dolgan came to the cavern on the lake and nearly lost the trail
again, until he saw the tunnel near the edge of the landing. He slogged through
the water, pulling himself up into the passage, and saw Tomas’s tracks. His
faint lantern light was insufficient to illuminate the crystals in the cavern.
But even if it had, he would not have paused to admire the sight, so intent was
he on finding the boy.
Downward he followed, never resting. He knew that Tomas had long
before outdistanced the wraith. There were signs that most of his journey was
at a slower pace: footprints in the dust showed he had been walking, and the cold
campfire showed he had stopped. But there were other terrors besides the wraith
down here, just as dreadful.
Dolgan again lost the trail in the last cavern, finding it only when
he spied the ledge above where the tracks ended. He had difficulty climbing to
it, but when he did, he saw the blackened spot where the boy had snuffed out
his torch. Here Tomas must have rested. Dolgan looked around the empty cavern.
The air did not move this deep below the mountains. Even the dwarf, who was
used to such things, found this an unnerving place. He looked down at the black
mark on the ledge. But how long did Tomas stay, and where did he go?
Dolgan saw the hole in the wall and, since no tracks led away from
the ledge, decided that was the way Tomas must have gone. He climbed through
and followed the passage until it came to a larger one, heading downward, into
the bowels of the mountain.
Dolgan followed what seemed to be a group of tracks, as if a band of
men had come this way. Tomas’s tracks were mixed in, and he was worried, for
the boy could have been along this way before or after the others, or could
have been with them. If the boy was held prisoner by someone, then Dolgan knew
every moment was critical.
The tunnel wound downward and soon changed into a hall fashioned
from great stone blocks fitted closely together and polished smooth. In all his
years he had never seen its like. The passage leveled out, and Dolgan walked
along quietly. The tracks had vanished, for the stone was hard and free of
dust. High overhead, Dolgan could make out the first of several crystal
chandeliers hung from the ceiling by chains. They could be lowered by means of
a pulley, so the candles might be lit. The sound of his boots echoed hollowly
off the high ceiling.
At the far end of the passage he spied large doors, fashioned from
wood, with bands of iron and a great lock. They were ajar, and light could be
seen coming through.
Without a sound, Dolgan crept close to the doors and peered in. He
gaped at what he saw, his shield and ax coming up instinctively.
Sitting on a pile of gold coins, and gems the size of a man’s fist,
was Tomas, eating what looked to be a fish. Opposite him crouched a figure that
caused Dolgan to doubt his eyes.
A head the size of a small wagon rested on the floor. Shield-size
scales of a deep golden color covered it, and the long, supple neck led back to
a huge body extending into the gloom of the giant hall. Enormous wings were
folded across its back, their drooping tips touching the floor. Two pointed
ears sat atop its head, separated by a delicate-looking crest, flecked with
silver. Its long muzzle was set in a wolflike grin, showing fangs as long as
broadswords, and a long forked tongue flicked out for a moment.
Dolgan fought down the overwhelming and rare urge to run, for Tomas
was sitting, and to all appearances sharing a meal, with the dwarven folk’s
most feared hereditary enemy: a great dragon. He stepped forward, and his boots
clacked on the stone floor.
Tomas turned at the sound, and the dragon’s great head came up.
Giant ruby eyes regarded the small intruder Tomas jumped to his feet, an
expression of joy upon his face. “Dolgan!” He scrambled down from the pile of
wealth and rushed to the dwarf.
The dragon’s voice rumbled through the great hall, echoing like thunder
through a valley. “Welcome, dwarf. Thy friend hath told me that thou wouldst
not forsake him.”
Tomas stood before the dwarf, asking a dozen questions, while
Dolgan’s senses reeled. Behind the boy, the Prince of all dragons sat quietlv
observing the exchange, and the dwarf was having trouble maintaining the
equanimity that was normally his. Making little sense of Tomas’s questions,
Dolgan gently pushed him to one side to better see the dragon. “I came alone,”
he said softly to the boy “The others were loath to leave the search to me, but
they had to press on, so vital was the mission.”
Tomas said, “I understand.”
“What manner of wizardry is this?” asked Dolgan softly.
The dragon chuckled, and the room rumbled with the sound. “Come into
my home, dwarf, and I will tell thee.” The great dragon’s head returned to the
floor, his eyes still resting above Dolgan’s head. The dwarf approached slowly,
shield and ax unconsciously at the ready. The dragon laughed, a deep, echoing
sound, like water cascading down a canyon “Stay thy hand, small warrior, I’ll
not harm thee or thy friend.”
Dolgan let his shield down and hung his ax on his belt. He looked
around and saw that they were standing in a vast hall, fashioned out of the
living rock of the mountain. On all its walls could be seen large tapestries
and banners, faded and torn; something about their look set Dolgan’s teeth on
edge, for they were as alien as they were ancient—no creature he knew of,
human, elf, or goblin fashioned those pennants. More of the giant crystal
chandeliers hung from timbers across the ceiling. At the far end of the hall, a
throne could be seen on a dais, and long tables with chairs for many diners
stood before it Upon the tables were flagons of crystal and plates of gold. And
all was covered with the dust of ages.
Elsewhere in the hall lay piles of wealth: gold, gems, crowns,
silver, rich armor, bolts of rare cloth, and carved chests of precious woods,
fitted with inlaid enamels of great craft.
Dolgan sat upon a lifetime’s riches of gold, absently moving it
around to make as comfortable a seat as was possible. Tomas sat next to him as
the dwarf pulled out his pipe. He didn’t show it, but he felt the need to calm
himself, and his pipe always soothed his nerves. He lit a taper from his
lantern and struck it to his pipe. The dragon watched him, then said, “Canst
thou now breathe fire and smoke, dwarf? Art thou the new dragon? Hath ever a
dragon been so small?”
Dolgan
shook his head. “ ‘Tis but my pipe .” He explained the use of tabac.
The dragon said, “This is a strange thing, but thine are a strange
folk, in truth.”
Dolgan cocked a brow at this but said nothing. “Tomas, how did you
come to this place?”
Tomas seemed unmindful of the dragon, and Dolgan found this
reassuring. If the great beast had wished to harm them, he could have done so
with little effort. Dragons were undisputedly the mightiest creatures on
Midkemia. And this was the mightiest dragon Dolgan had heard of, half again the
size of those he had fought in his youth.
Tomas finished the fish he had been eating and said, “I wandered for
a long time and came to a place where I could sleep.”
“Aye, I found it.”
“I awoke at the sound of something and found tracks that led here.”
“Those I saw also. I was afraid you had been taken.”
“I wasn’t. It was a party of goblins and a few Dark Brothers, coming
to this place. They were very concerned about what was ahead and didn’t pay
attention to what was behind, so I could follow fairly close.”
“That was a dangerous thing to do.”
“I know, but I was desperate for a way out. I thought they might
lead me to the surface, and I could wait while they went on ahead, then slip
out. If I could get out of the mines, I could have headed north toward your
village.”
“A bold plan, Tomas,” said Dolgan, an approving look in his eyes.
“They came to this place, and I followed.”
“What happened to them?”
The dragon spoke. “I sent them far away, dwarf, for they were not
company I would choose.”
“Sent them away? How?”
The dragon raised his head a little, and Dolgan could see that his
scales were faded and dull in places. The red eyes were filmed over slightly,
and suddenly Dolgan knew the dragon was blind.
“The dragons have long had magic, though it is unlike any other. It
is by my arts that I can see thee, dwarf, for the light hath long been denied
me. I took the foul creatures and sent them far to the north. They do not know
how they came to that place, nor remember this place.”
Dolgan puffed on his pipe, thinking of what he was hearing. “In the
tales of my people, there are legends of dragon magicians, though you are the
first I have seen.”
The dragon lowered his head to the floor slowly, as if tired. “For I
am one of the last of the golden dragons, dwarf, and none of the lesser dragons
have the art of sorcery. I have sworn never to take a life, but I would not
have their kind invade my resting place.”
Tomas spoke up. “Rhuagh has been kind to me, Dolgan. He let me stay
until you found me, for he knew that someone was coming.”
Dolgan looked at the dragon, wondering at his foretelling.
Tomas continued, “He gave me some smoked fish to eat, and a place to
rest.”
“Smoked fish?”
The dragon said, “The kobolds, those thou knowest as gnomes, worship
me as a god and bring me offerings, fish caught in the deep lake and smoked, and
treasure gleaned from deeper halls.”
“Aye,” said Dolgan, “gnomes have never been known for being overly
bright.”
The dragon chuckled. “True. The kobolds are shy and harm only those
who trouble them in their deep tunnels. They are a simple folk, and it pleaseth
them to have a god. As I am not able to hunt, it is an agreeable arrangement.”
Dolgan considered his next question. “I mean no disrespect, Rhuagh,
but it has ever been my experience with dragons that you have little love for
others not your own kind. Why have you aided the boy?”
The dragon closed his eyes for a moment, then opened them again to
stare blankly toward the dwarf “Know this, dwarf, that such was not always the
way of it. Thy people are old, but mine are the oldest of all, save one. We
were here before the elves and the moredhel. We served those whose names may
not be spoken, and were a happy people.”
“The Dragon Lords?”
“So your legends call them. They were our masters, and we were their
servants, as were the elves and the moredhel. When they left this land, on a
journey beyond imagining, we became the most powerful of the free people, in a
time before the dwarves or men came to these lands. Ours was a dominion over
the skies and all things, for we were mighty beyond any other.
“Ages ago, men and dwarves came to our mountains, and for a time we
lived in peace. But ways change, and soon strife came. The elves drove the
moredhel from the forest now called Elvandar, and men and dwarves warred with
dragons.
“We were strong, but humans are like the trees of the forest, their
numbers uncountable. Slowly my people fled to the south, and I am the last in
these mountains. I have lived here for ages, for I would not forsake my home.
“By magic I could turn away those who sought this treasure, and kill
those whose arts foiled my clouding of their minds. I sickened of the killing
and vowed to take no more lives, even those as hateful as the moredhel. That is
why I sent them far, and why I aided the boy, for he is undeserving of harm.”
Dolgan studied the dragon. “I thank you, Rhuagh.”
“Thy thanks are welcome, Dolgan of the Grey Towers. I am glad of thy
coming also. It is only a little longer that I could shelter the boy, for I
summoned Tomas to my side by magic arts, so he might sit my death-watch.”
“What?” exclaimed Tomas.
“It is given to dragons to know the hour of their death, Tomas, and
mine is close. I am old, even by the measure of my people, and have led a full
life. I am content for it to be so. It is our way.”
Dolgan looked troubled. “Still, I find it strange to sit here
hearing you speak of this.”
“Why, dwarf? Is it not true with thine own people that when one
dieth, it is accounted how well he lived, rather than how long?”
“You have the truth of that.”
“Then why should it matter if the death hour is known or not? It is
still the same. I have had all that one of my kind could hope for: health,
mates, young, riches, and rest. These are all I have ever wanted, and I have
had them.”
“ ‘Tis
a wise thing to know what is wanted, and wiser still to know when ‘tis
achieved,” said Dolgan.
“True. And still wiser to know when it is unachievable, for then
striving is folly. It is the way of my people to sit the deathwatch, but there
are none of my kind near enough to call. I would ask thee to wait for my
passing before thy leaving. Wilt thou?”
Dolgan looked at Tomas, who bobbed his head in agreement. “Aye,
dragon, we will, though it is not a thing to gladden our hearts.”
The dragon closed his eyes; Tomas and Dolgan could see they were
beginning to swell shut. “Thanks to thee, Dolgan, and to thee, Tomas.”
The dragon lay there and spoke to them of his life, flying the skies
of Midkemia, of far lands where tigers lived in cities, and mountains where
eagles could speak. Tales of wonder and awe were told, long into the night.
When his voice began to falter, Rhuagh said, “Once a man came to
this place, a magician of mighty arts. He could not be turned from this place
by my magic, nor could I slay him. For three days we battled, his arts against
mine, and when done, he had bested me. I thought he would slay me and carry off
my riches, but instead he stayed, for his only thought was to learn my magic,
so that it would not be lost when I passed.”
Tomas sat in wonder, for as little as he knew about magic from Pug,
he thought this a marvelous thing In his mind’s eye he could see the titanic
struggle and the great powers working.
“With him he had a strange creature, much like a goblin, though
upright, and with features of finer aspect. For three years he stayed with me,
while his servant came and went. He learned all I could teach, for I could deny
him not. But he taught as well, and his wisdom gave me great comfort. It was
because of him that I learned to respect life, no matter how mean of character,
and vowed to spare any that came to me. He also had suffered at the hands of
others, as I had in the wars with men, for much that I cherished was lost. This
man had the art of healing the wounds of the heart and mind, and when he left,
I felt the victor, not the vanquished.” He paused and swallowed, and Tomas
could see that speech was coming to him with more difficulty. “If a dragon
could not have attended my deathwatch, I would as soon have him sit here, for
he was the first of thy kind, boy, that I would count a friend.”
“Who was he, Rhuagh?” Tomas asked.
“He was called Macros.”
Dolgan looked thoughtful. “I’ve heard his name, a magician of most
puissant arts. He is nearly a myth, having lived somewhere to the east.”
“A myth he is not, Dolgan,” said Rhuagh, thickly. “Still, it may be
that he is dead, for he dwelt with me ages ago.” The dragon paused “My time is
now close, so I must finish I would ask a boon of thee, dwarf.” He moved his
head slightly and said, “In yon box is a gift from the mage, to be used at this
time. It is a rod fashioned of magic. Macros left it so that when I die no
bones will be left for scavengers to pick over. Wilt thou bring it here?”
Dolgan went to the indicated chest. He opened it to discover a black
metal rod lying upon a blue velvet cloth. He picked up the rod and found it
surprisingly heavy for its size. He carried it over to the dragon.
The dragon spoke, his words nearly unintelligible, for his tongue
was swollen. “In a moment, touch the rod to me, Dolgan, for then will I end.”
“Aye,” said Dolgan, “though it will give me scant pleasure to see
your end, dragon.”
“Before that I have one last thing to tell. In a box next to the
other is a gift for thee, dwarf. Thou mayest take whatever else here pleaseth
thee, for I will have no use for any of it. But of all in this hall, that in
the box is what I wish thee to have.” He tried to move his head toward Tomas,
but could not. “Tomas, thanks to thee, for spending my last with me. In the box
with the dwarf’s gift is one for you. Take whatever else pleaseth thee, also,
for thy heart is good.” He drew a deep breath, and Tomas could hear it rattle
in his throat. “Now, Dolgan.”
Dolgan extended the rod and lightly touched the dragon on the head
with it. At first nothing happened. Rhuagh said softly, “It was Macros’s last
gift.”
Suddenly a soft golden light began to form around the dragon. A
faint humming could be heard, as if the walls of the hall reverberated with fey
music. The sound increased as the light grew brighter and began to pulse with
energy. Tomas and Dolgan watched as the discolored patches faded from Rhuagh’s
scales. His hide shone with golden sparkle, and the film started to lift from
his eyes. He slowly raised his head, and they knew he could again see the hall
around him. His crest stood erect, and his wings lifted, showing the rich
silver sheen underneath. The yellowed teeth became brilliant white, and his
faded black claws shone like polished ebony as he stood upright, lifting his
head high.
Dolgan said softly, “Tis the grandest sight I’ve ever beheld.”
Slowly the light grew in intensity as Rhuagh returned to the image
of his youthful power. He pulled himself to his full, impressive height, his
crest dancing with silver lights. The dragon threw back his head, a youthful,
vigorous motion, and with a shout of joy sent a powerful blast of flame up to
the high vaulted ceiling. With a roar like a hundred trumpets he shouted, “I
thank thee, Macros. It is a princely gift indeed.”
Then the strangely harmonic thrumming changed in tone, becoming more
insistent, louder. For a brief instant both Dolgan and Tomas thought a voice
could be heard among the pulsing tones, a deep, hollow echo saying, “You are
welcome, friend.”
Tomas felt wetness on his face, and touched it. Tears of joy from
the dragon’s sheer beauty were running down his cheeks. The dragon’s great
golden wings unfolded, as if he were about to launch himself in flight. The
shimmering light became so bright, Tomas and Dolgan could barely stand to look,
though they could not pull their eyes from the spectacle. The sound in the room
grew to a pitch so loud, dust fell from the ceiling upon their heads, and they
could feel the floor shake. The dragon launched himself upward, wings extended,
then vanished in a blinding flash of cold white light. Suddenly the room was as
it had been and the sound was gone.
The emptiness in the cavern felt oppressive after the dragon
vanished, and Tomas looked at the dwarf “Let’s leave, Dolgan. I have little
wish to stay.”
Dolgan looked thoughtful. “Aye, Tomas, I also have little desire to
stay. Still, there is the matter of the dragon’s gifts.” He crossed over to the
box the dragon had identified and opened it.
Dolgan’s eyes became round as he reached in and pulled out a dwarven
hammer. He held it out before himself and looked upon it with reverence. The
head was made from a silver metal that shone in the lantern light with bluish
highlights. Across the side were carved dwarven symbols. The haft was carved
oak, with scrollwork running the length. It was polished, and the deep rich
gram showed through the finish Dolgan said, faintly, “Tis the Hammer of Tholin.
Long removed from my people. Its return will cause rejoicing in every dwarven
long hall throughout the West. It is the symbol of our last king, lost ages
ago.”
Tomas came over to watch and saw something else in the box. He
reached past Dolgan and pulled out a large bundle of white cloth. He unrolled
it and found that the cloth was a tabard of white, with a golden dragon
emblazoned on the front. Inside were a shield with the same device and a golden
helm. Most marvelous of all was a golden sword with a white hilt. Its scabbard
was fashioned from a smooth white material like ivory, but stronger, like
metal. Beneath the bundle lav a coat of golden chain mail, which he removed
with an “Oh!” of wonder.
Dolgan watched him and said, “Take them, boy. The dragon said it was
your gift.”
“They are much too fine for me, Dolgan. They belong to a prince or a
king.”
“I’m thinking the previous owner has scant use for them, laddie.
They were freely given, and you may do what you will, but I think that there is
something special to them, or else they wouldn’t have been placed in the box
with the hammer. Tholin’s hammer is a weapon of power, forged in the ancient
hearths of the Mac Cadman Alair, the oldest mine in these mountains. In it
rests magic unsurpassed in the history of the dwarves. It is likely the gilded
armor and sword are also such. It may be there is a purpose in their coming to
you.”
Tomas thought for a moment, then quickly pulled off his great cloak.
His tunic was no gambeson, but the golden mail went over it easily enough,
being fashioned for someone of larger stature. He pulled the tabard over it and
put the helm upon his head. Picking up the sword and shield, he stood before
Dolgan. “Do I look foolish?”
The dwarf regarded him closely “They are a bit large, but you’ll
grow into them, no doubt.” He thought he saw something in the way the boy stood
and held the sword in one hand and the shield in the other. “No, Tomas, you do
not look foolish. Perhaps not at ease, but not foolish. They are grand, and you
will come to wear them as they were meant to be worn, I think.”
Tomas nodded, picked up his cloak, and turned toward the door,
putting up his sword. The armor was surprisingly light, much lighter than what
he had worn at Crydee. The boy said, “I don’t feel like taking anything else,
Dolgan. I suppose that sounds strange.”
Dolgan walked over to him. “No, boy, for I also wish nothing of the
dragon’s riches.” With a backward glance at the hall, he added, “Though there
will be nights to come when I will wonder at the wisdom of that. I may return
someday, but I doubt it. Now let us find a way home.” They set off and soon
were in tunnels Dolgan knew well, taking them to the surface.
Dolgan gripped Tomas’s arm in silent warning. The boy knew enough
not to speak. He also felt the same alarm he had experienced just before the
wraith had attacked the day before. But this time it was almost physically
felt. The undead creature was near. Putting down the lantern, Tomas shuttered
it. His eyes widened in sudden astonishment, for instead of the expected
blackness, he saw faintly the figure of the dwarf moving slowly forward.
Without thought he said, “Dolgan—”
The dwarf turned, and suddenly a black form loomed up at his back “Behind
you!” shouted Tomas.
Dolgan spun to confront the wraith, instinctively bringing up his
shield and Tholin’s hammer. The undead creature struck at the dwarf, and only
Dolgan’s battle-trained reflexes and dwarven ability to sense movement in the
inky darkness saved him, for he took the contact on his iron-bosked shield. The
creature howled in rage at the contact with iron. Then Dolgan lashed out with
the legendary weapon of his ancestors, and the creature screamed as the hammer
struck its form. Blue-green light sprang about the head of the hammer, and the
creature retreated, wailing in agony.
“Stay behind me,” shouted Dolgan. “If iron irritates it, then
Tholin’s hammer pains it. I may be able to drive it off.”
Tomas began to obey the dwarf, then found his right hand crossing to
pull the golden sword free of the scabbard on his left hip Suddenly the
ill-fitting armor seemed to settle more comfortably around his shoulders, and
the shield balanced upon his arm as if he had carried it for years. Without
volition of his own, Tomas moved behind Dolgan, then stepped past, bringing the
golden sword to the ready.
The creature seemed to hesitate, then moved toward Tomas. Tomas
raised his sword, readying to strike. With a sound of utter terror, the wraith
turned and fled. Dolgan glanced at Tomas, and something he saw made him
hesitate as Tomas seemed to come to an awareness of himself and put up his
sword.
Dolgan returned to the lantern and said, “Why did you do that, lad?”
Tomas said, “I . . . don’t know.” Feeling suddenly self-conscious at
having disobeyed the dwarf’s instructions, he said, “But it worked. The thing
left.”
“Aye, it worked,” agreed Dolgan, removing the shutter from the
lantern. In the light he studied the boy.
Tomas said, “I think your ancestor’s hammer was too much for it.”
Dolgan said nothing, but he knew that wasn’t the case. The creature
had fled in fear from the sight of Tomas in his armor of white and gold. Then
another thought struck the dwarf. “Boy, how did you know to warn me the
creature was behind me?”
“I saw it.”
Dolgan turned to look at Tomas with open astonishment “You saw it?
How? You had shuttered the lantern.”
“I don’t know how. I just did.”
Dolgan closed the shutter on the lantern again and stood up. Moving
a few feet away, he said, “Where am I now, lad?”
Without hesitation Tomas came to stand before him, placing a hand
upon his shoulder. “Here.”
“What—?” said the dwarf.
Tomas touched the helm, then the shield “You said they were
special.”
“Aye,
lad. But I didn’t think they were that special.”
“Should I take them off?” asked the worried boy.
“No, no.” Leaving the lantern upon the floor, Dolgan said, “We can
move more quickly if I don’t have to worry about what you can and can’t see.”
He forced a note of cheenness into his voice. “And despite there being no two
finer warriors in the land, it’s best if we don’t announce our presence with that
light. The dragon’s telling of the moredhel being down in our mines gives me no
comfort. If one band was brave enough to risk my people’s wrath, there may be
others. Yon wraith may be terrified of your golden sword and my ancient hammer,
but twenty or so moredhel might not be so easily impressed.”
Tomas could find nothing to say, so they started moving off into the
darkness.
Three times they stopped and hid while hurrying groups of goblins
and Dark Brothers passed near by. From their dark vantage point they could see
that many of those who passed harbored wounds or were aided by their kinsmen as
they limped along. After the last group was gone, Dolgan turned to Tomas and
said, “Never in history have the goblins and moredhel dared to enter our mines
in such numbers. Too much do they fear my people to risk it.”
Tomas said, “They look pretty beat up, Dolgan, and they have females
and young with them, and carry great bundles, too. They are fleeing something.”
The dwarf nodded. “They are all moving from the direction of the
northern valley in the Grey Towers, heading toward the Green Heart. Something
still drives them south.”
“The Tsurani?”
Dolgan nodded. “My thought also. Come. We had best return to Caldara
as quickly as we can.” They set off and soon were in tunnels Dolgan knew well,
taking them to the surface and home.
They
were both exhausted when they reached Caldara five days later. The snows in the
mountains were heavy, and the going was slow. As they approached the village,
they were sighted by guards, and soon the entire village turned out to greet
them.
They were taken to the village long hall, and Tomas was given a
room. He was so tired that he fell asleep at once, and even the stout dwarf was
fatigued. The dwarves agreed to call the village elders together the next day
in council and discuss the latest news to reach the valley.
Tomas awoke feeling ravenous. He stretched as he stood up and was
surprised to find no stiffness. He had fallen asleep in the golden mail and
should have wakened to protesting joints and muscles. Instead he felt rested
and well. He opened the door and stepped into a hall. He saw no one until he
came to the central room of the long hall. There were several dwarves seated
along the great table, with Dolgan at the head. Tomas saw one was Weylin,
Dolgan’s son. Dolgan motioned the boy to a chair and introduced him to the
company.
The dwarves all greeted Tomas, who made polite responses. Mostly he
stared at the great feast of food on the table.
Dolgan laughed and said, “Help yourself, laddie; there is little
cause for you to be hungry with the board full.” Tomas heaped a plate with
beef, cheese, and bread and took a flagon of ale, though he had little head for
it and it was early in the day. He quickly consumed what was on the platter and
helped himself to another portion, looking to see if anyone disapproved. Most
of the dwarves were involved in a complicated discussion of an unknown nature
to Tomas, having to do with the allocation of winter stores to various villages
in the area.
Dolgan called a halt to the discussion and said, “Now that Tomas is
with us, I think we had best speak of these Tsurani.”
Tomas’s ears pricked up at that, and he turned his attention fully
to what was being said Dolgan continued, “Since I left on patrol, we have had
runners from Elvandar and Stone Mountain. There have been many sightings of
these aliens near the North Pass. They have made camp in the hills south of
Stone Mountain.”
One of the dwarves said, “That is Stone Mountain’s business, unless
they call us to arms.”
Dolgan said, “True, Orwin, but there is also the news they have been
seen moving in and out of the valley just south of the pass. They have intruded
on lands traditionally ours, and that is the business of the Grev Towers.”
The dwarf addressed as Orwin nodded “Indeed it is, but there is
naught we can do until spring.”
Dolgan put his feet up on the table, lighting a pipe. “And that is
true also. But we can be thankful the Tsurani can do naught until spring, as
well.”
Tomas put down a joint of beef he was holding. “Has the blizzard
struck?”
Dolgan looked at him. “Aye, laddie, the passes are all solid with
snow, for the first winter blizzard came upon us last night. There will be
nothing that can move out there, least of all an army.”
Tomas looked at Dolgan. “Then . . .”
“Aye. You’ll guest with us this winter, for not even our hardiest
runner could make his way out of these mountains to Crydee.”
Tomas sat back, for in spite of the comforts of the dwarven long
hall, he wished for more familiar surroundings. Still, there was nothing that
could be done. He resigned himself to that and returned his attention to his
meal.
11
SORCERER’S ISLE
The weary group trudged into Bordon.
Around them rode a company of Natalese Rangers, dressed in their
traditional grey tunics, trousers, and cloaks. They had been on patrol, had
encountered the travelers a mile out of town, and were now escorting them.
Borric was irritated that the rangers had not offered to let the exhausted
travelers ride double, but he hid it well. They had little reason to recognize
this group of ragamuffins as the Duke of Crydee and his party, and even if he
should have arrived in state, there was little warmth between the Free Cities
of Natal and the Kingdom.
Pug looked at Bordon with wonder. It was a small city by Kingdom
standards, little more than a seaport town, but far larger than Crydee.
Everywhere he looked, people were hurrying about on unknown tasks, busy and
preoccupied. Little attention was paid the travelers except for an occasional
glance from a shopkeeper or a woman at market. Never had the boy seen so many
people, horses, mules, and wagons all in one place. It was a confusion of
colors and sounds, overwhelming his senses. Barking dogs ran behind the
rangers’ horses, nimbly avoiding kicks by the irritated mounts. A few street
boys shouted obscenities at the party, all obviously outlanders from their
look, and most likely prisoners from the escort. Pug was vaguely troubled by
this rudeness, but his attention was quickly distracted by the newness of the
city.
Bordon, like the other cities in the area, had no standing army, but
instead supported a garrison of Natalese Rangers, descendants of the legendary
Imperial Keshian Guides and counted among the best horse soldiers and trackers
in the west. They could provide ample warning of approaching trouble and allow
the local militia time to turn out. Nominally independent, the rangers were
free to dispose of outlaws and renegades on the spot, but after hearing the
Duke’s story, and at mention of the name Martin Longbow—whom they knew well—the
leader of the patrol decided this matter should be turned over to the local
prefects.
They were taken to the office of the local prefect, located in a
small building near the city square. The rangers appeared pleased to be shed of
the prisoners and return to their patrol as they gave over custody to the
prefect.
The prefect was a short, swarthy man given to brightly colored
sashes about his ample girth and large golden rings upon his fingers. He
smoothed his dark, oiled beard as the ranger captain explained his company’s
meeting with the Duke’s party. As the rangers rode off, the prefect greeted
Borric coolly. When the Duke made it clear they were expected by Talbott
Kilrane, the largest ships’ broker in the city and Bornc’s trading agent in the
Free Cities, the prefect’s manner changed abruptly. They were taken from the
office to the prefect’s private quarters and offered hot, dark coffee. The
prefect sent one of his servants with a message to the house of Kilrane and
waited quietly, only occasionally making noncommittal small talk with the Duke.
Kulgan leaned over to Pug and said, “Our host is the sort who sees
which way the wind blows before making up his mind, he waits word from the
merchant before deciding if we’re prisoners or guests.” The magician chuckled.
“You’ll find as you grow older that minor functionaries are the same the world
over.”
An angry storm in the person of Meecham appeared suddenly in the
door of the prefect’s home a short time later, one of Kilrane’s senior clerks
at his elbow. The clerk quickly made it clear that this was indeed the Duke of
Crydee and, yes, he was expected by Talbott Kilrane. The prefect was abjectly
apologetic and hopeful the Duke would forgive the inconvenience, but under the
present conditions, in these troubled times, he could understand? His manner
was fawning and his smile unctuous.
Borric indicated that, yes, he did understand, all too well. Without
any further delay, they left the prefect and went outside, where a group of
grooms waited with horses. Quickly they mounted up, and Meecham and the clerk
led them through the town, toward a hillside community of large, imposing
houses.
The house of Talbott Kilrane stood topmost upon the highest hill
overlooking the city. From the road Pug could see ships standing at anchor.
Dozens of them were sitting with masts removed, obviously out of service during
the harsh weather. A few coast-huggers bound for Ylith in the north or the
other Free Cities were making their way cautiously in and out of the harbor,
but for the most part the harbor was quiet.
They reached the house and entered an open gate in a low wall, where
servants ran to take their horses. As they dismounted, their host came through
the large entrance to the house.
“Welcome, Lord Borric, welcome,” he said, a warm smile splitting his
gaunt face. Talbott Kilrane looked like a vulture reincarnated into human form,
with a balding head, sharp features, and small, dark eyes. His expensive robes
did little, to hide his gauntness, but there was an ease to his manner, and a
concern in his eyes, that softened the unattractive aspect.
In spite of the man’s appearance, Pug found him likable. He shooed
servants off, to make ready rooms and hot meals for the party. He would not
listen as the Duke tried to explain the mission. Raising a hand, he said,
“Later, Your Grace. We can speak at length, after you have had rest and food. I
will expect you for dinner tonight, but for now there are hot baths and clean
beds for your party. I will have warm meals delivered to your quarters. Good
food, rest, and clean clothes, and you’ll feel like a new man. Then we can
speak.”
He clapped his hands, and a housecarl came to show them their rooms.
The Duke and his son were given separate quarters, while Pug and Kulgan shared
another Gardan was shown to Meecham’s room, and the Duke’s soldiers were taken
to the servants’ quarters.
Kulgan told Pug to take the first bath while the magician spoke with
his servant for a while. Meecham and Kulgan went off to the franklin’s room,
and Pug stripped off his dirty clothes. In the center of the room was a large
metal tub, filled with scented water, hot and steaming. He stepped into it and
pulled his foot out quickly. After three days of walking through snow, the
water felt as if it were boiling. Gently he placed his foot back in and, when
he had become used to the heat, slowly entered the water.
He sat back in the tub, the sloping back providing support. The
inside of the tub was enameled, and Pug found the slick, smooth feeling strange
after the wooden tubs of home. He lathered himself over with a sweet soap and
washed the dirt from his hair, then stood in the tub and poured a bucket of
cold water over his head to rinse off.
He dried himself and put on the clean nightshirt that had been left
for him. In spite of the early hour he fell into the warm bed. His last thought
was of the sandy-haired boy with the ready grin. As Pug slipped into sleep, he
wondered if Dolgan had found his friend.
He awoke once during the day, hearing a nameless tune being hummed,
while water was being splashed about with great zeal as Kulgan soaped his large
body. Pug closed his eyes and was quickly asleep again.
He was hard asleep when Kulgan roused him for dinner. His tunic and
trousers had been cleaned and a small rent in the shirt mended. His boots were
polished and shone with a black gleam. As he stood inspecting himself in a
mirror, he noticed for the first time a soft black shadow on his cheeks. He
leaned closer and saw the early signs of a beard.
Kulgan watched him and said, “Well, Pug. Shall I have them fetch you
a razor so you can keep your chin bare like Prince Arutha? Or do you wish to
cultivate a magnificent beard?” He exaggeratedly brushed his own grey beard.
Pug smiled for the first time since leaving Mac Mordain Cadal. “I
think I can leave off worrying about it for a time.”
Kulgan laughed, glad to see the boy’s spirits returning. The
magician had been troubled at the depth of Pug’s mourning for Tomas and was
relieved to see the boy’s resilient nature assert itself. Kulgan held the door
open “Shall we?”
Pug inclined his head, imitating a courtly bow, and said, “Certes,
master magician. After you?” and broke into a laugh.
They made their way to the dining room, a large and well-lit hall,
though nothing as large as in the castle of Crydee. The Duke and Prince Arutha
were already seated, and Kulgan and Pug quickly took their places at the table.
Borric was just finishing his account of the events at Crydee and in
the great forest when Pug and Kulgan sat. “So,” he said, “I chose to carry this
news myself, so important I believe it to be.”
The
merchant leaned back in his chair as servants brought a wide variety of dishes
for the diners. “Lord Borric,” said Talbott, “when your man Meecham first
approached me, his request on your behalf was somewhat vague, due, I believe,
to the manner in which the information was transmitted.” He referred to the
magic employed by Kulgan to contact Belgan, who had in turn sent the message to
Meecham. “I never expected your desire to reach Krondor would prove as vital to
my own people as I now see it to be.” He paused, then continued, “I am, of
course, alarmed by the news you bear. I was willing to act as a broker to find
you a ship, but now I will undertake to send you in one of my own vessels.” He
picked up a small bell that sat near his hand and rang. In a moment a servant
was standing at his shoulder. “Send word to Captain Abram to ready the Storm
Queen. He leaves on tomorrow’s afternoon tide for Krondor. I will send more
detailed instructions later.”
The servant bowed and left. The Duke said, “I thank you, Master
Kilrane. I had hoped that you would understand, but I did not expect to find a
ship so quickly.”
The merchant looked directly at Borric. “Duke Borric, let me be
frank. There is little love lost between the Free Cities and the Kingdom. And,
to be franker still, less love for the name conDoin. It was your grandfather
who laid waste to Walinor and siege to Natal. He was stopped only ten miles
north of this very city, and that memory still rankles many of us. We are
Keshian by ancestry, but freemen by birth, and have little affection for
conquerors.” Kilrane continued as the Duke sat stiffly in his chair, “Still, we
are forced to admit that your father later, and yourself now, have been good
neighbors, treating fairly with the Free Cities, even generously at times. I
believe you to be a man of honor and realize these Tsurani people are likely
all you say they are. You are not the sort of man given to exaggeration, I
think.”
The Duke relaxed a little at this. Talbott took a sip of wine, then
resumed his conversation. “We would be foolish not to recognize that our best
interests lie with those of the Kingdom, for alone we are helpless. When you
have departed, I will summon a meeting of the Council of Guilds and Merchants
and will argue for support of the Kingdom in this.” He smiled, and all at the
table could see that here was a man as confident in his influence and authority
as the Duke was in his. “I think I will have little difficulty in making the
council see the wisdom of this. A brief mention of that Tsurani war galley and
a little conjecture on how our ships would fare against a fleet of such ships
should convince them.”
Borric laughed and slapped his hand upon the table. “Master
merchant, I can see your wealth was not acquired by a lucky cast of fate’s
knucklebones. Your shrewd mind is a match for my own Father Tully’s. As is your
wisdom. I give you my thanks.”
The Duke and the merchant continued to talk late into the night, but
Pug was still tired and returned to his bed. When Kulgan came in hours later,
he found the boy lying restfully, a peaceful expression on his face.
The
Storm Queen ran before the wind, her topgallants and sky sails slamming her
through the raging sea. The swirling, stinging icy rain made the night so black
that the tops of her tall masts were lost in hazy darkness to those who stood
on her decks.
On the quarterdeck, figures huddled under great fur-lined oilcloth
cloaks, trying to stay warm and dry in the bitterly cold wetness. Twice during
the last two weeks they had run through high seas, but this was by far the
worst weather they had encountered. A cry went up from the rigging, and word
was carried to the captain that two men had fallen from the yards. Duke Borric
shouted to Captain Abram, “Can nothing be done?”
“Nay, my lord. They are dead men, and to search would be folly, even
if possible, which it is not,” the captain shouted back, his voice carrying
over the storm’s roar.
A full watch was above in the treacherous rigging, knocking away the
ice that was forming on the spars, threatening to crack them with additional
weight, disabling the ship. Captain Abram held the rail with one hand, watching
for signs of trouble, his whole body in tune with his ship. Next to him stood
the Duke and Kulgan, less sure of their footing on the pitching deck. A loud
groaning, cracking sound came from below, and the captain swore.
Moments later a sailor appeared before them. “Captain, we’ve cracked
a timber and she’s taking water.”
The captain waved to one of his mates who stood on the main deck
“Take a crew below and shore up the damage, then report.”
The mate quickly picked four men to accompany him below. Kulgan
seemed to go into a trance for a minute before he said, “Captain, this storm
will blow another three days.”
The captain cursed the luck the gods had sent him and said to the
Duke, “I can’t run her before the storm for three days taking water. I must
find a place to heave to and repair the hull.”
The Duke nodded, shouting over the storm, “Are you turning for
Queg?”
The captain shook his head, dislodging snow and water dripping from
his black beard. “I cannot turn her into the wind for Queg. We will have to lie
off Sorcerer’s Isle.”
Kulgan shook his head, though the gesture was not noticed by the
others. The magician asked, “Is there nowhere else we can put in?”
The captain looked at the magician and the Duke. “Not as close. We
would risk the loss of a mast. Then, if we didn’t founder and sink, we’d lose
six days rather than three. The seas run higher, and I fear I may lose more
men.” He shouted orders aloft and to the steersman, and they took a more
southerly course, heading for Sorcerer’s Isle.
Kulgan went below with the Duke. The rocking, surging motion of the
ship made the ladder and narrow passageway difficult to negotiate, and the
stout magician was tossed from one side to the other as they made their way to
their cabins. The Duke went into his cabin, shared with his son, and Kulgan
entered his own. Gardan, Meecham, and Pug were trying to rest on their
respective bunks during the buffeting. The boy was having a difficult time, for
he had been sick the first two days. He had gained sea legs of a sort, but
still couldn’t bring himself to eat the salty pork and hardtack they were
forced to consume. Because of the rough seas, the ship’s cook had been unable
to perform his usual duties.
The ship’s timbers groaned in protest at the pounding the waves were
giving, and from ahead they could hear the sound of hammers as the work crew
struggled to repair the breached hull.
Pug rolled over and looked at Kulgan. “What about the storm?”
Meecham came up on one elbow and looked at his master. Gardan did
likewise. Kulgan said, “It will blow three days longer. We will put in to the
lee of an island and hold there until it slackens.”
“What island?” asked Pug.
“Sorcerer’s Isle.”
Meecham shot up out of his bunk, hitting his head on the low
ceiling. Cursing and rubbing his head, while Gardan stifled a laugh, he
exclaimed, “The island of Macros the Black?”
Kulgan nodded, while using one hand to steady himself as the ship
nosed over a high crest and forward into a deep trough. “The same. I have
little liking for the idea, but the captain fears for the ship.” As if to
punctuate the point, the hull creaked and groaned alarmingly for a moment.
“Who is Macros?” asked Pug.
Kulgan looked thoughtful for a moment, as much from listening to the
work crew in the hold as from the boy’s question, then said, “Macros is a great
sorcerer, Pug. Perhaps the greatest the world has ever known.”
“Aye,” added Meecham, “and the spawn of some demon from the deepest
circle of hell. His arts are the blackest, and even the bloody Priests of
Lims-Kragma fear to set foot on his island.”
Gardan laughed. “I have yet to see a wizard who could cow the death
goddess’s priests. He must be a powerful mage.”
“Those are only stories, Pug,” Kulgan said. “What we do know about
him is that when the persecution of magicians reached its height in the
Kingdom, Macros fled to this island. No one has since traveled to or from it.”
Pug sat up on his bunk, interested in what he was hearing, oblivious
to the terrible noise of the storm. He watched as Kulgan’s face was bathed in
moving half lights and shadows by the crazily swinging lantern that danced with
every lurch of the ship.
“Macros is very old,” Kulgan continued. “By what arts he keeps
alive, only he knows, but he has lived there over three hundred years.”
Gardan scoffed, “Or several men by the same name have lived there.”
Kulgan nodded. “Perhaps. In any event, there is nothing truly known
about him, except terrible tales told by sailors. I suspect that even if Macros
does practice the darker side of magic, his reputation is greatly inflated,
perhaps as a means of securing privacy.”
A loud cracking noise, as if another timber in the hull had split,
quieted them. The cabin rolled with the storm, and Meecham spoke all their
minds: “And I’m hoping we’ll all be able to stand upon Sorcerer’s Isle.”
The ship limped into the southern bay of the island. They would have
to wait until the storm subsided before they could put divers over the side to
inspect the damage to the hull.
Kulgan, Pug, Gardan, and Meecham came out on deck. The weather was
slightly kinder with the cliffs cutting the fury of the storm. Pug walked to
where the captain and Kulgan were standing. He followed their gaze up to the
top of the cliffs.
High above the bay sat a castle, its tall towers outlined against
the sky by the grey light of day. It was a strange place, with spires and
turrets pointing upward like some clawed hand. The castle was dark save for one
window in a high tower that shone with blue, pulsating light, as if lightning
had been captured and put to work by the inhabitant.
Pug heard Meecham say, “There, upon the bluff. Macros.”
Three days later the divers broke the surface and yelled to the
captain their appraisal of the damage. Pug was on the main deck with Meecham,
Gardan, and Kulgan Prince Arutha and his father stood near the captain,
awaiting the verdict on the ship’s condition. Above, the seabirds wheeled,
looking for the scraps and garbage heralded by a ship in these waters. The
storms of winter did little to supplement the meager feeding of the birds, and
a ship was a welcome source of fare.
Arutha came down to the main deck where the others waited. “It will
take all of this day and half tomorrow to repair the damage, but the captain
thinks it will hold fair until we reach Krondor. We should have little trouble
from here.”
Meecham and Gardan threw each other meaningful glances. Not wanting
to let the opportunity pass, Kulgan said, “Will we be able to put ashore, Your
Highness?”
Arutha rubbed his clean-shaven chin with a gloved hand. “Aye, though
not one sailor will put out a boat to carry us.”
“Us?” asked the magician.
Arutha smiled his crooked smile. “I have had my fill of cabins,
Kulgan. I feel the need to stretch my legs on firm ground. Besides, without
supervision, you’d spend the day wandering about places where you’ve no
business.” Pug looked up toward the castle, his glance noted by the magician.
“We’ll keep clear of that castle and the road up from the beach, to
be sure. The tales of this island only speak of ill coming to those who seek to
enter the sorcerer’s halls.”
Arutha signaled a seaman. A boat was readied, and the four men and
the boy got aboard. The boat was hauled over the side and lowered by a crew
sweating despite the cold wind that still blew after the storm. By the glances
they kept throwing toward the crest of the bluffs, Pug knew they were not
sweating because of work or weather.
As if reading his thoughts, Arutha said, “There may be a more
superstitious breed on Midkemia than sailors, but who they are I could not tell
you.”
When the boat was in the water, Meecham and Gardan cast off the
lines that hung suspended from the davits. The two men awkwardly took oars and
began to row toward the beach. It was a broken, stuttering rhythm at first, but
with disapproving looks from the Prince, along with several comments about how
men could spend their lives in a sea town and not know how to row, they finally
got the boat moving in good order.
They put in at a sandy stretch of beach, a little cove that broke
the bluffs of the bay. Upward toward the castle ran a path, which joined
another leading away across the island.
Pug leaped out of the boat and helped pull it ashore. When it was
fast aground, the others got out and stretched their legs.
Pug felt as if they were being watched, but each time he looked
around, there was nothing in sight but the rocks, and the few seabirds that
lived the winter in clefts of the cliff face.
Kulgan and the Prince studied the two paths up from the beach. The
magician looked at the other path, away from the sorcerer’s castle, and said,
“There should be little harm in exploring the other trail. Shall we?”
Days of boredom and confinement outweighed whatever anxiety they
felt. With a brusque nod, Arutha led the way up the trail.
Pug followed last, behind Meecham. The big-shouldered franklin was
armed with a broadsword, upon which his hand rested. Pug kept his sling handy,
for he still didn’t feel comfortable with a sword, though Gardan was giving him
lessons when possible. The boy fingered the sling absently, his eyes taking in
the scene before them.
Along the trail they startled several colonies of turnstones and
plovers, which took flight when the party came near. The birds squawked their
protests and hovered near their roosts until the hikers passed, then returned
to the scant comfort of the hillside.
They crested the first of a series of hills, and the path away from
the castle could be seen to dip behind another crest Kulgan said, “It must lead
somewhere. Shall we continue?” Arutha nodded, and the others said nothing. They
continued their journey until they came to a small valley, little more than a
dell, between two ranges of low hills. On the floor of the valley sat some
buildings.
Arutha said softly, “What do you think, Kulgan? Are they inhabited?”
Kulgan studied them for a moment, then turned to Meecham, who
stepped forward. The franklin inspected the vista below, his gaze traveling
from the floor of the vale to the hills around. “I think not. There is no sign
of smoke from cook fires, nor sound of people working.”
Arutha resumed his march down toward the floor of the valley, and
the others followed. Meecham turned to watch Pug for a moment, then noticed the
boy was unarmed except for his sling. The franklin pulled a long hunting knife
from his belt and handed it to the boy without comment. Pug bobbed his head
once in acknowledgment and took the knife in silence.
They reached a plateau above the buildings, and Pug could see an
alien-looking house, the central building circled by a large court and several
outbuildings. The entire property was surrounded by a low wall, no more than
four feet tall.
They worked their way down the hillside to a gate in the wall. There
were several barren fruit trees in the courtyard, and a garden area overgrown
with weeds. Near the front of the central building a fountain stood, topped
with a statue of three dolphins. They approached the fountain and saw that the
interior of the low pool surrounding the statue was covered in blue tiles,
faded and discolored with age. Kulgan examined the construction of the fountain
‘This is fashioned in a clever manner. I believe that water should issue from
the mouths of the dolphins.”
Arutha agreed. “I have seen the King’s fountains in Rillanon, and
they are similar, though lacking the grace of this.”
There was little snow on the ground, for it seemed the sheltered
valley and the entire island received little even in the most severe winters.
But it was still cold. Pug wandered a little way off and studied the house. It
had a single story, with windows every ten feet along the wall. There was but
one opening for a double door in the wall he stood facing, though the doors
were long off their hinges.
“Whoever lived here expected no trouble.”
Pug turned to see Gardan standing behind him, staring at the house
as well. “There is no tower for lookout,” continued the Sergeant. “And the low
wall seems more likely to keep livestock out of the gardens than for defense.”
Meecham joined them, hearing Gardan’s last remar.k “Aye, there is
little concern for defense here. This is the lowest spot on the island, save
for that small stream you could see behind the house when we came down the
hill.” He turned to stare up at the castle, the highest spires of which could
still be seen from the valley. “There is where you build for trouble. This
place,” he said, indicating the low buildings with a sweep of his hand, “was
fashioned by those who knew little of strife.”
Pug nodded as he moved away. Gardan and Meecham headed in a
different direction, toward an abandoned stable.
Pug moved around to the back of the house and found several smaller
buildings. He clutched his knife in his right hand and entered the closest. It
was open to the sky, for the roof had collapsed. Red roof tiles, shattered and
faded, lay about the floor, in what seemed to be a storeroom, with large wooden
shelves along three walls. Pug investigated the other rooms in the building,
finding them to be of similar configuration. The entire building was some sort
of storage area.
He moved to the next building and found a large kitchen. A stone
stove stood against one wall, big enough for several kettles to cook upon it
simultaneously, while a spit hung over a back opening above the fire was large
enough for a beef side or whole lamb. A mammoth butcher’s block stood in the
center of the room, scarred from countless blows of cleaver and knife.
Pug examined a strange-looking bronze pot in the corner, overlaid
with dust and cobwebs. He turned it over and found a wooden spoon. As he looked
up, he thought he saw a glimpse of someone outside the door of the cookhouse.
“Meecham? Gardan?” he asked, as he slowly approached the door. When
he stepped outside, there was no one in sight, but he did catch another glimpse
of movement at the rear door of the main house.
He hurried toward that door, assuming his companions had already
entered the building. As he entered the main house, he caught a hint of
movement down a side corridor. He stopped for a moment to survey this strange
house.
The door before him stood open, a sliding door fallen from railings
that had once held it in place. Through the door he could see a large central
courtyard, open to the sky above. The house was actually a hollow square, with
pillars holding up the interior of the partial roof. Another fountain and a
small garden occupied the very center of the courtyard. Like the one outside,
the fountain was in disrepair, and this garden was also choked with weeds.
Pug turned toward the hall down which he had seen movement. He
passed through a low side door into a shadowy corridor. In places the roof had
lost several tiles, so that occasionally light shone down from above, making it
easy for the boy to find his way. He passed two empty rooms, he suspected they
might be sleeping quarters.
He turned a corner to find himself before the door of an odd-looking
room and entered. The walls were tile mosaics, of sea creatures sporting in the
foam with scantily dressed men and women. The style of art was new to Pug. The
few tapestries and fewer paintings on display in the Duke’s halls were all very
lifelike, with muted colors and detailed execution in the finish. These mosaics
were suggestive of people and animals without capturing details.
In the floor was a large depression, like a pool, with steps leading
down before him Out of the wall opposite obtruded a brass fish head, hanging
over the pool. The nature of the room was beyond Pug.
As if someone had read his thoughts, a voice from behind said, “It
is a tepidanum.”
Pug turned and saw a man standing behind him. He was of average
height, with a high forehead and deep-set black eyes. There were streaks of
grey at the temples of his dark hair, but his beard was black as night. He wore
a brown robe of simple material, a whipcord belt around the waist. In his left
hand he held a sturdy oak staff. Pug came on guard, holding the long hunting
knife before him.
“Nay, lad. Put up your scramasax, I mean you no harm.” He smiled in
a way that made Pug relax.
Pug lowered his knife and said, “What did you call this room?”
“A tepidarium,” he said, entering the room. “Here warm water was
piped into the pool, and bathers would remove their clothing and place them on
those shelves.” He pointed to some shelves against the rear wall.
“Servants would clean and dry the clothing of dinner guests while
they bathed here.”
Pug thought the idea of dinner guests bathing at someone’s home in a
group a novel one, but he said nothing. The man continued, “Through that
door”—he pointed to a door next to the pool—“was another pool with very hot
water, in a room called a calidanum. Beyond was another pool with cold water in
a room called a fngidarium. There was a fourth room called the unctonum, where
servants would rub down the bathers with scented oils. And they scraped their
skins with wooden sticks. They didn’t use soap then.”
Pug was confused by all the different bathing rooms. “That sounds
like a lot of time spent getting clean. This is all very odd.”
The man leaned on his staff. “So it must seem to you, Pug. Still, I
expect those that built this house would consider your keep halls strange as
well.”
Pug started. “How did you know my name?”
The man smiled again. “I heard the tall soldier call you by name as
you approached the building. I was watching you, keeping out of sight until I
was sure you were not pirates come to seek ancient loot. Few pirates come so
young, so I thought it would be safe to talk to you.”
Pug studied the man. There was something about him that suggested
hidden meanings in his words. “Why would you speak with me?”
The man sat on the edge of the empty pool. The hem of his robe was
pulled back, revealing cross-gartered sandals of sturdy construction. “I am
alone mostly, and the chance to speak with strangers is a rare thing. So I
thought to see if you would visit with me awhile, for a few moments at least,
until you return to your ship.”
Pug sat down also, but kept a comfortable distance between himself
and the stranger. “Do you live here?”
The man looked around the room. “No, though I once did, long ago.”
There was a contemplative note in his voice, as if the admission were calling
up long-buried memories.
“Who are you?”
The man smiled again, and Pug felt his nervousness vanish. There was
something reassuring about his manner, and Pug could see that he intended no
harm. “Mostly I am called the traveler, for many lands have I seen. Here I am
sometimes known as the hermit, for so I live. You may call me what you like. It
is all the same.”
Pug looked at him closely. “Have you no proper name?”
“Many, so many that I have forgotten a few. At the time of my birth
I was given a name, as you were, but among those of my tribe it is a name known
only to the father and the mage-priest.”
Pug considered this. “It is all very strange, much like this house. Who
are your people?”
The man called the traveler laughed, a good-natured chuckle. “You
have a curious mind, Pug, full of questions. That is good.” He paused for a
moment, then said, “Where are you and your companions from? The ship in the bay
flies the Natalese banner of Bordon, but your accent and dress are of the
Kingdom.”
Pug said, “We are of Crydee,” and gave the man a brief description
of the journey. The man asked a few simple questions, and without being aware
of it, Pug found that soon he had given a full accounting of the events that
had brought them to the island, and the plans for the rest of the journey.
When he had finished, the traveler said, “That is a wondrous story
indeed. I should think there will be many more wonders before this strange meeting
of worlds is finished.”
Pug questioned him with a look. “I don’t understand.”
The traveler shook his head. “I don’t expect you to, Pug. Let us say
that things are occurring that can be understood only by examination after the
fact, with a distance of time separating the participants from the
participating.”
Pug scratched his knee. “You sound like Kulgan, trying to explain
how magic works.”
The traveler nodded. “An apt comparison. Though sometimes the only
way to understand the workings of magic is to work magic.”
Pug brightened. “Are you also a magician?”
The traveler stroked his long black beard. “Some have thought me
one, but I doubt that Kulgan and I share the same understanding of such
things.”
Pug’s expression showed he considered this an unsatisfactory
explanation even if he didn’t say so. The traveler leaned forward. “I can
effect a spell or two, if that answers your question, young Pug.”
Pug heard his name shouted from the courtyard. “Come,” said the
traveler “Your friends call. We had best go and reassure them that you are all
right.”
They left the bathing room and crossed the open court of the inner
garden. A large anteroom separated the garden from the front of the house, and
they passed through to the outside. When the others saw Pug in the company of
the traveler, they looked around quickly, their weapons drawn. Kulgan and the
Prince crossed the court to stand before them. The traveler put up his hands in
the universal sign that he was unarmed.
The Prince was the first to speak. “Who is your companion, Pug?”
Pug introduced the traveler. “He means no harm. He hid until he
could see that we were not pirates.” He handed the knife to Meecham.
If the explanation was unsatisfactory, Arutha gave no sign. “What is
your business here?”
The traveler spread his hands, with the staff in the crook of his
left arm. “I abide here, Prince of Crydee. I should think that the question
better serves me.”
The Prince stiffened at being addressed so, but after a tense moment
relaxed. “If that is so, then you are correct, for we are the intruders. We
came seeking relief from the solitary confines of the ship. Nothing more.”
The traveler nodded. “Then you are welcome at Villa Beata.”
Kulgan said, “What is Villa Beata?”
The traveler made a sweeping motion with his right hand. “This home
is Villa Beata. In the language of the builders, it means ‘blessed home,’ and
so it was for many years. As you can see, it has known better days.”
Everyone was relaxing with the traveler, for they also felt a reassurance
in his easy manner and friendly smile Kulgan said, “What of those who built
this strange place?”
“Dead . . . or gone. They thought this the Insula Beata, or Blessed
Isle, when they first came here. They fled a terrible war, which changed the
history of their world.” His dark eyes misted over, as if the pain of
remembering was great. “A great king died . . . or is thought to have died, for
some say he may return. It was a terrible and sad time. Here they sought to
live in peace.”
“What happened to them?” asked Pug.
The traveler shrugged “Pirates, or goblins? Sickness, or madness?
Who can tell? I saw this home as you see it now, and those who lived here were
gone.”
Arutha said, “You speak of strange things, friend traveler. I know
little of such, but it seems that this place has been deserted for ages. How is
it you knew those who lived here?”
The traveler smiled “It is not so long ago as you would imagine,
Prince of Crydee. And I am older than I look. It comes from eating well and
bathing regularly.”
Meecham had been studying the stranger the entire time, for of all
those who had come ashore, his was the most suspicious nature “And what of the
Black One? Does he not trouble you?”
The traveler looked over his shoulder at the top of the castle.
“Macros the Black? The magician and I have little cause to be at odds. He
suffers me the run of the island, as long as I don’t interfere with his work.”
A suspicion crossed Pug’s mind, but he said nothing, as the traveler
continued “Such a powerful and terrible sorcerer has little to fear from a
simple hermit, I’m sure you’ll agree.” He leaned forward and added in
conspiratorial tones, “Besides, I think much of his reputation is inflated and
overboasted, to keep intruders away. I doubt he is capable of the feats attributed
to him.”
Arutha said, “Then perhaps we should visit this sorcerer.”
The hermit looked at the Prince. “I don’t think you would find a
welcome at the castle. The sorcerer is oftentimes preoccupied with his work and
suffers interruption with poor grace. He may not be the mythical author of all
the world’s ills that some imagine him to be, but he could still cause more
trouble than it is worth to visit him. On the whole he is often poor company.”
There was a faint, wry hint of humor in his words.
Arutha looked around and said, “I think we have seen all of interest
we are likely to. Perhaps we should return to the ship.”
When none disagreed, the Prince said, “What of you, friend
traveler?”
The stranger spread his hands in a general gesture. “I continue my
habit of solitude, Your Highness. I have enjoyed this small visit, and the
boy’s news of the occurrences of the world outside, but I doubt that you would
find me tomorrow if you were to seek me.”
It was evident he was unlikely to provide any more information, and
Arutha found himself growing irritated with the man’s obscure answers. “Then we
bid you farewell, traveler. May the gods watch over you.”
“And you as well, Prince of Crydee.”
As they turned to leave, Pug felt something trip his ankle, and he
fell hard against Kulgan. Both went down in a tangle of bodies, and the
traveler helped the boy up. Meecham and Gardan assisted the stout mage to his
feet. Kulgan put weight upon his foot and started to fall. Arutha and Meecham
grabbed him. The traveler said, “It appears your ankle is turned, friend
magician. Here.” He held out his staff. “My staff is stout oak and will bear
your weight as you return to the ship.”
Kulgan took the offered staff and put his weight on it. He took an
experimental step and found that he could negotiate the path with the aid of
the staff. “Thank you, but what of yourself?”
The stranger shrugged. “A simple staff, easily replaced, friend
magician. Perhaps I shall have the opportunity of reclaiming it someday.”
“I will keep it against that day.”
The traveler turned away, saying, “Good. Then until that day, again
farewell.”
They watched as he walked back into the building, and then turned to
face each other, expressions of wonder upon their faces. Arutha was the first
to speak. “A strange man, this traveler.”
Kulgan nodded “More strange than you know, Prince. At his leaving I
feel the lifting of some enchantment, as if he carries a spell about him, one
that makes all near him trusting.”
Pug turned to Kulgan. “I wanted to ask him so many questions, but I
didn’t seem to be able to make myself.”
Meecham said, “Aye, I felt that also.”
Gardan said, “There is a thought in my mind I think we have been
speaking to the sorcerer himself.”
Pug said, “That is my thought.”
Kulgan leaned on the staff and said, “Perhaps. If it is so, then he
has his own reasons for masking his identity.” They talked about this as they
walked slowly up the path from the villa.
As they reached the cove where the boat was beached, Pug felt something
brush against his chest. He reached inside his tunic and found a small folded
piece of parchment. He withdrew it, startled by his find. He had not picked it
up, as well as he could remember. The traveler must have slipped it inside his
shirt when he had helped Pug to his feet.
Kulgan looked back as he started for the boat and, seeing Pug’s
expression, said, “What have you there?”
Pug handed the parchment over, while the others gathered around the
magician. Kulgan unfolded the parchment. He read it, and a surprised expression
crossed his face. He read it again, aloud. “I welcome those who come with no
malice in their hearts. You will know in days to come that our meeting was not
by chance. Until we meet again, keep the hermit’s staff as a sign of friendship
and goodwill Seek me not until the appointed time, for that too is foreordained
Macros.”
Kulgan handed the message back to Pug, who read it. “Then the hermit
was Macros!”
Meecham rubbed his beard. “This is something beyond my
understanding.”
Kulgan looked up to the castle, where the lights still flashed in
the single window. “As it is beyond mine, old friend. But whatever it means, I
think the sorcerer wishes us well, and I find that a good thing.”
They returned to the ship and retired to their cabins. After a night
of rest, they found the ship ready to leave on the midday tide. As they raised
sail, they were greeted with unseasonably light breezes, blowing them directly
for Krondor.
12
COUNCILS
Pug was restless.
He sat looking out a window of the Prince’s palace in Krondor.
Outside, the snow was falling, as it had been for the last three days. The Duke
and Arutha had been meeting with the Prince of Krondor daily. On the first day
Pug had told his story about finding the Tsurani ship, then had been dismissed.
He remembered that awkward interview.
He had been surprised to find the Prince to be young, in his
thirties, if not a vigorous and well man. Pug had been startled during their
interview when the Prince’s remarks were interrupted by a violent attack of
coughing. His pale face, drenched with sweat, showed him to be in worse health
than his manner indicated.
He had waved off Pug’s suggestion that he should leave and come back
when more convenient for him. Erland of Krondor was a reflective person, who listened
patiently to Pug’s narration, lessening the boy’s discomfort at being before
the heir apparent to the throne of the Kingdom. His eyes regarded Pug with
reassurance and understanding, as if it were a common thing to have awkward
boys standing before him. After listening to Pug’s narration, he had spent a
short time talking with Pug about small things, such as his studies and his
fortuitous rise to the nobility, as if these were important matters to his
realm.
Pug decided he liked Prince Erland. The second most powerful man in
the Kingdom, and the single most powerful man in the West, was warm and
friendly and cared for the comfort of his least-important guest.
Pug looked around the room, still not used to the splendor of the
palace. Even this small room was richly appointed, with a canopied bed instead
of a sleeping pallet. It was the first time Pug had ever slept in one, and he
found it difficult to get comfortable on the deep, soft, feather-stuffed
mattress. In the corner of the room stood a closet with more clothing in it
than he thought he could wear in his lifetime, all of costly weave and fine
cut, and all seemingly in his size. Kulgan had said it was a gift from the
Prince.
The quiet of his room reminded Pug how little he had seen of Kulgan
and the others. Gardan and his soldiers had left that morning with a bundle of
dispatches for Prince Lyam from his father, and Meecham was housed with the
palace guard. Kulgan was involved in the meetings as often as not, so Pug had a
lot of time to himself. He wished he had his books with him, for then at least
the time could be put to some good use. Since his arrival in Krondor there had
been little for him to do.
More than once Pug had thought of how much Tomas would have loved
the newness of this place—seemingly fashioned from glass and magic more than
stone—and the people in it. He thought about his lost friend, hoping Dolgan had
somehow found him, but not believing he had. The pain of loss was now a dull
ache, but still tender. Even after the last month, he would find himself
turning, expecting to see Tomas close by.
Not wishing to sit idle any longer, Pug opened the door and looked
down the hallway that ran the length of the east wing of the Prince’s palace.
He hurried down the hall, looking for any familiar face to break the monotony.
A guard passed him by, going the other way, and saluted. Pug still couldn’t
get used to the idea of being saluted every time a guard passed, but as a
member of the Duke’s party he was given full honors due his Squire’s rank by
the household staff.
Reaching a smaller hallway, he decided to explore. One way was the
same as another, he thought. The Prince had personally told him he had the run
of the palace, but Pug had been shy about overstepping himself. Now boredom
drove him to adventuring, or at least as much adventuring as possible under the
circumstances.
Pug found a small alcove with a window, providing a different view
of the palace grounds. Pug sat upon the window seat. Beyond the palace walls he
could see the port of Krondor lying below like a white-shrouded toy village.
Smoke was coming from many of the buildings, the only sign of life in the city.
The ships in the harbor looked like miniatures, lying at anchor, waiting for
more propitious conditions under which to sail.
A small voice behind him brought Pug out of his reverie. “Are you
Prince Arutha?”
A girl was standing behind him, about six or seven years old, with
big green eyes and dark reddish brown hair done up in silver netting. Her dress
was simple but fine looking, of red cloth with white lace at the sleeves. Her
face was pretty, but was set in an expression of deep concentration that gave
it a comic gravity.
Pug hesitated for a moment, then said, “No, I’m Pug. I came with the
Prince.”
The girl made no attempt to hide her disappointment. With a shrug
she came over and sat next to Pug. She looked up at him with the same grave
expression and said, “I was so hoping that you might be the Prince, for I
wanted to catch a glimpse of him before you leave for Salador.”
“Salador,” Pug said flatly. He had hoped the journey would end with
the visit to the Prince. Lately he had been thinking of Carline.
“Yes. Father says you are all to leave at once for Salador, then
take a ship for Rillanon to see the King.”
“Who’s your father?”
“The Prince, silly. Don’t you know anything?”
“I guess not.” Pug looked at the girl, seeing another Carline in the
making. “You must be Princess Anita.”
“Of course. And I’m a real princess too. Not the daughter of a duke,
but the daughter of a prince. My father would have been King if he had wanted,
but he didn’t want to. If he had, I would be Queen someday. But I won’t be.
What do you do?”
The question, coming so suddenly without preamble, caught Pug off
guard. The child’s prattling wasn’t very irksorne, and he wasn’t following
closely, being more intent on the scene through the window.
He hesitated, then said, “I’m apprenticed to the Duke’s magician.”
The Princess’s eyes grew round, and she said, “A real magician?”
“Real enough.”
Her little face lit up with delight. “Can he turn people into toads?
Mummy said magicians turn people into toads if they are bad.”
“I don’t know. I’ll ask him when I see him—if I see him again,” he
added under his breath.
“Oh, would you? I would so very much like to know.” She seemed
utterly fascinated by the prospect of finding out if the tale was true. “And
could you please tell me where I might see Prince Arutha?”
“I don’t know. I haven’t seen him myself in two days. What do you
want to see him for?”
“Mummy says I may marry him someday. I want to see if he is a nice
man.”
The prospect of this tiny child’s being married to the Duke’s
younger son confounded Pug for a moment. It was not an uncommon practice for
nobles to pledge their children in marriage years before their coming of age.
In ten years she would be a woman, and the Prince would still be a young man,
the Earl of some minor keep in the Kingdom. Still, Pug found the prospect
fascinating.
“Do you think you would like living with an earl?” Pug asked,
realizing at once it was a stupid question. The Princess confirmed the opinion
with a glance that would have done Father Tully credit.
She said, “Silly! How could I possibly know that when I don’t even
know who Mummy and Father will have me marry?”
The child jumped up. “Well, I must go back I’m not supposed to be
here. If they find me out of my rooms, I’ll be punished. I hope you have a nice
journey to Salador and Rillanon.”
“Thank you.”
With a sudden expression of worry, she said, “You won’t tell anyone
that I was here, will you?”
Pug gave her a conspiratorial smile “No. Your secret’s safe.” With a
look of relief, she smiled and peeked both ways down the hallway. As she
started to leave, Pug said, “He’s a nice man.”
The Princess stopped. “Who?”
“The Prince He’s a nice man. Given to brooding and moods, but on the
whole a nice person.”
The Princess frowned for a moment as she digested the information.
Then, with a bright smile, she said, “That’s good. I’d not want to marry a man
who’s not nice.” With a giggle she turned the corner and was gone.
Pug sat awhile longer, watching the snow fall, musing over the fact
of children being concerned about matters of state, and over a child with big,
serious green eyes.
That night the entire party was feted by the Prince. The whole
population of nobles at court and most of the rich commoners of Krondor were
attending the gala. Over four hundred people sat to dine, and Pug found himself
at a table with strangers who, out of respect for the quality of his clothing
and the simple fact of his being there in the first place, politely ignored
him. The Duke and Prince Arutha were seated at the head table with Prince
Erland and his wife, Princess Alicia, along with Duke Dulanic, Chancellor of
the Principality and Knight-Marshal of Krondor. Owing to Erland’s ill health,
the business of running Krondor’s military fell to Dulanic and the man he was
deep in conversation with, Lord Barry, Erland’s Lord-Admiral of the Krondonan
fleet. Other royal ministers were seated nearby, while the rest of the guests
were at smaller tables. Pug was seated at the one farthest removed from the
royal table.
Servants were bustling in and out of the hall, carrying large
platters of food and decanters of wine. Jongleurs strolled the hall, singing
the newest ballads and ditties. Jugglers and acrobats performed between the
tables, mostly ignored by the dinner guests, but giving their best, for the
Master of Ceremony would not call them back again should he judge their efforts
lacking.
The walls were covered with giant banners and rich tapestries. The
banners were of every major household in the Kingdom, from the gold and brown
of Crydee in the far west, to the white and green of far Ran, in the east.
Behind the royal table hung the banner of the Kingdom, a golden lion rampant
holding a sword, with a crown above his head, upon a field of purple, the
ancient crest of the conDoin kings. Next to it hung Krondor’s banner, an eagle
flying above a mountain peak, silver upon the royal purple. Only the Prince,
and the King in Rillanon, could wear the royal color. Borric and Arutha wore
red mantles over their tunics, signifying they were princes of the realm,
related to the royal family. It was the first time Pug had ever seen the two
wearing the formal marks of their station.
Everywhere were sights and sounds of gaiety, but even from across
the room Pug could tell that the talk at the Prince’s table was subdued. Borric
and Erland spent most of the dinner with their heads close together, speaking
privately.
Pug was startled by a touch on his shoulder and turned to see a
doll-like face peering through the large curtains not two feet behind him.
Princess Anita put her finger to her lips and beckoned for him to step through.
Pug saw the others at the table were looking at the great and near-great in the
room and would scarcely notice the departure of a nameless boy. He rose and
moved through the curtain, finding himself in a small servants’ alcove. Before
him was another curtain, leading to the kitchen, Pug supposed, through which
peeked the tiny fugitive from bed Pug moved to where Anita waited, discovering
it was, indeed, a long connecting corridor between the kitchen and the great
hall. A lengthy table covered with dishware and goblets ran along the wall.
Pug said, “What are you doing here?”
“Shush!” she said in a loud whisper. “I’m not supposed to be here.”
Pug smiled at the child. “I don’t think you have to worry about
being heard, there’s too much noise for that.”
“I came to see the Prince. Which one is he?”
Pug motioned for her to step into the small alcove, then drew aside
the curtain a little. Pointing at the head table, he said, “He’s two removed
from your father, in the black-and-silver tunic and red mantle.”
The child stretched up on tiptoe and said, “I can’t see.”
Pug held the girl up for a moment. She smiled at him. “I am in your
debt.”
“Not at all,” Pug intoned with mock gravity. They both giggled.
The Princess started as a voice spoke close to the curtain. “I must
fly!” She darted through the alcove, passed through the second curtain, and
disappeared from sight heading toward the kitchen and her getaway.
The curtain into the banquet hall parted, and a startled servant
stared at Pug. Uncertain what to say, the servingman nodded. The boy by rights
shouldn’t be there, but by his dress he was certainly someone.
Pug looked about and, without much conviction, finally said, “I was
looking for the way to my room. I must be going the wrong way.”
“The guest wing is through the first door on the left in the dining
hall, young sir. Ah . . . this way lies the kitchen. Would you care to have me
show you the way?” The servant obviously didn’t care to do so, and Pug was
equally lacking any desire for a guide. “No, thank you, I can find it,” he
said.
Pug rejoined his table, unnoticed by the other guests. The balance
of the meal passed without incident, except for an occasional strange glance by
a servingman.
Pug passed the time after dinner talking with the son of a merchant.
The two young men found each other in the crowded room where the Prince’s
after-dinner reception was being held. They spent a fitful hour being polite to
one another, before the boy’s father came and took him in tow. Pug stood around
being ignored by the Prince’s other dinner guests for a while, then decided he
could slip back to his own quarters without affronting anyone—he wouldn’t be
missed. Besides he hadn’t seen the Prince, Lord Borric, or Kulgan since they
left the dinner table. Most of the reception seemed under the supervision of a
score of household officials and Princess Alicia, a charming woman who had
spoken politely with Pug for a moment as he passed through the reception line.
Pug found Kulgan waiting for him in his room when he returned.
Kulgan said, without preamble, “We leave at first light, Pug. Prince
Erland is sending us on to Rillanon to see the King.”
Pug said, “Why is the Prince sending us?” His tone was cross, for he
was deeply homesick.
Before Kulgan could answer, the door flew open and Prince Arutha
came storming in Pug was surprised by Arutha’s expression of unconfined anger.
“Kulgan! There you are,” Arutha said, slamming the door. “Do you
know what our royal cousin is doing about the Tsurani invasion?”
Before Kulgan could speak, the Prince supplied the answer. “Nothing!
He won’t lift a finger to send aid to Crydee until Father has seen the King.
That will take another two months at least.”
Kulgan raised his hand. Instead of an adviser to the Duke, Arutha
saw one of his boyhood instructors. Kulgan, like Tully, could still command
both sons of the Duke when the need arose. “Quietly, Arutha.”
Arutha shook his head as he pulled over a chair. “I am sorry, Kulgan
I should have mastered my temper.” He noticed Pug’s confusion. “I apologize to
you also, Pug. There is much involved here that you don’t know of Perhaps . .
.” He looked questioningly at Kulgan.
Kulgan took out his pipe. “You might as well tell him, he’s going
along for the journey. He’ll find out soon enough.”
Arutha drummed his fingers on the arm of the chair for a moment,
then sitting forward, said, “My father and Erland have been conferring for days
on the best way to meet these outworlders should they come. The Prince even
agrees it is likely they will come.” He paused. “But he will do nothing to call
the Armies of the West together until he has been given permission by the
King.”
“I don’t understand,” said Pug. “Aren’t the Armies of the West the
Prince’s to command as he sees fit?”
“No longer,” said Arutha with a near-grimace. “The King sent word,
less than a year ago, that the armies may not be mustered without his
permission.” Arutha sat back in his chair as Kulgan blew a cloud of smoke. “It
is in violation of tradition. Never have the Armies of the West had another
commander than the Prince of Krondor, as the Armies of the East are the
King’s.”
Pug was still unclear about the significance of all this. Kulgan
said, “The Prince is the King’s Lord-Marshal in the West, the only man besides
the King who may command Duke Borric and the other Knight-Generals. Should he
call, every Duke from Malac’s Cross to Crydee would respond, with their
garrisons and levies. King Rodric, for his own reasons, has decided that none
may gather the armies without his authority.”
Arutha said, “Father would come to the Prince’s call, regardless, as
would the other Dukes.”
Kulgan nodded. “That may be what the King fears, for the Armies of
the West have long been more the Prince’s armies than the King’s. If your
father called, most would gather, for they revere him nearly as much as they
revere Erland. And if the King should say not . . .” He let the sentence slip
away.
Arutha nodded. “Strife within the Kingdom.”
Kulgan looked at his pipe. “Even to civil war, perhaps.”
Pug was troubled by the discussion. He was a keep boy, in spite of
his newly acquired title. “Even if it is in defense of the Kingdom?”
Kulgan shook his head slowly. “Even then. For some men, kings also,
there is as much importance in the manner in which things are done as the
doing.” Kulgan paused. “Duke Borric will not speak of it, but there has long
been trouble between himself and certain eastern dukes, especially his cousin,
Guy du Bas-Tyra. This trouble between the Prince and the King will only add to
the strain between West and East.”
Pug sat back. He knew that this was somehow more important than what
he was understanding, but there were blank places in his picturings of the way
things were. How could the King resent the Prince’s summoning the armies in
defense of the Kingdom? It didn’t make sense to him, in spite of Kulgan’s
explanation. And what sort of trouble in the East was Duke Borric unwilling to
speak of?
The magician stood. “We have an early day tomorrow, so we had best
get some sleep. It will be a long ride to Salador, then another long passage by
ship to Rillanon. By the time we reach the King, the first thaw will have come
to Crydee.”
Prince Erland bade the party a good journey as they sat upon their
horses in the courtyard of the palace. He looked pale and deeply troubled as he
wished them well.
The little Princess stood at an upstairs window and waved at Pug
with a tiny handkerchief. Pug was reminded of another Princess and wondered if
Anita would grow to be like Carline or be more even-tempered.
They rode out of the courtyard, where an escort of Royal Krondonan
Lancers stood ready to accompany them to Salador. It would be a three weeks’
ride over the mountains and past the marshes of Darkmoor, past Malac’s
Cross—the dividing point between the western and eastern realms—and on to
Salador. There they would take ship, and after another two weeks they would
reach Rillanon.
The lancers were shrouded in heavy cloaks of grey, but the
purple-and-silver tabards of Krondor’s Prince could be seen underneath, and
their shields bore the device of the royal Krondorian household. The Duke was
being honored by an escort of the Prince’s own household guard, rather than a
detachment from the city garrison.
As they left the city, the snow began to fall once more, and Pug
wondered if he would ever see spring in Crydee again. He sat quietly on his
horse as it plodded along the road east, trying to sort out the impressions of
the last few weeks, then gave up, resigning himself to whatever was to happen.
The ride to Salador took four weeks instead of three, for there had
been a storm of unusual intensity in the mountains west of Darkmoor. They had
been forced to take lodging at an inn outside the village that took its name
from the marshes. It had been a small inn, and they had all been forced to
crowd together regardless of rank for several days. The food had been simple
and the ale indifferent, and by the time the storm passed, they were all glad
to leave Darkmoor behind.
Another day had been lost when they chanced upon a village being
troubled by bandits. The sight of approaching cavalry had driven the brigands
away, but the Duke had ordered a sweep of the area to insure that they didn’t
return as soon as the soldiers rode off. The villagers had opened their doors
to the Duke’s party, welcoming them and offering their best food and warmest
beds. Poor offerings by the Duke’s standards, yet he received their hospitality
with graciousness, for he knew it was all they had. Pug enjoyed the simple food
and company, the closest yet to home since he had left Crydee.
When they were a half day’s ride short of Salador, they encountered
a patrol of city guards. The guard captain rode forward. Pulling up his horse,
he shouted, “What business brings the Prince’s guard to the lands of Salador?”
There was little love lost between the two cities, and the Krondorians rode
without a heraldic banner. His tone left no doubt that he regarded their
presence as an infringement upon his territory.
Duke Borric threw back his cloak, revealing his tabard. “Carry word
to your master that Borric, Duke of Crydee, approaches the city and would avail
himself of Lord Kerus’s hospitality.”
The guard captain was taken aback. He stammered, “My apologies, Your
Grace. I had no idea . . . there was no banner . . . .”
Arutha said dryly, “We mislaid it in a forest sometime back.”
The captain looked confused. “My lord?”
Borric said, “Never mind, Captain. Just send word to your master.”
The captain saluted. “At once, your Grace.” He wheeled his horse and
signaled for a rider to come forward. He gave him instructions, and the soldier
spurred his horse toward the city and soon galloped out of sight.
The captain returned to the Duke. “If Your Grace will permit, my men
are at your disposal.”
The Duke looked at the travel-weary Krondorians, all of whom seemed
to be enjoying the captain’s discomfort. “I think thirty men-at-arms are
sufficient, Captain. The Salador city guard is renowned for keeping the
environs near the city free of brigands.”
The captain, not realizing he was being made sport of, seemed to
puff up at this. “Thank you, Your Grace.”
The Duke said, “You and your men may continue your patrol.”
The captain saluted again and returned to his men. He shouted the
order to move out, and the guard column moved past the Duke’s party. As they
passed, the captain ordered a salute, and lances were dipped toward the Duke.
Borric returned the salute with a lazy wave of his hand, then when the guards
had passed, said, “Enough of this foolishness, let us to Salador.”
Arutha laughed and said, “Father, we have need of men like that in
the West.”
Borric turned and said, “Oh? How so?”
As the horses moved forward, Arutha said, “To polish shields and
boots.”
The Duke smiled and the Krondorians laughed. The western soldiers
held those of the East in low regard. The East had been pacified long before
the West had been opened to Kingdom expansion, and there was little trouble in
the Eastern Realm requiring real skill in warcraft. The Prince of Krondor’s
guards were battle-proved veterans, while those of Salador were considered by
the guardsmen from the West to do their best soldiering on the parade ground.
Soon they saw signs that they were nearing the city: cultivated
farmland, villages, roadside taverns, and wagons laden with trade goods. By
sundown they could see the walls of distant Salador.
As they entered the city, a full company of Duke Kerus’s own
household guards lined the streets to the palace. As in Krondor, there was no
castle, for the need for a small, easily defensible keep had passed as the
lands around became civilized.
Riding through the city, Pug realized how much of a frontier town
Crydee was. In spite of Lord Bornc’s political power, he was still Lord of a
frontier province.
Along the streets, citizens stood gawking at the western Duke from
the wild frontier of the Far Coast. Some cheered, for it seemed like a parade,
but most stood quietly, disappointed that the Duke and his party looked like
other men, rather than blood-drenched barbarians.
When they reached the courtyard of the palace, household servants
ran to take their horses. A household guard showed the soldiers from Krondor to
the soldiers’ commons, where they would rest before returning to the Prince’s
city. Another, with a captain’s badge of rank on his tunic, led Borric’s party
up the steps of the building.
Pug looked with wonder, for this palace was even larger than the
Prince’s in Krondor. They walked through several outer rooms, then reached an
inner courtyard. Here fountains and trees decorated a garden, beyond which
stood the central palace Pug realized that the building they had passed through
was simply one of the buildings surrounding the Duke’s living quarters. He
wondered what use Lord Kerus could possibly have for so many buildings and such
a large staff.
They crossed the garden courtyard and mounted another series of
steps toward a reception committee that stood in the door of the central
palace. Once this building might have been a citadel, protecting the
surrounding town, but Pug couldn’t bring himself to imagine it as it might have
been ages ago, for numerous renovations over the years had transformed an
ancient keep into a glittering thing of glass and marble.
Duke Kerus’s chamberlain, an old dried-up stick of a man with a
quick eye, knew every noble worth noting—from the borders of Kesh in the south
to Tyr-Sog in the north—by sight. His memory for faces and facts had often
saved Duke Kerus from embarrassment. By the time Borric had made his way up the
broad stairway from the courtyard, the chamberlain had provided Kerus with a
few personal facts and a quick evaluation of the right amount of flattery
required.
Duke Kerus took Borric’s hand. “Ah, Lord Borric, you do me great
honor by this unexpected visit. If you had only sent word of your arrival, I
would have prepared a more fitting welcome.”
They entered the antechamber of the palace, the Dukes in front.
Borric said, “I am sorry to put you to any trouble, Lord Kerus, but I am afraid
our mission is dependent on speed, and that the formal courtesies will have to
be put aside. I bear messages for the King and must put to sea for Rillanon as
soon as is possible.”
“Of course, Lord Borric, but you will surely be able to stay for a
short while, say a week or two?”
“I regret not. I would put to sea tonight if I could.”
“That is indeed sorry news. I so hoped that you could guest with us
for a time.”
The party reached the Duke’s audience hall, where the chamberlain
gave instructions to a company of household servants, who jumped to the task of
readying rooms for the guests. Entering the vast hall, with its high vaulted
ceiling, gigantic chandeliers, and great arched glass windows, Pug felt
dwarfed. The room was the largest he had ever seen, greater than the hall of
the Prince of Krondor.
A huge table was set with fruits and wine, and the travelers fell to
with vigor. Pug sat down with little grace, his whole body one mass of aches.
He was turning into a skilled horseman simply from long hours in the saddle,
but that fact didn’t ease his tired muscles.
Lord Kerus pressed the Duke for the cause of his hurried journey,
and between mouthfuls of fruit and drinks of wine, Borric filled him in on the
events of the last three months. After he was done, Kerus looked distressed.
“This is grave news indeed, Lord Borric. Things are unsettled in the Kingdom. I
am sure the Prince has told you of some of the trouble that has occurred since
last you came to the East.”
“Yes, he did. But reluctantly and in only the most cursory manner
Remember, it has been thirteen years since I journeyed to the capital, at
Rodric’s coronation when I came to renew my vassalage. He seemed a bright
enough young man then, able enough to learn to govern. But from what I’ve heard
in Krondor, there seems to have been a change.”
Kerus glanced around the room, then waved away his servants. Looking
pointedly at Borric’s companions, he raised one eyebrow questioningly.
Lord Borric said, “These have my trust and will not betray a
confidence.”
Kerus nodded. Loudly he said, “If you would like to stretch your
legs before retiring, perhaps you’d care to see my garden?”
Borric frowned and was about to speak when Arutha put his hand upon
his father’s arm, nodding agreement.
Borric said, “That sounds interesting. Despite the cold I could use
a short walk.”
The Duke motioned for Kulgan, Meecham, and Gardan to remain, but
Lord Kerus indicated Pug should join them. Borric looked surprised, but nodded
agreement. They left through a small set of doors to the garden, and once
outside, Kerus whispered, “It will look less suspicious if the boy comes with
us. I can’t even trust my own servants anymore. The King has agents
everywhere.”
Borric seemed infuriated. “The King has placed agents in your
household?”
“Yes, Lord Borric, there has been a great change in our King. I know
Erland has not told you the entire story, but it is one you must know.”
The Duke and his companions watched Duke Kerus, who looked
uncomfortable. He cleared his throat as he glanced around the snow covered
garden. Between the light from the palace windows and the large moon above, the
garden was a winterscape of white and blue crystals, undisturbed by footprints.
Kerus pointed to a set of tracks in the snow and said, “I made those
this afternoon when I came here to think about what I could safely tell you.”
He glanced around one more time, seeing if anyone could overhear the
conversation, then continued. “When Rodric the Third died, everyone expected
Erland would take the crown. After the official mourning, the Priests of Ishap
called all the possible heirs forward to present their claims. You were
expected to be one of them.”
Borric nodded “I know the custom. I was late getting to the city. I
would have renounced the claim in any event, so there was no importance in my
absence.”
Kerus nodded. “History might have been different had you been here,
Borric.” He lowered his voice. “I risk my neck by saying this, but many, even
those of us here in the East, would have urged you to take the crown.”
Borric’s expression showed he did not like hearing this, but Kerus
pressed on. “By the time you got here, all the back-hallway politics had been
done—with most lords content to give the crown to Erland—but it was a tense day
and a half while the issue was in doubt. Why the elder Rodric didn’t name an
heir I don’t know. But when the priests had chased away all the distant kin
with no real claim, three men stood before them, Erland, young Rodric, and Guy
du Bas-Tyra. The priests asked for their declarations, and each gave them in
turn. Rodric and Erland both had solid claims, while Guy was there as a matter
of form, as you would have been had you arrived in time.”
Arutha interjected dryly, “The time of mourning ensures no western
Lord will be King.”
Borric threw a disapproving glance at his son, but Kerus said, “Not
entirely. If there had been any doubt to the rights of succession, the priest
would have held off the ceremony until your father arrived, Arutha. It has been
done before.”
He looked at Borric and lowered his voice. “As I said, it was
expected Erland would take the crown. But when the crown was presented to him,
he refused, conceding the claim to Rodric. No one at that time knew of Erland’s
ill health, so most lords judged the decision a generous affirmation of
Rodric’s claim, as the only son of the King. With Guy du Bas-Tyra’s backing the
boy, the assembled Congress of Lords ratified his succession. Then the real
infighting began, until at last your late wife’s uncle was named as King’s
Regent.”
Borric nodded. He remembered the battle over who would be named the
then boy King’s Regent. His despised cousin Guy had nearly won the position,
but Borric’s timely arrival and his support of Caldric of Rillanon, along with
the support of Duke Brucal of Yabon and Prince Erland, had swung the majority
of votes in the congress away from Guy.
“For the next five years there was only an occasional border clash
with Kesh. Things were quiet. Eight years ago”—Kerus paused to glance around
again—”Rodric embarked upon a program of public improvements, as he calls them,
upgrading roads and bridges, building dams, and the like. At first they were of
little burden, but the taxes have been increased yearly until now the peasants
and freemen, even the minor nobles, are being bled white. The King has expanded
his programs until now he is rebuilding the entire capital, to make it the
greatest city known in the history of man, he says.
“Two years ago a small delegation of nobles came to the King and
asked him to abjure this excessive spending and ease the burden upon the
people. The King flew into a rage, accused the nobles of being traitors, and
had them summarily executed.”
Borric’s eyes widened. The snow under his boot crunched dryly as he
turned suddenly. “We’ve heard nothing of this in the West!”
“When Erland heard the news, he went immediately to the King and
demanded reparation for the families of the nobles who were executed, and a
lessening of the taxes. The King—or so it is rumored—was ready to seize his
uncle, but was restrained by the few counselors he still trusted. They advised
His Majesty that such an act, unheard of in the history of the Kingdom, would
surely cause the western lords to rise up against the King.”
Borric’s expression darkened “They were right. Had that boy hanged
Erland, the Kingdom would have been irretrievably split.”
“Since that time the Prince has not set foot in Rillanon, and the
business of the Kingdom is handled by aides, for the two men will not speak to
one another.”
The Duke looked skyward, and his voice became troubled. “This is
much worse than I had heard. Erland told me of the taxes and his refusal to
impose them in the West. He said that the King was agreed, for he understood
the need of maintaining the garrisons of the North and West.”
Kerus slowly shook his head no. “The King agreed only when his aides
painted pictures of goblin armies pouring down from the Northlands and
plundering the cities of his Kingdom.”
“Erland spoke of the strain between himself and his nephew, but even
in light of the news I carry, said nothing about His Majesty’s actions.”
Kerus drew a deep breath and started walking once more. “Borric, I
spend so much time with the sycophants of the King’s court, I forget that you
of the West are given to plain speech.” Kerus was silent a moment, then said,
“Our King is not the man he once was. Sometimes he seems his old self, laughing
and open, filled with grand plans for the Kingdom; other times he is . . .
someone else, as if a dark spirit has taken possession of his heart.
“Take care, Borric, for only Erland stands closer to the throne than
yourself. Our King is well aware of that fact—even if you never think of it—and
sees daggers and poison where none exists.”
Silence descended over the group, and Pug saw Borric look openly
troubled. Kerus continued. “Rodric fears others covet his crown. That may be,
but not those the King suspects. There are only four conDoin males besides the
King, all of whom are men of honor.” Borric inclined his head at the
compliment. “But there are perhaps a dozen more who can claim ties to the
throne, through the King’s mother and her people. All are eastern lords, and
many would not flinch from the opportunity to press their claim to the throne
before the Congress of Lords.”
Borric looked incensed. “You speak of treason.”
“Treason in men’s hearts, if not in deeds . . . yet.”
“Have things come to such a pass in the East, without us of the West
knowing?”
Kerus nodded as they reached the far end of the garden. “Erland is
an honorable man, and as such would keep unfounded rumors from his subjects,
even yourself. As you have said, it is thirteen years since you last were at
Rillanon. All warrants and missives from the King still pass through the
Prince’s court. How would you know?
“I fear it is only a matter of time before one or other of the
King’s advisers positions himself over the fallen heads of those of us who hold
to our beliefs that the nobility are wardens of the nation’s welfare.”
Borric said, “Then you risk much with your frank speech.”
Duke Kerus shrugged, indicating they should begin their return to
the palace. “I have not always been a man to speak my mind, Lord Borric, but
these are difficult times. Should anyone else have passed through, there would
have been only polite conversation. You are unique, for with the Prince
estranged from his nephew, you are the only man in the Kingdom with the
strength and rank to possibly influence the King. I do not envy your weighty
position, my friend.
“When Rodric the Third was king, I was among the most powerful
nobles in the East, but I might as well be a landless freebooter for all the
influence I now hold in Rodric the Fourth’s court.” Kerus paused “Your
black-hearted cousin Guy is now closest to the King, and the Duke of Bas-Tyra
and I have little love between us. Our reasons for disliking one another are
not as personal as yours. But as his star rises, mine falls even more.”
Kerus slapped his hands as the cold was beginning to bite. “But one
bit of good news. Guy is wintering at his estate near Pointer’s Head, so the
King is free of his plotting for the present.” Kerus gripped Borric’s arm. “Use
whatever influence you can muster to stem the King’s impulsive nature, Lord
Borric, for with this invasion you bring word of, we need to stand united. A
lengthy war would drain us of what little reserves we possess, and should the
Kingdom be put to the test, I do not know whether it would endure.”
Borric said nothing, for even his worst fears since leaving the
Prince were surpassed by Kerus’s remarks. The Duke of Salador said, “One last
thing, Borric. With Erland having refused the crown thirteen years ago, and the
rumors of his health failing, many of the Congress of Lords will be looking to
you for guidance. Where you lead, many will follow, even some of us in the
East.”
Borric said coldly, “Are you speaking of civil war?”
Kerus waved a hand, a pained expression crossing his face His eyes
seemed moist, as if near tears. “I am ever loyal to the crown, Borric, but if
it comes to the right of things, the Kingdom must prevail. No one man is more
important than the Kingdom.”
Borric said through clenched jaws, “The King is the Kingdom.”
Kerus said, “You would not be the man you are and say otherwise. I
hope you are able to direct the King’s energies toward this trouble in the
West, for should the Kingdom be imperiled, others will not hold to such lofty
beliefs.”
Borric’s tone softened a little as they walked up the steps leading
from the garden. “I know you mean well, Lord Kerus, and there is only love of
the realm in your heart. Have faith and pray, for I will do whatever I can to
ensure the survival of the Kingdom.”
Kerus stood before the door back into the palace. “I fear we will
all be in deep water soon, my lord Borric. I pray that this invasion you speak
of will not be the wave that drowns us. In whatever way I can aid you, I will.”
He turned toward the door, which was opened by a servant. Loudly he said, “I
will bid you a good night, for I can see you’re all tired.”
The tension in the room was heavy as Borric, Arutha, and Pug
re-entered, and the Duke’s mood one of dark reflection. Servants came to show
the guests to their rooms, and Pug followed a boy near his own age, dressed in
the Duke’s livery. Pug looked over his shoulder as they left the hall to see
the Duke and his son standing together, speaking quietly to Kulgan.
Pug was shown to a small but elegant room and, ignoring the richness
of the bed covers, fell across them still fully clothed. The servant boy said,
“Do you need aid in undressing, Squire?”
Pug sat up and looked at the boy with such a frank expression of
wonder that the servant backed away a step. “If that will be all, Squire?” he
asked, obviously uncomfortable.
Pug just laughed. The boy stood uncertainly for an instant, then
bowed and hurriedly left the room. Pug pulled off his clothing, wondering at
the eastern nobles and servants who had to help them undress. He was too tired
to fold his garments, simply letting them fall to the floor in a heap.
After blowing out the bedside candle, Pug lay for a time in the
darkness, troubled by the evening’s discussion. He knew little of court
intrigue, but knew that Kerus must have been deeply worried to speak as he did
before strangers, in spite of Borric’s reputation as a man of high honor.
Pug thought of all the things that had taken place in the last
months and knew that his dreams of the King answering the call of Crydee with
banners flying were another boyish fancy shattered upon the hard rock of
reality.
13
Rillanon
The ship sailed into the harbor.
The climate of the Kingdom Sea was more clement than that of the
Bitter Sea, and the journey from Salador had proven uneventful. They’d had to
beat a tack much of the way against a steady northeast wind, so three weeks had
passed instead of two.
Pug stood on the foredeck of the ship, his cloak pulled tightly
around him. The winter wind’s bitterness had given way to a softer cool, as if
spring were but a few days in coming.
Rillanon was called the Jewel of the Kingdom, and Pug judged the
name richly deserved. Unlike the squat cities of the West, Rillanon stood a
mass of tall spires, gracefully arched bridges, and gently twisting roadways,
scattered atop rolling hills in delightful confusion. Upon heroic towers,
banners and pennons fluttered in the wind, as if the city-celebrated the simple
fact of its own existence. To Pug, even the ferrymen who worked the barges
going to and from the ships at anchor in the harbor were more colorful for
being within the enchantment of Rillanon.
The Duke of Salador had ordered a ducal banner sewn for Borric, and
it now flew from the top of the ship’s mainmast, informing the officials of the
royal city that the Duke of Crydee had arrived. Borric’s ship was given
priority in docking by the city’s harbor pilot, and quickly the ship was being
secured at the royal quay. The party disembarked and were met by a company of
the Royal Household Guard. At the head of the guards was an old, grey-haired,
but still erect man, who greeted Borric warmly.
The two men embraced, and the older man, dressed in the royal purple
and gold of the guard but with a ducal signet over his heart, said, “Borric, it
is good to see you once more. What has it been? Ten . . . eleven years?”
“Caldric, old friend. It has been thirteen.” Borric regarded him
fondly. He had clear blue eyes and a short salt-and-pepper beard.
The man shook his head and smiled. “It has been much too long.” He
looked at the others. Spying Pug, he said, “Is this your younger boy?”
Borric laughed. “No, though he would be no shame to me if he were.”
He pointed out the lanky figure of Arutha. “This is my son. Arutha, come and
greet your great-uncle.”
Arutha stepped forward, and the two embraced. Duke Caldric, Lord of
Rillanon, Knight-General of the King’s Royal Household Guard, and Royal
Chancellor, pushed Arutha back and regarded him at arm’s length. “You were but
a boy when I last saw you. I should have known you, for though you have some of
your father’s looks, you also resemble my dear brother—your mother’s
father—greatly. You do honor to my family.”
Borric said, “Well, old war-horse, how is your city?”
Caldric said, “There is much to speak of, but not here. We shall
bring you to the King’s palace and quarter you in comfort. We shall have much
time to visit. What brings you here to Rillanon?”
“I have pressing business with His Majesty, but it is not something
to be spoken of in the streets. Let us go to the palace.”
The Duke and his party were given mounts, and the escort cleared
away the crowds as they rode through the city. If Krondor and Salador had
impressed Pug with their splendor, Rillanon left him speechless.
The island city was built upon many hills, with several small rivers
running down to the sea. It seemed to be a city of bridges and canals, as much
as towers and spires. Many of the buildings seemed new, and Pug thought that
this must be part of the King’s plan for rebuilding the city. At several points
along the way he saw workers removing old stones from a building, or erecting
new walls and roofs. The newer buildings were faced with colorful stonework,
many of marble and quartz, giving them a soft white, blue, or pink color. The
cobblestones in the streets were clean, and gutters ran free of the clogs and
debris Pug had seen in the other cities. Whatever else he might be doing, the boy
thought, the King is maintaining a marvelous city.
A river ran before the palace, so that entrance was made over a high
bridge that arched across the water into the main courtyard. The palace was a
collection of great buildings connected by long halls that sprawled atop a
hillside in the center of the city It was faced with many-colored stone, giving
it a rainbow aspect.
As they entered the courtyard, trumpets sounded from the walls, and
guards stood to attention. Porters stepped forward to take the mounts, while a
collection of palace nobles and officials stood near the palace entrance in
welcome.
Approaching, Pug noticed that the greeting given by these men was
formal and lacked the personal warmth of Duke Caldric’s welcome. As he stood
behind Kulgan and Meecham, he could hear Caldric’s voice. “My lord Borric, Duke
of Crydee, may I present Baron Gray, His Majesty’s Steward of the Royal
Household.” This was a short, plump man in a tight-fitting tunic of red silk,
and pale grey hose that bagged at the knees “Earl Selvec, First Lord of the
Royal Navies.” A tall, gaunt man with a thin, waxed mustache bowed stiffly. And
so on through the entire company. Each made a short statement of pleasure at
Lord Borric’s arrival, but Pug felt there was little sincerity in their
remarks.
They were taken to their quarters. Kulgan had to raise a fuss to
have Meecham near him, for Baron Gray had wanted to send him to the distant
servants’ wing of the palace, but he relented when Caldric asserted himself as
Royal Chancellor.
The room that Pug was shown to far surpassed in splendor anything he
had yet seen. The floors were polished marble, and the walls were made from the
same material but flecked with what looked to be gold. A great mirror hung in a
small room to one side of the sleeping quarters, where a large, gilded bathing
tub sat. A steward put his few belongings —what they had picked up along the
way since their own baggage had been lost in the forest—in a gigantic closet
that could have held a dozen times all that Pug owned. After the man had
finished, he inquired, “Shall I ready your bath, sir?”
Pug nodded, for three weeks aboard ship had made his clothes feel as
if they were sticking to him. When the bath was ready, the steward said, “Lord
Caldric will expect the Duke’s party for dinner in four hours’ time, sir. Shall
I return then?”
Pug said yes, impressed with the man’s diplomacy. He knew only that
Pug had arrived with the Duke, and left it to Pug to decide whether or not he
was included in the dinner invitation.
As he slipped into the warm water, Pug let out a long sigh of
relief. He had never been one for baths when he had been a keep boy, preferring
to wash away dirt in the sea and the streams near the castle. Now he could
learn to enjoy them. He mused about what Tomas would have thought of that. He
drifted off in a warm haze of memories, one very pleasant, of a dark-haired,
lovely princess, and one sad, of a sandy-haired boy.
The dinner of the night before had been an informal occasion, with
Duke Caldric hosting Lord Borric’s party. Now they stood in the royal throne
room waiting to be presented to the King. The hall was vast, a high vaulted
affair, with the entire southern wall fashioned of floor-to-ceiling windows
overlooking the city. Hundreds of nobles stood around as the Duke’s party was
led down a central aisle between the onlookers.
Pug had not thought it possible to consider Duke Borric poorly
dressed, for he had always worn the finest clothing in Crydee, as had his
children. But among the finery in evidence around the room, Borric looked like
a raven amid a flock of peacocks. Here a pearl-studded doublet, there a
gold-thread-embroidered tunic—each noble seemed to be outdoing the next. Every
lady wore the costliest silks and brocades, but only slightly outshone the men.
They halted before the throne, and Caldric announced the Duke. The
King smiled, and Pug was struck by a faint resemblance to Arutha, though the
King’s manner was more relaxed. He leaned forward on his throne and said,
“Welcome to our city, cousin. It is good to see Crydee in this hall after so
many years.”
Borric stepped forward and knelt before Rodric the Fourth, King of
the Kingdom of the Isles. “I am gladdened to see Your Majesty well.”
A brief shadow passed over the monarch’s face, then he smiled again
“Present to us your companions.”
The Duke presented his son, and the King said, “Well, it is true
that one of the conDoin line carries the blood of our mother’s kin besides
ourself.” Arutha bowed and backed away. Kulgan was next as one of the Duke’s
advisers. Meecham, who had no rank in the Duke’s court, had stayed in his room.
The King said something polite, and Pug was introduced. “Squire Pug of Crydee,
Your Majesty, Master of Forest Deep, and member of my court.”
The King clapped his hands together and laughed “The boy who kills
trolls. How wonderful. Travelers have carried the tale from the far shores of
Crydee, and we would hear it spoken by the author of the brave deed. We must
meet later so that you may tell us of this marvel.”
Pug bowed awkwardly, feeling a thousand eyes upon him. There had
been times before when he had wished the troll story had not been spread, but
never so much as now.
He backed away, and the King said, “Tonight we will hold a ball to
honor the arrival of our cousin Borric.”
He stood, arranging his purple robes around him, and pulled his
golden chain of office over his head. A page placed the chain on a purple
velvet cushion. The King then lifted his golden crown from his black-tressed
head and handed it to another page.
The crowd bowed as he stepped down from his throne. “Come, cousin,”
he said to Borric, “let us retire to my private balcony, where we can speak
without all the rigors of office. I grow weary of the pomp.”
Borric nodded and fell in next to the King, motioning Pug and the
others to wait. Duke Caldric announced that the day’s audience was at an end,
and that those with petitions for the King should return the next day.
Slowly the crowd moved out the two great doors at the end of the
hall, while Arutha, Kulgan, and Pug stood by. Caldric approached and said, “I
will show you to a room where you may wait. It would be well for you to stay
close, should His Majesty call for your attendance.”
A steward of the court took them through a small door near the one
the King had escorted Borric through. They entered a large, comfortable room
with a long table in the center laden with fruit, cheese, bread, and wine. At
the table were many chairs, and around the edge of the room were several
divans, with plump cushions piled upon them.
Arutha crossed over to large glass doors and peered through them. “I
can see Father and the King sitting on the royal balcony.”
Kulgan and Pug joined him and looked to where Arutha indicated. The
two men were at a table, overlooking the city and the sea beyond. The King was
speaking with expansive gestures, and Borric nodded as he listened.
Pug said, “I had not expected that His Majesty would look like you,
Your Highness.”
Arutha replied with a wry smile, “It is not so surprising when you
consider that, as my father was cousin to his father, so my mother was cousin
to his mother.”
Kulgan put his hand on Pug’s shoulder. “Many of the noble families
have more than one tie between them, Pug. Cousins who are four and five times
removed will marry for reasons of politics and bring the families closer again.
I doubt there is one noble family in the East that can’t claim some
relationship to the crown, though it may be distant and follow along a twisted
route.”
They returned to the table, and Pug nibbled at a piece of cheese.
“The King seems in good humor,” he said, cautiously approaching the subject all
had on their minds.
Kulgan looked pleased at the circumspect manner of the boy’s
comment, for after leaving Salador, Borric had cautioned them all regarding
Duke Kerus’s remarks. He had ended his admonition with the old adage, “In the
halls of power, there are no secrets, and even the deaf can hear.”
Arutha said, “Our monarch is a man of moods; let us hope he stays in
a good one after he hears Father’s tidings.”
The afternoon slowly passed as they awaited word from the Duke. When
the shadows outside had grown long, Borric suddenly appeared at a door. He
crossed over to stand before them, a troubled expression on his face. “His
Majesty spent most of the afternoon explaining his plans for the rebirth of the
Kingdom.”
Arutha said, “Did you tell him of the Tsurani?”
The Duke nodded. “He listened and then calmly informed me that he
would consider the matter. We will speak again in a day or so was all he said.”
Kulgan said, “At least he seemed in good humor.”
Borric regarded his old adviser. “I fear too good. I expected some
sign of alarm. I do not ride across the Kingdom for minor cause, but he seemed
unmoved by what I had to tell him.”
Kulgan looked worried “We are overlong on this journey as it is. Let
us hope that His Majesty will not take long in deciding upon a course of
action.”
Borric sat heavily in a chair and reached for a glass of wine. “Let
us hope.”
Pug walked through the door to the King’s private quarters, his
mouth dry with anticipation. He was to have his interview with King Rodric in a
few minutes, and he was unsettled to be alone with the ruler of the Kingdom.
Each time he had been close to other powerful nobles, he had hidden in the
shadow of the Duke or his son, coming forward to tell briefly what he knew of
the Tsurani, then able to disappear quickly back into the background. Now he
was to be the only guest of the most powerful man north of the Empire of Great
Kesh.
A house steward showed him through the door to the King’s private
balcony Several servants stood around the edge of the large open veranda, and
the King occupied the lone table, a carved marble affair under a large canopy.
The day was clear. Spring was coming early, as winter had before it,
and there was a hint of warmth in the gusting air. Below the balcony, past the
hedges and stone walls that marked its edge, Pug could see the city of Rillanon
and the sea beyond. The colorful rooftops shone brightly in the midday sun, as
the last snows had melted completely over the last four days. Ships sailed in
and out of the harbor, and the streets teemed with citizens. The faint cries of
merchants and hawkers, shouting over the noise of the streets, floated up to
become a soft buzzing where the King took his midday meal.
As Pug approached the table, a servant pulled out a chair. The King
turned and said, “Ah! Squire Pug, please take a seat.” Pug began a bow, and the
King said, “Enough. I don’t stand on formality when I dine with a friend.”
Pug hesitated, then said, “Your Majesty honors me,” as he sat.
Rodric waved the comment way. “I remember what it is to be a boy in
the company of men. When I was but a little older than you, I took the crown.
Until then I was only my father’s son.” His eyes got a distant look for a
moment. “The Prince, it’s true, but still only a boy. My opinion counted for
nothing, and I never seemed to satisfy my father’s expectations, in hunting,
riding, sailing, or swordplay. I took many a hiding from my tutors, Caldric among
them. That all changed when I became King, but I still remember what it was
like.” He turned toward Pug, and the distant expression vanished as he smiled.
“And I do wish us to be friends.” He glanced away and again his expression
turned distant. “One can’t have too many friends, now, can one? And since I’m
the King, there are so many who claim to be my friend, but aren’t.” He was
silent a moment, then again came out of his revery. “What do you think of my
city?”
Pug said, “I have never seen anything like it, Majesty. It’s
wonderful.”
Rodric looked out across the vista before them. “Yes, it is, isn’t
it?” He waved a hand, and a servant poured wine into crystal goblets. Pug
sipped at his; he still hadn’t developed a taste for wine, but found this very
good, light and fruity with a hint of spices. Rodric said, “I have tried very
hard to make Rillanon a wonderful place for those who live here. I would have
the day come when all the cities of the Kingdom are as fine as this, where
everywhere the eye travels, there is beauty. It would take a hundred lifetimes
to do that, so I can only set the pattern, building an example for those who
follow to imitate. But where I find brick, I leave marble. And those who see it
will know it for what it is— my legacy.”
The King seemed to ramble a bit, and Pug wasn’t sure of all that he
was saying as he continued to talk about buildings and gardens and removing
ugliness from view. Abruptly the King changed topics. “Tell me how you killed
the trolls.”
Pug told him, and the King seemed to hang on every word. When the
boy had finished, the King said, “That is a wonderful tale. It is better than
the versions that have reached the court, for while it is not half so heroic,
it is twice as impressive for being true. You have a stout heart, Squire Pug.”
Pug said, “Thank you, Majesty.”
Rodric said, “In your tale you mentioned the Princess Carline.”
“Yes, Majesty?”
“I have not seen her since she was a baby in her mother’s arms. What
sort of woman has she become?”
Pug found the shift in topic surprising, but said, “She has become a
beautiful woman, Majesty, much like her mother. She is bright and quick, if
given to a little temper.”
The King nodded. “Her mother was a beautiful woman. If the daughter
is half as lovely, she is lovely indeed. Can she reason?”
Pug looked confused. “Majesty?”
“Has she a good head for reason, logic? Can she argue?”
Pug nodded vigorously. “Yes, Your Majesty. The Princess is very good
at that.”
The King rubbed his hands together. “Good. I must have Borric send
her for a visit. Most of these eastern ladies are vapid, without substance. I
was hoping Borric gave the girl an education. I would like to meet a young
woman who knew logic and philosophy, and could argue and declaim.”
Pug suddenly realized what the King had meant by arguing wasn’t what
he had thought. He decided it best not to mention the discrepancy.
The King continued. “My ministers dun me to seek a wife and give the
Kingdom an heir. I have been busy, and frankly, have found little to interest
me in the court ladies—oh, they’re fine for a moonlight walk and other things.
But as the mother of my heirs? I hardly think so. But I should become serious
in my search for a queen. Perhaps the only conDoin daughter would be the
logical place to start.”
Pug began to mention another conDoin daughter, then stifled the
impulse, remembering the tension between the King and Anita’s father. Besides,
the girl was only seven.
The King shifted topics again. “For four days cousin Borric has
regaled me with tales of these aliens, these Tsurani. What do you think of all
this business?”
Pug looked startled. He had not thought the King might ask him for
an opinion on anything, let alone a matter as important as the security of the
Kingdom. He thought for a long moment, trying to frame his answer as best he
could, then said, “From everything I have seen and heard, Your Majesty, I think
these Tsurani people not only are planning to invade, but are already here.”
The King raised an eyebrow. “Oh? I would like to hear your
reasoning.”
Pug considered his words carefully. “If there have been as many
sightings as we are aware of, Majesty, considering the stealth these people are
employing, wouldn’t it be logical that there are many more occurrences of their
coming and going than we know of?”
The King nodded. “A good proposition. Continue.”
“Then might it also not be true that once the snows have fallen, we
are less likely to find signs of them, as they are holding to remote areas?”
Rodric nodded and Pug continued. “If they are as warlike as the Duke
and the others have said them to be, I think they have mapped out the West to
find a good place to bring their soldiers in during the winter so they can
launch their offensive this spring.”
The King slapped the table with his hand. “A good exercise in logic,
Pug.” Motioning for the servants to bring food, he said, “Now, let us eat.”
Food of an amazing variety and amount for just the two of them was
produced, and Pug picked small amounts of many things, so as not to appear
indifferent to the King’s generosity Rodric asked him a few questions as they
dined, and Pug answered as well as he could.
As Pug was finishing his meal, the King put his elbow on the table
and stroked his beardless chin. He stared out into space for a long time, and
Pug began to feel self-conscious, not knowing the proper courtesy toward a king
who is lost in thought. He elected to sit quietly.
After a time Rodric came out of his revery. There was a troubled
note in his voice as he looked at Pug and said, “Why do these people come to
plague us now? There is so much to be done. I can’t have war disrupting my
plans.” He stood and paced around the balcony for a while, leaving Pug standing,
for he had risen when the King had. Rodric turned to Pug. “I must send for Duke
Guy. He will advise me. He has a good head for such things.”
The King paced, looking at the city for a few minutes more, while
Pug stood by his chair. He heard the monarch mutter to himself about the great
works that must not be interrupted, then felt a tug on his sleeve. He turned
and saw a palace steward standing quietly at his side. With a smile and a
gesture toward the door, the steward indicated the interview was at an end. Pug
followed the man to the door, wondering at the staff’s ability to recognize the
moods of the King.
Pug was shown the way back to his room, and he asked the servant to
carry word to Lord Borric that Pug wished to see him if he was not busy.
He went into his room and sat down to think. A short time later he
was brought out of his musing by a knock at the door. He gave permission for
the caller to enter, and the same steward who had carried the message to the
Duke entered, with the message that Borric would see Pug at once.
Pug followed the man from his room and sent him away, saying he
could find the Duke’s room without guidance. He walked slowly, thinking of what
he was going to tell the Duke. Two things were abundantly clear to the boy: the
King was not pleased to hear that the Tsurani were a potential threat to his
kingdom, and Lord Borric would be equally displeased to hear that Guy du
Bas-Tyra was being called to Rillanon.
As with every dinner over the last few days, there was a hushed mood
at the table. The five men of Crydee sat eating in the Duke’s quarters, with
palace servants, all wearing the King’s purple-and-gold badge on their dark
tunics, hovering nearby.
The Duke was chafing to leave Rillanon for the West. Nearly four
months had passed since they left Crydee: the entire winter. Spring was upon
them, and if the Tsurani were going to attack, as they all believed, it was
only a matter of days now. Arutha’s restlessness matched his father’s. Even
Kulgan showed signs that the waiting was telling upon him. Only Meecham, who
revealed nothing of his feelings, seemed content to wait.
Pug also longed for home. He had grown bored in the palace. He
wished to be back in his tower with his studies. He also wished to see Carline
again, though he didn’t speak of this to anyone. Lately he found himself
remembering her in a softer light, forgiving those qualities that had once
irritated him. He also knew, with mixed feelings of anticipation, that he might
discover the fate of Tomas. Dolgan should soon send word to Crydee, if the thaw
came early to the mountains.
Borric had endured several more meetings with the King over the last
week, each ending unsatisfactorily as far as he was concerned. The last had
been hours ago, but he would say nothing about it until the room was emptied of
servants.
As the last dishes were being cleared away, and the servants were
pouring the King’s finest Keshian brandy, a knock came at the door and Duke
Caldric entered, waving the servants outside. When the room was cleared, he
turned to the Duke.
“Borric, I am sorry to interrupt your dining, but I have news.”
Borric stood, as did the others. “Please join us. Here, take a
glass.”
Caldric took the offered brandy and sat in Pug’s chair, while the
boy pulled another over. The Duke of Rillanon sipped his brandy and said,
“Messengers arrived less than an hour ago from the Duke of Bas-Tyra. Guy
expresses alarm over the possibility that the King might be ‘unduly’ distressed
by these ‘rumors’ of trouble in the West.”
Borric stood and threw his glass across the room, shattering it.
Amber fluid dripped down the wall as the Duke of Crydee nearly roared with
anger. “What game does Guy play at? What is this talk of rumors and undue
distress!”
Caldric raised a hand and Borric calmed a little, sitting again. The
old Duke said, “I myself penned the King’s call to Guy. Everything you had
told, every piece of information and every surmise, was included. I can only
think Guy is ensuring that the King reaches no decision until he arrives at the
palace.”
Borric drummed his fingers on the table and looked at Caldric with
anger flashing in his eyes. “What is Bas-Tyra doing? If war comes, it comes to
Crydee and Yabon. My people will suffer. My lands will be ravaged.”
Caldric shook his head slowly. “I will speak plainly, old friend.
Since the estrangement between the King and his uncle, Erland, Guy plays to
advance his own banner to primacy in the Kingdom. I think that, should Erland’s
health fail, Guy sees himself wearing the purple of Krondor.”
Through clenched teeth Borric said, “Then hear me clearly, Caldric.
I would not put that burden on myself or mine for any but the highest purpose.
But if Erland is as ill as I think, in spite of his claims otherwise, it will
be Anita who sits the throne in Krondor, not Black Guy. If I have to march the
Armies of the West into Krondor and assume the regency myself, that is what
shall be, even should Rodric wish it otherwise. Only if the King has issue will
another take the western throne.”
Caldric looked at Borric calmly. “And will you be branded traitor to
the crown?”
Borric slapped the table with his hand. “Curse the day that villain
was born. I regret that I must acknowledge him kinsman.”
Caldric waited for a minute until Borric calmed down, then said, “I know
you better than you know yourself, Borric You would not raise the war banner of
the West against the King, though you might happily strangle your cousin Guy.
It was always a sad thing for me that the Kingdom’s two finest generals could
hate each other so.”
“Aye, and with cause. Every time there is a call to aid the West, it
is cousin Guy who opposes. Every time there is intrigue and a title is lost, it
is one of Guy’s favorites who gains. How can you not see? It was only because
you, Brucal of Yabon, and I myself held firm that the congress did not name Guy
regent for Rodric’s first three years. He stood before every Duke in the
Kingdom and called you a tired old man who was not fit to rule in the King’s
name. How can you forget?”
Caldric did look tired and old as he sat in the chair, one hand
shading his eyes, as if the room light were too bright. Softly he said, “I do
see, and I haven’t forgotten. But he also is my kinsman by marriage, and if I
were not here, how much more influence do you think he would have with Rodric?
As a boy the King idolized him, seeing in him a dashing hero, a fighter of the
first rank, a defender of the Kingdom.”
Borric leaned back in his chair. “I am sorry, Caldric,” he said, his
voice losing its harsh edge. “I know you act for the good of us all. And Guy
did play the hero, rolling the Keshian Army back at Deep Taunton, all those
years ago. I should not speak of things I have not seen firsthand.”
Arutha sat passively through all this, but his eyes showed he felt
the same anger as his father. He moved forward in his chair, and the dukes
looked at him. Borric said, “You have something to say, my son?”
Arutha spread his hands wide before him. “In all this the thought
has bothered me: should the Tsurani come, how would it profit Guy to see the
King hesitate?”
Borric drummed his fingers on the table. “That is the puzzle, for in
spite of his scheming, Guy would not peril the Kingdom, not to spite me.”
“Would it not serve him,” said Arutha, “to let the West suffer a
little, until the issue was in doubt, then to come at the head of the Armies of
the East, the conquering hero, as he was at Deep Taunton?”
Caldric considered this. “Even Guy could not think so little of
these aliens, I would hope.”
Arutha paced the room “But consider what he knows. The ramblings of
a dying man. Surmise on the nature of a ship that only Pug, here, has seen, and
I caught but a glimpse of as it slid into the sea. Conjecture by a priest and a
magician, both callings Guy holds in little regard. Some migrating Dark Brothers.
He might discount such news.”
“But it is all there for the seeing,” protested Borric.
Caldric watched the young Prince pace the room. “Perhaps you are
right. What may be lacking is the urgency of your words, an urgency lacking in
the dry message of ink and parchment. When he arrives, we must convince him.”
Borric nearly spat his words. “It is for the King to decide, not
Guy!”
Caldric said, “But the King has given much weight to Guy’s counsel.
If you are to gain command of the Armies of the West, it is Guy who must be
convinced.”
Borric looked shocked. “I? I do not want the banner of the armies. I
only wish for Erland to be free to aid me, should there be need.”
Caldric placed both hands upon the table. “Borric, for all your
wisdom, you are much the rustic noble. Erland cannot lead the armies. He is not
well. Even if he could, the King would not allow it. Nor would he give leave
for Erland’s Marshal, Dulanic. You have seen Rodric at his best, of late. When
the black moods are upon him, he fears for his life. None dare say it, but the
King suspects his uncle of plotting for the crown.”
“Ridiculous!” exclaimed Borric. “The crown was Erland’s for the
asking thirteen years ago. There was no clear succession Rodric’s father had
not yet named him heir apparent, and Erland’s claim was as clear as the King’s,
perhaps more so. Only Guy and those who sought to use the boy pressed Rodric’s
claim. Most of the congress would have sustained Erland as King.”
“I know, but times are different, and the boy is a boy no longer. He
is now a frightened young man who is sick from fear. Whether it is due to Guy’s
and the others’ influence or from some illness of the mind, I do not know. The
King does not think as other men do. No king does, and Rodric less than most.
Ridiculous as it may seem, he will not give the Armies of the West to his
uncle. I am also afraid that once Guy has his ear, he will not give them to you
either.”
Borric opened his mouth to say something, but Kulgan interrupted.
“Excuse me, Your Graces, but may I suggest something?”
Caldric looked at Borric, who nodded. Kulgan cleared his throat and
said, “Would the King give the Armies of the West to Duke Brucal of Yabon?”
Comprehension slowly dawned on Borric’s and Caldric’s faces, until
the Duke of Crydee threw back his head and laughed. Slamming his fist on the
table, he nearly shouted, “Kulgan! If you had not served me well in all the
years I have known you, tonight you have.” He turned to Caldric. “What do you
think?”
Caldric smiled for the first time since entering the room “Brucal?
That old war dog? There is no more honest man in the Kingdom. And he is not in
the line of succession. He would be beyond even Guy’s attempts to discredit.
Should he receive the command of the armies . . .”
Arutha finished the thought “He would call Father to be his chief
adviser. He knows Father is the finest commander in the West.”
Caldric sat up straight in his chair, excitement on his face. “You
would even have command of the armies of Yabon.”
“Yes,” said Arutha, “and LaMut, Zun, Ylith, and the rest.”
Caldric stood. “I think it will work. Say nothing to the King
tomorrow. I will find the proper time to make the ‘suggestion.’ Pray that His
Majesty approves.”
Caldric took his leave, and Pug could see that for the first time
there was hope for a good ending to this journey. Even Arutha, who had fumed
like black thunder all week, looked nearly happy.
Pug was awakened by a pounding on his door. He sleepily called out
for whoever was out there to enter, and the door opened. A royal steward peeked
in. “Sir, the King commands all in the Duke’s party to join him in the throne
room. At once.” He held a lantern for Pug’s convenience.
Pug said he would come straight away and hurriedly got dressed.
Outside it was still dark, and he felt anxious about what had caused this
surprise summons. The hopeful feeling of the night before, after Caldric had
left, was replaced by a gnawing worry that the unpredictable King had somehow
learned of the plan to circumvent the arrival of the Duke of Bas-Tyra.
He was still buckling his belt about his tunic when he left his
room. He hurried down the hall, with the steward beside him holding a lantern
against the dark, as the torches and candles usually lit in the evening had all
been extinguished.
When they reached the throne room, the Duke, Arutha, and Kulgan were
arriving, all looking apprehensively toward Rodric, who paced by his throne,
still in his night-robes. Duke Caldric stood to one side, a grave expression on
his face. The room was dark, save for the lanterns carried by the stewards.
As soon as they were gathered before the throne, Rodric flew into a
rage. “Cousin! Do you know what I have here?” he screamed, holding out a sheaf
of parchment.
Borric said he didn’t. Rodric’s voice lowered only a little. “It is
a message from Yabon! That old fool Brucal has let those Tsurani aliens attack
and destroy one of his garrisons. Look at these!” he nearly shrieked, throwing
the parchments toward Borric. Kulgan picked them up and handed them to the
Duke. “Never mind,” said the King, his voice returning to near-normalcy. “I’ll
tell you what they say.
“These invaders have attacked into the Free Cities, near Wahnor.
They have attacked into the elven forests. They have attacked Stone Mountain.
They have attacked Crydee.”
Without thinking, Borric said, “What news from Crydee?”
The King stopped his pacing. He looked at Borric, and for a moment
Pug saw madness in his eyes. He closed them briefly, then opened them, and Pug
could see the King was himself again. He shook his head slightly and raised his
hand to his temple. “I have only secondhand news from Brucal. When those
messages left six weeks ago, there had only been one attack at Crydee. Your son
Lyam reports the victory was total, driving the aliens deep into the forest.”
Caldric stepped forward. “All reports say the same thing. Heavily
armed companies of foot soldiers attacked during the night, before the snows
had melted, taking the garrisons by surprise. Little is known save that a
garrison of LaMutians near Stone Mountain was overrun. All other attacks seem
to have been driven back.” He looked at Borric meaningfully. “There is no word
of the Tsurani’s using cavalry.”
Borric said, “Then perhaps Tully was right, and they have no
horses.”
The King seemed to be dizzy, for he took a staggering step backward
and sat on his throne. Again he placed a hand to his temple, then said, “What
is this talk of horses? My Kingdom is invaded. These creatures dare to attack
my soldiers.”
Borric looked at the King. “What would Your Majesty have me do?”
The King’s voice rose. “Do? I was going to wait for my loyal Duke of
Bas-Tyra to arrive before I made any decision. But now I must act.”
He paused, and his face took on a vulpine look, as his dark eyes
gleamed in the lantern light. “I was considering giving the Armies of the West
to Brucal, but the doddering old fool can’t even protect his own garrisons.”
Borric was about to protest on Brucal’s behalf, but Arutha, knowing
his father, gripped his arm, and the Duke remained silent.
The King said, “Borric, you must leave Crydee to your son. He is
capable enough, I should think. He’s given us our only victory so far.” His
eyes wandered and he giggled. He shook his head for a moment, and his voice
lost its frantic edge. “Oh, gods, these pains I think my head will burst.” He
closed his eyes briefly. “Borric, leave Crydee to Lyam and Arutha, I’m giving
you the banner of the Armies of the West, go to Yabon. Brucal is sorely
pressed, for most of the alien army strikes toward LaMut and Zun. When you are
there, request what you need. These invaders must be driven from our lands.”
The King’s face was pale, and perspiration gleamed on his forehead.
“This is a poor hour to start, but I have sent word to the harbor to ready a
ship. You must leave at once. Go now.”
The Duke bowed and turned Caldric said, “I will see His Majesty to
his room. I will accompany you to the docks when you are ready.”
The old Chancellor helped the King from the throne, and the Duke’s
party left the hall. They rushed back to their rooms to find stewards already
packing their belongings. Pug stood around excitedly, for at last he was
returning to his home.
They stood at dockside, bidding farewell to Caldric. Pug and Meecham
waited, and the tall franklin said, “Well, lad. It will be some time before we
see home again, now that war is joined.”
Pug looked up into the scarred face of the man who had found him in
the storm, so long ago. “Why? Aren’t we going home?”
Meecham shook his head. “The Prince will ship from Krondor through
the Straits of Darkness to join his brother, but the Duke will ship for Ylith,
then to Brucal’s camp somewhere near LaMut. Where Lord Borric goes, Kulgan
goes. And where my master goes, I go. And you?”
Pug felt a sinking in his stomach. What the franklin said was true.
He belonged with Kulgan, not with the folk at Crydee, though he knew if he
asked, he would be allowed to go home with the Prince. He resigned himself to
another sign that his boyhood was ending. “Where Kulgan goes, I go.”
Meecham clapped him on the shoulder and said, “Well, at least I can
teach you to use that bloody sword you swing like a fishwife’s broom.”
Feeling little cheer at the prospect, Pug smiled weakly. They soon
boarded the ship and were under way toward Salador, and the first leg of the
long journey west.
14
INVASION
The spring rains were heavy that year.
The business of war was hampered by the ever-present mud. It would
stay wet and cold for nearly another month before the brief, hot summer came.
Duke Brucal of Yabon and Lord Borric stood looking over a table
laden with maps. The rain hammered on the roof of the tent, the central part of
the commander’s pavilion. On either side of the tent two others were attached,
providing sleeping quarters for the two nobles. The tent was filled with smoke,
from lanterns and from Kulgan’s pipe. The magician had proven an able adviser
to the dukes, and his magical aid helpful. He could detect trends in the
weather, and his wizard’s sight could detect some of the Tsurani’s troop
movements, though not often. And over the years his reading of every book he
encountered, including narratives of warfare, had made him a fair student of
tactics and strategy.
Brucal pointed to the newest map on the table. “They have taken this
point here, and another here. They hold this point”—he indicated another spot
on the map—” in spite of our every effort to dislodge them. They also seem to
be moving along a line from here, to here.” His finger swept down a line along
the eastern face of the Grey Towers. “There is a coordinated pattern here, but
I’m damned if I can anticipate where it’s going next.” The old Duke looked
weary. The fighting had been going on sporadically for over two months now, and
no distinct advantage could be seen on either side.
Borric studied the map. Red spots marked known Tsurani strongholds:
hand-dug, earthen breastworks, with a minimum of two hundred men defending.
There were also suspected reinforcement companies, their approximate location
indicated with yellow spots. It was known that any position attacked was quick
to get reinforcements, sometimes in a matter of minutes. Blue spots indicated
the location of Kingdom pickets, though most of Brucal’s forces were billeted
around the hill upon which the commander’s tent sat.
Until the heavy foot soldiers and engineers from Ylith and Tyr-Sog
arrived to man and create permanent fortifications, the Kingdom was fighting a
principally mobile war, for most of the troops assembled were cavalry. The Duke
of Crydee agreed with the other man’s assessment. “It seems their tactics
remain the same: bring in a small force, dig in, and hold. They prevent our
troops from entering, but refuse to follow when we withdraw. There is a
pattern. But for the life of me, I can’t see it either.”
A guard entered. “My lords, an elf stands without, seeking
entrance.”
Brucal said, “Show him in.”
The guard held aside the tent flap, and an elf entered. His
red-brown hair was plastered to his head, and his cloak dripped water on the
floor of the tent. He made a slight bow to the dukes.
“What news from Elvandar?” Borric asked.
“My Queen sends you greetings.” He quickly turned to the map. He
pointed at the pass between the Grey Towers on the south and Stone Mountain on
the north, the same pass Borric’s forces now bottled up at its east end. “The
outworlders move many soldiers through this pass. They have advanced to the
edge of the elven forests, but seek not to enter. They have made it difficult
to get through.” He grinned. “I led several a merry chase for half a day. They
run nearly as well as the dwarves. But they could not keep up in the forest.”
He returned his attention to the map. “There is word from Crydee that
skirmishes have been fought by outriding patrols, but nothing close to the
castle itself. There is no word of activity from the Grey Towers, Carse, or
Tulan. They seem content to dig in along this pass. Your forces to the west
will not be able to join you, for they could not break through now.”
“How strong do the aliens appear to be?” asked Brucal.
“It is not known, but I saw several thousand along this route.” His
finger indicated a route along the northern edge of the pass, from the elven
forests to the Kingdom camp. “The dwarves of Stone Mountain are left alone, so
long as they do not venture south. The outworlders deny them the pass also.”
Borric asked the elf, “Has there been any report of the Tsurani’s
having cavalry?”
“None. Every report refers only to infantry.”
Kulgan said, “Father Tully’s speculation on their being horseless
seems to be borne out.”
Brucal took brush and ink in hand and entered the information on the
map. Kulgan stood looking over his shoulder.
Borric said to the elf, “After you’ve rested, carry my greetings to
your mistress, and my wish for her good health and prosperity. If you should
send runners to the west, please carry the same message to my sons.”
The elf bowed. “As my lord wishes. I shall return to Elvandar at
once.” He turned and left the tent.
Kulgan said, “I think I see it.” He pointed to the new red spots on
the map. They formed a rough half circle, through the pass “The Tsurani are
trying to hold this area here. That valley is the center of the circle I would
guess they are attempting to keep anyone from getting close.”
Both the dukes looked puzzled Borric said, “But to what purpose?
There is nothing there of any value militarily. It is as if they are inviting
us to bottle them up in that valley.”
Suddenly Brucal gasped “It’s a bridgehead. Think of it in terms of
crossing a river. They have a foothold on this side of the rift, as the
magician calls it. They have only as many supplies as their men can carry
through. They don’t have enough control of the area for foraging, so they need
to expand the area under their control and build up supplies before they launch
an offensive.”
Brucal turned to the magician. “Kulgan, what do you think? This is
more in your province.”
The magician looked at the map as if trying to divine information
hidden in it. “We know nothing of the magic involved. We don’t know how fast
they can pass supplies and men through, for no one has ever witnessed an
appearance. They may require a large area, which this valley provides them. Or
they may have some limit on the amount of time available to pass troops
through.”
Duke Borric considered this. “Then there is only one thing to do. We
must send a party into the valley to see what they are doing.”
Kulgan smiled “I will go too, if Your Grace permits. Your soldiers
might not have the faintest idea of what they are seeing if it involves magic.”
Brucal started to object, his gaze taking in the magician’s ample
size. Borric cut him off. “Don’t let his look fool you. He rides like a
trooper.”
He turned to Kulgan. “You had best take Pug, for if one should fall,
then the other can carry the news.”
Kulgan looked unhappy at that, but saw the wisdom in it. The Duke of
Yabon said, “If we strike at the North Pass, then into this valley and draw
their forces there, a small, fast company might break through here.” He pointed
at a small pass that entered the south end of the valley from the east.
Borric said, “It is a bold enough plan. We have danced with the
Tsurani so long, holding a stable front, I doubt they will expect it.” The
magician suggested they retire for the rest of the evening, for it would be a
long day on the morrow. He closed his eyes briefly, then informed the two
leaders that the rain would stop and the next day would be sunny.
Pug lay wrapped in a blanket, trying to nap, when Kulgan entered
their tent. Meecham sat before the cook fire, preparing the evening meal and
attempting to keep it from the greedy maw of Fantus. The firedrake had sought
out his master a week before, eliciting startled cries from the soldiers as he
swooped over the tents. Only Meecham’s commanding shouts had kept a bowman from
putting a cloth-yard arrow into the playful drake. Kulgan had been pleased to
see his pet, but at a loss to explain how the creature had found them. The
drake had moved right into the magician’s tent, content to sleep next to Pug
and steal food from under Meecham’s watchful eye.
Pug sat up as the magician pulled off his sopping cloak. “There is
an expedition going deep within Tsurani-held territory, to break the circle
they’ve thrown up around a small valley and find out what they are up to. You
and Meecham will be going with me on this trip, I would have friends at my back
and side.”
Pug felt excited by the news. Meecham had spent long hours schooling
him in use of sword and shield, and the old dream of soldiering had returned.
“I have kept my blade sharp, Kulgan.”
Meecham gave forth a snort that passed for laughter, and the
magician threw him a black look. “Good, Pug. But with any luck we’ll not be
fighting. We are to go in a smaller force attached to a larger one that will
draw off the Tsurani. We will drive quickly into their territory and discover
what they are hiding. We will then ride as fast as possible to bring back the
news. I thank the gods they are without horses, or we could never hope to
accomplish so bold a stroke. We shall ride through them before they know we
have struck.”
“Perhaps we may take a prisoner,” the boy said hopefully.
“It would be a change,” said Meecham. The Tsurani had proved to be
fierce fighters, preferring to die rather than be captured.
“Maybe then we’d discover why they’ve come to Midkemia,” ventured
Pug.
Kulgan looked thoughtful. “There is little we understand about these
Tsurani. Where is this place they come from? How do they cross between their
world and ours? And as you’ve pointed out, the most vexing question of all, why
do they come? Why invade our lands?”
“Metal.”
Kulgan and Pug looked over at Meecham, who was spooning up stew,
keeping one eye on Fantus. “They don’t have any metal and they want ours.” When
Kulgan and Pug regarded him with blank expressions, he shook his head. “I’d
thought you puzzled it out by now, so I didn’t think to bring it up.” He put
aside the bowls of stew, reached behind himself, and drew a bright red arrow
out from under his bedding. “Souvenir,” he said, holding it out for inspection.
“Look at the head. It’s the same stuff their swords are made from, some kind of
wood, hardened like steel. I picked over a lot of things fetched in by the
soldiers, and I haven’t seen one thing these Tsurani make with any metal in
it.”
Kulgan looked flabbergasted. “Of course! It’s all so simple. They
found a way to pass between their world and ours, sent through scouts, and
found a land rich in metals they lack. So they sent in an invading army. It
also explains why they marshal in a high valley of the mountains, rather than
in the lower forests. It gives them free access to . . . the dwarven mines!” He
jumped up. “I’d better inform the dukes at once. We must send word to the
dwarves to be alert for incursions into the mines.”
Pug sat thoughtfully as Kulgan vanished through the tent entrance.
After a moment he said, “Meecham, why didn’t they try trading?”
Meecham shook his head “The Tsurani? From what I’ve seen, boy, it’s
a good bet trading never entered their minds. They are one very warlike bunch.
Those bastards fight like six hundred kinds of demons. If they had cavalry,
they would have chased this whole lot back to LaMut, then probably burned the
city down around them. But if we can wear them down, like a bulldog does, just
keep hanging on until they tire, we might settle this after a time. Look what
happened to Kesh. Lost half of Bosania to the Kingdom in the north ‘cause the
Confederacy just plain wore the Empire out with one rebellion after another in
the south.”
After a time, Pug gave up on Kulgan’s returning soon, ate supper
alone, and made ready for bed. Meecham quit trying to keep the magician’s meal
away from the drake, and also turned in.
In the dark, Pug lay staring up at the tent roof, listening to the
sound of the rain and the drake’s joyous chewing. Soon he drifted off into
sleep, where he dreamed of a dark tunnel and a flickering light vanishing down
it.
The trees were thick and the air hung heavy with mist as the column
moved slowly through the forest. Outriders came and went every few minutes,
checking for signs that the Tsurani were preparing an ambush. The sun was lost
high in the trees overhead, and the entire scene had a greyish-green quality to
it, making it difficult to see more than a few yards ahead.
At the head of the column rode a young captain of the LaMutian army,
Vandros, son of the old Earl of LaMut. He was also one of the more level-headed
and capable young officers in Brucal’s army.
They rode in pairs, with Pug sitting next to a soldier, behind
Kulgan and Meecham. The order to halt came down the line, and Pug reined in his
horse and dismounted. Over a light gambeson, he wore a well-oiled suit of chain
mail. Over that was a tabard of the LaMutian forces, with the grey wolf’s head
on a circle of blue in the center. Heavy woolen trousers were tucked into his
high boots. He had a shield on his left arm, and his sword hung from his belt;
he felt truly a soldier. The only discordant note was his helm, which was a
little too large and gave him a slightly comic appearance.
Captain Vandros came back to where Kulgan stood waiting, and
dismounted. “The scouts have spotted a camp about half a mile ahead. They think
they were not seen by the guards.”
The captain pulled out a map. “We are about here I will lead my men
and attack the enemy position. Cavalry from Zun will support us on either side
Lieutenant Garth will command the column you will ride with. You will pass the
enemy camp and continue on toward the mountains. We will try to follow if we can,
but if we haven’t rejoined you by sundown, you must continue alone.
“Keep moving, if only at a slow walk. Push the horses, but try to
keep them alive. On horseback you can always outrun these aliens, but on foot I
wouldn’t give you much chance of getting back. They run like fiends.
“Once in the mountains, move through the pass Ride into the valley
one hour after sunrise. The North Pass will be attacked at dawn, so if you get
safely into the valley you should, I hope, find little between you and the
North Pass. Once in the valley, don’t stop for anything. If a man falls, he is
to be left. The mission is to get information back to the commanders. Now try
to rest. It may be your last chance for some time. We attack in an hour.”
He walked his horse back to the head of the line. Kulgan, Meecham,
and Pug sat without speaking. The magician wore no armor because he claimed it
would interfere with his magic. Pug was more inclined to believe it would
interfere with his considerable girth. Meecham had a sword at his side, like
the others, but held a horse bow. He preferred archery to close fighting,
though Pug knew, from long hours of instruction at his hands, that he was no
stranger to the blade.
The hour passed slowly, and Pug felt mounting excitement, for he was
still possessed by boyish notions of glory. He had forgotten the terror of the
fighting with the Dark Brothers before they reached the Grey Towers.
Word was passed and they remounted. They rode slowly at first, until
the Tsurani were in sight. As the trees thinned, they picked up speed, and when
they reached the clearing, they galloped the horses. Large breastworks of earth
had been thrown up as a defense against the charge of horsemen. Pug could see
the brightly colored helmets of the Tsurani rushing to defend their camp. As
the riders charged, the sounds of fighting could be heard echoing through the
trees as the Zunese troops engaged other Tsurani camps.
The ground shook under the horses as they rode straight at the camp,
sounding like a rolling wave of thunder. The Tsurani soldiers stayed behind the
earthworks, shooting arrows, most of which fell short. As the first element of
the column hit the earthworks, the second element turned to the left, riding
off at an angle past the camp. A few Tsurani soldiers were outside the
breastworks here, and were ridden down like wheat before a scythe. Two came
close to hitting the riders with the great two-handed swords they wielded, but
their blows went wide. Meecham, guiding his horse with his legs, dropped both
with two quick arrows.
Pug heard a horse scream among the sounds of the fighting behind,
then suddenly found himself crashing through the brush as they entered the
forest. They rode as hard as possible, cutting through the trees, ducking under
low branches, the scene a passing kaleidoscope of greens and browns.
The column rode for nearly a half hour, then slackened pace as the
horses began to tire. Kulgan called to Lieutenant Garth, and they halted to
check their position against the map. If they moved slowly for the balance of
the day and night, they would reach the mouth of the pass near daybreak.
Meecham peered over the heads of the lieutenant and Kulgan as they
knelt on the ground. “I know this place. I hunted it as a boy, when I lived
near Hush.”
Pug was startled. This was the first time Meecham had ever mentioned
anything about his past Pug had supposed that Meecham was from Crydee, and was
surprised to find he had been a youth in the Free Cities. But then he found it
difficult to imagine Meecham as a boy.
The franklin continued. “There is a way over the crest of the
mountains, a path that leads between two smaller peaks. It is little more than
a goat trail, but if we led the horses all night, we could be in the valley by
sunrise. This way is difficult to find on this side if you don’t know where to
seek it. From the valley side, it is nearly impossible. I would bet the Tsurani
know nothing about it.”
The lieutenant regarded Kulgan with a question in his eyes. The
magician looked at Meecham, then said, “It might be worth a try. We can mark
our trail for Vandros. If we move slowly, he might catch up before we reach the
valley.”
“All right,” said the lieutenant, “our biggest advantage is
mobility, so let’s keep moving. Meecham, where will we come out?”
The large man leaned over the lieutenant’s shoulder to point at a
spot on the map near the south end of the valley. “Here If we come out straight
west for a half mile or so, then swing north, we can cut down the heart of the
valley.” He motioned with his finger as he spoke. “This valley’s mostly woods
at the north and south end, with a big meadow in the middle. That’s where
they’d be if they have a big camp. It’s mostly open there, so if the aliens
haven’t come up with anything surprising, we should be able to ride right by
them afore they can organize to stop us. The dicey part will be getting through
the northern woods if they’ve garrisoned soldiers there. But if we get through
them, we’ll be free to the North Pass.”
“All agreed?” asked the lieutenant. When no one said anything, he
gave orders for the men to walk their horses, and Meecham took the lead as
guide.
They reached the entrance to the pass, or what Pug thought Meecham
had correctly called a goat trail, an hour before sundown. The lieutenant
posted guards and ordered the horses unsaddled Pug rubbed down his horse with
handfuls of long grass, then staked it out. The thirty soldiers were busy
tending to their horses and armor. Pug could feel the tension in the air. The
run around the Tsurani camp had set the soldiers on edge, and they were anxious
for a fight.
Meecham showed Pug how to muffle his sword and shield with rags torn
from the soldiers’ blankets. “We’re not going to be using these bed rolls this
night, and nothing will ring through the hills like the sound of metal striking
metal, boy. Except maybe the clopping of hooves on the rock.” Pug watched as he
muffled the horses’ hooves with leather stockings designed for just this
purpose and carried in the saddlebags. Pug rested as the sun began to set.
Through the short spring twilight, he waited until he heard the order to
resaddle. The soldiers were beginning to pull their horses into a line when he
finished.
Meecham and the lieutenant were walking down the line repeating
instructions to the men. They would move in single file, Meecham taking the
lead, the lieutenant second, down the line to the last soldier. They tied a
series of ropes through the left stirrup of each horse, and each man gripped it
tightly as he led his own horse. After everyone was in position, Meecham
started off.
The path rose steeply, and the horses had to scramble in places. In
the darkness they moved slowly, taking great care not to stray from the path.
Occasionally Meecham stopped the line, to check ahead. After several such
stops, the trail crested through a deep, narrow pass and started downward. An
hour later it widened, and they stopped to rest. Two soldiers were sent ahead
with Meecham to scout the way, while the rest of the tired line dropped to the
ground to ease cramped legs. Pug realized the fatigue was as much the result of
the tension created by the silent passage as of the climbing, but it didn’t
make his legs feel any better.
After what seemed to be much too short a rest they were moving
again. Pug stumbled along, fatigue numbing his mind to the point where the
world became an endless series of picking up one foot and placing it before the
other. Several times the horse before him was literally towing him as he
grasped the rope tied to its stirrup.
Suddenly Pug was aware that the line had stopped and that they were
standing in a gap between two small hills, looking down at the valley floor.
From here it would take only a few minutes to ride down the slope.
Kulgan walked back to where the boy stood next to his animal. The
stout wizard seemed little troubled by the climb, and Pug wondered at the
muscle that must he hidden beneath the layers of fat. “How are you feeling,
Pug?”
“I’ll live, I expect, but I think next time I’ll ride, if it’s all
the same to you.” They were keeping their voices low, but the magician gave out
with a soft chuckle anyway.
“I understand completely. We’ll be staying here until first light.
That will be slightly less than two hours. I suggest you get some sleep, for we
have a great deal of hard riding ahead.”
Pug nodded and lay down without a word. He used his shield for a
pillow and, before the magician had taken a step away, was fast asleep. He
never stirred as Meecham came and removed the leather muffles from his horse.
A gentle shaking brought Pug awake. He felt as if he had just closed
his eyes a moment before. Meecham was squatting before him, holding something
out “Here, boy. Eat this.”
Pug took the offered food. It was soft bread, with a nutty flavor.
After two bites he began to feel better.
Meecham said, “Eat quickly, we’re off in a few minutes.” He moved
forward to where the lieutenant and the magician stood by their horses. Pug
finished the bread and remounted. The soreness had left his legs, and by the
time he was astride his mount, he felt anxious to be off.
The lieutenant turned his horse and faced the men. “We will ride
west—then, on my command, north. Fight only if attacked. Our mission is to
return with information about the Tsurani. If any man falls, we cannot stop. If
you are separated from the others, get back as best you can. Remember as much
of what you see as possible, for you may be the only one to carry the news to
the dukes. May the gods protect us all.”
Several of the soldiers uttered quick prayers to various deities,
chiefly Tith, the war god, then they were off. The column came down the
hillside and reached the flat of the valley. The sun was cresting the hills
behind, and a rosy glow bathed the landscape. At the foot of the hills they
crossed a small creek and entered a plain of tall grass. Far ahead was a stand
of trees, and another could be seen off to the north. At the north end of the
valley the haze of campfire smoke hung in the air. The enemy was there all
right, thought Pug, and from the volume of smoke there must be a large
concentration of them. He hoped Meecham was right and they were all garrisoned
out in the open, where the Kingdom soldiers stood a fair chance of outrunning
them.
After a while the lieutenant passed the word, and the column turned
north. They trotted along, saving the horses for when they would be sure to
need the speed.
Pug thought he saw glimpses of color in the trees ahead, as they
descended into the southern woods of the valley, but couldn’t be sure. As they
reached the woods, a shout went up from within the trees. The lieutenant cried,
“All right, they’ve seen us. Ride hard and stay close.” He spurred his horse
forward, and soon the entire company was thundering through the woods. Pug saw
the horses in front bear to the left and turned his to follow, seeing a
clearing in the trees. The sound of voices grew louder as the first trees went
flying past, and his eyes tried to adjust to the darkness of the woods. He
hoped his horse could see more clearly than he could, or he might find himself
inside a tree.
The horse, battle trained and quick, darted between the trunks, and
Pug could begin to see flashes of color among the branches. Tsurani soldiers
were rushing to intercept the horsemen, but were forced to weave through the
trees, making it impossible. They were speeding through the woods faster than
the Tsurani could pass the word and react. Pug knew that this advantage of
surprise couldn’t last much longer, they were making too great a commotion for
the enemy not to realize what was happening.
After a mad dash through the trees, they broke into another clear
area where a few Tsurani soldiers stood waiting for them. The horsemen charged,
and most of the defenders scattered to avoid being run down. One, however,
stood his ground, in spite of the terror written on his face, and swung the
blue two-handed sword he carried. A horse screamed, and the rider was thrown as
the blade cut the horse’s right leg from under him. Pug lost sight of the fight
as he sped quickly past.
An arrow shot over Pug’s shoulder, buzzing like an angry bee. He
hunched over the withers of his mount, trying to give the archers behind him as
small a target as possible. Ahead, a soldier fell backward out of his saddle, a
red arrow through his neck.
Soon they were out of bow range and riding toward a breastwork
thrown across an old road from the mines in the south Hundreds of brightly
colored figures scurried behind it. The lieutenant signaled for the riders to
pass around it, to the west.
As soon as it was apparent they would pass the earthwork and not
charge it, several Tsurani bowmen came tumbling over the top of the redoubt and
ran to intercept the riders. As soon as they came within bowshot, the air
filled with red and blue shafts Pug heard a horse scream, but he couldn’t see
the stricken animal or its rider.
Riding quickly beyond the range of the bowmen, they entered another
thick stand of trees. The lieutenant pulled up his mount for a moment and
yelled, “From here on, make straight north. We’re almost to the meadow, so
there’ll be no cover, and speed is your only ally. Then once you’re in the
woods to the north, keep moving. Our forces should have broken through up
there, and if we can get past those woods, we should be all right.” Meecham had
described the woods as being about two or three miles across. From there it was
three miles of open ground until the North Pass through the hills began.
They slowed to a walk, trying to rest the horses as much as
possible. They could see the tiny figures of the Tsurani coming from behind,
but they would never catch up before the horses were running again. Ahead Pug
could see the trees of the forest, looming larger with each passing minute. He
could feel the eyes that must be there, watching them, waiting.
“As soon as we are within bowshot, ride as fast as you can,” shouted
the lieutenant. Pug saw the soldiers pull their swords and bows out, and drew
his own sword. Feeling uncomfortable with the weapon clutched in his right
hand, he rode at a trot toward the trees.
Suddenly the air was filled with arrows. Pug felt one glance off his
helm, but it still snapped his head back and brought tears to his eyes. He
urged his horse ahead blindly, trying to blink his eyes clear. He had the
shield in his left hand and a sword in his right, so that by the time he
blinked enough to be able to see clearly, he found himself in the woods. His
war-horse responded to leg pressure as he moved into the forest.
A yellow-garbed soldier burst from behind a tree and aimed a swing
at the boy. He caught the sword blow on his shield, which sent a numbing shock
up his left arm. He swung overhand and down at the soldier, who leaped away,
and the blow missed. Pug spurred his horse on, before the soldier could get in
position to swing again. All around, the forest rang with the sounds of battle.
He could barely make out the other horsemen among the trees.
Several times he rode down Tsurani soldiers as they tried to block
his passage. Once one tried to grab at the reins of the horse, but Pug sent him
reeling with a blow on the potlike helmet. To Pug it seemed as if they were all
engaged in some mad game of hide-and-go-seek, with foot soldiers lumping out
from behind every other tree.
A sharp pain stung Pug on the right cheek. Feeling with the back of
his sword hand as he bounded through the wood, he felt a wetness, and when he
pulled his hand away, he could see blood on his knuckles. He felt a detached
curiosity. He hadn’t even heard the arrow that had stung him.
Twice more he rode down soldiers, the war-horse knocking them aside.
Suddenly he burst out of the forest and was assaulted by a kaleidoscope of
images. He pulled up for a moment and let the scene register. Less than a
hundred yards to the west of where he exited the woodlands, a great device,
some hundred feet in length, with twenty-foot-high poles at each end, stood.
Around it were clustered several men, the first Tsurani Pug had seen who
weren’t wearing armor. These men wore long black robes and were completely
unarmed. Between the poles a shimmering grey haze like the one they had seen in
Kulgan’s room filled the air, blocking out the view of the area directly
behind. From out of the haze a wagon was being pulled by two grey, squat,
six-legged beasts, who were prodded by two soldiers in red armor Several more
wagons were standing beyond the machines, and a few of the strange beasts could
be seen grazing beyond the wagons.
Beyond the strange device, a mighty camp sprawled across the meadow,
with more tents than Pug could count. Banners of strange design and gaudy colors
fluttered in the wind above them, and the rising smoke of the campfires stung
his nose with acrid pungency as it was carried off in the breeze.
More riders were coming through the trees, and Pug spurred his horse
forward, angling away from the strange device. The six-legged beasts raised
their heads and ambled away from the oncoming horses, seeming to move with
little more than the minimum effort required to take them out of the path of
the riders.
One of the black-robed men ran toward the riders. He stopped and
stood off to one side as they sped past Pug got a glimpse of his face, clean
shaven, his lips moving and eyes fixed on something behind the boy. Pug heard a
yell and, looking back, saw a rider on the ground, his horse rooted in place,
like a statue. Several guards were rushing over to subdue the man when the boy
turned away. Once beyond the strange device, he could see a series of large,
brightly colored tents off to the left. Ahead, the way was clear.
Pug caught sight of Kulgan and reined his horse to bring himself
closer to the magician. Thirty yards to the right, Pug could see other riders.
As they dashed away, Kulgan shouted something at the boy that he couldn’t make
out. The magician pointed at the side of his face, then at Pug, who realized the
mage was asking if he was all right. Pug waved his sword and smiled, and the
magician smiled back.
Suddenly, about a hundred yards in front, a loud buzzing noise
filled the air, and a black-robed man appeared, as if from thin air. Kulgan’s
horse bore straight for him, but the man had a queer-looking device in his hand
that he pointed at the magician.
The air sizzled with energy Kulgan’s horse screamed and fell as if
poleaxed. The fat magician was tossed over the horse’s head and tucked his
shoulder under as he hit the ground. With an amazing display of agility he
rolled up onto his feet and bowled over the black-robed man.
Pug pulled up in spite of the order to keep going. He reined his
horse around and charged back to find the magician sitting astride the chest of
the smaller man, each grasping the left wrist of the other with his right hand.
Pug could see that they were locked eye to eye in a contest of wills. Kulgan
had explained this strange mental power to Pug before. It was a way in which a
magician could bend the will of another to his own. It took great concentration
and was very dangerous. Pug leaped from his own mount and rushed over to where
the two men were locked in struggle. With the flat of his sword, he struck the
black-robed figure on the temple. The man slumped unconscious.
Kulgan staggered to his feet. “Thank you, Pug. I don’t think I could
have bettered him. I’ve never encountered such mental strength.” Kulgan looked
to where his horse lay quivering on the ground. “It’s useless.” Turning to Pug,
he said, “Listen well, for you’ll have to carry word to Lord Borric. From the
speed that wagon was coming through the rift, I estimate they can bring in
several hundred men a day, perhaps a great deal more. Tell the Duke it would be
suicide to try to take the machine. Their magicians are too powerful. I don’t
think we can destroy the machine they use to hold the rift open. If I had time
to study it . . . He must call for reinforcements from Krondor, perhaps from the
East.”
Pug grabbed Kulgan by the arm “I can’t remember all that. We’ll ride
double.”
Kulgan began to protest but was too weak to prevent the boy’s
pulling him to where his horse stood. Ignoring Kulgan’s objections, he bullied
his master up into the saddle. Pug hesitated a moment, noting the animal’s
fatigue, then came to a decision. “With both of us to carry, he’ll never make
it, Kulgan,” he shouted as he struck the animal on the flank. “I’ll find
another.”
Pug scanned the area as the horse bearing Kulgan sped away. A
riderless mount was wandering about, less than twenty feet away, but as he
approached, the animal bolted. Cursing, Pug turned and was confronted by the
sight of the black-robed Tsurani regaining his feet. The man appeared confused
and weak, and Pug charged him. Only one thought was in Pug’s mind: to capture a
prisoner, and, from his appearance, a Tsurani magician in the bargain. Pug took
the magician by surprise, knocking him down.
The man scrambled backward in alarm as Pug raised his sword threateningly.
The man put forth his hand in what Pug took as a sign of submission, and the
boy hesitated. Suddenly a wave of pain passed through him, and he had to fight
to keep his feet. He staggered about and through the agony saw a familiar
figure riding toward him, shouting his name.
Pug shook his head, and suddenly the pain vanished. Meecham sped
toward him, and Pug knew the franklin could carry the Tsurani to the Duke’s
camp if Pug could keep him from fleeing. So he spun, all pain forgotten, and
closed upon the still-supine Tsurani. A look of shock crossed the magician’s
face when he saw the boy again advancing on him. Pug heard Meecham’s voice
calling his name from behind but didn’t take his eyes from the Tsurani.
Several Tsurani soldiers ran across the meadow, seeking to aid their
fallen magician, but Pug stood only a few feet away, and Meecham would reach
them in a few more moments.
The magician jumped to his feet and reached into his robe. He pulled
out a small device and activated it. A loud humming came from the object. Pug
rushed the man, determined to knock the device from his hand, whatever it might
be. The device hummed louder, and Pug could hear Meecham again shouting his
name as he struck the magician, burying his shoulder in the man’s stomach.
Suddenly the world exploded with white and blue lights, and Pug felt
himself falling through a rainbow of colors into a pit of darkness.
Pug opened his eyes. For a moment he struggled to bring them into
focus, for everything in his field of vision seemed to be flickering. He then
came fully awake and realized it was still night and the flickering came from
campfires a short distance from where he lay. He tried to sit up and found his
hands tied behind him. A groan sounded next to him. In the dim light he could
make out the features of a LaMutian horse soldier lying a few feet away. He was
also bound His face was drawn, and there was a nasty-looking cut running down
from his hairline to his cheekbone, all crusted over with dried blood.
Pug’s attention was distracted by the sound of voices speaking low,
behind him. He rolled over and saw two Tsurani guards in blue armor standing
watch. Several more tied prisoners lay about between the boy and the two
aliens, who were speaking together in their strange, musical-sounding language.
One noticed Pug’s movement and said something to the other, who nodded and
quickly hurried off.
In a moment he was back with another soldier, this one in
red-and-yellow armor, with a large crest on his helm, who ordered the two guards
to stand Pug up. He was pulled roughly to his feet, and the newcomer stood
before him and took stock. This man was dark-haired and had the uptilted,
wide-set eyes that Pug had seen before in the field among the Tsurani dead. His
cheekbones were flat, and he had a broad brow, topped by thick dark hair. In
the dim firelight, his skin looked nearly golden in color.
Except for their short stature, most of the Tsurani soldiers could
pass for citizens of many of the nations of Midkemia, but these golden men, as
Pug thought of them, resembled some Keshian traders Pug had seen in Crydee
years before, from the distant trading city of Shing Lai.
The officer inspected the boy’s clothing. Next he knelt and
inspected the boots on Pug’s feet. He stood and barked an order at the soldier
who had fetched him, who saluted and turned to Pug. He seized the bound boy and
led him away, on a winding course through the Tsurani camp.
At the center of the camp, large banners hung from the cross pieces
of standards, all set in a circle around a large tent. All bore strange
designs, creatures of outlandish configuration, depicted in bold colors.
Several had glyphs of an unknown language on them. It was to this place Pug was
half pulled, half dragged, through the hundreds of Tsurani soldiers who sat
quietly polishing their leather armor and making repairs on weapons. Several
watched as he passed, but the camp was free of the usual noise and bustle Pug
was used to in the camp of his own army. There was more than just the strange
and colorful banners to give this place an otherworld feeling. Pug tried to
note the details, so if he could escape and report, he could tell Duke Borric
something useful, but he found his senses betrayed by so many unfamiliar
images. He didn’t know what was important in all he saw.
At the entrance of the large tent, the guard who pulled Pug along
was challenged by two others, wearing black-and-orange armor. A quick exchange
of words resulted in the tent flap being held aside while Pug was thrust
through. He fell forward onto a thick pile of furs and woven mats. From where
he lay, Pug could see more banners hanging on the tent walls. The tent was
richly fashioned, with silklike hangings and thick rugs and pillows.
Hands roughly pulled him upright, and he could see several men
regarding him. All stood dressed in the gaudy armor and crested helms of the
Tsurani officers except for two. They sat upon a raised dais covered with
cushions. The first wore a simple black robe with cowl pulled back, revealing a
thin, pale face and bald pate: a Tsurani magician. The other wore a
rich-looking robe of orange with black trim, cut below knees and elbows, so
that it gave the look of something worn for comfort. From his wiry, muscled
appearance and several visible scars, Pug assumed that this man was a warrior
who had put aside his armor for the night.
The man in black said something in a high-pitched, singsong language
to the others. None of the other men said anything, but the one in the orange
robe nodded. The great tent was lit by a single brazier near where the two
robed men sat. The lean, black-robed one sat forward, and the light from the
brazier cast upward on his face, giving him a decidedly demonic look. His words
came haltingly, and thick with accent.
“I know only . . . little . . . of your speech. You understand?”
Pug nodded, his heart pounding while his mind worked furiously.
Kulgan’s training was coming into play. First he calmed himself, clearing the
fog that had gripped his mind. Then he extended every sense, automatically,
taking in every scrap of information available, seeking any useful bit of
knowledge that might improve his chances of survival. The soldier nearest the
door seemed to be relaxing, his left arm behind his head as he lay back on a
pile of cushions, his attention only half focused on the captive. But Pug
noticed that his other hand was never more than an inch from the hilt of a
wicked-looking dagger at his belt. A brief gleam of light on lacquer revealed
the presence of another dagger hilt, half protruding from a pillow at the right
elbow of the man in orange.
The man in black said slowly, “Listen, for I tell you something.
Then you asked questions. If you lie, you die. Slowly. Understand?” Pug nodded.
There was no doubt in his mind.
“This man,” said the black-robed one, pointing to the man in the
short orange robe, “is a . . . great man. He is . . . high man. He is . . .”
The man used a word Pug didn’t understand When Pug shook his head, the magician
said, “He family great Minwanabi. He second to . . .” He fumbled for a term,
then moved his hand in a circle, as if indicating all the men in the tent,
officers from their proud plumes “. . . man who lead.”
Pug nodded and softly said, “Your lord?”
The magician’s eyes narrowed, as if he were about to object to Pug’s
speaking out of turn, but instead he paused, then said, “Yes. Lord of War. It
is that one’s will that we are here. This one is second to Lord of War.” He
pointed to the man in orange, who looked on impassively. “You are nothing to
this man.” It was obvious the man was feeling frustration in his inability to
convey what he wished. It was plain this lord was something special by the
lights of his own people, and the man translating was trying to impress this
upon Pug.
The lord cut the translator off and said several things, then nodded
toward Pug. The bald magician bobbed his head in agreement, then turned his
attention toward Pug. “You are lord?”
Pug looked startled, then stammered out a negative. The magician
nodded, translated, and was given instruction by the lord. He turned back to
Pug. “You wear cloth like lord, true?”
Pug nodded His tunic was of a finer fabric than the homespun of the
common soldiers. He tried to explain his position as a member in the Duke’s
court. After several attempts he resigned himself to the presumption they made
of his being some sort of highly placed servant.
The magician picked up a small device and held it out to Pug.
Hesitating for a moment, the boy reached out and took it. It was a cube of some
crystal-like material, with veins of pink running throughout. After a moment in
his hand, it took on a glow, softly pink. The man in orange gave an order, and
the magician translated. “This lord says, how many men along pass to . . .” He
faltered and pointed.
Pug had no idea of where he was, or what direction was being pointed
to. “I don’t know where I am,” he said. “I was unconscious when I was brought
here.”
The magician sat in thought for a moment, then stood. “That way,” he
said, pointing at a right angle to the direction he had just indicated, “is
tall mountain, larger than others. That way,” he moved his hand a little, “in
sky, is five fires, like so.” His hands traced a pattern. After a moment Pug
understood. The man had pointed to where Stone Mountain lay and where the
constellation called the Five Jewels hung in the sky. He was in the valley they
had raided. The pass indicated was the one used as an escape route.
“I . . . really, I don’t know how many.”
The magician looked closely at the cube in Pug’s hand. It continued
to glow in soft pink tones. “Good, you tell truth.”
Pug then understood that he held some sort of device that would
inform his captives if he tried to deceive them. He felt black despair wash
over him. He knew that any survival hopes he entertained were going to involve
some manner of betraying his homeland.
The magician asked several questions about the nature of the force
outside the valley. When most went unanswered, for Pug had not been privy to
meetings on strategy matters, the question changed to a more general nature,
about common things in Midkemia, but which seemed to hold a fascination for the
Tsurani.
The interview continued for several hours. Pug began to feel faint
on several occasions as the pressure of the situation combined with his general
exhaustion. He was given a strong drink one of these times, which restored his
energy for a while but left him light-headed.
He answered every question. Several times he got around the truth
device by telling only some of the information requested, not volunteering
anything. On several of these occasions, he could tell both the lord and
magician were nettled by their inability to deal with answers that were
incomplete or complex. Finally the lord indicated the interview was over, and Pug
was dragged outside. The magician followed.
Outside the tent the magician stood before Pug. “My lord says, ‘I
think this servant’” —he pointed at Pug’s chest— “ ‘he is . . .’ ” He groped
for a word . . . “ ‘He is clever.’ My lord does not mind clever servants, for
they work well. But he thinks you are too clever. He says to tell you to be
careful, for you are now slave. Clever slave may live long time. Too clever
slave, dies quickly if . . .” Again the pause. Then a broad smile crossed the
magician’s face. “If he is fortun . . . fortunate. Yes . . . that is the word.”
He rolled the word around his mouth one more time, as if savoring the taste of
it. “Fortunate.”
Pug was led back to the holding area and left with his own thoughts.
He looked around and saw that a few other captives were awake. Most looked
confused and dispirited. One openly wept. Pug turned his eyes skyward and saw
the pink edge along the mountains in the east, heralding the coming dawn.
15
CONFLICTS
The rain was unceasing.
Huddled near the mouth of the cave, a group of dwarves sat around a
small cook fire, the gloom of the day reflected upon their faces. Dolgan puffed
upon his pipe, and the others were working on their armor, repairing cuts and
breaks in leather, cleaning and oiling metal. A pot of stew simmered on the
fire.
Tomas sat at the back of the cave, his sword set across his knees.
He looked blankly past the others, his eyes focused on some point far beyond
them.
Seven times the dwarves of the Grey Towers had ventured out against
the invaders, and seven times they had inflicted heavy losses. But each time it
was clear that the Tsurani’s numbers were undiminished. Many dwarves were
missing now, their lives bought at a dear price to the enemy, but dearer to the
families of the Grey Towers. The long-lived dwarves had fewer children, years
further apart, than did humans. Each loss diminished dwarvenkind at a much more
damaging cost than could have been imagined by the humans.
Each time the dwarves had gathered and attacked through the mines
into the valley, Tomas had been in the van. His golden helm would be a signal
beacon for the dwarves. His golden broadsword would arc above the fray, then
swing down to take its toll from the enemy. In battle the keep boy was
transformed into a figure of power, a fighting hero whose presence on the field
struck awe and fear into the Tsurani. Had he possessed any doubt about the
magical nature of his arms and armor after driving off the wraith, they were
dispelled the first time he wore them into battle.
They had gathered thirty fighting dwarves from Caldara and ventured
through the mines to an entrance in the south portion of the captured valley.
They surprised a Tsurani patrol not far from the mines and slew them. But
during the course of the fighting, Tomas had been cut off from the dwarves by
three Tsurani warriors. As they bore down on him, their swords raised high
overhead, he felt something take hold of him. Darting between two of them, like
some maddened acrobat, he had slain both with a single stroke from one side to
the other. The third had been taken quickly from behind before he could recover
from the sudden move.
After the fray, Tomas had been filled with an elation new to him,
and somehow frightening as well. All the way back from the battle, he had felt
suffused with an unknown energy.
Each subsequent battle had gained him the same power and skill of
arms. But the elation had become something more urgent, and the last two times
the visions had begun. Now for the first time the visions were coming unbidden.
They were transparent, like an image laid upon another.
He could see the dwarves through it, as well as the forest beyond.
But upon them played a scene of people long dead and places vanished from the
memories of the living. Halls decked with golden trappings were lit with
torches that threw dancing light from crystal set upon tables. Goblets that
never knew human touch were raised to lips that curved in unfamiliar smiles.
Great lords of some long-dead race supped at banquet before his eyes Strange
they were, yet also familiar Humanlike, but with elven ears and eyes. Tall like
the elvenfolk, but broader of shoulder and thicker of arm. The women were
beautiful, but in alien ways.
The dream took shape and substance, more vivid than any he had
experienced so far. Tomas strained to hear the faint laughter, the sound of
alien music, and the spoken words of these people.
He was ripped from his reverie by Dolgan’s voice. “Will you take
some food, laddie?” He could answer with only a part of his awareness, as he
rose and crossed the space between them to take the offered bowl of meat stew.
When his hand touched the bowl, the vision vanished, and he shook his head to
clear it.
“Are you all right, Tomas?”
Slowly sitting, Tomas looked at his friend for a moment. “I’m not
sure,” he said hesitantly. “There is something. I . . . I’m not really sure.
Just tired, I guess.”
Dolgan looked at the boy. The ravages of battle were showing on his
young face. Already he looked less the boy and more the man. But beyond the
normal hardening of character expected from battle, something else was
occurring in Tomas. Dolgan had not as yet decided if the change was fully for
good or ill—or if it could even be considered in those terms Six months of
watching Tomas was not long enough to come to any sort of conclusion.
Since donning the dragon’s gift armor, Tomas had become a fighter of
legendary capabilities. And the boy . . . no, the young man, was taking on
weight, even though food was often scarce. It was as if something were acting
to bring him to a growth sufficient to fit the cut of the armor. And his
features were gaining a strange cast. His nose had taken on a slightly more
angular shape, more finely chiseled than before. His brows had become more
arched, his eyes deeper set. He was still Tomas, but Tomas with a slight change
in appearance, as if wearing someone else’s expression.
Dolgan pulled long on his pipe and looked at the white tabard Tomas
wore. Seven times in battle, and free from stain. Dirt, blood, and all other
manner of contamination were refused purchase in its fabric. And the device of
the golden dragon gleamed as brightly as when they had first found it. So it
was also with the shield he wore in battle. Many times struck, still it was
free of any scar. The dwarves were circumspect in this matter, for their race
had long ago used magic in the fashioning of weapons of power. But this was
something else. They would wait and see what it brought before they would
judge.
As they finished their meager meal, one of the guards on the edge of
camp came into the clearing before the cave. “Someone comes.”
The dwarves quickly armed themselves and stood ready. Instead of the
strangely armored Tsurani soldiers, a single man dressed in the dark grey cloak
and tunic of a Natalese Ranger appeared. He walked directly into the center of
the clearing and announced in a voice hoarse from days running through wet
forests, “Hail, Dolgan of the Grey Towers.”
Dolgan stepped forward. “Hail, Grimsworth of Natal.”
The rangers were serving as scouts and runners since the invaders
had taken the Free City of Wahnor. The man walked into the cave mouth and sat
down. He was given a bowl of stew, and Dolgan asked, “What news?”
“None good, I’m afraid,” he said, between mouthfuls of stew. “The
invaders hold a hard front from out of the valley, northeast toward LaMut.
Walinor has been reinforced with fresh troops from their homeland and stands
like a knife between the Free Cities and the Kingdom. They had thrice raided
the main camp of the Kingdom’s host when I left two weeks ago, probably again
since. They harry patrols from Crydee. I am to tell you that it is believed they
will start a drive into your area soon.”
Dolgan looked perplexed. “Why do the dukes think that? Our lookouts
have seen no increase in the aliens’ activity in these parts. Every patrol they
send out we attack. If anything, they seem to be leaving us alone.”
“I am not sure. I heard that the magician Kulgan thinks the Tsurani
seek metals from your mines, though why I do not know. In any event, this is
what the dukes have said. They think there will be an assault on the mine
entrances in the valley. I am to tell you that new Tsurani troops may be coming
into the southern end of the valley, for there has been no new major assault in
the north, only the small raids.
“Now you must do what you think is best.” So saying, he turned his
full attention to the stew.
Dolgan thought. “Tell me, Grimsworth, what news of the elvenfolk?”
“Little. Since the aliens have invaded the southern part of the
elven forests, we are cut off. The last elven runner came through over a week
before I left. At last word, they had stopped the barbarians at the fords of
the river Crydee where it passes through the forest.
“There are also rumors of alien creatures fighting with the
invaders. But as far as I know, only a few burned-out village folk have seen
these creatures, so I wouldn’t place too much stock in what they say.
“There is one interesting piece of news, though. It seems a patrol
from Yabon made an unusually broad sweep to the edge of the Lake of the Sky. On
the shore they found what was left of some Tsurani and a band of goblins raiding
south from the Northlands. At least we don’t have to worry about the northern
borders. Perhaps we could arrange for them to battle each other for a while and
leave us alone.”
“Or take up common cause against us,” said Dolgan. “Still, I think
that unlikely, as the goblins tend to kill first and negotiate later.”
Grimsworth chuckled deeply. “It is somehow meet that these two
bloody-handed folk should run across one another.”
Dolgan nodded. He hoped Grimsworth correct, but was disquieted by
the thought of the Nations of the North—as the dwarves thought of the
Northlands—joining the fray.
Grimsworth wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. “I will stay
this night only, for if I am to pass safely through their lines, I must move
quickly. They step up their patrols to the coast, cutting off Crydee for days
at a time. I will spend some time there, then start the long run for the dukes’
camp.”
“Will you return?” asked Dolgan.
The ranger smiled, his grin showing up brightly against his dark
skin “Perhaps, if the gods are obliging. If not I, then one of my brothers. It
might be that you’ll see Long Leon, for he was sent to Elvandar and, if he is
a’right, may be bound here with missives from the Lady Aglaranna. It would be
good to know how the elvenfolk fare.” Tomas’s head came up from his musing at
the mention of the Elf Queen’s name.
Dolgan puffed on his pipe and nodded. Grimsworth turned to Tomas and
spoke directly to him for the first time. “I bring you a message from Lord
Borric, Tomas.” It had been Grimsworth who earned the first messages from the
dwarves along with the news that Tomas was alive and well. Tomas had wanted to
return to the Kingdom forces with Grimsworth, but the Natalese Ranger had
refused to have him along, citing his need to travel fast and quietly.
Grimsworth continued his message. “The Duke rejoices at your good fortune and
your good health. But he sends grave news as well. Your friend Pug fell in the
first raid into the Tsurani camp and was taken by them. Lord Borric shares your
loss.”
Tomas stood without a word and moved deep into the cave. He sat in
the rear, for a few moments as still as the rock around him, then a faint
trembling started in his shoulders. It grew in seventy until he shook
violently, teeth chattering as if from bitter cold. Then tears came unbidden to
his cheeks, and he felt a hot pain rush up from his bowels to his throat,
constricting his chest. Without a sound he gasped for breath, and great silent
sobs shook him. As the pain grew near-unbearable, a seed of cold fury formed in
the center of his being, pushing upward, displacing the hot pain of grief.
Dolgan, Grimsworth, and the rest looked up when Tomas re-entered the
light of the fire. “Would you please tell the Duke that I thank him for
thinking of me?” he asked the ranger.
Grimsworth nodded. “Yes, I will, lad. I think it would be a’right for
you to make the run to Crydee, if you wish to return home. I’m sure Prince Lyam
could use your sword.”
Tomas thought. It would be good to see home again, but at the keep
he would be just another apprentice, even if he did bear arms. They would let
him fight if the keep was attacked, but they certainly wouldn’t let him
participate in raids.
“Thank you, Grimsworth, but I will remain. There is much yet to be
done here, and I would be a part of it. I would ask you to give word to my
mother and father that I am well enough and think of them.” Sitting down, he
added, “If it is my destiny to return to Crydee, I shall.”
Grimsworth looked hard at Tomas, seemed about to speak, then noticed
a slight shake of Dolgan’s head. More than any other humans in the West, the Rangers
of Natal were sensitive to the ways of the elves and dwarves. Something was
occurring here that Dolgan thought best left unexplored for the time being, and
Grimsworth would bow before the dwarven chief’s wisdom.
As soon as the meal was finished, guards were posted, and the rest
made ready for sleep. As the fire died down, Tomas could hear the faint sounds
of inhuman music and again saw the shadows dance. Before sleep claimed him, he
plainly saw one figure stand apart from the rest, a tall warrior, cruel of face
and powerful in countenance, dressed in a white tabard emblazoned with a golden
dragon.
Tomas stood with his back pressed against the wall of the passage.
He smiled, a cruel and terrible smile. His eyes were wide, whites vivid around
pale blue irises. His body was nearly rigid as he stood motionless. His fingers
clenched and unclenched on the hilt of his sword of white and gold.
Images shimmered before his eyes, tall, graceful people who rode on
the backs of dragons and lived in halls deep in the earth. Music could be
faintly heard in his mind’s ear, and strange tongues. The long-dead race called
to him, a mighty race who had fashioned this armor, never meant for human use.
More and more the visions came. He could keep his mind free of them
most times, but when he felt the battle lust rise, as it did now, the images
took on dimension, color, and sound. He would strain to hear the words. They
efame faintly, and he could almost understand them.
He shook his head, bringing himself back to the present. He looked
around the dark passage, no longer surprised at his ability to see in the dark.
He signaled across the intersecting tunnel to Dolgan, who stood quietly waiting
in position with his men forty feet away and acknowledged him with a wave. On
each side of the large tunnel sixty dwarves waited to spring the trap. They
waited for the handful of dwarves who were running before a Tsurani force,
leading the enemy into the trap.
The sound of footfalls pounding down the tunnel alerted them. In a
moment it was joined by the sounds of clashing arms. Tomas tensed. Several
dwarves came into view, moving backward as they fought a rearward action.
Passing the side tunnels, the fighting dwarves gave no indication they were
aware of their brethren waiting on either side.
As soon as the first Tsurani warriors were past, Tomas cried, “Now!”
and leaped forward. Suddenly the tunnel was filled with turning, slashing
bodies. The Tsurani were mostly armed with broadswords, ill fitted for close
quarters, and the dwarves wielded hand axes and hammers with expertise Tomas
laid about himself, and several bodies fell. The flickering Tsurani torches
threw mad, dancing shadows high on the passage walls, creating confusion for
the eye.
A shout from the rear of the Tsurani force sounded, and the aliens
began to back down the tunnel. Those with shields came to the fore, forming a
wall over which the swordsmen could strike. The dwarves were unable to reach
far enough to do any damage. Each time a dwarf attacked, the shield wall would stand,
and the attacker would be answered by sword blows from behind the shield. In
short spurts the enemy backed away.
Tomas moved to the fore, since his reach was long enough to strike
at the shield holders. He felled two, but as quickly as each dropped, another
took his place. Still the dwarves pressed them and they retreated.
They reached a glory hole, entering it at the lowest level, and the
Tsurani rapidly took position in the center of the great cavern, forming a
rough circle of shields. The dwarves paused for a moment, then charged the
position.
A faint flicker of movement caught Tomas’s eye, and he looked up to
one of the ledges above. In the darkness of the mine it was impossible to see
anything clearly, but a sudden feeling alerted him. “Look to the rear!” he
shouted.
Most of the dwarves had broken through the shield wall and were too
busy to heed him, but a few close by stopped their attack and looked up One
standing next to Tomas cried, “From above!”
Black shapes came pouring from above, seeming to crawl down the face
of the rock. Other, human, shapes came running down the paths from the higher
levels. Lights appeared above as Tsurani warriors on the upper levels opened
shuttered lamps and lit torches.
Tomas stopped in shock. Directly behind the few surviving Tsurani in
the center of the cavern he could see creatures entering from every opening
above, like a herd of ants, which they closely resembled. Unlike ants, though,
they were upright from the center of their bodies, with humanlike arms bearing
weapons. Their faces, insectlike, had large multifaceted eyes but very
humanlike mouths. They moved with incredible speed, dodging forward to strike
at the dwarves, who, surprised though they were, responded without hesitation,
and the battle was joined.
The fray increased in intensity, and several times Tomas faced two
opponents, Tsurani, or monster, or both. The creatures were obviously
intelligent, for they fought in an organized manner, and their inhuman voices
could be heard crying out in the Tsurani tongue.
Tomas looked up after dispatching one of the creatures and saw a new
influx of warriors from above. “To me! To me!” he shouted, and the dwarves
started fighting toward him When most were close by, Dolgan could be heard
shouting, “Back, fall back! They are too many.”
The dwarves slowly began to move toward the tunnel they had entered
from, with its relative safety. There they could face a smaller number of
creatures and Tsurani and, they hoped, lose them in the mines. Seeing the
dwarves moving back, the Tsurani and their allies pressed the attack. Tomas saw
a large number of the creatures interpose themselves between the dwarves and
the escape route. He sprang forward and heard a strange war cry escape from his
lips, words he didn’t understand. His golden sword flashed, and with a shriek
one of the strange creatures fell. Another wielded a broadsword at him, and he
caught it on his shield. A lesser being’s arm would have been broken, but the
blow rang out on the white shield and the creature backed away, then struck
again.
Again he blocked it, and with a looping overhand swing struck
through its neck, severing head from body. It stiffened for a moment, then
collapsed at his feet. He leaped over its fallen body and landed before three
startled Tsurani warriors. One held two lanterns and the others were armed.
Before the man with the lanterns could drop them, Tomas jumped forward and
struck down the other two men. The third died trying to draw his sword.
Letting his shield hang on his arm, Tomas reached down and grabbed a
lantern. He turned and saw the dwarves scrambling over the bodies of the fallen
creatures he had killed. Several carried wounded comrades. A handful of
dwarves, with Dolgan at their head, held their enemies at bay while the others
made good their escape. The dwarves who carried wounded hurried past Tomas.
One, who had stayed behind in the tunnel during the fighting,
hastened forward when his comrades were obviously in retreat. Instead of
weapons he carried two bulging skins filled with liquid.
The rear guard was pressed back toward the escape tunnel, and twice
soldiers tried to circle to cut them off. Both times Tomas struck out, and they
fell. When Dolgan and his fighters stood atop the bodies of the fallen
monsters, Tomas yelled, “Be ready to jump.”
He took the two heavy skins from the dwarf. “Now!” he shouted Dolgan
and the others leaped back, and the Tsurani were left standing on the other
side of the corpses. Without hesitation, the dwarves sped up the tunnel while
Tomas threw the skins at the bodies. They had been earned carefully, for they
were fashioned to rupture on impact. Both contained naphtha, which the dwarves
had gathered from deep black pools under the mountain. It would burn without a
wick, as oil would not.
Tomas raised the lantern and smashed it in the midst of the pools of
volatile liquid. The Tsurani, hesitating only briefly, were moving forward as
the lantern burst. White heat exploded in the tunnel as the naphtha burst into
flame. The dwarves, blinded, could hear the screams of the Tsurani who had been
caught. When their vision recovered, they could see a single figure striding
down the tunnel. Tomas appeared black, outlined against the near-white flames.
When he reached them, Dolgan said, “They’ll be upon us when the
flames die.”
They quickly made their way through a series of tunnels and headed
back toward the exit on the western side of the mountains. After they had
traveled a short distance, Dolgan halted the party. He and several others stood
still, listening to the silence in the tunnels. One dropped to the floor and
placed his ear on the ground, but immediately jumped to his feet. “They come!
By the sound, hundreds of them, and the creatures too. They must be mounting a
major offensive.”
Dolgan took stock. Of the hundred and fifty dwarves who had begun
the ambush, only seventy or so stood here, and of these, twelve were injured.
It could be hoped that others had escaped through other passages, but for the
moment they were all in danger.
Dolgan acted quickly. “We must make for the forest.” He started to
trot along with the others following behind.
Tomas ran easily, but his mind reeled with images. In the heat of
battle they assaulted him, more vivid and clear than before. He could see the
bodies of his fallen enemies, yet they looked nothing like the Tsurani. He
could taste the blood of the fallen, the magic energies that came with him as
he drank from their open wounds in the ceremony of victory. He shook his head
to clear the images. What ceremony? he wondered.
Dolgan spoke, and Tomas forced his attention to the dwarf’s words.
“We must find another stronghold,” he said as they ran. “Perhaps it would be
best to try for Stone Mountain. Our villages here are safe, but we have no base
to fight from, for I think the Tsurani will have control of these mines soon.
Those creatures of theirs fight well in the dark, and if they have many of
them, they can ferret us out of the deeper passages.”
Tomas nodded, unable to speak. He was burning inside, a cold fire of
hatred for these Tsurani. They had savaged his homeland and taken his brother
in all but name, and now many dwarven friends lay dead under the mountain
because of them. His face was grim as he made a silent vow to destroy these
invaders, whatever the cost.
They moved cautiously through the trees, watching for signs of the
Tsurani. Three times in six days they had skirmished, and now the dwarves
numbered fifty-two. The more seriously wounded had been carried to the relative
safety of the high villages, where the Tsurani were unlikely to follow.
Now they approached the southern part of the elven forests. At first
they had tried to turn eastward toward the pass, seeking a way toward Stone
Mountain. The route was thick with Tsurani camps and patrols, and they had been
constantly turned northward. Finally it had been decided to try for Elvandar,
where they could find rest from the constant flight.
A scout returned from his position twenty yards ahead and said
softly, “A camp, at the ford.”
Dolgan considered. The dwarves were not swimmers, and they would
need to cross at a ford. It was likely the Tsurani would hold all the fords on
this side. They would have to find a place free of guards, if one existed.
Tomas looked around. It was nearly nightfall, and if they were to
sneak across the river this close to the Tsurani lines, it would best be done
in the dark Tomas whispered this to Dolgan, who nodded. He signaled the guard
to head off to the west of the espied camp, to find a likely looking place to
hole up.
After a short wait the guide returned with word of a thicket facing
a hollowed rock, where they could wait for nightfall. They hurried to the place
and found a boulder of granite extruding from the ground, twelve feet tall, and
broadening to a base twenty-five or thirty feet across. When they pulled back
the brush, they found a hollow in which they could tightly fit. It was only
twenty feet across, but it reached back under the rock shelf for over forty
feet, angling down When they were all safely tucked in, Dolgan observed, “This
must have been under the river at one time—see how it is worn smooth on the underside.
It is cramped, but we should be safe for a bit.”
Tomas barely heard, for he was once again fighting his battle
against the images, the waking dreams, as he thought of them. He closed his
eyes, and again the visions came, and the faint music.
***
The
victory had been swift, but Ashen-Shugar brooded. Something troubled the Ruler
of the Eagles’ Reaches. The blood of Algon-Kokoon, Tyrant of Wind Valley, was
still salty upon his lips, and his consorts were now Ashen-Shugar’s. Still
there was something lacking.
He studied the moredhel dancers, moving in perfect time with the
music for his amusement. That was as it should be. No, the lack was felt deep
within Ashen-Shugar.
Alengwan, one whom the elves called their Princess, and his latest
favorite, sat on the floor beside his throne, awaiting his pleasure. He barely
noticed her lovely face and her supple body, clothed in silken garments that
served to accent her beauty rather than conceal it.
“Art thou troubled, master?” she asked faintly, her terror of him as
thinly veiled as her body.
He glanced away. She had glimpsed his uncertainty, that earned her
death, but he would kill her later. Appetites of the flesh had fled lately,
both the pleasure of the bed and that of killing. Now he thought upon his
nameless feeling, that phantom emotion so strange within. Ashen-Shugar raised
his hand, and the dancers were on the floor, foreheads pressed to the stone.
The musicians had ceased playing in midnote, it seemed, and the cavern was
silent. With a flickering of his hand he dismissed them, and they fled out of
the great hall, past the mighty golden dragon, Shuruga, who patiently awaited
his master . . . .
“Tomas,” came the voice.
Tomas’s eyes opened with a snap. Dolgan had his hand upon the young
man’s arm. “It is time. Night has fallen. You’ve been asleep, laddie.”
Tomas shook his head to clear it, and the lingering images fled. He
felt a churning in his stomach as the last flickering vision of a warrior in
white and gold standing over the bloody body of an elven princess vanished.
With the others, he crawled out from under the overhanging rock, and
they set out once more toward the river. The forest was silent, even the night
birds seemingly cautious about revealing their whereabouts.
They reached the river without incident, save that they had to lie
hidden while a patrol of Tsurani passed. They followed the river, with a scout
in front. After a few minutes, the scout returned. “A sandbar crosses the
river.”
Dolgan nodded; the dwarves moved quietly forward and entered the
water in single file. Tomas waited with Dolgan while the others crossed.
When the last dwarf entered the water, an inquiring shout sounded
from farther up the bank. The dwarves froze. Tomas moved quickly forward and
surprised a Tsurani guard who was trying to peer through the gloom. The man
cried out as he was felled, and shouting erupted a short way off.
Tomas saw lantern light rapidly approaching him, turned, and ran. He
found Dolgan waiting on the bank and shouted, “Fly! They are upon us.”
Several dwarves stood indecisively as Tomas and Dolgan splashed into
the river. The water was cold, moving rapidly over the sandbar. Tomas had to
steady himself as he waded through. The water was only waist deep for him, but
the dwarves were covered nearly to their chins. They would never be able to
fight in the river.
As the first Tsurani guards leaped into the water, Tomas turned to
hold them off while the dwarves made good their escape. Two Tsurani attacked,
and he struck them both down. Several more jumped into the river, and he had
only a brief moment to see to the dwarves. They were almost at the opposite
bank, and he caught sight of Dolgan, helpless frustration clearly marked on his
face in the Tsurani lamplight.
Tomas struck out again at the Tsurani soldiers. Four or five were
trying to surround him, and the best he could manage was to keep them at bay.
Each time he tried for a kill, he would leave himself open from a different quarter.
The sound of new voices told him it was only a matter of moments
before he would be overwhelmed. He vowed to make them pay dearly and lashed out
at one man, splitting his shield and breaking his arm. The man went down with a
cry.
Tomas barely caught an answering blow on his shield when a whistling
sound sped past his ear, and a Tsurani guard fell screaming, a long arrow
protruding from his chest. The air was at once full of arrows. Several more
Tsurani fell, and the rest pulled back. Every soldier in the water died before
he could reach the shore.
A voice called out, “Quickly, man. They will answer in kind.” As if
to demonstrate the truth of the warning, an arrow sped past Tomas’s face from
the other direction. He hurried toward the safety of the opposite bank. A
Tsurani arrow struck him in the helm, and he stumbled. As he righted himself,
another took him in the leg. He pitched forward and felt the sandy soil of the
riverbank below him. Hands reached down and pulled him unceremoniously along.
A dizzy, swimming sensation swept over him, and he heard a voice
say, “They poison their arrows. We must . . .” The rest trailed away into
blackness.
***
Tomas
opened his eyes. For a moment he had no idea of where he was. He felt
light-headed and his mouth was dry. A face loomed over him, and a hand lifted
his head as water was placed at his lips. He drank deeply, feeling better
afterward. He turned his head a little and saw two men sitting close by. For a
moment he feared he had been captured, but then he saw that these men wore dark
green leather tunics.
“You have been very ill,” said the one who had given him water.
Tomas then realized these men were elves.
“Dolgan?” he croaked.
“The dwarves have been taken to council with our mistress. We could
not chance moving you, for fear of the poison. The outworlders have a venom
unknown to us, which kills rapidly. We treat it as best we can, but those
wounded die as often as not.”
He felt his strength returning slowly. “How long?”
“Three days. You have hovered near death since we fished you from
the river. We carried you as far as we dared.”
Tomas looked around and saw that he had been undressed and was lying
under a shelter fashioned from tree branches, a blanket over him. He smelled
food cooking over a fire and saw the pot the savory aroma came from. His host
noticed and signaled for a bowl to be brought over.
Tomas sat up, and his head swam for a moment. He was given a large
piece of bread and used it in place of a spoon. The food was delicious, and
every bite seemed to fill him with increasing strength. As he ate, he took
stock of the others sitting nearby. The two silent elves regarded him with
blank expressions. Only the speaker showed any signs of hospitality.
Tomas looked at him and said, “What of the enemy?”
The elf smiled. “The outworlders still fear to cross the river. Here
our magic is stronger, and they find themselves lost and confused. No
out-worlder has reached our shore and returned to the other side.”
Tomas nodded. When he finished eating, he felt surprisingly well. He
tried to stand and found he was only a little shaky. After a few steps, he
could feel the strength returning to his limbs, and that his leg was already
healed. He spent a few minutes stretching and working out the stiffness of
three days sleeping on the ground, then dressed.
“You’re Prince Calin. I remember you from the Duke’s court.”
Calin smiled in return. “And I you, Tomas of Crydee, though you have
changed much in a year’s time. These others are Galain and Algavins. If you
feel up to it, we can rejoin your friends at the court of the Queen.”
Tomas smiled. “Let’s go.”
They broke camp and set out. At first they moved slowly, giving
Tomas plenty of time to gain his wind, but after a while it was evident he was
remarkably fit in light of his recent brush with death.
Soon the four figures were running through the trees. Tomas, in
spite of his armor, kept pace. His hosts glanced questioningly at each other.
They ran most of the afternoon before stopping. Tomas looked around
the forest and said, “What a wonderful place.”
Galain said, “Most of your race would disagree, man. They find the
forest frightening, full of strange shapes and fearful sounds.”
Tomas laughed. “Most men lack imagination, or possess too much. The
forest is quiet and peaceful. It is the most peaceful place I think I have
known.”
The elves said nothing, but a look of mild surprise crossed Calin’s
face. “We had best continue, if we are to reach Elvandar before dark.”
As night fell, they reached a giant clearing Tomas stopped and stood
rooted by the sight before him. Across the clearing a huge city of trees rose
upward. Gigantic trees, dwarfing any oaks imagined, stood together. They were
linked by gracefully arching bridges of branches, flat across the tops, on
which elves could be seen crossing from bole to bole. Tomas looked up and saw
the trunks rise until they were lost in a sea of leaves and branches. The
leaves were deep green, but here and there a tree with golden, silver, or even
white foliage could be seen, sparkling with lights. A soft glow permeated the
entire area, and Tomas wondered if it ever became truly dark here.
Calin placed his hand on Tomas’s shoulder and simply said,
“Elvandar.”
They hurried across the clearing, and Tomas could see the elven tree
city was even larger than he had first imagined. It spread away on all sides
and must have been over a mile across. Tomas felt a thrill of wonder at this
magic place, a singular exaltation.
They reached a stairway, carved into the side of a tree, that wound
its way upward, into the branches. They started up the steps, and Tomas again
felt a sensation of joy, as if the mad frenzy that filled him during a battle
had a harmonious aspect of gentler nature.
Upward they climbed, and as they passed the large branches that
served as roadways for the elves, Tomas could see elven men and women on all
sides. Many of the men wore fighting leather like his guides, but many others
wore long, graceful robes or tunics of bright and rich colors. The women were
all beautiful, with their hair worn long and down, unlike the ladies of the
Duke’s court. Many had jewels woven into their tresses that sparkled when they
passed. All were tall and graceful.
They reached a gigantic branch and left the stairs. Calin began to
warn him about not looking down, for he knew humans had difficulty on the high
pathways, but Tomas stood near the edge, looking down with no sign of
discomfort or vertigo.
“This is a marvelous place,” he said. The three elves exchanged
questioning glances, but no words were spoken.
They set off again, and when they came to an intersection of
branches, the two elves turned off the path, leaving Tomas and Calin to travel
alone Deeper and deeper they moved, Tomas as surefooted on the branch road as
the elf, until they reached a large opening. Here a circle of trees formed a
central court for the Elf Queen. A hundred branches met and merged into a huge
platform. Aglaranna was sitting upon a wooden throne, surrounded by her court.
A single human, in the grey of a Natalese Ranger, stood near the Queen, his
black skin gleaming in the night glow. He was the tallest man Tomas had ever
seen, and the young man from Crydee knew this must be Long Leon, the ranger
Grimsworth had spoken of.
Calin led Tomas into the center of the clearing and presented him to
Queen Aglaranna. She showed slight surprise as she saw the figure of the young
man in white and gold, but quickly composed her features. In her rich voice she
welcomed Tomas to Elvandar, and bade him stay as long as he wished.
The court adjourned, and Dolgan came to where Tomas stood. “Well,
laddie, I am glad to see you recovered. It was an undecided issue when we left
you I hated to do so, but I think you understand. I was in need of getting word
on the fighting near Stone Mountain.”
Tomas nodded. “I understand. What news?”
Dolgan shook his head. “Bad, I fear. We are cut off from our
brethren. I think we will be staying with the elvenfolk for a while, and I have
little love for these heights.”
Tomas broke into open laughter at that. Dolgan smiled, for it was
the first time since the boy had donned the dragon’s armor he had heard the
sound.
16
RAID
Wagons groaned under heavy loads.
Whips cracked and wheels creaked as lumbering oxen pulled their
burdens down the road toward the beach. Arutha, Fannon, and Lyam rode before
soldiers protecting the wagons traveling between the castle and the shore.
Behind the wagons a ragged crowd of townspeople followed. Many carried bundles
or pulled carts, following the Duke’s sons toward the waiting ships.
They turned down the road that split off from the town road, and
Arutha’s gaze swept over the signs of destruction. The once-thriving town of
Crydee was now covered in an acrid blue haze. The sounds of hammering and
sawing rang through the morning air as workmen labored to repair what they
could of the damage.
The Tsurani had raided at sundown two days before, racing through
the town, overwhelming the few guards at their posts before an alarm was raised
by terrified women, old men, and children. The aliens had run riot through the
town, not pausing until they reached dockside, where they had fired three
ships, heavily damaging two. The damaged ships were already limping toward
Carse, while the undamaged ships in the harbor had moved down the coast to
their present location, north of Sailor’s Grief.
The Tsurani had put most of the buildings near the quay to the
torch, but while heavily damaged, they were repairable. The fire had spread
into the heart of town, resulting in the heaviest loss there. The Hall of the
Craftmasters, the two inns, and dozens of lesser buildings were now only
smoldering ruins. Blackened timbers, cracked roof tiles, and scorched stones
marked their locations. Fully one third of Crydee had burned before the fire
had been brought under control.
Arutha had stood on the wall, watching the hellish glow reflected on
the clouds above the town as the flames spread. Then at first light he had led
the garrison out, finding the Tsurani already vanished into the forests.
Arutha still chafed at the memory. Fannon had advised Lyam not to
allow the garrison out until dawn—fearing it was a ruse to get the castle gates
open or to lure the garrison into the woods where a larger force waited in
ambush—and Lyam had acceded to the old Swordmaster’s request. Arutha was sure
he could have prevented much of the damage had he been allowed to rout the
Tsurani at once.
As he rode down the coast road, Arutha was lost in thought. Orders
arrived the day before instructing Lyam to leave Crydee. The Duke’s
aide-de-camp had been killed, and with the war beginning its third year this
spring, he wished Lyam to join him at his camp in Yabon. For reasons Arutha
didn’t understand, Duke Borric had not given command to him as expected;
instead Borric had named the Swordmaster garrison commander. But, thought the
younger Prince, at least Fannon will be less ready to order me about without
Lyam’s backing. He shook his head slightly in an attempt to dislodge his
irritation. He loved his brother, but wished Lyam had shown more willingness to
assert himself Since the beginning of the war, Lyam had commanded in Crydee,
but it had been Fannon making all the decisions. Now Fannon had the office as
well as the influence.
“Thoughtful, brother?”
Lyam had pulled his own horse up and was now beside Arutha, who
shook his head and smiled faintly. “Just envious of you.”
Lyam smiled his warmest at his younger brother. “I know you wish to
be going, but Father’s orders were clear. You’re needed here.”
“How needed can I be where every suggestion I make has been
ignored?”
Lyam’s expression was conciliatory. “You’re still disturbed by
Father’s decision to name Fannon commander of the garrison.”
Arutha looked hard at his brother. “I am now the age you were when
Father named you commander at Crydee. Father was full commander and second
Knight-General in the West at my age, only four years shy of being named King’s
Warden of the West. Grandfather trusted him enough to give him full command.”
“Father’s not Grandfather, Arutha. Remember, Grandfather grew up in
a time when we were still warring in Crydee, pacifying newly conquered lands.
He grew up in war. Father did not. He learned all his warcraft down in the Vale
of Dreams, against Kesh, not defending his own home as Grandfather had. Times
change.”
“How they change, brother,” Arutha said dryly “Grandfather, like his
father before him, would not have sat behind safe walls. In the two years since
the war began, we have not mounted one major offensive against the Tsurani. We
cannot continue letting them dictate the course of the war, or surely they will
prevail.”
Lyam regarded his brother with concern mirrored in his eyes.
“Arutha, I know you are restless to harry the enemy, but Fannon is right in saying
we dare not risk the garrison. We must hold here and protect what we have.”
Arutha cast a quick glance at the ragged townspeople behind. “I’ll
tell those who follow how well they’re protected.”
Lyam saw the bitterness in Arutha. “I know you blame me, brother.
Had I taken your advice, rather than Fannon’s . . .”
Arutha lost his harsh manner. “It is not your doing,” he conceded
“Old Fannon is simply cautious. He also is of the opinion a soldier’s worth is
measured by the grey in his beard. I am still only the Duke’s boy. I fear my
opinions from now on will receive short shrift.”
“Curb thy impatience, youngster,” he said in mock seriousness.
“Perhaps between your boldness and Fannon’s caution, a safe middle course will
be followed.” Lyam laughed.
Arutha had always found his brother’s laughter infectious and
couldn’t repress a grin. “Perhaps, Lyam,” he said with a laugh.
They came to the beach where longboats waited to haul the refugees
out to the ships anchored offshore. The captains would not return to the
quayside until they were assured their ships would not again come under attack,
so the fleeing townspeople were forced to walk through the surf to board the
boats. Men and women began to wade to the boats, bundles of belongings and
small children held safely overhead. Older children swam playfully, turning the
event into sport. There were many tearful partings, for most of the townsmen
were remaining to rebuild their burned homes and serve as levies in the dukes’
army. The women, children, and old men who were leaving would be carried down
the coast to Tulan, the southernmost town in the Duchy, as yet untroubled by
either the Tsurani or the rampaging Dark Brothers in the Green Heart.
Lyam and Arutha dismounted, and a soldier took their horses. The
brothers watched as soldiers carefully loaded crates of messenger pigeons onto
the sole longboat pulled up on shore. The birds would be shipped through the
Straits of Darkness to the dukes’ camp Pigeons trained to fly to the camp were
now on their way to Crydee, and with their arrival some of the responsibility
for carrying information to and from the dukes’ camp would be lifted from
Martin Longbow’s trackers and the Natalese Rangers. This was the first year
mature pigeons raised in the camp—necessary for them to develop the homing
instinct—were available.
Soon the baggage and refugees were loaded, and it was time for Lyam
to depart. Fannon bid him a stiff and formal farewell, but it was apparent from
his controlled manner that the old Swordmaster felt concern for the Duke’s
older son. With no family of his own, Fannon had been something of an uncle to
the boys when they were growing, personally instructing them in swordsmanship,
the maintenance of armor, and the theories of warcraft. He maintained his
formal pose, but both brothers could see the genuine affection there.
When Fannon left, the brothers embraced. Lyam said, “Take care of
Fannon.” Arutha looked surprised. Lyam grinned and said, “I’d not care to think
what would happen here should Father pass you over once more and name Algon
commander of the garrison.”
Arutha groaned, then laughed with his brother. As Horsemaster, Algon
was technically second-in-command behind Fannon. All in the castle shared
genuine affection for the man, and deep respect for his vast knowledge of
horses, but everyone conceded his general lack of knowledge about anything
besides horses. After two years of warfare, he still resisted the idea the
invaders came from another world, an attitude that caused Tully no end of
irritation.
Lyam moved into the water, where two sailors held the longboat for
him. Over his shoulder he shouted, “And take care of our sister, Arutha.”
Arutha said he would. Lyam leaped into the longboat, next to the
precious pigeons, and the boat was pushed away from shore. Arutha watched as
the boat dwindled into the distance.
Arutha walked slowly back to where a soldier held his mount. He
paused to stare down the beach. To the south, the high bluffs reared, dominated
by Sailor’s Grief, which stood upthrust against the morning sky. Arutha
silently cursed the day the Tsurani ship crashed against those rocks.
Carline stood atop the southern tower of the keep, watching the
horizon, gathering her cloak around her against the sea breeze. She had stayed
at the castle, bidding Lyam good-bye earlier, not wishing to ride to the beach.
She preferred that her fears not becloud Lyam’s happiness at joining their
father in the dukes’ camp. Many times over the last two years she had chided
herself over such feelings. Her men were soldiers, all trained since boyhood
for war. But since word had reached Crydee of Pug’s capture, she had remained
afraid for them.
A feminine clearing of the throat made Carline turn. Lady Glynis,
the Princess’s companion for the last four years, smiled slightly and indicated
with a nod of her head the newcomer who appeared at the trapdoor leading down
into the tower.
Roland emerged from the doorway in the floor. The last two years had
added to his growth, and now he stood as tall as Arutha. He was still thin, but
his boyish features were resolving into those of a man.
He bowed and said, “Highness.”
Carline acknowledged the greeting with a nod and gestured that Lady
Glynis should leave them alone. Glynis fled down the stairway into the tower.
Softly Carline said, “You did not ride to the beach with Lyam?”
“No, Highness.”
“You spoke with him before he left?”
Roland turned his gaze to the far horizon. “Yes, Highness, though I
must confess to a foul humor at his going.”
Carline nodded understanding. “Because you have to stay.”
He spoke with bitterness, “Yes, Highness.”
Carline said gently, “Why so formal, Roland?”
Roland looked at the Princess, seventeen years old just this last
Midsummer’s Day. No longer a petulant little girl given to outbursts of temper,
she was changing into a beautiful young woman of thoughtful introspection. Few
in the castle were unaware of the many nights’ sobbing that issued from
Carline’s suite after news of Pug had reached the castle. After nearly a week
of solitude, Carline had emerged a changed person, more subdued, less willful.
There was little outward to show how Carline felt, but Roland knew she carried
a scar.
After a moment of silence, Roland said, “Highness, when . . .” He
halted, then said, “It is of no consequence.”
Carline placed her hand upon his arm. “Roland, whatever else, we
have always been friends.”
“It pleases me to think that is true.”
“Then tell me, why has a wall grown between us?”
Roland sighed, and there was none of his usual roguish humor in his
answer. “If there has, Carline, it is not of my fashioning.”
A spark of the girl’s former self sprang into being, and with a
temperamental edge to her voice she said, “Am I, then, the architect of this
estrangement?”
Anger erupted in Roland’s voice. “Aye, Carline!” He ran his hand
through his wavy brown hair and said, “Do you remember the day I fought with
Pug? The very day before he left.”
At the mention of Pug’s name she tensed. Stiffly she said, “Yes, I
remember.”
“Well, it was a silly thing, a boys’ thing, that fight. I told him
should he ever cause you any hurt, I’d thrash him. Did he tell you that?”
Moisture came unbidden to her eyes. Softly she said, “No, he never
mentioned it.”
Roland looked at the beautiful face he had loved for years and said,
“At least then I knew my rival.” He lowered his voice, the anger slipping away.
“I like to think then, near the end, he and I were fast friends. Still, I vowed
I’d never stop my attempts to change your heart.”
Shivering, Carline drew her cloak about her, though the day was not
that cool She felt conflicting emotions within, confusing emotions. Trembling,
she said, “Why did you stop, Roland?”
Sudden harsh anger burst within Roland. For the first time he lost
his mask of wit and manners before the Princess. “Because I can’t contend with
a memory, Carline.” Her eyes opened wide, and tears welled up and ran down her
cheeks. “Another man of flesh I can face, but this shade from the past I cannot
grapple with.” Hot anger exploded into words “He’s dead, Carline. I wish it
were not so; he was my friend and I miss him, but I’ve let him go. Pug is dead.
Until you grant that this is true, you are living with a false hope.”
She put her hand to her mouth, palm outward, her eyes regarding him
in wordless denial. Abruptly she turned and fled down the stairs.
Alone, Roland leaned his elbows on the cold stones of the tower
wall. Holding his head in his hands, he said, “Oh, what a fool I have become!”
“Patrol!”
shouted the guard from the wall of the castle. Arutha and Roland turned from
where they watched soldiers giving instructions to levies from the outlying
villages.
They reached the gate, and the patrol came riding slowly in, a dozen
dirty, weary riders, with Martin Longbow and two other trackers walking beside.
Arutha greeted the Huntmaster and then said, “What have you there?”
He indicated the three men in short grey robes who stood between the
line of horsemen. “Prisoners, Highness,” answered the hunter, leaning on his
bow.
Arutha dismissed the tired riders as other guards came to take
position around the prisoners. Arutha walked to where they waited, and when he
came within touching distance, all three fell to their knees, putting their
foreheads to the dirt.
Arutha raised his eyebrows in surprise at the display. “I have never
seen such as these.”
Longbow nodded in agreement. “They wear no armor, and they didn’t
give fight or run when we found them in the woods. They did as you see now,
only then they babbled like fishwives.”
Arutha said to Roland, “Fetch Father Tully. He may be able to make
something of their tongue.” Roland hurried off to find the priest. Longbow
dismissed his two trackers, who headed for the kitchen. A guard was dispatched
to find Swordmaster Fannon and inform him of the captives.
A few minutes later Roland returned with Father Tully. The old
priest of Astalon was dressed in a deep blue, nearly black, robe, and upon
catching a glimpse of him, the three prisoners set up a babble of whispers.
When Tully glanced in their direction, they fell completely silent. Arutha
looked at Longbow in surprise.
Tully said, “What have we here?”
“Prisoners,” said Arutha. “As you are the only man here to have had
some dealings with their language, I thought you might get something out of
them.”
“I remember little from my mind contact with the Tsurani Xomich, but
I can try.” The priest spoke a few halting words, which resulted in a confusion
as all three prisoners spoke at once. The centermost snapped at his companions,
who fell silent. He was short, as were the others, but powerfully built. His
hair was brown, and his skin swarthy, but his eyes were a startling green. He
spoke slowly to Tully, his manner somehow less deferential than his
companions’.
Tully shook his head. “I can’t be certain, but I think he wishes to
know if I am a Great One of this world.”
“Great One?” asked Arutha.
“The dying soldier was in awe of the man aboard ship he called
‘Great One.’ I think it was a title rather than a specific individual. Perhaps
Kulgan was correct in his suspicion these people hold their magicians or
priests in awe.”
“Who are these men?” asked the Prince.
Tully spoke to them again in halting words. The man in the center
spoke slowly, but after a moment Tully cut him off with a wave of his hand. To
Arutha he said, “These are slaves.”
“Slaves?” Until now there had been no contact with any Tsurani
except warriors. It was something of a revelation to find they practiced
slavery. While not unknown in the Kingdom, slavery was not widespread and was
limited to convicted felons. Along the Far Coast, it was nearly nonexistent.
Arutha found the idea strange and repugnant. Men might be born to low station,
but even the lowliest serf had rights the nobility were obligated to respect
and protect. Slaves were property. With a sudden disgust, Arutha said, “Tell
them to get up, for mercy’s sake.”
Tully spoke and the men slowly rose, the two on the flanks looking
about like frightened children. The other stood calmly, eyes only slightly
downcast. Again Tully questioned the man, finding his understanding of their
language returning.
The centermost man spoke at length, and when he was done Tully said,
“They were assigned to work in the enclaves near the river. They say their camp
was overrun by the forest people—he refers to the elves, I think—and the short
ones.”
“Dwarves, no doubt,” added Longbow with a grin.
Tully threw him a withering look. The rangy forester simply
continued to smile. Martin was one of the few young men of the castle never
intimidated by the old cleric, even before becoming one of the Duke’s staff.
“As I was saying,” continued the priest, “the elves and dwarves
overran their camp. They fled, fearing they would be killed. They wandered in
the woods for days until the patrol picked them up this morning.”
Arutha said, “This fellow in the center seems a bit different from
the others. Ask why this is so.”
Tully spoke slowly to the man, who answered with little inflection
in his tones. When he was done, Tully spoke with some surprise “He says his
name is Tchakachakalla. He was once a Tsurani officer!”
Arutha said, “This may prove most fortunate. If he’ll cooperate, we
may finally learn some things about the enemy.”
Swordmaster Fannon appeared from the keep and hurried to where
Arutha was questioning the prisoners. The commander of the Crydee garrison
said, “What have you here?”
Arutha explained as much as he knew about the prisoners, and when he
was finished, Fannon said, “Good, continue with the questioning.”
Arutha said to Tully, “Ask him how he came to be a slave.”
Without sign of embarrassment, Tchakachakalla told his story. When
he was done, Tully stood shaking his head. “He was a Strike Leader. It may take
some time to puzzle out what his rank was equivalent to in our armies, but I
gather he was at least a Knight-Lieutenant. He says his men broke in one of the
early battles and his ‘house’ lost much honor. He wasn’t given permission to
take his own life by someone he calls the Warchief. Instead he was made a slave
to expiate the shame of his command.”
Roland whistled low. “His men fled and he was held responsible.”
Longbow said, “There’s been more than one earl who’s bollixed a
command and found himself ordered by his Duke to serve with one of the Border
Barons along the Northern Marches.”
Tully shot Martin and Roland a black look. “If you are finished?” He
addressed Arutha and Fannon: “From what he said, it is clear he was stripped of
everything. He may prove of use to us.”
Fannon said, “This may be some trick I don’t like his looks.”
The man’s head came up, and he fixed Fannon with a narrow gaze
Martin’s mouth fell open. “By Kilian! I think he understands what you said.”
Fannon stood directly before Tchakachakalla “Do you understand me?”
“Little, master.” His accent was thick, and he spoke with a slow
singsong tone alien to the King’s Tongue. “Many Kingdom slaves on Kelewan. Know
little King’s Tongue.”
Fannon said, “Why didn’t you speak before?”
Again without any show of emotion, he answered, “Not ordered Slave
obey. Not . . .” He turned to Tully and spoke a few words.
Tully said, “He says it isn’t a slave’s place to show initiative.”
Arutha said, “Tully, do you think he can be trusted?”
“I don’t know. His story is strange, but they are a strange people
by our standards. My mind contact with the dying soldier showed me much I still
don’t understand.” Tully spoke to the man.
To Arutha the Tsurani said, “Tchakachakalla tell.” Fighting for
words, he said, “I Wedewayo. My house, family. My clan Hunzan Old, much honor.
Now slave. No house, no clan, no Tsuranuanni. No honor Slave obey.”
Arutha said, “I think I understand If you go back to the Tsurani,
what would happen to you?”
Tchakachakalla said, “Be slave, maybe. Be killed, maybe. All same.”
“And if you stay here?”
“Be slave, be killed?” He shrugged, showing little concern.
Arutha said, slowly, “We keep no slaves. What would you do if we set
you free?”
A flicker of some emotion passed over the slave’s face, and he
turned to Tully and spoke rapidly. Tully translated. “He says such a thing is
not possible on his world. He asks if you can do such a thing.”
Arutha nodded. Tchakachakalla pointed to his companions. “They work.
They always slaves.”
“And you?” said Arutha.
Tchakachakalla looked hard at the Prince and spoke to Tully, never
taking his eyes from Arutha. Tully said, “He’s recounting his lineage. He says
he is Tchakachakalla, Strike Leader of the Wedewayo, of the Hunzan Clan. His
father was a Force Leader, and his great-grandfather Warchief of the Hunzan
Clan. He has fought honorably, and only once has he failed in his duty. Now he
is only a slave, with no family, no clan, no nation, and no honor. He asks if you
mean to give him back his honor.”
Arutha said, “If the Tsurani come, what will you do?”
Tchakachakalla indicated his companions. “These men slaves Tsurani
come, they do nothing. Wait. Go with . . .” He and Tully exchanged brief
remarks and Tully supplied him with the word he wished.” victors. They go with
victors.” He looked at Arutha, and his eyes came alive “You make Tchakachakalla
free Tchakachakalla be your man, lord. Your honor is Tchakachakalla’s honor.
Give life if you say. Fight Tsurani if you say.”
Fannon spoke. “Likely story that. More’s the odds he’s a spy.”
The barrel-chested Tsurani looked hard at Fannon, then with a sudden
motion stepped before the Swordmaster, and before anyone could react, pulled
Fannon’s knife from his belt.
Longbow had his own knife out an instant later, as Arutha’s sword
was clearing its scabbard. Roland and the other soldiers were only a moment
behind. The Tsurani made no threatening gesture, but simply flipped the knife,
reversing it and handing it to Fannon hilt first. “Master think Tchakachakalla
enemy? Master kill. Give warrior’s death, return honor.”
Arutha returned his sword to his scabbard and took the knife from
Tchakachakalla’s hand. Returning the knife to Fannon, he said, “No, we will not
kill you.” To Tully he said, “I think this man may prove useful. For now, my
inclination is to believe him.”
Fannon looked less than pleased “He may be a very clever spy, but
you’re right. There’s no harm if we keep a close watch on him. Father Tully,
why don’t you take these men to soldiers’ commons and see what you can learn
from them. I’ll be along shortly.”
Tully spoke to the three slaves and indicated they should follow.
The two timid slaves moved at once, but Tchakachakalla bent his knee before
Arutha. He spoke rapidly in the Tsurani tongue; Tully translated.
“He’s just demanded you either kill him or make him your man. He
asked how a man can be free with no house, clan, or honor. On his world such
men are called grey warriors and have no honor.”
Arutha said, “Our ways are not your ways. Here a man can be free
with no family or clan and still have honor.”
Tchakachakalla bent his head slightly while listening, then nodded.
He rose and said, “Tchakachakalla understand.” Then with a grin he added,
“Soon, I be your man. Good lord need good warrior. Tchakachakalla good
warrior.”
“Tully, take them along, and find out how much Tchak . . . Tchakal .
. .” Arutha laughed. “I can’t pronounce that mouthful.” To the slave he said,
“If you’re to serve here, you need a Kingdom name.”
The slave looked about and then gave a curt nod.
Longbow said, “Call him Charles. It’s as close a name as I can
imagine.”
Arutha said, “As good a name as any. From now on, you will be called
Charles.”
The newly named slave said, “Tcharles?” He shrugged and nodded.
Without another word he fell in beside Father Tully, who led the slaves toward
the soldiers’ commons.
Roland said, “What do you make of that?” as the three slaves
vanished around the corner.
Fannon said, “Time will tell if we’ve been duped.”
Longbow laughed “I’ll keep an eye on Charles, Swordmaster. He’s a
tough little fellow. He traveled at a good pace when we brought them in. Maybe
I’ll turn him into a tracker.”
Arutha interrupted “It will be some time before I’ll be comfortable
letting him outside the castle walls.”
Fannon let the matter drop. To Longbow he said, “Where did you find
them?”
“To the north, along the Clearbrook branch of the river. We were
following the signs of a large party of warriors heading for the coast.”
Fannon considered this. “Gardan leads another patrol near there.
Perhaps he’ll catch sight of them and we’ll find out what the bastards are up
to this year.” Without another word he walked back toward the keep.
Martin laughed, Arutha was surprised to hear him. “What in this
strikes you as funny, Huntmaster?”
Martin shook his head. “A little thing, Highness It’s the
Swordmaster himself He’ll not speak of it to anyone, but I wager he would give
all he owns to have your father back in command. He’s a good soldier, but he
dislikes the responsibility.”
Arutha regarded the retreating back of the Swordmaster, then said,
“I think you are right, Martin.” His voice carried a thoughtful note. “I have
been at odds with Fannon so much of late, I lost sight of the fact he never
requested this commission.”
Lowering his voice, Martin said, “A suggestion, Arutha.”
Arutha nodded Martin pointed to Fannon. “Should anything happen to
Fannon, name another Swordmaster quickly; do not wait for your father’s
consent. For if you wait, Algon will assume command, and he is a fool.”
Arutha stiffened at the Huntmaster’s presumption, while Roland tried
to silence Martin with a warning look. Arutha coldly said, “I thought you a
friend of the Horsemaster.”
Martin smiled, his eyes hinting at strange humor. “Aye, I am, as are
all in the castle. But anyone you ask will tell you the same: take his horses
away, and Algon is an indifferent thinker.”
Nettled by Martin’s manner, Arutha said, “And who should take his place?
The Huntmaster?”
Martin laughed, a sound of such open, clear amusement at the
thought, Arutha found himself less angry at his suggestion.
“I?” said the Huntmaster “Heaven forfend, Highness. I am a simple
hunter, no more. No, should the need come, name Gardan. He is by far the most
able soldier in Crydee.”
Arutha knew Martin was correct, but gave in to impatience. “Enough.
Fannon is well, and I trust will remain so.”
Martin nodded “May the gods preserve him . . . and us all. Please
excuse me, it was but a passing concern. Now, with Your Highness’s leave, I’ve
not had a hot meal in a week.”
Arutha indicated he could leave, and Martin walked away toward the
kitchen Roland said, “He is wrong on one account, Arutha.”
Arutha stood with his arms folded across his chest, watching Longbow
as he vanished around the corner. “What is that, Roland?”
“That man is much more than the simple hunter he pretends.”
Arutha was silent for a moment. “He is Something about Martin
Longbow has always made me uneasy, though I have never found fault with him.”
Roland laughed, and Arutha said, “Now something strikes you as
funny, Roland?”
Roland shrugged. “Only that many think you and he are much alike.”
Arutha turned a black gaze upon Roland, who shook his head. “It’s
often said we take offense most in what we see of ourselves in others It’s
true, Arutha. You both have that same cutting edge to your humor, almost
mocking, and neither of you suffers foolishness.” Roland’s voice became
serious. “There’s no mystery to it, I should think. You’re a great deal like
your father, and with Martin having no family, it follows he would pattern
himself after the Duke.”
Arutha became thoughtful. “Perhaps you’re right. But something else
troubles me about that man.” He left the thought unfinished and turned toward
the keep.
Roland fell into step beside the thoughtful Prince and wondered if
he had overstepped himself.
The night thundered. Ragged bolts of lightning shattered the
darkness as clouds rolled in from the west. Roland stood on the southern tower
watching the display. Since dinner his mood had been as dark as the western
sky. The day had not gone well. First he had felt troubled by his conversation
with Arutha by the gate. Then Carline had treated him at dinner with the same
stony silence he had endured since their meeting on this very tower two weeks
earlier Carline had seemed more subdued than usual, but Roland felt a stab of
anger at himself each time he chanced a glance in her direction. Roland could
still see the pain in the Princess’s eyes. “What a witless fool I am,” he said
aloud.
“Not a fool, Roland.”
Carline was standing a few paces away, looking toward the coming
storm. She clutched a shawl around her shoulders, though the air was temperate.
The thunder had masked her footfalls, and Roland said, “It is a poor night to
be upon the tower, my lady.”
She came to stand beside him and said, “Will it rain? These hot
nights bring thunder and lightning, but usually little rain.”
“It will rain. Where are your ladies?”
She indicated the tower door. “Upon the stairs. They fear the
lightning, and besides, I wished to speak with you alone.”
Roland said nothing, and Carline remained silent for a time. The
night was sundered with violent displays of energy tearing across the heavens,
followed by cracking booms of thunder. “When I was young,” she said at last,
“Father used to say on nights such as this the gods were sporting in the sky.”
Roland looked at her face, illuminated by the single lantern hanging
on the wall. “My father-told me they made war.”
She smiled “Roland, you spoke rightly on the day Lyam left. I have
been lost in my own grief, unable to see the truth. Pug would have been the
first to tell me that nothing is forever. That living in the past is foolish
and robs us of the future.” She lowered her head a little. “Perhaps it has
something to do with Father. When Mother died, he never fully recovered. I was
very young, but I can still remember how he was. He used to laugh a great deal
before she died. He was more like Lyam then. After . . . well, he became more
like Arutha. He’d laugh, but there’d be a hard edge to it, a bitterness.”
“As if somehow mocking?”
She nodded thoughtfully. “Yes, mocking. Why did you say that?”
“Something I noticed . . . something I pointed out to your brother
today. About Martin Longbow.”
She sighed. “Yes, I understand. Longbow is also like that.”
Softly Roland said, “Nevertheless, you did not come to speak of your
brother or Martin.”
“No, I came to tell you how sorry I am for the way I’ve acted. I’ve
been angry with you for two weeks, but I’d no right. You only said what was
true. I’ve treated you badly.”
Roland was surprised. “You’ve not treated me badly, Carline. I acted
the boor.”
“No, you have done nothing but be a friend to me, Roland. You told
me the truth, not what I wanted to hear. It must have been hard . . .
considering how you feel.” She looked out at the approaching storm. “When I
first heard of Pug’s capture, I thought the world ended.”
Trying to be understanding, Roland quoted, “ ‘The first love is the
difficult love.’ ”
Carline smiled at the aphorism. “That is what they say. And with
you?”
Roland mustered a carefree stance. “So it seems, Princess.”
She placed her hand upon his arm. “Neither of us is free to feel
other than as we do, Roland.”
His smile became sadder. “That is the truth, Carline.”
“Will you always be my good friend?”
There was a genuine note of concern in her voice that touched the
young Squire. She was trying to put matters right between them, but without the
guile she’d used when younger. Her honest attempt turned aside any frustration
he felt at her not returning his affections fully. “I will, Carline. I’ll
always be your good friend.”
She came into his arms and he held her close, her head against his
chest. Softly she said, “Father Tully says that some loves come unbidden like
winds from the sea, and others grow from the seeds of friendship.”
“I will hope for such a harvest, Carline. But should it not come,
still I will remain your good friend.”
They stood quietly together for a time, comforting each other for
different causes, but sharing a tenderness each had been denied for two years.
Each of them was lost in the comfort of the other’s nearness, and neither saw
what the lightning flashes revealed for brief instants. On the horizon, beating
for the harbor, came a ship.
The winds whipped the banners on the palisades of the castle walls
as rain began to fall. As water gathered in small pools, the lanterns cast
yellow reflections upward off the puddles to give an otherworldly look to the
two men standing on the wall.
A flash of lightning illuminated the sea, and a soldier said,
“There! Highness, did you see? Three points south of the Guardian Rocks.” He
extended his arm, pointing the way.
Arutha peered into the gloom, his brow furrowed in concentration. “I
can see nothing in this darkness. It’s blacker than a Guiswan priest’s soul out
there.” The soldier absently made a protective sign at the mention of the
killer god. “Any signal from the beacon tower?”
“None, Highness. Not by beacon, nor by messenger.”
Another flash of lightning illuminated the night, and Arutha saw the
ship outlined in the distance. He swore. “It will need the beacon at Longpoint
to reach the harbor safely.” Without another word, he ran down the stairs
leading to the courtyard. Near the gate he instructed a soldier to get his
horse and two riders to accompany him. As he stood there waiting, the rain
passed, leaving the night with a clean but warm, moist feeling. A few minutes
later, Fannon appeared from the direction of the soldiers’ commons. “What’s
this? Riding?”
Arutha said, “A ship makes for the harbor, and there is no beacon at
Longpoint.”
As a groom brought Arutha’s horse, followed by two mounted soldiers,
Fannon said, “You’d best be off, then. And tell those stone-crowned layabouts
at the lighthouse I’ll have words for them when they finish duty.”
Arutha had expected an argument from Fannon and felt relieved there
would be none. He mounted and the gates were opened. They rode through and
headed down the road toward town.
The brief rain had made the night rich with fresh odors: the flowers
along the road, and the scent of salt from the sea, soon masked by the acrid
odor of burned wood from the charred remnants of gutted buildings as they
neared town.
They sped past the quiet town, taking the road along the harbor. A
pair of guards stationed by the quayside hastily saluted when they saw the
Prince fly past. The shuttered buildings near the docks bore mute testimony to
those who had fled after the raid.
They left the town and rode out to the lighthouse, following a bend
in the road. Beyond the town they gained their first glimpse of the lighthouse,
upon a natural island of rock joined to the mainland by a long causeway of
stone, topped by a compacted dirt road. The horses’ hooves beat a dull tattoo
upon the dirt as they approached the tall tower. A lightning flash lit up the
sky, and the three riders could see the ship running under full sail toward the
harbor.
Shouting to the others, Arutha said, “They’ll pile upon the rocks
without a beacon.”
One of the guards shouted back, “Look, Highness. Someone signals!”
They reined in and saw figures near the base of the tower. A man dressed
in black stood swinging a shuttered lantern back and forth. It could be clearly
seen by those on the ship, but not by anyone upon the castle walls. In the dim
light, Arutha saw the still forms of Crydee soldiers lying on the ground. Four
men, also attired in black with head coverings that masked their faces, ran
toward the horsemen. Three drew long swords from back scabbards, while the
fourth aimed a bow. The soldier to Arutha’s right cried out as an arrow struck
him in the chest. Arutha charged his horse among the three who closed, knocking
over two while his sword slashed out, taking the third across the face. The man
fell without a sound.
The Prince wheeled around and saw his other companion also engaged,
hacking downward at the bowman. More men in black dashed from within the tower,
rushing forward silently.
Arutha’s horse screamed. He could see an arrow protruding from its
neck. As it collapsed beneath him, he freed his feet from the stirrups and
lifted his left leg over the dying animal’s neck, jumping free as it struck the
ground. He hit and rolled, coming to his feet before a short figure in black
with a long sword held high overhead with both hands. The long blade flashed
down, and Arutha jumped to his left, thrusting with his own sword. He took the
man in the chest, then yanked his sword free Like the others before, the man in
black fell without uttering a cry.
Another flash of lightning showed men rushing toward Arutha from the
tower. Arutha turned to order the remaining rider back to warn the castle, but
the shouted command died aborning when he saw the man pulled from his saddle by
swarming figures in black. Arutha dodged a blow from the first man to reach him
and ran past three startled figures. He smashed at the face of a fourth man
with his sword hilt, trying to knock the man aside. His only thought was to
open a pathway so he might flee to warn the castle. The struck man reeled back,
and Arutha attempted to jump past him. The falling man reached out with one
hand, catching Arutha’s leg as he sprang.
Arutha struck hard stone and felt hands frantically grab at his
right foot. He kicked backward with his left and took the man in the throat
with his boot. The sound of the man’s windpipe being crushed was followed by a
convulsion of movement.
Arutha came to his feet as another attacker reached him, others only
a step behind. Arutha sprang backward, trying to gain some distance. His boot
heel caught on a rock, and suddenly the world tilted crazily. He found himself
suspended in space for an instant, then his shoulders met rock as he bounced
down the side of the causeway. He hit several more rocks, and icy water closed
over him.
The shock of the water kept him from passing into unconsciousness.
Dazed, he reflexively held his breath, but had little wind. Without thinking,
he pushed upward and broke the surface with a loud, ragged gasp. Still groggy,
he nevertheless possessed enough wits to duck below the surface when arrows
struck the water near him. He couldn’t see a thing in the murky darkness of the
harbor, but clung to the rocks, pulling himself along more than swimming. He
moved back toward the tower end of the causeway, hoping the raiders would think
him headed in the other direction.
He quietly surfaced and blinked the salt water from his eyes. Peering
around the shelter of a large rock, he saw black figures searching the darkness
of the water. Arutha moved quietly, nestling himself into the rocks. Bruised
muscles and joints made him wince as he moved, but nothing seemed broken.
Another flash of lightning lit the harbor. Arutha could see the ship
speeding safely into Crydee harbor. It was a trader, but rigged for speed and
outfitted for war. Whoever piloted the ship was a mad genius, for he cleared
the rocks by a scant margin, heading straight for the quayside around the bend
of the causeway. Arutha could see men in the rigging, frantically reefing in
sails. Upon the deck a company of black-clad warriors stood with weapons ready.
Arutha turned his attention to the men on the causeway and saw one
motion silently to the others. They ran off in the direction of the town.
Ignoring the pain in his body, Arutha pulled himself up, negotiating the
slippery rocks to regain the dirt road of the causeway. Staggering a bit, he
came to his feet and looked off toward the town. There was still no sign of
trouble, but he knew it would erupt shortly.
Arutha half staggered, half ran to the lighthouse tower and forced
himself to climb the stairs. Twice he came close to blacking out, but he
reached the top of the tower. He saw the lookout lying dead near the signal
fire. The oil-soaked wood was protected from the elements by a hood that hung
suspended over it. The cold wind blew through the open windows on all sides of
the building.
Arutha found the dead sentry’s pouch and removed flint, steel, and
tinder. He opened the small door in the side of the metal hood, using his body
to shield the wood from the wind. The second spark he fired caught in the wood,
and a small flame sprang into existence. It quickly spread, and when it was
burning fully, Arutha pulled on the chain hoist that elevated the hood. With an
audible whoosh, the flames sprang fully to the ceiling as the wind struck the
fire.
Against one wall stood a jar of powder mixed by Kulgan against such
an emergency. Arutha fought down dizziness as he bent again to pull the knife
from the dead sentry’s belt. He used it to pry the lid off the jar and then
tossed the entire contents into the fire.
Instantly the flames turned bright crimson, a warning beacon none
could confuse with a normal light. Arutha turned toward the castle, standing
away from the window so as not to block the light. Brighter and brighter the
flames burned as Arutha found his mind going vague again. For a long moment
there was silence in the night, then suddenly an alarm sounded from the castle.
Arutha felt relief. The red beacon was the signal for reavers in the harbor,
and the castle garrison had been well drilled to meet such raids. Fannon might
be cautious with chasing Tsurani raiders into the woods at night, but a pirate
ship in his harbor was something he would not hesitate to answer.
Arutha staggered down the stairs, stopping to support himself at the
door His entire body hurt, and he was nearly overcome by dizziness. He drew a
deep breath and headed for the town. When he came to where his dead horse lay,
he looked about for his sword, then remembered he had carried it with him into
the harbor. He stumbled to where one of his riders lay, next to a black-clad bowman.
Arutha bent down to pick up the fallen soldier’s sword, nearly blacking out as
he stood. He held himself erect for a moment, fearing he might lose
consciousness if he moved, and waited as the ringing in his head subsided. He
slowly reached up and touched his head. One particularly sore spot, with an
angry lump forming, told him he had struck his head hard at least once as he
fell down the causeway. His fingers came away sticky with clotting blood.
Arutha began to walk to town, and as he moved, the ringing in his
head resumed. For a time he staggered, then he tried to force himself to run,
but after only three wobbly strides he resumed his clumsy walk. He hurried as
much as he could, rounding the bend in the road to come in sight of town. He
heard faint sounds of fighting. In the distance he could see the red light of
fires springing heavenward as buildings were put to the torch. Screams of men
and women sounded strangely remote and muted to Arutha’s ears.
He forced himself into a trot, and as he closed upon the town,
anticipation of fighting forced away much of the fog clouding his mind. He
turned along the harborside; with the dockside buildings burning, it was bright
as day, but no one was in sight. Against the quayside the raiders’ ship rested,
a gangway leading down to the dock. Arutha approached quietly, fearing guards
had been left to protect it. When he reached the gangway, all was quiet. The
sounds of fighting were distant, as if all the raiders had attacked deeply into
the town.
As he began to move away, a voice cried out from the ship, “Gods of
mercy! Is anyone there?” The voice was deep and powerful, but with a controlled
note of terror.
Arutha hurried up the gangway, sword ready. He stopped when he
reached the top. From the forward hatch cover he could see fire glowing
brightly belowdecks. He looked about: everywhere his eyes traveled he saw
seamen lying dead in their own blood. From the rear of the ship the voice cried
out, “You, man. If you’re a godsfearing man of the Kingdom, come help me.”
Arutha made his way amid the carnage and found a man sitting against
the starboard rail. He was large, broad-shouldered, and barrel-chested. He
could have been any age between twenty and forty. He held the side of an ample
stomach with his right hand, blood seeping through his fingers. Curly dark hair
swept back from a receding hairline, and he wore his black beard cut short. He
managed a weak smile as he pointed to a black-clothed figure lying nearby. “The
bastards killed my crew and fired my ship. That one made the mistake of not
killing me with the first blow.” He pointed at the section of a fallen yard
pinning his legs. “I can’t manage to budge that damned yard and hold my guts in
at the same time. If you’d lift it a bit, I think I can pull myself free.”
Arutha saw the problem: the man was pinned down at the short end of
the yard, tangled in a mass of ropes and blocks. He gripped the long end and
heaved upward, moving it only a few inches, but enough. With a half grunt, half
groan, the wounded man pulled his legs out. “I don’t think my legs are broken,
lad. Give me a hand up and we’ll see.”
Arutha gave him a hand and nearly lost his footing pulling the bulky
seaman to his feet. “Here, now,” said the wounded man. “You’re not in much of a
fighting trim yourself, are you?”
“I’ll be all right,” said Arutha, steadying the man while fighting
off an attack of nausea.
The seaman leaned upon Arutha. “We’d better hurry, then. The fire is
spreading.” With Arutha’s help, he negotiated the gangway. When they reached
the quayside, gasping for breath, the heat was becoming intense. The wounded
seaman gasped, “Keep going!”
Arutha nodded and slung the man’s arm over his shoulder. They set
off down the quay, staggering like a pair of drunken sailors on the town.
Suddenly there came a roar, and both men were slammed to the ground.
Arutha shook his dazed head and turned over. Behind him a great tower of flames
leaped skyward. The ship was a faintly seen black silhouette in the heart of
the blinding yellow-and-white column of fire. Waves of heat washed over them,
as if they were standing at the door of a giant oven.
Arutha managed to croak, “What was that?”
His companion gave out with an equally feeble reply: “Two hundred
barrels of Quegan fire oil.”
Arutha spoke in disbelief. “You didn’t say anything about fire oil
back aboard ship.”
“I didn’t want you getting excited. You looked half-gone already. I
figured we’d either get clear or we wouldn’t.”
Arutha tried to rise, but fell back. Suddenly he felt very
comfortable resting on the cool stone of the quay. He saw the fire begin to dim
before his eyes, then all went dark.
Arutha opened his eyes and saw blurred shapes over him. He blinked
and the images cleared. Carline hovered over his sleeping pallet, looking
anxiously on as Father Tully examined him. Behind Carline, Fannon watched, and
next to him stood an unfamiliar man. Then Arutha remembered him. “The man from
the ship.”
The man
grinned. “Amos Trask, lately master of the Sidonie until those
bast—begging the Princess’s pardon—those cursed land rats put her to the torch.
Standing here thanks to Your Highness.”
Tully interrupted. “How do you feel?”
Arutha sat up, finding his body a mass of dull aches. Carline placed
cushions behind her brother. “Battered, but I’ll survive.” His head swam a
little. “I’m a bit dizzy.”
Tully looked down his nose at Arutha’s head. “Small wonder. You took
a nasty crack. You may find yourself occasionally dizzy for a few days, but I
don’t think it is serious.”
Arutha looked at the Swordmaster. “How long?”
Fannon said, “A patrol brought you in last night. It’s morning.”
“The raid?”
Fannon shook his head sadly. “The town’s gutted. We managed to kill
them all, but there’s not a whole building left standing in Crydee. The fishing
village at the south end of the harbor is untouched, but otherwise everything
was lost.”
Carline fussed around near Arutha, tucking in covers and fluffing
his cushions. “You should rest.”
He said, “Right now, I’m hungry.”
She brought over a bowl of hot broth. He submitted to the light broth
in place of solid food, but refused to let her spoon-feed him. Between
mouthfuls he said, “Tell me what happened.”
Fannon looked disturbed. “It was the Tsurani.”
Arutha’s hand stopped, his spoon poised halfway between bowl and
mouth. “Tsurani? I thought they were reavers, from the Sunset Islands.”
“At first so did we, but after talking to Captain Trask here, and
the Tsurani slaves who are with us, we’ve pieced together a picture of what’s
happened.”
Tully picked up the narrative. “From the slaves’ story, these men
were specially chosen. They called it a death raid. They were selected to enter
the town, destroy as much as possible, then die without fleeing. They burned
the ship as much as a symbol of their commitment as to deny it to us. I gather
from what they say it’s considered something of a great honor.”
Arutha looked at Amos Trask. “How is it they managed to seize your
ship, Captain?”
“Ah, that is a bitter story, Highness.” He leaned to his right a
little, and Arutha remembered his wound.
“How is your side?”
Trask grinned, his dark eyes merry. “A messy wound, but not a
serious one. The good father put it right as new, Highness.”
Tully made a derisive sound. “That man should be in bed. He is more
seriously injured than you. He would not leave until he saw you were all
right.”
Trask ignored the comment. “I’ve had worse. We once had a fight with
a Quegan war galley turned rogue pirate and—well, that’s another story. You
asked about my ship.” He limped over closer to Arutha’s pallet. “We were
outward bound from Palanque with a load of weapons and fire oil. Considering
the situation here, I thought to find a ready market. We braved the straits
early in the season, stealing the march on other ships, or so we hoped.
“But while we made the passage early, we paid the price. A monstrous
storm blew up from the south, and we were driven for a week. When it was over,
we headed east, striking for the coast. I thought we’d have no trouble plotting
our position from landmarks. When we sighted land, not one aboard recognized a
single feature. As none of us had ever been north of Crydee, we judged rightly
we had gone farther than we had thought.
“We coasted by day, heaving to at night, for I’d not risk unknown
shoals and reefs. On the third night the Tsurani came swimming out from shore
like a pod of dolphins. Dived right under the ship, and came up on both sides.
By the time I was awake from the commotion on deck, there was a full half dozen
of the bast—begging the Princess’s pardon—them Tsurani swarming over me. It took
them only minutes to take my ship.” His shoulders sagged a bit. “It’s a hard
thing to lose one’s ship, Highness.”
He grimaced and Tully stood, making Trask sit on the stool next to
Arutha. Trask continued his story. “We couldn’t understand what they said; their
tongue is more suited for monkeys than men—I myself speak five civilized
languages and can do ‘talk-see’ in a dozen more. But as I was saying, we
couldn’t understand their gibberish, but they made their intentions clear
enough.
“They pored over my charts.” He grimaced in remembering. “I
purchased them legal and aboveboard from a retired captain down in Durbin.
Fifty years of experience in those charts, there were, from here in Crydee to
the farthest eastern shores of the Keshian Confederacy, and they were tossing
them around my cabin like so much old canvas until they found the ones they
wanted. They had some sailors among them, for as soon as they recognized the
charts, they made their plans known to me.
“Curse me for a freshwater fisherman, but we had heaved to only a
few miles north of the headlands above your lighthouse. If we’d sailed a little
longer, we would have been safely in Crydee harbor two days ago.”
Arutha and the others said nothing. Trask continued, “They went
through my cargo holds and started tossing things overboard, no matter what.
Over five hundred fine Quegan broadswords, over the side. Pikes, lances,
longbows, everything—I guess to keep any of it from reaching Crydee somehow.
They didn’t know what to do with the Quegan fire oil —the barrels would’ve
needed a dock hoist to get them out of the hold —so they left it alone. But
they made sure there wasn’t a weapon aboard that wasn’t in their hands. Then
some of the little land rats got dressed up in those black rags, swam ashore,
and started down the coast toward the lighthouse. While they were going, the
rest were praying, on their knees rocking back and forth, except for a few with
bows watching my crew. Then all of a sudden, about three hours after sundown,
they’re up and kicking my men around, pointing to the harbor on the map.
“We set sail and headed down the coast. The rest you know. I guess
they judged you would not expect an attack from seaward.”
Fannon said, “They judged correctly. Since their last raid we’ve
patrolled the forests heavily. They couldn’t get within a day’s march of Crydee
without our knowing. This way they caught us unawares.” The old Swordmaster
sounded tired and bitter. “Now the town is destroyed, and we’ve a courtyard
filled with terrified townsmen.”
Trask also sounded bitter. “They put most of their men ashore
quickly, but left two dozen to slaughter my men.” An expression of pain crossed
his face. “They were a hard lot, my lads, but on the whole good enough men. We
didn’t know what was happening until the first of my boys began to fall from
the spars with Tsurani arrows in them, waving like little flags as they hit the
water. We thought they were going to have us take them out again. My boys put
up a struggle then, you can bet. But they didn’t start soon enough.
Marlinspikes and belayin’ pins can’t stand up to men with swords and bows.”
Trask sighed deeply, the pain on his face as much from his story as
from his injury. “Thirty-five men. Dock rats, cutthroats, and murderers all,
but they were my crew. I was the only one allowed to go killing them. I cracked
the skull of the first Tsurani who came at me, took his sword, and killed
another. But the third one knocked it from my hand and ran me through.” He
barked a short, harsh-sounding laugh. “I broke his neck. I passed out for a
time. They must have thought me dead. The next I knew, the fires were going and
I started yelling. Then I saw you come up the gangway.”
Arutha said, “You’re a bold man, Amos Trask.”
A look of deep pain crossed the large man’s face. “Not bold enough
to keep my ship, Highness. Now I’m nothing more than another beached sailor.”
Tully said, “Enough for now. Arutha, you need rest.” He put his hand
on Amos Trask’s shoulder. “Captain, you’d do well to follow his example. Your
wound is more serious than you admit. I’ll take you to a room where you can
rest.”
The captain rose, and Arutha said, “Captain Trask.”
“Yes, Highness?”
“We have need of good men here in Crydee.”
A glimmer of humor crossed the seaman’s face. “I thank you,
Highness. Without a ship, though, I don’t know what use I could be.”
Arutha said, “Between Fannon and myself, we’ll find enough to keep
you busy.”
The man bowed slightly, restricted by his wounded side. He left with
Tully. Carline kissed Arutha on the cheek, saying, “Rest now.” She took away
the broth and was escorted from the room by Fannon. Arutha was asleep before
the door closed.
17
ATTACK
Carline lunged.
She thrust the point of her sword in a low line, aiming a killing
blow for the stomach. Roland barely avoided the thrust by a strong beat of his
blade, knocking hers out of line. He sprang back and for a moment was off
balance. Carline saw the hesitation and lunged forward again.
Roland
laughed as he suddenly leaped away, knocking her blade aside once more, then
stepping outside her guard. Quickly tossing his sword from right hand to left,
he reached out and caught her sword arm at the wrist, pulling her, in turn, off
balance. He swung her about, stepping behind her. He wrapped his left arm
around her waist, being careful of his sword edge, and pulled her tightly to
him. She struggled against his superior strength, but while he was behind her,
she could inflict no more than angry curses on him. “It was a trick! A loathsome
trick,” she spat.
She
kicked helplessly as he laughed. “Don’t overextend yourself that way, even when
it looks like a clean kill. You’ve good speed, but you press too much. Learn
patience. Wait for a clear opening, therf attack. You overbalance that much and
you’re dead.” He gave her a quick kiss on the cheek and pushed her
unceremoniously away.
Carline stumbled forward, regained her balance, and turned. “Rogue!
Make free with the royal person, will you?” She advanced on him, sword at the
ready, slowly circling to the left. With her father away, Carline had pestered
Arutha into allowing Roland to teach her swordplay. Her final argument had
been, “What do I do if the Tsurani enter the castle? Attack them with
embroidery needles?” Arutha had relented more from tiring of the constant
nagging than from any conviction she would have to use the weapon.
Suddenly Carline launched a furious attack in high line, forcing
Roland to retreat across the small court behind the keep. He found himself
backed against a low wall and waited. She lunged again, and he nimbly stepped
aside, the padded point of her rapier striking the wall an instant after he
vacated the spot. He jumped past her, playfully swatting her across the rump
with the flat of his blade as he took up position behind her. “And don’t lose
your temper, or you’ll lose your head as well.”
“Oh!” she cried, spinning to face him. Her expression was caught
halfway between anger and amusement. “You monster!”
Roland stood ready, a look of mock contrition on his face. She
measured the distance between them and began to advance slowly. She was wearing
tight-fitting men’s trousers—to the despair of Lady Marna— and a man’s tunic
cinched at the waist by her sword belt. In the last year her figure had filled
out, and the snug costume bordered on the scandalous. Now eighteen years of
age, there was nothing about Carline that was girlish. The specially crafted
boots she wore, black, ankle-high, carefully beat upon the ground as she
stepped the distance between them, and her long, lustrous dark hair was tied
into a single braid that swung freely about her shoulders.
Roland welcomed these sessions with her. They had rediscovered much
of their former playful fun in them, and Roland held the guarded hope her
feelings for him might be developing into something more than friendship. In
the year since Lyam’s departure they had practiced together, or had gone riding
when it was considered safe, near the castle. The time with her had nourished a
sense of companionship between them he had previously been unable to bring
about. While more serious than before, she had regained her spark and sense of
humor.
Roland stood lost in reflection a moment. The little-girl Princess,
spoiled and indulged, was gone. The child grown petulant and demanding from the
boredom of her role was now a thing of the past. In her stead was a young woman
of strong mind and will, tempered by harsh lessons.
Roland blinked and found himself with her sword’s point at his
throat. He playfully threw down his own weapon and said, “Lady, I yield!”
She laughed. “What were you daydreaming about, Roland?”
He gently pushed aside the tip of her sword. “I was remembering how
distraught Lady Mama became when you first went riding in those clothes and
came back all dirty and very unladylike.”
Carline smiled at the memory. “I thought she would stay abed for a
week.” She put up her sword. “I wish I could find reasons to wear these clothes
more often. They are so comfortable.”
Roland nodded, grinning widely. “And very fetching.” He made a
display of leering at the way they hugged Carline’s curvaceous body. “Though I
expect that is due to the wearer.”
She tilted her nose upward in a show of disapproval. “You are a
rogue and a flatterer, sir. And a lecher.”
With a chuckle, he picked up his sword. “I think that is enough for
today, Carline. I could endure only one defeat this afternoon. Another, and I
shall have to quit the castle in shame.”
Her eyes widened as she drew her weapon, and he saw the dig had
struck home. “Oh! Shamed by a mere girl, is it?” she said, advancing with her
sword ready.
Laughing, he brought his own to the ready, backing away. “Now, Lady.
This is most unseemly.”
Leveling her sword, she fixed him with an angry gaze. “I have Lady
Mama to be concerned with my manners, Roland I don’t need a buffoon like you to
instruct me.”
“Buffoon!” he cried, leaping forward. She caught his blade and
riposted, nearly striking. He took the thrust on his blade, sliding his own
along hers until they stood corps a corps. He seized her sword wrist with his
free hand and smiled. “You never want to find yourself in this position.” She
struggled to free herself, but he held her fast. “Unless the Tsurani start
sending their women after us, most anyone you fight will prove stronger than
yourself, and from here have his way with you.” So saying, he jerked her closer
and kissed her.
She pulled back, an expression of surprise on her face. Suddenly the
sword fell from her fingers and she grabbed him. Pulling him with surprising
force, she kissed him with a passion that answered his.
When he pulled back, she regarded him with a look of surprise mixed
with longing. A smile spread on her face, as her eyes sparkled. Quietly she
said, “Roland, I—”
Alarm sounded throughout the castle, and the shout of “Attack!”
could be heard from the walls on the other side of the keep.
Roland swore softly and stepped back. “Of all the gods-cursed,
ill-timed luck.” He headed into the hall that led to the main courtyard. With a
grin he turned and said, “Remember what you were going to say, Lady.” His humor
vanished when he saw her following after, sword in hand. “Where are you going?”
he asked, all lightness absent from his voice.
Defiantly she said, “To the walls. I’m not going to sit in the
cellars any longer.”
Firmly he said, “No. You’ve never experienced true fighting. As a
sport, you do well enough with a sword, but I’ll not risk your freezing the
first time you smell blood. You’ll go to the cellars with the other ladies and
lock yourself safely in.”
Roland had never spoken to her in this manner before, and she was
amazed. Always before he had been the teasing rogue, or the gentle friend. Now
he was suddenly a different man. She began to protest, but he cut her off.
Taking her by the arm, half leading, half dragging her, he walked in the
direction of the cellar doors. “Roland!” she cried. “Let me go!”
Quietly he said, “You’ll go where you were ordered. And I’ll go
where I’m ordered. There will be no argument.”
She pulled against his hold, but the grip was unyielding. “Roland!
Take your hand from me this instant!” she commanded.
He continued to ignore her protests and dragged her along the hall.
At the cellar door a startled guard watched the approaching pair. Roland came
to a stop and propelled Carline toward the door with a less than gentle shove.
Her eyes wide in outrage, Carline turned to the guard. “Arrest him! At once!
He”—anger elevated her voice to a most unladylike volume—”laid hands on me!”
The guard hesitated, looking from one to another, then tentatively
began to step toward the Squire. Roland raised a warning finger and pointed it
at the guard, less than an inch from his nose. “You will see Her Highness to
her appointed place of safety. You will ignore her objections, and should she
try to leave, you will restrain her. Do you understand?” His voice left no
doubt he was deadly serious.
The guard nodded, but still was reluctant to place hands upon the
Princess. Without taking his eyes from the soldier’s face, Roland pushed
Carline gently toward the door and said, “If I find she has left the cellar
before the signal that all is safe has sounded, I will ensure that the Prince
and the Swordmaster are informed you allowed the Princess to step in harm’s
way.”
That was enough for the guard. He might not understand who had right
of rank between Princess and Squire during attacks, but there was no doubt at
all in his mind of what the Swordmaster would do to him under such
circumstances. He turned to the cellar door before Carline could return and
said, “Highness, this way,” forcing her down the steps.
Carline backed down the stairs, fuming. Roland closed the door
behind them. She turned after another backward step, then haughtily walked
down. When they reached the room set aside for the women of the castle and town
in time of attack, Carline found the other women waiting, huddled together,
terrified.
The guard hazarded an apologetic salute and said, “Begging the
Princess’s pardon, but the Squire seemed most determined.”
Suddenly Carline’s scowl vanished, and in its place a small smile
appeared. She said, “Yes, he did, didn’t he?”
Riders sped into the courtyard, the massive gates swinging shut
behind. Arutha watched from the walls and turned to Fannon.
Fannon said, “Of all the worst possible luck.”
Arutha said, “Luck has nothing to do with it. The Tsurani would
certainly not be attacking when the advantage is ours.” Everything looked
peaceful, except the burned town standing as a constant reminder of the war.
But he also knew that beyond the town, in the forests to the north and
northeast, an army was gathering. And by all reports as many as two thousand
more Tsurani were on the march toward Crydee.
“Get back inside, you rat-bitten, motherless dog.”
Arutha looked downward into the courtyard and saw Amos Trask kicking
at the panic-stricken figure of a fisherman, who dashed back into one of the
many rude huts erected inside the wall of the castle to house the last of the
displaced townsfolk who had not gone south. Most of the townspeople had shipped
for Carse after the death raid, but a few had stayed the winter. Except for
some fishermen who were to stay to help feed the garrison, the rest were due to
be shipped south to Carse and Tulan this spring. But the first ships of the
coming season were not due in for weeks. Amos had been put in charge of these
folk since his ship had been burned the year before, keeping them from getting
underfoot and from causing too much disruption in the castle. The former sea
captain had proved a gift during the first weeks after the burning of the town.
Amos had the necessary talent for command and kept the tough, ill-mannered, and
individualistic fisherfolk in line. Arutha judged him a braggart, a liar, and
most probably, a pirate, but generally likable.
Gardan came up the stairs from the court, Roland following. Gardan
saluted the Prince and Swordmaster, and said, “That’s the last patrol, sir.”
“Then we must only wait for Longbow,” said Fannon.
Gardan shook his head “Not one patrol caught sight of him, sir.”
“That’s because Longbow is undoubtedly closer to the Tsurani than
any soldier of sound judgment is likely to get,” ventured Arutha. “How soon, do
you think, before the rest of the Tsurani arrive?”
Pointing to the northeast, Gardan said, “Less than an hour, if they
push straight through.” He looked skyward. “They have less than four hours of
light. We might expect one attack before nightfall. Most likely they’ll take
position, rest their men, and attack at first light.”
Arutha glanced at Roland. “Are the women safe?”
Roland grinned. “All, though your sister might have a few harsh
words about me when this is over.”
Arutha returned the grin. “When this is over, I’ll deal with it.” He
looked around. “Now we wait.”
Swordmaster Fannon’s eyes swept the deceptively peaceful scene before
them. There was a note of worry mixed with determination in his voice as he
said, “Yes, now we wait.”
Martin raised his hand. His three trackers stopped moving. The woods
were quiet as far as they could tell, but the three knew Martin possessed more
acute senses than they. After a moment he moved along, scouting ahead.
For ten hours, since before dawn, they had been marking the Tsurani
line of march. As well as he could judge, the Tsurani had been repulsed once
more from Elvandar at the fords along the river Crydee and were now turning
their attention to the castle at Crydee. For three years the Tsurani had been
occupied along four fronts: against the Duke’s armies in the east, the elves
and dwarves along the north, the hold at Crydee in the west, and the
Brotherhood of the Dark Path and the goblins in the south.
The trackers had stayed close to the Tsurani trailbreakers,
occasionally too close. Twice they had been forced to run from attackers,
Tsurani warriors tenaciously willing to follow the Huntmaster of Crydee and his
men. Once they had been overtaken, and Martin had lost one of his men in the
fighting.
Martin gave the raucous caw of a crow, and in a few minutes his
three remaining trackers joined him. One, a long-faced young man named Garret,
said, “They move far west of where I thought they would turn.”
Longbow considered. “Aye, it seems they may be planning to encircle
all of the lands around the castle. Or they may simply wish to strike from an
unexpected quarter.” Then with a wry grin he said, “But most likely, they
simply sweep the area before the attack begins, ensuring they have no harrying
forces at their backs.”
Another tracker said, “Surely they know we mark their passing.”
Longbow’s crooked grin widened. “No doubt. I judge them unconcerned
with our comings and goings.” He shook his head. “These Tsurani are an arrogant
crew.” Pointing, he said, “Garret will come with me. You two will make straight
for the castle. Inform the Swordmaster some two thousand more Tsurani march on
Crydee.” Without a word the two men set off at a brisk pace toward the castle.
To his remaining companion he spoke lightly. “Come, let us return to
the advancing enemy and see what he is about now.”
Garret shook his head. “Your cheerful manner does little to ease my
worrisome mind, Huntmaster.”
Turning back the way they had come, Longbow said, “One time is much
like another to death. She comes when she will. So why give over your mind to
worry?”
“Aye,” said Garret, his long face showing he was unconvinced. “Why,
indeed? It’s not death arriving when she will that worries me; it’s your
inviting her to visit that gets me shivering.”
Martin laughed softly. He motioned for Garret to follow. They set
off at a trot, covering ground with long, loose strides. The forest was bright with
sunlight, but between the thick boles were many dark places wherein a watchful
enemy could lurk Garret left it to Longbow’s able judgment whether these hiding
places were safe to pass. Then, as one, both men stopped in their tracks at the
sound of movement ahead. Noiselessly they melted into a shadowy thicket. A
minute passed slowly with neither man speaking. Then a faint whispering came to
them, the words unclear.
Into their field of vision came two figures, moving cautiously along
a north-south path that intersected the one Martin followed. Both were dressed
in dark grey cloaks, with bows held ready. They stopped, and one kneeled down
to study the signs left by Longbow and his trackers. He pointed down the trail
and spoke to his companion, who nodded and returned the way they had come.
Longbow heard Garret hiss as he drew in his breath. Peering around
the area was a tracker of the Brotherhood of the Dark Path. After a moment of
searching he followed his companion.
Garret began to stir and Martin gripped his arm. “Not yet,” Longbow
whispered.
Garret whispered back, “What are they doing this far north?”
Martin shook his head. “They’ve slipped in behind our patrols along
the foothills. We’ve grown lax in the south, Garret. We never thought they’d
move north this far west of the mountains.” He waited silently for a moment,
then whispered, “Perhaps they tire of the Green Heart and are trying for the
Northlands to join their brothers.”
Garret started to speak, but stopped when another Dark Brother
entered the spot vacated by the others a moment before. He looked around, then
raised his hand in signal. Other figures appeared along the trail intersecting
the one Martin’s men had traveled. In ones, twos, and threes, Dark Brothers
crossed the path, disappearing into the trees.
Garret sat holding his breath. He could hear Martin counting faintly
as the figures crossed their field of vision: “. . . ten, twelve, fifteen,
sixteen, eighteen . . .”
The stream of dark-cloaked figures continued, seemingly unending to
Garret. “. . . thirty-one, thirty-two, thirty-four . . .”
As the crossing continued, larger numbers of Brothers appeared, and
after a time Martin whispered, “There are more than a hundred.”
Still they came, some now carrying bundles on their backs and
shoulders. Many wore the dark grey mountain cloaks, but others were dressed in
green, brown, or black clothing. Garret leaned close to Martin and whispered,
“You are right. It is a migration north. I mark over two hundred.”
Martin nodded. “And still they come.”
For many more minutes the Dark Brothers crossed the trail, until the
flood of warriors was replaced by ragged-looking females and young. When they
had passed, a company of twenty fighters crossed the trail, and then the area
was quiet.
They waited a moment in silence. Garret said, “They are elven-kin to
move so large a number through the forest undetected so long.”
Martin smiled. “I’d advise you not mention that fact to the next elf
you encounter.” He stood slowly, unbending cramped muscles from the long
sitting in the brush. A faint sound echoed from the east, and Martin got a
thoughtful look on his face. “How far along the trail do you judge the Dark
Brothers’ march?”
Garret said, “At their rear, a hundred yards; at the van, perhaps a
quarter mile or less. Why?”
Martin grinned, and Garret became discomforted by the mocking humor
in his eyes. “Come, I think I know where we can have some fun.”
Garret groaned softly, “Ah, Huntmaster, my skin gets a poxy feeling
when you mention fun.”
Martin struck the man a friendly blow to the chest with the back of
his hand. “Come, stout fellow.” The Huntmaster broke trail, with Garret behind.
They loped along through the woods, easily avoiding obstacles that would have
hindered less experienced woodsmen.
They came to a break in the trail, and both men halted. Just down
the trail, at the edge of their vision in the gloom of the forest, came a
company of Tsurani trailbreakers. Martin and Garret faded into the trees, and
the Huntmaster said, “The main column is close behind. When they reach the
crossing where the Dark Brothers passed, they might chance to follow.”
Garret shook his head. “Or they might not, so we will make certain
they do.” Taking a deep breath, he added, “Oh well,” then made a short silent
prayer to Kihan, the Singer of Green Silences, Goddess of Foresters, as they
unshouldered their bows.
Martin stepped out onto the trail and took aim, and Garret followed
his example. The Tsurani trailbreakers came into view, cutting away the thick
underbrush along the trail so the main body could more easily follow. Martin
waited until the Tsurani were uncomfortably close, then he let fly, just as the
first trailbreaker took notice of them. The first two men fell, and before they
hit the ground, two more arrows were loosed Martin and Garret pulled arrows
from back quivers in fluid motions, set arrow to bowstring, and let fly with uncommon
quickness and accuracy. It was not from any act of kindness Martin had selected
Garret five years before. In the eye of the storm, he would stand calmly, do as
ordered, and do it with skill.
Ten stunned Tsurani fell before they could raise an alarm. Calmly
Martin and Garret shouldered their bows and waited. Then along the trail
appeared a veritable wall of colored armor. The Tsurani officers in the van
stopped in shocked silence as they regarded the dead trail-breakers. Then they
saw the two foresters standing quietly down the trail and shouted something.
The entire front of the column sprang forward, weapons drawn.
Martin leaped into the thicket on the north side of the trail,
Garret a step behind. They dashed through the trees, the Tsurani in close pursuit.
Martin’s voice filled the forest with a wild hunter’s call. Garret
shouted as much from some nameless, crazy exhilaration as from fear. The noise
behind was tremendous as a horde of Tsurani pursued them through the trees.
Martin led them northward, paralleling the course taken by the Dark
Brotherhood. After a time he stopped and between gasping breaths said, “Slowly,
we don’t want to lose them.”
Garret looked back and saw the Tsurani were out of sight. They
leaned against a tree and waited. A moment later the first Tsurani came into
view, hurrying along on a course that angled off to the northwest.
With a disgusted look, Martin said, “We must have killed the only
skilled trackers on their whole bloody world.” He took his hunter’s horn from
his belt and let forth with such a loud blast the Tsurani soldier froze, an
expression of shock clearly evident on his face even from where Martin and
Garret stood.
The Tsurani looked around and caught sight of the two huntsmen
Martin waved for the man to follow, and he and Garret were off again. The
Tsurani shouted for those behind and gave chase. For a quarter mile they led
the Tsurani through the woods, then they angled westward Garret shouted,
between heaving breaths, “The Dark Brothers . . . they’ll know we come.”
Martin shouted back, “Unless they’ve . . . suddenly all . . . gone
deaf.” He managed a smile. “The Tsurani hold a six-to-one . . . advantage I . .
. think it . . . only fair to let . . . the Brotherhood . . . have the . . .
ambush.”
Garret spared enough breath for a low groan and continued to follow
his master’s lead. They crashed out of a thicket and Martin stopped, grabbing
Garret by the tunic. He cocked his head and said, “They’re up ahead.”
Garret said, “I don’t know . . . how you can hear a thing with . . .
all that cursed racket behind.” It sounded as if most of the Tsurani column had
followed, though the forest amplified the noise and confused its source.
Martin said, “Do you still wear that . . . ridiculous red
undertunic?”
“Yes, why?”
“Tear off a strip.” Garret pulled his knife without question and
lifted up his green forester’s tunic. Underneath was a garish red cotton
undertunic. He cut a long strip off the bottom, then hastily tucked the
undertunic in. While Garret ordered himself, Martin tied the strip to an arrow.
He looked back to where the Tsurani thrashed in the brush. “It must be those
stubby legs. They may be able to run all day, but they can’t keep up in the
woods.” He handed the arrow to Garret. “See that large elm across that small
clearing?”
Garret nodded. “See the small birch behind, off to the left?” Again
Garret nodded. “Think you can hit it with that rag dragging at your arrow?”
Garret grinned as he unslung his bow, notched the arrow, and let
fly. The arrow sped true, striking the tree. Martin said, “When our bandylegged
friends get here, they’ll see that flicker of color over there and go charging
across. Unless I’m sadly mistaken, the Brothers are about fifty feet the other
side of your arrow.” He pulled his horn as Garret shouldered his bow again.
“Once more we’re off,” he said, blowing a long, loud call.
Like hornets the Tsurani descended, but Longbow and Garret were off
to the southwest before the note from the hunter’s horn had died in the air.
They dashed to be gone before the Tsurani caught sight of them, aborting the
hoax. Suddenly they broke through a thicket and ran into a group of women and
children milling about. One young woman of the Brotherhood was placing a bundle
upon the ground. She stopped at the sight of the two men. Garret had to slide
to a halt to keep from bowling her over.
Her large brown eyes studied him for an instant as he stepped
sideways to get around her. Without thinking, Garret said, “Excuse me, ma’am,”
and raised his hand to his forelock. Then he was off after the Huntmaster as
shouts of surprise and anger erupted behind them.
Martin called a halt after they had covered another quarter mile and
listened. To the northeast came the sounds of battle, shouts and screams, and
the ring of weapons. Martin grinned. “They’ll both be busy for a while.”
Garret sank wearily to the ground and said, “Next time send me to
the castle, will you, Huntmaster?”
Martin kneeled beside the tracker. “That should prevent the Tsurani
from reaching Crydee until sundown or after. They won’t be able to mount an
attack until tomorrow. Four hundred Dark Brothers are not something they can
safely leave at their rear. We’ll rest a bit, then make for Crydee.”
Garret leaned back against a tree. “Welcome news.” He let out a long
sigh of relief. “That was a close thing, Huntmaster.”
Martin smiled enigmatically. “All life is a close thing, Garret.”
Garret shook his head slowly. “Did you see that girl?”
Martin nodded. “What of her?”
Garret looked perplexed. “She was pretty no, closer to being
beautiful, in a strange sort of way, I mean. But she had long black hair, and
her eyes were the color of otter’s fur. And she had a pouty mouth and pert
look. Enough to warrant a second glance from most men. It’s not what I would
have expected from the Brotherhood.”
Martin nodded “The moredhel are a pretty people, in truth, as are
the elves. But remember, Garret,” he said with a smile, “should you chance to
find yourself exchanging pleasantries with a moredhel woman again, she’d as
soon cut your heart out as kiss you.”
They rested for a while as cries and shouts echoed from the
northeast. Then slowly they stood and began the return to Crydee.
***
Since
the start of the war, the Tsurani had confined their activities to those areas
immediately adjacent the valley in the Grey Towers. Reports from the dwarves
and the elves revealed mining activities were taking place in the Grey Towers.
Enclaves had been thrown up outside the valley, from which they raided Kingdom
positions. Once or twice during the year they would mount an offensive against
the Dukes’ Armies of the West, the elves in Elvandar, or Crydee, but for the
most part they were content to hold what they had already taken.
And each year they would expand their holdings, building more enclaves,
expanding the area under their control, and gaining themselves a stronger
position from which to conduct the next year’s campaign. Since the fall of
Wahnor, the expected thrust toward the coast of the Bitter Sea had not
materialized, nor had the Tsurani again tried for the LaMutian fortresses near
Stone Mountain. Walinor and Crydee town were sacked and abandoned, more to deny
them to the Kingdom and Free Cities than for any Tsurani gain. By the spring of
the third year of the war, the leaders of the Kingdom forces despaired of a
major attack, one that might break the stalemate. Now it came. And it came at
the logical place, the allies’ weakest front, the garrison at Crydee.
Arutha looked out over the walls at the Tsurani army. He stood next
to Gardan and Fannon, with Martin Longbow behind. “How many?” he asked, not
taking his eyes from the gathering host.
Martin spoke. “Fifteen hundred, two thousand, it is hard to judge.
There were two thousand more coming yesterday, less whatever the Dark
Brotherhood took with them.”
From the distant woods the sounds of workmen felling trees rang out.
The Swordmaster and Huntmaster judged the Tsurani were cutting trees to build
scaling ladders.
Martin said, “I’d never thought to hear myself say such, but I wish
there’d been four thousand Dark Brothers in the forest yesterday.”
Gardan spat over the wall. “Still, you did well, Huntmaster. It is
only fitting they should run afoul of each other.”
Martin chuckled humorlessly. “It is also a good thing the Dark
Brothers kill on sight. Though I am sure they do it out of no love for us, they
do guard our southern flank.”
Arutha said, “Unless yesterday’s band was not an isolated case. If
the Brotherhood is abandoning the Green Heart, we may soon have to fear for
Tulan, Jonril, and Carse.”
“I’m glad they’ve not parleyed,” said Fannon. “If they should truce
. . .”
Martin shook his head. “The moredhel will traffic only with weapons
runners and renegades who will serve them for gold. Otherwise they have no use
for us. And by all evidence, the Tsurani are bent on conquest. The moredhel are
no more spared their ambition than we are.”
Fannon looked back at the mounting Tsurani force. Brightly colored
standards with symbols and designs strange to behold were placed at various
positions along the leading edge of the army. Hundreds of warriors in
different-colored armor stood in groups under each banner.
A horn sounded, and the Tsurani soldiers faced the walls. Each
standard was brought forward a dozen paces and planted in the ground. A handful
of soldiers wearing the high-crested helmets that the Kingdom forces took to
denote officers walked forward and stood halfway between the army and the
standard-bearers. One, wearing bright blue armor, called something and pointed
at the castle. A shout went up from the assembled Tsurani host, and then
another officer, this one in bright red armor, began to walk slowly up to the
castle.
Arutha and the others watched in silence while the man crossed the
distance to the gate. He looked neither right nor left, nor up at the people on
the walls, but marched with eyes straight ahead until he reached the gate.
There he took out a large hand ax and banged three times upon it with the haft.
“What is he doing?” asked Roland, just come up the stairs.
Again the Tsurani pounded on the gates of the castle. “I think,”
said Longbow, “he’s ordering us to open up and quit the castle.”
Then the Tsurani reached back and slammed his ax into the gate,
leaving it quivering in the wood. Without hurrying, he turned and began walking
away to cheers from the watching Tsurani.
“What now?” asked Fannon.
“I think I know,” said Martin, unshouldering his bow. He drew out an
arrow and fitted it to the bowstring. With a sudden pull, he let fly. The shaft
struck the ground between the Tsurani officer’s legs and the man halted.
“The Hadati hillmen of Yabon have rituals like this,” said Martin.
“They put great store by showing bravery in the face of an enemy. To touch one
and live is more honorable than killing him.” He pointed toward the officer,
who stood motionless. “If I kill him, I have no honor, because he’s showing us
all how brave he is. But we can show we know how to play this game.”
The Tsurani officer turned and picked up the arrow and snapped it in
two. He faced the castle, holding the broken arrow high as he shouted defiance
at those on the walls. Longbow sighted another arrow and let fly. The second
arrow sped down and sliced the plume from the officer’s helmet. The Tsurani
fell silent as feathers began drifting down around his face.
Roland whooped at the shot, and then the walls of the castle erupted
with cheers. The Tsurani slowly removed his helm.
Martin said, “Now he’s inviting one of us either to kill him,
showing we are without honor, or to come out of the castle and dare to face
him.”
Fannon said, “I will not allow the gates open over some childish
contest!”
Longbow grinned as he said, “Then we’ll change the rules.” He leaned
over the edge of the walkway and shouted down to the courtyard below. “Garret,
fowling blunt!”
Garret, in the court below, drew a fowling arrow from his quiver and
tossed it up to Longbow. Martin showed the others the heavy iron ball that
served as the tip, used to stun game birds where a sharp arrow would destroy
them, and then fitted it to his bow. Sighting the officer, he let fly.
The arrow took the Tsurani officer in the stomach, knocking him
backward. All on the wall could imagine the sound made as the man had his
breath knocked from him. The Tsurani soldiers shouted in outrage, then quieted
as the man stood up, obviously stunned but otherwise showing no injury. Then he
doubled over, his hands on his knees, and vomited.
Arutha said dryly, “So much for an officer’s dignity.”
“Well,” said Fannon, “I think it is time to give them another lesson
in Kingdom warfare.” He raised his arm high above his head. “Catapults!” he
cried.
Answering flags waved from the tops of the towers along the walls
and atop the keep. He dropped his arm, and the mighty engines were fired. On
the smaller towers, ballistae, looking like giant crossbows, shot spearlike
missiles, while atop the keep, huge mangonels flung buckets of heavy stones.
The rain of stones and missiles landed amid the Tsurani, crushing heads and
limbs, tearing ragged holes in their lines. The screams of wounded men could be
heard by the defenders, while the catapult crew quickly rewound and loaded
their deadly engines.
The Tsurani milled about in confusion and, when the second flight of
stones and missiles struck, broke and ran. A cheer went up from the defenders
on the wall, then died when the Tsurani regrouped beyond the range of the
engines.
Gardan said, “Swordmaster, I think they mean to wait us out.”
“I think you’re wrong,” said Arutha, pointing. The other looked: a
large number of Tsurani detached themselves from the main body, moving forward
to stop just outside missile range.
“They look to be readying an attack,” said Fannon, “but why with
only a part of their force?”
A soldier appeared and said, “Highness, there are no signs of
Tsurani along any of the other positions.”
Arutha looked to Fannon. “And why attack only one wall?” After a few
minutes, Arutha said, “I’d judge a thousand.”
“More likely twelve hundred,” said Fannon. He saw scaling ladders
appearing at the rear of the attackers, moving forward. “Anytime now.”
A thousand defenders waited inside the walls. Other men of Crydee
still manned outlying garrisons and lookout positions, but the bulk of the
Duchy’s strength was here. Fannon said, “We can withstand this force as long as
the walls remain unbreached. Less than a ten-to-one advantage we can deal
with.”
More messengers came from the other walls. “They still mount nothing
along the east, north, and south, Swordmaster,” one reported.
“They seem determined to do this the hard way.” Fannon looked
thoughtful for a moment. “Little of what we’ve seen is understandable. Death
raids, marshaling within catapult range, wasting time with games of honor.
Still, they are not without skill, and we can take nothing for granted.” To the
guard he said, “Pass the word to keep alert on the other walls, and be ready to
move to defend should this prove a feint.”
The messengers left, and the waiting continued. The sun moved across
the sky, until an hour before sunset, when it sat at the backs of the
attackers. Suddenly horns blew and drums beat, and in a rush the Tsurani broke
toward the walls. The catapults sang, and great holes appeared in the lines of
attackers. Still they came, until they moved within bow range of the patiently
waiting defenders. A storm of arrows fell upon the attackers, and to a man the
front rank collapsed, but those behind came on, large brightly colored shields
held overhead as they rushed the walls. A half-dozen times men fell, dropping
scaling ladders, only to have others grab them up and continue.
Tsurani bowmen answered the bowmen from the walls with their own
shower of arrows, and men of Crydee fell from the battlements. Arutha ducked
behind the walls of the castle as the arrows sped overhead, then he risked a
glance between the merlons of the wall. A horde of attackers filled his field
of vision, and a ladder top suddenly appeared before him. A soldier near the
Prince grabbed the ladder top and pushed it away, aided by a second using a
pole arm. Arutha could hear the screams of the Tsurani as they fell from the
ladder. The first soldier to the ladder then fell backward, a Tsurani arrow
protruding from his eye, and disappeared into the courtyard.
A sudden shout went up from below, and Arutha sprang to his feet,
risking a bowshaft by looking down. All along the base of the wall, Tsurani
warriors were withdrawing, running back to the safety of their own lines.
“What are they doing?” wondered Fannon.
The Tsurani ran until they were safe from the catapults, then
stopped, turned, and formed up ranks. Officers were walking up and down before
the men, exhorting them. After a moment the assembled Tsurani cheered.
“Damn me!” came from Arutha’s left, and he glimpsed Amos Trask at
his shoulder, a seaman’s cutlass in his hand. “The maniacs are congratulating
themselves on getting slaughtered.”
The scene below was grisly. Tsurani soldiers lay scattered around
like toys thrown by a careless giant child. A few moved feebly and moaned, but
most were dead.
Fannon said, “I’d wager they lost a hundred or more. This makes no
sense.” He said to Roland and Martin, “Check the other walls.” They both hurried
off. “What are they doing now?” he said as he watched the Tsurani. In the red
glow of sunset, he could see them still in lines, while men lit torches and
passed them around. “Surely they don’t intend to attack after sunset? They’ll
fall over themselves in the dark.”
“Who knows what they plan?” said Arutha. “I’ve never heard of an
attack being staged this badly.”
Amos said, “Beggin’ the Prince’s pardon, but I know a thing or two
about warcraft—from my younger days—and I’ve also never heard of this like before.
Even the Keshians, who’ll throw away dog soldiers like a drunken seaman throws
away his money, even they wouldn’t try a frontal assault like this. I’d keep a
weather eye out for trickery.”
“Yes,” answered Arutha. “But of what sort?”
Throughout the night the Tsurani attacked, rushing headlong against
the walls, to die at the base. Once a few made the top of the walls, but they
were quickly killed and the ladders thrown back. With dawn the Tsurani
withdrew.
Arutha, Fannon, and Gardan watched as the Tsurani reached the safety
of their own lines, beyond catapult and bow range. With the sunrise a sea of
colorful tents appeared, and the Tsurani retired to their campsites. The
defenders were astonished at the number of Tsurani dead along the base of the
castle walls.
After a few hours the stink of the dead became overpowering. Fannon
consulted with an exhausted Arutha as the Prince was readying for an overdue
sleep. “The Tsurani have made no attempt to reclaim their fallen.”
Arutha said, “We have no common language in which to parley, unless
you mean to send Tully out under a flag of truce.”
Fannon said, “He’d go, of course, but I’d not risk him. Still, the
bodies could be trouble in a day or two. Besides the stink and flies, with
unbuned dead comes disease. It’s the gods’ way of showing their displeasure
over not honoring the dead.”
“Then,” said Arutha, pulling on the boot he had just taken off, “we
had best see what can be done.”
He returned to the gate and found Gardan already making plans to
remove the bodies. A dozen volunteers were waiting by the gate to go and gather
the dead for a funeral pyre.
Arutha and Fannon reached the walls as Gardan led the men through
the gate. Archers lined the walls to cover the retreat of the men outside the
walls if necessary, but it soon became evident the Tsurani were not going to
trouble the party. Several came to the edge of their lines, to sit and watch
the Kingdom soldiers working.
After a half hour it was clear the men of Crydee would not be able
to complete the work before they were exhausted. Arutha considered sending more
men outside, but Fannon refused, thinking it what the Tsurani were waiting for.
“If we have to move a large party back through the gate, it might prove
disastrous. If we close the gate, we lose men outside, and if we leave it open
too long, the Tsurani breach the castle.” Arutha was forced to agree, and they
settled down to watch Gardan’s men working in the hot morning.
Then, near midday, a dozen Tsurani warriors, unarmed, walked
casually across their lines and approached the work party. Those on the wall
watched tensely, but when the Tsurani reached the spot where Crydee men worked,
they silently began picking up bodies and carrying them to where the pyre was
being erected.
With the help of the Tsurani, the bodies were stacked upon the huge
pyre. Torches were set, and soon the bodies of the slain were consumed in fire.
The Tsurani who had helped place the bodies upon the pyre watched as the
soldier who led the volunteers stood away from the mounting flames. Then one
Tsurani soldier spoke a word, and he and his companions bowed in respect to
those upon the fire. The soldier who led the Crydee soldiers said, “Honors to
the dead!” The twelve men of Crydee assumed a posture of attention and saluted.
Then the Tsurani turned to face the Kingdom soldiers and again they bowed. The
commanding soldier called out, “Return salute!” and the twelve men of Crydee
saluted the Tsurani.
Arutha shook his head, watching men who had tried to kill one
another working side by side as if it were the most natural thing in the world,
then saluting one another. “Father used to say that, among man’s strange
undertakings, war stood clearly forth as the strangest.”
At
sundown they came again, wave after wave of attackers, rushing the west wall,
to die at the base. Four times during the night they struck, and four times
they were repulsed.
Now they came again, and Arutha shrugged off his fatigue to fight
once more. They could see more Tsurani joining those before the castle, long
snakes of torchlight coming from the forest to the north. After the last
assault, it was clear the situation was shifting to the Tsurani’s favor. The
defenders were exhausted from two nights of fighting, and the Tsurani were
still throwing fresh troops into the fray.
“They mean to grind us down, no matter what the cost,” said a
fatigued Fannon. He began to say something to a guard when a strange expression
crossed his face. He closed his eyes and collapsed. Arutha caught him. An arrow
protruded from his back. A panicky-looking soldier kneeling on the other side
looked at Arutha, clearly asking: What do we do?
Arutha shouted, “Get him into the keep, to Father Tully,” and the
man and another soldier picked up the unconscious Swordmaster and carried him
down. A third soldier asked, “What orders, Highness?”
Arutha spun around, seeing the worried faces of Crydee’s soldiers
nearby, and said, “As before. Defend the wall.”
The fighting went hard. A half-dozen times Arutha found himself
dueling with Tsurani warriors who topped the wall. Then, after a timeless
battling, the Tsurani withdrew.
Arutha stood panting, his clothing drenched with perspiration
beneath his chest armor. He shouted for water, and a castle porter arrived with
a bucket. He drank, as did the others around, and turned to watch the Tsurani
host.
Again they stood just beyond catapult range, and their torchlights
seemed undimimshed. “Prince Arutha,” came a voice behind. He spun around
Horsemaster Algon was standing before him. “I just heard of Fannon’s wound.”
Arutha said, “How is he?”
“A close thing. The wound is serious, but not yet fatal. Tully
thinks should he live another day, he will recover. But he will not be able to
command for weeks, perhaps longer.”
Arutha knew Algon was waiting for a decision from him. The Prince
was Knight-Captain of the King’s army and, without Fannon, the commander of the
garrison. He was also untried and could turn over command to the Horsemaster.
Arutha looked around. “Where is Gardan?”
“Here, Highness,” came a shout from a short way down the wall.
Arutha was surprised at the sergeant’s appearance. His dark skin was nearly
grey from the dust that stuck to it, held fast by the sheen of perspiration.
His tunic and tabard were soaked with blood, which also covered his arms to the
elbows.
Arutha looked down at his own hands and arms and found them likewise
covered. He shouted, “More water!” and said to Algon, “Gardan will act as my
second commander. Should anything happen to me, he will take command of the
garrison. Gardan is acting Swordmaster.”
Algon hesitated as if about to say something, then a look of relief
crossed his face. “Yes, Highness. Orders?”
Arutha looked back toward the Tsurani lines, then to the east. The
first light of the false dawn was coming, and the sun would rise over the
mountains in less than two hours. He seemed to weigh facts for a time, as he
washed away the blood on his arms and face. Finally he said, “Get Longbow.”
The Huntmaster was called for and arrived a few minutes later,
followed by Amos Trask, who wore a wide grin. “Damn me, but they can fight,”
said the seaman.
Arutha ignored the comment. “It is clear to me they plan to keep
constant pressure upon us. With as little regard as they show for their own
lives, they can wear us down in a few weeks. This is one thing we didn’t count
upon, this willingness of their men to go to certain death. I want the north,
south, and east walls stripped. Leave enough men to keep watch, and hold any
attackers until reinforcements can arrive. Bring the men from the other walls
here, and order those here to stand down. I want six-hour watches rotated
throughout the rest of the day. Martin, has there been any more word of Dark
Brother migration?”
Longbow shrugged. “We’ve been a little busy, Highness. My men have
all been in the north woods the last few weeks.”
Arutha said, “Could you slip a few trackers over the walls before
first light?”
Longbow considered “If they leave at once, and if the Tsurani aren’t
watching the east wall too closely, yes.”
“Do so. The Dark Brothers aren’t foolish enough to attack this
force, but if you could find a few bands the size of the one you spotted three
days ago and repeat your trap . . .”
Martin grinned. “I’ll lead them out myself. We’d best leave now,
before it gets much lighter.” Arutha dismissed him, and Martin ran down the
stairs. “Garret!” he shouted. “Come on, lad. We’re off for some fun.” A groan
could be heard by those on the wall as Martin gathered his trackers around him.
Arutha said to Gardan, “I want messages sent to Carse and Tulan. Use
five pigeons for each. Order Barons Bellamy and Tolburt to strip their
garrisons and take ship for Crydee at once.”
Gardan said, “Highness, that will leave those garrisons nearly
undefended.”
Algon joined in the objection. “If the Dark Brotherhood moves toward
the Northlands, the Tsurani will have an open path to the southern keeps next
year.”
Arutha said, “If the Dark Brothers are moving en masse, which they
may not be, and if the Tsurani learn they have abandoned the Green Heart, which
they may not. I am concerned by this known threat, not a possible one next
year. If they keep this constant pressure upon us, how long can we withstand?”
Gardan said, “A few weeks, perhaps a month No longer.”
Arutha once more studied the Tsurani camp. “They boldly pitch their
tents near the edge of town. They range through our forests, building ladders
and siege engines no doubt. They know we cannot sally forth in strength. But
with eighteen hundred fresh soldiers from the southern keeps attacking up the
coast road from the beaches and the garrison sallying forth, we can rout them
from Crydee. Once the siege is broken, they will have to withdraw to their
eastern enclaves. We can harry them continuously with horsemen, keep them from
regrouping. Then we can return those forces to the southern keeps, and they’ll
be ready for any Tsurani attacks against Carse or Tulan next spring.”
Gardan said, “A bold enough plan, Highness.” He saluted and left the
wall, followed by Algon.
Amos Trask said, “Your commanders are cautious men, Highness.”
Arutha said, “You agree with my plan?”
“Should Crydee fall, what matters when Carse or Tulan falls? If not
this year, then next for certain. It might as well be in one fight as two or
three. As the sergeant said, it is a bold plan. Still, a ship was never taken
without getting close enough to board. You have the makings of a fine corsair
should you ever grow tired of being a Prince, Highness.”
Arutha regarded Amos Trask with a skeptical smile. “Corsair, is it?
I thought you claimed to be an honest trader.”
Amos looked slightly discomposed. Then he broke out in a hearty
laugh. “I only said I had a cargo for Crydee, Highness I never said how I came
by it.”
“Well, we have no time for your piratical past now.”
Amos
looked stung. “No pirate, Sire. The Sidonie was carrying letters of
marque from Great Kesh, given by the governor of Durbin.”
Arutha laughed. “Of course! And everyone knows there is no finer,
more law-abiding group upon the high seas than the captains of the Durbin
coast.”
Amos
shrugged. “They tend to be a crusty lot, it’s true. And they sometimes make
free with the concept of free passage on the high seas, but we prefer the term privateer.”
Horns blew and drums beat, and with shrieking war cries the Tsurani
came. The defenders waited, then as the attacking host crossed the invisible
line marking the outer range of the castle’s war engines, death rained down
upon the Tsurani. Still they came.
The Tsurani crossed the second invisible line marking the outer
range of the castle’s bowmen, and scores more died. Still they came.
The attackers reached the walls, and defenders dropped stones and
pushed over scaling ladders, dealing out death to those below Still they came.
Arutha quickly ordered a redeployment of his reserves, directing
them to be ready near the points of heaviest attack. Men hurried to carry out
his orders.
Standing atop the west wall, in the thick of the fight, Arutha
answered attack with attack, repulsing warrior after warrior as they reached
the top of the wall. Even in the midst of battle, Arutha was aware of the scene
around him, shouting orders, hearing replies, catching glimpses of what others
were doing. He saw Amos Trask, disarmed, strike a Tsurani full in the face with
his fist, knocking the man from the wall Trask then carefully bent down and
picked up his cutlass as if he had simply dropped it while strolling along the
wall. Gardan moved among the men, exhorting the defenders, bolstering sagging
spirits, and driving the men beyond the point where they would normally have
given in to exhaustion.
Arutha helped two soldiers push away another scaling ladder, then
stared in momentary confusion as one of the men slowly turned and sat at his
feet, surprise on his face as he looked down at the Tsurani bow-shaft in his
chest. The man leaned back against the wall and closed his eyes as if deciding
to sleep for a time.
Arutha heard someone shout his name Gardan stood a few feet away,
pointing to the north section of the west wall. “They’ve crested the wall!”
Arutha ran past Gardan, shouting, “Order the reserves to follow!” He
raced along the wall until he reached the breach in the defenses. A dozen
Tsurani held each end of a section of the wall, pushing forward to clear room
for their comrades to follow. Arutha hurled himself into the front rank, past
weary and surprised guards who were being forced back along the battlement.
Arutha thrust over the first Tsurani shield, taking the man in the throat. The
Tsurani’s face registered shock, then he keeled over and fell into the
courtyard below. Arutha attacked the man next to the first and shouted, “For
Crydee! For the Kingdom!”
Then Gardan was among them, like a towering black giant, dealing
blows to all who stood before. Suddenly the men of Crydee pressed forward, a
wave of flesh and steel along the narrow rampart. The Tsurani stood their
ground, refusing to yield the hard-won breach, and to a man were killed.
Arutha struck a Tsurani warrior with the bell guard of his rapier,
knocking him to the ground below, and turned to find the wall once more in the
possession of the defenders. Horns blew from the Tsurani lines, and the attackers
withdrew.
Arutha became aware the sun had cleared the mountains to the east.
The morning had finally come. He surveyed the scene below and felt suddenly
more fatigued than he could ever remember. Turning slowly, he saw every man on
the wall was watching him. Then one of the soldiers shouted, “Hail, Arutha!
Hail, Prince of Crydee!”
Suddenly the castle was ringing with shouts as men chanted, “Arutha!
Arutha!”
To Gardan, Arutha asked, “Why?”
With a satisfied look the sergeant replied, “They saw you personally
take the fight to the Tsurani, Highness, or heard from others. They are
soldiers and expect certain things from a commander. They are now truly your
men, Highness.”
Arutha stood quietly as the cheers filled the castle. Then he raised
his hand and the courtyard fell silent. “You have done well. Crydee is served
aright by her soldiers.” He spoke to Gardan. “Change the watch upon the walls.
We may have little time to enjoy the victory.”
As if his words were an omen, a shout came from a guard atop the
nearest tower. “Highness, ‘ware the field.”
Arutha saw the Tsurani lines had been re-formed. Wearily he said,
‘Have they no limit?”
Instead of the expected attack, a single man walked from the Tsurani
line, apparently an officer by his crested helm. He pointed to the walls, and
the entire Tsurani line erupted in cheers. He walked farther, within bow range,
stopping several times to point at the wall His blue armor glinted in the
morning sun as the attackers cheered with his gestures toward the castle.
“A challenge?” said Gardan, watching the strange display as the man
showed his back, unmindful of personal danger, and walked back to his own
lines.
“No,” said Amos Trask, who came to stand next to Gardan “I think
they salute a brave enemy.” Amos shook his head slightly. “A strange people.”
Arutha said, “Shall we ever understand such men?”
Gardan put his hand upon Arutha’s shoulder. “I doubt it. Look, they
quit the field.”
The Tsurani were marching back toward their tents before the remains
of Crydee town. A few watchmen were left to observe the castle, but it was
clear the main force was being ordered to stand down again. Gardan said, “I
would have ordered another assault.” His voice betrayed his disbelief. “They
have to know we are near exhaustion. Why not press the attack?”
Amos said, “Who can say. Perhaps they, too, are tired.”
Arutha said, “This attacking through the night has some meaning I do
not understand.” He shook his head “In time we will know what they plot. Leave
a watch upon the walls, but have the men retire to the courtyard. It is
becoming clear they prefer not to attack during the day. Order food brought
from the kitchen, and water to bathe with.” Orders were passed, and men left
their posts, some sitting on the walks below the wall, too tired to trudge down
the steps. Others reached the courtyard and tossed aside their weapons, sitting
in the shade of the battlements while castle porters hurried among them with
buckets of fresh water. Arutha leaned against the wall. He spoke silently to
himself “They’ll be back.”
They came again that night.
18
SIEGE
Wounded men groaned at sunrise.
For the twelfth straight night the Tsurani had assaulted the castle,
only to retire at dawn. Gardan could not see any clear reason for the dangerous
night attacks. As he watched the Tsurani gathering up their dead, then
returning to their tents, he said, “They are strange. Their archers cannot fire
at the walls once the ladders are up for fear of hitting their own men. We have
no such problem, knowing everyone below is the enemy. I don’t understand these
men.”
Arutha sat numbly washing the blood and dirt from his face,
oblivious to the scene about him. He was too tired even to answer Gardan.
“Here,” a voice nearby said, and he pulled the damp cloth from his face to see
a proffered drinking cup. He took the cup and drained it in one long pull,
savoring the taste of strong wine.
Carline stood before him, wearing tunic and trousers, her sword
hanging at her side. “What are you doing here?” Arutha asked, fatigue making
his voice sound harsh in his own ears.
Carline’s manner was brisk. “Someone must carry water and food. With
every man on the walls all night long, who do you think is fit for duty in the
morning? Not that pitiful handful of porters who are too old for fighting, that
is certain.”
Arutha looked about and saw other women, ladies of the castle as
well as servants and fishwives, walking among the men, who thankfully took the
offered food and drink. He smiled his crooked smile. “How fare you?”
“Well enough. Still, sitting in the cellar is as difficult in its own
way as being on the wall, I judge. Each sound of battle that reaches us brings
one or another of the ladies to tears.” Her voice carried a tone of mild
disapproval. “They huddle like rabbits. Oh, it is so tiresome.” She stood
quietly for a moment, then asked, “Have you seen Roland?”
He looked about. “Last night for a time.” He covered his face in the
soothing wetness of the cloth. Pulling it away after a moment, he added, “Or
perhaps it was two nights past. I’ve lost track.” He pointed toward the wall nearest
the keep. “He should be over there somewhere. I put him in charge of the off
watch. He is responsible for guarding against a flank attack.”
Carline smiled She knew Roland would be chafing to get into the
fight, but with his responsibilities it would be unlikely unless the Tsurani
attacked on all sides. “Thank you, Arutha.”
Arutha feigned ignorance. “For what?”
She kneeled and kissed his wet cheek. “For knowing me better than I
know myself sometimes.” She stood and walked away.
Roland walked along the battlements, watching the distant forest
beyond the broad clearing that ran along the eastern wall of the castle. He
approached a guard standing next to an alarm bell and said, “Anything?”
“Nothing, Squire,”
Roland nodded. “Keep a watchful eye. This is the narrowest open area
before the wall. If they come against a second flank, this is where I would
expect the assault.”
The soldier said, “In truth, Squire. Why do they come only against
one wall, and why the strongest?”
Roland shrugged. “I don’t pretend to know. Perhaps to show contempt,
or bravery. Or for some alien reason.”
The guard came to attention and saluted. Carline had come silently
up behind them. Roland took her by the arm and hurried her along. “What do you
think you’re doing up here?” he said in ungentle tones.
Her look of relief at finding him alive and unhurt turned to one of
anger. “I came to see if you were all right,” she said defiantly.
Guiding her down the stairs to the courtyard below, he answered,
“We’re not so far removed from the forest a Tsurani bowman could not reduce the
Duke’s household by one. I’ll not explain to your father and brothers what my
reasons were for allowing you up there.”
“Oh! Is that your only reason? You don’t want to face Father.”
He smiled and his voice softened. “No. Of course not.”
She returned the smile. “I was worried.”
Roland sat upon the lower steps and plucked at some weeds growing
near the base of the stones, pulling them out and tossing them aside. “Little
reason for that. Arutha has seen I’ll not risk much.”
Placatingly, Carline said, “Still, this is an important post. If
they attack here, you’ll have to hold with a small number until reinforcements
come.”
“If they attack. Gardan came by yesterday, and he thinks they may
tire of this soon and dig in for a long siege, waiting for us to starve.”
She said, “More’s their hard luck, then. We’ve stores through the
winter, and they’ll find little to forage out there once the snows come.”
Playfully mocking, he said, “What have we here? A student of
tactics?”
She regarded him like an overtaxed teacher confronted with a
particularly slow student. “I listen, and I have my wits about me. Do you think
I do nothing but sit around waiting for you men to tell me what is occurring?
If I did, I’d know nothing.”
He put up his hands in sign of supplication. “I’m sorry, Carline You
are most definitely no one’s fool.” He stood and took her hand. “But you have
made me your fool.”
She squeezed his hand. “No, Roland, I have been the fool. It has
taken me almost three years to understand just how good a man you are. And how
good a friend.” She leaned over and kissed him lightly. He returned the kiss
with tenderness. “And more,” she added quietly.
“When this is over . . .” he began.
She placed her free hand over his lips. “Not now, Roland. Not now.”
He smiled his understanding “I’d best be back to the walls,
Carline.”
She kissed him again and left for the main courtyard and the work to
be done. He climbed back to the wall and resumed his vigil.
It was late afternoon when a guard shouted, “Squire! In the forest!”
Roland looked in the indicated direction and saw two figures sprinting across
the open ground. From the trees the shouts of men came, and the clamor of
battle.
Crydee bowmen raised their weapons, then Roland shouted, “Hold! It’s
Longbow!” To the guard next to him he said, “Bring ropes, quickly.”
Longbow and Garret reached the wall as the ropes were being lowered
and, as soon as they were secured, scrambled upward. When they were safely over
the walls, they sank exhaustedly behind the battlements. Waterskins were handed
the two foresters, who drank deeply.
“What now?” asked Roland.
Longbow gave him a lopsided smile. “We found another band of
travelers heading northward about thirty miles southeast of here and arranged
for them to visit with the Tsurani.”
Garret looked up at Roland with eyes darkly circled from fatigue. “A
band he calls it. Damn near five hundred moredhel moving in strength. Must have
been a full hundred chasing us through the woods the last two days.”
Roland said, “Arutha will be pleased. The Tsurani have hit us each
night since you left. We could do with a little diverting of their attentions.”
Longbow nodded. “Where’s the Prince?”
“At the west wall, where all the fighting’s been.”
Longbow stood and pulled the exhausted Garret to his feet. “Come
along. We’d better report.”
Roland instructed the guards to keep a sharp watch and followed the
two huntsmen. They found Arutha supervising the distribution of weapons to
those in need of replacing broken or dulled ones. Gardell, the smith, and his
apprentices gathered up those that were reparable and dumped them into a cart,
heading for the forge to begin work.
Longbow said, “Highness, another band of moredhel have come north. I
led them here, so the Tsurani could be too busy to attack tonight.”
Arutha said, “That is welcome news. Come, we’ll have a cup of wine,
and you can tell of what you saw.”
Longbow sent Garret off to the kitchen and followed Arutha and
Roland into the keep. The Prince sent word asking Gardan to join them in the
council room and, when they were all there, asked Longbow to recount his
travels.
Longbow drank deeply from the wine cup placed before him. “It was
touch and go for a while. The woods are thick with both Tsurani and moredhel.
And there are many signs they have little affection for one another. We counted
at least a hundred dead on both sides.”
Arutha looked at the other three men. “We know little of their ways,
but it seems foolish for them to travel so close to Crydee.”
Longbow shook his head. “They have little choice, Highness. The
Green Heart must be foraged clean, and they cannot return to their mountains
because of the Tsurani. The moredhel are making for the Northlands and won’t
risk passing near Elvandar. With the rest of the way blocked by the Tsurani
strength, their only path is through the forests nearby, then westward along
the river toward the coast. Once they reach the sea, they can turn northward
again. They must gain the Great Northern Mountains before winter to reach their
brothers in the Northlands safely.”
He drank the rest of his cup and waited while a servant refilled it.
“From all signs, nearly every moredhel in the south is making for the
Northlands. It looks as if over a thousand have already safely been by here.
How many more will come this way through the summer and fall, we cannot guess.”
He drank again. “The Tsurani will have to watch their eastern flank and would
do well to watch the south as well. The moredhel are starved and might chance a
raid into the Tsurani camp while the bulk of the army is thrown against the
walls of the castle. Should a three-way fight occur, it could get messy.”
“For the Tsurani,” said Gardan.
Martin hoisted his cup in salute. “For the Tsurani.”
Arutha said, “You’ve done well, Huntmaster.”
“Thank you, Highness.” He laughed. “I’d never thought to see the day
I’d welcome sight of the Dark Brotherhood in the forests of Crydee.”
Arutha drummed his fingers upon the table. “It will be another two
to three weeks before we can expect the armies from Tulan and Carse. If the
Dark Brothers harry the Tsurani enough, we might have some respite.” He looked
at Martin. “What occurs to the east?”
Longbow spread his hands upon the table “We couldn’t get close
enough to see much as we hurried past, but they are up to something. They’ve a
good number of men scattered throughout the woods from the edge of the clearing
back about a half mile. If it hadn’t been for the moredhel hot on our heels,
Garret and I might not have made it back to the walls.”
“I wish I knew what they were doing out there,” said Arutha “This
attacking only at night, it surely masks some trickery.”
Gardan said, “We’ll know soon enough, I fear.”
Arutha stood, and the others rose as well. “We have much to do in
any event. But if they do not come this night, we should all take advantage of
the rest. Order watches posted, and send the men back to the commons for sleep.
If I’m needed, I’ll be in my room.”
The others followed him from the council hall, and Arutha walked
slowly to his room, his fatigued mind trying to grasp what he knew were
important matters, but failing. He threw off only his armor and fell fully
clothed across his pallet. He was quickly asleep, but it was a troubled,
dream-filled slumber.
For a week no attacks came, as the Tsurani were cautious of the
migrating Brotherhood of the Dark Path. As Martin had foretold, the moredhel
were emboldened by hunger and had twice struck into the heart of the Tsurani
camp.
On the eighth afternoon after the first moredhel attack, the Tsurani
were again gathering on the field before the castle, their ranks once more
swelled by reinforcements from the east. Messages carried by pigeon between
Arutha and his father told of increased fighting along the eastern front as
well. Lord Borric speculated Crydee was being attacked by troops fresh from the
Tsurani homeworld, as there had been no reports of any troop movements along
his front. Other messages arrived with word of relief from Carse and Tulan.
Baron Tolburt’s soldiers had departed Tulan within two days of receiving
Arutha’s message, and his fleet would join with Baron Bellamy’s at Carse.
Depending upon the prevailing winds, it would be from one to two weeks before
the relief fleet arrived.
Arutha stood at his usual place upon the west wall, Martin Longbow
at his side. They watched the Tsurani taking position as the sun sank in the
west, a red beacon bathing the landscape in crimson.
“It seems,” said Arutha, “they mount a full attack tonight.”
Longbow said, “They’ve cleared the area of troublesome neighbors by
all appearances, at least for a time. The moredhel gained us a little time,
Highness, but no more.”
“I wonder how many will reach the Northlands?”
Longbow shrugged. “One in five perhaps From the Green Heart to the
Northlands is a long, difficult journey under the best of circumstances. Now .
. .” He let his words trail off.
Gardan came up the stairs from the courtyard. “Highness, the tower
watch reports the Tsurani are in formation.”
As he spoke, the Tsurani sounded their battle calls and began to
advance. Arutha drew his sword and gave the order for the catapults to fire.
Bowmen followed, unleashing a storm of arrows upon the attackers, but still the
Tsurani came.
Through the night, wave after wave of brightly armored aliens threw
themselves at the west wall of Castle Crydee. Most died on the field before the
wall, or at its base, but a few managed to crest the battlements. They, too, died.
Still, more came.
Six times the Tsurani wave had broken upon the defenses of Crydee,
and now they prepared for a seventh assault. Arutha, covered in dirt and blood,
directed the disposition of rested troops along the wall Gardan looked to the
east. “If we hold one more time, the dawn will be here. Then we should have
some respite,” he said, his voice thick with fatigue.
“We will hold,” answered Arutha, his own voice sounding just as
tired in his ears as Gardan’s.
“Arutha?”
Arutha saw Roland and Amos coming up the stairs, with another man
behind. “What now?” asked the Prince.
Roland said, “We can see no activity on the other walls, but there
is something here you should see.”
Arutha recognized the other man, Lewis, the castle’s Rathunter. It
was his responsibility to keep vermin from the keep. He tenderly held something
in his hands.
Arutha looked closely: it was a ferret, twitching slightly in the
firelight. “Highness,” said Lewis, his voice thick with emotion, “it’s—”
“What, man?” said Arutha impatiently. With attack about to begin, he
had little time to mourn a lost pet.
Roland spoke, for Lewis was obviously overcome at the loss of his
ferret. “The Rathunter’s ferrets didn’t return two days ago. This one crawled
into the storage room behind the kitchen sometime since Lewis found it there a
few minutes ago.”
In choked tones, Lewis said, “They’re all well trained, sire. If
they didn’t come back, it’s because something kept them from returnin’. This
poor lad’s been stepped on. His back’s broken. He must’ve crawled for hours to
get back.”
Arutha said, “I fail to see the significance of this.”
Roland gripped the Prince’s arm. “Arutha, he hunts them in the rat
tunnels under the castle.”
Comprehension dawned upon Arutha. He turned to Gardan and said,
“Sappers! The Tsurani must be digging under the east wall.”
Gardan said, “That would explain the constant attacks upon the west
wall—to draw us away.”
Arutha said, “Gardan, take command of the walls. Amos, Roland, come
with me.”
Arutha ran down the steps and through the courtyard. He shouted for
a group of soldiers to follow and bring shovels. They reached the small
courtyard behind the keep, and Arutha said, “We’ve got to find that tunnel and collapse
it.”
Amos said, “Your walls are slanted outward at the plinth. They’ll
recognize they can’t fire the timbers of the tunnels to bring it down to make a
breach. They’ll be trying to get a force inside the castle grounds or into the
keep.”
Roland looked alarmed. “Carline! She and the other ladies are in the
cellars.”
Arutha said, “Take some men and go to the cellars.” Roland ran off.
Arutha fell to his knees and placed his ear on the ground. The others followed
his example, moving around, listening for sounds of digging from below.
Carline sat nervously next to the Lady Marna. The fat former
governess made a show of calmly attending to her needlepoint despite the
rustling and stirring of the other women in the cellar. The sounds of battle
from the walls came to them as faint, distant echoes, muted by the thick walls
of the keep. Now there was an equally unnerving quiet.
“Oh! To be sitting here like a caged bird,” said Carline.
“The walls are no place for a lady,” came the retort from Lady
Marna.
Carline stood. As she paced the room, she said, “I can tie bandages
and carry water. All of us could.”
The other ladies of the court looked at one another as if the
Princess had been bereft of her senses. None of them could imagine subjecting
herself to such a trial.
“Highness, please,” said Lady Mama, “you should wait quietly. There
will be much to do when the battle’s over. Now you should rest.”
Carline began a retort, then stopped. She held up her hand. “Do you
hear something?”
The others stopped their movement, and all listened. From the floor
came a faint tapping sound. Carline knelt upon the flagstone. “My lady, this is
most unseemly,” began the Lady Marna.
Carline stopped the complaint with an imperious wave of her hand
“Quiet!” She placed her ear upon the flagstones. “There is something . . .”
Lady Glynis shuddered. “Probably rats scurrying about. There are
hundreds of them down here.” Her expression showed this revelation was about as
unpleasant a fact as imaginable.
“Be quiet!” ordered Carline.
There came a cracking sound from the floor, and Carline leaped to
her feet. Her sword came out of its scabbard as a fracture appeared in the
stones of the floor. A chisel point broke through the flagstone, and suddenly
the upturned stone was pushed up and outward.
Ladies screamed as a hole appeared in the floor. A startled face
popped into the light, then a Tsurani warrior, hair filthy from the dirt of the
tunnel, tried to scramble upward Carline’s sword took him in the throat as she
shouted, “Get out! Call the guards!”
Most of the women sat frozen in terror, refusing to move. Lady Marna
heaved her massive bulk from the bench upon which she sat and gave a shrieking
town girl a backhanded slap. The girl looked at Lady Marna with wide-eyed
fright for an instant, then broke toward the steps. As if at a signal, the
others ran after, screaming for help.
Carline watched as the Tsurani slowly fell back, blocking the hole
in the floor. Other cracks appeared around the hole, and hands pulled pieces of
flagstone downward into the ever-widening entrance. Lady Marna was halfway to
the steps when she saw Carline standing her ground. “Princess!” she shrieked.
Another man came scrambling upward, and Carline delivered a death
blow to him. She was then forced back as the stones near her feet collapsed.
The Tsurani had terminated their tunnel in a wide hole and were now broadening
the entrance, pulling down stones so that they could swarm out, overwhelming
any defenders.
A man fought upward, pushing Carline to one side, allowing another to
start his climb upward Lady Mama ran back to her former ward and grabbed up a
large piece of loose stone, which she brought crashing down on the unhelmeted
skull of the second man. Grunts and strange-sounding words came from the tunnel
mouth as the man fell back upon those behind.
Carline ran the other man through and kicked another in the face.
“Princess!” cried Lady Marna. “We must flee!”
Carline didn’t answer. She dodged a blow at her feet delivered by a
Tsurani who then sprang nimbly out of the hole. Carline thrust and the man
dodged. Another came scrambling out of the hole, and the Lady Marna shrieked.
The first man turned reflexively at the sound, and Carline drove her
sword into his side. The second man raised a serrated sword to strike Lady
Marna, and Carline sprang for him, thrusting her sword point into his neck. The
man shuddered and fell, his fingers releasing their grip on the sword Carline
grabbed Lady Marna’s arm and propelled her toward the steps.
Tsurani came swarming out of the hole, and Carline turned at the
bottom of the stairs Lady Marna stood behind her beloved Princess, not willing
to leave. The Tsurani approached wanly. The girl had killed enough of their
companions to warrant their respect and caution.
Suddenly a body crashed past the girl as Roland charged into the
Tsurani, soldiers of the keep hurrying behind. The young Squire was in a frenzy
to protect the Princess, and he boiled over three Tsurani in his rush. They
tumbled backward, disappearing into the hole, Roland with them.
As the Squire vanished from view, Carline screamed, “Roland!” Other
guards leaped past the Princess to engage the Tsurani who still stood in the
cellar, and more jumped boldly into the hole. Grunts and cries, shouts and
oaths rang from the tunnel.
A guard took Carline by the arm and began to drag her up the stairs.
She followed, helpless in the man’s strong grip, crying, “Roland!”
Grunts of exertion filled the dark tunnel as the soldiers from
Crydee dug furiously. Arutha had found the Tsurani tunnel and had ordered a
shaft sunk near it. They were now digging a countertunnel to intercept the
Tsurani, near the wall. Amos had agreed with Arutha’s judgment that they needed
to force the Tsurani back beyond the wall before collapsing the tunnel, denying
them any access to the castle.
A shovel broke through, and men began frantically clearing away
enough dirt to allow passage into the Tsurani tunnel. Boards were hastily
jammed into place, jerry-rigged supports, preventing the earth above from
caving in on them.
The men from Crydee surged into the low tunnel and entered a
frantic, terrible melee. Tsurani warriors and Roland’s squad of soldiers were
locked in a desperate hand-to-hand struggle in the dark. Men fought and died in
the gloom under the earth. It was impossible to bring order to the fray, with
the fighting in such confinement. An overturned lantern flickered faintly,
providing little illumination.
Arutha said to a soldier behind, “Get more men!”
“At once, Highness!” answered the soldier, turning toward the shaft.
Arutha entered the Tsurani tunnel. It was only five feet high, so he
moved stooped over. It was fairly wide, with enough room for three men to
negotiate closely. Arutha stepped on something soft, which groaned in pain. He
continued past the dying man, toward the sound of fighting.
It was a scene from his worst nightmare, faintly lit by widely
spaced torches. With little room only the first three men could engage the
enemy at any one point. Arutha called out, “Knives!” and dropped his rapier. In
close quarters the shorter weapons would prove more effective.
He came upon two men struggling in the darkness and grabbed at one.
His hand closed on chitinous armor, and he plunged his knife into the man’s
exposed neck. Jerking the now lifeless body off the other man, he saw a jam of
bodies a few feet away, where Crydee and Tsurani soldiers pressed against one
another. Curses and cries filled the tunnel, and the damp earth smell was mixed
with the odor of blood and excrement.
Arutha fought madly, blindly, lashing out at barely seen foes. His
own fear kept threatening to overcome him as primitive awareness cried for him
to quit the tunnel and the threatening earth above. He forced his panic down
and continued to lead the attack on the sappers.
A familiar voice grunted and cursed at his side, and Arutha knew
Amos Trask was near. “Another thirty feet, lad!” he shouted.
Arutha took the man at his word, having lost all sense of distance.
The men of Crydee pressed onward, and many died killing the resisting Tsurani.
Time became a blur and the fight a dim montage of images.
Abruptly Amos shouted, “Straw!” and bundles of dry straw were passed
forward “Torches!” he cried, and flaming torches were passed up. He piled the
straw near a latticework of timbers and drove the torch into the pile. Flames
burst upward, and he yelled, “Clear the tunnel!”
The fighting stopped. Every man, whether of Crydee or Tsurani,
turned and fled the flames. The sappers knew the tunnel was lost without means
to quench the flames and scrambled for their lives.
Choking smoke filled the tunnel, and men began to cough as they
cleared the cramped quarters. Arutha followed Amos, and they missed the turn to
the countertunnel, coming out in the cellar. Guardsmen, dirty and bloody, were
collapsing on the stones of the cellar, gasping for air. A dull rumble sounded,
and with a crash, a blast of air and smoke blew out of the hole. Amos grinned,
his face streaked with dirt. “The timbers collapsed. The tunnel’s sealed.”
Arutha nodded dumbly, exhausted and still reeling from the smoke. A
cup of water was handed to him, and he drank deeply, soothing his burning
throat.
Carline appeared before him. “Are you all right?” she asked, concern
on her face. He nodded. She looked around. “Where’s Roland?”
Arutha shook his head. “It was impossible to see down there. Was he
in the tunnel?”
She bit her lower lip. Tears welled up in her blue eyes as she
nodded Arutha said, “He might have cleared the tunnel and come up in the
courtyard. Let us see.”
He got to his feet, and Amos and Carline followed him up the stairs.
They left the keep, and a soldier informed him the attack on the wall had been
repulsed. Arutha acknowledged the report and continued around the keep until
they came to the shaft he had ordered dug Soldiers lay on the grass of the
yard, coughing and spitting, trying to clear their lungs of the burning smoke.
The air hung heavy with an acrid haze as fumes from the fire continued to
billow from the shaft. Another rumble sounded, and Arutha could feel it through
the soles of his boots. Near the wall a depression had appeared where the
tunnel had fallen below. “Squire Roland!” Arutha shouted.
“Here, Highness,” came an answering shout from a soldier.
Carline dashed past Arutha and reached Roland before the Prince. The
Squire lay upon the ground, tended by the soldier who answered. His eyes were
closed and his skin pale, and blood seeped from his side. The soldier said, “I
had to drag him along the last few yards, Highness. He was out on his feet. I
thought it might be smoke until I saw the wound.”
Carline cradled Roland’s head, while Arutha first cut the binding
straps of Roland’s breastplate, then tore away the undertunic. After a moment
Arutha sat back upon his heels. “It’s a shallow wound He’ll be all right.”
“Oh, Roland,” Carline said softly.
Roland’s eyes opened and he grinned weakly. His voice was tired, but
he forced a cheery note. “What’s this? You’d think I’d been killed.”
Carline said, “You heartless monster.” She gently shook him but
didn’t release her hold as she smiled down at him. “Playing tricks at a time
like this!”
He winced as he tried to move. “Ooh, that hurts.” She placed a
restraining hand upon his shoulder.
“Don’t try to move. We must bind the wound,” she said, caught
between relief and anger.
Nestling his head into her lap, he smiled. “I’d not move for half
your father’s Duchy.”
She looked at him in irritation. “What were you doing throwing
yourself upon the enemy like that?”
Roland looked genuinely embarrassed. “In truth, I tripped coming
down the steps and couldn’t stop myself.”
She placed her cheek against his forehead as Arutha and Amos
laughed. “You are a liar. And I do love you,” she said softly.
Arutha stood and took Amos in tow, leaving Roland and Carline to
each other. Reaching the corner, they encountered the former Tsurani slave,
Charles, carrying water for the wounded. Arutha halted the man.
He stood with a yoke across his shoulders holding two large water
buckets. He was bleeding from several small wounds and was covered with mire.
Arutha said, “What happened to you?”
With a broad smile, Charles said, “Good fight. Jump in hole. Charles
good warrior.”
The former Tsurani slave was pale and weaved a little as he stood
there. Arutha remained speechless, then indicated he should continue his work.
Happily Charles hurried along. Arutha said to Amos, “What do you make of that?”
Amos chuckled. “I’ve had many dealings with rogues and scoundrels,
Highness. I know little of these Tsurani, but I think that’s a man to count
on.”
Arutha watched as Charles dispensed water to the other soldiers,
ignoring his own wounds and fatigue. “That was no mean thing, jumping into the
shaft without orders. I’ll have to consider Longbow’s offer to put that man in
service.”
They continued on their way, Arutha supervising the care of the
wounded, while Amos was put in charge of the final destruction of the tunnel.
When dawn came, the courtyard was still, and only a patch of raw
earth, where the shaft had been filled in, and a long depression running from
the keep to the outer wall showed anything unusual had occurred in the night.
Fannon hobbled along the wall, favoring his right side. The wound to
his back was almost healed, but he was still unable to walk without aid. Father
Tully supported the Swordmaster as they came to where the others waited.
Arutha gave the Swordmaster a smile and gently took him by the other
arm, helping Tully hold him. Gardan, Amos Trask, Martin Longbow, and a group of
soldiers stood nearby.
“What’s this?” asked Fannon, his display of gruff anger a welcome
sight to those on the wall. “Have you so little wits among you that you must
haul me from my rest to take charge?”
Arutha pointed out to sea. On the horizon dozens of small flecks
could be seen against the blue of sea and sky, flashes of brilliant white
glinting as the morning sun was caught and reflected back to them. “The fleet
from Carse and Tulan approaches the south beaches.”
He indicated the Tsurani camp in the distance, bustling with
activity. “Today we’ll drive them out. By this time tomorrow we’ll clear this
entire area of the aliens. We’ll harry them eastward, allowing them no respite.
It will be a long time before they’ll come in strength again.”
Quietly Fannon said, “I trust you are right, Arutha.” He stood
without speaking for a time, then said, “I have heard reports of your command,
Arutha. You’ve done well. You are a credit to your father, and to Crydee.”
Finding himself moved by the Swordmaster’s praise, Arutha tried to
make light, but Fannon interrupted. “No, you have done all that was needed, and
more. You were right. With these people we must not be cautious. We must carry
the struggle to them.” He sighed. “I am an old man, Arutha. It is time I retired
and left warfare to the young.”
Tully made a derisive noise. “You’re not old. I was already a priest
when you were still in swaddling.”
Fannon laughed with the others at the obvious untruth of the
statement, and Arutha said, “You must know, if I’ve done well, it is because of
your teachings.”
Tully gripped Fannon’s elbow. “You may not be an old man, but you
are a sick one. Back to the keep with you. You’ve had enough gadding about. You
can begin walking regularly tomorrow. In a few weeks you’ll be charging about,
shouting orders at everyone like your old self.”
Fannon managed a slight smile and allowed Tully to lead him back
down the stairs. When he was gone, Gardan said, “The Swordmaster’s right,
Highness. You’ve done your father proud.”
Arutha watched the approaching ships, his angular features fixed in
an expression of quiet reflection. Softly he said, “If I have done well, it is
because I have had the aid of good men, many no longer with us.” He took a deep
breath, then continued, “You have played a great part in our withstanding this
siege, Gardan, and you, Martin.”
Both men smiled and voiced their thanks. “And you, pirate.” Arutha
grinned. “You’ve also played a great part. We are deeply in your debt.”
Amos Trask tried to look modest and failed. “Well, Highness, I was
merely protecting my own skin as well as everyone else’s.” He then returned
Arutha’s grin. “It was a rousing good fight.”
Arutha looked toward the sea once more. “Let us hope we can soon be
done with rousing good fights.” He left the walls and started down the stairs.
“Give orders to prepare for the attack.”
Carline stood atop the south tower of the keep, her arm around
Roland’s waist. The Squire was pale from his wound, but otherwise in hale
spirits. “We’ll be done with the siege, now the fleet’s arrived,” he said,
clinging tightly to the Princess.
“It has been a nightmare.”
He smiled down at her, gazing into her blue eyes. “Not entirely.
There has been some compensation.”
Softly she said, “You are a rogue,” then kissed him. When they
separated, she said, “I wonder if your foolish bravery was nothing more than a
ploy to gain my sympathies.”
Feigning a wince, he said, “Lady, I am wounded.”
She clung to him. “I was so worried about you, not knowing if you
lay dead in the tunnel. I . . .” Her voice dropped off as her gaze strayed to
the north tower of the keep, opposite the one upon which they stood. She could
see the window upon the second floor, the window to Pug’s room. The funny
little metal chimney, which would constantly belch smoke when he was at his
studies, was now only a mute reminder of just how empty the tower stood.
Roland followed her gaze. “I know,” he said. “I miss him, too. And
Tomas as well.”
She sighed. “That seems such a long time ago, Roland. I was a girl
then, a girl with a girl’s notion of what life and love were about.” Softly she
said, “Some love comes like a wind off the sea, while others grow slowly from
the seeds of friendship and kindness. Someone once told me that.”
“Father Tully. He was right.” He squeezed her waist. “Either way, as
long as you feel, you live.”
She watched as the soldiers of the garrison prepared for the coming
sortie. “Will this end it?”
“No, they will come again. This war is fated to last a long time.”
They stood together, taking comfort in the simple fact of each
other’s existence.
Kasumi of the Shinzawai, Force Leader of the Armies of the Kanazawai
Clan, of the Blue Wheel Party, watched the enemy upon the castle wall.
He could barely make out the figures walking along the battlements,
but he knew them well. He could not put names to any, but they were each as
familiar to him as his own men. The slender youth who commanded, who fought
like a demon, who brought order to the fray when needed, he was there. The
black giant would not be too far from his side, the one who stood like a
bulwark against every attack upon the walls. And the green-clad one, who could
race through the woods like an apparition, taunting Kasumi’s men by the freedom
with which he passed their lines, he would be there as well. No doubt the
broad-shouldered one was nearby, the laughing man with the curved sword and
maniacal grin. Kasumi quietly saluted them all as valiant foemen, even if only
barbarians.
Chingari of the Omechkel, the Senior Strike Leader, came to stand at
Kasumi’s side. “Force Leader, the barbarian fleet is nearing. They will land
their men within the hour.”
Kasumi regarded the scroll he held in his hand. It had been read a
dozen times since arriving at dawn. He glanced at it one more time, again studying
the chop at the bottom, the crest of his father, Kamatsu, Lord of the
Shinzawai. Silently accepting his personal fate, Kasumi said, “Order for march.
Break camp at once and begin assembling the warriors. We are commanded to
return to Kelewan. Send the trailbreakers ahead.”
Chingari’s voice betrayed his bitterness. “Now the tunnel is
destroyed, do we quit so meekly?”
“There is no shame, Chingari. Our clan has withdrawn itself from the
Alliance for War, as have the other clans of the Blue Wheel Party. The War
Party is once more alone in the conduct of this invasion.”
With a sigh Chingari said, “Again politics interferes with conquest.
It would have been a glorious victory to take such a fine castle.”
Kasumi laughed. “True.” He watched the activities of the castle.
“They are the best we have ever faced. We already learn much from them. Castle
walls slanted outward at the plinth, preventing sappers from collapsing them,
this is a new and clever thing. And those beasts they ride. Ayee, how they
move, like Thьn racing across the tundras of home. I will somehow gain some of
those animals. Yes, these people are more than simple barbarians.”
After a moment’s more reflection, he said, “Have our scouts and
trailbreakers keep alert for signs of the forest devils.”
Chingari spat. “The foul ones move in great number northward once
more. They’re as much a dagger in our side as the barbarians.”
Kasumi said, “When this world is conquered, we shall have to see to
these creatures. The barbarians make strong slaves. Some may even prove
valuable enough to make free vassals who will swear loyalty to our houses, but
those foul ones, they must be obliterated.” Kasumi fell silent for a while.
Then he said, “Let the barbarians think we flee in terror from their fleet.
This place is now a matter for the clans remaining in the War Party. Let Tasio
of the Minwanabi worry about a garrison at his rear should he move eastward.
Until the Kanazawai once more realign themselves in the High Council, we are
done with this war. Order the march.”
Chingari saluted his commander and left, and Kasumi considered the
implications of the message from his father. He knew the withdrawal of all the
forces of the Blue Wheel Party would prove a major setback for the Warlord and
his party. The repercussions of such a move would be felt throughout the Empire
for some years to come. There would be no smashing victories for the Warlord
now, for with the departure of those forces loyal to the Kanazawai lords and
the other clans of the Blue Wheel, other clans would reconsider before joining
in an all-out push. No, thought Kasumi, it was a bold but dangerous move by his
father and the other lords. This war would now be prolonged. The Warlord was
robbed of a spectacular conquest; he was now overextended with too few men
holding too much land. Without new allies he would remain unable to press
forward with the war. His choices were now down to two: withdraw from Midkemia
and risk humiliation before the High Council, or sit and wait, hoping for
another shift in politics at home.
It was a stunning move on behalf of the Blue Wheel. But the risk was
great. And the risk from the next series of moves in the Game of the Council
would be even more dangerous. Silently he said: O my father, we are now firmly
committed to the Great Game. We risk much: our family, our clan, our honor, and
perhaps even the Empire itself.
Crumbling the scroll, he tossed it into a nearby brazier, and when
it was totally consumed by flame, he put aside thoughts of risk and walked back
toward his tent.
BOOK II
MILAMBER AND THE VALHERU
We were, fair queen,
Two lads
that thought there was no more behind
But such a
day to-morrow as to-day,
And to be
boy eternal.
—SHAKESPEARE, The Winter’s Tale
19
SLAVE
The dying slave lay screaming.
The day was unmercifully hot. The other slaves went about their
work, ignoring the sound as much as possible. Life in the work camp was cheap,
and it did no good to dwell on the fate that awaited so many. The dying man had
been bitten by a relli, a snakelike swamp creature. Its venom was slow-acting
and painful; short of magic, there was no cure.
Suddenly there was silence. Pug looked over to see a Tsurani guard
wipe off his sword. A hand fell on Pug’s shoulder. Laurie’s voice whispered in
his ear, “Looks like our venerable overseer was disturbed by the sound of
Toffston’s dying.”
Pug tied a coil of rope securely around his waist. “At least it
ended quickly.” He turned to the tall blond singer from the Kingdom city of
Tyr-Sog and said, “Keep a sharp eye out. This one’s old and may be rotten.”
Without another word Pug scampered up the bole of the ngaggi tree, a firlike
swamp tree the Tsurani harvested for wood and resins. With few metals, the Tsurani
had become clever in finding substitutes. The wood of this tree could be worked
like paper, then dried to an incredible hardness, useful in fashioning a
hundred things. The resins were used to laminate woods and cure hides. Properly
cured hides could produce a suit of leather armor as tough as Midkemian
chainmail, and laminated wooden weapons were nearly the match of Midkemian
steel.
Four years in the swamp camp had hardened Pug’s body. His sinewy
muscles strained as he climbed the tree. His skin had been tanned deeply by the
harsh sun of the Tsurani homeworld. His face was covered by a slave’s beard.
Pug reached the first large branches and looked down at his friend.
Laurie stood knee-deep in the murky water, absently swatting at the insects
that plagued them while they worked. Pug liked Laurie. The troubadour had no
business being here, but then he’d had no business tagging along with a patrol
in the hope of seeing Tsurani soldiers, either. He said he had wanted material
for ballads that would make him famous throughout the Kingdom. He had seen more
than he had hoped for. The patrol had ridden into a major Tsurani offensive,
and Laurie had been captured. He had come to this camp over four months ago,
and he and Pug had quickly become friends.
Pug continued his climb, keeping one eye always searching for the
dangerous tree dwellers of Kelewan. Reaching the most likely place for a
topping, Pug froze as he caught a glimpse of movement. He relaxed when he saw
it was only a needier, a creature whose protection was its resemblance to a
clump of ngaggi needles. It scurried away from the presence of the human and
made the short jump to the branch of a neighboring tree. Pug made another
survey and started tying his ropes. His job was to cut away the tops of the
huge trees, making the fall less dangerous to those below.
Pug took several cuts at the bark, then felt the edge of his wooden
ax bite into the softer pulp beneath. A faint pungent odor greeted his careful
sniffing. Swearing, he called down to Laurie, “This one’s rotten. Tell the
overseer.”
He waited, looking out over the tops of trees. All around, strange
insects and birdlike creatures flew. In the four years he had been a slave on
this world, he had not grown used to the appearance of these life-forms. They
were not all that different from those on Midkemia, but it was the similarities
as much as the differences that kept reminding him this was not his home. Bees
should be yellow-and-black-striped, not bright red. Eagles shouldn’t have
yellow bands on their wings, nor hawks purple. These creatures were not bees,
eagles, or hawks, but the resemblance was striking. Pug found it easier to accept
the stranger creatures of Kelewan than these. The six-legged needra, the
domesticated beast of burden that looked like some sort of bovine with two
extra stumpy legs, or the cho-ja, the insectoid creature who served the Tsurani
and could speak their language: these he had come to find familiar. But each
time he glimpsed a creature from the corner of his eye and turned, expecting it
to be Midkemian only to find it was not, then the despair would strike.
Laurie’s voice brought him from his reverie. “The overseer comes.”
Pug swore. If the overseer had to get himself dirty by wading in the
water, then he would be in a foul mood—which could mean beatings, or a
reduction in the chronically meager food. He would already be angered by the
delay in the cutting. A family of burrowers-—beaverlike six-legged
creatures—had made themselves at home in the roots of the great trees. They
would gnaw the tender roots, and the trees would sicken and die. The soft,
pulpy wood would turn sour, then watery, and after a while the tree would
collapse from within. Several burrower tunnels had been poisoned, but the
damage had already been done to the trees.
A rough voice, swearing mightily while its owner splashed through
the swamp, announced the arrival of the overseer, Nogamu. He himself was a
slave, but he had attained the highest rank a slave could rise to, and while he
could never hope to be free, he had many privileges and could order soldiers or
freemen placed under his command. A young soldier came walking behind, a look
of mild amusement on his face. He was clean-shaven in the manner of a Tsurani
freeman, and as he looked up at Pug, the slave could get a good look at him. He
had the high cheekbones and nearly black eyes that so many Tsurani possessed.
His dark eyes caught sight of Pug, and he seemed to nod slightly. His blue
armor was of a type unknown to Pug, but with the strange Tsurani military
organization, that was not surprising.Even family, demesne, area, town, city,
and province appeared to have its own army. How they all related one to another
within the Empire was beyond Pug’s understanding.
The overseer stood at the base of the tree, his short robe held
above the water. He growled like the bear he resembled and shouted up at Pug,
“What’s this about another rotten tree?”
Pug spoke the Tsurani language better than any Midkemian in the
camp, for he had been there longer than all but a few old Tsurani slaves. He
shouted down, “It smells of rot. We should rerig another and leave this one
alone, Slave Master.”
The overseer shook his fist. “You are all lazy. There is nothing
wrong with this tree. It is fine. You only want to keep from working. Now cut
it!”
Pug sighed. There was no arguing with the Bear, as all the Midkemian
slaves called Nogamu. He was obviously upset about something, and the slaves
would pay the price. Pug started hacking through the upper section, and it soon
fell to the ground. The smell of rot was thick, and Pug removed the ropes
quickly. Just as the last length was coiled around his waist, a splitting sound
came from directly in front of him. “It falls!” he shouted down to the slaves
standing in the water below. Without hesitation they all ran. The cry of
“falls” was never ignored.
The bole of the tree was splitting down the middle now that the top
had been cut away. While this was not common, if a tree was far enough gone for
the pulp to have lost its strength, any flaw in the bark could cause it to
split under its own weight. The tree’s branches would pull the halves away from
each other. Had Pug been tied to the bole, the ropes would have cut him in half
before they snapped.
Pug gauged the direction of the fall, then as the half he stood upon
started to move, he launched himself away from it. He hit the water flat, back
first, trying to let the two feet of water break his fall as much as possible.
The blow from the water was immediately followed by the harder impact with the
ground. The bottom was mostly mud, so there was little damage done. The air in
his lungs exploded from his mouth when he struck, and his senses reeled for a
moment. He retained enough presence of mind to sit up and gasp a deep lungful
of air.
Suddenly a heavy weight hit him across the stomach, knocking the
wind from him and pushing his head back underwater. He struggled to move and
found a large branch across his stomach. He could barely get his face out of
the water to get air His lungs burned, and he breathed without control. Water
came pouring down his windpipe, and he started to choke. Coughing and
sputtering, he tried to keep calm but felt panic rise within him. He
frantically pushed at the weight across him but couldn’t move it.
Abruptly he found his head above water; Laurie said, “Spit, Pug! Get
the muck out of your lungs, or you’ll get lung fever.”
Pug coughed and spit. With Laurie holding his head, he could catch
his breath.
Laurie shouted, “Grab this branch. I’ll pull him out from under.”
Several slaves splashed over, sweat beading their bodies. They
reached underwater and seized the branch. Heaving, they managed to move it
slightly, but Laurie couldn’t drag Pug out.
“Bring axes, we’ll have to cut the branch from the tree.”
Other slaves were starting to bring axes over when Nogamu shouted,
“No. Leave him. We have no time for this. There are trees to cut.”
The overseer crossed over and struck Laurie across the face with a
lash. It cut deep into the singer’s cheek, but he didn’t let go of his friend’s
head. “Back to work, slave. You’ll be beaten tonight for speaking to me that
way. There are others who can top. Now, let him go!” He struck Laurie again.
Laurie winced, but held Pug’s head above water.
Nogamu raised his lash for a third blow, but was halted by a voice
from behind. “Cut the slave from under the branch.” Laurie saw the speaker was
the young soldier who had accompanied the slave master. The overseer whirled
about, unaccustomed to having his orders questioned. When he saw who had
spoken, he bit back the words that were on his lips. Bowing his head, he said,
“My lord’s will.”
He signaled for the slaves with the axes to cut Pug loose, and in
short order Pug was out from under the branch. Laurie carried him over to where
the young soldier stood. Pug coughed the last water from his lungs and gasped,
“I thank the master for my life.”
The man said nothing, but when the overseer approached, directed his
remarks to him. “The slave was right, and you were not. The tree was rotten It
is not proper for you to punish him for your bad judgment and ill temper I
should have you beaten, but will not spare the time for it. The work goes
slowly, and my father is displeased.”
Nogamu bowed his head. “I lose much face in my lord’s sight. May I
have his permission to kill myself?”
“No. It is too much honor. Return to work.”
The overseer’s face grew red in silent shame and rage. Raising his
lash, he pointed at Laurie and Pug. “You two, back to work.”
Laurie stood, and Pug tried. His knees were wobbly from his near
drowning, but he managed to stand after a few attempts.
“These two shall be excused work the rest of the day,” the young
lord said. “This one”—he pointed to Pug—“is of little use. The other must dress
those cuts you gave him, or festering will start.” He turned to a guard. “Take
them back to camp and see to their needs.”
Pug was grateful, not so much for himself as for Laurie. With a
little rest, Pug could have returned to work, but an open wound in the swamp
was a death warrant as often as not. Infections came quickly in this hot, dirty
place, and there were few ways of dealing with them.
They followed the guard. As they left, Pug could see the slave
master watching them with naked hatred in his eyes.
There was a creaking of floorboards, and Pug came instantly awake
His slave-bred wariness told him that the sound didn’t belong in the hut during
the dead of night.
Through the gloom, footfalls could be heard coming closer, then they
stopped at the foot of his pallet. From the next pallet, he could hear Laurie’s
sharp intake of breath, and he knew the minstrel was awake also. Probably half
the slaves had been awakened by the intruder. The stranger hesitated over
something, and Pug waited, tense with uncertainty. There was a grunt, and
without hesitation Pug rolled off his mat. A weight came crashing down, and Pug
could hear a dull thud as a dagger struck where his chest had been only moments
before. Suddenly the room exploded with activity. Slaves were shouting and
could be heard running for the door.
Pug felt hands reach for him in the dark, and a sharp pain exploded
across his chest. He reached blindly for his assailant and grappled with him
for the blade. Another slash, and his right hand was cut across the palm.
Abruptly the attacker stopped moving, and Pug became aware that a third body
was atop the would-be assassin.
Soldiers rushed into the hut, carrying lanterns, and Pug could see
Laurie lying across the still body of Nogamu. The Bear was still breathing, but
from the way the dagger protruded from his ribs, not for long.
The young soldier who had saved Pug’s and Laurie’s lives entered,
and the others made way for him. He stood over the three combatants and simply
asked, “Is he dead?”
The overseer’s eyes opened, and in a faint whisper he said, “I live,
lord. But I die by the blade.” A weak but defiant smile showed on his
sweat-drenched face.
The young soldier’s expression betrayed no emotion, but his eyes
looked as if ablaze. “I think not,” he said softly. He turned to two of the
soldiers in the room “Take him outside at once and hang him. There will be no
honors for his clan to sing. Leave the body there for the insects. It shall be
a warning that I am not to be disobeyed. Go.”
The dying man’s face paled, and his lips quivered. “No, master. I
pray, leave me to die by the blade. A few minutes longer.” Bloody foam appeared
at the corner of his mouth.
Two husky soldiers reached down for Nogamu and, with little thought
for his pain, dragged him outside. He could be heard wailing the entire way.
The amount of strength left in his voice was amazing, as if his fear of the
rope had awakened some deep reserve.
They stood in frozen tableau until the sound was cut off in a
strangled cry. The young officer then turned to Pug and Laurie. Pug sat, blood
running from a long, shallow gash across his chest. He held his injured hand in
the other. It was deeply cut, and his fingers wouldn’t move.
“Bring your wounded friend,” the young soldier commanded Laurie.
Laurie helped Pug to his feet, and they followed the officer out of
the slave hut. He led them across the compound to his own quarters and ordered
them to enter. Once inside, he instructed a guard to send for the camp
physician. He had them stand in silence until the physician arrived. He was an
old Tsurani, dressed in the robes of one of their gods —which one the
Midkemians couldn’t tell. He inspected Pug’s wounds and judged the chest wound
superficial. The hand, he said, would be another matter.
“The cut is deep, and the muscles and tendons have been cut. It will
heal, but there will be a loss of movement and little strength for gripping. He
most likely will be fit for only light duty.”
The soldier nodded, a peculiar expression on his face: a mixture of
disgust and impatience. “Very well. Dress the wounds and leave us.”
The physician set about cleaning the wounds. He took a score of stitches
in the hand, bandaged it, admonished Pug to keep it clean, and left. Pug
ignored the pain, easing his mind with an old mental exercise.
After the physician was gone, the soldier studied the two slaves
before him “By law, I should have you hanged for killing the slave master.”
They said nothing. They would remain silent until commanded to
speak.
“But as I hanged the slave master, I am free to keep you alive,
should it suit my purpose I can simply have you punished for wounding him.” He
paused. “Consider yourselves punished.”
With a wave of his hand he said, “Leave me, but return here at
daybreak I have to decide what to do with you.”
They left, feeling fortunate, for under most circumstances they
would now be hanging next to the former slave master. As they crossed the
compound, Laurie said, “I wonder what that was about.”
Pug responded, “I hurt too much to wonder why. I’m just thankful
that we will see tomorrow.”
Laurie said nothing until they reached the slave hut. “I think the
young lord has something up his sleeve.”
“Whatever I have long since given up trying to understand our
masters. That’s why I’ve stayed alive so long, Laurie. I just do what I’m told
to, and I endure.” Pug pointed to the tree where the former overseer’s body
could be seen in the pale moonlight—only the small moon was out tonight. “It’s
much too easy to end up like that.”
Laurie nodded. “Perhaps you’re right. I still think about escape.”
Pug laughed, a short, bitter sound. “Where, singer? Where could you
run? Toward the rift and ten thousand Tsurani?”
Laurie said nothing. They returned to their pallets and tried to
sleep in the humid heat.
***
The
young officer sat upon a pile of cushions, cross-legged in Tsurani fashion. He
sent away the guard who had accompanied Pug and Laurie, then motioned for the
two slaves to sit. They did so hesitantly, for a slave was not usually
permitted to sit in a master’s presence.
“I am Hokanu, of the Shinzawai. My father owns this camp,” he said
without preamble. “He is deeply dissatisfied with the harvest this year. He has
sent me to see what can be done. Now I have no overseer to manage the work,
because a foolish man blamed you for his own stupidity. What am I to do?”
They said nothing. He asked, “You have been here, how long?”
Pug and Laurie answered in turn. He considered the answers, then
said, “You”—pointing at Laurie—“are nothing unusual, save you speak our tongue
better than most barbarians, all things considered. But you” —pointing at
Pug—“have stayed alive longer than most of your stiff-necked countrymen and
also speak our language well. You might even pass for a peasant from a remote
province.”
They sat still, unsure of what Hokanu was leading up to. Pug
realized with a shock that he was probably older by a year or two than this
young lord. He was young for such power. The ways of the Tsurani were very
strange. In Crydee he would still be an apprentice, or if noble, continuing his
education in statecraft.
“How do you speak so well?” he asked of Pug.
“Master, I was among the first captured and brought here. There were
only seven of us among so many Tsurani slaves. We learned to survive. After
some time, I was the only one left. The others died of the burning fever or
festering wounds, or were killed by the guards. There were none for me to talk
with who spoke my own language. No other countryman came to this camp for over
a year.”
The officer nodded, then to Laurie said, “And you?”
“Master, I am a singer, a minstrel in my own land. It is our custom
to travel broadly, and we must learn many tongues. I have also a good ear for
music. Your language is what is called a tone language on my world, words with
the same sound save for the pitch with which they are spoken have different
meanings. We have several such tongues to the south of our Kingdom. I learn quickly.”
A glimmering appeared in the eyes of the soldier “It is good to know
these things.” He lapsed deep into thought. After a moment he nodded to himself
“There are many considerations that fashion a man’s fortune, slaves.” He
smiled, looking more like a boy than a man. “This camp is a shambles. I am to
prepare a report for my father, the Lord of the Shinzawai. I think I know what
the problems are.” He pointed at Pug. “I would have your thoughts on the
subject. You have been here longer than anyone.”
Pug composed himself. It had been a long time since anyone had asked
him to venture an opinion on anything. “Master, the first overseer, the one who
was here when I was captured, was a shrewd man, who understood that men, even
slaves, cannot be made to work well if they are weak from hunger. We had better
food and if injured were given time for healing. Nogamu was an ill-tempered man
who took every setback as a personal affront. Should burrowers ruin a grove, it
was the fault of the slaves. Should a slave die, it was a plot to discredit his
oversight of the work force. Each difficulty was rewarded by another cut in
food, or in longer work hours. Any good fortune was regarded as his rightful
due.”
“I suspected as much. Nogamu was at one time a very important man. He
was the hadonra—demesne manager—of his father’s estates. His family was found
to be guilty of plotting against the Empire, and his own clan sold them all
into slavery, those that were not hanged. He was never a good slave. It was
thought that giving him responsibility for the camp might find some useful
channel for his skills. It proved not to be the case.
“Is there a good man among the slaves who could command ably?”
Laurie inclined his head, then said, “Master, Pug here . . .”
“I think not. I have plans for you both.”
Pug was surprised and wondered what he meant. He said, “Perhaps
Chogana, master. He was a farmer, until his crops failed and he was sold into
slavery for taxes. He has a level head.”
The soldier clapped his hands once, and a guard was in the room in
an instant. “Send for the slave Chogana.”
The guard saluted and left. “It is good that he is Tsurani,” said
the soldier. “You barbarians do not know your place, and I hate to think what
would happen should I leave one in charge. He would have my soldiers cutting
the trees while the slaves stood guard.”
There was a moment of silence, then Laurie laughed. It was a rich,
deep sound. Hokanu smiled. Pug watched closely. The young man who had their
lives in his hands seemed to be working hard at winning their trust. Laurie
appeared to have taken a liking to him, but Pug held his feelings in check. He
was further removed from the old Midkemian society, where war made noble and
commoner comrades-in-arms, able to share meals and misery without regard for
rank. One thing he had learned about the Tsurani early on was that they never
for an instant forgot their station. Whatever was occurring in this hut was by
this young soldier’s design, not by chance. Hokanu seemed to feel Pug’s eyes
upon him and looked at him. Their eyes locked briefly before Pug dropped his as
a slave is expected to do. For an instant a communication passed between them.
It was as if the soldier had said: You do not believe that I am a friend. So be
it, as long as you act your part.
With a wave of his hand, Hokanu said, “Return to your hut. Rest
well, for we will leave after the noon meal.”
They rose and bowed, then backed out of the hut. Pug walked in
silence, but Laurie said, “I wonder where we are going.” When no answer came,
he added, “In any event, it will have to be a better place than this.”
Pug wondered if it would be.
A hand shook Pug’s shoulder, and he came awake. He had been dozing
in the morning heat, taking advantage of the extra rest before he and Laurie
left with the young noble after the noon meal Chogana, the former farmer Pug
had recommended, motioned for silence, pointing to where Laurie slept deeply.
Pug followed the old slave out of the hut, to sit in the shade of the
building. Speaking slowly, as was his fashion, Chogana said, “My lord Hokanu
tells me you were instrumental in my being selected slave master for the camp.”
His brown, seamed face looked dignified as he bowed his head toward Pug. “I am
in your debt.”
Pug returned the bow, formal and unusual in this camp. “There is no
debt. You will conduct yourself as an overseer should. You will care well for
our brothers.”
Chogana’s old face split in a grin, revealing teeth stained brown by
years of chewing tateen nuts. The mildly narcotic nut—easily found in the
swamp—did not reduce efficiency but made the work seem less harsh. Pug had
avoided the habit, for no reasons he could voice, as had most of the
Midkemians. It seemed somehow to signify a final surrender of will.
Chogana stared at the camp, his eyes narrowed to slits by the harsh
light. It stood empty, except for the young lord’s bodyguard and the cook’s
crew. In the distance the sounds of the work crew echoed through the trees.
“When I was a boy, on my father’s farm in Szetac,” began Chogana,
“it was discovered I had a talent. I was investigated and found lacking.” The
meaning of that last statement was lost on Pug, but he didn’t interrupt. “So I
became a farmer like my father. But my talent was there. Sometimes I see
things, Pug, things within men. As I grew, word of my talent spread, and
people, mostly poor people, would come and ask for my advice. As a young man I
was arrogant and charged much, telling of what I saw. When I was older, I was
humble and took whatever was offered, but still I told what I saw. Either way,
people left angry. Do you know why?” he asked with a chuckle. Pug shook his
head. “Because they didn’t come to hear the truth, they came to hear what they
wanted to hear.”
Pug shared Chogana’s laugh. “So I pretended the talent went away,
and after a time people stopped coming to my farm. But the talent never went
away, Pug, and I still can see things, sometimes. I have seen something in you,
and I would tell you before you leave forever. I will die in this camp, but you
have a different fate before you. Will you listen?” Pug said he would, and
Chogana said, “Within you there is a trapped power. What it is and what it
means, I do not know.”
Knowing the strange Tsurani attitude toward magicians, Pug felt
sudden panic at the possibility someone might have sensed his former calling.
To most he was just another slave in the camp, and to a few, a former squire.
Chogana continued, speaking with his eyes closed. “I dreamed about
you, Pug. I saw you upon a tower, and you faced a fearsome foe.” He opened his
eyes. “I do not know what the dream may mean, but this you must know. Before
you mount that tower to face your foe, you must seek your wal; it is that
secret center of your being, the perfect place of peace within. Once you reside
there, you are safe from all harm. Your flesh may suffer, even die, but within
your wal you will endure in peace. Seek hard, Pug, for few men find their wal.”
Chogana stood. “You will leave soon. Come, we must wake Laurie.”
As they walked to the hut entrance, Pug said, “Chogana, thank you.
But one thing: you spoke of a foe upon the tower. Could you mark him?”
Chogana laughed and bobbed his head up and down. “Oh yes, I saw
him.” He continued to chuckle as he climbed the steps to the hut. “He is the
foe to be feared most by any man.” Narrow eyes regarded Pug. “He was you.”
Pug and Laurie sat on the steps of the temple, with six Tsurani
guards lounging around. The guards had been civil—barely—for the entire
journey. The travel had been tiring, if not difficult. With no horses, nor
anything to substitute for them, every Tsurani not riding in a needra cart
moved by power of shanks’ mare, their own or others. Nobles were carried up and
down the wide boulevards on litters borne on the backs of puffing, sweating
slaves.
Pug and Laurie had been given the short, plain grey robes of slaves.
Their loincloths, adequate in the swamps, were deemed unsightly for travel
among Tsurani citizens. The Tsurani put some store upon modesty—if not as much
as people in the Kingdom did.
They had come up the road along the coast of the great body of water
called Battle Bay. Pug had thought that if it was a bay, it was larger than
anything so named in Midkemia, for even from the high cliffs overlooking it,
the other side could not be seen. After several days’ travel they had entered
cultivated pastureland and soon after could see the opposite shore closing in
rapidly. Another few days on the road, and they had come to the city of Jamar.
Pug and Laurie watched the passing traffic, while Hokanu made an
offering at the temple. The Tsurani seemed mad for colors. Here even the
lowliest worker was likely to be dressed in a brightly colored short robe.
Those with wealth could be seen in more flamboyant dress, covered with intricately
executed designs. Only slaves lacked colorful dress.
Everywhere around the city, people thronged: farmers, traders,
workers, and travelers. Lines of needras plodded by, pulling wagons filled with
produce and goods. The sheer numbers of people overwhelmed Pug and Laurie, for
the Tsurani seemed like ants scurrying about as if the commerce of the Empire
could not wait upon the comfort of its citizens. Many who passed stopped to
stare at the Midkemians, whom they regarded as giant barbarians. Their own
height topped out at about five feet six inches, and even Pug was considered
tall, having come to his full growth at five feet eight. For their part, the
Midkemians had come to refer to the Tsurani as runts.
Pug and Laurie looked about. They waited in the center of the city,
where the great temples were. Ten pyramids sat amid a series of parks differing
in size. All were richly appointed with murals, both tiled and painted. From
where they were, the young men could see three of the parks. Each was terraced,
with miniature watercourses winding through, complete with tiny waterfalls.
Dwarf trees, as well as large shade trees, dotted the grass-covered grounds of
the parks Strolling musicians played flutes and strange stringed instruments,
producing alien, polytonal music, entertaining those who rested in the parks or
passed by.
Laurie listened with rapt attention. “Listen to those halftones! And
those diminished minors!” He sighed and looked down at the ground, his manner
somber. “It’s alien, but it’s music.” He looked at Pug, and the usual humor was
missing from his voice. “If I could only play again.” He glanced at the distant
musicians. “I could even develop a taste for Tsurani music.” Pug left him alone
with his longings.
Pug glanced around the busy city square, attempting to sort out the
impressions that had been coming without cease since entering the outer
precinct of the city. Everywhere people hurried about their business. A short
distance from the temples, they had passed through a market, not unlike those
in Kingdom cities, but larger. The noise of hawkers and buyers, the smells, the
heat, all reminded him of home in an odd way.
When Hokanu’s party neared, commoners would step out of the way, for
the guards at the head of the procession would call out “Shinzawai! Shinzawai!”
letting everyone know a noble approached. Only once did the party give way in
the city; a group of red-clad men, robed in cloaks of scarlet feathers. The one
that Pug took to be a high priest wore a mask of wood fashioned to resemble a
red skull, while the others had red painted faces. They blew reed whistles, and
people scattered to clear their line of march. One of the soldiers made a sign
of protection, and later Pug learned these men were the priests of Turakamu,
the eater of hearts, brother to the goddess Sibi, she who was death.
Pug turned to a nearby guard and motioned for permission to speak.
The guard nodded once, and Pug said, “Master, what god resides here?” as he
pointed to the temple where Hokanu prayed.
“Ignorant barbarian,” answered the soldier in a friendly manner,
“the gods do not abide in these halls, but in the Upper and Lower Heavens. This
temple is for men to make their devotions. Here my lord’s son makes an offering
and petitions to Chochocan, the good god of the Upper Heaven and his servant,
Tomachaca, the god of peace, for good fortune for the Shinzawai.”
When Hokanu returned, they started off again. They made their way
through the city, Pug still studying the people they passed. The press was
incredible, and Pug wondered how they managed to stand it. Like farmers in a
city for the first time, Pug and Laurie kept gawking at the wonders of Jamar.
Even the supposedly worldly troubadour would exclaim about this sight or that.
Soon the guards were chuckling over the barbarians’ obvious delight at the most
mundane things.
Every building they passed was fashioned from wood and a translucent
material, clothlike but rigid. A few, like the temples, were constructed with
stone, but what was most remarkable was that every building they passed, from
temple to worker’s hut, was painted white, except for bordering beams and door
frames, which were polished deep brown. Every open surface was decorated with
colorful paintings. Animals, landscapes, deities, and battle scenes abounded.
Everywhere was a not of color to confound the eye.
To the north of the temples, across from one of the parks and facing
a wide boulevard, stood a single building, set apart by open lawns bordered
with hedges. Two guards, dressed in armor and helm similar to those of their
own guards, stood watch at the door. They saluted Hokanu when he approached.
Without a word their other guards marched around the side of the
house, leaving the slaves with the young officer. He signaled, and one of the
door guards slid the large cloth-covered door aside. They entered an open
hallway leading back, with doors on each side. Hokanu marched them to a rear
door, which a house slave opened for them.
Pug and Laurie then discovered the house was fashioned like a
square, with a large garden in the center, accessible from all sides. Near a
bubbling pool sat an older man, dressed in a plain but rich-looking dark blue
robe. He was consulting a scroll. He looked up when the three entered, and rose
to greet Hokanu.
The young man removed his helm and then came to attention Pug and
Laurie stood slightly behind and said nothing. The man nodded, and Hokanu
approached. They embraced, and the older man said, “My son, it is good to see
you again. How were things at the camp?”
Hokanu made his report on the camp, briefly and to the point,
leaving out nothing of importance. He then told of the actions taken to remedy
the situation. “So the new overseer will see that the slaves have ample food
and rest. He should increase production soon.”
His father nodded. “I think you have acted wisely, my son. We shall
have to send another in a few months’ time to gauge progress, but things could
not become any worse than they were. The Warlord demands higher production, and
we border on falling into his bad graces.”
He seemed to notice the slaves for the first time. “These?” was all
he said, pointing at Laurie and Pug.
“They are unusual. I was thinking of our talk on the night before my
brother went to the north. They may prove valuable.”
“Have you spoken of this to anyone?” Firm lines set around his grey
eyes. Even though much shorter, he somehow reminded Pug of Lord Borric.
“No, my father. Only those who took council that night—”
The lord of the house cut him off with a wave of the hand. “Save
your remarks for later. ‘Trust no secrets to a city.’ Inform Septiem. We close
the house and leave for our estates in the morning.”
Hokanu bowed slightly, then turned to leave. “Hokanu.” His father’s
voice stopped him. “You have done well.” Pride plainly showing on his face, the
young man left the garden.
The lord of the house sat again upon a bench of carved stone, next
to a small fountain, and regarded the two slaves. “What are you called?”
“Pug, master.”
“Laurie, master.”
He seemed to derive some sort of insight from these simple
statements. “Through that door,” he said, pointing to the left, “is the way to
the cookhouse. My hadonra is called Septiem. He will see to your care. Go now.”
They bowed and left the garden. As they made their way through the
house, Pug nearly knocked over a young girl coming around a corner. She was
dressed in a slave’s robe and carried a large bundle of washing. It went flying
across the hall.
“Oh!” she cried. “I’ve just now washed these. Now I’ll have to do
them over.” Pug quickly bent to help her pick them up. She was tall for a
Tsurani, nearly Pug’s height, and well proportioned. Her brown hair was tied
back, and her brown eyes were framed by long, dark lashes. Pug stopped
gathering the clothing and stared at her in open admiration. She hesitated
under his scrutiny, then quickly picked up the rest of the clothes and hurried
off. Laurie watched her trim figure retreat, tan legs shown to good advantage
by the short slave’s robe.
Laurie slapped Pug’s shoulder. “Ha! I told you things would be
looking up.”
They left the house and approached the cookhouse, where the smell of
hot food set their appetites on edge. “I think you’ve made an impression on
that girl, Pug.”
Pug had never had much experience with women and felt his ears start
to burn. At the slave camp much of the talk was about women, and this, more
than anything else, had kept him feeling like a boy. He turned to see if Laurie
was having sport with him, then saw the blond singer looking behind him. He
followed Laurie’s gaze and caught a glimpse of a shyly smiling face pull back
from a window in the house.
The next day the household of the Shinzawai Family was in an uproar
Slaves and servants hurried every which way making ready for the journey to the
north. Pug and Laurie were left to themselves, as there was no one among the
household staff free enough to assign them tasks. They sat in the shade of a
large willowhke tree, enjoying the novelty of free time as they observed the
furor.
“These people are crazy, Pug. I’ve seen less preparation for
caravans. It looks as if they plan on taking everything with them.”
“Maybe they are. These people no longer surprise me.” Pug stood,
leaning against the bole. “I’ve seen things that defy logic.”
“True enough. But when you’ve seen as many different lands as I
have, you learn that the more things look different, the more they are the
same.”
“What do you mean?”
Laurie rose and leaned on the other side of the tree. In low tones
he said, “I’m not sure, but something is afoot, and we play a part, be sure. If
we keep sharp, we may be able to turn it to our advantage. Always remember
that. Should a man want something from you, you can always make a bargain, no
matter what the apparent differences in your stations.”
“Of course. Give him what he wants, and he’ll let you live.”
“You’re too young to be so cynical,” Laurie countered, with mirth
sparkling in his eyes. “Tell you what. You leave the world-weary pose to old
travelers such as myself, and I’ll make sure that you don’t miss a single
opportunity.”
Pug snorted. “What opportunity?”
“Well, for one thing,” Laurie said, pointing behind Pug, “that
little girl you nearly knocked over yesterday is appearing to have some
difficulty in lifting those boxes.” Pug, glancing back, saw the laundry girl
struggling to stack several large crates ready to be loaded into wagons. “I
think she might appreciate a little help, don’t you think?”
Pug’s confusion was evident on his face. “What . . . ?”
Laurie gave him a gentle push. “Off with you, dolt. A little help
now, later . . . who knows?”
Pug stumbled. “Later?”
“Gods!” laughed Laurie, fetching Pug a playful kick in the rump.
The troubadour’s humor was infectious, and Pug was smiling as he
approached the girl. She was trying to lift a large wooden crate atop another.
Pug took it from her. “Here, I can do that.”
She stepped away, uncertain. “It’s not heavy. It’s just too high for
me.” She looked everywhere but at Pug.
Pug lifted the crate easily and placed it on top of the others,
favoring his tender hand only a little. “There you are,” he said, trying to
sound casual.
The girl brushed back a stray wisp of hair that had fallen into her
eyes. “You’re a barbarian, aren’t you?” She spoke hesitantly.
Pug flinched. “You call us that. I like to think I’m as civilized as
the next man.”
She blushed. “I didn’t mean any offense. My people are called
barbarians also. Anyone who’s not a Tsurani is called that. I meant you’re from
that other world.”
Pug nodded. “What’s your name?”
She said, “Katala,” then in a rush, “What is your name?”
“Pug.”
She smiled. “That’s a strange name. Pug.” She seemed to like the
sound of it.
Just then the hadonra, Septiem, an old but erect man with the bearing
of a retired general, came around the house. “You two!” he snapped. “There’s
work to do! Don’t stand there.”
Katala ran back into the house, and Pug was left hesitating before
the yellow-robed estate manager. “You! What’s your name?”
“Pug, sir.”
“I see that you and your blond giant friend have been given nothing
to do. I’ll have to remedy that. Call him over.”
Pug sighed. So much for their free time. He waved for Laurie to come
over, and they were put to work loading wagons.
20
ESTATE
The weather had turned cooler during the last three weeks.
Still it hinted at the summer’s heat. The winter season in this
land, if a season it properly was, lasted a mere six weeks, with brief cold
rains out of the north. The trees held most of their bluish green leaves, and
there was nothing to mark the passing of fall. In the four years Pug had abided
in Tsuranuanni, there were none of the familiar signs that marked the passing
seasons: no bird migrations, frost in the mornings, rains that froze, snow, or
blooming of wild flowers. This land seemed eternally set in the soft amber of
summer.
For the first few days of the journey, they had followed the highway
from Jamar, northward to the city of Sulan-qu. The river Gagajin had carried a
ceaseless clutter of boats and barges, while the highway was equally jammed
with caravans, farmers’ carts, and nobles riding in litters.
The Lord of the Shinzawai had departed the first day by boat for the
Holy City, to attend the High Council. The household followed at a more
leisurely pace. Hokanu paused outside the city of Sulan-qu long enough to pay a
social call upon the Lady of the Acoma, and Pug and Laurie found the
opportunity to gossip with another Midkemian slave, recently captured. The news
of the war was disheartening. No change since the last they had heard, the
stalemate continued.
At the Holy City, the Lord of the Shinzawai joined his son and the
retinue on its journey to the Shinzawai estates, outside the City of Silmani.
From then, the trek northward had been uneventful.
The Shinzawai caravan was approaching the boundaries of the family’s
northern estates Pug and Laurie had little to do along the way except
occasional chores: dumping the cook pots, cleaning up needra droppings, loading
and unloading supplies. Now they were riding on the back of a wagon, feet
dangling over the rear. Laurie bit into a ripe jomach fruit, something like a
large green pomegranate with the flesh of a watermelon. Spitting out seeds, he
said, “How’s the hand?”
Pug studied his right hand, examining the red puckered scar that ran
across the palm “It’s still stiff. I expect it’s as healed as it will ever be.”
Laurie took a look. “Don’t think you’ll ever carry a sword again.”
He grinned.
Pug laughed “I doubt you will either. I somehow don’t think they’ll
be finding a place for you in the Imperial Horse Lance.”
Laurie spat a burst of seeds, bouncing them off the nose of the
needra who pulled the wagon behind them. The six-legged beast snorted, and the
driver waved his steering stick angrily at them. “Except for the fact that the
Emperor doesn’t have any lancers, due to the fact that he also doesn’t have any
horses, I can’t think of a finer choice.”
Pug laughed derisively.
“I’ll have you know, fella-me-lad,” said Laurie in aristocratic
tones, “that we troubadours are often beset by a less savory sort of customer,
brigands and cutthroats seeking our hard-earned wages—scant though they may be.
If one doesn’t develop the ability to defend oneself, one doesn’t stay in
business, if you catch my meaning.”
Pug smiled. He knew that a troubadour was nearly sacrosanct in a
town, for should he be harmed or robbed, word would spread, and no other would
ever come there again. But on the road it was a different matter. He had no
doubt of Laurie’s ability to take care of himself, but wasn’t about to let him
use that pompous tone and sit without a rejoinder. As he was about to speak,
though, he was cut off by shouts coming from the front of the caravan. Guards
came rushing forward, and Laurie turned to his shorter companion. “What do you
suppose that is all about?”
Not waiting for an answer, he jumped down and ran forward. Pug
followed. As they reached the head of the caravan, behind the Lord of the
Shinzawai’s litter, they could see shapes advancing up the road toward them.
Laurie grabbed Pug’s sleeve. “Riders!”
Pug could scarcely believe his eyes, for indeed it appeared that
riders were approaching along the road from the Shinzawai manor. As they got
closer, he could see that, rather than riders, there was one horseman and three
cho-ja, all three a rich dark blue color.
The rider, a young brown-haired Tsurani, taller than most,
dismounted. His movement was clumsy, and Laurie observed, “They will never pose
any military threat if that’s the best seat they can keep. Look, there is no
saddle, nor bridle, only a rude hackamore fashioned from leather straps. And
the poor horse looks like it hasn’t been properly groomed for a month.”
The curtain of the litter was pulled back as the rider approached.
The slaves put the litter down, and the Lord of the Shinzawai got out. Hokanu
had reached his father’s side, from his place among the guards at the rear of
the caravan, and was embracing the rider, exchanging greetings. The rider then
embraced the Lord of the Shinzawai Pug and Laurie could hear the rider say,
“Father! It is good to see you.”
The Shinzawai lord said, “Kasumi! It is good to see my firstborn
son. When did you return?”
“Less than a week ago. I would have come to Jamar, but I heard that
you were due here, so I waited.”
“I am glad. Who are these with you?” He indicated the creatures.
“This,” he said, pointing to the foremost, “is Strike Leader
X’calak, back from fighting the short ones under the mountains on Midkemia.”
The creature stepped forward and raised his right hand—very
humanlike—in salute, and in a high, piping voice said, “Hail, Kamatsu, Lord of
the Shinzawai. Honors to your house.”
The Lord of the Shinzawai bowed slightly from the waist “Greetings,
X’calak. Honors to your hive. The cho-ja are always welcome guests.”
The creature stepped back and waited. The lord turned to look at the
horse. “What is this upon which you sit, my son?”
“A horse, Father. A creature the barbarians ride into battle. I’ve
told you of them before. It is a truly marvelous creature. On its back I can
run faster than the swiftest cho-ja runner.”
“How do you stay on?”
The older Shinzawai son laughed. “With great difficulty, I’m afraid.
The barbarians have tricks to it I have yet to learn.”
Hokanu smiled. “Perhaps we can arrange for lessons.”
Kasumi slapped him playfully on the back. “I have asked several
barbarians, but unfortunately they were all dead.”
“I have two here who are not.”
Kasumi looked past his brother and saw Laurie, standing a full head
taller than the other slaves who had gathered around. “So I see. Well, we must
ask him. Father, with your permission, I will ride back to the house and have
all made ready for your homecoming.”
Kamatsu embraced his son and agreed. The older son grabbed a handful
of mane, and with an athletic leap, remounted. With a wave, he rode off.
Pug and Laurie quickly returned to their places on the wagon. Laurie
asked, “Have you seen the like of those things before?”
Pug nodded. “Yes. The Tsurani call them the cho-ja. They live in
large hive mounds, like ants. The Tsurani slaves I spoke with in the camp tell
me they have been around as long as can be remembered. They are loyal to the
Empire, though I seem to remember someone saying that each hive has its own
queen.”
Laurie peered around the front of the wagon, hanging on with one
hand. “I wouldn’t like to face one on foot. Look at the way they run.”
Pug said nothing. The older Shinzawai son’s remark about the short
ones under the mountain brought back old memories. If Tomas is alive, he
thought, he is a man now. If he is alive.
The Shinzawai manor was huge. It was easily the biggest single
building —short of temples and palaces—that Pug had seen. It sat atop a hill,
commanding a view of the countryside for miles. The house was square, like the
one in Jamar, but several times the size. The town house could easily have fit
inside this one’s central garden. Behind it were the outbuildings, cookhouse,
and slave quarters.
Pug craned his neck to take in the garden, for they were walking
quickly through, and there was little time to absorb all of it. The hadonra,
Septiem, scolded him. “Don’t tarry.”
Pug quickened his step and fell in beside Laurie. Still, on a brief
viewing, the garden was impressive. Several shade trees had been planted beside
three pools that sat in the midst of miniature trees and flowering plants.
Stone benches had been placed for contemplative rest, and paths of fine pebble
gravel wandered throughout. Around this tiny park the building rose, three
stories tall. The top two stones had balconies, and several staircases rose to
connect them. Servants could be seen hurrying along the upper levels, but there
appeared to be no one else in the garden, or at least that portion they had
crossed.
They reached a sliding door, and Septiem turned to face them. In
stern tones he said, “You two barbarians will watch your manners before the
lords of this house, or by the gods, I’ll have every inch of skin off your
backs. Now make sure you do all that I’ve told you, or you’ll wish that Master
Hokanu had left you to rot in the swamps.”
He slid the door to one side and announced the slaves. The command
for them to enter was given, and Septiem shooed them inside.
They found themselves in a colorfully lit room, the light coming
through the large translucent door covered with a painting. On the walls hung
carvings, tapestries, and paintings, all done in fine style, small and
delicate. The floor was covered, in Tsurani fashion, with a thick pile of
cushions. Upon a large cushion Kamatsu, Lord of the Shinzawai, sat; across from
him were his two sons. All were dressed in the short robes of expensive fabric
and cut they used when off duty. Pug and Laurie stood with their eyes downcast
until they were spoken to.
Hokanu spoke first. “The blond giant is called Loh-’re, and the more
normal-sized one is Poog.”
Laurie started to open his mouth, but a quick elbow from Pug
silenced him before he could speak.
The older son noticed the exchange, and said, “You would speak?”
Laurie looked up, then quickly down again. The instructions had been
clear: not to speak until commanded to Laurie wasn’t sure the question was a
command.
The lord of the house said, “Speak.”
Laurie looked at Kasumi. “I am Laurie, master. Lor-ee. And my friend
is Pug, not Poog.”
Hokanu looked taken aback at being corrected, but the older brother
nodded and pronounced the names several times over, until he spoke them
correctly. He then said, “Have you ridden horses?”
Both slaves nodded. Kasumi said, “Good. Then you can show me the
best way.”
Pug’s gaze wandered as much as was possible with his head down, but
something caught his eye. Next to the Lord of the Shinzawai sat a game board
and what looked like familiar figures. Kamatsu noticed and said, “You know this
game?” He reached over and brought the board forward, so that it lay before
him.
Pug said, “Master, I know the game. We call it chess.”
Hokanu looked at his brother, who leaned forward “As several have
said, Father, there has been contact with the barbarians before.”
His father waved away the comment. “It is a theory.” To Pug he said,
“Sit here and show me how the pieces move.”
Pug sat and tried to remember what Kulgan had taught him. He had
been an indifferent student of the game, but knew a few basic openings. He
moved a pawn forward and said, “This piece may move forward only one space,
except when it is first moved, master. Then it may move two.” The lord of the
house nodded, motioning that he should continue. “This piece is a knight and
moves like so,” said Pug.
After he had demonstrated the moves of the various pieces, the Lord
of the Shinzawai said, “We call this game shah. The pieces are called by
different names, but it is the same. Come, we will play.”
Kamatsu gave the white pieces to Pug. He opened with a conventional
king’s pawn move, and Kamatsu countered. Pug played badly and was quickly
beaten. The others watched the entire game without a sound. When it was over,
the lord said, “Do you play well, among your people?”
“No, master. I play poorly.”
He smiled, his eyes wrinkling at the edges. “Then I would guess that
your people are not as barbarous as is commonly held. We will play again soon.”
He nodded to his older son, and Kasumi rose. Bowing to his father,
he said to Pug and Laurie, “Come.”
They bowed to the lord of the house and followed Kasumi out of the
room. He led them through the house, to a smaller room with sleeping pallets
and cushions. “You will sleep here. My room is next door. I would have you at
hand at all times.”
Laurie spoke up boldly. “What does the master want of us?”
Kasumi regarded him for a moment. “You barbarians will never make
good slaves. You forget your place too often.”
Laurie started to stammer an apology but was cut off. “It is of
little matter. You are to teach me things, Laurie. You will teach me to ride,
and how to speak your language. Both of you. I would learn what those.”
—he paused, then made a flat, nasal wa-wa-wa sound—”noises mean when
you speak to each other.”
Further conversation was cut off by the sound of a single chime that
reverberated throughout the house. Kasumi said, “A Great One comes. Stay in
your rooms. I must go to welcome him with my father.” He hurried off, leaving
the two Midkemians to sit in their new quarters wondering at this newest twist
in their lives.
Twice during the following two days, Pug and Laurie glimpsed the
Shinzawai’s important visitor. He was much like the Shinzawai lord in
appearance, but thinner, and he wore the black robe of a Tsurani Great One. Pug
asked a few questions of the house staff and gained a little information. Pug
and Laurie had seen nothing that compared with the awe in which the Great Ones
were held by the Tsurani. They seemed a power apart, and with what little
understanding of Tsurani social reality Pug had, he couldn’t exactly comprehend
how they fit into the scheme of things. At first he had thought they were under
some social stigma, for all he was ever told was that the Great Ones were “outside
the law.” He then was made to understand, by an exasperated Tsurani slave who
couldn’t believe Pug’s ignorance of important matters, that the Great Ones had
little or no social constraints in exchange for some nameless service to the
Empire.
Pug had made a discovery during this time that lightened the alien
feeling of his captivity somewhat. Behind the needra pens he had found a kennel
full of yapping, tail-wagging dogs. They were the only Midkemian-like animals
he had seen on Kelewan, and he felt an unexplained joy at their presence. He
had rushed back to their room to fetch Laurie and had brought him to the
kennel. Now they sat in one of the runs, amid a group of playful canines.
Laurie laughed at their boisterous play. They were unlike the Duke’s
hunting hounds, being longer of leg, and more gaunt. Their ears were pointed,
and perked at every sound.
“I’ve seen their like before, in Gulbi. It’s a town in the Great
Northern Trade Route of Kesh. They are called greyhounds and are used to run
down the fast cats and antelope of the grasslands near the Valley of the Sun.”
The kennel master, a thin, droopy-eyelidded slave named Rachmad,
came over and watched them suspiciously “What are you doing here?”
Laurie regarded the dour man and playfully pulled the muzzle of a
rambunctious puppy. “We haven’t seen dogs since we left our homeland, Rachmad.
Our master is busy with the Great One, so we thought we would visit your fine
kennel.”
At mention of his “fine kennel” the gloomy countenance brightened
considerably. “I try to keep the dogs healthy We must keep them locked up, for
they try to harry the cho-ja, who like them not at all.” For a moment Pug
thought perhaps they had been taken from Midkemia as the horse had been. When
he asked where they had come from, Rachmad looked at him as if he were crazy.
“You speak like you have been too long in the sun. There have always been
dogs.” With that final pronouncement on the matter, he judged the conversation
closed and left.
Later that night, Pug awoke to find Laurie entering their room
“Where have you been?”
“Shh! You want to wake the whole household? Go back to sleep.”
“Where did you go?” Pug asked in hushed tones.
Laurie could be seen grinning in the dim light “I paid a visit to a
certain cook’s assistant, for . . . a chat.”
“Oh. Almorella?”
“Yes,” came the cheerful reply “She’s quite a girl.” The young slave
who served in the kitchen had been making big eyes at Laurie ever since the
caravan had arrived four days ago.
After a moment of silence, Laurie said, “You should cultivate a few
friends yourself. Gives a whole new look to things.”
“I’ll bet,” Pug said, disapproval mixed with more than a little
envy. Almorella was a bright and cheerful girl, near Pug’s age, with merry dark
eyes.
“That little Katala, now. She has her eye on you, I’m thinking.”
Cheeks burning, Pug threw a cushion at his friend. “Oh, shut up and
go to sleep.”
Laurie stifled a laugh. He retired to his pallet and left Pug alone
in thought.
There was the faint promise of rain on the wind, and Pug welcomed
the coolness he felt in its touch. Laurie was sitting astride Kasumi’s horse,
and the young officer stood by and watched. Laurie had directed Tsurani
craftsmen as they fashioned a saddle and bridle for the mount and was now
demonstrating their use.
“This horse is combat trained,” Laurie shouted. “He can be neck
reined”—he demonstrated by laying the reins on one side of the horse’s neck,
then the other—”or he can be turned by using your legs.” He raised his hands
and showed the older son of the house how this was done.
For three weeks they had been instructing the young noble in riding,
and he had shown natural ability. Laurie jumped from the horse, and Kasumi took
his place. The Tsurani rode roughly at first, the saddle feeling strange under
him. As he bounced by, Pug called out, “Master, grip him firmly with your lower
leg!” The horse sensed the pressure and picked up a quick trot. Rather than be
troubled by the increase in speed, Kasumi looked enraptured. “Keep your heels
down!” shouted Pug. Then, without instructions from either slave, Kasumi kicked
the horse hard in the sides and had the animal running over the fields.
Laurie watched him vanish across the meadow and said, “He’s either a
natural horseman or he’s going to kill himself.”
Pug nodded. “I think he’s got the knack. He’s certainly not lacking
courage.”
Laurie pulled up a long stem of grass from the ground and put it
between his teeth. He hunkered down and scratched the ear of a bitch who lay at
his feet, as much to distract the dog from running after the horse as to play
with her. She rolled over on her back and playfully chewed his hand.
Laurie turned his attention to Pug. “I wonder what game our young
friend is playing at.”
Pug shrugged. “What do you mean?”
“Remember when we first arrived? I heard Kasumi was about to head
out with his cho-ja companions. Well, those three cho-ja soldiers left this
morning—which is why Bethel here is out of her pen—and I heard some gossip that
the orders of the older son of the Shinzawai were suddenly changed. Put that
together with these riding and language lessons and what do you have?”
Pug stretched. “I don’t know.”
“I don’t know either.” Laurie sounded disgusted “But these matters
are of high import.” He looked across the plain and said lightly, “All I ever
wanted to do was to travel and tell my stories, sing my songs, and someday find
a widow who owned an inn.”
Pug laughed. “I think you would find tavern keeping dull business
after all this fine adventure.”
“Some fine adventuring. I’m riding along with a bunch of provincial
militia and run right smack into the entire Tsurani army. Since then I’ve been
beaten several times, spent over four months mucking about in the swamps,
walked over half this world—”
“Ridden in a wagon, as I remember.”
“Well, traveled over half this world, and now I’m giving riding
lessons to Kasumi Shinzawai, older son of a lord of Tsuranuanm Not the stuff
great ballads are made of.”
Pug smiled ruefully “You could have been four years in the swamps.
Consider yourself lucky. At least you can count on being here tomorrow. At
least as long as Septiem doesn’t catch you creeping around the kitchen late at
night.”
Laurie studied Pug closely “I know you’re joking. About Septiem, I
mean. It has occurred to me several times to ask you, Pug. Why do you never
speak of your life before you were captured?”
Pug looked away absently “I guess it’s a habit I picked up in the swamp
camp. It doesn’t pay to remind yourself of what you used to be. I’ve seen brave
men die because they couldn’t forget they were born free.”
Laurie pulled at the dog’s ear “But things are different here.”
“Are they? Remember what you said back in Jamar about a man wanting
something from you. I think the more comfortable you become here, the easier it
is for them to get whatever it is they want from you. This Shinzawai lord is no
one’s fool.” Seemingly shifting topics, he said, “Is it better to train a dog
or horse with a whip or with kindness?”
Laurie looked up. “What? Why, with kindness, but you have to use
discipline also.”
Pug nodded. “We are being shown the same consideration as Bethel and
her kind, I think. But we still are slaves. Never forget that.”
Laurie looked out over the field for a long time and said nothing.
The pair were rousted from their thoughts by the shouts of the older
son of the house as he rode back into view. He pulled the horse up before them
and jumped down. “He flies,” he said, in his broken King’s Tongue. Kasumi was
an apt student and was picking up the language quickly. He supplemented his
language lessons with a constant stream of questions about the lands and people
of Midkemia. There was not a single aspect of life in the Kingdom that he
seemed uninterested in. He had asked for examples of the most mundane things,
such as the manner in which one bargains with tradespeople, and the proper
forms of address when speaking to people of different ranks.
Kasumi led the horse back to the shed that had been built for him,
and Pug watched for any sign of footsoreness. They had fashioned shoes for him
from wood treated with resin, by trial and error, but these seemed to be
holding up well enough. As he walked, Kasumi said, “I have been thinking about
a thing. I don’t understand how your King rules, with all you have said about
this Congress of Lords. Please explain this thing.”
Laurie looked at Pug with an eyebrow raised. While no more an
authority on Kingdom politics than Laurie, he seemed better able to explain
what he knew. Pug said, “The congress elects the King, though it is mostly a
matter of form.”
“Form?”
“A tradition. The heir to the throne is always elected, except when
there is no clear successor. It is considered the best way to stem civil war,
for the ruling of the congress is final.” He explained how the Prince of
Krondor had deferred to his nephew, and how the congress had acquiesced to his
wishes “How is it with the Empire?”
Kasumi thought, then said, “Perhaps not so different. Each emperor
is the elect of the gods, but from what you have told me he is unlike your
King. He rules in the Holy City, but his leadership is spiritual. He protects
us from the wrath of the gods.”
Laurie asked, “Who then rules?”
They reached the shed, and Kasumi took the saddle and bridle off the
horse and began rubbing him down. “Here it is different from your land.” He
seemed to have difficulty with the language and shifted into Tsurarri. “A
Ruling Lord of a family is the absolute authority upon his estate. Each family
belongs to a clan, and the most influential lord in the clan is Warchief.
Within that clan, each other lord of a family holds certain powers depending
upon influence. The Shinzawai belong to the Kanazawai Clan. We are the second
most powerful family in that clan next to the Keda. My father in his youth was
commander of the clan armies, a Warchief, what you would call a general. The
position of families shifts from generation to generation, so that it is
unlikely I will reach so exalted a position.
“The leading lords of each clan sit in the High Council. They advise
the Warlord. He rules in the name of the Emperor, though the Emperor could
overrule him.”
“Does the Emperor in fact ever overrule the Warlord?” asked Laurie.
“Never.”
“How is the Warlord chosen?” asked Pug.
“It is difficult to explain. When the old Warlord dies, the clans
meet. It is a large gathering of lords, for not only the council comes, but
also the heads of every family. They meet and plot, and sometimes blood feuds
develop, but in the end a new Warlord is elected.”
Pug brushed back the hair from his eyes. “Then what is to keep the
Warlord’s clan from claiming the office, if they are the most powerful?”
Kasumi looked troubled. “It is not an easy thing to explain. Perhaps
you would have to be Tsurani to understand. There are laws, but more important,
there are customs. No matter how powerful a clan becomes, or a family within
it, only the lord of one of five families may be elected Warlord. They are the
Keda, Tonmargu, Minwanabi, Oaxatucan, and the Xacatecas. So there are only five
lords who may be considered. This Warlord is an Oaxatucan, so the light of the
Kanazawai clan burns dimly. His clan, the Omechan, is in ascension now. Only
the Minwanabi rival them, and for the present they are allied in the war
effort. That is the way of it.”
Laurie shook his head “This family and clan business makes our own
politics seem simple.”
Kasumi laughed. “That is not politics. Politics is the province of
the parties.”
“Parties?” asked Laurie, obviously getting lost in the conversation.
“There are many parties. The Blue Wheel, the Golden Flower, the Jade
Eye, the Party for Progress, the War Party, and others. Families may belong to
different parties, each trying to further their own needs. Sometimes families
from the same clan will belong to different parties. Sometimes they switch
alliances to suit their needs for the moment. Other times they may support two
parties at once, or none.”
“It seems a most unstable government,” remarked Laurie.
Kasumi laughed. “It has lasted for over two thousand years. We have
an old saying: ‘In the High Council, there is no brother.’ Remember that and
you may understand.”
Pug weighed his next question carefully. “Master, in all this you
have not mentioned the Great Ones. Why is that?”
Kasumi stopped rubbing down the horse and looked at Pug for a
moment, then resumed his ministrations. “They have nothing to do with politics.
They are outside the law and have no clan.” He paused again. “Why do you ask?”
“It is only that they seem to command a great amount of respect, and
since one has called here so recently, I thought you could enlighten me.”
“They are given respect because the fate of the Empire is at all
times in their hands. It is a grave responsibility. They renounce all their
ties, and few have personal lives beyond their community of magicians. Those
with families live apart, and their children are sent to live with their former
families when they come of age. It is a difficult thing. They make many
sacrifices.”
Pug watched Kasumi closely. He seemed somehow troubled by what he
was saying. “The Great One who came to see my father was, when a boy, a member
of this family. He was my uncle. It is difficult for us now, for he must
observe the formalities and cannot claim kinship. It would be better if he
stayed away, I think.” The last was spoken softly.
“Why is that, master?” Laurie asked, in hushed tones.
“Because it is hard for Hokanu. Before he became my brother, he was
that Great One’s son.”
They finished caring for the horse and left the shack. Bethel ran
ahead, for she knew it was close to feeding time. As they passed the kennel,
Rachmad called her over, and she joined the other dogs.
The entire way there was no conversation, and Kasumi entered his
room with no further remark for either of the Midkemians. Pug sat on his
pallet, waiting for the call for dinner, and thought about what he had learned.
For all their strange ways, the Tsurani were much like other men. He found this
somehow both comforting and troublesome.
Two weeks later, Pug was faced with another problem to mull over.
Katala had been making it obvious she was less than pleased with Pug’s lack of
attention. In little ways at first, then with more blatant signs, she had tried
to spark his interest. Finally things had come to a head when he had run into
her behind the cook shed earlier that afternoon.
Laurie and Kasumi were trying to build a small lute, with the aid of
a Shinzawai woodcrafter Kasumi had expressed interest in the music of the
troubadour and, the last few days, had watched closely while Laurie argued with
the artisan over the selection of proper grains, the way to cut the wood, and
the manner of fashioning the instrument. He was perplexed about whether or not
needra gut would make suitable strings, and a thousand other details. Pug had
found all this less than engrossing, and after a few days had found every
excuse to wander off. The smell of curing wood reminded him too much of cutting
trees in the swamp for him to enjoy being around the resin pots in the
wood-carver’s shed.
This afternoon he had been lying in the shade of the cook shed when
Katala came around the corner. His stomach constricted at the sight of her. He
thought her very attractive, but each time he had tried to speak to her, he
found he couldn’t think of anything to say. He would simply make a few inane
remarks, become embarrassed, then hurry off. Lately he had taken to saying
nothing. As she had approached this afternoon, he had smiled noncommittally,
and she started to walk past. Suddenly she had turned and looked as if near to
tears.
“What is the matter with me? Am I so ugly that you can’t stand the
sight of me?”
Pug had sat speechless, his mouth open She had stood for a moment,
then kicked him in the leg “Stupid barbarian,” she had sniffed, then run off.
Now he sat in his room, feeling confused and uneasy over this
afternoon’s encounter Laurie was carving pegs for his lute. Finally he put knife
and wood aside and said, “What’s troubling you, Pug? You look as if they’re
promoting you to slave master and sending you back to the swamp.”
Pug lay back on his pallet, staring at the ceiling. “It’s Katala.”
“Oh,” Laurie said.
“What do you mean, ‘Oh’?”
“Nothing, except that Almorella tells me the girl has been
impossible for the last two weeks, and you look about as bright as a poleaxed
steer these days. What’s the matter?”
“I don’t know. She’s just . . . she’s just . . . She kicked me
today.”
Laurie threw back his head and laughed. “Why in the name of heaven
did she do that?”
“I don’t know. She just kicked me.”
“What did you do?”
“I didn’t do anything.”
“Ha!” Laurie exploded with mirth. “That’s the trouble, Pug. There is
only one thing I know of that a woman hates more than a man she doesn’t like
paying her too much attention—and that’s lack of attention from a man she does
like.”
Pug looked despondent. “I thought it was something like that.”
Surprise registered on Laurie’s face. “What is it? Don’t you like
her?”
Leaning forward, his elbows on his knees, Pug said, “It’s not that.
I like her. She’s very pretty and seems nice enough. It’s just that . . .”
“What?”
Pug glanced sharply over at his friend, to see if he was being
mocked. Laurie was smiling, but in a friendly, reassuring way. Pug continued.
“It’s just . . . there’s someone else.”
Laurie’s mouth fell open, then snapped shut “Who? Except for
Almorella, Katala’s the prettiest wench I’ve seen on this gods-forsaken world.”
He sighed. “In honesty, she’s prettier than Almorella, though only a little.
Besides, I’ve not seen you ever speak to another woman, and I’d have noticed
you skulking off with anyone.”
Pug shook his head and looked down. “No, Laurie. I mean back home.”
Laurie’s mouth popped open again, then he fell over backward and
groaned. “ ‘Back home!’ What am I to do with this child? He’s bereft of all
wit!” He pulled himself up on an elbow and said, “Can this be Pug speaking? The
lad who counsels me to put the past behind? The one who insists that dwelling
on how things were at home leads only to a quick death?”
Pug ignored the sting of the questions. “This is different.”
“How is it different? By Ruthia—who in her more tender moments
protects fools, drunks, and minstrels—how can you tell me this is different? Do
you imagine for a moment you have one hope in ten times ten thousand of ever
seeing this girl again, whoever she is?”
“I know, but thinking of Carline has kept me from losing my mind
more times . . .” He sighed loudly. “We all need one dream, Laurie.”
Laurie studied his young friend for a quiet moment. “Yes, Pug, we
all need one dream. Still,” he added brightly, “a dream is one thing, a living,
breathing, warm woman is another.” Seeing Pug become irritated at the remark,
he switched topics. “Who is Carline, Pug?”
“My lord Borric’s daughter.”
Laurie’s eyes grew round. “Princess Carline?” Pug nodded. Laurie’s
voice showed amusement. “The most eligible noble daughter in the Western Realm
after the daughter of the Prince of Krondor? There are sides to you I never
would have thought possible! Tell me about her.”
Pug began to speak slowly at first, telling of his boyhood
infatuation for her, then of how their relationship developed. Laurie remained
silent, putting aside questions, letting Pug relieve himself of the pent-up
emotions of years. Finally Pug said, “Perhaps that’s what bothers me so much
about Katala. In certain ways Katala’s like Carline. They’ve both got strong
wills and make their moods known.”
Laurie nodded, not saying anything. Pug lapsed into silence, then
after a moment said, “When I was at Crydee, I thought for a time I was in love
with Carline. But I don’t know. Is that strange?”
Laurie shook his head. “No, Pug. There are many ways to love someone.
Sometimes we want love so much, we’re not too choosy about who we love. Other
times we make love such a pure and noble thing, no poor human can ever meet our
vision. But for the most part, love is a recognition, an opportunity to say,
There is something about you I cherish.’ It doesn’t entail marriage, or even
physical love. There’s love of parents, love of city or nation, love of life,
and love of people. All different, all love. But tell me, do you find your
feelings for Katala much as they were for Carline?”
Pug shrugged and smiled. “No, they’re not, not quite the same. With
Carline, I felt as if I had to keep her away, you know, at arm’s length. Sort
of keeping control of what went on, I think.”
Laurie probed lightly. “And Katala?”
Pug shrugged again. “I don’t know. It’s different. I don’t feel as
if I have to keep her under control. It’s more as if there are things I want to
tell her, but I don’t know how. Like the way I got all jammed up inside when
she smiled at me the first time. I could talk to Carline, when she kept quiet
and let me. Katala keeps quiet, but I don’t know what to say.” He paused a
moment, then made a sound that was half sigh, half groan. “Just thinking about
Katala makes me hurt, Laurie.”
Laurie lay back, a friendly chuckle escaping his lips. “Aye, it’s
well I’ve known that ache. And I must admit your taste runs to interesting
women. From what I can see, Katala’s a prize. And the Princess Carline . . .”
A little snappishly, Pug said, “I’ll make a point of introducing you
when we get back.”
Laurie ignored the tone “I’ll hold you to that. Look, all I mean is
it seems you’ve developed an excellent knack for finding worthwhile women.” A
little sadly, he said, “I wish I could claim as much. My life has been mostly
caught up with tavern wenches, farmers’ daughters, and common street whores. I
don’t know what to tell you.”
“Laurie,” said Pug. Laurie sat up and looked at his friend. “I don’t
know . . . I don’t know what to do.”
Laurie studied Pug a moment, then comprehension dawned and he threw
back his head, laughing. He could see Pug’s anger rising and put his hands up
in supplication. “I’m sorry, Pug. I didn’t mean to embarrass you. It was just
not what I expected to hear.”
Somewhat placated, Pug said, “I was young when I was captured, less
than sixteen years of age. I was never of a size like the other boys, so the
girls didn’t pay much attention to me, until Carline, I mean, and after I
became a squire, they were afraid to talk to me. After that . . . Damn it all,
Laurie. I’ve been in the swamps for four years. What chance have I had to know
a woman?”
Laurie sat quietly for a moment, and the tension left the room.
“Pug, I never would have imagined, but as you said, when have you had the
time?”
“Laurie, what am I to do?”
“What would you like to do?” Laurie looked at Pug, his expression
showing concern.
“I would like to . . . go to her. I think. I don’t know.”
Laurie rubbed his chin. “Look, Pug, I never thought I’d have this
sort of talk with anyone besides a son someday if I ever have one. I wasn’t
meaning to make sport of you. You just caught me off guard.” He looked away,
gathering his thoughts, then said, “My father threw me out when I was just shy
twelve years old; I was the oldest boy, and he had seven other mouths to feed.
And I was never much for farming. A neighbor boy and I walked to Tyr-Sog and
spent a year living on the streets. He joined a mercenary band as a cook’s
monkey and later became a soldier. I hooked up with a traveling troupe of musicians.
I apprenticed to a jongleur from whom I learned the songs, sagas, and ballads,
and I traveled.
“I came quickly to my growth, a man at thirteen. There was a woman
in the troupe, a widow of a singer, traveling with her brothers and cousins.
She was just past twenty, but seemed very old to me then. She was the one who
introduced me to the games of men and women.” He stopped for a moment, reliving
memories long forgotten.
Laurie smiled. “It was over fifteen years ago, Pug. But I can still
see her face. We were both a little lost. It was never a planned thing. It just
happened one afternoon on the road.
“She was . . . kind.” He looked at Pug. “She knew I was scared,
despite my bravado.” He smiled and closed his eyes. “I can still see the sun in
the trees behind her face, and the smell of her mingled with the scent of
wildflowers.” Opening his eyes he said, “We spent the next two years together,
while I learned to sing. Then I left the troupe.”
“What happened?” Pug asked, for this was a new story to him. Laurie
had never spoken of his youth before.
“She married again. He was a good man, an innkeeper on the road from
Malac’s Cross to Durrony’s Vale. His wife had died the year before of fever,
leaving him with two small sons. She tried to explain things to me, but I
wouldn’t listen. What did I know? I was not quite sixteen, and the world was a
simple place.”
Pug nodded. “I know what you mean.”
Laurie said, “Look, what I’m trying to say is that I understand the
problem. I can explain how things work . . .”
Pug said, “I know that. I wasn’t raised by monks.”
“But you don’t know how things work.”
Pug nodded as they both laughed. “I think you should just go to the
girl and make your feelings known,” said Laurie.
“Just talk to her?”
“Of course. Love is like a lot of things, it is always best done
with the head. Save mindless efforts for mindless things Now go.”
“Now?” Pug looked panic-stricken.
“You can’t start any sooner, right?”
Pug nodded and without a word left. He walked down the dark and
quiet corridors, outside to the slave quarters, and found his way to her door.
He raised his hand to knock on the door frame, then stopped. He stood quietly
for a moment trying to make up his mind what to do, when the door slid open.
Almorella stood in the doorway, clutching her robe about her, her hair
disheveled. “Oh,” she whispered, “I thought it was Laurie. Wait a moment.” She
disappeared into the room, then shortly reappeared with a bundle of things in
her arms. She patted Pug’s arm and set off in the direction of his and Laurie’s
room.
Pug stood at the door, then slowly entered. He could see Katala
lying under a blanket on her pallet. He stepped over to where she lay and
squatted next to her. He touched her shoulder and softly spoke her name. She
came awake and sat up suddenly, gathered her blanket around her, and said,
“What are you doing here?”
“I . . . I wanted to talk to you.” Once started, the words came out
in a tumbling rush. “I am sorry if I’ve done anything to make you angry with
me. Or haven’t done anything. I mean, Laurie said that if you don’t do
something when someone expects you to, that’s as bad as paying too much
attention. I’m not sure, you see.” She covered her mouth to hide a giggle, for
she could see his distress in spite of the gloom. “What I mean . . . what I
mean is I’m sorry. Sorry for what I’ve done. Or didn’t do . . .”
She silenced him by placing her fingertips across his mouth. Her arm
snaked out and around his neck, pulling his head downward. She kissed him
slowly, then said, “Silly. Go close the door.”
They lay together, Katala’s arm across Pug’s chest, while he stared
at the ceiling. She made sleepy sounds, and he ran his hands through her thick
hair and across her soft shoulder.
“What?” she asked sleepily.
“I was just thinking that I haven’t been happier since I was made a
member of the Duke’s court.”
“ ‘Sgood.” She came a bit more awake. “What’s a duke?”
Pug thought for a moment. “It’s like a lord here, only different. My
Duke was cousin to the King, and the third most powerful man in the Kingdom.”
She snuggled closer to him. “You must have been important to be part
of the court of such a man.”
“Not really; I did him a service and was rewarded for it.” He didn’t
think he wanted to bring up Carline’s name here. Somehow his boyhood fantasies
about the Princess seemed childish in light of this night.
Katala rolled over onto her stomach. She raised her head and rested
it on a hand, forming a triangle with her arm. “I wish things could be
different.”
“How so, love?”
“My father was a farmer in Thuril. We are among the last free people
in Kelewan. If we could go there, you could take a position with the Coaldra,
the Council of Warriors. They always have need for resourceful men. Then we
could be together.”
“We’re together here, aren’t we?”
Katala kissed him lightly. “Yes, dear Pug, we are. But we both
remember what it was to be free, don’t we?”
Pug sat up. “I try to put that sort of thing out of my mind.”
She put her arms around him, holding him as she would a child. “It
must have been terrible in the swamps. We hear stories, but no one knows,” she
said softly.
“It is well that you don’t.”
She kissed him, and soon they returned to that timeless, safe place
shared by two, all thoughts of things terrible and alien forgotten. For the
rest of the night they took pleasure in each other, discovering a depth of
feeling new to each. Pug couldn’t tell if she had known other men before, and
didn’t ask. It wasn’t important to him. The only important thing was being
there, with her, now. He was awash in a sea of new delights and emotions. He
didn’t understand his feelings entirely, but there was little doubt what he
felt for Katala was more real, more compelling, than the worshipful, confused
longings he had known when with Carline.
Weeks passed, and Pug found his life falling into a reassuring
routine. He spent occasional evenings with the Lord of the Shinzawai playing
chess—or shah, as it was called here—and their conversations gave Pug insights
into the nature of Tsurani life. He could no longer think of these people as
aliens, for he saw their daily life as similar to what he had known as a boy.
There were surprising differences, such as the strict adherence to an honor
code, but the similarities far outnumbered the differences.
Katala became the centerpiece of his existence. They came together
whenever they found time, sharing meals, a quick exchange of words, and every
night that they could steal together Pug was sure the other slaves in the
household knew of their nighttime assignations, but the proximity of people in
Tsurani life had bred a certain blindness to the personal habits of others, and
no one cared a great deal about the comings and goings of two slaves.
Several weeks after his first night with Katala, Pug found himself
alone with Kasumi, as Laurie was embroiled in another shouting match with the
woodcrafter who was finishing his lute. The man considered Laurie somewhat
unreasonable in objecting to the instrument’s being finished in bright yellow
paint with purple trim. And he saw absolutely no merit in leaving the natural
wood tones exposed. Pug and Kasumi left the singer explaining to the
woodcrafter the requirements of wood for proper resonance, seemingly intent on
convincing by volume as much as by logic.
They walked toward the stable area. Several more captured horses had
been purchased by agents of the Lord of the Shinzawai and had been sent to his
estate, at what Pug took to be a great deal of expense and some political
maneuvering. Whenever alone with the slaves, Kasumi spoke the King’s Tongue and
insisted they call him by name. He showed a quickness in learning the language
that matched his quickness in learning to ride.
“Friend Laurie,” said the older son of the house, “will never make a
proper slave from a Tsurani point of view. He has no appreciation of our arts.”
Pug listened to the argument that still could be heard coming from
the wood-carver’s building. “I think it more the case of his being concerned
over the proper appreciation of his art.”
They reached the corral and watched as a spirited grey stallion
reared and whinnied at their approach. The horse had been brought in a week
ago, securely tied by several leads to a wagon, and had repeatedly tried to
attack anyone who came close.
“Why do you think this one is so troublesome, Pug?”
Pug watched the magnificent animal run around the corral, herding
the other horses away from the men. When the mares and another, less dominant,
stallion were safely away, the grey turned and watched the two men warily.
“I’m not sure. Either he’s simply a badly tempered animal, perhaps
from mishandling, or he’s a specially trained war-horse. Most of our war mounts
are trained not to shy in battle, to remain silent when held, to respond to
their rider’s command in times of stress. A few, mostly ridden by lords, are
specially trained to obey only their master, and they are weapons as much as
transport, being schooled to attack. He may be one of these.”
Kasumi watched him closely as he pawed the ground and tossed his
head. “I shall ride him someday,” he said. “In any event, he will sire a strong
line. We now number five mares, and Father has secured another five. They will
arrive in a few weeks, and we are scouring every estate in the Empire to find
more.” Kasumi got a far-off look and mused, “When I was first upon your world,
Pug, I hated the sight of horses. They rode down upon us, and our soldiers
died. But then I came to see what magnificent creatures they are. There were
other prisoners, when I was still back on your world, who said you have noble
families who are known for nothing so much as the fine stock of horses they
breed. Someday the finest horses in the Empire shall be Shinzawai horses.”
“By the look of these, you have a good start, though from what
little I know, I think you need a larger stock for breeding.”
“We shall have as many as it takes.”
“Kasumi, how can your leaders spare these captured animals from the
war effort? You must surely see the need to quickly build mounted units if you
are going to advance your conquest.”
Kasumi’s face took on a rueful expression. “Our leaders, for the
most part, are tradition-bound, Pug. They refuse to see any wisdom in training
cavalry. They are fools. Your horsemen ride over our warriors, and yet they
pretend we cannot learn anything, calling your people barbarians. I once sieged
a castle in your homeland, and those who defended taught me much about
warcraft. Many would brand me traitor for saying such, but we have held our own
only by force of numbers. For the most part, your generals have more skill.
Trying to keep one’s soldiers alive, rather than sending them to their death,
teaches a certain craftiness.
“No, the truth of the matter is we are led by men who—” He stopped,
realizing he was speaking dangerously. “The truth is,” he said at last, “we are
as stiff-necked a people as you.”
He studied Pug’s face for a moment, then smiled. “We raided for
horses during the first year, so that the Warlord’s Great Ones could study the
beasts, to see if they were intelligent allies, like our cho-ja, or merely
animals. It was a fairly comical scene. The Warlord insisted he be the first to
try to ride a horse. I suspect he chose one much like this big grey, for no
sooner did he approach the animal than the horse attacked, nearly killing him.
His honor won’t permit any other to ride when he failed. And I think he was
fearful of trying again with another animal. Our Warlord, Almecho, is a man of
considerable pride and temper, even for a Tsurani.”
Pug said, “Then how can your father continue to purchase captured horses?
And how can you ride in defiance of his order?”
Kasumi’s smile broadened. “My father is a man of considerable
influence in the council. Our politics is strangely twisted, and there are ways
to bend any command, even from the Warlord or High Council, and any order, save
one from the Light of Heaven himself. But most of all it is because these
horses are here, and the Warlord is not.” He smiled “The Warlord is supreme
only in the field. Upon this estate, none may question my father’s will.”
Since coming to the estate of the Shinzawai, Pug had been troubled
by whatever Kasumi and his father were plotting. That they were embroiled in
some Tsurani political intrigue he doubted not, but what it might prove to be
he had no idea. A powerful lord like Kamatsu would not spend this much effort
satisfying a whim of even a son as favored as Kasumi. Still, Pug knew better
than to involve himself any more than he was involved by circumstance. He
changed the topic of conversation. “Kasumi, I was wondering something.”
“Yes?”
“What is the law regarding the marriage of slaves?”
Kasumi seemed unsurprised by the question. “Slaves may marry with
their master’s permission. But permission is rarely given. Once married, a man
and wife may not be separated, nor can children be sold away so long as the
parents live. That is the law. Should a married couple live a long time, an
estate could become burdened with three or four generations of slaves, many
more than they could economically support. But occasionally permission is
granted. Why, do you wish Katala for your wife?”
Pug looked surprised. “You know?”
Without arrogance Kasumi said, “Nothing occurs upon my father’s
estates that he is ignorant of, and he confides in me. It is a great honor.”
Pug nodded thoughtfully. “I don’t know yet. I feel much for her, but
something holds me back. It’s as if . . .” He shrugged, at a loss for words.
Kasumi regarded him closely for a time, then said, “It is by my
father’s will you live and by his whim how you live.” Kasumi stopped for a
minute, and Pug became painfully aware of how large a gulf still stood between
the two men, one the son of a powerful lord and the other the lowest of his
father’s property, a slave. The false veneer of friendship was ripped away, and
Pug again knew what he had learned in the swamp: here life was cheap, and only
this man’s pleasure, or his father’s, stood between Pug and destruction.
As if reading Pug’s mind, Kasumi said, “Remember, Pug, the law is
strict. A slave may never be freed. Still, there is the swamp, and there is
here. And to us of Tsuranuanni, you of the Kingdom are very impatient.”
Pug knew Kasumi was trying to tell him something, something perhaps
important. For all his openness at times, Kasumi could easily revert to a
Tsurani manner Pug could only call cryptic. There was an unvoiced tension
behind Kasumi’s words, and Pug thought it best not to press. Changing the topic
of conversation again, he asked, “How goes the war, Kasumi?”
Kasumi sighed, “Badly for both sides.” He watched the grey stallion.
“We fight along stable lines, unchanged in the last three years. Our last two
offensives were blunted, but your army also could make no gains. Now weeks pass
without fighting. Then your countrymen raid one of our enclaves, and we return
the compliment. Little is accomplished except the spilling of blood. It is all
very senseless, and there is little honor to be won.”
Pug was surprised. Everything he had seen of the Tsurani reinforced
Meecham’s observation of years ago, that the Tsurani were a very warlike race.
Everywhere he had looked when traveling to this estate, he had seen soldiers.
Both sons of the house were soldiers, as had been their father in his youth.
Hokanu was First Strike Leader of his father’s garrison, due to his being the
Lord of the Shinzawai’s second son, but his dealing with the slave master at
the swamp camp showed a ruthless efficiency in Hokanu, and Pug knew it to be no
quirk. He was Tsurani, and the Tsurani code was taught at a very early age, and
fiercely followed.
Kasumi sensed he was being studied and said, “I fear I am becoming
softened by your outlandish ways, Pug.” He paused. “Come, tell me more of your
people, and what . . .” Kasumi froze. He seized Pug’s arm and cocked his head,
listening. After a brief instant he said, “No! It can’t be!” Suddenly he
wheeled and shouted, “Raid! The Thun!”
Pug listened and in the distance could hear the faint rumbling, as
if a herd of horses were galloping over the plains. He climbed upon the rail of
the corral and looked into the distance. A large meadow stretched away behind
the corral ending at the edge of a lightly wooded area. While the alarm sounded
behind him, he could see forms emerging from the tree line.
Pug watched in terrible fascination as the creatures called Thьn
came racing toward the estate house. They grew in stature as they ran furiously
toward where Pug waited. They were large, centaurlike beings, looking like
mounted riders in the distance. Rather than horselike, the lower body was
reminiscent of a large deer or an elk, but more heavily muscled. The upper body
was completely manlike, but the face resembled nothing so much as an ape with a
long snout. The entire body, except the face, was covered by a medium-length
fur, mottled grey and white. Each creature carried a club or ax, the head being
stone lashed to the wooden haft.
Hokanu and the household guard came running from the soldiers’
building and took up positions near the corral. Archers readied their bows, and
swordsmen stood in ranks, ready to accept the charge.
Suddenly Laurie was at Pug’s side, holding his nearly finished lute
“What?”
“Thьn raid!”
Laurie stood as fascinated by the sight as Pug. Suddenly he put his
lute aside, then jumped into the corral. “What do you think you’re doing?”
yelled Pug.
The troubadour dodged a protective feint by the grey stallion and
jumped upon the back of another horse, the dominant mare of the small herd.
“Trying to get the animals safely away.”
Pug nodded and opened the gate Laurie rode the horse out, but the
grey kept the others from following, herding them back Pug hesitated for a
minute, then said, “Algon, I hope you knew what you taught.” He walked calmly
toward the stallion, silently trying to convey a sense of command. When the
stallion put back his ears and snorted at him, Pug said, “Stand!”
The horse’s ears cocked at the command, and it seemed to be
deciding. Pug knew timing was critical and did not break the rhythm of his
approach. The horse studied him as he came alongside, and Pug said, “Stand!”
again. Then before the animal could bolt, he grabbed a handful of mane and was
up on its back.
The battle-trained war-horse, whether by design or luck, decided Pug
was close enough to his former master to respond. Perhaps it was due to the
clamor of battle around, but for whatever reason, the grey leaped forward in
response to Pug’s leg commands and was out the gate at a run. Pug gripped with
his legs for his life. As the horse cleared the gate, Pug shouted, “Laurie, get
the others!” as the stallion turned to the left. Pug glanced over his shoulder
and saw the other animals following the herd leader as Laurie brought her past
the gate.
Pug saw Kasumi running from the tack house, a saddle in his hand,
and shouted, “Whoa!” setting as hard a seat as he could manage bareback. The
stallion halted and Pug commanded, “Stand!” The grey pawed the ground in
anticipation of a fight. Kasumi shouted as he approached, “Keep the horses from
fighting. This is a Blood Raid, and the Thьn will not retreat until each has
killed at least once.” He called for Laurie to stop, and when the small herd
was milling about, he quickly saddled a horse and turned it away from the
others.
Pug kicked, and the grey and the mare Laurie rode led the remaining
four horses to the side of the estate house. They kept the animals closely
bunched out of sight of the attacking Thьn.
A soldier came running around the corner of the house, carrying
weapons. He reached Pug and Laurie and shouted, “My master Kasumi commands you
defend the horses with your lives.” He handed the two slaves each a sword and
shield, then turned and dashed back toward the fighting.
Pug regarded the strange sword and shield, lighter by half than any
he had ever trained with. A shrill cry interrupted his examination as Kasumi
came riding around the house, in a running fight with a Thьn warrior. The
eldest son of the Shinzawai rode well, and though he had little training in
fighting from horseback, he was a skilled swordsman His inexperience was offset
by the Thun’s lack of experience with horses, for while it was not unlike
fighting one of his own kind, the horse was also attacking, biting at the
creature’s chest and face.
Catching wind of the Thьn, Pug’s grey reared and nearly threw him.
He held fiercely to the mane and gripped tightly with his lower legs. The other
horses neighed, and Pug fought to keep his from charging. Laurie shouted, “They
don’t like the way those things smell. Look at the way Kasumi’s horse is
acting.”
Another of the creatures came into sight, and Laurie let out a whoop
and rode to intercept. They came together in a clash of weapons, and Laurie
took the Thьn club blow on his shield. His own sword struck the creature across
the chest, and it cried out in a strange, guttural language, staggering for a
moment, then falling.
Pug heard a scream from inside the house and turned to see one of
the thin sliding doors erupt outward as a body hurled through it. A stunned
house slave staggered to his feet, then collapsed, blood welling up from a
wound on his head. Other figures came scurrying through the door.
Pug saw Katala and Almorella running from the house with the others,
a Thьn warrior in pursuit. The creature bore down upon Katala, club raised high
overhead.
Pug shouted her name, and the grey sensed his rider’s alarm. Without
command the huge war-horse sprang forward, intercepting the Thьn as it closed
with the slave girl. The horse was enraged, from the sounds of battle or the
Thьn smell. It crashed heavily into the Thьn, biting and lashing out with heavy
forelegs, and the Thьn’s legs went out from under it. Pug was thrown by the
impact and landed heavily. He lay dazed for a moment, then he climbed to his
feet. He staggered to where Katala sat huddled and pulled her away from the
maddened stallion.
The grey reared above the still Thьn, and hooves came flashing down.
Again and again the war-horse struck at the Thьn, until there was no doubt of
there being a breath of life left in the fallen creature.
Pug shouted for the horse to halt and stand, and with a contemptuous
snort, the animal ceased the attack, but it kept its ears pinned back, and Pug
could see it quiver. Pug approached it and stroked its neck, until the animal
stopped trembling.
Then it was quiet. Pug looked about and saw Laurie riding after the
scattering horses. He left his own mount and returned to Katala She sat
trembling upon the grass, Almorella at her side.
Kneeling before her, he said, “Are you all right?”
She took a deep breath, then gave him a frightened smile. “Yes, but
I was sure I was going to be trampled for a minute.”
Pug looked at the slave girl who had come to mean so much to him and
said, “I thought so, too.” Suddenly they were both smiling at each other.
Almorella stood and made some comment about seeing to the others. “I was so
afraid you’d been hurt,” Pug said “I thought I would lose my mind when I saw
you running from that creature.”
Katala put her hand upon Pug’s cheek, and he realized they were wet
with tears, “I was so frightened for you,” he said.
“And I for you. I thought you’d be killed the way you came crashing
into the Thьn.” Then she was weeping. She came slowly into his arms. “I don’t
know what I would do if you were killed.” Pug gripped her with all his
strength. They sat that way for a few minutes, until Katala regained her
composure. Gently pulling away from Pug, she said, “The estate is a shambles.
Septiem will have a thousand things for us to do.” She began to stand, and Pug
gripped her hand.
Rising before her he said, “I didn’t know, before I mean. I love
you, Katala.”
She smiled at him, touching his cheek. “And I you, Pug.”
Their moment of discovery was interrupted by the appearance of the
Lord of the Shinzawai and his younger son. Looking around, he surveyed the
damage to his house as Kasumi rode around the corner, splattered in blood.
Kasumi saluted his father and said, “They have fled, I have ordered
men dispatched to the northern watch forts. They must have overwhelmed one of
the garrisons to have broken through.”
The Lord of the Shinzawai nodded he understood and turned to enter
his house, calling for his First Adviser and his other senior servants to
report the damage to him.
Katala whispered to Pug, “We’ll talk later,” and answered the hoarse
shouts of the hadonra, Septiem. Pug joined Laurie, who had ridden up to
Kasumi’s side.
The minstrel looked at the dead creatures on the ground and said,
“What are they?”
Kasumi said, “Thьn. They’re nomadic creatures of the northern
tundra. We have forts along the foothills of the mountains separating our
estates from their lands, at every pass. Once they roamed these ranges until we
drove them north. Occasionally they seek to return to the warmer lands of the
south.” He pointed to a talisman tied in the fur of one of the creatures. “This
was a Blood Raid. They are all young males, unproved in their bands, without
mates. They failed in the summer rites of combat and were banished from the
herd by the stronger males. They had to come south, killing at least one
Tsurani before they would be allowed to return to their band. Each would have
to return with a Tsurani head, or not come back. It is their custom. Those who
escaped will be hunted down, for they will not cross back to their home range.”
Laurie shook his head. “Does this happen often?”
“Every year,” said Hokanu with a wry smile. “Usually the watch forts
turn them back, but it must have been a large herd this year. Many must have
already returned to the north with heads taken from our men at the forts.”
Kasumi said, “They must have killed two patrols, as well.” He shook
his head. “We’ve lost between sixty and a hundred men.”
Hokanu seemed to reflect his older brother’s unhappiness at the
setback. “I will personally lead a patrol to see to the damage.”
Kasumi gave him permission, and he left Kasumi turned toward Laurie.
“The horses?” Laurie pointed to where the stallion Pug had ridden stood watch
over a small herd.
Suddenly Pug spoke up. “Kasumi, I do wish to ask your father
permission to marry Katala.”
Kasumi’s eyes narrowed. “Listen well, Pug. I tried to instruct you,
but you did not seem to catch my meaning. You are not of a subtle people. Now I
will put it plainly. You may ask, but it will be refused.”
Pug began to object, but Kasumi cut him off. “I have said, you are
impatient people. There are reasons. More I cannot say, but there are reasons,
Pug.”
Anger flared in Pug’s eyes, and Kasumi said, in the King’s Tongue,
“Say a word in anger within earshot of any soldier of this house, especially my
brother, and you are a dead slave.”
Stiffly Pug said, “Your will, master.”
Witnessing the bitterness of Pug’s expression, Kasumi softly
repeated, “There are reasons, Pug.” For a moment he was trying to be other than
a Tsurani master, a friend trying to ease pain. He locked gaze with Pug, then a
veil dropped over Kasumi’s eyes, and once more they were slave and master.
Pug lowered his eyes as was expected of a slave, and Kasumi said,
“See to the horses.” He strode away, leaving Pug alone.
Pug never spoke of his request to Katala She sensed that something
troubled him deeply, something that seemed to add a bitter note to their
otherwise joyful time together. He learned the depth of his love for her and
began to explore her complex nature. Besides being strong-willed, she was
quick-minded. He only had to explain something to her once, and she understood.
He learned to love her dry wit, a quality native to her people, the Thuril, and
sharpened to a razor’s edge by her captivity She was an observant student of
everything around her and commented unmercifully upon the foibles of everyone
in the household, to their detriment and Pug’s amusement She insisted upon
learning some of Pug’s language, so he began teaching her the King’s Tongue.
She proved an apt student.
Two months went by uneventfully, then one night Pug and Laurie were
called to the dining room of the master of the house. Laurie had completed work
upon his lute and, though dissatisfied in a hundred little ways, judged it
passable for playing. Tonight he was to play for the Lord of the Shinzawai.
They entered the room and saw that the lord was entertaining a
guest, a black-robed man, the Great One whom they had glimpsed months ago. Pug
stood by the door while Laurie took a place at the foot of the low dining
table. Adjusting the cushion he sat upon, he began to play.
As the first notes hung in the air, he started singing: an old tune
that Pug knew well. It sang of the joys of harvest and the riches of the land,
and was a favorite in farm villages throughout the Kingdom. Besides Pug, only
Kasumi understood the words, though his father could pick out a few that he had
learned during his chess matches with Pug.
Pug had never heard Laurie sing before, and he was genuinely
impressed. For all the troubadour’s braggadocio, he was better than any Pug had
heard. His voice was a clear, true instrument, expressive in both words and
music of what he sang. When he was finished, the diners politely struck the
table with eating knives, in what Pug assumed was the Tsurani equivalent of
applause.
Laurie began another tune, a merry air played at festivals
throughout the Kingdom. Pug remembered when he had last heard it, at the
Festival of Banapis the year before he had left Crydee for Rillanon. He could
almost see once more the familiar sights of home. For the first time in years,
Pug felt a deep sadness and longing that nearly overwhelmed him.
Pug swallowed hard, easing the tightness in his throat. Homesickness
and hopeless frustration warred within him, and he could feel his hard-learned
self-control slipping away. He quickly invoked one of the calming exercises he
had been taught by Kulgan. A sense of well-being swept over him, and he
relaxed. While Laurie performed, Pug used all his concentration to fend off the
haunting memories of home. All his skills created an aura of calm he could
stand within, a refuge from useless rage, the only legacy of reminiscence.
Several times during the performance, Pug felt the gaze of the Great
One upon him. The man seemed to study him with some question in his eyes. When
Laurie was finished, the magician leaned over and spoke to his host.
The Lord of the Shinzawai beckoned Pug to the table. When he was
seated, the Great One spoke. “I must ask you something.” His voice was clear
and strong, and his tone reminded Pug of Kulgan when he was preparing Pug for
lessons. “Who are you?”
The direct, simple question caught everyone at the table by
surprise. The lord of the house seemed uncertain as to the magician’s question
and started to reply. “He is a slave—”
He was interrupted by the Great One’s upraised hand. Pug said, “I am
called Pug, master.”
Again the man’s dark eyes studied him. “Who are you?”
Pug felt flustered. He had never liked being the center of
attention, and this time it was focused upon him as never before in his life.
“I am Pug, once of the Duke of Crydee’s court.”
“Who are you, to stand here radiating the power?” At this all three
men of the Shinzawai household started, and Laurie looked at Pug in confusion.
“I am a slave, master.”
“Give me your hand.”
Pug reached out, and his hand was taken by the Great One. The man’s
lips moved, and his eyes clouded over Pug felt a warmth flow through his hand
and over him. The room seemed to glow with a soft white haze. Soon all he could
see was the magician’s eyes. His mind fogged over, and time was suspended. He
felt a pressure inside his head as if something were trying to intrude. He
fought against it, and the pressure withdrew.
His vision cleared, and the two dark eyes seemed to withdraw from
his face until he could see the entire room again. The magician let go of his
hand. “Who are you?” A brief flicker in his eyes was the only sign of his deep
concern.
“I am Pug, apprentice to the magician Kulgan.”
At this the Lord of the Shinzawai blanched, confusion registering on
his face. “How . . .”
The black-robed Great One rose and announced, “This slave is no
longer property of this house. He is now the province of the Assembly.”
The room fell silent. Pug couldn’t understand what was happening and
felt afraid.
The magician drew forth a device from his robe Pug remembered that
he had seen one before, during the raid on the Tsurani camp, and his fear
mounted. The magician activated it, and it buzzed as the other one had. He
placed his hand on Pug’s shoulder, and the room disappeared in a grey haze.
21
CHANGELING
The Elf Prince sat quietly.
Calin awaited his mother. There was much on his mind, and he needed
to speak with her this night. There had been little chance for that of late,
for as the war had grown in scope, he found less time to abide in the bowers of
Elvandar. As Warleader of the elves, he had been in the field nearly every day
since the last time the outworlders had tried to forge across the river.
Since the siege of Castle Crydee three years before, the outworlders
had come each spring, swarming across the river like ants, a dozen for each elf
Each year elven magic had defeated them. Hundreds would enter the sleeping
glades to fall into the endless sleep, their bodies being consumed by the soil,
to nourish the magic trees. Others would answer the dryads’ call, following the
enchanted sprites’ songs until in their passion for the elemental beings they
would die of thirst while still in their inhuman lovers’ embrace feeding the
dryads with their lives. Others would fall to the creatures of the forests, the
giant wolves, bears, and lions who answered the call of the elven war horns.
The very branches and roots of the trees of the elven forests would resist the
invaders until they turned and fled.
But this year, for the first time, the Black Robes had come. Much of
the elven magic had been blunted. The elves had prevailed, but Calin wondered
how they would fare when the outworlders returned.
This year the dwarves of the Grey Towers had again aided the elves.
With the moredhel gone from the Green Heart, the dwarves had made swift passage
from their wintering in the mountains, adding their numbers to the defense of
Elvandar. For the third year since the siege at Crydee, the dwarves had proved
the difference in holding the out-worlders across the river. And again with the
dwarves came the man called Tomas.
Calin looked up, then rose as his mother approached. Queen Aglaranna
seated herself upon her throne and said, “My son, it is good to see you again.”
“Mother, it is good to see you also.” He sat at her feet and waited
for the words he needed to come. His mother sat patiently, sensing his dark
mood.
Finally he spoke. “I am troubled by Tomas.”
“As am I,” said the Queen, her expression clouded and pensive.
“Is that why you absent yourself when he comes to court?”
“For that . . . and other reasons.”
“How can it be the Old Ones’ magic still holds so strong after all
these ages?”
A voice came from behind the throne. “So that’s it, then?”
They turned, surprised, and Dolgan stepped from the gloom, lighting
his pipe. Aglaranna looked incensed. “Are the dwarves of the Grey Towers known
for eavesdropping, Dolgan?”
The dwarven chief ignored the bite of the question. “Usually not, my
lady. But I was out for a walk—those little tree rooms fill with smoke right
quickly—and I happened to overhear. I did not wish to interrupt.”
Calin said, “You can move with stealth when you choose, friend
Dolgan.”
Dolgan shrugged and blew a cloud of smoke. “Elvenfolk are not the
only ones with the knack of treading lightly. But we were speaking of the lad.
If what you say is true, then it is a serious matter indeed. Had I known, I
would never have allowed him to take the gift.”
The Queen smiled at him. “It is not your fault, Dolgan. You could
not have known. I have feared this since Tomas came among us in the mantle of
the Old Ones. At first I thought the magic of the Valheru would not work for
him, being a mortal, but now I can see he is less mortal each year.
“It was an unfortunate series of events brought this to pass. Our
Spellweavers would have discovered that treasure ages ago, but for the dragon’s
magic. We spent centuries seeking out and destroying such relics, preventing
their use by the moredhel. Now it is too late, for Tomas would never willingly
let the armor be destroyed.”
Dolgan puffed at his pipe. “Each winter he broods in the long halls,
awaiting the coming of spring, and the coming of battle. There is little else
for him. He sits and drinks, or stands at the door staring out into the snow,
seeing what no other can see. He keeps the armor locked away in his room during
such times, and when campaigning, he never removes it, even to sleep. He has
changed, and it is not a natural changing. No, he would never willingly give up
the armor.”
“We could try to force him,” said the Queen, “but that could prove
unwise. There is something coming into being in him, something that may save my
people, and I would risk much for them.”
Dolgan said, “I do not understand, my lady.”
“I am not sure I do either, Dolgan, but I am Queen of a people at
war. A terrible foe savages our lands and each year grows bolder. The outworld
magic is strong, perhaps stronger than any since the Old Ones vanished. It may
be the magic in the dragon’s gift will save my people.”
Dolgan shook his head. “It seems strange such power could still
reside in metal armor.”
Aglaranna smiled at the dwarf. “Does it? What of the Hammer of
Tholin you carry? Is it not vested with powers from ages past? Powers that mark
you once more heir to the throne of the dwarves of the West?”
Dolgan looked hard at the Queen. “You know much of our ways, lady I
must never forget your girlish countenance masks ages of knowledge.” He then
brushed away her comment. “We have been done with kings for many years in the
West, since Tholin vanished in the Mac Mordain Cadal. We do as well as those
who obey old King Halfdan in Dorgin. But should my people wish the throne
restored, we shall meet in moot, though not until this war is over. Now, what
of the lad?”
Aglaranna looked troubled. “He is becoming what he is becoming. We
can aid that transformation. Our Spellweavers work to this end already. Should
the full power of the Valheru rise up in Tomas un-tempered, he would be able to
brush aside our protective magic much as you would a bothersome twig barring your
way upon the trail. But he is not an Old One born. His nature is as alien to
the Valheru as their nature was to all others. Aided by our Spellweavers, his
human ability to love, to know compassion, to understand, may temper the
unchecked power of the Valheru. If so, he may . . . he may prove a boon to us
all.” Dolgan was visited by the certainty the Queen had been about to say
something else, but remained silent as she continued “Should that Valheru power
become coupled with a human’s capacity for blind hatred, savagery, and cruelty,
then he would become something to fear. Only time will tell us what such a
blending will produce.”
“The Dragon Lords . . . ,” said Dolgan. “We have some mention of the
Valheru in our lore, but only scraps here and there. I would understand more,
if you’ll permit.”
The Queen looked off into the distance. “Our lore, eldest of all in
the world today, tells of the Valheru, Dolgan. There is much of which I am
forbidden to speak, names of power, fearful to invoke, things terrible to
recall, but I may tell you this much. Long before man or dwarf came to this
world, the Valheru ruled. They were part of this world, fashioned from the very
fabric of its creation, nearly godlike in power and unfathomable in purpose.
Their nature was chaotic and unpredictable. They were more powerful than any
others. Upon the backs of the great dragons they flew, no place in the universe
beyond their reach. To other worlds they roamed, bringing back that which
pleased them, treasure and knowledge plundered from other beings. They were
subject to no law but their own will and whim. They fought among themselves as
often as not, and only death resolved conflicts. This world was their dominion.
And we were their creatures.
“We and the moredhel were of one race then, and the Valheru bred us
as you would cattle. Some were taken, from both races, for . . . personal pets,
bred for beauty . . . and other qualities. Others were bred to tend the forests
and fields. Those who lived in the wild became the forerunners of the elves,
while those who remained with the Valheru were the forerunners of the moredhel.
“But then came a time of changing. Our masters ceased their
internecine struggles and banded together. Why they did so is forgotten, though
some among the moredhel may still know, for they were closer to our masters
than we elves. We may have known their reasons then, but this was the time of
the Chaos Wars, and much was lost. Only this we know: all the servants of the
Valheru were given freedom, and the Old Ones were never again seen by elf or
moredhel. When the Chaos Wars raged, great rifts in time and space were opened,
and it was through these that goblins, men, and dwarves came to this world. Few
of our people or of the moredhel survived, but those that did rebuilt our
homes. The moredhel longed to inherit the might of their lost masters, rather
than seek their own destiny as the elves did, and used their cunning to find
tokens of the Valheru, taking to the Dark Path. It is the reason we are so
unalike, who once were brothers.
“The old magic is still powerful. In strength and bravery Tomas
matches any. He took the magic unwittingly, and that may prove the difference.
The old magic changed the moredhel into the Brotherhood of the Dark Path
because they sought the power out of dark longings. Tomas was a boy of good and
noble heart, with no taint of evil in his soul. Perchance he will grow to
master the dark side of the magic.”
Dolgan scratched his head. “ ‘Tis a grave risk, then, from what you
say. I was concerned for the lad, true, and gave little thought to the larger
scheme of things. You know the way of it better than I, but I hope we’ll not
live to regret letting him keep the armor.”
The Queen stepped down from her throne. “I also hope there will be
no regrets, Dolgan. Here in Elvandar the old magic is softened, and Tomas is of
lighter heart. Perhaps that is a sign we do the right thing, tempering the
change rather than opposing it.”
Dolgan made a courtly bow. “I yield to your wisdom, my lady. And I
pray you are right.”
The Queen bade them good night and left. Calin said, “I also pray my
Mother-Queen speaks from wisdom, and not from some other feeling.”
“I don’t take your meaning, Elf Prince.”
Calin looked down upon the short figure. “Don’t play the fool with
me, Dolgan Your wisdom is widely known and highly respected. You see it as well
as I. Between my mother and Tomas there is something growing.”
Dolgan sighed, the freshening breeze carrying away his pipe’s smoke
“Aye, Calin, I’ve seen it as well. A look, little more, but enough.”
“She looks upon Tomas as she once looked upon my Father-King, though
she still denies it within herself.”
“And there is something within Tomas,” said the dwarf, watching the
Elf Prince closely, “though it is less tender than what your lady feels. Still,
he holds it well in check.”
“Look to your friend, Dolgan. Should he try to press his suit for
the Queen, there will be trouble.”
“So much do you dislike him, Calin?”
Calin looked thoughtfully at Dolgan. “No, Dolgan. I do not dislike
Tomas. I fear him. That is enough.” Calin was silent for a while, then said,
“We will never again bend knee before another master, we who live in Elvandar.
Should my mother’s hopes of how Tomas will change prove false, we shall have a
reckoning.”
Dolgan shook his head slowly. “That would prove a sorry day, Calin.”
“That it would, Dolgan.” Calin walked from the council ring, past
his mother’s throne, and left the dwarf alone. Dolgan looked out at the fairy
lights of Elvandar, praying the Elf Queen’s hopes would not prove unfounded.
***
Winds
howled across the plains. Ashen-Shugar sat astride the broad shoulders of
Shuruga. The great golden dragon’s thoughts reached his master. Do we hunt?
There was hunger in the dragon’s mind.
“No. We wait.”
The Ruler of the Eagles’ Reaches waited as the streaming moredhel
made their way toward the rising city. Hundreds pulled great blocks of stone
mined in quarries half a world away, dragging them toward the city on the
plains. Many had died and many more would die, but that was unimportant. Or was
it? Ashen-Shugar was troubled by this new and strange thought.
A roar
from above sounded as another great dragon came spiraling down, a magnificent
black bellowing challenge. Shuruga raised his head and trumpeted his reply. To
his master he said, Do we fight?
“No.”
Ashen-Shugar sensed disappointment in his mount, but chose to ignore
it. He watched as the other dragon settled gracefully to the ground a short
distance away, folding its mighty wings across its back. Black scales reflected
the hazy sunlight like polished ebony. The dragon’s rider raised his hand in
salute.
Ashen-Shugar returned the greeting, and the other’s dragon
approached cautiously. Shuruga hissed, and Ashen-Shugar absently struck the
beast with his fist. Shuruga lapsed into silence.
“Has the Ruler of the Eagles’ Reaches finally come to join us?”
asked the newcomer, Draken-Korin, the Lord of Tigers. His
black-and-orange-striped armor sparkled as he dismounted from his dragon.
Out of courtesy Ashen-Shugar dismounted as well. His hand never
strayed far from his white-hilted sword of gold, for though times were
changing, trust was unknown among the Valheru. In times past they would have
fought as likely as not, but now the need for information was more pressing.
Ashen-Shugar said, “No. I simply watch.”
Draken-Korin regarded the Ruler of the Eagles’ Reaches, his pale
blue eyes revealing no emotion. “You alone have not agreed, Ashen-Shugar.”
“Joining to plunder across the cosmos is one thing, Draken-Korin This
. . . this plan of yours is madness.”
“What is this madness? I know not of what you speak. We are. We do.
What more is there?”
“This is not our way.”
“It is not our way to let others stand against our will. These new
beings, they contest with us.”
Ashen-Shugar raised his eyes skyward. “Yes, that is so. But they are
not like others. They also are formed from the very stuff of this world, as are
we.”
“What does that matter? How many of our kin have you killed? How
much blood has passed your lips? Whoever stands against you must be killed, or
kill you. That is all.”
“What of those left behind, the moredhel and the elves?”
“What of them? They are nothing.”
“They are ours.”
“You have grown strange under your mountains, Ashen-Shugar. They are
our servants. It is not as if they possessed true power. They exist for our
pleasure, nothing more. What concerns you?”
“I do not know. There is something. . . .”
“Tomas.”
For an instant Tomas existed in two places. He shook his head and
the visions vanished. He turned his head and saw Galain lying in the brush next
to him. A force of elves and dwarves waited some distance behind. The young
cousin of Prince Calin pointed toward the Tsurani camp across the river. Tomas
followed his companion’s gesture and saw the outworld soldiers sitting near
their campfires, and smiled. “They hug their camps,” he whispered.
Galain nodded. “We have stung them enough that they seek the warmth of
their campfires.”
The late spring evening mist shrouded the area, mantling the Tsurani
camp in haze. Even the campfires seemed to burn less brightly. Tomas again
studied the camp. “I mark thirty, with thirty more in each camp east and west.”
Galain said nothing, waiting for Tomas’s next command. Though Calin
was Warleader of Elvandar, Tomas had assumed command of the forces of elves and
dwarves. It was never clear when captaincy had passed to him, but slowly, as he
had grown in stature, he had grown in leadership. In battle he would simply
shout for something to be done, and elves and dwarves would rush to obey. At
first it had been because the commands were logical and obvious. But the
pattern had become accepted, and now they obeyed because it was Tomas who
commanded.
Tomas motioned for Galain to follow and moved away from the
river-bank, until they were safely out of sight of the Tsurani camp, among
those who waited deep within the trees Dolgan looked at the young man who once
had been the boy he saved from the mines of Mac Mordain Cadal.
Tomas stood six inches past six feet in height, as tall as any elf.
He walked with a powerful self-assurance, a warrior born. In the six years he
had been with the dwarves, he had become a man . . . and more. Dolgan watched
him, as Tomas surveyed the warriors gathered before him, and knew Tomas could
now walk the dark mines of the Grey Towers without fear or danger.
“Have the other scouts turned?”
Dolgan nodded, signaling for them to come forward. Three elves and
three dwarves approached. “Any sign of the Black Robes?”
When the scouts indicated no, the man in white and gold frowned. “We
would do well to capture one of them and carry him to Elvandar. Their last
attack was the deepest yet. I would give much to know the limits of their
power.”
Dolgan took out his pipe, gauging they were far enough from the
river for it not to be seen. As he lit it, he said, “The Tsurani guard the
Black Robes like a dragon guards its treasure.”
Tomas laughed at that, and Dolgan caught a glimpse of the boy he had
known. “Aye, and it’s a brave dwarf who loots a dragon’s lair.”
Galain said, “If they follow the pattern of the last three years,
they most likely are done with us for the season. It is possible we shall not
see another Black Robe until next spring.”
Tomas looked thoughtful, his pale eyes seemingly aglow with a light
of their own. “Their pattern . . . their pattern is to take, to hold, then to
take more. We have been willing to let them do as they wish, so long as they do
not cross the river. It is time to change that pattern. And if we trouble them
enough, we may have the opportunity to seize one of these Black Robes.”
Dolgan shook his head at the risk implicit in what Tomas proposed.
Then, with a smile, Tomas added, “Besides, if we can’t loosen their hold along
the river for a time, the dwarves and I will be forced to winter here, for the
outworlders are now deep into the Green Heart.”
Galain looked at his tall friend. Tomas grew more elf-like each
year, and Galain could appreciate the obscure humor that often marked his
words. He knew Tomas would welcome staying near the Queen. But in spite of his
worries over Tomas’s magic, he had come to like the man. “How?”
“Send bowmen to the camps on the right and the left and beyond. When
I call with the honk of a greylag, have them volley across the river, but from
beyond those positions as if the main attack were coming from east and west.”
He smiled, and there was no humor in his expression. “That should isolate this
camp long enough for us to do some bloody work.”
Galain nodded, and sent ten bowmen to each camp. The others made
ready for the attack, and after sufficient time Tomas raised his hands to his
mouth Cupping them, he made the sound of a wild goose.
A moment later he could hear shouting coming from east and west of
the position across the river. The soldiers in the Tsurani camp stood and
looked both ways, with several coming to the edge of the water, peering into
the dark forest. Tomas raised his hand and dropped it with a chopping motion.
Suddenly it was raining elven arrows on the camp across the river,
and Tsurani soldiers were diving for their shields. Before they could fully
recover, Tomas led a charge of dwarves across the shallow sandbar ford. Another
flight of arrows passed overhead, then the elves shouldered bows, drew swords,
and charged after the dwarves, all save a dozen who would stay to offer
covering fire should it be needed.
Tomas was first ashore and struck down a Tsurani guard who met him
at the river’s edge. Quickly he was among them, wreaking mayhem. Tsurani blood
exploded off his golden blade, and the screams of wounded and dying men filled
the damp night.
Dolgan slew a guard and found none to stand against him. He turned
and saw Galain standing over another dead Tsurani, but staring at something
beyond. The dwarf followed his gaze to where Tomas was standing over a wounded
Tsurani soldier who lay with blood running down his face from a scalp wound, an
arm upraised in a plea for mercy. Over him stood Tomas, his face an alien mask
of rage. With a strange and terrible cry, in a voice cruel and harsh, he
brought down his golden sword and ended the Tsurani’s life. He turned quickly,
seeking more foes. When none presented themselves, he seemed to go blank for a
moment, then his eyes refocused.
Galain heard a dwarf call, “They come.” Shouts came from the other
Tsurani camps as they discovered the ruse and quickly approached the true
battle site.
Without a word Tomas’s party hurried across the water. They reached
the other side as Tsurani bowmen fired upon them, to be answered by elves on
the opposite shore. The attacking group quickly fell back deeply into the
trees, until they were a safe distance away.
When they stopped, the elves and dwarves sat down to catch their
wind, and to rest from the battle surge still in their blood. Galain looked to
Tomas and said, “We did well. No one lost, and only a few slightly wounded, and
thirty outworlders slain.”
Tomas didn’t smile, but looked thoughtfully for a moment, as if
hearing something. He turned to look at Galain, as if the elf’s words were
finally registering. “Aye, we did well, but we must strike again, tomorrow and
the next day and the next, until they act.”
Night after night they crossed the river. They would attack a camp,
and the next night strike miles away. A night would pass without attack, then
the same camp would be raided three nights running. Sometimes a single arrow
would take a guard from the opposite shore, then nothing, while his companions
stood waiting for an attack that never came. Once they struck through the lines
at dawn, after the defenders had decided that no attack was coming. They
overran a camp, ranging miles into the south forest, and took a baggage train,
even slaughtering the strange six-legged beasts who pulled the wagons. Five
separate fights were fought as they turned from that raid, and two dwarves and
three elves were lost.
Now Tomas and his band, numbering over three hundred elves and
dwarves, sat awaiting word from other camps. They were eating a stew of
venison, seasoned with mosses, roots, and tubers.
A runner came up to Tomas and Galain. “Word from the King’s army.”
Behind him a figure in grey approached the campfire.
Tomas and Galain stood. “Hail, Long Leon of Natal,” said the elf.
“Hail, Galain,” answered the tall, black-skinned ranger.
An elf brought over bread and a bowl of steaming stew to the two
newcomers, and as they sat, Tomas said, “What news from the Duke?”
Between mouthfuls of food, the ranger said, “Lord Borric sends
greetings. Things stand poorly. Like moss on a tree, the Tsurani slowly advance
in the east. They take a few yards, then sit. They seem to be in no hurry. The
Duke’s best guess is they seek to reach the coast by next year, isolating the
Free Cities from the north. Then perhaps an attack toward Zun or LaMut. Who can
say?”
Tomas asked, “Any news from Crydee?”
“Pigeons arrived just before I left Prince Arutha holds fast against
the Tsurani. They have luck as poor there as here. But they move southward
through the Green Heart.” He surveyed the dwarves and Tomas. “I am surprised
that you could reach Elvandar.”
Dolgan puffed his pipe. “It was a long trek. We had to move swiftly
and with stealth. It is unlikely we will be able to return to the mountains now
the invaders are aroused. Once in place, they are loath to yield what they have
gained.”
Tomas paced before the fire. “How did you elude their sentries?”
“Your raids are causing much confusion in their ranks. Men who faced
the Armies of the West were pulled out of the line to rush to the river. I
simply followed one such group. They never thought to look behind. I had only
to slip past their lines when they withdrew and then again across the river.”
Calin said, “How many do they bring against us?”
Leon shrugged “I saw six companies, there must be others.” They had
estimated a Tsurani company at twenty squads each of thirty men.
Tomas slapped his gloved hands together. “They would bring three
thousand men back only if they were planning another crossing. They must seek
to drive us deep into the forest again, to keep us from harrying their
positions.” He crossed to stand over the ranger. “Do any of the black-robed
ones come?”
“From time to time I saw one with the company I followed.”
Tomas again slapped his hands. “This time they come in force. Send
word to the other camps. In two days’ time all the host of Elvandar is to meet
at the Queen’s court, save scouts and runners who will watch the outworlders.”
Silently runners sprang up from the fire and hurried off to carry
word to the other elven bands strung out along the banks of the river Crydee.
Ashen-Shugar sat upon his throne, oblivious to the dancers. The moredhel
females had been chosen for their beauty and grace, but he was untouched by
their allure. His mind’s eye was far away, seeking the coming battle. Inside, a
strangeness, a hollow feeling without name, came into being.
It
is called sadness, said the voice within.
Ashen-Shugar thought: Who are you to visit me in my solitude?
I am
that which you are becoming. This is but a dream, a memory.
Ashen-Shugar
drew forth his sword and rose from his throne, bellowing his rage. Instantly
the musicians stopped their playing. The dancers, servants, and musicians fell
to the floor, prostrating themselves before their master “I am! There is no
dream!”
You
are but a remembrance of the past, said the voice. We
are becoming one.
Ashen-Shugar raised his sword, then lashed down. The head of a
cowering servant rolled upon the floor. Ashen-Shugar knelt and placed his hand
in the fountain of blood Raising fingers to his lips, he tasted the salty
flavor and cried, “Is this not the taste of life!”
It
is illusion. All has passed.
“I feel
a strangeness, an unease that makes me . . . it makes me . . . there is no
word.”
It
is fear.
Ashen-Shugar
again lashed out with his sword, and a young dancer died. “These things, they
know fear. What has fear to do with me?”
You
are afraid. All creatures fear change, even the gods.
Who are
you? asked the Valheru silently.
I am
you. I am what you will become. I am what you were. I am Tomas.
***
A shout
from below brought Tomas from his reverie. He rose and left his small room,
crossing a tree-branch bridge to the level of the Queen’s court. At a rail he
could make out the dim figures of hundreds of dwarves camped below the heights
of Elvandar. He stood for a time watching the campfires below. Each hour
hundreds more elven and dwarven warriors made their way to join this army he
marshaled. Tomorrow he would sit in council with Calin, Tathar, Dolgan, and
others and make known his plan to meet the coming assault.
Six years of fighting had given Tomas a strange counterpoint to the
dreams that still troubled his sleep. When the battle rage took him, he existed
in another’s dreams. When he was away from the elven forest, the call to enter
those dreams became ever more difficult to stem. He felt no fear of these
visitations, as he had at first. He was more than human because of some
long-dead being’s dreams. There were powers within him, powers that he could
use, and they were now part of him, as they had been part of the wearer of the
white and gold. He knew that he would never be Tomas of Crydee again, but what
was he becoming . . . ?
The slightest hint of a footfall sounded behind him. Without
turning, he said, “Good eve, my lady.”
The Elf Queen came to stand next to him, a studied expression on her
face. “Your senses are elven now,” she said in her own language.
“So it seems, Shining Moon,” he answered in the same language, using
the ancient translation of her name.
He turned to face her and saw wonder in her eyes. She reached out
and gently touched his face. “Is this the boy who stood so flustered in the
Duke’s council chamber at the thought of speaking before the Elf Queen, who now
speaks the true tongue as if born to it?”
He pushed away her hand, gently. “I am what I am, what you see.” His
voice was firm, commanding.
She studied his face, holding back a shudder as she recognized
something fearful within his countenance. “But what do I see, Tomas?”
Ignoring her question, he said, “Why do you avoid me, lady?”
Gently she spoke. “There is this thing growing between us that may
not be. It sprang into existence the moment you first came to us, Tomas.”
Almost with a note of amusement, Tomas said, “Before that, lady,
from the first I gazed upon you.” He stood tall over her. “And why may this
thing not be? Who better to sit at your side?”
She moved away from him, her control lost for a brief moment. In
that instant he saw what few had ever seen: the Elf Queen confused and unsure,
doubting her own ancient wisdom. “Whatever else, you are man. Despite what
powers are granted you, it is a man’s span allotted to you. I will reign until
my spirit travels to the Blessed Isles to be with my lord, who has already made
the journey. Then Calin rules, as son of a king, as King. Thus it is with my
people.”
Tomas reached for her and turned her to face him. “It was not always
so.”
Her eyes showed a spark of fear. “No, we were not always a free
people.”
She sensed impatience within him, but she also saw him struggle with
it as he forced his voice to calmness. “Do you then feel nothing?”
She took a step away. “I would lie if I said not. But it is a
strange pulling, and something that fills me with uncertainty and with no small
dread. If you become more the Valheru, more than the man can master, then we
could not welcome you here. We would not allow the return of the Old Ones.”
Tomas laughed, with a strange mixture of humor and bitterness. “As a
boy I beheld you and was filled with a boy’s longing. Now I am a man and behold
you with a man’s longing. Is the power that makes me bold enough to seek you
out, the power that gives me the means to do so, that which will also keep us
apart?”
Aglaranna put her hand to her cheek. “I know not. It has never been
with the royal family to be other than what we are. Others may seek alliance
with humans. I would not have that sadness when you are old and grey and I am
still as you see me.”
Tomas’s eyes flashed, and his voice gained a harsh edge. “That will
never happen, lady I shall live a thousand years in this glade. Of that I have
no doubt. But I shall trouble you no more . . . until other matters are
settled. This thing is willed by fate to be, Aglaranna. You will come to know
that.”
She stood with her hand raised to her mouth, and her eyes moist with
emotion. He walked away, leaving her alone in her court to consider what he had
said. For the first time since her Lord-King had passed over, Aglaranna knew
two conflicting emotions: fear and longing.
Tomas turned at a shout from the edge of the clearing. An elf was
walking from the trees followed by a simply dressed man. He stopped his
conversation with Calin and Dolgan, and the three hurried to follow the
stranger as he was guided up to the Queen’s court. Aglaranna sat on her throne,
her elders arranged on benches to either side. Tathar stood next to the Queen.
The stranger approached the throne and made a slight bow. Tathar
threw a quick glance at the sentry who had escorted the man, but the elf looked
bemused. The man in brown said, “Greetings, lady,” in perfect elvish.
Aglaranna answered in the King’s Tongue. “You come boldly among us,
stranger.”
The man smiled, leaning on his staff. “Still, I did seek a guide,
for I would not enter Elvandar unbidden.”
Tathar said, “I think yon guide had little choice.”
The man said, “There is always a choice, though it is not always
apparent.”
Tomas stepped forward. “What is your purpose here?”
Turning at the voice, the man smiled “Ah! The wearer of the dragon’s
gift. Well met, Tomas of Crydee.”
Tomas stepped back. The man’s eyes radiated power, and his easy
manner veiled strength that Tomas could feel. “Who are you?”
The man said, “I have many names, but here I am called Macros the
Black.” He pointed with his staff and swept it around the gathered watchers. “I
have come, for you have embarked upon a bold plan.” At the last, he pointed his
staff at Tomas. He dropped the tip and leaned on the staff again. “But the plan
to capture a Black Robe will bring naught but destruction to Elvandar should
you not have my aid.” He smiled slightly. “A Black Robe you shall have in time,
but not yet.” There was a hint of irony in his voice.
Aglaranna arose. Her shoulders were back, and her eyes looked
straight into his. “You know much.”
Macros inclined his head slightly “Aye, I know much, more than is
sometimes comforting.” He stepped past her and placed a hand upon Tomas’s
shoulder. Guiding Tomas to a seat near where the Queen stood, Macros forced him
to sit with a gentle pressure on his shoulder. He took a seat next to him and
laid the staff against the crook of his neck and shoulder. Looking at the
Queen, he said, “The Tsurari come at first light, and they will drive straight
through to Elvandar.”
Tathar stepped before Macros and said, “How do you know this?”
Macros smiled again. “Do you not remember me in council with your
father?”
Tathar stepped back, his eyes widening. “You . . .”
“I am he, though I am no longer called as I was then.”
Tathar looked troubled. “So long ago. I would not have thought it
possible.”
Macros said, “Much is possible.” He looked pointedly from the Queen
to Tomas.
Aglaranna slowly sat down, masking her discomfort. “Are you the
sorcerer?”
Macros nodded. “So I am called, though there is more in the tale
than can be told now. Will you heed me?”
Tathar nodded to the Queen. “Long ago, this one came to our aid. I
do not understand how it can be the same man, but he was then a true friend to
your father and mine. He can be trusted.”
“What, then, is your counsel?” asked the Queen.
“The Tsurani magicians have marked your sentries, knowing where they
hide. At first light they will come, breaking across the river in two waves,
like the horns of a bull. As you meet them, a wave of the creatures called
cho-ja will come through the center, where your strength is weak. They have not
thrown them against you yet, but the dwarves can tell you of their skill in
warfare.”
Dolgan stepped forward. “Aye, lady. They are fearsome creatures and
fight in the dark as well as do my people. I had thought them confined to the
mines.”
Macros said, “And so they were, until the raids. They have brought
up a host of them, which ready themselves across the river, beyond the sight of
your scouts. They will come in numbers. The Tsurani tire of your raids and
would put an end to the warring across the river. Their magicians have worked
hard to learn the secrets of Elvandar, and now they know that should the sacred
heart of the elven forests fall, the elves will be a force no longer.”
Tomas said, “Then we shall hold back, and defend against the
center.”
Macros sat quietly for a moment, as if remembering something. “That
is a start, but they bring their magicians with them, anxious as they are for
an ending. Their magic will let their warriors pass through your forests
unchecked by the power of your Spellweavers, and here they will come.”
Aglaranna said, “Then we shall meet them here and stand until the
end.”
Macros nodded. “Bravely said, lady, but you will need my aid.”
Dolgan studied the sorcerer. “What can one man do?”
Macros stood. “Much. Upon the morrow, you shall see. Fear not,
dwarf, the battle will be harsh, and many will travel to the Blessed Isles, but
with firm resolve, we shall prevail.”
Tomas said, “You speak like one who has already seen these things
happen.”
Macros smiled, and his eyes said a thousand things, and nothing. “I
do, Tomas of Crydee, do I not?” He turned to the others and with a sweep of his
staff said, “Ready yourselves. I shall be with you.” To the Queen he said, “I
would rest; if you have a place for me?”
The Queen turned to the elf who had brought Macros to the council.
“Take him to a room, bring him whatever he requires.”
The sorcerer bowed and followed the guide. The others stood in
silence, until Tomas said, “Let us make ready.”
As night gave way to dawn, the Queen stood alone near her throne. In
all the years of her rule, she had never known a time like this. Her thoughts
ran with hundreds of images, from times as long ago as her youth, and as recently
as two nights ago.
“Seeking answers in the past, lady?”
She turned to see the sorcerer standing behind her, leaning on his
staff. He approached and stood next to her.
“Can you read my mind, sorcerer?”
With a smile and a wave of his hand, Macros said, “No, my lady. But
there is much I do know and can see. Your heart is heavy, and your mind
burdened.”
“Do you understand why?”
Macros laughed softly. “Without question. Still, I would speak to
you of these things.”
“Why, sorcerer? What part ,do you play?”
Macros looked out over the lights of Elvandar “A part, much as any
man plays.”
“But you know yours well.”
“True. It is given to some to understand what is obscure to others.
Such is my fate.”
“Why have you come?”
“Because there is need. Without me Elvandar may fall, and that must
not be. It is so ordained, and I can only do my part.”
“Will you stay if the battle is won?”
“No. I have other tasks. But I will come once more, when the need is
again great.”
“When?”
“That I may not tell you.”
“Will it be soon?”
“Soon enough, though not soon enough.”
“You speak in riddles.”
Macros smiled, a crooked, sad smile. “Life is a riddle. It is in the
hands of the gods. Their will shall prevail, and many mortals will find their
lives changed.”
“Tomas?” Aglaranna looked deep into the sorcerer’s dark eyes.
“He most visibly, but all who live through these times.”
“What is he?”
“What would you have him be?”
The Elf Queen found herself unable to answer. Macros placed his hand
lightly on her shoulder. She felt calm flow from his fingers and heard herself
say, “I would wish nothing of trouble upon my people, but the sight of him
fills me with longing. I long for a man . . . a man with his . . . might. Tomas
is more like my lost lord than he will ever know. And I fear him, for once I
make the pledge, once I place him above me, I lose the power to rule. Do you
think the elders would allow this? My people would never willingly place the
yoke of the Valheru upon their necks again.”
The sorcerer was silent for a time, then said, “For all my arts,
there are things hidden from me, but understand this: there is a magic here fey
beyond imagining. I cannot explain save to say it reaches across time, more
than is apparent. For while the Valheru is present within Tomas now, so is
Tomas present within the Valheru in ages past.
“Tomas wears the garb of Ashen-Shugar, last of the Dragon Lords.
When the Chaos Wars raged, he alone remained upon this world, for he felt
things alien to his kind.”
“Tomas?”
Macros smiled. “Think not upon this overly long, lady. These sorts
of paradox can send the mind reeling. What Ashen-Shugar felt was an obligation
to protect this world.”
Aglaranna studied Macros’s face in the twinkling lights of Elvandar.
“You know more of the ancient lore than any other man, sorcerer.”
“I have been . . . given much, lady.” He looked over the elven
forests and spoke more to himself than to the Queen: “Soon will come a time of
testing for Tomas. I cannot be sure what will occur, but this much I do know.
Somehow the boy from Crydee, in his love for you and yours, in his simple human
caring, has so far withstood the most powerful member of the most powerful
mortal race ever to have lived upon this world. And he is well served in
withstanding the terrible pain of that conflict of two natures by the soft arts
of your Spellweavers.”
She looked hard at Macros. “You know of this?”
He laughed with genuine amusement. “Lady, I am not without some
vanity. I’m stung you’d think you could fashion so fine a spellweaving without
my observing. Little magic in this world escapes my notice. What you have done
is wise and may tip the balance in Tomas’s favor.”
“That is the thought I plead to myself,” said Aglaranna quietly,
“when I see in Tomas a lord to match the King of my youth, the husband taken
too soon from my side. Can it be true?”
“Should he survive the time of testing, yes. It may be the conflict
will prove the end of both Tomas and Ashen-Shugar. But should Tomas survive, he
may become what you most secretly long for.
“Now I shall tell you something only the gods and I know, I can
judge many things yet to come, but much is still unknown to me. One thing I
know is this: at your side Tomas may grow to rule wisely and well and, as his
youth is replaced by wisdom, grow to be the lord of your wishes, if his power
can somehow be tempered by his human heart. Should he be sent away, a terrible
fate may await both the Kingdom and the free peoples of the West.”
Her eyes asked the question, and he continued. “I cannot see into
that dark future, lady; I can only surmise. Should he come into his powers with
the dark side in preeminence, he will be a terrible force, one that must be
destroyed. Those who see the battle madness come upon him see but a shadow of
the true darkness bound up within him. Even if a balance is struck and Tomas’s
humanity survives, but still you send him away, then humanity’s capacity for
anger, pain, and hate may come forth. I ask you: should Tomas be driven away
and someday raise the dragon standard in the north, what would occur?”
The Queen became frightened and openly showed it, her mask of
control lost completely. “The moredhel would gather.”
“Aye, my lady. Not as bands of troublesome bandits, but as a host.
Twenty thousand Dark Brothers, and with them a hundred thousand goblins, and
companies of men whose dark nature would seek profit in the destruction and
savagery to follow. A mighty army under the steel glove of a warrior born, a
general whom even your own people follow without question.”
“Do you advise me to keep him here?”
“I can only point out the alternatives. You must decide.”
The Elf Queen threw back her head, her red-gold locks flying and her
eyes moist, looking out over Elvandar. The first light of day was breaking.
Rosy light lanced through the trees, casting shadows of deep blue. The morning
songs of birds could be heard around the glades She turned to Macros, wishing
to thank him for his counsel, and found him gone.
***
The
Tsurani advanced as Macros had foretold. The cho-ja attacked across the river,
after the two human waves had carried the flanks. Tomas had set skirmishers,
lines of bowmen with a few shield guards, who retreated and fired into the
advancing army, giving the impression of resistance.
Tomas stood before the assembled army of Elvandar and the dwarves of
the Grey Towers, only fifteen hundred arrayed against the six thousand invaders
and their magicians. In silence they waited. As the enemy approached, the
shouts of Tsurani warriors and the cries of those who fell to elvish arrows
could be heard through the forest. Tomas looked up at the Queen, standing on a
balcony overlooking the scene of the coming battle, next to the sorcerer.
Suddenly elves were running toward them, and the first flashes of
brightly colored Tsurani armor could be seen through the trees. When the
skirmishers had rejoined the main force, Tomas raised his sword.
“Wait,” a voice cried out from above, and the sorcerer pointed
across the open clearing, where the first elements of the Tsurani forces were
running into the clearing. Confronted by the waiting elven army, the vanguard
halted and waited as their comrades joined them. Their officers ordered ranks
formed, for here was fighting they could understand, two armies meeting on an
open plain, and the advantage was theirs.
The cho-ja also stood in ordered ranks, heeding the officers’
shouted commands Tomas was fascinated, for he still knew little of these
creatures and counted them animals as much as intelligent allies of the
Tsurani.
Macros shouted, “Wait!” again, and waved his staff above his head,
inscribing broad circles in the air. A stillness descended upon the glade.
Suddenly an owl flew past Tomas’s head, straight for the Tsurani
lines. It circled above the aliens for a moment, then swooped and struck a
soldier in the face. The man screamed in pain as its talons clawed his eyes.
A hawk sped past and duplicated the owl’s attack. Then a large black
rook descended from the sky. A flight of sparrows erupted from the trees behind
the Tsurani and pecked at faces and unprotected arms. Birds came flying from
every part of the forest and attacked the invaders. Soon the air was filled
with the sound of flapping wings as every manner of bird in the forest
descended upon the Tsurani. Thousands of them, from the smallest hummingbird to
the mighty eagle, attacked the out-world host. Men cried out, and a few broke
formation and ran, trying to avoid the wicked beaks and talons that tried to
scratch at eyes, pull at cloaks, and tear flesh. The cho-ja reared, for though
their armored hide was immune to the pecking and clawing, their large,
jewellike eyes were easy targets for the feathered attackers.
A shout went up from the elves as the Tsurani lines dissolved in
disorder. Tomas gave the order, and elven bowmen added feathered arrows to the
fray. Tsurani soldiers were struck and fell before they could come to grips
with the enemy. Their own bowmen could not return the fire, for they were
harried by a hundred tiny foes.
The elves watched as the Tsurani tried to hold position, while the
birds continued their bloody work in their midst. The Tsurani fought back as
best they could, striking down many birds in midflight, but for each one
killed, three took its place.
Suddenly a hissing, tearing sound cut through the din. There was an
instant of silence as everything moving on the Tsurani side of the clearing
seemed to pause. Then the birds exploded upward, accompanied by a sizzling
crackle of energy, as if thrown back by some unseen force. As the birds cleared
the area, Tomas could see the black robes of the Tsurani magicians as they
moved through their forces, restoring order. Hundreds of wounded Tsurani lay
upon the ground, but the battle-tempered aliens quickly re-formed their lines,
ignoring the injured.
The enormous flight of birds gathered again above the invaders and
started to dive. Instantly a glowing red shield of energy formed around the
Tsurani. As the birds struck, they stiffened and fell, their feathers
smoldering and filling the air with a pungent burning stench. Elven arrows that
struck the barrier were halted in midflight and burst into flame, falling
harmlessly to the ground.
Tomas gave the order to stop the bow fire and turned to look at
Macros. Again the sorcerer shouted, “Wait!”
Macros waved his staff and the birds dispersed, hearing his silent
command. The staff extended toward the Tsurani, as Macros aimed it at the red
barrier. A golden bolt of energy shot forth. It sped across the clearing and
pierced the red barrier, to strike a black-robed magician in the chest. The
magician crumpled to the ground, and a shout of horror and outrage went up from
the assembled Tsurani. The other magicians turned their attention to the
platform above the elven army, and blue globes of fire shot toward Macros.
Tomas shouted, “Aglaranna!” in rage as the tiny blue stars struck the platform,
obliterating all sight of her in a blinding display of exploding light. Then he
could see again.
The sorcerer stood upon the platform unharmed, as did the Queen.
Tathar pulled her away, and Macros pointed with his staff again. Another
black-robed magician fell. The four remaining magicians looked upon Macros’s
survival and counterattack with expressions of mixed awe and anger, clearly
seen across the glade. They redoubled their assault upon the sorcerer, wave
after wave of blue light and fire striking Macros’s protective barrier. All
upon the ground were forced to turn away from the sight, lest they become
blinded by the terrible energies being unleashed. After this magical onslaught
was ended, Tomas looked upward, and again the sorcerer was unharmed.
One magician gave out with a cry of pure anguish and pulled a device
from his robe. Activating it, he vanished from the clearing, followed moments
later by his three companions. Macros looked down at Tomas, pointed his staff at
the Tsurani host, and called, “Now!”
Tomas raised his sword and gave the signal to attack. A hail of
arrows passed overhead as he led the charge across the clearing. The Tsurani
were demoralized, their attack blunted by the birds and the sight of their magicians
being killed and driven off. Yet they stood their ground and took the charge.
Hundreds had died from the claws and beaks of the birds, and more from the
flights of arrows, but still they numbered three to one of the elves and
dwarves.
The battle was joined, and Tomas was caught up in the red haze that
washed away any thought but to kill. Hacking right and left, he carved a path
through the Tsurani, confounding their every attempt to strike him down.
Tsurani and cho-ja both fell to his blade, as he delivered death with an even
hand to all who stood before him.
Back and forth across the clearing the battle moved, as man and
cho-ja, elf and dwarf fell. The sun moved higher in the sky, and there was no
respite from the fray. The sounds of death filled the air, and high overhead
the kites and vultures gathered.
Slowly the Tsurani press forced the elves and dwarves back. Slowly
they moved toward the heart of Elvandar. There was a brief pause, as if both
sides had struck a balance, when the adversaries moved away from each other,
leaving an open space between. Tomas heard the voice of the sorcerer ringing
clear above the sounds of battle. “Back!” it cried, and to a man, the forces of
Elvandar retreated.
The Tsurani paused a moment, then, sensing the hesitation of the
elves and dwarves to continue, started to press forward. Abruptly there came a
rumbling sound, and the earth trembled. All stopped moving, and the Tsurani
looked fearful.
Tomas could see the trees shake, more and more violently, as the
trembling increased. Suddenly there came a crescendo of noise, as if the grandfather
of all thunderclaps pealed overhead. With the booming sound, a huge piece of
earth erupted upward, as if heaved by some invisible giant’s hand. The Tsurani
who were standing on it shot upward, to fall hard to the ground, and those
nearby were knocked aside.
Another piece of the ground erupted, then a third. Suddenly the air
was full of giant pieces of earth that flew upward, then fell upon the Tsurani.
Screams of terror filled the air, and the Tsurani turned and fled. There was no
order to their retreat, for they flew from a place where the very earth
attacked them. Tomas watched as the clearing was emptied of all but the dead
and dying.
In a matter of minutes, the clearing was quiet, as the earth
subsided and the shocked onlookers stood mute. The sounds of the Tsurani army
retreating through the woods could be heard. Their cries told of other horrors
being visited upon them as they fled.
Tomas felt weak and weary, and looked down to find his arms covered
with blood. His tabard and shield and his golden sword were clean as they
always were, but for the first time he could feel human life splattered upon
himself. In Elvandar the battle madness did not stay with him, and he felt sick
to his inner being.
He turned and said softly, “It is over.” There was a faint cheer
from the elves and dwarves, but it was halfhearted, for none felt like victors.
They had seen a mighty host felled by primeval forces, elemental powers that
defied description.
Tomas walked slowly past Calin and Dolgan and mounted the stairs.
The Elf Prince sent soldiers to follow the retreating invaders, to care for the
allied wounded, and to give the dying Tsurani quick mercy.
Tomas made his way to the small room where he abided, and pulled
aside the curtain. He sat heavily upon his pallet, tossing aside his sword and
shield. A dull throbbing in his head caused him to close his eyes. Memories
came flooding in.
The heavens were torn with mad vortices of energy crashing from
horizon to horizon. Ashen-Shugar sat upon mighty Shuruga’s back, watching the
very fabric of time and space rent.
A clarion rang, the heralding note heard by dint of his magic. The
moment he awaited had come. Urging Shuruga upward, Ashen-Shugar’s eyes searched
the’ heavens, seeking what must come against the mad display in the skies. A
sudden stiffening of Shuruga under him coincided with his sighting of his prey.
The figure of Draken-Korin grew recognizable as he sat upon his black dragon.
There was a strangeness in his eyes, and for the first time in his long memory Ashen-Shugar
began to understand the meaning of horror. He could not put a name to it, could
not describe it, but in the tortured eyes of Draken-Korin he saw it.
Ashen-Shugar ordered Shuruga forward. The mighty golden dragon
roared his challenge, answered by Draken-Korin’s equally mighty black. The two
clashed in the sky, and their riders worked their arts upon each other.
Ashen-Shugar’s golden blade arched overhead and struck, cleaving the
black shield with the grinning tiger’s head in twain. It was almost too easy,
as Ashen-Shugar had known it would be. Draken-Korin had given up too much of
his essence to that which was forming. Before the might of the last Valheru, he
was little more than a mortal. Once, twice, three times more Ashen-Shugar
struck, and the last of his brothers fell from the back of his black dragon.
Downward he tumbled to strike the ground. By force of will, Ashen-Shugar left
Shuruga’s back and floated to stand beside the helpless body of Draken-Korin,
leaving Shuruga to finish his contest with the near-dead black dragon.
A spark of life still persisted within the broken form, life ages
past remembering. A pleading look entered Draken-Korin’s eyes as Ashen-Shugar
approached. He whispered, “Why?”
Pointing heavenward with his golden blade, Ashen-Shugar said, “This
obscenity should never have been allowed. You bring an end to all we knew.”
Draken-Korin looked skyward to where Ashen-Shugar pointed. He
watched the tumbling, raging display of energies, twisted, screaming rainbows
of light jagged across the vault of the sky. He witnessed the new horror being
formed from the twisted life force of his brothers and sisters, a raging,
mindless thing of hate and anger.
In a croaking voice, Draken-Korin said, “They were so strong. We
could never have dreamed.” His face contorted in terror and hate as
Ashen-Shugar raised his golden blade. “But I had the right!” he screamed.
Ashen-Shugar brought down his blade, cleanly severing the head of
Draken-Korin from his body. At once both head and body were engulfed with a
glimmering light, and the air hissed around Ashen-Shugar. Then the fallen
Valheru vanished without trace, his essence returning to that mindless monster
raging against the new gods. With bitterness Ashen-Shugar said, “There is no
right. There is only power.”
Is
that how it was?
“Yes,
that is how I slew the last of my brethren.”
The
others?
“They
are now part of that.” He indicated the terrible sky.
Together, never apart, they watched the madness above as the Chaos
Wars raged. After a time Ashen-Shugar said, “Come, this is an ending. Let us be
done with it.”
They began to walk toward the waiting Shuruga. Then a voice came.
***
“You
are quiet.”
Tomas
opened his eyes. Before him knelt Aglaranna, a basin of herb-sweetened water
and a cloth in her hand. She removed his tabard and helped him pull off the
golden chain. While he sat near exhaustion, she began washing the blood from
his face and arms, saying nothing as he watched her.
When he was clean, she took a dry cloth to his face and said, “You
look tired, my lord.”
“I see many things, Aglaranna, things not meant for a man to see. I
bear the weight of ages upon my soul, and I am tired.”
“Is there no comfort to be sought?”
He looked at her, their eyes locking. The commanding gaze was
tempered by a hint of gentleness, but still she was forced to drop her eyes.
“Do you mock me, lady?”
She shook her head. “No, Tomas. I . . . came to comfort you, if you
have need.”
He reached out and took her hand, and drew her toward him, hunger in
his eyes. When she was encircled by his embrace, feeling the rising passion in
his body, she heard him say, “My need is great, lady.”
Looking into his pale eyes, she dropped the final barriers between
them. “As is mine, my lord.”
22
TRAINING
He arose in the darkness.
He donned a simple white robe, a mark of his station, and left his
cell. He waited outside the small and simple room, which contained a sleeping
mat, a single candle, and a shelf for scrolls: all that was deemed necessary
for his education. Down the corridor he could see the others, all years younger
than he, standing quietly before the doors of their cells. The first black-clad
master came along the corridor and stopped before one of the others. Without a
word the man nodded, the boy fell in behind him, and they marched away into the
gloom. The dawn sent soft grey light through the high narrow windows in the
hallway. He, like the others, extinguished the torch on the wall opposite his
door, at the first hint of day. Another man in black came down the corridor,
and another waiting youth left behind him. Soon a third. Then a fourth. After a
time he found himself alone. The hallway was silent.
A figure emerged from the darkness, his robes conspiring to mask his
coming until the last few feet. He stood before the young man in white and
nodded, pointing down the corridor. The youth fell in behind his black-robed
guide, and they made their way down a series of torchlit passages, into the heart
of the great building that had been the young man’s home as long as he could
remember. Soon they were traveling through a series of low tunnels, rank with
the smell of age, and wet, as if deep below the lake that surrounded the
building on all sides.
The man in black paused at a wooden door, slid a bolt aside, and
opened it. The younger man entered behind the older and came to stand before a
series of wooden troughs. Each was half the length of a man’s height, and half
that wide. One stood on the floor, and the others were arrayed above it,
suspended by wooden supports in steps, one above the next, until the highest
stood near the height of a man’s head. All of those above had single holes in
the end that overhung the trough below. In the bottom trough, water could be
heard sloshing, as it responded to the vibrations of their footfalls on the
stone floor.
The man in black pointed to a bucket and turned and left the young
man in white alone.
The young man picked up the bucket and set about his task. All
commands to those in white were given without words, and, as he had quickly
learned when he had first become aware, those in white were not allowed to
speak. He knew he could speak, for he understood the concept and had quietly
tried to form a few words while lying on his mat in the dark. As with so many
other things, he understood the fact, without being aware of how he understood.
He knew that he existed before his first awakening in his cell, but was not in
the least alarmed by his lack of memory. It seemed somehow proper.
He started his task. Like so many other things he was commanded to
do, it seemed an impossible undertaking. He took the bucket and filled the
topmost trough from the bottom one. As it had on days before, the water spilled
from the top down into each successive trough, until the contents of the bucket
rested again at the bottom Doggedly he pursued his work, letting his mind go
vacant, while his body undertook the mindless task.
As it did so many other times when left to its own devices, his mind
danced from image to image, bright flashes of shapes and colors the eluded his
grasp as he sought to close mental fingers around them. First came a brief
glimpse of a beach, with crashing waves on rocks, black and weathered.
Fighting. A strange-looking cold white substance lying on the ground—a word,
snow, that fled as quickly as it came. A muddy camp. A great kitchen with boys
hurrying about many tasks. A room in a high tower. Each passed with blinding
quickness, leaving only an afterimage in its passing.
Daily a voice would sound in his head, and his mind’s voice would
respond with an answer, while he labored at his endless task. The voice would
ask a simple question, and his mind’s voice would answer. Should the answer be
incorrect, the question would be repeated. If several wrong answers were made,
the voice would cease its questioning, sometimes returning later in the day,
sometimes not.
The white-clad worker felt the familiar pressure against the fabric
of his thoughts.
—What
is the law— the voice asked.
—The
law is the structure that surrounds our lives, and gives them meaning— he
answered.
—What
is the highest embodiment of the law?—
—The
Empire is the highest embodiment of the law—
—What
are you?— came the next question.
—I
am a servant of the Empire—
The thought contact flickered for a moment, then returned, as if the
other were considering the following question carefully.
—In
what manner are you allowed to serve?—
The question had been asked several times before, and always his
answer had been met with the blank inner silence that told him he had answered
incorrectly. This time he carefully considered, eliminating all the answers he
had made previously, as well as those that were combinations of extrapolations
of the previously incorrect ones.
Finally
he answered—As I see fit—
There was a surge of feeling from without, a feeling of approval.
Quickly another question followed.
—Where
is your allotted place?—
He thought about this, knowing that the obvious answer was likely to
be the incorrect one, but still one that needed to be tested. He answered.
—My
place is here—
The mind contact was broken, as he suspected it would be. He knew
that he was being trained, though the purpose of the training was masked from
his mind. Now he could ponder the last question in light of his previous
answers and perhaps ascertain the correct response.
That night he dreamed.
A strange man in a brown robe, tied with a whipcord belt, walked
along the roadway. The man in brown turned and said, “Hurry up. We don’t have
much time, and you can’t fall behind.”
He tried to move faster but found his feet were lead and his arms
tied to his sides. The man in brown halted his brisk walk and said, “Very well,
then. One thing at a time.”
He tried to speak and found his mouth refused to move. The man in
brown stroked his beard thoughtfully, then said, “Consider this: you are the
architect of your own imprisonment.”
He looked down and saw that his bare feet were upon a dusty road. He
looked up, and the man in brown was again walking briskly away. He tried to
follow and again couldn’t move. He awoke in a cold sweat.
Again
he had been asked where his place was, and again his answer,— Where I am
needed—was unsatisfactory. He toiled over another pointless task, driving
nails into a thick sheet of wool, which let them fall through to the floor,
where he picked them up and drove them through again.
His reconsideration of the last question he had been asked was
interrupted when the door behind him opened, and his guide motioned for him to
follow. They moved through long passages, winding their way up to the level
where they would eat the scant morning meal.
When they entered the hall, the guide took a place by the door,
while others in black robes similarly escorted the white-clad ones into the
hall. This was the day that the young man’s guide would stand and watch the
boys in white, who, along with the young man, were bound to eat in silence.
Each day a different wearer of the black robe filled this function.
The
young man ate and considered the last question of the morning. He weighed each
possible answer, seeking out possible flaws, and as they were discovered,
discarding them. Abruptly one answer came unbidden to his mind, an intuitive
leap, as his subconscious provided him with a solution to the question. I
am the architect of my own imprisonment. Several times in the past, when
particularly knotty problems had stopped his progress, this had occurred, which
accounted for his rapid advancement in his lessons. He weighed the possible
flaws in this answer, and when he was certain he was correct, he stood. Other
eyes regarded him furtively, for this was a violation of the rules.
He went over to stand before his guide, who regarded his approach
with a controlled expression, his only sign of curiosity being a slight arching
of his brows.
Without preamble the young man in white said, “This is no longer my
place.”
The man in black showed no emotion, but placed a hand on the young
man’s shoulder and nodded slightly. He reached inside his robe and removed a
small bell, which he rang once. Another black-robed individual appeared moments
later. Without word the newcomer took the place at the door, as the guide
motioned for the young man to follow him.
They walked in silence as they had done many times before, until
they came to a room. The man in black turned to the young man and said, “Open
the door.”
The young man started to reach for the door, then with a flash of
insight pulled his hand away. Knitting his brow in concentration, he opened the
door by the power of his mind. Slowly it swung inward. The man in black turned
and smiled. “Good,” he said, in a soft, pleasant voice.
They entered a room with many white, grey, and black robes hanging
upon hooks. The man in black said, “Change to a grey robe.”
The young man did so quickly and faced the other man. The man in
black studied the new wearer of the grey. “You are no longer bound to silence.
Any question you may have will be answered, as well as is possible, though
there are still things that will be waited upon, until you don the black. Then
you will fully understand. Come.”
The young man in grey followed his guide to another room, where cushions
surrounded a low table, upon which rested a pot of hot chocha, a pungent,
bittersweet drink. The man in black poured two cups and handed one to the young
man, indicating he should sit. They both sat, and the young man said, “Who am
I?”
The man in black shrugged. “You will have to decide that, for only
you can glean your true name. It is a name that must never be spoken to others,
lest they gain power over you. Henceforward you will be called Milamber.”
The newly named Milamber thought for a moment, then said, “It will
serve What are you called?”
“I am called Shimone.”
“Who are you?”
“Your guide, your teacher. Now you will have others, but it was
given to me to be responsible for the first part of your training, the longest
part.”
“How long have I been here?”
“Nearly four years.”
Milamber was surprised by this, for his memory stretched back only a
little, several months at best. “When will my memories be returned to me?”
Shimone smiled, for he was pleased that Milamber had not asked if
they would be returned, and said as much. “Your mind will call up your past
life as you progress in the balance of your training, slowly at first, with
more rapidity later. There is a reason for this. You must be able to withstand
the lure of former ties, of family and nations, of friends and home. In your
case that is particularly vital.”
“Why is that?”
“When your past returns to you, you will understand,” was all
Shimone said, a smile on his face His hawkish features and dark eyes were set
in an expression that communicated the feeling this was the end of that topic.
Milamber thought of several questions, quickly discarding them as of
less immediate consequence. Finally he asked, “What would have happened if I
had opened the door by hand?”
“You would have died.” Shimone said this flatly, without emotion.
Milamber was not surprised or shocked, he simply accepted it. “To
what end?”
Shimone was a little surprised by the question and showed it. “We
cannot rule each other, all we can do is ensure that each new magician is able
to discharge the responsibility attendant upon his actions. You made the
judgment that your place was no longer with those who wore the white, the
novices. If that was not your place, then you would have to demonstrate your ability
to deal with the responsibilities of this change. The bright but foolish ones
often die at this stage.”
Milamber considered this and acknowledged the propriety of such a
test. “How long will my training continue?”
Shimone made a noncommittal gesture. “As long as it takes. You rise
rapidly, however, so I think it will not be too much longer in your case. You
have certain natural gifts, and—you will understand this when your memory
returns—a certain advantage over the other, younger, students who started with
you.”
Milamber studied the contents of his cup. In the thin, dark fluid he
seemed to glimpse a single word, as if seen from the corner of the eye, that
vanished when he tried to focus upon it. He couldn’t hang on to it, but it had
been a short name, a simple name.
That night he dreamed again.
The man in brown walked along the road, and this time Milamber could
follow. “You see, there are few objective limits. What they teach you is
useful, but never accept the proposition that just because a solution satisfies
a problem, that it must be the only solution.”
The man in brown stopped. “Look at this,” he said, pointing to a
flower beside the road Milamber leaned down to see what the man was pointing
at. A small spider spun a web between two leaves. “That creature,” said the man
in brown, “toils oblivious to our passing. Either of us could crush out its
existence at whim. Consider this, then, if that creature could somehow
apprehend our existence, our threat to its life, would the spider worship us?”
“I don’t know,” Milamber answered “I don’t know how a spider
thinks.”
The man in brown leaned upon his staff. “Considering how little
humans think alike, it might be that this spider would react with fear,
defiance, indifference, fatalism, or incredulity. Anything’s possible.” He
reached out with his staff and gently caught a piece of spider silk on the
wooden pole. Lifting the tiny arachnid, he transported it over to the opposite
side of the road. “Do you think the creature knows that this is a different flower?”
“I don’t know.”
The man in brown smiled. “That is perhaps the wisest of all
answers.”
Returning to his walk, he said, “You will be seeing many things
soon, some of which will make little sense to you. When you do, remember one
thing.”
“What is that?” asked Milamber.
“Things are not always what they seem. Remember the spider, who at
this very moment may be offering prayers to me in thanks for its sudden
bounty.” Pointing back with the staff at the plant, he said, “There are a great
many more bugs on that one than the other.” Scratching at his beard he added,
“I wonder: is the flower also offering prayers of thanks?”
He spent weeks in the company of Shimone and a few others. He knew
more of his life, though only a fragment of what was missing. He had been a
slave, and he had been discovered to have the power. He remembered a woman, and
felt a faint tugging at the thought of her vaguely remembered image.
He was quick to learn. Each lesson was accomplished in a single day,
or at most two. He would quickly dissect each problem given, and when it was
time to discuss it with his teachers, his questions were to the point, well
thought out, and proper.
One day he arose, in a newer but still simple cell, and emerged to
find Shimone waiting for him. The black-robed magician said, “From this point
on, you may not speak until you have finished the task set for you.”
Milamber nodded his understanding and followed his guide down the
hall. The older magician led him through a series of long tunnels to a place in
the building he had never been before. They mounted a long staircase, rising
many stories above where they had started. Upward they climbed, until Shimone
opened a door for him. Milamber preceded Shimone through the door and found
himself upon an open flat roof, atop a high tower. From the center of the roof
a single spire of stone rose. Skyward it shot, a needle of fashioned rock.
Winding upward around it was a narrow stairway, carved into the side of the
needle. Milamber’s eyes followed it until the top was lost in the clouds. He
found the sight fascinating, for it seemed to violate several canons of
physical law that he had studied. Still, it stood before him, and what was
more, his guide was indicating that he should mount the steps.
He started upward. As he completed his first circumnavigation, he
noted that Shimone had disappeared through the wooden door. Relieved of his
presence, Milamber turned his gaze outward from the roof, drinking in the vista
around him.
He was atop the highest tower of an immense city of towers.
Everywhere he looked, hundreds of stone fingers pointed upward, strong
structures with windows turning blind eyes outward. Some were open to the sky,
as this one was; others were roofed in stone, or in shimmering lights. But of
them all, this one alone was topped by a thin spire. Below the hundreds of
towers, bridges arched through the sky, connecting them, and farther down could
be seen the bulk of the single, incredible building that supported all he saw.
It was a monster of construction. Sprawling below him, it stretched away for
miles in every direction. He had known it would be a large place, from his
travels within, but this knowledge did nothing to lessen his awe at the sight.
Still farther down, in the dim extreme of his vision, he could see
the faint green of grass, a thin border edging the dark bulk of the building.
On all sides he saw water, the once-glimpsed lake. In the distance he could
make out the hazy suggestion of mountains, but unless he strained to see them,
it was as if the entire world were arrayed below.
Plodding upward, he turned around the spire as he climbed. Each
circle brought him a new detail of the vista. A single bird wheeled high above
all else, ignorant of the affairs of men, its scarlet wings spread to catch the
air as it watched with keen eye the lake below. Seeing a telltale flicker on
the water, it folded back its wings and stooped, hitting the surface for the
briefest moment before it climbed aloft once more, a flopping prize clutched in
its talons. With a cry of victory it circled once, then sped westward.
A turn. A play of winds. Each carried suggestions of far and alien
lands From the south a gust with a hint of hot jungles where slaves toiled to
reclaim farmlands from deadly, water-shrouded marshes. From the east a breeze
carried the victory chant of a dozen warriors of the Thuril Confederation,
after defeating an equal number of Empire soldiers in a border clash. In
counterpoint there was a faint echo of a dying Tsurani soldier, crying for his
family. From the north came the smell of ice and the sound of the hooves of
thousands of Thьn pounding over the frozen tundra, heading south for warmer
lands. From the west, the laughter of the young wife of a powerful noble
teasing a half-terrified, half-aroused household guard into betraying her
husband, away conducting business with a merchant in Tusan to the south. From
the east, the smell of spices as merchants haggled in the market square in far
Yankora. Again south, and the smell of salt from the Sea of Blood. North, and
windswept ice fields that had never known the tread of human feet, but over
which beings old and wise in ways unknown to men walked, seeking a sign in the
heavens—one that never came. Each breeze brought a note and tone, a color and
hue, a taste and fragrance. The texture of the world blew by, and he breathed
deeply, savoring it.
A turn. From the steps below came a pulsing as the world beat with a
life of its own. Upward through the island, through the building, through the
tower, the spire, and his very body came the urgent yet eternal beating of the
planet’s heart. He cast his eyes downward and saw deep caverns, the upper ones
worked by slaves who harvested the few rare metals to be found, along with coal
for heat and stone for building. Below these were other caverns, some natural,
others the remnants of a lost city, overblown by dust that became soil as the
ages passed. Here once dwelled creatures beyond his ability to imagine. Deeper
still his vision plunged him, to a region of heat and light, where primeval
forces contested Liquid rock, inflamed and glowing, pushed against its solid
cousin, seeking a passage upward, mindlessly driven by nature. Deeper still, to
a world of pure force, where lines of energy ran through the heart of the
world.
A turn, and he stepped upon a small platform atop the spire. It was
less than his own height in size on each side, an impossibly precarious perch.
He stepped to the middle, overcoming a vertigo that tried to send him screaming
over the edge. He employed every part of his ability and training to stand
there, for he understood without being told that to fail here was to die.
He cleared his mind of fear and looked around at the scene before
him, awed by the expanse of emptiness. Never before had he felt so truly
isolated, so truly alone. Here he stood with nothing between him and whatever
fate was allotted to him.
Below him stretched the world and above him an empty sky. The wind
held a hint of moisture, and he saw dark clouds racing up from the south. The
tower, or the needle upon it, swayed slightly, and he unconsciously shifted his
weight to compensate.
Lightning flashed as the storm clouds rushed toward him, and thunder
broke around his head. The very sound was enough to dislodge him from the small
platform, and he was forced to delve deeper into his inner well of power, into
that silent place known only as wal, and there he found the strength to resist
the onslaught of the storm.
Winds buffeted him, slamming him toward the platform’s edge. He
reeled and recovered, the darkling abyss below beckoning to him, inviting his
fall. With a surge of will, he brushed aside the vertigo once again and set his
mind to the task ahead.
In his
mind a voice cried, —Now is the time of testing. Upon this tower you must
stand, and should your will falter, from it you will fall—
There
was a momentary pause, then the voice cried once more, —Behold! Witness and
understand how it was—
Blackness swept upward, and he was consumed.
For a
time he floats, nameless and lost. A pinpoint of flickering consciousness, an
unknown swimmer through a black and empty sea. Then a single note invades the
void. It reverberates, a soundless sound, a sense-lacking intruder on the
senses. —Without senses, how is there perception?— his mind asks. His
mind! —I am!— he cries, and a million philosophies cry out in wonder. —If
I am, then what is not me? —he wonders.
An echo
replies, —You are that which you are, and not that which you are not—
—An
unsatisfactory answer— he muses.
—Good—
replies the echo.
—What
is that note?— he asks.
—It
is the touch of an old man’s sleep the moment before death—
—What
is that note?—
—It
is the color of winter—
—What
is that note?—
—It
is the sound of hope—
—What
is that note?—
—It
is the taste of love—
—What
is that note?—
—It is
an alarm to wake you—
He floats. Around him swim a billion billion stars. Great clusters
drift by, ablaze with energy. In riots of color they spin, giant reds and
blues, the smaller oranges and yellows, and the tiny reds and whites. The
colorless and angry black ones drink in the storm of light around them, while
others pulse out energies in an unknown spectrum, and a few twist the fabric of
space and time, sending his vision swimming as he tries to fathom their
passing. From each to each a line of force stretches, binding them all in a net
of power. Back and forth along the strands of this web energy flows, pulsing
with a life that is not life. The stars know as they fly by. They are aware of
his presence, but acknowledge it not. He is too small for them to be concerned
with. Around him stretches away the whole of the universe.
At various points in the web, creatures of power rest or work, each
different from the others, but all somehow the same. Some he can see are gods,
for they are familiar to him, and others are less or more. Each plays a role.
Some regard him, for his passing is not without notice; some are beyond him,
too great to comprehend him, and so being, are less than he. Others study him
closely, weighing his power and abilities against their own. He studies them in
return. All are silent.
He speeds among the stars and the beings of power, until he espies a
star, one among the multitude, but one that calls to him. From the star twenty
lines of energy lead away, and near each is a being of power. Without knowing
why, he understands that here are the ancient gods of Kelewan. Each plays on
the nearest line of power influencing the structure of space and time nearby.
Some contest among themselves, others work oblivious to the strife, and still
others do nothing that is discernible.
He moves closer. A single planet swings about the star, a
blue-and-green sphere shrouded in white clouds. Kelewan.
Down the lines of force he plunges, until he is on the surface. Here
he sees a world untouched by the footprint of man. Great beasts with six legs
stride the land, and hiding from them are a young race of quick-thinking
beings.
The cho-ja, a few bands of scurrying creatures, little more than the
large insects that spawned them, speed through the trees of the great forests,
fearing the large predators who hunt them, as they in turn hunt smaller game.
They have begun to reason, and their queens now design each for a specific
purpose, so strong and well-armed soldiers protect the foragers. More food is
brought to the hive, and the race begins to prosper.
Over the plains the young Thьn males race, fighting among themselves
with rocks and sticks, fists and fang. They clash knowing only there is a
nameless urge driving them on, demanding that one or another from their band
drive off the others and sire the next generation of young. It will be ages
before they become reasoning beings, able to work together against the
two-legged creatures who have yet to appear upon this world.
Near the sea, not yet named for the blood of thousands killed upon
it, the Sunn huddle on the shore, newly emerged from the sea, discomforted upon
the land, but no longer able to abide in the deep. Fearing all, they plot in
their sea-caves, seeking security and building an attitude toward outsiders
that will set the stage for their genocide generations later.
Above the mountains, the Thrillillil soar, their culture formative
and crude, only little more than a loose association of breeding pairs and
young. Their large but delicate wings cast shadows that hide the Nummongnum,
who creep along the edge of the rocks, hidden from sight by their mottled fur,
which resembles the stones behind which they scurry, seeking Thrillillil eggs,
beginning a war that will last a thousand years and end in the annihilation of
both races.
This is a harsh world, abundant with life, but contentious life,
with no mercy for the weak. Of those races he sees, only two will endure, the
Thьn and the cho-ja. He sees darkness approaching like a sudden storm, and it
sweeps over him.
Like the calm after the storm, light comes.
He stands on a cliff looking down upon a great plain of grass
separated from the sea by a small beach. A shimmering in the air begins, and
the sea beyond the plain is distorted. Like the agitation of the air by the
heat of the day, the scene ripples. Scintillating colors appear in the air.
Then, as if by two giant hands, the very fabric of space and time is torn, an
ever-widening gap through which he can see. Beyond this fracture in the air, a
vision of chaos is revealed, a mad display of energy, as if all the lines of
power in that universe are torn asunder. Bolts of energy sufficient to destroy
suns explode in displays of color beyond the ability of mortal eyes to
describe, leaving them dazzled with lesser lights. From deep within this giant
rift, a wide bridge of golden light extends downward, until it touches the
grass of the plain. Upon the bridge thousands of figures are moving, escaping
the madness beyond the rift to the serenity of the plain.
Downward they hurry, some carrying all they own on their backs,
others with animals pulling wagons and sleds heaped with valuables. All press
forward, fleeing a nameless horror behind.
He studies the figures, and though much is alien, he can see much
that is also familiar. Many wear short robes of plain fashion, and he knows he
is looking upon the seeds of the Tsurani race. Their faces are more basic,
showing less of the blending with others that would take place in years to
come. Most are fair, with brown or blond hair. At their feet run barking dogs,
sleek and swift greyhounds and whippets.
Next to them stride proud warriors, with slanted eyes and bronze
skin. These are fighting men, but not organized soldiers, for they wear robes
of different cut and color one from the other. Each steps down off the bridge,
some showing wounds, all hiding terror behind implacable expressions. Over
their shoulders they carry long swords of fine steel, fashioned with great
care. The tops of their heads are shaved, with the hair around pulled back into
a knot. These bear the proud look of men unsure if they are better off for
having survived the battle. Mixed among them are others, all strangers.
A race of short people carry nets that proclaim them fishers, though
of what sea only they know. They have dark hair, sallow skin, and grey-green
eyes. Men, women, and children all wear simple fur trousers, leaving upper
bodies bare.
Behind them come a nation of tall, noble, black-skinned people.
Their robes are richly fashioned of soft and subtle colors. Many have gems
adorning their foreheads, and gold bands on their arms. All are weeping for a
homeland never to be seen again.
Then come riders upon impossible beasts that look like flying
serpents with feathered birds’ heads. Upon the riders’ faces are masks of
animals and birds, brightly painted and plumed. They are covered in paint
alone, for their homeworld was a hot place. They wear their nakedness like a
cloak, for there is beauty in their form, as if each had been fashioned by a
master sculptor, and they bear weapons of black glass. Women and children ride
behind the men unmasked, revealing expressions made harsh by the cruel world
they flee. The Serpent Riders turn their creatures eastward and fly away. The
great flying snakes will die out in the cold highlands of the east, but will
remain forever in the legends of the proud Thuril.
Thousands more come, all walking down the golden ramp to set foot
upon Kelewan. When they reach the plain, some move off, traveling to other
parts of the planet, but many stay and watch as thousands more come across the
bridge. Time passes, night follows day, then gives way to day once more, while
the hosts enter from the insane storm of chaos.
With them come twenty beings of power, also fleeing the utter
destruction of a universe. The multitudes upon the plain cannot see them
passing, but he can. He knows they will become the twenty gods of Kelewan, the
Ten Higher and Ten Lower Beings. They fly upward, to wrest the lines of power
from the ancient, feeble beings who hold station around this world. There is no
struggle as the new gods take their stations, for the old beings of power know
a newer order is coming into the world.
After days of watching, he sees that the stream of humanity is
thinning. Hundreds of men and women pull huge boats made from some metal, shining
in the sun, mounted on wheels of a black substance. They reach the plain and
see the ocean beyond the narrow beach. They give a shout and pull their boats
to the water and launch them. Fifty boats raise sail and set out across the
ocean, heading southward, for the land that will become Tsubar, the lost
nation.
The last group is composed of thousands of men in robes of many
designs and colors. He knows that these are the priests and magicians of many
nations. Together they stand, holding back the raging madness beyond. As he
watches, many fall, their lives burning out like spent candles. At some
prearranged signal, many of them, but less than one for each hundred standing
at the top of the golden bridge, turn and flee downward. All are holding books,
scrolls, and other tomes of knowledge. When they reach the bottom of the
bridge, they turn and watch the unfolding drama at the top.
Those above, looking not at those who have fled but at what they
hold back, give forth a shout, incanting a mighty spell, wielding magic of
enormous power. Those below echo their cries, and all who can hear them quail
in dread at the sound. The bridge begins to dissolve, from the ground up. A
flood of terror and hate comes pouring through the rift, and those who stand
atop the bridge begin to crumple before its onslaught. As the bridge and the
opening above disappear from sight, a single blast of fury comes through that
stuns many who stand upon the plain below, felling them as if with a blow.
For some time those who escaped the nameless terror behind the rift
stand mute. Then slowly they start to disperse. Groups break away and move off.
He knows that, in years to come, these ragged refugees will conquer this world,
for they are the seeds of the nations that populate Kelewan.
He knows he has seen the beginning of the nations, and their flight
from the Enemy, the nameless terror that destroyed the homes of the races of
mankind, dispersing them to other universes.
Again the cloak of time is drawn over him, creating darkness.
Followed by light.
On the plain that had been empty, a great city stands. Its white
towers ascend to the skies. Its people are industrious, and the city prospers.
Caravans of trade goods come overland, and great ships call from across the
sea. Years speed by, bringing war and famine, peace and bounty.
One day a ship pulls into the harbor, as scarred and ill as its
crew. A great battle has been fought, and this ship is one of the few to
survive. Those across the water will come soon, and the City of the Plains will
fall if help is not forthcoming. Runners are sent north to the cities along the
great river, for should the white city fall, nothing will prevent the invaders
from striking northward. Runners return, carrying the news. The armies of the
other cities will come. He watches as they gather and meet the invaders near
the sea. The invaders are repulsed, but the cost is great, for the battle rages
twelve days. A hundred thousand men die, and the sands are red for months. A
thousand ships burn, and the sky is filled with black smoke, and for days it falls
upon the land, covering miles about with a fine, powdery ash. The city of white
becomes the city of grey. The sea is called Blood from that day forward, and
the great bay is called Battle. But out of the battle an alliance is formed,
and the seeds of the great Empire are planted, the world-spanning Empire of
Tsuranuanm.
Like silence descending, darkness comes.
As a clarion sounding, light returns.
He stands atop a temple, in the heart of the central city of the
Empire. Below, thousands of people stand. Shoulder to shoulder they fill the
streets, chanting while thousands of upraised hands pass along great wooden
platforms overhead. Upon the platforms stand the nobles of the Empire, Lords of
the Five Great Families. Upon the last platform, largest of all, rests a golden
throne, fashioned from the rarest of metals of this mineral-poor world. Upon
this throne sits a young boy. When the platform reaches the Great Square of the
Twenty Higher and Lower Gods, it is placed upon the ground, and the throne is
carried on the backs of the citizens to the top of the highest temple.
The throne is lowered, facing southeast, from where the nations had
come in the beginning. From deep within the temple, a dozen black-clad
priestesses rush forth, red-clad priests at their side. The Priestesses of
Sibi, the Death Goddess, point out one or another citizen in the crowd, and the
red-clad Priests of the Killing God grab them. They seize men, women, and
occasionally children. All are dragged to the top of the temple, where waiting priests
of the Red God cut their hearts from their bodies, while the priests and
priestesses of the other eighteen orders look on silently. When hundreds have
been sacrificed, and the temple steps are bathed in blood, the Chief Priestess
of the Death Goddess judges the gods satisfied. They place a silver ring upon
the boy’s hand, and a golden circlet upon his brow, and proclaim him the Light
of Heaven, Minjochka, eleven times Emperor. The boy plays with a wooden toy
given to him at the start of the day, for he grows bored easily, while the
throng presses forward to dip their hands in the blood of their countrymen,
counting it lucky to do so. In the east, the sky darkens as night approaches.
As the sun rises, he stands near a magician who has worked the night
through. The man grows alarmed at what his calculations have shown, and he
incants a spell that takes him to another place. The watcher follows. In a
small hall, several more magicians react with expressions of dread to the news
the first magician brings. A messenger is dispatched to the Warlord, ruler of
the Empire in the Emperor’s name. The Warlord summons the magicians. The
watcher follows. The magicians explain the news. The signs in the stars, along
with ancient writings, herald the coming of a great disaster. A star, a
wanderer in the heavens sighted where none has been seen before, stands
motionless but grows brighter. It will bring destruction to the nations. The
Warlord is skeptical, but of late more and more nobles have come to heed the
words of magicians. There have always been legends of magicians saving the
nations from the Enemy, but few think them likely. Still, there is now this new
convocation of magicians, who have formed something called the Assembly, toward
what ends only the magicians know. So, with the changing times in mind, the
Warlord agrees to take the news to the Emperor. After a time an order is sent
to the Assembly by the Emperor. His demand: bring proof. The magicians shake
their heads and return to their modest halls.
Decades pass, and the magicians conduct a campaign of propaganda,
seeking to influence any noble of the Empire who will listen. The day arrives
when the news is proclaimed that the Emperor is dead and his son now reigns.
The magicians gather with all who can travel to the Holy City for the
coronation of the new Emperor.
Thousands of people line the streets, while slaves bear the nobles
of the land in litters to the great temples. The new Emperor rides the ancient
golden throne, born by a hundred husky slaves. He is crowned, while a slave is
sacrificed deep within the halls of the temple of the Death God, Turakamu, as a
petition to the gods to allow the old Emperor’s soul to rest in heaven.
The crowd cheers, for Sudkahanchoza, thirty-four times Emperor, is
well loved, and this will be the last time they will ever look upon him.
He will now retire to the Holy Palace, where his soul will stand
forever vigilant on behalf of his subjects, while the Warlord and the High
Council conduct the business of governing the Empire. The new Emperor will live
a contemplative life, reading, painting, studying the great books of the
temples, seeking to purify his soul for this arduous life.
This Emperor is unlike his father and, after hearing the grave news
from the Assembly, orders the building of a great castle upon an island in the
center of the giant lake in the midst of the mountains of Ambolina.
Time . . .
. . . passes.
Hundreds of black-clad magicians stand atop towers that rise from
the city of the island, not yet the magnificent single entity of the future.
Two hundred years have passed, and now two suns burn in the sky, one warm and
yellow-green, the other small, white, and angry. The watcher sees the men work
their magic, the greatest spell cast in the history of the nations. Even the
legendary bridge from the outside, the beginning of time, was not so great a
feat, for then they had only moved between worlds, now they would move a star.
Below he can feel the presence of hundreds of other magicians, adding their
power to those above. The spell has been wrought over the last few years, each
step taken with the greatest care, as the Stranger approaches. Though powerful
beyond compare, this enchantment is also delicate in the extreme. Any misstep
and its work will be undone. He looks up and sees the Stranger, its course
marked toward the path of this world. It will not strike Kelewan, but there is
little doubt that its heat added to Kelewan’s already hot star will render the
planet lifeless. Kelewan will hang for over a year between its own primary and
the Stranger, in constant daylight, and all magicians agree that only a few
might survive in deep caves, to emerge to a burned-out planet. Now they must
act, before it is too late to try again should the enchantment fail.
Now they do act, all in concert, incanting the last piece of the
great arcane work. The world seems to stand still for a moment, reverberating
with the final word of the spell. Slowly that reverberation grows louder,
picking up resonance, developing new harmonies, new overtones, a character of
its own. Soon it is loud enough to deafen those in the towers, who cover their
ears. Below, those on the ground stand in mute wonder, looking to the sky where
a blaze of color begins to form. Ragged bolts of energy flash, and the light
from the two stars is dimmed in momentarily blinding displays that will leave
some who viewed them sightless for the rest of their lives. He is not affected
by the sound or light, as if some agency has taken care to protect him from
their effects. A great rift appears in the sky, much like the one the golden
bridge came through ages ago. He watches without emotion, his strongest feeling
being detached fascination. It grows in the sky, between the Stranger and
Kelewan, and begins to move away from the planet, toward the invading star.
But something else occurs. From the heart of the rift, more violent
than at the time of the golden bridge, an unprecedented display of erupting
energies comes forth. The chaotic scene is matched with an overwhelming wave of
hatred. The Enemy, the evil power that drove the nations to Kelewan, still
abides in the other universe, and it has not forgotten those who escaped it
ages ago. It cannot pierce the barrier of the rift, for it needs more time to
move between universes than the life span of the rift, but it reaches forth and
warps it, sending it away from the Stranger. The rift grows larger, and those
on the ground see it is going to engulf Kelewan, bringing the planet back into
the dominion of the Enemy.
The watcher looks on impassively, unlike those around him, for he
knows that this is not the end of the world. The rift rushes toward the planet,
and one magician comes forth.
He is somehow familiar to the one who watches. The man, unlike those
around him, wears a brown robe, fastened round with a whipcord belt, and holds
a staff of wood. He raises the staff above his head and incants. The rift
changes, from colors impossible to describe to inky black, and it strikes the
planet.
The heavens explode for a moment, then all around is black. When the
darkness lifts, the sun, Kelewan’s own, is dropping below the horizon.
The magicians who are not dead or mad stare upward in horror. Above
them the sky is a void, without stars.
And the man in brown turns to him and says, “Remember, things are
not always what they seem.”
Blackness . . .
. . . heralds the passing of time again. He is standing in the halls
of the Assembly. Magicians are appearing regularly, using the pattern on the
floor as a focal point for their transit. Each remembers the pattern like an
address, and wills himself there. A message arrives from the Emperor. He begs
the Assembly to solve the problem, promising them whatever aid they require.
The watcher moves forward through generations to find the magicians
again upon the towers. Now, instead of the invading Stranger, they regard a
starless sky. Another spell, years in the fashioning, is being incanted. When
it is finished, the earth reverberates with violent energies. Suddenly the sky
is ablaze with stars, and Kelewan is again in its normal place.
“Things are not always what they seem,” says a voice.
The Emperor sends a command that the full Assembly should come to
the Holy City at once. By ones and twos they use the patterns to travel to
Kentosani. The watcher follows. There they are taken to the inner chamber of
the Emperor’s palace, something unheard of in the history of the Empire.
Of the seven thousand magicians who gathered a century before to
thwart the Stranger, only two hundred survived. Even now that number has
increased but slightly, so that not even one magician for each twenty who stood
upon towers against the Stranger answers the Emperor’s call. They advance to
stand before Tukamaco, forty times Emperor, descendant of Sudkahanchoza, and
Light of Heaven. The Emperor asks if the Assembly will accept the charge to
stand ever vigilant over the Empire, protecting it until the end of time. The
magicians confer and agree. The Emperor then leaves his throne and abases
himself before the assembled magicians, something never done before. He sits
back and, still on his knees before them, throws wide his arms and proclaims
that from this day forth the magicians are the Great Ones, free from all
obligations, save the charge just accepted. They are outside the law, and none
may command them, including the Warlord, who stands to one side, a frown upon
his face. Whatever they desire is theirs to ask, for their words will be as
law.
And a magician smiles knowingly at another nearby.
Darkness . . .
. . . and time passes.
The watcher stands before the Warlord’s throne. A delegation of
magicians stand before the Warlord. They present him with proof of what they
have claimed. A controllable rift, free from the Enemy’s influence, has been
opened, and another world has been found. This is unsuitable for life—but a
second has been discovered, a rich, ripe world. They show him a lifetime’s
worth of wealth in metals, all found lying about, discarded. He who watches
smiles to himself over the Warlord’s eagerness at the sight of a broken
breastplate, a rusted sword, and a handful of bent nails. To further prove this
is an alien world, they present him with a strange but beautiful flower. The
Warlord smells it and is pleased with its rich fragrance. The watcher nods, for
he, too, knows the richness of a Midkemian rose. The black wing of passing time
covers him again.
Once more he stood upon the platform. He looked around and saw that
the full fury of the storm was breaking around him. Only by his unconscious
will had he been able to stand upon this platform, while his conscious mind was
occupied by the unfolding history of Kelewan. He now understood the nature of
the test, for he found himself exhausted from the energy he had expended during
the ordeal. While being instilled with the final instruction in his place in
this society, he had been tested with the raw fury of nature.
He took a last look around, finding the grim view of the
storm-tossed lake and the shuttered windows of the towers somehow satisfying.
He strove to capture this image, as if to ensure that he would forever remember
the moment he came to his full awakening as a Great One, for there were no more
blocks on his memory, or his emotions. He exulted in his power: no longer Pug
the keep boy, but now a magician of power to dwarf the imagination of his
former master, Kulgan. And never again would either of these worlds, Midkemia
or Kelewan, seem the same to him.
By force of will he descended to the roof, floating gently through
the raging wind. The door opened in anticipation of his coming. He entered, and
it closed behind him. Shimone was waiting for him, a smile upon his face. As
they moved down the long halls of the Assembly building-city, the skies outside
exploded with clashes of thunder, as if heralding his arrival.
Hochopepa sat upon his mat, awaiting the arrival of his guest. The
heavy, bald magician was interested in gauging the mettle of the newest member
of the Assembly, come into his estate as a wearer of the black robe the
previous day.
A chime sounded, announcing his guest’s arrival. Hochopepa stood and
crossed his richly furnished apartment. He pulled aside the sliding door
“Welcome, Milamber I am pleased you saw fit to accept my invitation.”
“I am honored,” was all Milamber said as he entered and regarded the
room. Of all the quarters in the Assembly building he had seen, this was by far
the most opulent. The hangings on the walls were rich cloth, enhanced with the
finest threadwork, and there were several valuable metal objects adorning
various shelves.
Milamber made a study of his host as well. The heavyset magician
showed Milamber to a cushion before a low table and then poured cups of chocha.
His plump hands moved with controlled ease, precisely and efficiently. His
dark, nearly black, eyes shone from under the thick brows that accented an
otherwise deceptively bland face. He was the stockiest magician Milamber had
seen yet, as most who wore the black robe tended to be thin and ascetic
looking. Milamber sensed this was largely by design, as if someone occupied
with the pleasures of the flesh couldn’t be too concerned with matters of deep
thought.
After the first sip of chocha had been taken, Hochopepa said, “You
pose something of a problem for me, Milamber.”
When Milamber made no comment, Hochopepa said, “You make no remark.”
Milamber inclined his head in agreement. “Perhaps your background accounts for
a bit more wariness than is the rule here.”
Milamber said, “A slave become magician is something to ponder.”
Hochopepa waved his hand. “It is a rarity for a slave to don the
black robe, but not unheard of. Occasionally the power is not recognized until
adulthood. But the laws are explicit, and no matter how late the power is
revealed, nor how mean the station of the man manifesting it, from that instant
on he is subject only to the Assembly. Once a soldier was ordered hanged by his
lord. He floated, suspended in space, a scant hair’s breadth from hanging, by
sheer power of will. His power finally manifested itself at the moment of his
greatest need. He was given over to the Assembly, where he survived training,
but proved to be a magician of indifferent power and overall poor outlook.
“But that is not for this discussion. Your particular situation, the
one that makes you somewhat of a problem for me, is that you are a
barbarian—excuse me, were a barbarian.”
Milamber smiled again. He had left the Tower of Testing with all his
memories of his life, though much about his training was still sketchy. He
understood the processes that had been used to bring him into control of his
magic. They had singled him out as one among a hundred thousand, a Great One.
Of the two hundred million people of the Empire, he was one of two thousand
magicians of the black robe. His slave-bred wariness, as Hochopepa pointed out,
combined with his intelligence to keep him silent. Hochopepa was trying to make
a point, and Milamber would wait to hear what it was, no matter how roundabout
the stout magician insisted on being.
When Milamber said nothing, Hochopepa continued. “Your position is
strange for several reasons. The obvious one is that you are the first to wear
the black who is not of this world. The second is that you were the apprentice
of a Lesser Magician.”
Milamber raised an eyebrow. “Kulgan? You know of my training?”
Hochopepa laughed, a genuine belly laugh, which made Milamber relax
his guard a little and regard the other man with a little less distrust. “Of
course. There was not one aspect of your background that was not closely
examined, for you provided a wealth of information about your world.” Hochopepa
looked closely at his guest. “The Warlord might choose to launch an invasion
into a world we know little about—over the objections of some of his magician advisers,
I might add—but we of the Assembly prefer to study our adversaries. We were
most relieved to learn magic is restricted to the province of priests and
followers of the Lesser Path on your world.”
“Again you mention a Lesser Magic. What is your meaning?”
It was Hochopepa’s turn to look slightly surprised. “I assumed you
knew.” Milamber shook his head. “The Path of Lesser Magic is walked by some who
can operate certain forces by power of will, though of a different order than
we of the black robe.”
“Then you know of my previous failure.”
Hochopepa laughed again “Yes. Had you been less suited to the
Greater Path, you might have learned his ways. As it is, you had too much
ability to have succeeded as a Lesser Path magician. It is a talent rather than
an art, the Lesser Path. The Greater Path is for scholars.”
Milamber nodded. Each time Hochopepa explained a concept, it was as
if Milamber had known it all his life. He remarked on this.
“It is easy enough to understand. During your training many facts and
concepts were taught you. The basic concepts of magic were taught early, your
responsibility to the Empire later. Part of the process of bringing all your
abilities to maturity requires that all these facts be there when you need
them. But much of what you were taught was also masked, to be revealed when you
needed it, when you could fully understand what was in your mind. There will be
a period when thoughts will come unbidden from time to time. As you frame a
question, the answer will appear in your mind. And sometimes an answer will
come as you read it or hear it. It serves to keep you from reeling under the
impact of years of learning coming upon you in an instant.
“It is not unlike the spells used to grant you the visions on the
Tower of Testing. Obviously, we have no means to ‘see’ what occurred before the
time of the bridge, or at any other time in history, but we can plant
suggestions, create illusion—”
Things
are not what they seem. Milamber barely hid his
surprise at this unexpected voice in his mind “—and provide a construct around
which you may add the images most significant to you. Personally, I find the
entire presentation upon the Tower reeks of Grand Dц Opera. You may avail
yourself of the libraries should you seek history rather than theater.” Seeing
Milamber’s attentions were elsewhere, Hochopepa said, “In any event, we were
speaking of other things.”
Milamber said, “I would hear of your problem.”
Hochopepa adjusted his robe, smoothing the creases. “Indulge me a
moment longer for a brief digression. It all has bearing on why I asked you
here.” Milamber signified that Hochopepa should continue.
“Little is known of our peoples before the Escape. We know that the
nations came from many different worlds. There is also some speculation that
others fled the Enemy to different worlds, your former homeworld among them
perhaps. There are a few shreds of evidence to support that hypothesis, but it
is only conjecture at this point.” Milamber thought about the games of shдh he
had played with the Lord of the Shinzawai and considered the possibility.
“We came as refugees. Of millions, only thousands survived to plant
seeds here. We found this world old and used up. Great civilizations once
flourished here, and all that is left of them are worn, smooth stones where
once cities stood. Who these creatures were, no one knows This world has few
metals, and what was brought with us in the Escape wore away over the ages. Our
animals, like your horses and cattle, died out, all save for dogs. We had to
adjust to our new homeworld, and to each other.
“We fought many wars between the time of the Escape and the advent
of the Stranger. We were little more than city-states until the Battle of a
Thousand Ships. Then the humblest of the races, the Tsurani, rose to conquer all
others, uniting most of this world in a single Empire.
“We of the Assembly support the Empire because on this world it is
the single most powerful force for order—not because it is noble, or fair, or
beautiful, or just. But because of it the majority of humanity can live and
work without war in their homelands, can live without famine, plagues, and the
other disasters of older times. And with this order around us, we of the
Assembly can work unhindered.
“It was the attempt to dispel the Stranger that first made it
apparent that we must be able to work unhindered by anyone, including the
Emperor, with whatever resources are necessary. We were robbed of precious time
for action by the Emperor’s lack of cooperation when we first learned of the
Stranger. Had we been given support at once, we might have been able to deal
with the Enemy when it acted to warp the rift. That is why we accepted the
charge to defend and serve the Empire, in exchange for total freedom.”
Milamber said, “This is all apparent as you speak of it. I am still
waiting to hear of your problem regarding me.”
Hochopepa sighed. “In good time, my friend. I must finish one last
thought. You must understand why the Assembly functions as it does to have any
hope of surviving more than a few weeks.”
Milamber looked openly surprised at this remark. “Survive?”
“Yes, Milamber, survive, for there are many here who would have seen
you at the bottom of the lake during your training.”
“Why?”
“We work to restore the Greater Art. When we fled the Enemy, at the
dawn of history, only one magician in a thousand who battled the Enemy
survived. They, for the most part, were the Lesser Magicians and apprentices.
They banded together in small groups to protect the knowledge they brought with
them from their homeworlds. At first countryman would seek out countryman,
then, later, larger associations grew, as desire grew to restore the lost arts.
After centuries had passed, the Assembly was founded, and magicians from all
parts of the world came, until today all who walk the Greater Path are members
of the Assembly. Most of those who practice the Lesser Art serve here as well,
though they are afforded a different level of respect and freedom. They tend to
be better at building devices and understanding the forces of nature than we of
the black robes—they build the orbs we use to transport ourselves from place to
place, for one example. While not outside the law, the Lesser Magicians are
protected from interference from others by the Assembly. All magicians are the
province of the Assembly.”
Milamber said, “So we gain freedom to act as we see fit, as long as
we act in the best interest of the Empire.”
Hochopepa nodded. “It does not matter what we do, or even that two
magicians may find themselves at odds over some action or another, as long as
both are working in what they believe is the best interest of the Empire.”
“From my somewhat ‘barbaric’ point of view, a strange law.”
“Not a law, but a tradition. On this world, my barbaric friend,
tradition and custom can be a much stronger constraint than law. Laws are
changed, but tradition endures.”
“I think I see what your problem is, my civilized friend. You are
not sure if I will act in the best interest of the Empire, being an outlander.”
Hochopepa nodded. “Were we certain that you were capable of acting
against the Empire, you would have been killed. As it is, we are uncertain,
though we tend to believe it unlikely you are capable of such action.”
For the first time Milamber was completely unsure of what he was
hearing. “I was under the assumption that you had ways of ensuring that all who
are trained are loyal to the Empire, as the first duty.”
“Normally, yes. In your case we faced problems new to us. As far as
we can tell, you are submerged in the underlying cause of the brotherhood of
magicians, the order of the Empire. Usually we are certain. We simply read the
apprentice’s mind. With you we couldn’t. We had to rely on truth drugs, long
interrogations, and training drills designed to show any duplicity.”
“Why?”
“Not for any reason we understand. The spells of thought masking are
known. It was nothing of that sort. It was as if your mind held some property
we had never encountered before. Perhaps a natural talent unknown to us, but
common to your world, or the result of some training at the hands of your
Lesser Path master protected you against our mind-reading arts.
“In any event, it created something of a stir in these halls, you
may be sure. Several times during your training, the question of your
continuing was raised, and each time our inability to read your mind was given
as reason for your termination. Each time more were willing to see you continue
than not. On the whole you present a possible wealth of new knowledge and, as
such, deserve every benefit of the doubt—to ensure we do not lose such a
valuable addition to our storehouse of talents, of course.”
“Of course,” Milamber said dryly.
“Yesterday the question of your continuation became critical. When
the time came for your final acceptance into the Assembly, the issue was put to
the vote and ended in a tie. There was one abstention, myself. As long as I
remain unallied with one side or the other, the question of your survival is
moot. You are free to act as a full member of the Assembly until I recast my
vote to ratify your selection into the Assembly, or not. Our tradition does not
allow a change of vote, once cast, except abstentions. As no one absent during
the voting may add their vote later, I am the only one who can break the tie.
So the result of the voting, no matter how long delayed, is mine to decide.”
Milamber looked long and hard at the older magician. “I see.”
Hochopepa shook his head slowly. “I wonder if you do. To put it in
its simplest form, the question of the moment is, what am I to do with you?
Without meaning to, I find your life is now in my hands. What I have to decide
is whether or not you should be killed. That is why I wished to see you, to see
if I might have erred in judgment.”
Suddenly Milamber threw back his head and laughed, long and hard. In
a moment tears were running down his cheeks. When he quieted, Hochopepa said,
“I fail to see the humor.”
Milamber raised his hand in a placating gesture. “No offense was
intended, my civilized friend. But surely you must see the irony of the
situation. I was a slave, my life subject to the whim of others. For all my
training, and advancement in station, I find that this fact has not been
altered.” He paused for a moment, and his smile was friendly. “Still, I would
rather have you hold my life in your hands than my former overseer. That is
what I find so funny.”
Hochopepa was startled by the answer, then he, too, started to laugh.
“Many of our brothers pay little heed to the ancient teachings, but if you are
familiar with our older philosophers, you will understand my meaning. You seem
to be a man who has found his wal. I think we have an understanding, my
barbaric friend I think we have started well.”
Milamber studied Hochopepa. Without knowing the unconscious process
whereby he reached the conclusion, he judged he had found an ally, and perhaps
a friend. “I think so, as well. And I think you also a man who has found his
wal.”
Feigning modesty, Hochopepa said, “I am but a simple man, too much a
slave to pleasures of the flesh to have reached such a state of perfect
centering.” With a sigh he leaned forward and began to speak intently. “Listen
to me well, Milamber For all the reasons enumerated before, you are as much a
weapon to be feared as a possible source of knowledge.
“Tsurani are slaves to politics, as any student of the Game of the
Council can attest; while we of the Assembly are reputed to be above such
things, we have our own factions and infighting, not always settled in a
peaceful, bloodless manner.
“Many of our brothers are little more than superstitious peasants,
distrusting that which is alien and unknown. From this day forward, you must
bend yourself to one task. Stay peacefully hidden within your wal, and become
Tsurani. To all outward appearances, you must become more Tsurani than anyone
else in the Assembly. Is that understood?”
“It is,” Milamber said simply.
Hochopepa poured another cup of hot chocha each. “Be especially wary
of the Warlord’s pets, Elgahar and Ergoran, and a reckless youngster named
Tapek. Their master rankles at the progress of the war upon your former
homeworld and is suspicious of the Assembly. Now that two of our brothers died
in the last major campaign, fewer of our brothers are willing to lend further
aid to that undertaking. The few magicians left within his faction are
overtaxed, and it is rumored he will be unable to subdue any more of your world
without a miracle. It would take a united High Council—-which should happen
when the Thьn raiders become agriculturalists and poets, and not before—or a
large number of Black Robes agreeing to do his bidding. The latter should occur
about a year after the former, so you can see he is in a somewhat poor
political situation. Warlords who fail in conducting war tend to fall from
grace quickly.” With a smile he added, “Of course, we of the Assembly are far
above matters political.” His tone turned serious once more. “You must face one
thing: he may view you as a potential threat, either influencing others not to
aid him, or openly opposing him from some deep-rooted sympathy for your former
homeland. You are protected from his direct actions, but you still might run
afoul of his pets. Some still blindly follow his lead.”
“ ‘The path of power is a path of turns within turns,’ ” Milamber
quoted.
Hochopepa nodded, a satisfied expression upon his face. His eyes
seemed to glint. “That is Tsurani. You learn quickly.”
In the following weeks Milamber grew into the fullness of his new
position, learning the responsibilities of his office. It was remarked on more
than once, and occasionally with distrust, that there had been few who had
demonstrated so much ability so soon after donning the black robe.
For all the changes in his existence, Milamber discovered many
things were unchanged. With practice he discovered he still had untapped wells
of power within, which could be called up only in times of stress. He studied
to bring this wild augmentation of power under control, but with little
success. He also discovered he was able to put aside the mental conditions
placed upon him during training. He chose not to reveal this fact to anyone,
not even Hochopepa. His reordering of these mental conditionings also regained him
something else, a nearly overwhelming desire to be with Katala once again. He
put aside that desire, to go to her at once and demand her release from the
Lord of the Shinzawai, well within his ability now he was a Great One. He
hesitated for fear of the reaction of the other magicians, and for fear her
feelings might have changed toward him. Instead he plunged into his studies.
His time in the Assembly brought forth his true identity, as he had
been told it would. This identity proved the key to his unusual mastery of the
Greater Path. He was a being of both worlds, worlds bound together by the great
rift. And for as long as those worlds stayed bound together, he drew power from
both, twice the power available to others of the black robe. This knowledge revealed
his true name, that name which could not be spoken lest it let another gain
power over him. In the ancient Tsurani language, unused since the time of the
Escape, it meant, “One who stands between worlds.”
23
VOYAGE
Martin watched.
Motioning silently to his companions, they slipped through the wood
line, just out of sight of those in the meadow. They could easily hear the
shouts in the Tsurani camp as orders were given. Martin crouched low, so no
hint of movement would betray their presence. Behind him scurried Garret and
the former Tsurani slave, Charles. In the six years since the siege of Crydee,
Charles had met Martin’s expectations, proving his loyalty and worth a dozen
times. He had also become a passable woodsman, though he would never have
Garret or Martin’s natural ease.
Whispering, Charles said, “Huntmaster, I mark many new banners.”
“Where?”
Charles pointed to a spot near the farthest edge of the Tsurani
camp. With the aid of the dwarves remaining in the high villages, Martin and
his two companions had made the dangerous climb over the Grey Towers, easily
passing the few Tsurani sentries left along the western edge of the valley, the
flank thought least in need of vigilance. Now they were within a few hundred
feet of the main Tsurani camp.
Garret let forth a nearly silent whistle. “The man has eyes like a
falcon. I can barely see those banners.”
Charles said, “I only know what to look for.”
“What do the new banners mean?” asked Longbow.
“Ill news, Huntmaster. Those are the house banners of families that
were loyal to the Blue Wheel Party. At least when I was captured. They have
been absent since the siege of Crydee. This can mean only another major shift
in the High Council.” He studied the Huntmaster’s face. “It tells us the Alliance
for War is again restored. And next spring we can expect a major offensive.”
Martin motioned for them to move back into the woods. The trees were
fully covered in fall colors, riots of red, gold, and brown. Moving quietly
through fallen leaves, they found a sheltering stand of brush skirting an
ancient oak and knelt behind it. Martin took out a small piece of dried beef
and chewed it. The climb over the Grey Towers, even with the dwarves’ help, had
taken its toll: they all were hungry, tired, and dirty. “Where are the new
companies of soldiers?” Martin asked.
“They won’t bring them through this winter. They can stage outside
the City of the Plains on Kelewan, at ease in a milder climate. They’ll move
through the rift just before the spring thaw. By the time flowers are blooming
in Princess Carline’s garden again, they’ll be marching.”
A high-pitched keening sound came from the north. Charles’s
expression changed to one of controlled alarm “Cho-ja!” He glanced around, then
pointed upward.
Martin nodded and made a stirrup with his hands. He boosted first
Charles, then Garret, into the oak tree. Then he jumped, and they caught his
hands and pulled him up.
Moving into the higher branches, they were motionless and had
weapons ready when the cho-ja patrol came into view, passing beneath the tree.
Six of the antlike creatures moved at steady pace; then the leader, marked by a
crested helm of Tsurani make, motioned them to halt. He turned one way then
another, then made commands in their high-pitched language. The other five
spread out, and for nearly ten minutes the three men in the tree could hear
them searching the area.
When they returned, they quickly formed up and moved off. When
Martin was certain they were out of hearing range, he whispered, “What was that?”
“They smelled us. My scent will have changed from all the Midkemian
food I have eaten. They knew we were not Tsurani.”
Climbing down from the tree, Charles said, “Cho-ja cannot look
easily upward, so they rarely do.”
Garret asked, “What if some of your former countrymen had been
along?”
Charles shrugged. “The cho-ja would have been speaking Tsurani.
Their language is almost impossible to learn, so no one tries.”
Martin said, “Will they be able to mark our trail?”
Charles said, “I don’t think so, but—” He stopped as loud barking
came from the Tsurani camp. “Dogs!”
Martin said, “They can track us. Come.” He set out at a controlled
run, back toward an ancient trail into the mountains, one almost completely
overgrown and undiscovered by the Tsurani but used by Martin’s band to enter
the valley.
For a few moments the three men loped through the woods, listening
to the barking behind. Then the sound of the dogs changed, and barks became
howls and baying. “They’ve gotten the scent,” said Garret.
Martin only nodded and picked up the pace. They ran for another
minute, the sound of the dogs steadily gaining on them, when Martin halted and
grabbed at Garret’s arm to keep him from running past. With a signal, he
changed directions away from the trail and led the others to a small stream.
Entering the water, he said, “I remembered hearing this when we passed by
before.”
The other two entered the water, and Martin said, “We gain only
minutes. They’ll search up- and downstream.”
Garret said, “Which way?”
Martin said, “Downstream. They’ll search upstream first, as that’s
the way out.”
Charles said, “Huntmaster, there’s another way.” He quickly
un-shouldered his backpack and removed a large pouch. He began sprinkling black
powder up and down the shore of the stream where they had entered.
Garret felt his eyes tearing and blew hard through his nose to keep
from sneezing. “Pepper!”
Charles said, “Mastercook Megar will be angry, but I thought we
might need it. The cho-ja and the dogs will smell nothing for hours when they
sniff around here.”
Martin nodded. “Upstream!”
The three men splashed through the water, then got into a quieter,
steady rhythm. They were out of sight of the place where they entered when the
baying of the dogs was interrupted by sneezes. Angry voices shouted commands,
and frustrated replies were heard. Charles indulged himself in a faint smile as
they continued to move through the water.
Finding a branch low enough over the stream, Martin boosted his
companions out and climbed up after them. They moved along the tree until they
found another branch of a nearby oak close enough to jump to.
They touched the ground again a dozen yards from the stream bank
Martin glanced around to ensure they were not seen and motioned for the others
to follow as he led them back toward the Grey Towers.
***
Sea
breezes swept the walls. Arutha looked out at the town of Crydee and the sea
beyond, his brown hair ruffled by the wind. Patches of light and dark flashed
across the landscape as high, fluffy clouds raced overhead. Arutha watched the
distant horizon, taking in the vista of the Endless Sea whipped to a froth of
whitecaps, as the noise of workmen restoring another building in the town blew
by on the wind.
Another autumn visited Crydee, the eighth since the start of the
war. Arutha considered it fortunate another spring and summer had passed
without a major Tsurani offensive; still, he felt little cause for comfort. He
was no longer a boy fresh to command, but a seasoned soldier. At twenty-seven
years he had seen more conflict, and had made more decisions, than most men of
the Kingdom knew in their lives. In his best judgment, he knew the Tsurani were
slowly winning the war.
He let his mind drift a little, then shook himself out of his
brooding While no longer a moody boy, he still tended to let introspection
overtake him. He found it best to keep busy and avoid such wasteful pastimes.
“It is a short autumn.”
Arutha looked to his left and found Roland standing nearby. The
Squire had caught the Prince lost in thought and had made his approach without
detection. Arutha found himself irritated. He shrugged it off and said, “And a
short winter will follow, Roland. And in the spring.
“What news of Longbow?”
Arutha balled a gloved fist and gently struck the stones of the
wall, the slow, controlled gesture, a clear sign of his frustration. “I’ve
regretted the need for his going a hundred times. Of the three, only Garret
shows any sense of caution. That Charles is a Tsurani madman, consumed by
honor, and Longbow is . . .”
“Longbow,” finished Roland.
“I’ve never met a man who reveals so little of himself, Roland If I
live as long as an elf, I don’t think I’ll ever understand what makes him the
way he is.”
Roland leaned against the cool stones of the wall and said, “Do you
think they’re safe?”
Arutha returned his attention to the sea. “If any man in Crydee can
crest the mountains into the Tsurani-held valley and get back, it is Martin.
Still, I worry.”
Roland found the admission surprising. Like Martin, Arutha was not a
man to reveal what he felt. Sensing the Prince’s deep trouble, Roland changed
the topic. “I’ve a message from my father, Arutha.”
“I was told there was a personal message among the dispatches from
Tulan.”
“Then you know Father’s calling me home.”
“Yes. I’m sorry about the broken leg.”
“Father was never much of a rider. It’s the second time he’s fallen
from his horse and broken something. Last time, when I was little, it was his
arm.”
“It’s been a long time since you were home.”
Roland shrugged. “With the war, I felt little need to return. Most
of the fighting’s been around here. And,” he added with a grin, “there are
other reasons to stay.”
Sharing the smile, Arutha said, “Have you told Carline yet?”
Roland lost his grin. “Not yet. I thought I’d wait until I’d
arranged for a ship south.” With the Brotherhood’s abandonment of the Green
Heart, travel by land to the south was nearly impossible, for the Tsurani had
cut off the roads to Carse and Tulan.
A shout from the tower caused them to turn. “Trackers approaching!”
Arutha squinted against the glare reflecting off the distant sea and
could make out three figures trotting easily along the road. When they were
close enough to be seen clearly, Arutha said, “Longbow.” There was a note of
relief in his voice.
Leaving the wall, Arutha descended the steps to the courtyard to
wait for the Huntmaster and his men. Roland stood by his side as the three
dusty men entered the gates of the castle. Both Garret and Charles remained
silent as Martin said, “Greetings, Highness.”
“Greetings, Martin. What news?” asked the Prince.
Martin began to recount the facts unearthed at the Tsurani camp, and
after a moment Arutha cut him off. “Better save your wind for the council,
Martin. Roland, go gather Father Tully, Swordmaster Fannon, and Amos Trask, and
bring them to the council hall.”
Roland hurried off, and Arutha said, “Charles and Garret are to come
as well, Martin.”
Garret glanced at the former Tsurani slave, who shrugged. Both knew
the long-anticipated hot meal would have to wait a little longer upon the
Prince’s convenience.
Martin took the seat next to Amos Trask, while Charles and Garret
remained standing. The former sea captain nodded a greeting to Martin, as Arutha
pulled out his own chair, as was his habit, ignoring most formalities when with
his councillors. Amos had become an unofficial member of Arutha’s staff since
the siege of the castle; he was an enterprising man of many unexpected skills.
Fannon sat to Arutha’s right. Since his wound, he had been content
to accept Arutha as commander in Crydee and had sent a personal note to Lord
Borric advising him so. The Duke had sent a reply ratifying the transfer of
command, and Fannon had returned to his former role as adjutant. The
Swordmaster seemed pleased with the situation.
Arutha said, “Martin has just returned from a mission of special
importance. Martin, tell us what you’ve seen.”
Martin said, “We climbed the Grey Towers and entered the valley
where the Tsurani have their headquarters.”
Fannon and Tully looked at the Huntmaster with surprise, while Amos
Trask guffawed. “You toss aside a small saga in one sentence,” said the seaman.
Martin ignored the comment and said, “I think it best to let Charles
tell you what we saw.”
The former Tsurani slave’s voice held a note of concern. “From all
signs, the Warlord will launch another major offensive next spring.”
Everyone in the room sat speechless, save Fannon. “How can you be
sure? Are there new armies in his camp?”
Charles shook his head. “No, the new soldiers will not arrive until
just before the first spring thaw. My former countrymen have little liking for
your cold climate. They will stage during the winter months on my former
homeworld. They’ll move through the rift just before the offensive.”
Even after five years, Fannon still had lingering doubts about
Charles’s loyalty, though Longbow held none. “How, then,” said the Swordmaster,
“can you be certain there is to be an offensive? We’ve had none since the assault
on Elvandar three years ago.”
“There are new banners in the Warlord’s camp, Swordmaster, the
banners of the houses who belong to the Blue Wheel Party. They have been absent
for six years. It can mean only another major change within the High Council.
The Alliance for War is again formed.”
Of those in the room, only Tully seemed to grasp what Charles was
saying. He had made a study of the Tsurani, learning all he could from the
captured slaves. He said, “You had better explain, Charles.”
Charles took a moment to organize his remarks and said, “You must
understand one thing of my former homeland. Above everything except honor and
obedience to the Emperor, there is the High Council. To gain in the High
Council is worth much, even the risk of life itself. More than one family has
been destroyed by plots and intrigues within the council. We of the Empire
refer to this as the ‘Game of the Council.’
“My family was well placed within the Hunzan Clan, neither great
enough to warrant notice by our clan’s rivals, nor small enough to be relegated
to only minor roles. We had the benefit of knowing much of the matters before
the High Council without having to worry overly much about what decisions were
made. Our clan was active in the Party for Progress, for we numbered many
scholars, teachers, healers, priests, and artists in our families.
“Then for a time the Hunzan Clan left the Party for Progress, for
reasons not clear to any but the highest family leaders, reasons I can only
speculate on. My clan joined with the clans of the Blue Wheel Party, one of the
oldest in the High Council. While not so powerful as the Warlord’s War Party,
or the traditionalists of the Imperial Party, it still has much honor and
influence.
“Six years ago, when I first came here, the Blue Wheel Party had
joined with the War Party to form the Alliance for War. Those of us in the
lesser families were not told why such a radical change in alignment had come
about, but there was no doubt it was a matter of the Game of the Council.
“My personal fall from grace and my enslavement was certainly
necessary to ensure that those of my clan would stay above suspicion until the
time was right for whatever move was being planned. It is now clear what that
move was.
“Since the siege of this castle, I have seen no sign of any soldier
who’s a member of the Blue Wheel families. I took it to mean the Alliance for
War had been ended.”
Fannon interrupted. “Are you then saying the conduct of this war is
but an aspect of some political game in this High Council?”
Charles said, “Swordmaster, I know it is difficult for a man as
steadfast in his loyalty to his nation as you are to understand such a thing.
But that is exactly what I am saying.
“There are reasons, Tsurani reasons, for such a war. Your world is
rich in metals, metals we treasure on Kelewan. Also, ours is a bloody history,
and all who are not of Tsuranuanni are to be feared and subjugated. If we could
find your world, then might you not someday find ours?
“But more, it is a way for the Warlord to gain great influence in
the High Council. For centuries we have fought the Thuril Confederation, and
when we at last were forced to the treaty table, the War Party lost a great
deal of power within the council. This war is a way for that lost power to be
regained. The Emperor rarely commands, leaving the Warlord supreme, but the
Warlord is still the Lord of a family, the Warchief of a clan, and as such is
constantly seeking to gain advantage for his own people in the Game of the
Council.”
Tully looked fascinated. “So the Blue Wheel Party joining with the Warlord’s
party, then suddenly withdrawing, was but a ploy in this political game, a
maneuver to gain some advantage?”
Charles smiled. “It is very Tsurani, good Father. The Warlord
planned his first campaign with great care, then three years into it finds himself
with only half an army. He is overextended, unable to bring news of smashing
victories to the High Council and the Emperor. He loses position and prestige
in the game.”
Fannon said, “Unbelievable! Hundreds of men dying for such a thing.”
“Such is the way of the Game of the Council, Swordmaster. The
Warlord Almecho is an ambitious man. To be Warlord one must be. He must rely on
other ambitious men, many who would seek to take his mantle should he falter.
To keep these men as allies rather than foemen, he must occasionally look the
other way.
“In the first year of the war, the Warlord’s subcommander, a man
called Tasio of the Minwanabi, ordered an attack upon one of the LaMutian
garrisons. Besides being second-in-command in the campaign on this world, Tasio
is also the cousin of Lord Jingu of the Minwanabi. The order to attack was
given to Lord Sezu of the Acoma, sworn enemy of Jingu. The Acoma soldiers were
almost destroyed to a man, including Lord Sezu and his son Tasio arrived
moments too late to save the Acoma, but in time to seize the battle and bring
the Warlord a victory.”
Fannon’s eyes were round with disbelief. “That’s the blackest
duplicity I have ever heard of.”
Arutha said, “It’s also brilliant, by these people’s standards.”
Charles nodded in agreement with the Prince’s remark. “The Warlord
would forgive Tasio getting one of his better commanders slaughtered and losing
the entire Acoma army, in exchange for a victory and strengthened support by
the Minwanabi.
“Any Ruling Lord who had no direct stake in the game would applaud
the move as a masterstroke, even those who admired Lord Sezu. It gained Almecho
and Lord Jingu many allies in the council. So the Warlord’s political
opponents, needing to devise a way to counter his growing power, created the
situation I described, overextending the Warlord and leaving him unable to
prosecute this war. Many families hovering near the edge of the War Party would
then be drawn to the Blue Wheel and their allies for delivering such a stunning
blow.”
Arutha said, “But the important fact for us is that this Blue Wheel
is once more allied with the Warlord, and their soldiers will be rejoining the
war come spring.”
Charles looked at those in the council hall. “I cannot begin to
guess why there has once again been a realignment in the council. I am too
removed from the game. But as His Highness has said, what is important for
those of us here in Crydee to know is that as many as ten thousand fresh
soldiers may come against one of the fronts in the spring.”
Amos scowled. “That’s a backbreaker, for certain.”
Arutha unfolded a half-dozen parchments. “Over the last few months,
most of you have read these messages.” He looked at Tully and Fannon “You’ve
seen the pattern begin to emerge.” He picked up one parchment “From Father:
‘Constant Tsurani sorties and raids keep our men in a state of unease. Our
inability to close with the enemy has lent a dark aspect to all we do. I fear
we shall never see an end to this business . . .’ From Baron Bellamy: ‘. . .
increased Tsurani activity near the Jonril garrison. I deem it advisable to
increase our commitment there this winter, while the Tsurani are normally
inactive, lest we lose that position next spring.’ Squire Roland will be
supervising a joint reinforcement from Carse and Tulan at Jonril this winter.”
Several in the room glanced at Roland, who stood near Arutha’s
shoulder. The Prince continued. “From Lord Dulanic, Knight-Marshal of Krondor:
‘While His Highness shares your concern, there is little to indicate the need
for alarm Unless some intelligence can be produced to give credence to your
fears of possible future Tsurani offensives, I have advised the Prince of
Krondor to refuse your request for elements of the Krondorian garrison to be
sent to the Far Coast . . .’ ” Arutha looked around the room. “Now the pattern
is clear.”
Setting aside the parchments, Arutha pointed at the map affixed to
the tabletop. “We have committed every available soldier. We dare not pull men
from the south for fear of the Tsurani moving against Jonril. With the garrison
strengthened, we will have a stable situation down there for a while. Should
the enemy attack the garrison, it can be reinforced from Carse and Tulan.
Should the enemy move against either castle, they leave Jonril at their back.
But all that will fail should we strip those garrisons.
“And Father is committed to a long front and has no men to spare.”
He looked at Charles. “Where would you expect the attack to come?”
The former Tsurani slave looked over the map, then shrugged. “It’s
difficult to say, Highness. Should the situation be decided solely upon
military merits, the Warlord should attack against the weaker front, either
toward the elves, or here. But little done in the Empire is free of political
considerations.” He studied troop dispositions on the map, then said, “Were I
the Warlord, in need of a simple victory to bolster my position in the High
Council, I would attack Crydee once more. But were I the Warlord and my
position in the High Council precarious, in need of a bold stroke to regain
lost prestige, I might risk an all-out offensive against the main force of the
Kingdom, those armies under Duke Borric’s command. To crush the main strength
of the Kingdom would give him dominance within the council for years to come.”
Fannon leaned back in his chair and sighed. “Then we are faced with
the possibility of another assault upon Crydee this spring without recourse to
reinforcements for fear of attack elsewhere.” He indicated the map with a sweep
of his hand. “Now we face the same problem as the Duke. All our forces are
committed along the Tsurani front. The only men we have available are those in
the towns on leave, only a small part of the whole.
“We can’t maintain the army in the field indefinitely; even Lords
Borric and Brucal winter in LaMut with the Earl, leaving small companies to
guard the Tsurani.” Waving his hand in the air, he said, “I digress. What is
important is to notify your father at once, Arutha, of the possibility of attack.
Then should the Tsurani hit his lines, he’ll be back from LaMut early, in
position and ready. Even should the Tsurani bring ten thousand fresh troops, he
can call up more soldiers from the outlying garrisons in Yabon, fully another
two thousand.”
Amos said, “Two thousand against ten thousand sounds poor odds,
Swordmaster.”
Fannon was inclined to agree “We do all we can. There are no
guarantees it will be enough.”
Charles said, “At least they will be horse soldiers, Swordmaster. My
former comrades still have little liking for horses.”
Fannon nodded agreement “But even so, it is a bleak picture.”
“There is one thing,” said Arutha, holding up a parchment. “The
message from Lord Dulanic stated the need for intelligence to give credence to
our request for aid. We now have enough intelligence to satisfy him, I think.”
Fannon said, “Even a small portion of the Krondonan garrison here
would give us the strength to resist an offensive. Still, it is late in the
season, and a message would have to be dispatched at once.”
“That’s the gods’ truth,” said Amos. “If you left this afternoon,
you’d barely clear the Straits of Darkness before winter shuts them off. In
another two weeks it’d be a close thing.”
Arutha said, “I have given the matter some thought. I think there is
enough need to risk my going to Krondor.”
Fannon sat up straight in his chair. “But you’re the commander of
the Duchy’s army, Arutha. You can’t abandon that responsibility.”
Arutha smiled “I can and I will. I know you have no wish to resume
command here once more, but resume command you will. If we are to win support
from Erland, I must convince him myself. When Father first carried word of the
Tsurani to Erland and the King, I learned the advantage of speaking in person.
Erland’s a cautious man. I will need every persuasion I can bring to bear.”
Amos snorted. “And how do you plan on reaching Krondor, begging Your
Highness’s pardon? There’s the better part of three Tsurani armies between here
and the Free Cities should you go overland. And there are only a few luggers
fit for coasting in the harbor, and you’d need a deep-water ship for a sea
journey.”
“There’s one deep-water ship, Amos. The Wind of Dawn is still in
port.”
Amos’s mouth dropped open. “The Wmd of Dawn?” he cried in disbelief
“Beside the fact she’s little better than a lugger herself, she’s laid up for
the winter. I heard her captain crying over her broken keelson when the
muddleheaded fool came limping into harbor a month ago. She needs to be hauled
out, have the keel inspected and the keelson replaced. Without repair her
keel’s too weak to take the pounding she’ll get from the winter storms. You
might as well stick your head in a rain barrel, begging Your Highness’s pardon.
You’d still drown, but you’d save a lot of other people a great deal of
trouble.”
Fannon looked incensed at the seaman’s remarks, but Tully, Martin,
Roland, and Arutha only looked amused. “When I sent Martin out,” said Arutha,
“I considered the possibility I might need a ship for Krondor. I ordered her
repaired two weeks ago. There’s a swarm of shipwrights aboard her now.” He
fixed Amos with a questioning look. “Of course I’ve been told it won’t be as
good a job as if they’d hauled her out, but it will serve.”
“Aye, for potting up and down the coast in the light winds of spring,
perhaps. But you’re talking about winter storms, and you’re talking about
running the Straits of Darkness.”
Arutha said, “Well, she will have to do I’m leaving in a few days’
time. Someone must convince Erland we need aid, and I have to be the one.”
Amos refused to let the subject drop “And has Oscar Danteen agreed
to captain his ship through the straits for you?”
Arutha said, “I’ve not told him our destination as yet.” Amos shook
his head. “As I thought. That man’s got the heart of a shark, which is to say
none, and the courage of a jellyfish, which is also to say none. Soon as you
give the order, he’ll cut your throat, drop you over the side, winter with the
pirates of the Sunset Islands, then head straight for the Free Cities come
spring. He’ll then have some Natalese scribe pen a most grieving and flowery
message to your father, describing your valor just before you were lost
overboard in high seas while fighting pirates. Then he’ll spend a year drinking
up the gold you gave him for passage.”
Arutha said, “But I purchased his ship. I’m ship’s master now.” Amos
said, “Owner or not, Prince or not, aboard ship there is but one master, the
captain. He is King and High Priest, and no man tells him what to do, save when
a harbor pilot’s aboard, and then only with respect. No, Highness, you’ll not
survive this journey with Oscar Danteen on the quarterdeck.”
Faint lines of mirth began to crinkle at the corners of Arutha’s
eyes “Have you another suggestion, Captain?”
Amos sighed as he sank back into his chair. “I’ve been hooked, I
might as well be gutted and cleaned. Send word to Danteen to clear out the
captain’s cabin and discharge the crew. I’ll see to getting a replacement crew
for that band of cutthroats, though there’s mostly drunkards and boys left in port
this time of year. And for the love of the gods, don’t mention to anyone where
we’re bound. If so much as one of those drink-besotted scoundrels learns you
mean to risk the Straits of Darkness this late in the season, you’ll have to
turn out the garrison to comb the woods for deserters.”
Arutha said, “Very well. I’ll leave all preparations to you. We
depart as soon as you judge the ship ready.” He said to Longbow, “I’ll want you
to come as well, Huntmaster.”
Longbow looked a little surprised. “Me, Highness?”
“I’ll want an eyewitness for Lord Dulanic and the Prince.”
Martin frowned, but after a moment said, “I’ve never been to
Krondor, Highness.” He smiled his crooked smile. “I may never have the chance
again.”
Amos Trask’s voice cut through the shriek of the wind. Gusts from
the sea carried his words to a confused-looking lad aloft “No, you
warped-brained landlubber, don’t pull the sheets so damn tight. They’ll be
humming like a lute string. They don’t pull the ship, the mast does. The lines
help when the wind changes quarter.” He watched as the boy adjusted the sheets.
“Yes, that’s it; no, that’s too loose.” He swore loudly. “Now; there you have
it!”
He looked disgusted as Arutha came up the gangway. “Fishing boys who
want to be sailors. And drunkards. And a few of Danteen’s rogues I had to
rehire. This is some crew, Highness.”
“Will they serve?”
“They bloody well better, or they’ll answer to me.” He watched with
a critical eye as the sailors crawled over the spars aloft, checking every knot
and splice, every line and sheet. “We need thirty good men. I can count on
eight. The rest? I mean to put into Carse as well as Tulan on the way down.
Maybe then we can replace the boys and less dependable men with experienced
seamen.”
“What of the delay clearing the straits?”
“If we were there today, we would manage. By the time we get there,
a dependable crew will prove more important than arriving a week earlier. The
season will be full upon us.” He studied Arutha. “Do you know why the passage
is called the Straits of Darkness?”
Arutha shrugged. Amos said, “It’s no simple sailor’s superstition.
It’s a description of what you find there.” He got a far-off look as he said,
“Now, I can tell you about the different currents from the Endless Sea and
Bitter Sea that come together there, or about the changing, crazy tides of
winter when the moons are all in the worst possible aspect in the heavens, or
how winds come sweeping down from the north, blowing snow so thick you can’t
see the decks from the yards. But then. There are no words to describe the
straits in winter. It is one, two, three days traveling blind. And if the
prevailing wind’s not blowing you back into the Endless Sea, then it’s blowing
you to the southern rocks. Or there’s no wind, and fog blots out everything as
the currents turn you around.”
“You paint a bleak picture, Captain,” said Arutha with a grim smile.
“Only the truth. You’re a young man of uncommonly practical wits and
cold nerve, Highness. I’ve seen you stand when many men of greater experience
would have broken and run. I’m not trying to put any scare upon you. I simply
wish you to understand what you propose to do. If any can clear the straits in
winter in this bucket, it is Amos Trask, and that’s no idle boast. I’ve cut the
season so fine before, there’s little to tell between autumn and winter, winter
and spring. But I would also tell you this: before leaving Crydee, say tender
good-byes to your sister, write your father and brother, and leave any testaments
and legacies in order.”
Without changing expression, Arutha said, “The letters and legacies
are written, and Carline and I dine alone tonight.”
Amos nodded. “We’ll leave on the morning tide. This ship’s a
slab-sided, wattle-bottomed, water-rotted coaster, Highness, but she’ll make it
through if I have to pick her up and carry her.”
Arutha took his leave, and when he was out of sight, Amos turned his
attention heavenward. “Astalon,” he invoked the god of justice, “I’m a sinner,
it’s true. But if you had to measure out justice, did it have to be this?” Now
at peace with his fate, Amos returned to the business of seeing everything in
order.
Carline walked in the garden, the withering blooms reflecting her
own sad mood Roland watched her from a short way off, trying to find words of
comfort. Finally he said, “I will be Baron of Tulan someday. It is over nine
years since I’ve been home I must go down the coast with Arutha.”
Softly she said, “I know.”
He saw the resignation on her face and crossed to hold her. “You
will be Baroness there someday, also.”
She hugged him tightly, then stepped away, forcing herself to speak
lightly. “Still, you’d think after all these years your father would have
learned to do without you.”
He smiled. “He was to have wintered in Jonril with Baron Bellamy,
overseeing the enlargement of the garrison I will go in his stead. My brothers
are all too young. With the Tsurani dug in for the winter, it is our only
chance to expand the fort.”
With forced levity she said, “At least I won’t have to worry about
your breaking the hearts of the ladies of your father’s court.”
He laughed “Little chance of that Supplies and men are already
assembling and the barges ready to travel up the river Wyndermeer. After Amos
puts me ashore in Tulan, I’ll spend one or two days at home, no more, then off
I go. It will be a long winter in Jonril with no one for company but soldiers
and a few farmers in that gods-forsaken fort.”
Carline covered her mouth as she giggled “I hope your father doesn’t
discover you’ve gambled away his barony to the soldiers come spring.”
Roland smiled at her. “I’ll miss you.”
Carline took his hands in hers. “And I you.”
They stood in tableau for a time, then suddenly Carline’s facade of
bravery cracked, and she was in his arms “Don’t let anything happen. I couldn’t
bear losing you.”
“I know,” he said gently. “But you must continue to put on a brave
face for others. Fannon will need your help in conducting court, and you will
have the responsibility for the entire household. You are mistress of Crydee,
and many people will depend upon your guidance.”
They watched the banners on the walls snapping in the late-afternoon
wind. The air was harsh, and he drew his cloak about them. Trembling, she said,
“Come back to me, Roland.”
Softly he said, “I’ll come back, Carline.” He tried to shake a cold,
icy feeling that had risen within, but could not.
They stood on the dock, in the darkness of morning before the
sunrise. Arutha and Roland waited by the gangway. Arutha said, “Take care of everything,
Swordmaster.”
Fannon stood with his hand upon his sword, still proud and erect
despite advancing years. “I will, Highness.”
With a slight smile Arutha said, “And when Gardan and Algon return
from patrol, instruct them to take care of you.”
Fannon’s eyes blazed as he shot back. “Insolent pup! I can best any
man of the castle, save your father. Step down from the gangway and draw your
sword, and I’ll show you why I still wear the badge of Swordmaster.”
Arutha held his hands up in mock supplication. “Fannon, it is good
to see such sparks again. Crydee is well protected by her Swordmaster.”
Fannon stepped forward and placed his hand upon Arutha’s shoulder.
“Take care, Arutha. You were always my best student I should hate to lose you.”
Arutha smiled fondly at his old teacher. “My thanks, Fannon.” Then
his manner turned wry. “I would hate to lose me, also I’ll be back. And I’ll
have Erland’s soldiers with me.”
Arutha and Roland sprang up the gangway, while those on the dock
waved good-bye. Martin Longbow waited at the rail, watching as the gangway was
removed and the men upon the quay cast off lines. Amos Trask shouted orders,
and sails were lowered from the yards Slowly the ship moved away from the
quayside into the harbor. Arutha watched silently, with Roland and Martin
beside, as the docks fell behind.
Roland said, “I was glad the Princess chose not to come. One more
good-bye would be more than I could manage.”
“I understand,” said Arutha. “She cares for you greatly, Squire,
though I can’t see why.” Roland looked to see if the Prince was joking and
found Arutha smiling faintly. “I’ve not spoken of it,” the Prince continued.
“But since we may not see each other for some time after you leave us in Tulan,
you should know that when the opportunity comes for you to speak to Father,
you’ll have my word on your behalf.”
“Thank you, Arutha.”
The town slipped by in darkness, replaced by the causeway to the
lighthouse. The false dawn pierced the gloom slightly, casting everything into
greys and blacks. Then after some time the large upthrust form of the Guardian
Rocks appeared off the starboard quarter.
Amos ordered the helm put over, and they turned southwestward, more
sails set to bring them full before the wind. The ship picked up speed, and
Arutha could hear gulls crying overhead. Suddenly he was struck with the
knowledge they were now out of Crydee. He felt chilled and gathered his cloak
tightly around him.
Arutha stood on the quarterdeck, sword held ready, Martin to one
side notching an arrow to his bowstring. Amos Trask and his first mate, Vasco,
also had weapons drawn. Six angry-looking seamen were assembled upon the deck
below, while the rest of the crew watched the confrontation.
One sailor shouted from the deck, “You’ve lied to us, Captain.
You’ve not put back north for Crydee as you said in Tulan. Unless you mean for
us to sail on to Keshian Elarial, there’s nothing south save the straits. Do
you mean to pass the Straits of Darkness?”
Amos roared, “Damn you, man. Do you question my orders?”
“Aye, Captain. Tradition holds there’s no valid compact between
captain and crew to sail the straits in winter, save by agreement. You lied to
us, and we’re not obliged to sail with you.”
Arutha heard Amos mutter, “A bloody sea-lawyer.” To the sailor he
said, “Very well,” and handed his cutlass to Vasco. Descending the ladder to
the main deck, he approached the seaman with a friendly smile upon his face.
“Look, lads,” he began as he reached the six recalcitrant sailors,
all holding belaying pins or marhnespikes. “I’ll be honest with you. The Prince
must reach Krondor, or there’ll be hell to pay come spring. The Tsurani gather
a large force, which may come against Crydee.” He placed his hand upon the
shoulder of the sailors’ spokesman and said, “So what it comes down to is this:
we must sail to Krondor.” With a sudden motion Amos had his arm around the
man’s neck. He ran to the side of the ship and heaved the helpless sailor over.
“If you don’t wish to come along,” he shouted, “you can swim back to Tulan!”
Another sailor started to move toward Amos when an arrow struck the
deck at his feet. He looked up and saw Martin taking a bead upon him. The
Huntmaster said, “I wouldn’t.”
The man dropped his marhnespike and stepped back. Amos turned to
face the sailors. “By the time I reach the quarterdeck, you had better be in
the rigging—or over the side, it makes no difference to me. Any man not working
will be hanged for the mutinous dog he is.”
The faint cries for help of the man in the water could be heard as
Amos returned to the quarterdeck. To Vasco he said, “Toss that fool a rope, and
if he doesn’t relent, pitch him overboard again.” Amos shouted, “Set all sails!
Make for the Straits of Darkness.”
Arutha blinked seawater out of his eyes and held on to the guide
rope with all the strength he possessed. Another wave crashed over the side of
the ship, and he was blinded once more. Strong hands grabbed him from behind,
and in the darkness he heard Martin’s voice. “Are you all right?”
Spitting water, he shouted, “Yes,” and continued to make his way
toward the quarterdeck, Martin close behind. The Wind of Dawn pitched and
rolled beneath his feet, and he slipped twice before he reached the ladder. The
entire ship had been rigged with safety lines, for in the rough sea it was
impossible to keep a footing without something to hang on to.
Arutha pulled himself up the ladder to the quarterdeck and stumbled
as much as walked to Amos Trask. The captain waited beside the helmsman,
lending his weight to the large tiller when needed. He stood as if rooted to
the wood of the deck, feet wide apart, weight shifting with each move of the
ship, his eyes peering into the gloom above. He watched, listened, each sense
tuned to the ship’s rhythm. Arutha knew he had not slept for two days and a
night, and most of this night as well.
“How much longer?” Arutha shouted.
“One, two days, who can say?” A snap from above sounded like
cracking spring ice upon the river Crydee. “Hard aport!” Amos shouted, leaning
heavily into the tiller. When the ship heeled, he shouted to Arutha, “Another
day of these gods-cursed winds buffeting this ship, and we’ll be lucky if we
can turn and run back to Tulan.”
They were nine days out of Tulan, the last three spent in the storm.
The ship had been relentlessly pounded by waves and wind, and Amos had been in
the hold three times, inspecting the repairs to the keelson. Amos judged them
due west of the straits, but couldn’t be sure until the storm passed. Another
wave struck the ship, and it shuddered.
“Weather break!” came the shout from above.
“Where away?” cried Amos.
“Dead starboard!”
“Come about!” ordered Amos, and the helmsman leaned against the
tiller.
Arutha strained his eyes against the stinging salt spray and saw a
faint glow seem to swing about until it stood off the bow. Then it grew larger
as they drove for the thinning weather. As if walking out of a dark room, they
moved from gloom to light. The heavens seemed to open above them, and they
could see grey skies. The waves still ran high, but Arutha sensed the weather
had turned at last. He looked over his shoulder and saw the black mass of the
storm as it moved away from them.
Moment by moment the combers subsided, and after the raging clamor
of the storm, the sea seemed suddenly silent. The sky was quickly brightening,
and Amos said, “It’s morning. I must have lost track of time. I thought it
still night.”
Arutha watched the receding storm and could see it clearly outlined,
a churning mass of darkness against the lighter grey of the sky above. The grey
quickly turned to slate, then blue-grey as the morning sun broke through the
storm. For the better part of an hour. Arutha watched the spectacle, while Amos
ordered his men about their tasks, sending the night watch below and the day
watch above.
The storm raced eastward, leaving a choppy sea behind Time seemed
frozen as Arutha stood in awe of the scene on the horizon. A portion of the
storm seemed to have stopped, between distant fingers of land. Great spouts of
water spun between the boundaries of the narrow passage in the distance. It
looked as if a mass of dark, boiling clouds had been trapped within that area
by a supernatural force.
“The Straits of Darkness,” said Amos Trask at his shoulder.
“When do we put through them?” Arutha asked quietly.
“Now,” answered Amos. The captain turned and shouted, “Day watch
aloft! Midwatch turn to and stand ready! Helmsman, set course due east!”
Men scrambled into the rigging, while others came from below, still
haggard and showing little benefit from the few hours’ sleep since they last
stood watch. Arutha pulled back the hood of his cloak and felt the cold sting
of the wind against his wet scalp. Amos gripped him by the arm and said, “We
could wait for weeks and not have the wind favorable again. That storm was a
blessing in disguise, for it will give us a bold start through.”
Arutha watched in fascination as they headed for the straits. Some
freak of weather and current had created the conditions that held the straits
in water-shrouded gloom all winter. In fair weather the straits were a
difficult passage, for though they appeared wide at most points, dangerous
rocks were hidden just below the water in many critical places. In foul weather
they were considered impossible for most captains to negotiate. Sheets of water
or flurries of snow blown down from the southernmost peaks of the Grey Towers
tried to fall, only to be caught by blasts of wind and tossed back upward
again, to try to fall once more. Waterspouts suddenly erupted upward to spin
madly for minutes, then dissolve into blinding cascades. Ragged bolts of
lightning cracked and were followed by booming thunder as all the fury of
colliding weather fronts was unleashed.
“The sea’s running high,” yelled Amos. “That’s good. We’ll have more
room to clear the rocks, and we’ll be through or dashed to pieces in short
order. If the wind holds, we’ll be through before the day is done.”
“What if the winds change?”
“That is not something to dwell on!”
They raced forward, attacking the edge of the swirling weather
inside the straits. The ship shuddered as if reluctant once again to face foul
weather. Arutha gripped the rail tightly as the ship began to buck and lurch.
Amos picked his way along, avoiding the sudden wayward gusts, keeping the ship
in the westerly trail of the passed storm.
All light disappeared. The ship was illuminated only by the dancing
light of the storm lanterns, casting flickering yellow darts into murk. The
distant booming of waves upon rocks reverberated from all quarters, confusing
the senses. Amos shouted to Arutha, “We’ll keep to the center of the passage;
if we slip to one side or the other, or get turned, we’ll stave in the hull on
rocks.” Arutha nodded, as the captain shouted instructions to his crew.
Arutha fought his way to the forward rail of the quarterdeck and
shouted Martin’s name. The Huntmaster answered from the main deck below that he
was well, though waterlogged Arutha held tight to the rail as the ship dipped
low into a trough and then started to rise as it met a crest. For what seemed
minutes the ship strained upward, climbing and climbing, then suddenly water
swept over the bow and they were heading downward again. The rail became his
only contact with a solid world amid a cold, wet chaos. Arutha’s hands ached
from the effort of hanging on.
Hours passed in cacophonous fury, while Amos commanded his crew to
answer every challenge of wind and tide. Occasionally the darkness was
punctuated by a blinding flash of lightning, bringing every detail into sharp
focus, leaving dazzling afterimages in the darkness.
In a sudden lurch, the ship seemed to slip sideways, and Arutha felt
his feet go out from under him as the ship heeled over. He held to the rail
with all his strength, his ears deafened by a monstrous grinding. The ship
righted itself, and Arutha pulled himself around to see, in the flickering glow
of the storm lanterns, the tiller swinging wildly back and forth and the
helmsman slumped down upon the deck, his face darkened by blood flowing from
his open mouth. Amos was desperately scrambling upright, reaching for the
lashing tiller. Risking broken ribs as he seized it, he fought desperately to
hang on and bring the ship back under control.
Arutha half stumbled to the tiller and threw his weight against it.
A long, low grinding sound came from the starboard side, and the ship
shuddered.
“Turn, you motherless bitch!” cried Amos as he heaved against the
tiller, marshaling what strength he had left. Arutha felt his muscles
protesting in pain as he strained against the seemingly immobile tiller. Slowly
it moved, first an inch, then another. The grinding rose in volume, until
Arutha’s ears rang from the sound of it.
Suddenly the tiller swung free once more. Arutha overbalanced and
went flying across the deck. He struck the hard wood and slid along the wet
surface until he crashed into the bulwark, gasping as wind exploded from his
lungs. A wave drenched him and he spluttered, spitting out a lungful of
seawater. Groggily he pulled himself up and staggered back to the tiller.
In the faint light Amos’s face was white from exertion, but it was
set in a wide-eyed, manic expression as he laughed. “Thought you’d gone over
the side for a moment.”
Arutha leaned into the tiller, and together they forced it to move
once more. Amos’s mad laughter rang out, and Arutha said, “What’s so damn
funny?”
“Look!”
Panting,
Arutha looked where Amos indicated. In the darkness he saw huge forms rearing
up alongside the ship, blacker shapes against the blackness. Amos yelled,
“We’re clearing the Great South Rocks Pull, Prince of Crydee! Pull if you wish
to ever see dry land again!”
Arutha hauled upon the tiller, forcing the balky ship away from the
terrible stone embrace mere yards away. Again they felt the ship shudder as
another low grinding sound came from below Amos whooped. “If this barge has a
bottom when we’re through, I’ll be amazed.”
Arutha felt a gut-wrenching stab of panic, followed immediately by a
strange exultation. He found himself seized by a nameless, almost joyous
feeling as he struggled to hold the ship on course. He heard a strange sound
amid the cacophony and discovered he was laughing with Amos, laughing at the
fury erupting around him. There was nothing left to fear. He would endure or he
wouldn’t. It didn’t matter now. All he could do was give himself over to one
task, keeping the ship heading past the jagged rocks. Every fiber of his being
laughed in terror, in joy at being reduced to this lower level of existence,
this primal state of being. Nothing existed save the need to do this one thing,
upon which all was wagered.
Arutha entered a new state of awareness. Seconds, minutes, hours
lost all meaning. He struggled, with Amos, to keep the ship under control, but
his senses recorded everything around him in minute detail. He could feel the
grain of the wood through the wet leather of his gloves. The fabric of his
stockings was gathered between his toes in his water-soaked boots. The wind
smelled of salt and pitch, wet wool caps, and rain-drenched canvas. Every groan
of timber, smack of rope against wood, and shout of men above could be clearly
heard. Upon his face he felt the wind and cold touch of melting snow and
seawater, and he laughed. Never had he felt so close to death, and never had he
felt more alive. Muscles bunched, and he pitted himself against forces primeval
and formidable. On and on they plunged, deeper and deeper into the madness of
the Straits of Darkness.
Arutha heard Amos as he shouted orders, orchestrating every man’s
move by the second. He played his ship as a master musician played a lute,
sensing each vibration and sound, striving for that harmony of motion that kept
the Wind of Dawn moving safely through perilous seas. The crew answered his
every demand instantly, risking death in the treacherous rigging, for they knew
their safe passage rested solely upon his skill.
Then it was over. One moment they were fighting with mad strength to
clear the rocks and pass through the fury of the straits, the next they were
running before a stiff breeze with the darkness behind.
Ahead the sky was overcast, but the storm that had held them for
days was a distant gloom upon the eastern horizon. Arutha looked at his hands,
as if at things apart, and willed them to release their hold upon the tiller.
Sailors caught him as he collapsed, and lowered him to the deck. For
a time his senses reeled, then he saw Amos sitting a short way off as Vasco
took the tiller. Amos’s face was still mirthful as he said, “We did it, boy.
We’re in the Bitter Sea.”
Arutha looked about. “Why is it still so dark?”
Amos laughed. “It’s nearly sundown. We were on that tiller for
hours.”
Arutha began to laugh too. Never had he felt such triumph. He
laughed until tears of exhaustion ran down his face, until his sides hurt. Amos
half crawled to his side. “You know what it is to laugh at death, Arutha.
You’ll never be the same man again.”
Arutha caught his breath. “I thought you mad there for a time.”
Amos took a wineskin a sailor handed him and drew a deep drink. He
passed it to Arutha and said, “Aye, as you were. It is something only a few
know in their lives. It is a vision of something so clear, so true, it can only
be a madness. You see what life is worth, and you know what death means.”
Arutha looked up at the sailor standing by them, and saw it was the
man Amos had pitched over the rail to head off the mutiny. Vasco threw the man
a frown as he watched, but the man didn’t move. Amos looked up at him, and the
seaman said, “Captain, I just wanted to say . . . I was wrong. Thirteen years a
sailor, and I’d have wagered my soul to Lims-Kragma no master could pilot a
ship such as this through the straits.” Lowering his eyes, he said, “I’d
willingly stand for flogging for what I done, Captain. But after, I’d sail to
the Seven Lower Hells with you, and so would any man here.”
Arutha looked about and saw other sailors gathering upon the
quarterdeck or looking down from the rigging Shouts of “Aye, Captain,” and “He
has the truth of it” could be heard.
Amos pulled himself up, gripping the rail of the ship, his legs
wobbling a little. He surveyed the men gathered around, then shouted, “Night
watch above! Midwatch and day watch stand down.” He turned to Vasco. “Check
below for damage to the hull, then open the galley. Set course for Krondor.”
Arutha came awake in his cabin Martin Longbow was sitting by his
side. “Here.” The Huntmaster held out a steaming mug of broth.
Arutha levered himself up on his elbow, his bruised and tired body
protesting. He sipped at the hot broth. “How long was I asleep?”
“You fell asleep on deck last night, just after sundown. Or passed
out, if you want the truth. It’s three hours after sunrise.”
“The weather?”
“Fair, or at least not storming. Amos is back on deck. He thinks it
might hold most of the way. The damage below is not too bad, we’ll be all right
if we don’t have to withstand another gale. Even so, Amos says there are a few
fair anchorages to be found along the Keshian coast should the need arise.”
Arutha pulled himself out of his bunk, put on his cloak, and went up
on deck Martin followed. Amos stood by the tiller, his eyes studying the way
the sail held the wind. He lowered his gaze to watch as Arutha and Martin
climbed the ladder to the quarterdeck. For a moment he studied the pair, as if
struck by some thought or another, then smiled as Arutha asked, “How do we
fare?”
Amos said, “We’ve a broad reach to the winds; had it since we
cleared the straits. If it holds from the northwest, we should reach Krondor quickly
enough. But winds rarely do hold, so we may take a bit longer.”
A lookout shouted, “Sail ho!”
“Where away?” shouted Amos.
“Two points abaft port!”
Amos studied the horizon, and soon three tiny white specks appeared.
To the lookout he shouted, “What ships?”
“Galleys, Captain!”
Amos mused aloud. “Quegan. This is a bit south for their usual
patrols if they’re warships, and I don’t think it likely they’re merchantmen.”
He ordered more canvas on the yards. “If the wind holds, we’ll be past before
they can close. They’re fat-bottomed tubs under sail, and their rowers can’t
maintain speed over this distance.”
Arutha watched in fascination as the ships grew on the horizon. The
closest galley turned to cut them off, and after a while he could make out the
hulking outline of the galley, its majestic sails above a high fore and aft
deck. Arutha could see the sweep of oars, three banks per side, as the captain
attempted a short burst of speed. But Amos was right, and soon the galley was
falling away behind. As the distance between the Wind of Dawn and the galleys
slowly increased, Arutha said, “They were flying the Royal Quegan standard.
What would Quegan war galleys be doing this far south?”
“The gods only know,” said Amos. “Could be they’re out looking for
pirates, or they could be keeping an eye out for Keshian ships straying north.
It’s hard to guess. Queg treats the whole of the Bitter Sea as her pond. I’d as
soon avoid finding out what they’re up to as not.”
The rest of the day passed uneventfully, and Arutha enjoyed a sense
of respite after the dangers of the last few days. The night brought a clear
display of stars; he spent several hours on deck studying the bright array in
the heavens. Martin came on deck and found him looking upward. Arutha heard the
arrival of the Huntmaster and said, “Kulgan and Tully say the stars are suns
much like our own, made small by vast distances.”
Martin said, “An incredible thought, but I think they are right.”
“Have you wondered if one of those is where the Tsurani homeworld
lies?”
Martin leaned upon the rail. “Many times, Highness. In the hills you
can see the stars like this, after the campfires are out. Undimmed by lights
from town or keep, they blaze across the sky. I also have wondered if one of
them might be where our enemies live. Charles has told me their sun is brighter
than ours, and their world hotter.”
“It seems impossible. To make war across such a void defies all logic.”
They stood quietly together watching the glory of the night,
ignoring the bite of the crisp wind that carried them to Krondor. Footfalls
behind caused them to turn as one, and Amos Trask appeared. He hesitated a
moment, studying the two faces before him, then joined them at the rail.
“Stargazing, is it?”
The others said nothing, and Trask watched the wake of the ship,
then the sky. “There is no place like the sea, gentlemen. Those who live on
land all their lives can never truly understand. The sea is basic, sometimes
cruel, sometimes gentle, and never predictable. But it is nights like this that
make me thankful the gods allowed me to be a sailor.”
Arutha said, “And something of a philosopher as well.”
Amos chuckled. “Take any deep-water sailor who’s faced death at sea
as many times as I have, and scratch him lightly. Underneath you’ll find a
philosopher, Highness. No fancy words, I’ll warrant you, but a deep abiding
sense of his place in the world. The oldest known sailor’s prayer is to Ishap.
‘Ishap, thy sea is great and my boat is small, have mercy on me.’ That sums it
up.”
Martin spoke quietly, almost to himself. “When I was a boy, among
the great trees, I knew such feelings. To stand by a bole so ancient it is
older than the oldest living memory of man gives such a sense of place in the
world.”
Arutha stretched. “It is late. I shall bid you both a good night.”
As he started to leave, he seemed taken by some thought. “I am not given to
your philosophies, but . . . I am pleased to have shared this voyage with you
both.”
After he was gone, Martin watched the stars for a time, then became
aware Amos was studying him. He faced the seaman and said, “You seem taken by
some thought, Amos.”
“Aye, Master Longbow.” Leaning against the rail, he said, “Nearly
seven full years have passed since I came to Crydee. Something has tickled my
mind since first meeting you.”
“What is that, Amos?”
“You’re a man of mysteries, Martin. There’re many things in my own
life I’d not wish recounted now, but with you it’s something else.”
Martin appeared indifferent to the course of conversation, but his
eyes narrowed slightly. “There’s little about me not well known in Crydee.”
“True, but it is that little which troubles me.”
“Put your mind at ease, Amos. I am the Duke’s Huntmaster, nothing
more.”
Quietly Amos said, “I think more, Martin. In my travels through the
town, overseeing the rebuilding, I’ve met a lot of people, and in seven years
I’ve heard a lot of gossip about you. Some time back I put the pieces together
and came up with an answer. It explains why I see your manner change—only a
little, but enough to notice—when you’re around Arutha, and especially when
you’re around the Princess.”
Martin laughed. “You spin an old and tired bard’s tale, Amos. You
think I am the poor hunter desperate for love of a young Princess? You think me
in love with Carline?”
Amos said, “No, though I have no doubt you love her. As much as any
brother loves his sister.”
Martin had his belt knife half out when Amos’s hand caught his
wrist. The thickset seaman held the hunter’s wrist in a viselike grip, and
Martin could not move his arm. “Stay your anger, Martin. I’d not like to have
to pitch you over the side to cool you off.”
Martin ceased his struggling against Amos and released his knife,
letting it slide back into its sheath. Amos held the hunter’s wrist a moment
longer, then let go. After a moment Martin said, “She has no knowledge, nor do
her brothers. Until this time I thought only the Duke and one or two others
might know. How did you learn of it?”
Amos said, “It was not hard. People most often don’t see what is
right before them.” Amos turned and watched the sails above, absently checking
each detail of the ship’s crew as he spoke. “I’ve seen the Duke’s likeness in
the great hall. Should you grow a beard like his, the resemblance would shout
for the world to see. Everyone in the castle remarks how Arutha grows to
resemble his mother less and father more each passing year, and I’ve been
nagged since we first met why no one else noticed he resembles you as well. I
expect they don’t notice because they choose not to. It explains so much: why
you were granted special favor by the Duke in placing you with the old Huntmaster,
and why you were chosen Huntmaster when a new one was needed. For some time now
I’ve suspected, but tonight I was certain. When I came up from the lower deck
and you both turned in the darkness, for a moment I couldn’t tell which of you
was which.”
Martin spoke with no emotion, just a statement of fact. “It’s your
life should you breathe a word of it to anyone.”
Amos settled himself against the rail. “I’m a bad man to threaten,
Martin Longbow.”
“It is a matter of honor.”
Amos crossed his arms over his chest. “Lord Borric is not the first
noble to father a bastard, nor will he be the last. Many are even given offices
and rank. How is the Duke of Crydee’s honor endangered?”
Martin gripped the rail, standing like a statue in the night. His
words seemed to come from a great distance. “Not his honor, Captain. Mine.” He
faced Amos, and in the night his eyes seemed alive with inner light as they
reflected the lantern hung behind the seaman. “The Duke knows of my birth, and
for his own reasons chose to bring me to Crydee when I was still little more
than a boy. I am sure Father Tully has been told, for he stands highest in the
Duke’s trust, and possibly Kulgan as well. But none of them suspect I know.
They think me ignorant of my heritage.”
Amos stroked his beard. “A knotty problem, Martin. Secrets within
secrets, and such. Well, you have my word—from friendship, not from threat—I’ll
not speak to anyone of this, save by your leave. Still, if I judge Arutha
right, he would sooner know as not.”
“That is for me to decide, Amos, no one else. Someday perhaps I’ll
tell him, or I may not.”
Amos pushed himself from the rail. “I’ve much to do before I turn
in, Martin, but I’ll say one more thing. You’ve plotted a lonely course. I do
not envy you your journey upon it Good night.”
“Good night.” After Amos had returned to the quarterdeck, Martin
watched the familiar stars in the sky. All the companions of his solitary
travels through the hills of Crydee looked down upon him. The constellations
shone in the night, the Beasthunter and the Beasthound, the Dragon, the Kraken,
and the Five Jewels. He turned his attention to the sea, staring down into the
blackness, lost in thoughts he had once imagined buried forever.
“Land ho!” shouted the lookout.
“Where away?” answered Amos.
“Dead ahead, Captain.”
Arutha, Martin, and Amos left the quarterdeck and quickly made their
way to the bow. As they stood waiting for land to heave into sight, Amos said,
“Can you feel that trembling each time we breast a trough? It’s that keelson,
if I know how a ship’s made, and I do. We’ll need to put in at a shipyard for
refitting in Krondor.”
Arutha watched as the thin strip of land in the distance grew
clearer in the afternoon light. While not bright, the day was relatively fair,
only slightly overcast. “We should have time. I’ll want to return to Crydee as
soon as Erland’s convinced of the risk, but even if he agrees at once, it will
take some time to gather the men and ships.”
Martin said, dryly, “And I for one would not care to pass the
Straits of Darkness again until the weather is a bit more agreeable.”
Amos said, “Man of faint heart. You’ve already done it the hard way.
Going to the Far Coast in the dead of winter is only slightly suicidal.”
Arutha waited in silence as the distant landfall began to resolve in
detail. In less than an hour they could clearly make out the sights of
Krondor’s towers rising into the air, and ships at anchor in the harbor.
“Well,” said Amos, “if you wish a state welcome, I’d better have
your banner broken out and run up the mast.”
Arutha held him back, saying, “Wait, Amos. Do you mark that ship by
the harbor’s mouth?”
As they closed upon the harbor, Amos studied the ship in question.
“She’s a beastly bitch. Look at the size of her. The Prince’s building them a
damn sight bigger than when I was last in Krondor. Three-masted, and rigged for
thirty or better sail from flying jib to spanker. From the lines of her hull,
she’s a greyhound, no doubt. I’d not want to run up against her with less than
three Quegan galleys. You’d need the rowers, for those oversized crossbows she
mounts fore and aft would quickly make a hash of your rigging.
“Now we know why those Quegan galleys were so far from home. If the
Kingdom’s bringing warships like this to the Bitter Sea, Queg’s—”
“Mark the banner at her masthead, Amos,” said Arutha.
Entering
the harbor, they passed near the ship. On her bow was painted her name, Royal
Griffin. Amos said, “A Kingdom warship, no doubt, but I’ve never seen one
under any banner but Krondor’s.” Atop the ship’s highest mast a black banner
emblazoned with a golden eagle snapped in the breeze. “I thought I knew every
banner seen on the Bitter Sea, but that one is new to me.”
“The same banner lies above the docks, Arutha,” said Martin,
pointing toward the distant city.
Quietly Arutha said, “That banner has never been seen on the Bitter
Sea before.” His expression turned grim as he said, “Unless I say otherwise, we
are Natalese traders, nothing more.”
“Whose banner is that?” asked Amos.
Gripping the rail, Arutha replied, “It is the banner of the
second-oldest house in the Kingdom. It announces that my distant cousin, Guy,
the Duke of Bas-Tyra, is in Krondor.”
24
KRONDOR
The inn was crowded.
Amos led Arutha and Martin through the common room to an empty table
near the fireplace. Snatches of conversation reached Arutha’s ears as they took
their seats. On close inspection the mood in the room was more restrained than
it had first appeared.
Arutha’s thoughts raced His plans for securing Erland’s help had
been crushed within minutes of reaching the harbor Everywhere in the city were
signs that Guy du Bas-Tyra was not simply guesting in Krondor, but was now
fully in control. Men of the city watch followed officers wearing the black and
gold of Bas-Tyra, and Guy’s banner flew over every tower in the city.
When a dowdy serving wench came, Amos ordered three mugs of ale, and
the men waited in silence until they were brought When the servingwoman was
gone, Amos said, “We’ll have to pick our way carefully now.”
Arutha’s expression remained fixed. “How long before we can sail?”
“Weeks, at least three. We’ve got to get the hull repaired, and the
keelson replaced correctly. How long will depend on the shipwrights. Winter’s a
bad time: the fair-weather traders haul out their ships, so they’ll be fit come
spring. I’ll begin inquiries first thing tomorrow.”
“That may take too long. If needs be, buy another.”
Amos raised an eyebrow “You’ve funds?”
“In my chest aboard ship.” With a grim smile he said, “The Tsurani
aren’t the only ones who play politics with war. To many of the nobles in
Krondor and the East, the war is a distant thing, hardly imaginable. It has
gone on for nearly nine years, and all they ever see is dispatches.
“And our loyal Kingdom merchants don’t donate supplies and ships out
of love for King Rodric. My gold is a hedge against underwriting the cost of
bringing Krondorian soldiers to Crydee, both in expenses and bribes.”
“Well then,” said Amos, “even so it will be a week or two. You don’t
usually stroll into a ship’s brokerage and pay gold for the first ship offered,
not if you wish to avoid notice. And most of the ships sold are fairly
worthless. It will take time.”
“And,” put in Martin, “there’re the straits.”
“That’s true,” agreed Amos, “though we could take a leisurely turn
up the coast to Sarth and wait to time our run through the straits.”
“No,” said Arutha. “Sarth is still in the Principality. If Guy’s in
control of Krondor, he’ll have agents and soldiers there. We won’t be safe
until we’re out of the Bitter Sea. We’ll attract less attention in Krondor than
in Sarth: strangers are not uncommon here.”
Amos looked long at Arutha, then said, “Now, I don’t claim to know
you as well as some men I’ve met, but I don’t think you’re as concerned for
your own skin as something else.”
Arutha glanced about the room. “We’d better find a less public place
to talk.”
With a sound between a sigh and a groan, Amos heaved himself out of
his chair. “The Sailor’s Ease is not where I’d prefer to stay, but for our
purposes it will serve.” He made his way to the long bar and spoke at length to
the innkeeper. The heavyset owner of the inn pointed up the stairs, and Amos
nodded. He signed for his companions to accompany him and led them through the
press of the common room, up the stairs, and down a long hall to the last door.
Pushing it aside, he motioned for them to enter.
Inside they found a room with little to recommend itself by way of
comforts. Four straw-stuffed pallets rested on the floor. A large box in the
corner served as a common closet. A crude lamp, a simple wick floating in a
bowl of oil, sat upon a rude table, it burned with a pungent odor when Longbow
struck a spark to it.
Amos closed the door as Arutha said, “I can see what you meant about
choices in rooms.”
“I’ve slept in far worse,” answered Amos, settling down on one of
the pallets. “If we’re to keep our liberty, we’d best establish believable
identities. For the time being, we’ll call you Arthur. It’s close enough to
your own to afford a passable explanation should someone call out your real
name and cause you to turn or answer. Also, it will be easy to remember.”
Arutha and Martin sat down, and Amos continued. “Arthur—get used to
that name—of navigating cities you know less than a thimbleful, which is twice
as much as Martin knows. You’ll do well to play the role of some minor noble’s
son, from some out-of-the-way place. Martin, you are a hunter from the hills of
Natal.”
“I can speak the language passing well.”
Arutha gave a half-smile. “Get him a grey cloak and he’d make a fair
ranger. I don’t speak the language of Natal, or the Keshian tongue, so I’ll be
the son of a minor eastern noble, visiting for recreation. Few in Krondor could
know half the barons of the East.”
“Just so long as it’s not too close to Bas-Tyra. With all those
black tabards about, it would be a pretty thing to run into a supposed cousin
among Guy’s officers.”
Arutha’s expression turned dark. “You were correct about my
concerns, Amos. I’ll not leave Krondor until I’ve discovered exactly what Guy
is doing here and what it means for the war.”
“Even should I find us a ship tomorrow,” said Amos, “which is
unlikely, you should have plenty of time to snoop about. Probably find out more
than you’ll want to know. The city’s a lousy place for secrets. The
rumormongers will be plying their trade in the market, and every commoner in
the city will know enough to give you a fair picture of what’s taken place.
Just remember to keep your mouth shut and ears open. Rumormongers’ll sell you
what you want to know, then turn around and sell news of your asking to the
city guard so fast it’d make you spin to watch.” Amos stretched, then said,
“It’s still early, but I think we should have a hot meal, then to bed. We’ve a
lot of prowling about to accomplish.” With that he rose and opened the door,
and the three men returned to the common room.
Arutha munched upon a nearly cold meat pie. Lowering his head, he
forced himself to continue consuming the pieman’s greasy ware. He refused to
consider what was contained within the soggy crust in addition to the beef and
pork the seller claimed.
Casting a sidelong glance across the busy square, Arutha studied the
gates to Prince Erland’s palace. Finishing the pie, he quickly crossed to an
ale stand and ordered a large mug to wash away the aftertaste. For the last
hour he had moved, seemingly without purpose, from seller’s cart to seller’s
cart, purchasing this and that, posing as a minor noble’s son. And in that hour
he had learned a great deal.
Martin and Amos came into sight, nearly an hour before the appointed
time. Both wore grim expressions and kept glancing nervously about. Without
comment Amos motioned for Arutha to follow as they walked by. They pushed
through the midday throng and passed quickly away from the great-square
district. Reaching a less hospitable-looking though no less busy area, they
continued until Amos indicated they should enter a particular building.
Once through the door, Arutha was met by a hot, steamy atmosphere as
an attendant came to greet them. “A bathhouse?” said Arutha.
Without humor Amos said, “You need to get rid of some road dirt,
Arthur.” To the attendant he said, “A steam for us all.”
The man led them to a changing room and handed each a rough towel
and a canvas bag for belongings. They undressed, wrapped the towels about them,
and carried their clothing and weapons in the bags into the steam room.
The large room was completely tiled, though the walls and floors
were stained and showed patches of green. The air was close and fetid. A small
half-naked boy squatted in the center of the room, before the bed of rocks that
supplied the steam. He alternately fed wood to the huge brazier below the
stones and poured water upon them, generating giant clouds of steam.
When they were seated upon a bench, in the farthest corner of the
room, Arutha said, “Why a bathhouse?”
Amos whispered, “Our inn has very thin walls. And a great deal of
business is conducted in places such as these, so three men whispering in the
corner won’t draw undue attention.” He shouted to the boy, “You, lad, run and
fetch some chilled wine.” Amos tossed a silver coin at the boy, who caught it
in midair. When he didn’t move, Amos tossed him another, and the boy scampered
off. With a sigh Amos said, “The price of chilled wine has doubled since I was
last here. He’ll be gone for a while, but not too long.”
“What is this?” asked Arutha, not taking pains to hide his ill
humor. The towel itched and the room stank, and he doubted if he’d be any
cleaner for the time spent here than if he’d stayed in the square.
“Martin and I both have troublesome news.”
“As do I. I already know Guy is Viceroy in Krondor. What else have
you learned?”
Martin said, “I overheard some conversation that makes me believe
Guy has imprisoned Erland and his family in the palace.”
Arutha’s eyes narrowed, and his voice was low and angry. “Even Guy
wouldn’t dare harm the Prince of Krondor.”
Martin said, “He would should the King give his leave. I know little
of this trouble between the King and the Prince, but it is clear Guy is now the
power in Krondor and acts with the King’s permission, if not his blessing. You
told me of Caldric’s warning when you were last in Rillanon. Perhaps the King’s
sickness has grown worse.”
“Madness, if you mean to speak clearly,” snapped Arutha.
“To further cloud things in Krondor,” said Amos, “it seems we are at
war with Great Kesh.”
“What!” said Arutha.
“A rumor, nothing more.” Amos spoke quietly and quickly. “Before
finding Martin, I was nosing around a local joy house, not too far from the
garrison barracks. I overheard some soldiers at their ease saying they were to
leave at first light for a campaign. When the object of one soldier’s momentary
ardor asked when she would see him again, he said, ‘As long as it takes to
march to the vale and back, should luck be with us,’ at which point he invoked
Ruthia’s name, so that the Lady of Luck would not view his discussion of her
province disfavorably.”
“The vale?” said Arutha. “That can only mean a campaign down into
the Vale of Dreams. Kesh must have hit the garrison at Shamata with an
expeditionary force of dog-soldiers. Guy’s no fool. He’ll know the only
answer’s a quick, unhesitating strike from Krondor, to show Great Kesh’s
Empress we can still defend our borders. Once the dog soldiers have been driven
south of the vale, we’ll have another round of useless treaty talks over who
has the right to it. That means even should Guy wish to aid Crydee, which I
doubt, he could not. There’s no time to deal with Kesh, return, and reach
Crydee by spring, or even early summer.” Arutha swore. “This is bitter news,
Amos.”
“There is still more. Earlier today I took the trouble to visit the
ship, just to ensure Vasco had everything in hand, and that the men weren’t
chafing too much at being kept aboard. Our ship is being watched.”
“Are you sure?”
“Certain. There’s a couple of boys who stand around, playing at net
mending, but they do no real work. They watched closely as I rowed out and
back.”
“Who do you think they are?”
“I can’t begin to guess. They could be Guy’s men, or men still loyal
to Erland. They could be agents of Great Kesh, smugglers, even Mockers.”
“Mockers?” asked Martin.
“The Guild of Thieves,” said Arutha. “Little goes on in Krondor
without notice by their leader, the Upright Man.”
Amos said, “That mysterious personage runs the Mockers with tighter
control than a captain has over his crew. There are places in the city where
even the Prince cannot reach, but no place in Krondor is beyond the Upright
Man. If he’s taken an interest in us, for whatever reason, we have much to
fear.”
The conversation was interrupted by the serving boy’s return. He set
down a chilled pewter pitcher of wine and three cups. Amos said, “Fetch
yourself to the nearest incense vendor, boy. This place stinks. Buy something
sweet to toss upon the fire.”
The boy regarded them a little warily, then shrugged as Amos tossed
him another coin. He ran from the room, and Amos said, “He’ll be back soon, and
I’ve run out of reasons to send him away. In any event this place will soon be
thick with merchants taking an afternoon steam.
“When the boy comes back, sip some wine, try to relax, and don’t
leave too soon. Now, in all this bleak mess, there is one small glimmer of
light.”
“Then I would hear what it is,” said Arutha.
“Guy will soon be gone from the city.”
Arutha’s eyes narrowed. “Still, his men will be left in charge. But
what you say does have some aspect of comfort. There are few in Krondor likely
to mark me by sight, for it’s nearly nine years since I was last here, and most
of those have likely disappeared with the Prince. Also, there is a plan I’ve
been considering. With Guy out of Krondor, I would have an even better chance
of success.”
“What plan?” asked Amos.
“I’ll
tell you when I’ve had more time to dwell upon it. Where could we safely meet?”
Amos considered. “Brothels, drug houses, and gambling halls are all
as bad as inns. Either the Mockers control them and note everyone coming and
going, or there are others about looking for information to sell. If someone
overheard you speaking the wrong phrase, the Mockers or the city guards could
be down on you in minutes.” He was quiet for a moment. Then he smiled. “I have
the very place! When the town watch rings the hour bell, two hours after
sunset, meet me at the east end of Temple Square.”
The boy returned and tossed a small bundle of incense upon the fire,
cutting off conversation. Arutha settled back and drank the chilled wine,
rapidly warming in the heat of the steam room. He closed his eyes, but was not
relaxing, as he considered the situation. After a while he began to feel his
plan might work if he could reach Dulanic. Running out of patience, he was the
first to rise, rinse off, dress, and leave.
***
Arutha
waited as Martin and Amos approached from different parts of the city, crossing
Temple Square. On all sides the temples of the greater and lesser gods rose up.
Several were busy with pilgrims and worshipers entering and leaving, while
others were nearly deserted.
Reaching the Prince, Amos said, “How fared you this afternoon?”
Arutha spoke softly. “I occupied my time in a tavern, keeping to
myself. I did overhear some conversation about Erland, but when I tried to get
closer, the speakers moved off. Otherwise I considered the plan I spoke of.”
Martin glanced about, then said, “An ill-omened place you picked,
Amos. Gathered at this end of the square are all the gods and goddesses of
darkness and chaos.”
Amos shrugged. “Which means few travelers nearby after night fall.
And a clear view of anyone approaching.” To Arutha he said, “Now, what is this
plan?”
Quietly and quickly, Arutha said, “I noticed two things this
morning: Erland’s personal guards still patrol the palace grounds, so there
must be limits to Guy’s control. Second, several of Erland’s courtiers entered
and left freely enough, so some large portion of the daily business of
governing the Western Realm must remain unchanged.”
Amos stroked his chin, thinking “That would seem logical Guy brought
his army with him, not his administrators. They’re still back running
Bas-Tyra.”
“Which means Lord Dulanic and others not entirely sympathetic to Guy
might still be able to aid us. If Dulanic will help, I can still succeed with
my mission.”
“How?” asked Amos.
“As Erland’s Knight-Marshal, Dulanic has control of vassal garrisons
to Krondor. Upon his signature alone he could call up the garrisons at
Durrony’s Vale and Malac’s Cross. If he ordered them to march to Sarth, they
could join the garrison there and take ship for Crydee. It would be a hard
march, but we could still bring them to Crydee by spring.”
“And no hardship to your father, either. I was going to tell you: I
have heard Guy has sent soldiers from the Krondonan garrison to your father.”
Arutha said, “That seems strange. I can’t imagine Guy wishing to aid
Father.”
Amos shook his head. “Not so strange. To your father it will seem as
if Guy has been sent by the King only to aid Erland, for I suspect the rumors
of Erland’s being a prisoner in his own palace are not as yet widespread. Also,
it is a fine pretext to rid the city of officers and men loyal to the Prince.
“Still, it is no small boon to your father. From all accounts nearly
four thousand men have left or are leaving for the north. That might be enough
to deal with the Tsurani should they come against the Duke.”
Martin said, “But should they come against Crydee?”
“For that we must seek aid. We must get inside the palace and find
Dulanic.”
“How?” Amos asked.
“It was my hope you might have a suggestion.”
Amos looked down, then said, “Is there anyone in the palace you know
to be trustworthy?”
“Before, I could have named a dozen, but this business makes me
doubt everyone. Who stands with the Viceroy and who with the Prince I can’t
begin to guess.”
“Then we’ll have to nose about some more. And we’ll have to listen
for news of likely ships for transport. Once we’ve hired a few, we’ll slip them
out of Krondor one or two at a time, every few days. We’ll need at least a
score to carry the men of three garrisons. Assuming you get Dulanic’s support,
which brings us back to gaining entrance to the palace.” Amos swore softly.
“Are you sure you wouldn’t care to chuck this business and become a privateer?”
Arutha’s expression clearly showed he was unamused. Amos sighed. “I thought
not.”
Arutha said, “You seem to know the underside of the city well, Amos.
Use your experience to find us a way into the palace, even if through the
sewer. I’ll keep my eyes open for any of Erland’s men who might wander through
the great square. Martin, you’ll have to simply keep your ears open.”
With a long sigh of resignation, Amos said, “Getting into the palace
is a risky plan, and I don’t mind telling you I don’t care for the odds.” He
hiked his thumb at a nearby temple. “I may even bounce into Ruthia’s temple and
ask the Lady of Luck to smile upon us.”
Arutha dug a gold coin from his purse and tossed it to Amos. “Say a
prayer to the Lady for me as well I’ll see you back at the tavern later.”
Arutha strode off into the gloom, and Amos inclined his head toward
the temple of the Goddess of Luck. “Care to make a votive offering, Martin?”
The night’s silence was ruptured by trumpets calling men to arms
Arutha was the first to the window, thrusting aside the wooden shutters and
peering through. With most of the city asleep, there were few lights to mask
the glow in the east. Amos reached Arutha’s side, Martin a step behind.
Martin said, “Campfires, hundreds of them.” The Huntmaster glanced
heavenward, marking the stars’ positions in the clear sky, and said, “Two hours
to dawn.”
“Guy’s readying his army for the march,” said Arutha quietly.
Amos leaned far out the window. By craning his neck, he could catch
a glimpse of the harbor. In the distance men were calling aboard ships “Sounds
like they’re readying ships as well.”
Arutha leaned with both hands upon the table by the window. “Guy
will send his foot soldiers by ship down the coast, into the Sea of Dreams, to
Shamata, while his cavalry rides to the south. His foot will reach the city
fresh enough to help bolster the defense, and when his horses arrive, they
aren’t sick from traveling by ship. And they’ll arrive within days of one
another.”
As if to prove his words, from the east came the sounds of marching
men. Then a few minutes later the first company of Bas-Tyra’s foot soldiers
came into view. Arutha and his companions watched them march past the open gate
of the inn’s courtyard. Lanterns gave the soldiers a strange, otherworld
appearance as they marched in columns down the street. They stepped in cadence,
their golden-eagle banners snapping above their heads Martin said, “They are
well-schooled troops.”
Arutha said, “Guy is many things, most of them unpleasant, but one
thing cannot be argued: he is the finest general in the Kingdom. Even Father is
forced to admit that, though he’ll say nothing else good about the man. Were I
the King, I would send the Armies of the East under his command to fight the
Tsurani. Three times Guy has marched against Kesh, and three times he has
thrashed them. If the Keshians do not know he’s come west, the very sight of
his banner in the field may drive them to the peace table, for they fear and
respect him.” Arutha’s voice became thoughtful in tone. “There is one thing. When
Guy first came to be Duke of Bas-Tyra, he suffered some sort of personal
dishonor—Father never told what that shame was—and took to wearing only black
as a badge of sorts, earning him the name Black Guy. That type of thing takes a
strange brand of personal courage. Whatever else can be said of Black Guy du
Bas-Tyra, none will call him craven.”
While the soldiers continued to pass below, Arutha and his
companions watched in silence. Then, with the sun rising in the east, the last
soldiers disappeared along the streets to the harbour.
***
The
morning after Guy’s army had marched, it was announced the city was sealed, the
gates closed to all travelers and the harbor blockaded. Arutha judged it a
normal practice, to prevent Keshian agents from leaving the city by fast sloop
or fast horse to carry word of Guy’s march. Amos used a visit to the Wind of
Dawn to view the harbor blockade and discovered it was a light one, for Guy had
ordered most of the fleet to stand off the coast at sea ambush, watching for
any Keshian flotillas should Kesh learn the city was stripped of her garrison.
The city was now policed by city guards in Guy’s livery, as the last Krondorian
soldiers departed for the north Rumor had it Guy would also send the garrison
at Shamata to the front once the fighting with Kesh had been settled, leaving
every garrison in the Principality manned by soldiers loyal to Bas-Tyra.
Arutha spent most of his time in taverns, places of business, and
the open markets most likely to be frequented by those from the palace. Amos
prowled near the docks or in the city’s seedier sections, especially the
infamous Poor Quarter, and began making discreet inquiries about the
availability of ships. Martin used his guise as a simple woodsman to blunder
into any place that looked promising.
Nearly a week went by this way, with little new information being
unearthed. Then, late the sixth day after Guy had quit the city, Arutha found
himself being hailed in the middle of the busy square by Martin.
“Arthur!” shouted the hunter as he ran up to Arutha. “Best come
quickly.” He set off toward the waterfront and the Sailor’s Ease.
Back at the inn they found Amos already in the room, resting upon
his pallet before his nightly sojourn into the Poor Quarter. Once the door was
closed, Martin said, “I think they may know Arutha’s in Krondor.”
Amos bolted upright as Arutha said, “What? How . . . ?”
“I wandered into a tavern near the barracks, just before the midday
meal. With the army gone from the city, there was little business. One man did
enter, just as I was readying to leave. A scribe with the city’s Quartermaster,
he was fit to burst with a rumor and in need of someone to tell it to. So, with
the aid of some wine, I obliged him by playing the simple woodsy, and by
showing respect for so important a personage.
“Three things this man told me Lord Dulanic has disappeared from
Krondor, gone the night Guy left. There’s some business of his having retired
to nameless estates to the north, now that Guy’s Viceroy, but the scribe thought
that unlikely. The second thing was news of Lord Barry’s death.”
Arutha’s face showed shock. “The Prince’s Lord-Admiral dead?”
“This man told me Barry had died under mysterious circumstances,
though there’s no official announcement planned. Some eastern lord, Jessup, has
been given command of the Krondonan fleet.”
“Jessup is Guy’s man,” said Arutha. “He commanded the Bas-Tyra
squadrons of the King’s fleet.”
“And lastly, the man made a display of knowing some secret
concerning a search for someone he only called ‘the Viceroy’s royal cousin.’ ”
Amos swore. “I don’t know how, but someone’s marked you. With Erland
and his family virtual captives in the palace, there’s hardly a chance another
royal cousin’s come wandering into Krondor in the last few days, unless you’ve
a few out and about you’ve not told us of.”
Arutha ignored Amos’s feeble humor. In the span of time it took for
Longbow to tell his tale, all his plans for aiding Crydee were dashed. The city
was firmly in control of those either loyal to Guy or indifferent to who ruled
in the King’s name. There was no one in the city he could turn to for help, and
his failure in bringing aid home was a bitter thing Quietly he said, “Then
there’s no other course but to return to Crydee as soon as possible.”
“That may not be so easy,” said Amos. “There’s more strange things
occurring. I’ve been in places where a man can usually make contact with those
needed for a dishonest task or two, but everywhere I’ve made
inquiries—discreet, have no doubt—I come up against only hard silence. If I
didn’t know better, I’d swear the Upright Man’s closed up shop and all the
Mockers are now serving in Guy’s army. I’ve never seen such a collection of
dumb barmen, ignorant whores, uninformed beggars, and tongueless gamblers. You
don’t need to be a genius to see the word’s gone out. No one is to talk to
strangers, no matter how promising a transaction’s being offered. So we can
look for no aid in getting free of the city, and if Guy’s agents know you’re in
Krondor, there’ll be no lifting of the blockade or opening of the gates until
you’ve been found, no matter how loudly the merchants scream.”
“We’re deep in the snare,” agreed Martin.
“But if Guy’s men only suspect I’m in Krondor, they may tire of the
search.”
“True,’’ agreed Amos, “and after a while, the Mockers may open up as
well. Should they agree to help—for a significant price, you can be
certain—we’ll have powerful help in leaving the city.”
Arutha balled his fist and struck the pallet upon which he sat.
“Damn Bas-Tyra I’d gladly murder him this instant. Not only does he imperil the
west, he risks a greater schism between the two realms by taking the
Principality under his own banner. Should anything happen to Erland and his
family, it’s almost certainly civil war.”
Amos slowly shook his head. “A bollixed mission this, and through no
fault of yours, Arutha.” He sighed. “Still, we can’t be startled into panic.
Friend Martin may have misunderstood the scribe’s last remark, or the man may
have been speaking simply to hear himself talk. We’ll have to be cautious, but
we can’t bolt and run. Should you vanish from sight completely, someone might
take notice. Best if you stay close to the inn, but act as you have been, for
the time being. I’ll continue to make attempts at reaching someone who may have
ways to get us clear of the city—smugglers, if not the Mockers.”
Arutha rose from the pallet and said, “I’ve no appetite, but we’ve
eaten together in the common room every night. I expect we’d best go down for
supper soon.”
Amos waved him back to his bed. “Stay awhile longer. I’m going to
run down to the docks and visit the ship. If Martin’s scribe was not just
breaking wind, they’ll certainly search the ships in the harbor. I’d better
warn Vasco and the crew to be ready to go over the side if necessary and find
someplace to store your chest. We aren’t due to be hauled out for refitting for
another week, so we must act with care. I’ve run blockades before. I wouldn’t
want to risk it in a hulk as leaky as the Wind of Dawn, but if I can’t find
another ship . . .” At the door he turned back to face Arutha and Martin. “It’s
a black storm, boys, but we’ve weathered worse.”
Arutha and Martin sat quietly as Amos entered the common room. The
seaman pulled out a chair and called for ale and a meal. Once he was served, he
said, “Everything is taken care of. Your chest is safe as long as the ship is
left moored.”
“Where did you hide it?”
“It’s snugly wrapped in oilcloth and tied securely to the anchor.”
Arutha looked impressed. “Underwater?”
“You can buy new clothes, and gold and gems don’t rust.”
Martin said, “How are the men?”
“Grumbling over being in port another week and still aboard ship,
but they’re good lads.”
The door to the inn opened and six men entered. Five took chairs
near the door while one stood surveying the room. Amos hissed, “See that
rat-faced fellow who just sat down? He’s one of the boys who’ve been watching
the docks for the last week. Look’s like I’ve been followed.”
The man who remained standing spotted Amos and approached the table.
He was a plain-looking man, of open countenance. His reddish-blond hair was
flyaway around his head, and he wore a common sailor’s clothing. He clutched a
wool cap in hand as he smiled at them.
Amos nodded, and the man said, “If you’re the master of the Wind of
Dawn, I’d have words with you.”
Amos raised an eyebrow, but said nothing. He indicated the free
chair and the man sat. “Name’s Radburn. I’m looking for a berth, Captain.”
Amos looked about, seeing Radburn’s companions were pretending not
to notice what was transpiring at the table. “Why my ship?”
“I’ve tried others. They’re all full up. Just thought I’d ask you.”
“Who was your last master, and why did you leave his service?”
Radburn
laughed, a friendly sound. “Well, I last sailed with a company of barge
ferrymen, taking cargo from ship to shore in the harbor. Been stuck doing that
for a year.” He fell silent as the serving wench approached. Amos ordered
another round of ale, and when one was set before Radburn, he said, “Thank you,
Captain.” He took a long pull and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
“Before I came to be beached, I sailed with Captain John Avery, aboard the Bantamma.”
“I know the Little Rooster, and John Avery, though I haven’t seen
him since I was last in Durbin, five or six years back.”
“Well, I got a little drunk, and the captain told me he’d have none
who drank aboard his ship I drink no more than the next man, Captain, but you
know Master Avery’s reputation, being an abstentious follower of Sung the
White.”
Amos looked at Martin and Arutha, but said nothing Radburn said,
“These your officers, Captain?”
“No, business partners.” When it was clear Amos was going to say
nothing more, Radburn let the topic of identities drop. Amos finally said,
“We’ve been in the city little more than a week, and I’ve been busy with
personal matters. What news?”
Radburn shrugged. “The war goes on Good for the merchants, bad for
the rest. Now we’ve the business with Kesh. Before the troubles was along the
Far Coast, but now . . . Krondor might not prove such a healthy spot if the
Viceroy doesn’t chase the dogs of Kesh back home. Otherwise, there’s the usual
gossip . . .” He glanced around, as looking for anyone who might overhear. “. .
. and some not so usual.”
Amos lifted his mug to his lips saying nothing. “Since the Viceroy’s
come,” said Radburn quietly, “things haven’t been the same in Krondor. An
honest man isn’t safe on the streets anymore, what with Durbin slavers running
about and the press gangs almost as bad. That’s why I need a ship, Captain.”
“Press gangs!” Amos exploded. “There hasn’t been a press gang in a
Kingdom city in thirty years.”
“Once was, but now things have changed again. You get a little drunk
and don’t find a safe berth for the night, the press gang comes along and slaps
you into the dungeon. It just isn’t right, no sir. Just because a man’s between
ships doesn’t give anyone the right to ship him out with Lord Jessup’s fleet
for seven years. Seven years of chasing pirates and fighting Quegan war
galleys!”
Amos’s eyes narrowed. “How is it that Guy rules in Krondor? We’ve
heard stories, but they seem confused.”
Radburn nodded. “Right you are, Captain. For it is confusing. A
month ago, Lord Guy rides in with his army behind, flags a’wavmg, drums
beating, and the rest. The Prince, so they say, welcomes him and treats him
real friendly, even though du Bas-Tyra is carrying the King’s writ naming him
Viceroy. The Prince even helps him, they say, until this business of the press
gangs and such comes to his ears.” Lowering his voice more, he said, “I heard
that when he complained, Guy locks him up in his rooms. Nice rooms, I expect,
but same as a cell if you can’t leave. So I hear.”
Arutha was so outraged by the story, he was on the verge of
speaking. Amos gripped his arm quickly, warning silence, then said, “Well,
Radburn, I can always use a good man who’s sailed with John Avery. I’ll tell
you what. I’ve one more trip to the ship to make tonight, and there’re some personal
belongings in my room I’ll want aboard. Come along and carry them.”
Amos rose and, giving the man no time to object, gripped him by the
arm and propelled him toward the stairs. Arutha shot a glance at the group who
entered with Radburn. They seemed unaware for the moment of what was
transpiring across the crowded common room as Amos took Radburn up the stairs,
Arutha and Martin following behind.
Amos hustled Radburn down the hall and, once through the door to
their room, spun and delivered a staggering blow to Radburn’s stomach, doubling
him over. A brutal knee to the face, and Radburn lay stunned upon the floor.
“What is this all about?” said Arutha.
“That man’s a liar. John Avery’s a marked man in Kesh. He betrayed
the Durbin captains to a Quegan raiding fleet twenty years ago. Yet Radburn
didn’t bat an eye when I said I saw Avery in Durbin six years ago. And he’s too
free in showing disrespect to the Viceroy. His story stinks like a week-dead
fish. We go out the door with him, and inside of two blocks a dozen men or more
will be upon us.”
“What shall we do?” said Arutha.
“We leave. His friends will be up those stairs in a minute.” He
pointed to the window. Martin stood by the door as Arutha ripped aside a dirty
canvas shade and pushed open the wooden shutters. Amos said, “Now you see why I
chose this room.” Less than a yard below the window’s ledge was the roof of the
stable.
Arutha stepped out, Amos and Martin following. They hurried
carefully down the steeply sloping roof until they reached the edge. Arutha
leaped down, landing quietly, followed a moment later by Martin. Amos landed
more heavily, but suffered only a minor bruise to his dignity.
They heard a cough and an oath, and looked up to see a bloodied face
at the window. Radburn shouted, “They’re in the courtyard!” as the three
fugitives started for the gate.
Amos swore. “I should have cut his throat.”
They ran to the gate, and as they entered the street, Amos grabbed
at Arutha. A group of men were running down the street toward them. Arutha and
his companions fled the opposite way, ducking into a dark alley.
Hurrying along between the blank walls of two buildings, they cut
across a busy street, overturning several pushcarts, and ducked into another
alley, the cart owners’ curses following. They continued to run, the sounds of
pursuit never far behind, following a twisting maze of back alleys and side
streets through darkened Krondor.
Turning a corner, they found themselves intersecting a long narrow
street, little more than an alley, flanked on both sides by tall buildings Amos
rounded the corner first and motioned for Arutha and Martin to halt. In low
tones, he said, “Martin, hurry down to the corner and take a look around.
Arutha, go the other way.” He pointed toward a spot where dim light could be
seen. “I’ll stand watch here. If we become separated, make for the ship. It’ll
be a desperate chance, breaking the blockade, but should you win free, have
Vasco make for Durbin. Your gold will buy you enough protection there to get
the ship refitted and you back to Crydee. Now go.”
Arutha and Martin ran down the street in opposite directions, and
Amos stood watch behind. Abruptly shouts came down the narrow street, and
Arutha looked back. At the other end of the street he could see the dim figure
of Martin struggling with several men. He started back, but Amos shouted, “Go
on I’ll help him. Get away!”
Arutha hesitated, then resumed his run toward the distant light. He
was panting when he reached the corner and nearly skidded to a halt as he
entered a well-traveled, brightly lit avenue. From carts decorated with
lanterns, hawkers sold their wares to passing citizens out for a stroll after
supper. The weather was mild—there looked to be little chance of snow this
winter—and large numbers of people were about. From the condition of the
buildings and the fashions of those in the area, Arutha knew he was in a more
prosperous section of the city.
Arutha stepped into the street and forced himself to walk at a
leisurely pace. He turned and made a display of examining a garment seller’s
wares as several men appeared from the street he had just fled. He tugged a
garish red cloak from among the goods and swirled it about his shoulder,
pulling the hood over his head. “Here now, what do you think you’re doing?”
asked a dried-faced old man in a reedy whisper.
Affecting a nasal voice, Arutha said, “My good man, you don’t expect
me to purchase a garment without seeing if it fits?”
Suddenly confronted by a buyer, the man became unctuously friendly.
“Oh no, certainly, sir.” Looking at Arutha in the ill-tailored cloak, he said,
“It’s a perfect fit, sir, and the color suits you well, if I may say.”
Arutha chanced a glance at his pursuers. The man called Radburn
stood at the corner, blood dried upon his face and his nose swollen, but still
able to direct his men’s search. Arutha adjusted the cloak, a great, cumbersome
thing that hung nearly to the ground. In a display of fussiness, he said, “You
think so? I wouldn’t care to appear at court looking like a vagabond.”
“Oh, court is it, sir? Well, it’s just the thing, mark me It adds a
certain elegance to your appearance.”
“How much is it?” Arutha saw Radburn’s men walking through the busy
crowd, some looking into each tavern and storefront as they passed, others
hurrying on to other destinations. More followed from the smaller street, and
Radburn spoke quickly to them. He set some to watching those in the street,
then turned and led the rest back the way they had come.
“It’s the finest cloth made in Ran, sir,” said the seller. “It was
brought at great expense from the shore of the Kingdom Sea. I couldn’t let it
go for less than twenty golden sovereigns.”
Arutha blanched, and for a moment was so struck by the outrageous
price he nearly forgot himself. “Twenty!” He lowered his voice as a passing
member of Radburn’s company threw him a quick glance “My dear man,” he said,
returning to character, “I seek to purchase a cloak, not establish an annuity
for your grandchildren.” Radburn’s man turned away and disappeared into the
press of the crowd. “It is rather a plain wrap, after all. I should think two
sovereigns more than sufficient.”
The man looked stricken “Sir, you seek to beggar me I couldn’t think
of parting with it for a sum of less than eighteen sovereigns.”
They haggled for another ten minutes, and Arutha finally departed
with the cloak for the price of eight sovereigns and two silver royals. It was
double the price he should have paid, but the searchers had ignored a man
haggling with a street seller, and escaping detection was worth the price a
hundred times over.
Arutha kept alert for signs he was being watched as he made his way
along the street. Unfortunately he knew little of Krondor and had no idea where
he was after the flight. He kept to the busier part of the street, staying
close to larger groups, seeking to blend in.
Arutha saw a man standing at the corner, seemingly idling the night
away, but clearly watching those who passed. Arutha looked around and saw a
tavern on the other side of the street, marked by a brightly painted sign of a
white dove. He quickly crossed the street, keeping his face turned away from
the man at the corner, and approached the doorway of the tavern. As he reached
for the door, a hand gripped his cloak, and Arutha spun, his sword halfway out
of its scabbard. A boy of about thirteen stood there, wearing a simple,
oft-patched tunic and men’s trousers cut off at the knees. He had dark hair and
eyes, and his smudged face was set in a grin. “Not there, sir,” he said with a
merry note in his voice.
Arutha slipped his sword back into the scabbard and fell into
character. “Begone, boy. I’ve no time for beggars or panderers, even those of
limited stature.”
The boy’s grin broadened “If you insist, but there are two of them
in there.”
Arutha dropped his nasal accent. “Who?”
“The men who chased you from the side street.”
Arutha glanced about. The boy appeared alone. He looked into the
boy’s eyes and said, “What are you talking about?”
“I saw how you acted. Quick on your feet, sir. But they’ve blanketed
the area, and you’ll not be slipping by them yourself.”
Arutha leaned forward “Who are you, boy?”
With a toss of his ragged hair he said, “Name’s Jimmy I work
hereabouts. I can get you out. For a fee, of course.”
“And what makes you think I wish to get out?”
“Don’t play the fool with me, like you did with the merchant, sir.
You need to get clear of somebody who’s likely to pay me to show him where you
are. I’ve run afoul of Radburn and his men before, so you have more of my
sympathy than he’s likely to get. As long as you can bid more for your freedom
than he will for your capture.”
“You know Radburn?”
Jimmy grinned. “Not so as I’d care to admit, but yes, we’ve had
dealings before.”
Arutha was struck by the boy’s cool manner, not what he would have
expected from the boys he knew back home. Here stood an old hand at negotiating
the treacherous byways of the city. “How much?”
“Radburn will pay me twenty-five gold to find you, fifty if he
especially wants your skin.”
Arutha took out his com pouch and handed it to the boy. “Over a
hundred sovereigns in there, boy. Get me out of here and to the docks, and I’ll
double it.”
The boy’s eyes flickered wide a moment, but he never lost his grin.
“You must have offended someone with a lot of influence. Come along.”
He darted away so quickly, Arutha almost lost him in the heavy
crowd. The boy moved with the ease of experience through the press, while
Arutha had to struggle to keep from jostling people in the street.
Jimmy led him into an alley, several blocks away. When they were a
short way down the alley, Jimmy stopped. “Better toss that cloak. Red’s not my
favorite color for looking inconspicuous.” When Arutha had pitched the cloak
into an empty barrel, Jimmy said, “You’ll be pointed at the docks in a moment.
If someone tumbles onto us, you’re on your own. But for that other hundred
gold, I’ll try to see you all the way.”
They worked their way to the end of the alley, apparently seldom
used from the heavy accumulation of trash and discarded objects, packing
crates, broken furniture, and nameless goods against the walls around them
Jimmy pulled aside a crate, revealing a hole. “This should put us outside
Radburn’s net, at least I hope so,” said Jimmy.
Arutha found he had to crouch to follow the boy through the small passage
From the rank odor in the tunnel, it was clear something had crawled in here to
die fairly recently. As if reading his mind, Jimmy said, “We toss a dead cat in
here every few days. Keeps others from sticking their noses too far in.”
“We?” said Arutha.
Jimmy ignored the question and kept moving Soon they exited into
another alley overburdened with trash. At the mouth of the alley, Jimmy
motioned for Arutha to stop and wait. He hurried along the dark street, then
returned at a run. “Radburn’s men. They must have known you’d head for the
harbor.”
“Can we slip past them?”
“No chance. They’re as thick as lice on a beggar.” The boy took off
in the opposite direction down the street they had entered from the alley.
Arutha followed as Jimmy turned up another small byway. Arutha hoped he hadn’t
bargained wrongly in trusting the street boy. After a few minutes of traveling,
Jimmy stopped. “I know a place you can hole up awhile, until I can find some
others to help get you to your ship. But it’ll cost you more than a hundred.”
“Get me to my ship before dawn, and I’ll give you whatever you ask.”
Jimmy grinned. “I can ask a lot.” He regarded Arutha for a moment
longer, then with a curt nod of his head led off. Arutha followed, and they
wound their way deeper into the city. The sounds of people in the streets fell
off, and Arutha judged they were moving into an area less well traveled at
night. The buildings around them showed they were heading into another poor
area of the city, though not close to the docks as far as Arutha could tell.
Several sharp turns through dark, narrow alleys, and Arutha was
completely lost. Abruptly Jimmy turned and said, “We’re there.” He pulled open
a door in an otherwise blank wall and stepped through. Arutha climbed a long
flight of stairs after him.
Jimmy led him down a long hall at the top of the stairs, to a door.
The boy opened it and indicated Arutha should enter. Arutha took a single step,
then halted as he discovered three sword points leveled at his stomach.
25
ESCAPE
The man motioned for Arutha to enter.
He sat behind a small table facing the door. Leaning forward into
the light of the small lamp on the table, he said, “Please come in.” The light
revealed his face was covered with pockmarks and he possessed a large hooked
nose. His eyes never strayed from Arutha as the three swordsmen stepped back,
allowing the Prince entrance. Arutha hesitated as he saw the bound and
unconscious forms of Amos and Martin slumped against the wall. Amos groaned and
stirred, but Martin remained motionless.
Arutha measured the distance between himself and the three
swordsmen, his hand hovering near the hilt of his rapier. Any notion of leaping
back and drawing his sword vanished when he felt a dagger point pressed against
the small of his back. A hand snaked around from behind and relieved him of his
sword.
Jimmy then stepped around the Prince, examining the rapier as he
carefully hid his dagger in the folds of his loose tunic. He grinned broadly.
“I’ve seen a few of these about. It’s light enough I could use it.”
Dryly Arutha said, “Under the circumstances, it might not be
inappropriate to make it my legacy to you. Use it in good health.”
The pock-faced man said, “You keep your wits about you,” as Arutha
was ushered farther into the room by a swordsman. Another put away his weapon
and tied Arutha’s arms behind him. He was then roughly thrust into a chair,
opposite the man who had spoken, who continued, “My name is Aaron Cook, and
you’ve already met Jimmy the Hand.” He indicated the boy. “These others prefer
to remain anonymous at present.”
Arutha looked at the boy. “Jimmy the Hand?”
The boy executed a fair imitation of a courtly bow, and Cook said,
“The finest pickpocket in Krondor and well on his way to becoming the finest
thief as well, should you be inclined to believe his self-appraisal.
“Now, to matters of business. Who are you?”
Arutha related the story of being Amos’s business partner, calling
himself Arthur, and Cook studied him stoically. With a sigh, he nodded, and one
of the silent men stepped forward and struck Arutha across the mouth. Arutha’s
head snapped back from the force of the blow, and his eyes watered. “Friend
Arthur,” said Aaron Cook, shaking his head, “we can go about this interview two
ways. I’d advise you not to make the choice of the difficult way. It will prove
most unpleasant, and we shall know what we want in the end in any event. So
please consider your answer carefully.” He stood and came around the table.
“Who are you?”
Arutha began to repeat his story, and the man who struck him stepped
forward again, ending his answer with another ringing blow. The man called Cook
leaned down so his face was level with Arutha’s Arutha blinked to clear the
tears from his eyes, and Cook said, “Friend, tell us what we ask. Now, so as
not to waste time”—he pointed at Amos —“that he is the captain of your ship we
concede, but you his business partner . . . I think not. That other fellow
played the part of a hunter from the mountains in several taverns about town,
and I think it no mummery; he has the look of one who knows mountains better
than city streets, a look hard to forge.” He studied Arutha “But you you are a
soldier at least, and your rich boots and fine sword mark you a gentleman. But
I think there is more.” Looking into Arutha’s eyes, he said, “Now, why is Jocko
Radburn so intent upon finding you?”
Arutha looked Aaron Cook squarely in the eyes. “I don’t know.”
The man who had struck Arutha began to step forward again, but Cook
held up his hand. “That may be true. You’ve been something of a fool, the way
you’ve been popping up here and there, hanging around the gates of the palace,
playing the innocent. You are either poor spies, or poor fools, but there is no
doubt you’ve aroused the interest of the Viceroy’s men, and therefore ours.”
“Who are you?”
Cook ignored the question “Jocko Radburn’s the senior officer in the
Viceroy’s secret police. Despite that open, honest face on him, Radburn’s one
of the most steel-nerved, immovable bastards the gods ever graced this world
with. He’d happily cut his grandmother’s heart out if he thought the old girl
was making free with state secrets. The fact he put in a personal appearance
shows he, at the very least, judges you potentially important.
“We first learned three men were nosing about town a day or two
after you arrived, and when our people heard some of Radburn’s men were keeping
an eye upon you, we decided to do likewise. When they began offering small
bribes for information about you three, we became especially interested. We
were content to simply keep watching you, waiting until you showed your hand.
“But when Jocko and his men showed at the Sailor’s Ease, we were
forced to act. We snatched those two from under Jocko’s nose, but Jocko and his
bully boys came down the alley between you and us, so we hurried them away.
Jimmy’s finding you was a bit of luck, for he didn’t know we were ready to
bring you in.” He nodded approval to the boy. “You did right bringing him
here.”
Jimmy laughed. “I was on the rooftops, watching the whole thing. I
knew you wanted him in as soon as you grabbed the other two.”
One of the men swore. “You’d better not have been trying for a boost
without writ from the Nightmaster, boy.”
Cook raised his hand, and the man fell silent. “It will not hurt for
you to know that some here are Mockers, others are not, but we are all united
in an undertaking of great importance. Mark me well, Arthur. Your only hope of
leaving here alive rests upon our being satisfied you do not endanger that
undertaking I spoke of. It may be Radburn’s interest in you is only
coincidental to his interest in other matters. Or there may be a weaving of
threads here, some pattern as yet unseen. In any event, we shall have the
truth, and when we are satisfied with what you have told us, we shall set you
free—perhaps even aid you and your companions—or we shall kill you. Now start
at the beginning. Why did you come to Krondor?”
Arutha considered. There was little but pain to be gained by lying,
yet he was not willing to tell the entire truth. That these men were not
working with Guy’s men wasn’t proved. This could be a ploy, with Radburn in the
next room listening to every word. He decided what part of the truth to tell.
“I’m an agent for Crydee. I came to speak to Prince Erland and Lord Dulanic in
person, to ask for aid against a coming Tsurani offensive. When we learned Guy
du Bas-Tyra was in possession of the city, we decided to gauge the temper of
things before committing ourselves to a course of action.”
Cook listened closely, then said, “Why should an emissary of Crydee
slip into the city? Why not come in with banners flying and receive a state
welcome?”
“Because Black Guy’d just as soon toss him into a cell as not, you
stupid bastard.”
Cook’s head snapped around: Amos was sitting up against the wall,
groggily shaking his head. “I think you busted my skull, Cook.”
Aaron Cook looked hard at Amos. “You know me?”
“Aye, you wooden-headed sea rat, I know you. I know you well enough
to know we’re not speaking another word until you go fetch Trevor Hull.”
Aaron Cook rose from the table, an uncertain expression on his face.
He motioned to one of the men by the door, who also looked discomforted by
Amos’s words. The man nodded to Cook and left the room. Minutes later he
returned, followed by another man, tall, with a shock of grey hair, but still
powerful looking. A ragged scar ran from his forehead through his right eye,
which was milky white, and down his cheek. He took a long look at Amos, then
laughed aloud and pointed at the captives. “Untie them.”
Amos was lifted by two men, then untied. As his ropes were loosened,
he said, “I thought they’d hung you years ago, Trevor.”
The man clapped Amos on the back. “And I you, Amos.”
Cook looked questioningly at the new arrival, while Arutha was
untied and Martin revived with a cup of water thrown in his face. The man
called Trevor Hull looked at Cook and said, “Have your wits fled, man? He’s
grown a beard and cut his famous flowing locks—lost some on top and put on a
few pounds as well—but he’s still Amos Trask.”
Cook studied Amos a moment longer, then his eyes widened. “Captain
Trenchard?”
Amos nodded, and Arutha looked on in astonishment. Even in far
Crydee they had heard of Trenchard the Pirate, the Dagger of the Sea. He’d had
a short career, but a famous one. It was reputed even Quegan war galleys had
turned and fled at sight of Trenchard’s fleet, and there wasn’t a town along
the coasts of the Bitter Sea that did not fear his marauders.
Aaron Cook extended his hand. “Sorry, Captain. It’s been so many
years since we last met. We couldn’t be certain you weren’t part of some plot
of Radburn’s to locate us.”
“Who are you?” asked Arutha.
“All in good time,” answered Hull. “Come.”
One of the men helped the still-groggy Martin to his feet, and Cook
and Hull led them to a more comfortable room, with chairs enough for all. When
all were sitting, Amos said, “This old rogue is Trevor Hull, Captain White-eye,
master of the Red Raven.”
Hull shook his head sadly. “No longer, Amos. Burned off of Elarial
she was, three years ago, by imperial Keshian cutters. My mate Cook here and a
few of my boys got to shore with me, but most of the crew went down with the
Red Raven. We made our way back to Durbin, but things are changing, what with
the wars and all. Came to Krondor a year ago and have been working here since.”
“Working? You, Trevor?”
The man smiled, his scar wrinkling, as he said, “Smuggling, in fact.
That’s what brought us together with the Mockers. Not much can happen in
Krondor along those lines without the Upright Man’s permission.
“When the Viceroy first came to Krondor, we started running up
against Jocko Radburn and his secret police. He’s been a thorn in our side from
the first. This business of guards sneaking about dressed as common folk,
there’s just no honor in it.”
Amos muttered, “I knew I should have cut his throat when I had the
chance. Next time I won’t be so damned civilized.”
“Slowing down a bit, Amos? Well, a week ago we got word from the
Upright Man he had a precious cargo to leave the city. We’ve had to bide our
time until the right ship was ready. Radburn’s very anxious to find that cargo
before it leaves Krondor. So, you see, it’s a most delicate situation, for we
can’t ship it until the blockade’s lifted, or we find a blockade captain we can
bribe. When we first caught wind you three were asking questions, we thought it
might be some grand plot of Jocko’s to find that cargo. Now we’ve cleared the
air, I’d like to hear the answer to Cook’s question explained. Why should an
emissary from Crydee fear discovery by the Viceroy’s men?”
“Listening in, were you?” Amos turned to Arutha, who nodded. “This
is no simple emissary, Trevor. Our young friend is Prince Arutha, son of Duke
Borric.”
Aaron Cook’s eyes went wide, and the man who struck Arutha paled.
Trevor Hull nodded understanding. “The Viceroy’d pay handsomely to get his
hands upon the son of his old enemy, especially when it came time to press his
claim in the Congress of Lords.”
“What claim?” said Arutha.
Hull leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees. “You’d not
know, of course. We only heard the news a few days ago ourselves, and it’s not
common knowledge. Still, I’m not free to speak plainly without permission.”
He rose and left the room. Arutha and Amos exchanged questioning
glances, then Arutha looked toward Martin. “Are you all right?”
Martin carefully touched his head. “I’ll recover, though they must
have hit me with a tree.”
One of the men grinned in a friendly, almost apologetic way. Patting
a wooden billy in his belt sash, he said, “He’s a hard one to bring down,
that’s for certain.”
Hull returned to the room, followed by another. The men in the room
rose, and Arutha, Amos, and Martin slowly followed suit. Behind Hull came a
young girl no more than sixteen years of age. Arutha was instantly struck by
the promise of beauty in her features: large sea-green eyes, straight and
delicate nose, and slightly full mouth. A faint hint of freckles dusted her
otherwise fair skin. She was tall and slender and walked with poise. She came
across the room to Arutha, rose up on tiptoes, and kissed him lightly upon the
cheek. Arutha looked surprised at this gesture and watched as she stepped back
with a smile upon her lips. She wore a simple dress of dark blue, and her
red-brown hair hung loosely to her shoulders. After a second she said, “Of
course, how silly I am. You’d not know me. I saw you when you were last in
Krondor, but we never met. I’m your cousin Anita, Erland’s daughter.”
Arutha stood thunderstruck. Besides the girl’s disquieting effect
upon his composure, with her winning smile and clear gaze, he was doubly
surprised to find her in this company of brigands. He sat down slowly, and she
took a chair. So used to the informality of his father’s court, he was somewhat
surprised when she gave the others permission to sit.
“How . . . ?” Arutha began.
Amos interrupted. “The Upright Man’s precious cargo?”
Hull nodded, and the Princess spoke Her pretty face clouded with
emotion. “When the Duke of Bas-Tyra came with orders from the King, Father
greeted him warmly and offered no resistance. At first Father did all he could
to aid him in taking command of the army, but when he heard of the things Guy
was doing with his secret police and press gangs, Father protested. Then when
Lord Barry died and Guy put Lord Jessup in command of the fleet over Father’s
objections, and Lord Dulanic disappeared so mysteriously, Father sent a letter
to the King, demanding Guy’s recall. Guy intercepted the message and ordered us
kept under guard in a wing of the palace. Then Guy came to my room one night.”
She shuddered Arutha nearly spat when he said, “You don’t have to
speak of such things.” The sudden rage startled the girl.
“No,” she said, “it was nothing like that. He was very proper,
nearly formal. He simply informed me we were to be wed, and that King Rodric
was to name him heir to the throne of Krondor. If anything, he seemed irritated
by the bother of having to take such a course.”
Arutha slammed his fist against the wall behind. “That tears it! Guy
means to have Erland’s crown and Rodric’s after. He means to be King.”
Anita looked at Arutha shyly. “So it seems. Father’s not well and
couldn’t resist, though he refused to sign the proclamation of betrothal. Guy
had him taken to the dungeon until he would sign.” Her eyes teared as she said,
“Father cannot live long in such cold and damp quarters. I fear he will die
before agreeing to Guy’s wishes.” She continued to speak, her face a mask of
control, though tears ran down her cheeks as she talked of her mother and
father’s imprisonment. “Then one of my ladies told me a maid knew some people
in the city who might be willing to help.”
Trevor Hull said, “With your permission, Highness. One of the girls
in the palace is sister to a Mocker. With everything up in the wind, the
Upright Man decided it might be to his advantage to take a hand. He arranged to
smuggle the Princess out of the palace the night of Guy’s departure, and she’s
been here since.”
Amos said, “Then the rumor we overheard before we fled the Sailor’s
Ease about there being a hunt on for a ‘royal cousin’ was about Anita, not
Arutha.”
Hull pointed at the Prince. “It may be Radburn and his boys still
have no idea who you are. Most likely, they jumped on you in the hope you’d
turn out to be party to the Princess’s escape. We’re almost certain the Viceroy
has no idea she’s gone from the palace, for she fled after he rode out. I
expect Radburn is desperate to get her back before his master returns from the
war with Kesh.”
Arutha studied the Princess, feeling a strong desire to do something
on her behalf, a desire beyond the consideration of foiling Guy. He shunted
aside the strange tug of emotions. He asked Trevor Hull, “Why does the Upright
Man wish to contend with Guy? Why isn’t he turning her in for a reward?”
Trevor Hull looked to Jimmy the Hand, who answered with a grin. “My
master, a most perceptive man, saw at once his own interests were best served
by aiding the Princess. Since Erland has been Prince of Krondor, the business
of the city runs smoothly, an environment conducive to the success of my
master’s many undertakings. Stability profits us all, you see. With Guy here,
we’ve his secret police about, upsetting the normal commerce of our guild. And
whatever else, we are most loyal subjects of His Highness the Prince of
Krondor. If he does not wish his daughter to marry the Viceroy, we do not wish
it as well.” With a laugh, Jimmy added, “Besides, the Princess has agreed to
pay twenty-five thousand gold sovereigns to our master should the guild get her
free of Krondor, to be delivered when her father returns to power, or some
other fate places her upon the throne.”
Arutha took Anita’s hand and said, “Well, cousin, there is nothing
else to be done. We must take you to Crydee at the first chance.”
Anita smiled, and Arutha found himself smiling back Trevor Hull
said, “As I said before, we were waiting for the right opportunity to smuggle
her from the city.” He turned to Amos. “You’re the man for this, Amos. There’s
no better blockade runner on the Bitter Sea—excepting myself, of course, but
I’ve other matters to take care of here.”
Trask said, “We can’t leave for a few weeks yet. Even if the
blockade was lifted, my ship’s in desperate need of refitting. And if we left
now, we’d have to sail about until the weather in the straits breaks. With
Jessup’s fleet at sea ambush, that would be risky. I’d rather hide here awhile,
then a quick run west, through the straits, and up the Far Coast with no
delay.”
Hull slapped him on the shoulder. “Good, that will give us time.
I’ve heard of your ship; the boys tell me it’s little better than a barge.
We’ll find you another. I’ll send word to your men when the time is right.
Radburn’ll most likely leave your crew alone, hoping you’ll turn up. We’ll slip
them aboard the new ship a few at a time at night and replace them with my own
boys, so Radburn’s men won’t notice anything unusual aboard.”
He turned to Arutha. “You’ll be safe enough here, Highness. This
building is one of many owned by the Mockers, and none will get close without
our having ample warning When the time is right, we’ll get you all free of the
city. Now we’ll take you to your room, so you may rest.”
Arutha, Martin, and Amos were shown to a room down the hall from the
one where they had met Anita, while the Princess returned to her own quarters.
The room they entered was a simple affair, but clean. All three men were tired
Martin fell heavily on one pallet and was quickly asleep. Amos lowered himself
slowly, and Arutha watched him for a moment. With a slight smile he said, “When
you first came to Crydee, I thought you a pirate.”
Struggling to remove a boot, Amos said, “In truth, I tried to leave
that behind me, Highness.” He laughed “Perhaps it was the gods working their
revenge upon me, but you know, for fifteen years, man and boy, I was a corsair
and a captain, then when I try my hand at honest trading for the first time, my
ship is captured and burned, my crew slaughtered, and I find myself beached as
far from the heart of the Kingdom as you can get and still be in it.”
Arutha lay down upon his pallet. “You’ve been a good counselor, Amos
Trask, and a brave companion. Your help over the years has earned you a good
deal of forgiveness for past wrongdoings, but”—he shook his head—“Trenchard the
Pirate! Gods, man, there’s so much to forgive.”
Amos yawned and stretched. “When we return to Crydee, you can hang
me, Arutha, but for now please have the good grace to keep silent and put out
the light. I am getting too old for this foolishness. I need some sleep.”
Arutha reached over and covered the wick of the lamp with a snuff.
He lay back in the darkness, images and thoughts crowding his mind. He thought
of his father and what he would do were he here, then wondered how his brother
and sister were. Thoughts of Carline caused him to think of Roland, and to
speculate how the fortifications of Jonril were progressing. He forced aside
the buzzing thoughts and let his mind drift. Then before sleep took him, he
remembered Anita, as she rose up on tiptoes to kiss his cheek, and felt again a
not entirely comfortable churning within. A faint smile crossed his lips as he
fell asleep.
Anita clapped appreciatively as Arutha turned aside the point of
Jimmy’s sword. The boy thief blushed at his awkwardness, but Arutha said, “That
was better.”
He and Jimmy were practicing basic swordwork, Jimmy using a rapier
purchased with some of the gold Arutha had given him. For a month they had
passed the time this way, and Anita had taken to watching. Whenever the
Princess was around, the usually brash Jimmy the Hand became subdued, and he
blushed furiously whenever she spoke to him. Arutha was now certain the boy
thief was afflicted by the worst sort of infatuation for the Princess, only
three years older than himself. Arutha appreciated Jimmy’s distress, for he
also found the girl’s presence a distraction. Still in the first years of
womanhood, she nevertheless carried herself with court-bred grace, had wit and
education and showed the promise of mature beauty. Arutha found it easier to
turn his thoughts to other topics than the Princess.
The basement where they worked on their swordplay was damp and
poorly ventilated, so it soon became close and humid. Arutha said, “That’s
enough for today, Jimmy. You’re still impatient to close, and that can be
fatal. You’ve plenty of speed, and it’s good you learn young, but you lack arm
strength to bash about as many older men do; with the rapier, that can also
prove fatal. Remember, the edge is for cutting—”
“—and the point is for killing,” finished Jimmy, with a
self-conscious grin. “I can see how you’d have to be cautious against a man
with a broadsword. He could break your blade if you tried to block instead of
parry, but what do you do if one of those alien warriors comes at you with that
greatsword you described?”
Arutha laughed “You find out who can run faster.” Anita’s laughter
joined with Arutha’s and Jimmy’s. Arutha said, “Seriously, you must stay to the
off-hand side. With the big swords, your opponent gets one swing, then you’ve
got an opening—”
The door opened, and Amos walked in with Martin and Trevor Hull.
Amos said, “The worse damn luck—begging the Princess’s pardon. Arutha, the
worst has occurred.”
Arutha wiped the perspiration off his brow with a towel and said,
“Don’t stand there waiting for me to guess. What?”
“News came this morning,” said Hull. “Guy is returning to Krondor.”
“Why?” asked Anita.
Amos said, “It seems our Lord of Bas-Tyra rode into Shamata and ran
his banner up above the walls. The Keshian commander had the good grace to
mount one more attack, for the sake of form, then nearly gave himself a
ruptured gut racing back home. He left a handful of minor nobles haggling with
Guy’s lieutenants over the conditions of armistice until a formal treaty can be
drawn up between the King and the Keshian Empress. There’s only one reason Guy
can be hurrying back here.”
Quietly Anita said, “He knows I’ve escaped.”
Trevor Hull said, “Yes, Highness. This Black Guy’s a wily one. He
must have a spy in Radburn’s company. It appears he doesn’t even trust his own
secret police overmuch. Luckily we still have people inside the palace loyal to
your father, or we would never have learned of this turn.”
Arutha sat down near the Princess. “Well, then we must soon be gone.
It’s either sail for home or toward Ylith to reach Father.”
Amos said, “Looking at the choices, it seems there is little to
recommend one course over the other. Both have dangers and advantages.”
Martin looked at the girl, then said, “Though I don’t think the
Duke’s war camp any place for a young woman.”
Amos sat down by Arutha. “Your presence in Crydee is not vital, at
least not for now. Fannon and Gardan are able men, and should the need arise, I
think your sister would prove no mean commander. They should be able to keep
things under control as well as you.”
Martin said, “But you must ask yourself this: what will your father
do when he learns Guy does not simply rule in Krondor as Erland’s aide but
holds the city completely in his power, that he’s sending no aid to the Far
Coast, and that he means to have the throne?”
Arutha nodded vigorously “You are right, Martin You know Father
well. It will mean civil war.” There was sorrow on his face. “He’ll withdraw
half the Armies of the West and march down the coast to Krondor and not stop
until Guy’s head is on a pole before the city’s gates. Then the course will be
set. He’ll have to turn east and march against Rodric. He’d never wish the
crown for himself, but once begun, he cannot stop short of total victory or
defeat. But we’d lose the West to the Tsurani in time. Brucal couldn’t hold
them long with only half an army.”
Jimmy said, “This civil war sounds a nasty sort of business.”
Arutha sat forward. Wiping his forehead, he looked up from under
damp locks. “We’ve not had one in two hundred fifty years, since the first
Borric slew his half brother, Jon the Pretender. Compared to what this would
be, with all the East marshaled against the West, that was only a skirmish.”
Amos looked at Arutha with concern upon his face. “History’s not my
strong suit, but it seems to me you’d do best by your father keeping him in
ignorance of this turn of events until the Tsurani spring offensive is
finished.”
Arutha exhaled a long, low breath. “There’s nothing else for it. We
know no aid will be forthcoming for Crydee. I can best decide what to do when I
return. Perhaps in council with Fannon and the others we can work out some
defense for when the Tsurani come.” His tone was one of near-resignation.
“Father will learn of Guy’s plotting in due time, his sort of news is too hard
to keep. The best we can hope for is he’ll lot hear of it until after the
Tsurani offensive. Perhaps by then the situation will have changed.” It was
obvious from his tone he didn’t think that likely.
Martin said, “It may be the Tsurani will choose to march against
Elvandar, or carry the battle to your father. Who can say?”
Arutha leaned back and became aware of Anita’s hand resting gently
upon his arm. “What a choice we have,” he said quietly. “To face the possible
loss of Crydee and the Far Coast to the Tsurani or to plunge the Kingdom into
civil war. Truly the gods must hate the Kingdom.”
Amos stood. “Trevor tells me he has a ship. We can sail in a few
days. With luck, the straits will be clearing when we arrive.”
Lost in the gloom of his own personal defeat, Arutha barely heard
him. He had come to Krondor in such confidence. He would win Erland’s support
for his cause, and Crydee would be rescued from the Tsurani. Now he faced an
even more desperate situation than had he stayed home. Everyone left him alone,
save for Anita, who spent silent minutes just sitting at his side.
***
Dark
figures moved quietly toward the waterfront. Trevor Hull led a dozen men with
Arutha and his companions down the silent street. They hugged the walls of the
buildings, and every few yards Arutha would cast a backward glance to see how
Anita fared. She returned his concern with brave smiles, faintly perceived in the
predawn darkness.
Arutha knew that over a hundred men moved down adjacent streets,
sweeping the area of the city watch and Radburn’s agents. The Mockers had
turned out in force so Arutha and the others could safely quit the city. Hull
had carried word the night before that for a considerable cost the Upright Man
had arranged for one of the blockade ships to “drift” off station. Since
learning the true situation, including Guy’s plan to become Prince of Krondor,
the Upright Man had given over his not inconsiderable resources to aid the
Prince’s and Anita’s escape. Anita wondered if anyone outside the Guild of
Thieves would ever learn the mysterious leader’s true identity. From what
chance remarks Arutha had overheard, it seemed only a few within the Mockers
knew who he was.
With Guy on his way back to the city, Jocko Radburn’s men had
increased their searching to a near-frenzied pitch Curfew had been instituted
and homes randomly entered and searched in the middle of the night. Every known
informant in the city, and many of the beggars and rumormongers as well, had
been dragged off to the dungeons and questioned, but whatever else Radburn’s
men accomplished, they did not learn where the Princess was hidden. No matter
how much the denizens of the street feared Radburn, they feared the Upright Man
more.
Anita
heard Hull speaking quietly to Amos. “She’s a blockade runner, called the Sea
Swift, and she’s well named. There’s no faster ship left in the harbor,
with all the big warships out with Jessup’s fleet. You should make good time
westward. The prevailing winds are northerly, so you’ll have a broad reach most
of the way.”
Amos said, “Trevor, I’ve sailed the Bitter Sea a bit I know how the
winds blow this time of year as well as any man.”
Hull
snorted “Well then, as you say. Your men and the Prince’s gold are all safely
aboard, and Radburn’s watchdogs don’t seem to have a notion. They still watch
the Wind of Dawn like a mouser a rathole, but the Sea Swift is left
alone. We’ve arranged for false papers to be posted with a broker, announcing
she’s for sale, so even if there was no blockade, they’d not imagine she’d be
leaving harbor for some time.”
They reached the docks and hurried along to a waiting longboat.
There were muffled noises, and Arutha knew the Mockers and Trevor’s smugglers
were disposing of Radburn’s watchmen.
Then to the rear, shouts erupted. The clamor of steel broke the
still of the morning, and Arutha heard Hull shout, “To the boat!”
The pounding of boots upon the wood of the docks set up a racket as
Mockers came swarming out of nearby streets, intercepting whoever sought to cut
off the escape.
They reached the end of the dock and hurried down the ladder to the
longboat. Arutha waited at the top of the ladder until Anita was safely down,
then turned. As he stepped upon the top rung, he heard the sound of hoofbeats
approaching and saw horses crashing through the press of Mockers, who fell
before the onslaught. Riders in the black and gold of Bas-Tyra hacked down with
swords, to break free of those seeking to slow them.
Martin shouted from the boat, and Arutha hurried down the ladder. As
he reached the boat, a voice from above shouted, “Farewell!”
Anita looked up and saw Jimmy the Hand hanging over the edge of the
dock, a nervous grin on his face. How the boy had managed to join them when
everyone thought him safely back at the hiding place, Arutha couldn’t guess.
Seeing the unarmed boy gave the Prince a momentary start. He unbuckled his
rapier and tossed it high. “Here, use it in good health!” As quick as a
striking serpent, Jimmy caught the scabbard, then vanished.
Sailors pulled hard against the oars, and the boat sped away from
the docks Lanterns appeared upon the wharves as the sound of battle became
louder. Even in the predawn hour, many cries of “What passes?” and “Who goes
there?” came from those set to guard ships and cargo in the harbor. Anita
watched over his shoulder, trying to see what was occurring behind. More
lanterns were being brought, and a fire erupted on the docks. Large bales of
something, stored under canvas, exploded into flames.
Those in the boat could now clearly see the fight. Many of the
thieves were escaping down city streets, or leaping into the icy water of the
harbor. Arutha couldn’t see the grey-haired figure of Trevor Hull anywhere, or
the small one of Jimmy the Hand. Then clearly he saw Jocko Radburn, dressed in
a simple tunic, as before. Radburn came to the edge of the dock and watched the
retreating boat. He pointed at the fleeing longboat with his sword and shouted
something lost in the clamor.
Arutha
turned and saw Anita sitting opposite him, her hood thrown back, her face
clearly visible in the blaze of light from the wharf. Her gaze was caught by
the spectacle on shore, and she seemed unaware of her discovery. Arutha quickly
pulled her cloak hood about her face, snapping her from her glamour, but he
knew the damage was done. He looked back again and saw Radburn ordering his men
after the fleeing Mockers, retreating down the docks. He stood there alone,
then turned away, vanishing in the gloom by the time the longboat reached the Sea
Swift.
As soon
as they were all aboard, Amos’s crew cast mooring lines and scrambled aloft to
set sails. The Sea Swift began to move from the harbor.
The promised gap in the harbor blockade appeared, and Amos set
course for it. He was through before any attempt to cut them off could
materialize, and suddenly they were outside the harbor, in the open sea.
Arutha felt a strange elation as it struck him they were free of
Krondor. Then he heard Amos swear. “Look!”
In the
faint light of the false dawn, Arutha saw the dim shape where Amos pointed. The
Royal Griffin, the three-masted warship they had seen when coming into
the harbor, was at anchor beyond the breakwater, hidden from the view of any in
the city. Amos said, “I thought her out with Jessup’s fleet. Damn that Radburn
for a crafty swine. She’ll be on our wake as soon as he can get aboard.” He
shouted for all sails to be set and then watched the retreating ship behind.
“I’d say a prayer to Ruthia, Highness. If we can steal enough time before she
gets under way, we still may be free. But we’ll need all the good fortune the
Lady of Luck can spare.”
The
morning was clear and cold. Amos and Vasco watched the crew work with approval.
The less experienced men had been replaced by men handpicked by Trevor Hull.
They did their work quickly and well, and the Sea Swift raced westward.
Anita had been shown to a cabin below, and Arutha and Martin stood
on deck with Amos. The lookout reported the horizon clear.
Amos said, “It’s a close thing, Highness. If they’ve gotten that
brute of a ship underway as quickly as possible, we’ve only stole an hour or
two on them. Their captain may choose the wrong course, but seeing as we’re
trying to stay free of Jessup’s sea ambush, they’re a good bet to follow close
to the Keshian coast, and risk running into a Keshian warship, rather than
losing us. I’ll not feel comfortable until we’re two days free of pursuit.
“But even if they started at once, they’ll only make up a small
distance each hour. So until we know for certain they have us in sight, we’d
all do with a bit of rest. Go below, and I’ll call you should anything occur.”
Arutha nodded and left Martin followed. He bid Martin a good rest
and watched as the Huntmaster entered the cabin he shared with Vasco. Arutha
entered his own cabin and stopped when he saw Anita sitting on his bunk. Slowly
he closed the door and said, “I thought you were asleep in your own cabin.”
She shook her head slightly, then suddenly she was across the short
space separating them, her head buried against his chest. Sobs shook her as she
said, “I’ve tried to be brave, Arutha, but I’ve been so frightened.”
He stood there awkwardly for a moment, then gently placed his arms
around her. The self-reliant pose had crumbled, and Arutha now realized how
young she was. Her court training and manners had served her well in
maintaining poise among the rough company of the Mockers over the month, but
her mask could no longer withstand the pressure. He stroked her hair and said,
“You’ll be fine.”
He made other reassuring sounds, not aware of what he was saying,
finding her closeness disturbing. She was young enough to make him judge her
still a girl, but old enough to make him doubt that judgment. He had never been
able to banter lightly with the young women of the court like Roland,
preferring a straightforward conversation, which seemed to leave the ladies
cold. And he had never commanded their attention the way Lyam had, with his
blond good looks and his laughing, easy manner. On the whole women made him
uncomfortable, and this woman—or girl, he couldn’t decide which—more than
usual.
When the tears subsided, he ushered her to the single chair in the
cramped cabin and sat upon the bunk. She sniffed once, then said, “I’m sorry,
this is so unseemly.”
Suddenly Arutha laughed. “What a girl you are!” he said with genuine
affection. “Were I in your place, smuggling myself from the palace, hiding amid
cutthroats and thieves, dodging Radburn’s weasels and all, I’d have fallen
apart long since.”
She drew a small handkerchief from her sleeve and delicately wiped
her nose. Then she smiled at him. “Thank you for saying that, but I think you’d
have done better. Martin has told me a lot about you over the last few weeks,
and you are a rather brave man by his accounts.”
Arutha felt embarrassed by the attention. “The Huntmaster has a
tendency to overboast,” he said, knowing it to be untrue, and changed the
subject. “Amos tells me if we don’t sight that ship for two days, we’ll have
won free.”
She lowered her eyes. “That’s good.”
He leaned forward and brushed a tear from her cheek, then, feeling self-conscious,
pulled his hand away. “You will be safe with us in Crydee, free from Guy’s
plottings. My sister will make you a welcome guest in our house.”
She smiled faintly. “Still, I am worried about Father and Mother.”
Arutha tried his best to lay her fears to rest. “With you safely
gone from Krondor, Guy cannot gain by causing your parents harm. He may still
force a consent to marry from your father, but Erland could do no harm by
giving it now. With you out of reach, it’s a hollow betrothal. Before this is
all done, we shall have an accounting with dear cousin Guy.”
She sighed, and her smile broadened. “Thank you, Arutha. You’ve made
me feel better.”
He rose and said, “Try to sleep. I’ll use your cabin for the time
being.” She smiled as she went to his bunk. He closed the door behind him. All
at once he felt little need for rest and returned to the deck. Amos stood by
the helmsman, eyes fixed astern Arutha came to stand at his side. Amos said,
“There, on the horizon, can you see it?”
Arutha squinted and made out a faint white speck against the blue of
the sky. “Radburn?”
Amos spat over the transom. “My guess. Whatever start we’ve had is
being slowly eaten away. But a stern chase is a long chase, as the saying goes.
If we can keep far enough ahead for the rest of the day, we might blip them at
night—if there’s enough cloud cover so the moons don’t mark our passage.”
Arutha said nothing, watching the faint speck in the distance.
Throughout the day they had watched the pursuing ship grow slowly in
size. At first the tiny speck grew with maddening slowness, but now with
alarming speed. Arutha could see the sails clearly defined, no longer a simple
blur of white, and he could see a hint of a black speck at the masthead,
undoubtedly Guy’s banner.
Amos
regarded the setting sun, directly ahead of the fleeing Sea Swift, then
watched the following ship. He shouted to the watch aloft, “Can you mark her?”
The lookout cried down, “Three-masted warship, Captain.”
Amos
looked at Arutha. “It’s the Royal Griffin. She’ll overtake us at
sundown. If we had but ten more minutes, or some weather to hide in, or she was
just a trifle slower . . .”
“What can you do?”
“Little. In a broad reach she’s faster, fast enough that we can’t
shake her with any sort of fancy sailing. If I tried to turn to a beam reach
just as she came near, I could put a bit of space between us, for we’d both
lose speed, but she’d fall off faster for a time. Then as soon as they trimmed
sails, they’d overhaul us. But that’d send us southward, and there’re some
fairly nasty shoals and reefs along this stretch of coast, not far from here.
It’d be chancy. No, she’ll come in somewhat to the windward. When she’s
alongside, her taller masts will cut our wind, and we’ll slow enough for them
to board without so much as a by-your-leave.”
Arutha watched the closing ship for another half hour Martin came on
deck and watched as the distance between the two ships shrank by a few feet
each minute. Amos held the ship tight to the wind, driving her to the limit of
her speed, but still the other closed.
“Damn!” said Amos, nearly spitting from frustration. “If we were
running east, we’d lose them in the dark, but westward we’ll be outlined
against the evening sky for some time after the sun sets. They’ll still be able
to see us when we’ll be blind to them.”
The sun sank and the chase continued. As the sun neared the horizon,
an angry red ball above the black-green sea, the warship followed by less than
a thousand yards.
Amos said, “They might try to foul the rigging or sweep the decks
clear with those oversized crossbows, but with the girl aboard, Radburn might
not risk it for fear of injuring her.”
Nine
hundred, eight hundred yards, the Royal Griffin came on, rolling
inexorably toward them. Arutha could see figures, small silhouettes in the
rigging, black against sails turned blood-red by the setting sun.
When the pursuing ship was five hundred yards behind, the lookout
shouted, “Fog!”
Amos looked up. “Where away?”
“South by west. A mile or more.”
Amos sped for the bow and Arutha followed. In the distance they
could see the sun setting, while off to the left a hazy white band stretched
across the top of the black sea. “Gods!” shouted Amos. “We have a chance.”
Amos shouted for the helmsman to come to a southwest heading, then
sprinted for the stern, Arutha behind him by a step. When they reached the
stern, they saw the turn had halved the distance between the ships. Amos said,
“Martin, can you mark their helmsman?”
Martin squinted, then said, “It’s a bit gloomy, but he’s not a
difficult mark.”
Amos said, “See if you can take his mind off holding course.”
Martin uncovered his ever-present bow and strung it. He drew out a
cloth-yard shaft and sighted on the pursuing ship. He waited, shifting weight
to compensate for the rolling of the ship, then let fly. Like an angry bird,
the arrow arched over the water, clearing the stern of the following ship.
Martin watched the shaft’s flight, then quietly hummed an “Ah” to
himself. In a single fluid motion he drew out another arrow, fitted it to the
bowstring, pulled, and released. It followed the path of the first, but instead
of clearing the rear of the other ship, struck in the transom, quivering mere
inches from the helmsman’s head.
From
the Sea Swift they could see the Royal Griffin’s helmsman dive
for the deck, releasing the tiller. The warship swung over and began to fall
away. Martin said, “A little gusty for fine shooting,” and sent another arrow
to strike within inches of the first, keeping the tiller unmanned.
Slowly the distance between the ships began to widen, and Amos
turned to his crew. “Pass the word. When I give the order for silence, any man
who drops so much as a whisper is fish bait.”
The warship wobbled behind a minute, then swung back on course
Martin said, “Looks like they’ll keep a little less broad to us, Amos. I can’t
shoot through sails.”
“No, but if you’d oblige me by keeping those lads in the bow away
from their ballista, I’d be thankful I think you irritated Radburn.”
Martin and Arutha saw the ballista crew readying their weapons. The
Huntmaster sent a flurry of arrows at the pursuing ship’s bow, one arrow
following the last before it was halfway to the target. The first struck a man
in the leg, felling him, and the other men dove for cover.
“Fog dead ahead, Captain!” came the shout from above.
Amos turned to the helmsman. “Hard to port.”
The Sea
Swift angled to the south. The Royal Griffin came hard after, now
less than four hundred yards behind. As they changed course, the wind died.
Approaching the fog bank, Amos said to Arutha, “The winds fall off to less than
a bilious fart in there; I’m reefing sails, so the sound of flapping canvas
doesn’t give us away.”
Abruptly they entered a wall of grey, murky fog, quickly becoming
black as the sun sank over the horizon. As soon as the warship vanished from
sight, Amos said, “Reef sails!”
The crew hauled in sails, quickly slowing the ship. Then Amos said,
“Hard to starboard, and pass the word for silence.”
Suddenly the ship became graveyard quiet. Amos turned to Arutha and
whispered, “There’s currents here running to the west. We’ll let them carry us
away from here and hope Radburn’s captain is a Kingdom Sea man.
“Tiller to midships,” he whispered to the helmsman. To Vasco, he
said, “Pass the word to lash down the yards. And those aloft are to remain
motionless.”
Suddenly Arutha became aware of the quiet. After the clamor of the
chase, with the fresh north wind blowing, the ropes and sheets singing in the
yards, the canvas snapping constantly, this muffled fogbank was unnaturally
silent. An occasional groan of a yard moving, or the snap of a rope, were the
only sounds in the murk. Fear dragged the minutes out in the seemingly endless
vigil.
Then,
like an alarm ringing out, they heard voices and the sounds of a ship. Creeking
yards and the snap of canvas as it moved in the faint wind echoed from all
quarters. Arutha couldn’t see anything for minutes, until a faint glow pierced
through the murk to the rear, passing from northeast to southwest, lanterns
from the pursuing Royal Griffin. Every man aboard the Sea Swift,
on deck and above, stayed at his station, afraid to move for the noise that
would carry over the water like a clarion In the distance they could hear a
shout from the other ship, “Quiet, damn it! We can’t hear them for our own
noise!” Then it was suddenly still, save for the rippling of canvas and ropes
from the Royal Griffin.
Time passed without measure as they waited in the blackness. Then
came a hideous grinding sound, ringing like a thunder peal, a tearing, cracking
shriek of wood being crushed. Instantly the cries of men could be heard, shouts
of panic.
Amos turned to the others, half-seen in the darkness. “They’ve
shoaled out. From the sound, they’ve torn the hull right out from under.
They’re dead men.” He ordered the helm put over to the northwest, away from the
shoals and reefs, as sailors hurriedly set sail.
“A bad way to die,” said Arutha.
Martin shrugged, half-lit by the lanterns being brought up on deck.
“Is there a good way? I’ve seen worse.”
Arutha left the quarterdeck, the faint, pitiful cries of the
drowning men still carrying across the water, a grisly counterpoint to Vasco’s
more mundane shout to open the galley. He closed the door to the companion way
and shut out those unhappy sounds. He quietly opened the door to his cabin and
saw Anita lying asleep in the faint light of a shuttered candle. Her red-brown
hair looked nearly black as it lay spread about her head. He started to close
the door, when he heard her say, “Arutha?”
He stepped in, finding her watching him in the dim light. He sat on
the edge of the berth. “Are you well?” he asked.
She stretched and nodded. “I’ve been sleeping soundly.” Her eyes
widened. “Is everything all right?” She sat up, bringing her face close to his.
He reached out and put his arms around her, holding her close.
“Everything is fine. We’re safe now.”
She sighed as she rested her head on his shoulder. “Thank you for
everything, Arutha.”
He said nothing, suddenly caught up in strong emotion, a protective
feeling, a need to keep Anita from harm’s way, to care for her. For long
moments they sat this way, then Arutha regained control over his surging
feelings. Pulling away a little, he said, “You’d be hungry, I’d think.”
She laughed, an honestly merry sound. “Why yes, as a matter of fact
I’m famished.”
He said, “I’ll have something sent down, though it will be plain
fare, I’m afraid, even compared to what you were given by the Mockers.”
“Anything.”
He went on deck and ordered a seaman to the galley to fetch
something for the Princess, then returned to find her combing her hair. “I must
look a mess,” she said.
Arutha suddenly found himself fighting the urge to grin. He didn’t
know why, but he was inexplicably happy. “Not at all,” he said. “You look quite
nice, actually.”
She stopped her combing, and Arutha marveled at how she looked so
young one minute, so womanly the next. She smiled at him. “I remember sneaking
a peek at you during Father’s court dinner, when you were last in Krondor.”
“At me? What in heaven’s name for?”
She seemed to ignore the question “I thought you looked nice then as
well, though a bit stern. There was a boy there who held me up to see. He was
with your father’s party. I’ve forgotten his name, but he said he was
apprentice to a magician.”
Arutha’s smile faded. “That was Pug.”
“What ever happened to him?”
“He was lost in the first year of the war.”
She put aside her comb. “I’m sorry. He was kind to a bothersome
child.”
“He was a kind lad, given to doing brave things, and he was very
special to my sister. She grieved for a long time when he was lost.” Fighting
back a gloomy mood, he said, “Now, why did a Princess of Krondor want to sneak
a look at a distant and rural cousin?”
Anita watched Arutha for a long moment, then said, “I wanted to see
you because our fathers thought it likely we would marry.”
Arutha was stunned. It took all his control to retain his composure.
He pulled over the single chair and sat. Anita said, “Didn’t your father ever
mention it to you?”
For want of anything clever to say, Arutha merely shook his head.
Anita nodded. “I know, the war and all. Things did get quite frantic
soon after you left for Rillanon.”
Arutha swallowed hard, finding his mouth suddenly dry. “Now, what is
this about our fathers’ plans for . . . our marriage?”
Arutha looked at Anita, her green eyes flickering with reflected
candlelight, and something else. “Matters of state, I’m afraid. Father wanted
my claim to the throne bolstered, and Lyam’s too dangerous a match, being the
older. You’d be ideal, for the King would not likely object . . . or wouldn’t
have then, I guess. Now, with Guy set upon having me, I suppose the King is in
agreement.”
Arutha became suddenly irritated, though he wasn’t certain why “And
I suppose we’re not to be consulted in the matter!” His voice rose.
“Please, it’s not my doing.”
“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to offend you. It’s only I’d never given
much thought to marriage, and certainly not for reasons of state.” The wry grin
reappeared. “That is usually the province of eldest sons. We second-born as a
rule are left to get by as best we can, an old widowed countess, or a rich
merchant’s daughter.” He tried to make light of it. “A rich merchant’s
beautiful daughter, if we’re lucky, which we usually are not.” He couldn’t
manage a light tone and sat back Finally he said, “Anita, you will stay at
Crydee as long as need be. It may prove dangerous because of the Tsurani for a
time, but we’ll see that through, somehow, send you down to Carse, perhaps.
When this war is over, you’ll go home in safety; I promise you. And never,
never shall anyone force you to do anything against your will.”
The conversation was interrupted by a knock on the door, and a
seaman entered with a steaming bowl of chowder, hard bread, and salted pork on
a platter. As the seaman placed the food on the table and poured a cup of wine,
Arutha watched Anita. When the sailor was gone, Anita began to eat.
Arutha spoke of little things with Anita, finding himself once more
captivated by the girl’s open, appealing manner. When he finally bade her good
night and closed the door, he was abruptly aware the idea of a state marriage
was causing him only a little discomfort. He went up on deck; the fog had
lifted, and once more they were running before a light breeze. He watched the
stars above and, for the first time in years, whistled a happy air.
Near the helm Martin and Amos shared a wineskin and spoke low. “The
Prince seems unusually cheerful tonight,” said Amos.
Martin blew a puff of smoke from a pipe, which was quickly carried
away on the wind. “And it’s a good bet he’s not even aware why he feels so
cheerful. Anita’s young, but not so young he’ll be able to ignore her
attentions for very long. If she’s made up her mind, and I think she has,
she’ll have him snared within the year. And he’ll be glad to be caught.”
Amos laughed “Though it will be some time before he owns up to it.
I’m willing to wager young Roland is hauled up before the altar sooner than
Anita.”
Martin shook his head. “That’s no wager. Roland’s been caught for
years. Anita has some work to do yet.”
“You’ve never been in love, then, Martin?”
Martin said, “No, Amos. Foresters, like sailors, make poor husbands.
Never at home long and spending days, even weeks, alone. Tends to make them a
brooding, solitary lot. You?”
“Not so you’d notice.” Amos sighed “The older I get, the more I
wonder what I’ve missed.”
“But would you change anything?”
With a chuckle Amos said, “Probably not, Martin, probably not.”
As the ship put in at the quayside, Fannon and Gardan dismounted.
Arutha led Anita down the gangway and introduced her to the Swordmaster of
Crydee.
“We’ve no carriages in Crydee, Highness,” Fantion said to her, “but
I’ll have a cart sent for at once. It’s a long walk to the castle.”
Anita smiled “I can ride, Master Fannon. Any horse that’s not too
spirited will do.”
Fannon ordered two of his men to ride to the stable and bring one of
Carline’s palfreys with a proper sidesaddle. Arutha asked, “What news?”
Fannon led the Prince off a short distance and said, “A late thaw in
the mountains, Highness, so there has been no major Tsurani movement as yet. A
few of the smaller garrisons have been raided, but there is nothing to indicate
a spring offensive here Perhaps they’ll move against your father.”
“I hope you’re right, for Father’s received most of the Krondonan
garrison.” He quickly outlined what had occurred in Krondor, and Fannon
listened closely.
“You did well not sailing for your father’s camp. I think you judged
things correctly. Nothing could prove more disastrous than a major Tsurani
offensive against Duke Borric’s position as he was marshaling to march against
Guy. Let us keep this to ourselves for a time. Your father will learn what has
occurred soon enough, but the more time it takes for him to discover Guy’s
treachery, the more chance we have of keeping the Tsurani at bay another year.”
Arutha looked troubled. “This cannot continue much longer, Fannon.
We must soon see an end to this war.” He turned for a moment and saw
townspeople begin to gawk at the Princess. “Still, we at least have a little
time to come up with something to counter the Tsurani, if we can but think of
it.”
Fannon thought a moment, started to speak, then stopped His
expression became grim, almost painful. Arutha said, “What is it, Swordmaster?”
“I have grave and sorry news to greet you with, Highness. Squire
Roland is dead.”
Arutha was rocked by the news. For a brief moment he wondered if
Fannon made some tasteless joke, for his mind would not accept what he had
heard Finally he said, “What . . . how?”
“News came three days ago from Baron Tolburt, who is most sorely
grieved. The Squire was killed in a Tsurani raid.”
Arutha looked at the castle upon the hill. “Carline?”
“As you would expect. She weeps, but she also bears up well.”
Arutha fought back a choking sensation. His face was a grim mask as
he moved back to Anita, Amos, and Martin. Word had spread that the Princess of
Krondor was upon the wharf. The soldiers who had ridden with Fannon and Gardan
formed a quiet ring around her, keeping the townsfolk at a respectful distance,
while Arutha shared the sad news with Amos and Martin.
Soon the horses arrived and they were in the saddle, riding toward
the castle. Arutha spurred his horse on and was dismounted before the others
had entered the courtyard. Most of the household staff awaited him, and with
little ceremony he shouted to Housecarl Samuel, “The Princess of Krondor is
guesting with us. See rooms are made ready. Escort her to the great hall and
tell her I will join her shortly.”
He hurried through the entrance of the keep, past guards who snapped
to attention as their Prince strode by. He reached Carline’s suite and knocked
upon the door.
“Who is it?” came the soft voice from within.
“Arutha.”
The door flew open, and Carline rushed into her brother’s arms,
holding him tightly. “Oh, I’m so glad you are back. You don’t know how glad.”
She stepped back and looked at him. “I’m sorry. I was going to ride down to
meet you, but I just couldn’t seem to gather myself together.”
“Fannon just told me. I’m so very sorry.”
She regarded him calmly, her face set in an expression of
acceptance. She took him by the hand and led him to her chambers. Sitting upon
a divan, she said, “I always knew it might happen. It was the silliest thing,
you know. Baron Tolburt wrote a very long letter, the poor man. He saw so
little of his son and was stricken.” Tears began to come, and she swallowed
hard, looking away from Arutha. “Roland died . . .”
“You don’t have to tell me.”
She shook her head. “It’s all right. It hurts . . .” Again tears
came, but she spoke through them. “Oh, it hurts, but I’ll get over the pain.
Roland taught me that, Arutha. He knew there were going to be risks, and should
he die, I’d have to keep living my own life. He taught me well I think because
I finally learned how much I loved him, and told him so, I gained the strength
to cope with this loss.
“Roland died trying to save some farmer’s cows.” Through the tears,
she smiled. “Isn’t that like him? He spent the entire winter building up the
fort, and then the first time there’s trouble, it’s some hungry Tsurani trying
to steal some skinny cows Roland went riding out with his men to chase them
away, but got shot by an arrow. He was the only one hurt, and he died before
they could get him back to the fort.” She sighed long. “He was such a jester at
times, I almost think he did it on purpose.”
She began to weep, and Arutha watched in silence. Quickly she
regained control over herself and said, “No good comes from this, you know.”
She rose and looked out a window and said, quietly, “Damn this stupid war.”
Arutha came over to her, holding her tightly for a moment. “Damn all
wars,” he said.
For a few more minutes they were quiet, then she said, “Now tell me,
what news from Krondor?”
Arutha gave her a brief account of his experiences in Krondor, half
his attention on her. She seemed much more accepting of Roland’s loss than she
had when grieving for Pug. Arutha shared her pain, but also felt certain she
would be all right. He was pleased to discover just how much Carline had
matured over the last few years. When he finished telling of Anita’s rescue,
Carline interrupted “Anita, the Princess of Krondor, is here?”
Arutha nodded, and Carline said, “I must look a fright, and you
bring the Princess of Krondor here. Arutha, you are a monster.” She rushed to a
polished metal mirror and fussed with her face, daubing at it with a damp
cloth.
Arutha smiled. Under the mantle of mourning, his sister still showed
a spark of her natural spirit.
Combing her hair out, Carline turned to face her brother. “Is she
pretty, Arutha?”
Arutha’s wry smile was replaced by a grin. “Yes, I’d say she is
pretty.” Carline studied Arutha’s face. “I can see I’ll have to get to know her
well.” She put down her comb and straightened her gown. Extending her hand to
him, she said, “Come, we can’t keep your young lady waiting.”
Hand in hand they left the room and walked down the stairs to the
main hallway, to welcome Anita to Crydee.
26
GREAT ONE
An abandoned house overlooked the city.
The site upon which the house had been constructed had once seen the
lights of a great family manse On top of the highest of many rolling hills
surrounding the city of Ontoset, it was considered the choicest view of the
city and the sea beyond. The family had come to low estate, the result of being
on the losing side in one of the Empire’s many subtle but lethal political
struggles. The house had fallen into disrepair and the property been ignored,
for while it was as fine a building site as any found in the area, the
association of ill fortune with the property was too real for the superstitious
Tsurani.
One day news reached the city that some kula herders had awakened to
the sight of a single black-robed figure walking up the hill toward the old
house. They all acted with haste to avoid him, in the socially correct fashion
for their station. They stayed within the area, tending their animals—the
source of their meager income: kula wool—when, near midday, they heard a great
noise, as if the heavens above them had erupted with the grandfather of all
thunder peals. The herd scattered in terror, some running up the hill. The
herders were no less terrified, but true to their trade, they put aside their
fears and chased after the animals.
One herder, a man named Xanothis, came to the top of the once-famous
hill to be greeted by the sight of the black-robed magician he had seen
earlier, standing upon the crest. Where the run-down great house had stood
moments before, a large patch of smoking land was laid bare, several feet below
the level of the grass that surrounded it. Fearing he had intruded upon some
business of a Great One, Xanothis started to back away, hoping to avoid
detection, for the Great One’s back was to the herder and his cowl was drawn
over his head. As he took the first step backward, the magician turned to face
him, fixing him with a pair of unsettlingly deep brown deep eyes.
The herder lowered himself as custom demanded, on his knees, eyes
cast downward. He did not fully abase himself, for he was a freeman, and while
not a noble, he was head of his family.
“Stand up,” the magician ordered.
Slightly confused, Xanothis rose, eyes still cast downward.
“Look at me.”
He looked up and found the face in the cowl regarding him closely. A
beard as dark as the eyes framed a fair face, a fact that added to Xanothis’s
discomfort, as only slaves wore beards. The magician smiled at this obvious
confusion and walked around the herder, inspecting him.
The magician saw a man tall for a Tsurani, an inch or two taller
than his own five feet eight. His skin was dark, like unclouded chocha or
coffee. His eyes were black, and his hair was black as well, save where it was
shot with white. The herder’s short green robe revealed the powerful build of a
former soldier, a fact the magician gleaned from the man’s erect posture and
several scars. Past fifty he looked, but still capable of the strenuous life of
a herder. Though shorter, this man resembled Gardan of Crydee slightly.
“Your name?” asked the magician, as he came round to stand before
the herder. Xanothis answered, his voice betraying his unease. The magician
then startled him by asking, “Would you agree that this is a good place for a
home, herdsman?”
Confused, Xanothis stammered, “If . . . if it . . . is your will,
Great One.”
The magician snapped, “Ask not what I think! I ask your thoughts!”
Xanothis could barely hide his anger at his own shame. Great Ones
were sacrosanct, and to be false with one was to do a dishonor. “Forgive me,
Great One. It is said this spot is ill favored by the gods.”
“And who is it that says so?”
The sharpness in the magician’s voice caused the older man’s head to
snap up as if he had been struck. His eyes hid little of his anger, but his
voice remained calm as he said, “Those who live in the city, Great One, and
others about the countryside.” The herdsman met the magician’s gaze and held
it.
The corners of the magician’s eyes wrinkled in mirth, and his mouth
turned up a little, but his voice still rang out. “But not you, herder?”
“I was fifteen years a soldier, Great One. I have found it often the
case that the gods favor those who take care of their own welfare.”
The magician smiled at this, though it was not an entirely warm
expression. “A man of self-reliance. Good. I am glad we are of a like mind, for
I plan to build my estate here, as I have a taste for the view of the sea.”
A certain stiffness of posture in the herder’s stance at this remark
caught the magician’s notice, and he said, “Have I your approval, Xanothis of
Ontoset?”
Xanothis shifted his weight from one foot to the other, then said,
“The Great One jests with me. My approval or disapproval is of no consequence,
I am certain.”
“True, but you still avoid my question Have I your approval?”
Xanothis’s shoulders sagged a little as he said, “I will have to
move my herds, Great One That is all. I mean no disrespect.”
“Tell me of this house, Xanothis, that stood here before this day.”
“It was the home of the Lord of the Almach, Great One. He backed the
wrong cousin against Almecho when the office of Warlord was contested.” He
shrugged. “I was once a Patrol Leader of that house I was a prideful man, which
limited my advancement as a soldier. My lord gave me permission to leave his
service and marry, so I took over my wife’s father’s herds. Had I stayed a
soldier, I would now be a slave, dead, or a grey warrior.” He glanced out
toward the sea. “What more would you know, Great One?”
The magician said, “You may keep your herds upon this hill,
Xanothis. The grazers keep the grass neat, and I have no liking for unkempt
grounds. Just keep them away from the main house where I will be working, else
I cook one for my supper now and again.”
Without another word, the magician pulled a device from within his
robe and activated it. A strange hum was emitted for a moment; then the
black-robed figure disappeared with a small popping sound. Xanothis stood
quietly for a few minutes, then resumed his search of his lost animals.
Later that night, around a campfire, he told his family and the
other herders of his meeting with the Great One. None doubted his word, for
whatever his other faults might be, Xanothis was not one to expand upon the
truth, but they were amazed. And they never quite got used to one other thing:
over the following months while a new great house was being built, one or
another of the herdsmen would occasionally catch sight of Xanothis engaged in
conversation with a Great One, atop the hill while kula grazed below them.
Now a new and strange house stood atop the hill. It was the source
of both some speculation and a little envy. The speculation was about its
owner, the strange Great One. The envy was over its design and construction,
something of a revolution in Tsurani architecture. Gone was the traditional
three-story, open-center building. In its place was a long, single-story
building, with several smaller ones attached to it by covered walkways. It was
a rambling affair, with many small gardens and waterways winding between the
structures. Its construction was as much a sensation as its design, for it
consisted mainly of stone, with fired brick tiles upon the roof. Some
speculated that it offered cool protection during the heat of summer.
Two other facts added to the fascination evidenced over the house
and its owner. First was the manner in which the project had been commissioned.
The magician had first appeared in Ontoset one day, at the home of Tumacel, the
richest moneylender in the city. He appropriated over thirty thousand imperials
in funds and left the moneylender stricken over his loss of liquidity. This was
Milamber’s method of dealing with the Tsurani passion for bureaucracy. Any
merchant or tradesman commanded to render service to a Great One was forced to
petition the imperial treasury for repayment. This resulted in slow delivery of
ordered materials, less than enthusiastic service, and resentment Milamber
simply paid in advance and left it to the moneylender—-who was better able to
account for his losses than most other merchants, by nature of his
bookkeeping—to recover from the treasury. The second fact was the style of
decoration. Instead of the garishly bold wall paintings, the building was left
mostly unpainted, except for an occasional landscape in muted, natural colors.
Many fine young artists were employed on this project, and when it was done,
the demand for their services was phenomenal. Within a month a new wave in
Tsurani art was in progress.
Fifty slaves now worked the outlying fields, all free to come and go
as they wished, dressed in the garb of their homeworld, Midkemia. All had been
taken from the slave market one day, without payment, by the Great One.
Many travelers to Ontoset would make an afternoon of climbing the
hills nearby to see the house. From a respectable distance, of course. The
herder, Xanothis, was questioned many times about the strange Great One who
lived in that house, but the former soldier said nothing, only smiling a great
deal.
“The belief that the current great rift to Midkemia is controllable
is only partially correct.” Milamber paused, allowing his scribe to finish
copying the dictation. “It can be stated that rifts may be established without
the release of destructive energies associated with their accidental creation,
either through poorly effected magic spells or by the proximity of too many
unstable magic devices.”
Milamber’s research into the special aspects of rift energies would
be added to the Assembly’s archives when completed Like other projects he had
read of in the archives, research into rifts had shown what Milamber took to be
a grievous flaw in most of his brother magicians’ work. In general, projects
were not carried through to completion, showing a lack of thoroughness. Once
the procedure to establish rifts safely had been developed, further research
into their nature had been halted.
Continuing, he dictated: “What is lacking in the concept of control
is the ability to select the terminus of contact, the ability to ‘target’ the
rift. It has been shown by the appearance of the ship carrying Fanatha on the
shores of Crydee, on the world of Midkemia, that a certain affinity between a
newly forming rift and an existing one is probable. However, as shown by
further testing, this affinity is limited, such limits being as yet not fully
understood. While there is increased probability of a second rift appearing
within a regional proximity to the first, it is by no means a certainty.”
When the scribe was caught up, Milamber added, “Also, there is a
question of why rifts show certain inconsistencies. Size appears relative to
the energy employed in their formation, but other characteristics seem without
pattern. Some rifts are single direction”—Milamber had lost several valuable
devices discovering this fact—“while others allow movement in two directions.
And then there are ‘bonded pairs,’ two single-direction rifts that appear
simultaneously, both allowing one-way travel between origin and terminus.
Though they may appear miles apart, they are related—”
Milamber’s narration was interrupted by the sound of the chimes
announcing the arrival of someone from the Assembly. He dismissed his scribe
and made his way to the pattern room. As he walked, he mused on the real reason
for his submersion in research over the last two months. He was avoiding the
decision he must soon make, whether or not to return to the Shinzawai estate
for Katala.
Milamber knew there was a chance she had become the wife of another,
for their separation had been nearly five years, and she would have no reason
to think he’d ever be returning. But time and training had done nothing to dull
his feelings toward her. As he reached the transporting room with its tiled
pattern, he made his decision: tomorrow he would go to see her.
As he entered the room, he saw Hochopepa step off the pattern in the
tile floor. “Ah,” said the plump magician, “there you are. Since it has been
two weeks since I last saw you, I decided to pay a visit.”
“I am glad to see you I have been deeply involved in study and could
do with a short respite.”
They walked from the room into one of the several gardens nearby
Hochopepa said, “I have been meaning to ask you: what is the significance of
the pattern you chose? I don’t recognize it.”
Milamber said, “It is a stylized recreation of a pattern I once saw
in a fountain. Three dolphins.”
“Dolphins?”
Milamber explained about the Midkemian sea mammals, while they
seated themselves upon cushions between a pair of dwarf fruit trees.
“Why the dolphins from that fountain?”
“I don’t know. A compulsion, perhaps. Also, when I underwent my
final testing on the tower, I saw something that didn’t register for a month or
two after.”
“What does one have to do with the other?”
“In the representation of the final challenge to the Stranger, do
you remember a single brown-robed magician, who bent the rift to keep Kelewan
from entering the Enemy’s universe?”
Hochopepa looked thoughtful. “I can’t say as I do, Milamber. But
then the spell used to create that image affects each of us differently. If you
compare visions with others, you’ll discover a great deal of variation. But at
the time of the Stranger, we were all black robes. Who could this odd
brown-robed magician be?”
Milamber said, “A man I have met, years ago.”
“Impossible. That scene took place centuries ago.”
Milamber smiled and said, “Nevertheless, I have met him. I made my
pattern of three dolphins as something of a commemorative to our meeting.”
“How very strange. There has been some speculation on time travel,
which would have to be the answer in this case, unless your barbaric mind
played false with you upon the tower.” He said the last with a smile.
Milamber clapped his hands, and a servant arrived with a platter of
refreshments. The servant, Netoha, at one time had been hadonra for the family
that resided there previously. Milamber had found him while securing someone to
plant the varieties of vegetation he wanted in his gardens. The man was bold
enough to approach, something that singled him out from the common Tsurani. Unable
to find the work he was trained for since the demise of his employer’s estate,
Netoha had scratched out a meager living over the years. Milamber had taken him
on as much out of sympathy as out of any real need. He had quickly made himself
useful in a hundred ways the young magician had never dreamed of, and the
relationship was mutually satisfactory.
Hochopepa took the offered sweets and drink “I have come to tell you
some news. There is to be an Imperial Festival in two months’ time, with games.
Will you come?”
Milamber found his curiosity piqued. With a wave he dismissed
Netoha. “And what makes this festival so special? I can’t remember having seen
you so animated before.”
“This festival is being given by the Warlord in honor of his nephew,
the Emperor. He has plans for a new major offensive the week before the games,
and it is hoped he will announce the success of the campaign.” He lowered his
voice. “It is no secret to those with access to court gossip he is under a
great deal of pressure to justify his conduct of the war before the High
Council. Rumor has it he has been forced to offer major concessions to the Blue
Wheel Party to regain their support in the war.
“But what will make the games unusual is that the Light of Heaven
will leave his Palace of Contemplation, breaking with ancient tradition. It
would be a proper occasion for you to make some sort of entrance into court
society.”
“I’m sorry, Hocho,” Milamber said, “I have little desire to attend
any festivals. I have been to one earlier this month, in Ontoset, as part of my
studies. The dances are boring, the food tends toward the awful, and the wine
is as flat as the speeches. The games are of less interest still. If this is
the court society you speak of, then I’ll be fine without it.”
“Milamber, there are many holes left in your education. Gaining the
black robe did not mean instant mastery of our craft. There is quite a bit more
involved in protecting the Empire than sitting about dreaming up new ways of
tossing energy around, or creating economic chaos with the local moneylenders.”
He took another sweet and returned to his chiding. “There are several reasons
you must come with me to the festivities, Milamber. First, you are something of
a celebrity to the nobles of the realm, for news of your wondrous house has
spread from one corner of the Empire to the other, mostly by aid of those young
bandits you paid so well to execute the delicate paintings you love so much. It
is now considered the mark of some distinction to have the same sort of work done.
“And this place”—his hand inscribed an arc before them, mock wonder
upon his face—“anyone who could be so clever to design such an edifice must
surely be worthy of attention.” His mocking tone vanished as he added, “By the
way, this entire bit of nonsense has not been diminished one whit by your
mysterious isolation here in the hinterlands. If anything, it has added to your
reputation.
“Now to more important reasons than social ones. As you no doubt
know, there is growing concern that the news from the war is somehow being
downplayed. In all these years there has been little gain, and some talk is
going about that the Emperor may take a stand against the Warlord’s policies.
If so . . .” He let the thought go unfinished.
Milamber was silent for a time. “Hocho, I think it is time that I
told you something, and if you feel it’s sufficient to warrant my life, then
you may return to the Assembly and bring charges.”
Hochopepa was raptly attentive, all quips and sharp remarks put
aside.
“You who trained me did your work well, for I am filled with a need
to do what is best for the Empire. I hold only a little feeling for the land of
my birth anymore, and you will never know what that signifies. But in the
process of making me what I am, you could never create the love of home within
my being that I once felt for my own Crydee. What you have created is a man
with a strong sense of duty, untempered by any love for that thing he feels
duty toward.” Hochopepa remained silent as the impact of what Milamber had said
penetrated, then he nodded as Milamber continued.
“I may be the greatest threat to the Empire since the Stranger
invaded your skies, for if I become involved with its politics, I will be
justice without mercy.
“I have known of the factions within the parties, the crossover of
families from one party to another, and the consequences of those acts. Do you
think because I sit atop my hill in the eastlands, I am unaware of the shifts
and stirrings of the political animals in the capital? Of course not. If the
Blue Wheel Party collapses and its members realign with the War Party or the
Imperials, every street merchant in Ontoset is speculating on the news the next
day to the marketplace. I know what is taking place as well as any other who is
not directly involved. And in the months since I came to live here, I have come
to one conclusion: the Empire is slowly killing itself.”
The older magician said nothing for a moment, then asked, “Have you
wondered at all why our system is such that we are killing ourselves?”
Milamber stood and paced a little. “Of course. I am studying it, and
have chosen to wait before I act. I need more time to understand the history
you taught me so well. But I do have some speculations of sorts on what’s
wrong, and they will give me a starting point.” He inclined his head, asking if
he should go on. Hochopepa nodded that he should. “It seems to me there are
several major problems here, problems I can only guess at in terms of impact
upon the Empire.
“First”—he held up his index finger—“those in power are more
concerned with their own grandeur than with the well-being of the Empire. And
as they are those who appear to the casual eye to be the Empire, it is an easy
thing not to notice.”
“What do you mean?” the older magician asked.
“When you think of the Empire, what comes to mind? A history of
armies warring across the lands? Or the rise of the Assembly? Perhaps you think
of a chronicle of rulers? Whatever it is, most likely the single most obvious truth
is overlooked. The Empire is all those who live within its borders, from the
nobles to the lowest servant, even the slaves who work the fields. It must be
seen as a whole, not as being embodied by some small but visible part, such as
the Warlord or the High Council. Do you understand that?”
Hochopepa looked troubled. “I’m not sure, but I think . . . Go on.”
“If that is true, then consider the rest. Second, there must never
be a time when the need for stability overrules the need for growth.”
“But we have always grown!” objected Hochopepa.
“Not true,” countered Milamber. “You have always expanded, and that
seems like growth if you don’t investigate closely. But while your armies have
been bringing new lands into your borders, what has happened to your art, your
music, your literature, your research? Even the vaunted Assembly does little
more than refine that which is already known. You implied earlier that I was
wasting my time finding new ways to ‘toss energy around.’ Well, what is wrong
with that? Nothing. But there is something wrong with the type of society that
looks upon the new as suspect.
“Look around you, Hocho. Your artists are in shock because I
described what I had seen in paintings in my youth, and a few young artists
became excited. Your musicians spend all their time learning the old songs,
perfectly, to the note, and no one composes new ones, just clever variations on
melodies that are centuries old. No one creates new epics, they only retell old
ones. Hocho, you are a people stagnating. This war is but one example. It is
unjustified, fought from habit, to keep certain groups in power, to reap wealth
for those already wealthy, and to play the Game of the Council. And the cost!
Thousands of lives are wasted each year, the lives of those who are the Empire,
its own citizens. The Empire is a cannibal, devouring its own people.”
The older magician was disturbed by what he heard, in total
contradiction with what he believed he saw: a vibrant, energetic, alive
culture.
“Third,” said Milamber, “if my duty is to serve the Empire, and the
social order of the Empire is responsible for its own stagnation, then it is my
duty to change that social order, even if I must destroy it.”
Now Hochopepa was shocked. Milamber’s logic was without fault, but
the suggested solution was potentially fraught with danger to everything
Hochopepa knew and revered. “I understand what you say, Milamber, but what you
speak of is too difficult to contemplate all at once.”
Milamber’s voice took on reassuring tones “I do not mean to imply
that the destruction of the present social order is the only solution, Hocho. I
used that to shock and to drive home a point. That is what much of my research
is about, not only the visible mastery of energy, but also investigations into
the nature of the Tsurani people and the Empire. Believe me, I am more than
willing to spend as much time on the question as I need. I plan on spending
some time in the archives.”
Hochopepa’s brows furrowed, and he studied his younger friend’s
face. “Be warned, you may find some unsettling things in those archives. As I
said, your education is not complete.”
Milamber let his voice drop. “I have already found some unsettling
things, Hocho. Much of what is held to be common truth by the nations is based
upon falsehoods.”
Hochopepa became concerned. “There are things that are forbidden for
any but members of the Assembly to know, Milamber, and even then it is unwise
to speak about them to even one of your brethren.” He glanced away, thinking,
then said, “Still, when you have finished prowling around in those musty old
vaults, if you need to discuss your findings, I’ll be a willing ear.” He looked
back at his friend. “I like you and think you’re a refreshing change of pace
for us, Milamber, but there are many who would rather see you dead as not.
Don’t go chattering on to anyone but Shimone or myself about this social
research you’re doing.”
“Agreed. But when I reach a judgment as to what must be done, I
shall act.”
Hochopepa stood, an expression of concern on his face. “It is not
that I disagree with you, my friend, it is simply that I must have time to
assimilate what you have said.”
“I could only speak the truth to you, Hocho, no matter how
disturbing.”
Hochopepa smiled. “A fact I appreciate, Milamber. I must spend some time
considering the proposition.” Some of his usual humor crept back into his
voice. “Perhaps you will accompany me to the Assembly? You have been absent
much of the time with this house building and all; you would do well to put in
an appearance now and again.”
Milamber smiled at his friend. “Of course.” He indicated that
Hochopepa should lead the way to the pattern. As they walked, Hochopepa said,
“If you wish to study our culture, Milamber, I still suggest you come to the
Imperial Festival. There will be more political activity in the seats of the
arena in that one day than could be observed in a month in the High Council.”
Milamber turned toward Hochopepa. “Perhaps you’re right I shall
think about it.”
When they appeared on the pattern of the Assembly, Shimone was
standing close by. He bowed slightly in greeting and said, “Welcome I was about
to go looking for you two.”
Hochopepa said with mild amusement, “Are we so vital to the business
of the Assembly that you must be sent to fetch us back?”
Shimone inclined his head a little. “Perhaps, but not today. I
merely thought you would find the business at hand interesting.”
Milamber asked, “What is happening?”
“The Warlord has sent messages to the Assembly, and Hodiku raises
questions about them. We best hurry, for they are nearly ready to begin.”
They walked quickly to the central hall of the Assembly and entered.
Arrayed about a large open area was an amphitheater of open benches, they took
seats in a lower row. Already several hundred black-robed Great Ones were in
place. In the center of the floor they could see Fumita, the one-time brother
of the Shinzawai lord, standing alone, he would be presiding over the business
of the day. The presidency was allotted by chance to one of those in
attendance. Milamber had seen Fumita in the Assembly only twice since being
brought here.
Shimone said, “It has been nearly three weeks since I saw you in the
Assembly, Milamber.”
“I must apologize, but I have been busy getting my home in order.”
“So I hear. You’re something of a source of gossip in the imperial
court. I hear the Warlord himself is anxious to meet you.”
“Perhaps someday.”
Hochopepa said to Shimone, “Who can understand such a man? Taking to
building such a strange home.” He turned to Milamber. “Next you’ll be telling
me that you’re taking a wife.”
Milamber laughed. “Why, Hocho, how did you guess?”
Hochopepa’s eyes grew wide. “You’re not! ‘
“And why shouldn’t I?”
“Milamber, it is not a wise course, believe me. To this day I have
regretted my own marriage.”
“Hocho, I didn’t know you were a married man.”
“I choose not to speak of it much. My wife is a fine woman, though
given to an overly sharp tongue and scathing wit. In my own home I’m not much
more than another servant to be ordered about. That is why I see her only on
prescribed holidays, it would be bad for my nerves to see her more often.”
Shimone said, “Who is your intended, Milamber? A noble daughter?”
“No. She was a slave with me at the Shinzawai estate.”
Hochopepa mused, “A slave girl . . . hmm. That might work out.”
Milamber laughed, and Shimone chuckled. Several other magicians
regarded them with curiosity, for the Assembly was not a regular forum for
mirth.
Fumita held up his hand, and the Assembly became quiet. “Today there
is a matter being brought before the Assembly by Hodiku.”
A thin Great One, with shaved head and hooked nose, walked from his
seat in front of Milamber and Hochopepa to the center of the floor.
He surveyed the magicians in the hall, then spoke. “I come today so
that I may speak about the Empire.” It was the formal opening of any business
brought before the Assembly. “I speak for the good of the Empire,” he added,
completing the ritual. “I am concerned about the demand made today by the
Warlord for aid so he may broaden the war against the Midkemian world.”
A chorus of jeers and cries of “Politics” and “Sit down!” erupted
from around the room. Soon Shimone and Hochopepa were on their feet with others
crying, “Let him speak!”
Fumita held up a hand for silence, and soon the room quieted Hodiku
continued “We are precedented. Fifteen years ago the Assembly sent an order to
the Warlord to end the war against the Thunl Confederation.”
Another magician jumped to his feet “If the Thuril conquest had
continued, there would have been too few in the north to repulse the Thьn
migration that year. It was a clear case of the salvation of Szetac Province
and the Holy City. Now our borders in the north are secure. The situation is
not the same.”
Arguments erupted over the entire hall, and it took several minutes
for Fumita to restore order. Hochopepa rose and said, “I would like to hear
Hodiku’s reasons for considering this request vital to the security of the
Empire. Any magician who is willing is free to work on behalf of the conquest.”
“That is the point,” responded Hodiku. “There is no reason for any
magician who feels this war into another space-time is right and proper for the
Empire not to work in support of the conquest. Without the Black Robes who
already serve the Warlord, the rift would never have been prepared for such an
undertaking. It is that he now makes demands of the Assembly itself I find
objectionable If five or six magicians choose to serve in the field, even to
traveling to this other world to risk their lives in the battle, then it is
their own concern. But if one magician responds to this demand without
considering the issues, it will appear the Assembly is now subject to the will
of the Warlord.”
Several magicians applauded this sentiment, and others seemed to
weigh its merits. Only a few booed and jeered. Hochopepa stood again. “I would
like to offer a proposal. I will undertake on behalf of the Assembly to send a
message to the Warlord expressing our regret that the Assembly as a body may
not order any magician to perform as requested, but that he is free to seek the
services of any magician willing to work on his behalf.”
A general murmur of approval ran through the room, and Fumita asked,
“Hochopepa offers a proposition to send a statement of policy to the Warlord on
behalf of the Assembly. Does anyone find this objectionable?” When no
objections were forthcoming, he said, “The Assembly thanks Hochopepa for his
wisdom.”
He paused for a moment, then said, “Another matter needs our
attention: the novice Shiro has been found lacking in the moral qualities
necessary for the Greater Art. The mind probes reveal that he harbors
anti-Imperial feelings, learned as a youth from his maternal grandmother, a
Thuril woman. Is the Assembly agreed?”
Hands were raised, and each bore a nimbus of light as the magicians
voted. Green for life, red for death, and blue for abstention. Milamber
abstained, but the vote was otherwise unanimous for death. One Black Robe rose,
and Milamber knew that within minutes the novice would be stunned senseless,
then teleported to the bottom of the lake, where his lifeless body would
remain, too cold to rise to the surface.
After the meeting broke up, Shimone said, “You should make a point
of coming more often, Milamber. We hardly see you anymore. And you spend too
much time alone.”
Milamber smiled. “That is true, but I plan to remedy the situation
tomorrow.”
The chime sounded throughout the house, and servants jumped to make
ready for the Great One’s visit. Kamatsu, Lord of the Shinzawai, knew that a
Great One had struck a chime in the halls of the Assembly, willing the sound to
come here, to announce his imminent appearance.
In Kasumi’s room, Laurie and the elder son of the house sat
engrossed in a game of pashawa, played with painted pieces of stiff paper. It
was common to alehouses and inns in Midkemia and was one more detail in the
young Tsurani’s drive to master every facet of Midkemian life.
Kasumi stood. “It is most likely he who once was my uncle; I had
best go.”
Laurie smiled. “Or could it be that you wish to stem your losses?”
The Tsurani shook his head. “I fear I have created a problem in my
own house. You were never a good slave, Laurie, and if anything, you have grown
more intractable. It is a good thing I like you.”
They both laughed, and the elder son of the house left. A few
minutes later a house slave came running to Laurie and informed him that the
lord of the house commanded him to come at once. Laurie jumped up, more from
the slave’s obvious agitation than from any inbred obedience. He hurried to the
lord’s room and knocked on the doorjamb. The door slid to one side, and Kasumi
held it. Laurie stepped through and saw the Shinzawai lord and his guest, and
then confusion overtook him.
The guest was wearing the black robe of the Tsurani Great Ones, but
the face was Pug’s. He started to speak, stopped, and started again “Pug?”
The lord of the house looked outraged at this forward behavior by
the slave, but his nearly voiced command was stopped by the Great One. “May I
have the use of this room for a few minutes, lord? I wish to speak to this
slave in private.”
Kamatsu, Lord of the Shinzawai, bowed stiffly. “Your will, Great
One.” He left the room with his son behind, he was still in shock over the
appearance of the former slave and confused at the conflicts within himself.
The Great One he was, there could be no thought of fraud: his manner of arrival
proved it. But Kamatsu couldn’t help feeling that his arrival heralded disaster
for the plan he and his son had so carefully nurtured for the last nine years.
Milamber spoke “Shut the door, Laurie.”
Laurie shut it, then studied his former friend. He looked fit, but
vastly changed. His bearing was nearly regal, as if the mantle of power he now
wore reflected some inner strength he had lacked before.
“I . . . ,” Laurie began, then lapsed into silence, confused about
what to say. Finally he said, “Are you well?”
Milamber nodded. “I am well, old friend.”
Laurie smiled and crossed the room and embraced his friend, then
pushed himself away. “Let me look at you.”
Milamber smiled. “I am called Milamber, Laurie. The boy you knew as
Pug is as dead as last year’s flowers. Come, sit and we will talk.”
They sat at the table and poured two cups of chocha Laurie sipped at
the bitter brew and said, “We heard nothing about you. After the first year I
gave you up for lost I’m sorry.”
Milamber nodded, “It is the way of the Assembly. As a magician I am
expected to forgo all my former ties, except for those that can be maintained
in a socially acceptable manner. Being without clan or family, I had nothing to
forgo. And you were always a poor slave who never knew his place. What better
friend for a renegade, barbarian magician?”
Laune nodded. “I am glad you have returned. Will you stay?”
Milamber shook his head no “I have no place here. Besides, there is
work I must be about. I now have an estate of my own, near the city of Ontoset.
I have come for you. And Katala, if . . .” His voice trailed off, as if he were
fearful of asking about her.
Sensing his distress, Laurie said, “She is still here and has not
taken a husband. She would not forget you.” He broke into a grin. “Gods of
Midkemia! It completely slipped my mind. You would have no way of knowing.”
“What?”
“You have a son.”
Milamber sat dumbstruck. “A son?”
Laurie laughed “He was born eight months after you were taken. He is
a fine boy, and Katala is a fine mother.”
Milamber felt overwhelmed at the news and said, “Please. Would you
bring her here?”
Laurie jumped to his feet “At once.”
He rushed from the room Milamber sat fighting down the upsurge of
emotion. He composed himself, using his magician’s skills to relax his mind.
The door slid open, and Katala was revealed, uncertainty on her face
Laurie stood behind, a boy of about four in his arms.
Milamber rose and spread his arms to her Katala rushed to him, and
he nearly cried in his joy. They clung quietly for a moment, then she murmured,
“I thought you gone. I hoped . . . but I thought you gone.”
They stood for several minutes, each lost in the pure pleasure of
the other’s presence, until she pushed herself away “You must meet your son,
Pug.”
Laurie brought the boy forward. He regarded Milamber with large
brown eyes. He was a well-formed boy, with a stronger likeness to his mother,
but something in the way he tilted his head made him resemble the boy from
Crydee keep. Katala took him from Laurie and passed him to Milamber. “William,
this is your father.”
The boy seemed to take this in with some skepticism. He ventured a
shy smile, but leaned back, keeping his distance. “I want down,” he said
abruptly. Milamber laughed and put the boy down. He looked at his father, then immediately
lost interest in the stranger in black. “Ooh!” he cried, and rushed over to
play with the Lord of the Shinzawai’s shah pieces.
Milamber watched him for a moment, then said, “William?”
Katala stood next to him with her arm around his waist, hugging him
as if afraid he would disappear again. Laurie said, “She wanted a Midkemian
name for him, Milamber.”
Katala started. “Milamber?”
“It is my new name, love. You must get used to calling me that.” She
frowned, not entirely pleased with the thought. “Milamber,” she repeated,
testing the sound. She then shrugged. “It is a good name.”
“How did he become William?”
Laurie went over to the boy, who was trying to stand the pieces one
atop the other, and gently took them away. The boy threw him a black look. “I
want to play,” he said indignantly.
Laurie picked him up and said, “I gave her a bunch of names, and she
picked that one.”
“I liked its sound,” she said; “William.”
At the sound of his name the boy looked at his mother. “I’m hungry.”
“I favored James or Owen, but she insisted,” Laurie said, while the
boy tried to wriggle out of his arms.
Katala took him. “I must feed him. I’ll take him to the kitchen.”
She kissed Milamber and left the room.
The magician stood quietly for a moment. “It is all more than I had
hoped for. I was afraid she’d have found another.”
“Not that one, P—Milamber. She would have nothing to do with any of
the men who paid court to her, and there were a few. She’s a good woman. You
need never doubt her.”
“I never will, Laurie.”
They seated themselves; a discreet cough at the door made them turn.
Kamatsu stood at the door “May I enter, Great One?”
Milamber and Laurie started to rise, and the lord of the house waved
them back into place. “Please, stay seated.” Kasumi entered behind his father
and closed the door. Milamber noticed for the first time that the son of the
house was wearing garments that were Midkemian in fashion. He raised an
eyebrow, but said nothing.
The head of the Shinzawai family looked deeply troubled and tried to
collect his thoughts. After a few moments he said, “Great One, may I be frank
with you? Your arrival today is something unexpected and the source of some
possible difficulty.”
“Please,” said Milamber. “I do not intend to cause disruption in
your household, lord. I want only my wife and son. And I will require this
slave also.” He indicated Laurie.
“Your will, Great One. The woman and the boy should, of course, go
with you. But if I may beg of you, please allow the slave to remain.”
Milamber looked from face to face. The two Shinzawai maintained
control, but by the way they glanced from one to the other and at Laurie, their
distress was poorly hidden. Something had changed here in the last five years.
The relationship between the men in the room was not what it should have been
between masters and slave.
“Laurie?” Milamber looked at his friend. “What is this?”
Laurie looked at the other two men, then at Milamber “I will have to
ask you to promise me something.”
Kamatsu’s shock was signaled by a sharp intake of breath “Laurie!
You dare too much. One does not bargain with a Great One His words are as law.”
Milamber held up a hand. “No. Let him speak.”
In imploring tones Laurie said to his friend, “I know little of
these matters, Milamber. You know I have no sense about protocol. I may be
violating custom, but I ask you for the sake of our former friendship, will you
keep a trust and vow to keep what you hear in this room to yourself?”
The magician pondered the matter. He could command the Shinzawai
lord to tell all, and the man would, as automatically as a soldier following
orders, but his friendship with the troubadour was important to him. “I give
you my word that I will not repeat what you tell me.”
Laurie gave a sigh and smile, and the Shinzawai seemed to lose some
of their tension Laurie said, “I have struck a bargain with my lord here. When
we have completed certain tasks, I am to be given my freedom.”
Milamber shook his head. “That is not possible. The law does not
permit a slave to be freed. Even the Warlord cannot free a slave.”
Laurie smiled. “And yourself?”
Milamber looked stern. “I am outside the law. None may command me.
Are you claiming to be a magician?”
“No, Milamber, nothing like that. It is true that I can only be a
slave here. But I won’t be here. I will return to Midkemia.”
Milamber looked puzzled. “How is that possible? There is only one
rift into Midkemia, and that is controlled by the Warlord’s pet magicians.
There are no others, or I would know of them.”
“We have a plan. It is involved and will take much explaining, but
simply put, it is this: I will accompany Kasumi, disguised as a priest of
Turakamu the Red. He will be leading soldiers replacing troops at the front No
one is likely to notice my height, for the Red One’s priests are given wide
berth. The troops are all loyal to the Shinzawai. Once in Midkemia, we will
slip through the lines and find our way to the Kingdom forces.”
Milamber nodded. “Now I understand the language lessons and the
clothes. But tell me, Laurie. Are you willing to spy for the Tsurani in
exchange for your freedom?” There was no disapproval in his voice, it was a
simple question.
Laurie flushed. “I am not going as a spy. I am going as a guide. I
am to take Kasumi to Rillanon, for an audience with the King.”
“Why?” Milamber was surprised.
Kasumi interrupted. “I go to meet the King and bring him an offer of
peace.”
Milamber raised an argument. “How can you possibly expect to end the
war with the War Party still in control of the High Council?”
“There is one thing in our favor,” responded Kamatsu. “This war has
lasted for nine years, and the end is nowhere in sight. Great One, I don’t
presume to instruct you, but if I may explain some things?”
Milamber nodded that he should continue Kamatsu sipped his drink and
went on. “Since the end of the war with the Thuril Confederation, the War Party
has been pressed to maintain its dominance over the High Council. Each border
clash with Thuril brought the call for a renewal of the conflict. Between the
fighting on the border, and the constant attempts by the Thьn to break through
the passes in the north and regain their former southern range, the War Party
managed barely to maintain a majority. A coalition led by the Blue Wheel Party
was on the verge of dislodging them ten years ago, when the Assembly discovered
the rift into your former homeland. The call for war rang out in the council as
soon as the rich metals of your homeland were known to exist. All the progress
we had made over the years was lost in that instant.
“So we began at once to counter this madness. The metals being mined
on your former world are, from what Laurie has told us, the leavings of
abandoned mines, not considered worth the bother by those you call dwarves.
There is nothing in this for Tsuranuanni but an excuse to raise the War Banner
again and shed blood.
“You know our history. You know how difficult it is for us to settle
our differences in a peaceful manner. I have been a soldier and know the
glories of war. I also know its waste Laurie has convinced me that my
suspicions about those who live in the Kingdom were correct. You are not a very
warlike people, in spite of your nobles and their armies You would have been
willing to trade.”
Milamber interrupted. “This is all true. But I am not sure that it
has any bearing on things as they stand now. My former nation had not fought a
major war in nearly fifty years, except for skirmishes with the goblins of the
north and along the Keshian border. But now the battle drums sound in the West.
The Armies of the Kingdom have been blooded. The nation has been invaded
without cause. They would not, I think, be willing simply to stop and forgive.
There would be demands for retribution, or at least reparation Would the High
Council be willing to surrender the honor of Tsuranuanni and make restitution
for the wrong done at the hands of its soldiers?”
The Shinzawai lord looked troubled. “The council would not, I am
sure. But the Emperor would.”
“The Emperor?” Milamber said, surprised “What has he to do with this?”
“Ichindar, may heaven bless him, feels the war is bleeding the
Empire of its resources. When we campaigned against the Thuril, we learned that
some frontiers are simply too vast and far from the Empire to control, save at
costs far greater than the victories are worth. The Light of Heaven understands
that nowhere could there be a frontier as vast or far as that we have found on
Midkemia. He is taking a hand in the Game of the Council. It is perhaps the
greatest game ever played in the history of Tsuranuanni. The Light of Heaven is
willing to command the Warlord to peace, to have him removed from office if
need be. But he will not take the risk of so great a break with tradition
unless he is guaranteed the willingness of King Rodric to come to terms. He
must go before the High Council with peace a fait accompli; otherwise he risks
too much.
“Regicide has been committed only once in the history of the Empire,
Great One. The High Council hailed the killer and named him Emperor. He was the
son of the man he slew. His father had tried to order taxes imposed upon the
temples, the last time an Emperor played in the Game of the Council. We can be
a hard people, Great One, even with ourselves, and never has an Emperor sought
to do what Ichmdar seeks, what others, many others, will see as laying down the
honor of the Empire, an unthinkable act.
“But if he can deliver peace to the council, then it will clearly
show the gods give their blessing to such an undertaking, and none will dare
challenge him.”
“You risk much, Lord of the Shinzawai.”
“I love my nation and the Empire, Great One. I would willingly die
in the field for her, and I risked that often when I was younger, during the
Thunl campaigns. I would also risk my life, my sons, the honor of my house,
family, and clan to bring the Empire to sanity. As would the Emperor. We are a
patient people. This plan is years in preparation. The Blue Wheel Party has
long been secretly allied with the Party for Peace. We withdrew in the third
year of the war to embarrass the Warlord and set the stage for Kasumi’s
training for the coming journey. Over a year was spent in traveling to various
lords within the Blue Wheel and Peace parties, ensuring cooperation, that every
member would play his part in the Game of the Council, before you and Laurie
were brought here to be his tutors.
“We are Tsurani, and the Light of Heaven would not allow an overture
to be made until he had a ready messenger. We have made Kasumi that messenger,
seeking to give him the best possible chance of reaching your former King
safely. It must be this way, for should any outside our faction learn of the
attempt if it fails, many heads, including my own, would fall, the price of
losing the game If you take Laurie away, Kasumi has little chance of reaching
your former King, and the peace effort will be postponed until we can find
another trustworthy guide, a delay almost certain to last one or two more
years. The situation is now critical. The Blue Wheel Party is again part of the
Alliance for War, after years of negotiation with the War Party, and thousands
of men are being sent to fight so that Kasumi may slip through Kingdom lines
into your former homeland. The time will soon be ripe. You must consider what
even another year of war would mean. With the conquest of your former homeland,
the Warlord could become invulnerable to any move we may make.”
Milamber considered, then to Kasumi said, “How soon?”
Kasumi said, “Soon, Great One, a matter of weeks. The Warlord has
spies everywhere and has some hint of our plans. He has little trust of the
Blue Wheel’s sudden shift in the council, but he cannot refuse the aid. He
feels the need to strike a great victory. He plans the major spring offensive
against the forces of Lords Borric and Brucal, the Kingdom’s main strength. It
will be timed to occur just before the Imperial Festival, orchestrated so he
can announce the victory at the Imperial Games, for his own personal glory.”
Kamatsu said, “It is much like an end-game gambit in shah, Great
One.
“A smashing victory will gain the Warlord all he needs to take
control of the High Council, but we risk this to play for our final move. The
front will be in confusion as preparations are being made for the offensive
Kasumi and Laurie will have their best opportunity to slip through the lines.
Should King Rodric agree, then the Light of Heaven can appear in the High Council
with an announcement of peace, and all that the Warlord’s power and influence
is based upon will crumble In terms of shah, we expose our last piece to
capture so that our Emperor may checkmate a Warlord.”
Milamber was thoughtful for a time. “I think you have embarked on a
bold plan, Lord of the Shinzawai. I will honor my pledge to say nothing Laurie
may continue here.” He looked at Laurie. “May the gods of our forefathers
protect you and bring you success. I pray this war may end soon.” He stood up. “If
you don’t mind, I will take my leave. I would have my wife and child home now.”
Kasumi rose and bowed. “I should like to say one thing more, Great
One.”
Milamber indicated he should proceed. “Years ago, when you asked for
Katala for your wife, and I told you the request would be refused, I also told
you there was a reason. It was our plan you would also return to your homeworld
I trust you understand that now. We are a hard people, Great One, but not
cruel.”
“It was apparent as soon as the plan was revealed.” He looked at
Laurie. “For what I am now, this is my homeland, but there is still a part of
me unchanged within, and for that reason I envy you your homecoming. You will
be well remembered, old friend.”
So saying, Milamber left the room. Outside the great house he found
Katala waiting in a garden, watching their son at play. She came to him and
they embraced, savoring sweet reunion. After a long moment he said, “Come,
beloved, let us take our son home.”
27
FUSION
Longbow wept in silence.
Alone in a glade near the edge of the elven forests, the Huntmaster
of Crydee stood over three fallen elves. Their lifeless bodies lay sprawled
upon the ground with arms and legs bent at impossible angles, their fair faces
covered in blood. Martin knew what death meant to the elves, where one or two
children to a family in a century was the norm. One face he knew well,
Algavins, Galain’s companion since boyhood, less than thirty years of age,
still a child by the elven folk’s measure.
Footsteps from behind caused Martin to wipe away the tears and
resume his usually impassive expression From behind he heard Garret say,
“There’s another bunch down the trail, Huntmaster. The Tsurani went through
this part of the forest like a bad wind.”
Martin nodded, then set out without comment Garret followed. For all
his youth, Garret was Longbow’s best tracker, and they both moved lightly along
the trail toward Elvandar.
After traveling for hours, they crossed the river west of a Tsurani
enclave, and when they were safely into the elven forests, a voice hailed them
from the trees. “Well met, Martin Longbow.”
Martin and Garret halted and waited as three elves appeared from
among the trees, seemingly forming out of the air Galain and his two companions
approached the Huntmaster and Garret. Martin inclined his head slightly back
toward the river, and Galain nodded. It was all the communication they needed
to exchange the fact both knew of Algavins’s death, along with the others.
Garret noticed the exchange, though he was far from conversant with the
subtleties of elvish ways.
“Tomas? Calin?” asked Martin.
“In council with the Queen. Do you bring news?”
“Messages from Prince Arutha. Are you bound for council?”
Galain smiled the elvish half-smile that indicated ironic humor. “It
has fallen to us to guard the way. We must remain for a time. We will come as
soon as the dwarves cross the river. They are due anytime now.”
The comment was not lost on Martin as he bade them good-bye and
continued toward Elvandar. Approaching the clearing surrounding the elvish
tree-city, he wondered at the exclusion of Galain and the other young elves
from council. They were all constant companions of Tomas since he came to take
up permanent residency in Elvandar. Martin had not been there since just before
the siege of Crydee, but in those years he had spoken to some of the Natalese
Rangers who ran messages from the Duke to Elvandar to Crydee. On several
occasions he had spent hours talking with Long Leon and Grimsworth of Natal.
While close-mouthed when not among their own kind, they were less guarded with
Longbow, for in the Huntmaster of Crydee they sensed a kindred spirit. He was
the only man not a Ranger of Natal who could enter Elvandar unbidden. The two
Natalese Rangers had indicated great changes in the Elf Queen’s court, and
Martin felt a strange sort of silent disquiet.
As they approached Elvandar in an easy, loping run, Garret said,
“Huntmaster, will they not send someone to fetch the fallen?”
Martin stopped and leaned upon his bow. “Garret, it is not their
way. They will let the forest reclaim them, for they believe their true spirits
are now abiding in the Blessed Isles.” He thought a moment, then said, “Among
my trackers, you are perhaps the best I’ve known.” The still young man blushed
at the compliment, but Longbow said, “No flattery, but simply fact I mention it
because you are the one most likely to replace me should anything happen.”
Garret’s usual hangdog expression gave way to one of close attention
to what Martin was saying. Martin continued, “If something should occur that
takes me from this life, I would hope that someone would continue to keep
Elvandar and the human world from drifting apart.”
Garret nodded. “I think I understand.”
“You must, for it would be a sad thing for the two races to grow
away from one another.” He spoke softly. “About their beliefs you must learn as
you can, but a few things you should know, especially in this time of war. Do
you remember how it is claimed that certain priests can recall the dead, if
they are no more than an hour departed?”
Garret said, “I have heard the story, but I have never met anyone
who claims to have seen it done, or even claims to know someone who has seen
it.”
“It is true. Father Tully says so, and he’s not the sort to be less
than forthright on matters of faith.” Martin looked down at the soil. “There is
a story: an important priest—of which order I do not know—found himself grown
away from the gods and caught up in the human world. He cast off his fine robes
and golden ornaments and donned the simple homespun of an itinerant monk. He
wandered the wilderness, seeking humility. Time and chance brought him to
Elvandar, where he came upon a newly fallen elf, dead by accident but a few
minutes before the priest arrived. He began to recall the elf from death, for
he was a priest of great powers, and sought to share his abilities with all in
need. He was halted by the elf’s wife, and when he asked her why, she said, ‘It
is not our way. He is now in a far better place, and should you recall him, he
will not return but against his will and to our sorrow. That is why we will not
speak his name, lest he hear longing in our voices and return to comfort us at
cost of his own.’ From what I know, no elf has ever been recalled from death.
“I have been told by some that no elf can be revived by human arts.
Others have said that elves have no true souls, which is why they do not
return. I think both are false, and they have a finer sense of where they live
in the world.”
Garret was quiet for a moment while he digested this information.
“It is a strange tale, Huntmaster. What brought it to mind?”
“The death of those elves and your question. It is to show you how
they differ from us, and how you must work to learn their ways. You will spend
time among them.”
“Is the tale of the dead elf true?”
“Yes. The newly fallen elf was the late Elf King, Queen Aglaranna’s
husband. I was but a boy then, thirty years ago, but I remember it. I was with
the hunting party when the accident happened, and I met the priest.”
Garret said nothing, and Martin picked up his weapon and resumed his
journey.
They soon came to the edge of Elvandar. Martin stopped while Garret
stood enraptured by the sight of the great trees. The late-afternoon sun cast
long shadows through the forest, but the high boughs were already glimmering
with their own fairy light.
Martin took Garret by the elbow and gently guided the gawking
tracker along to the Queen’s court. He reached the council ring and entered,
saluting the Queen.
Aglaranna smiled at sight of him. “Welcome, Martin Longbow. It has
been too long since you last came to us.”
Martin introduced Garret, who bowed awkwardly before the Queen. Then
another figure entered the court, from where he had stood in the shadows.
Martin had grown alongside elven children and was as able as any man
in hiding his emotions when need be, but the sight of Tomas rocked him to the
point of nearly exclaiming. Biting back a comment, he forced himself not to
stare and heard Garret’s indrawn breath of amazement. They had heard of the
changes in Tomas, but nothing had prepared either Martin or Garret for the
sight of the towering man before him. Alien eyes regarded them. There was
little remaining of the happy, grinning boy who had once followed Martin
through the woods begging for tales of the elves, or played barrel ball with
Garret. Without cordiality Tomas stepped forward and said, “What word from
Crydee?”
Martin leaned upon his bow. “Prince Arutha sends his greetings,” he
said to the Queen, “and his affections, as well as his hope for your good
health.” Turning to Tomas, who had obviously usurped some position of command
within the Queen’s council, he said, “Arutha sends the following news: Black
Guy, Duke of Bas-Tyra, now rules in Krondor, so no help will be forthcoming to
the Far Coast. Also, the Prince has good cause to believe the outworlders plan
to mount a major offensive soon, whether against Crydee, Elvandar, or the
Duke’s army he cannot tell. However, the southern enclaves are not being
reinforced through the dwarven mines, though they are strongly dug in. My
trackers have had some signs of northward movement, but nothing on a large
scale. It is Arutha’s guess the most likely offensive will be against his
father and Brucal’s army.” Then he said, “And I bring word that Arutha’s Squire
has been slain.” He observed the elven avoidance of naming the dead.
Tomas’s eyes betrayed a glint of emotion at the news of Roland’s
death, but all he said was, “In war men die.”
Calin realized the exchange was something of a personal matter
between Longbow and Tomas. No one else in the court had known Roland well,
though Calin remembered him from the dinner that night so many years ago in
Crydee. Martin was troubled by Tomas’s reaction to the news of his boyhood
friend’s death. Returning to the business of the war, the Elf Prince said, “It
is a logical thing. Should the Kingdom army in the West be broken, the
outworlders could then turn their full attention on the other fronts, gaining
the Free Cities and Crydee quickly. Within a year, two at the most, all of what
once was Keshian Bosania would be under their banners. Then they could march
easily upon Yabon. In time they could march to the gates of Krondor.”
Tomas faced Calin, as if to speak, his eyes narrow. A flash of
communication passed between the Queen and Tomas, and he stepped back into his
place in the council circle. Calin continued, “If the outworlders are not
staging to the west of the mountains, then we should be joined by the dwarves
soon. We’ve had sorties across the river from the outworlders, but no sign of
major attacks to come. I think Arutha is correct in his surmise, and should the
dukes call, we should try to aid them.”
Tomas turned upon the Elf Prince. “Leave Elvandar unprotected!” His
face showed outrage. Martin was startled by the ferocity of Tomas’s barely
checked anger “Without stripping the elven forests of defenders, we could not
mount enough numbers to matter in such a battle.”
Calin’s face remained impassive, but his eyes mirrored Tomas’s
anger. His words came forth quietly. “I am Warleader of Elvandar. I would not
leave our forests unprotected. But should the outworlders mount a major
offensive against the dukes, they will not leave sufficient soldiers along the
river to menace our forests. They have not come against us since we defeated
them with the sorcerer’s aid and their Black Robes were killed. But should they
battle Lords Borric and Brucal, and should the battle be a close thing, our
numbers might tip the balance, especially as we can strike against their weaker
flank.”
Tomas maintained his self-control, standing rigidly for a moment,
then in icy tones he said, “The dwarves follow Dolgan, and Dolgan follows my
lead. They will not come unless I call them to battle.” Without another word he
left the council circle.
Martin watched Tomas leave. His skin crawled as he felt for the
first time the power contained within this strange blend of man and whatever
else lived inside the boy from Crydee. He had caught only a glimpse of what was
within Tomas, but it had been enough Tomas was a being to be feared.
Martin then saw a flicker of expression on Aglaranna’s face. She
rose and said, “I had better have words with Tomas. He has been overwrought of
late.”
As she left, Martin was struck by a certainty. Whatever else he had
seen, he had witnessed a conflict between the Elf Queen’s son and her lover,
and a deep conflict within herself, as well. Aglaranna had worn the expression
of one caught in a hopeless fate.
When the Queen had left, Calin said, “You have come at a propitious
time, Martin. We have need of your wisdom.”
Martin nodded. He sent Garret away to get something to eat, and when
he was gone, Martin studied the Elf Prince, then the others in the council.
Tathar stood at his usual place, to the right of the Queen’s throne. Others he
knew, all old and trusted advisers of the Queen. Many were ancient
Spellweavers.
Martin sat down, patiently waiting for Calin to speak. The Elf
Prince remained silent for a time. Martin studied Calin, for he knew him and
could sense his disquiet. As a boy, Martin had thought the Elf Prince the
finest embodiment of all elven virtues. While his boyish hero worship had
passed, he still regarded Calin with undiminished respect.
Calin said, “Martin, of all here you are the only one to have known
Tomas before this change. What can you say of the transformation you’ve seen?”
Martin spent time considering his reply. “I have only glimpsed these
changes over the years, until this day. That they are great is obvious. But as
to what they herald, I cannot begin to guess. He was a good enough boy; one not
overly given to mischief, though with enough curiosity to find it. He had a
tender side and did not hold back in his affections. His temper was moderate,
though he could lose control when a friend was threatened or struck. In all, he
was much like other boys, a dreamer.”
“And now?”
Martin was troubled and took no pains to hide this. “He is something
beyond my understanding.”
Tathar said, “Your words are clear to us, Martin, and true, for he
has also gone beyond our understanding.”
Calin spoke softly. “Of men, you know our history more than any. You
know of our hatred for the ages spent in bondage to the Valheru. You know we
reject the Dark Path they trod. We fear the return of that power as much as we
do this invasion of outworlders and their Black Robes. You have seen Tomas. You
must know what we are forced to consider.”
Martin nodded. “Yes. You weigh his life.”
“Many of the younger elves follow him blindly,” said Tathar. “They
lack the maturity and wisdom to withstand the subtle influence of the Valheru
magic with him. And while the dwarves do not follow blindly, still they follow,
for they have none of our heritage of fear, and they put great faith in his
leadership. He has proved the means of their survival for eight years now,
saving many of them from death repeatedly.
“But while Tomas has been a boon to us in this struggle against the
invaders, we may have to put aside all other considerations save one: will this
half man, half Valheru attempt to become our master?” Tathar frowned. “If so,
he must be destroyed.”
Martin felt cold inside. Of all the boys he had known at Crydee, he
had held special affection for three, Garret, Tomas, and Pug. He had mourned
silently when Pug had been taken by the Tsurani, and had often wondered if it
had been to his death or captivity. Now he mourned for Tomas, for whatever else
might occur, Tomas would never again be as he once was.
Martin said to Calin. “Can nothing be done?”
Calin indicated Tathar should answer the question. The old
Spellweaver looked around the circle, gaining silent agreement from the other
Spellweavers. To Martin he said, “We do what we can to bring this to a good
ending. But should the Valheru come forth in his might, we would not withstand,
so we are fearful. We harbor no hatred for Tomas. But even as you pity a rabid
wolf, you must kill it.”
Martin looked grimly out at the lights of Elvandar, as darkness
deepened. As long as he remembered, it had been a comforting sight. Now he felt
only cold bitterness. “When shall you decide?”
Tathar said, “You understand our ways. We shall decide when we must
decide.”
Martin rose slowly to his feet. “My counsel to you then is this:
until the change has clearly shown itself to be toward the Dark Path, do not
mistakenly give too much weight to ancient fears. I have long been taught that
those who now rule in Elvandar are of heartier nature and more independent mind
than those who were first set free by the Valheru. Stay your hand until the
last. Something good may come of this yet, or if not that, something that is
not entirely ill.”
Tathar nodded. “Your counsel is given well. It is well received.”
Martin looked heavily burdened “I will do what I can. Once I was
able to influence Tomas, perhaps I may yet again. I will go meditate upon the
matter, then seek him out and speak with him.” None in the circle around the
Queen’s court spoke as he left. They knew his heart was as troubled as their
own.
The throbbing had become worse, not quite a pain, but a discomfort
that grew unnervingly more persistent Tomas sat in the cool glade, near the
quiet pool, struggling within himself. Since coming to live in Elvandar, he had
found his dreams little more than vague shadowy images, with half-remembered
phrases and names to grasp. They were less troublesome, less fearful, less a
presence in his daily life, but the pressure within his head, the dull
near-ache had grown. When he was in battle, he became lost in red rage, and
there was no sense of the ache, but when the battle lust subsided, especially
when he was slow to return to Elvandar, the throbbing returned.
Footsteps sounded lightly behind, and without turning, he said, “I
wish to be alone.”
Aglaranna said, “The pain, Tomas?”
A faint stirring of some strange feeling rose briefly within, and he
cocked his head as if listening for something. Then he answered curtly, “Yes. I
will return to our rooms soon. Leave now and prepare for me to join you later.”
Aglaranna stepped back, her proud features showing pain at being
addressed in such a tone. She turned quickly and left.
As she walked through the woods, her emotions churned within. Since
surrendering to Tomas’s desire, and her own, she had lost the ability to
command him, or to resist his commands. He was now lord over her, and she felt
shame. It was a joyless union, not the return of lost happiness she had hoped
for. But there was a will-sapping compulsion, a need to be with him, to belong
to him, that stripped away her defenses. Tomas was dynamic, powerful, and
sometimes cruel. She corrected herself: not cruel, just so removed from any
other being, no comparison could be made. He was not indifferent to her needs;
he simply was unaware she had any. As she approached Elvandar, the soft fairy
lights reflected in the shimmering tears that touched her cheeks.
Tomas was only partially aware of her departure. Under the dull ache
within his head, a voice faintly called to him. He strained to listen, knowing
its timbre, its color, knowing who called. . . .
“Tomas?”
Yes.
Ashen-Shugar
looked across the desolation of the plains, dry cracked lands devoid of
moisture save for bubbling alkali pots that spewed foul odors into the air.
Aloud, to his unseen companion, he said, “It has been some time since we last
spoke.”
Tathar
and the others seek to keep us apart. You are often forgotten.
The fetid winds blew from the north, cold but cloying. The smell of
decay was everywhere, and in the residue of the mighty madness that had gripped
the universe around, only faint stirrings of life reasserting itself were felt.
“No matter. We are together again.”
What
is this place?
“The
Desolation of the Chaos Wars. Draken-Korin’s monument, the lifeless tundra that
was once great grasslands. Few living things abide here. Most creatures flee to
the south, and more hospitable climes.”
Who
are you?
Ashen-Shugar
laughed “I am what you are becoming. We are one. So you have said many times.”
I
had forgotten.
Ashen-Shugar
called, and Shuruga sped toward him over a grey landscape, while black clouds
thundered overhead. The mighty dragon landed, and his master climbed upon his
back. Casting a glance at the spot marked by ash, the only reminder of
Draken-Konn’s existence, the Valheru said, “Come, let us see what fate has
wrought.”
Shuruga leaped into the heavens, and above the desolation they flew.
Ashen-Shugar was silent as he rode upon Shuruga’s broad back, feeling the wind
blowing across his face. They flew, and time passed them by, as they shared the
death of one age and the birth of another. High in the blue sky they soared,
free of the horror of the Chaos Wars.
It
is worthy of sorrow.
“I
think not. There is a lesson, though I cannot bring myself to know it Yet I
sense you do.” Ashen-Shugar closed his eyes as the throbbing returned.
Yes,
I remember
“Tomas?”
Tomas’s eyes snapped open. He found Galain standing a short way off,
near the edge of the clearing. “Shall I return later?”
Tomas rose slowly from where he had sat dreaming. His voice was
rough and tired. “No, what is it?”
“Dolgan’s dwarven band has reached the outer forest and waits for
you near the winding brook. The dwarves struck an outworld enclave as they
crossed the river.” There was a merry smile upon the young elf’s face. “They have
finally captured prisoners.”
A strange look of mixed delight and fury passed over Tomas’s face.
Galain felt strange emotions as he regarded the reaction of the warrior in
white and gold to this news. As if listening to a distant call, Tomas spoke
distractedly. “Go to the dwarven camp. I will join you there presently.”
Galain withdrew, and Tomas listened. A distant voice grew louder.
“Have I erred?”
The hall echoed with the words, for now it was vacant, the servants
having slipped away. Ashen-Shugar brooded upon his throne. He spoke to shadows.
“Have I erred?”
Now
you know doubt, answered the ever-present voice.
“This strange quietness within, what is it?”
It
is death approaching.
Ashen-Shugar
closed his eyes. “I thought as much. So few of my kind lived beyond battle. It
was a rare thing. I am the last. Still, I would like to fly Shuruga once more.”
He
is gone. Dead, ages past.
“But I
flew him this morning.”
It
was a dream. As is this.
“Am I
then also mad?”
You
are but a memory. This is but a dream.
“Then I
will do what is planned. I accept the inevitable. Another will come to take my
place.”
So
it has happened already, for I am the one who came, and I have taken up your
sword and put upon your mantle; your cause is now mine I stand against those
who would plunder this world.
“Then
am I content to die.”
Opening his eyes, he took one last look at his hall now cloaked in
ancient dust. Closing them for the last time, the Ruler of the Eagles’ Reaches
cast his final spell. His waning powers, still unmatched upon this world by any
save the new gods, flowed from his tired body, infusing his armor. Smoky wisps
wafted upward from where his body had rested, and soon only the golden armor,
white tabard, shield, and sword of white and gold remained.
I am
Ashen-Shugar; I am Tomas.
Tomas’s eyes opened, and for a moment he was confused to find
himself in the glade. A strange passion grew within as he felt a new strength
flowing throughout his being. In his mind rang a clarion call: I am
Ashen-Shugar, the Valheru. I will destroy all who seek to plunder my world.
With a terrible resolve he left the glade, to find the place the
dwarves had brought his enemies.
“It is good to see you again, friend Longbow,” said Dolgan, puffing
away on his pipe. They had not seen each other since a chance meeting several
years before when the dwarves passed through the forest east of Crydee on their
way to Elvandar.
Martin, Calin, and a few elves had come to see the dwarves’
prisoners, who were still bound. They waited in a group in a corner of the
clearing, glaring at their captors. Galain entered the clearing and said,
“Tomas is coming soon.”
Martin said, “How is it, Dolgan, after all these years, you managed
to capture prisoners, and an entire enclave at that?”
Behind the eight bound warriors stood a fearful group of Tsurani
slaves, unbound but huddled together, uncertain of their fate Dolgan gave an
offhanded wave. “Usually we’re raiding across the river, and prisoners tend to
slow things down during a withdrawal, being either unconscious or
uncooperative. This time we had little choice in the matter, as we needed to
cross the river Crydee. In past years we’d wait to sneak across in darkness,
but this year they’re as close as nettles in a thicket everywhere along the
river.
“We found this band in a relatively isolated spot, with only these
eight to guard the slaves. They were repairing an earthwork, one that I judge
was overrun a short while ago during an elven sortie. We slipped around them,
then a few of the lads climbed into the trees—though they liked it little. We
dropped down upon the three outer guards, silencing them before they could
shout the alert. The other five were napping, the lazy louts. We slipped into
camp, and after a few well-placed strokes with our hammers, we bound them.
These others”—he indicated the slaves—”were too timid to make a sound. When it
was clear we had not alarmed the nearby enclaves, we thought to bring them
along. Seemed a waste to leave them behind. Thought we might learn something
useful.” Dolgan tried to keep an impassive expression, but pride over his
company’s work shone through like a beacon in the night.
Martin smiled his approval and said to Calin, “I hope we may learn
what is coming, if the feared offensive is really to be mounted and where. I’ve
learned a few phrases of their tongue, but not enough to make any sense of what
they might tell us. Only Father Tully and Charles, my Tsurani tracker, can
speak to them fluently. Perhaps we should attempt to move them to Crydee?”
Calin said, “We have the means to learn their tongue, given time. I
doubt they would lend much cooperation in their transport. Most likely they
would try to raise the alarm every step of the way.”
Martin conceded the point. Then a disturbance caused him to turn.
Tomas came striding into the clearing Dolgan began to greet him, but
something in the young warrior’s manner and expression silenced him. There was
madness in Tomas’s eyes, something the dwarf had glimpsed before as a glimmer,
but which now shone forth brightly.
Tomas regarded the bound prisoners, then pulled his sword slowly and
pointed at them. The words he spoke were alien to both Martin and the dwarves,
but the elves were rocked by what they heard. Several of the older elves
dropped to their knees in supplication, and the younger ones drew away in
reflexive fear. Only Calin stood his ground, though he appeared shaken. Then
slowly the Elf Prince turned to Martin, his face drained of color. In terrified
tones he said, “At last the Valheru is truly among us.”
Ignoring all others in the clearing, Tomas walked up to the first
Tsurani prisoner. The bound soldier looked up with a mixture of fear and
defiance. Suddenly the golden sword was raised high and arced down, severing
the man’s head from his shoulders. Blood splattered the white tabard, then
flowed off, leaving it spotless. A low moan of fear came from the huddled
slaves, and the remaining soldiers’ eyes were wide in terror. Slowly Tomas
turned to face the next prisoner, and again his sword took a life.
Martin freed himself from shocked paralysis, forcing his eyes away
from the butchery. He felt terrible dread, but it appeared as nothing to what
the elves revealed in their abasement before Tomas. Calin’s face showed a
struggle within as he tried to overcome a nearly instinctive obedience to the
words spoken in the ancient language of the Valheru, masters of all, ages past.
The younger elves, less studied in the old wisdom, simply had no understanding
of the overwhelming need to obey this man in white and gold. The language of
the Valheru was still the language of power.
Tomas turned away from his slaughter, and Martin felt struck by the
strength of his gaze. Gone was any vestige of the boy from Crydee. Now an alien
presence suffused his being Tomas’s arm drew back, and Martin tensed to dodge
the blow. Any human was a potential victim, and even the dwarves drew back at
the awesome menace Tomas projected. Then a faint spark of recognition entered
Tomas’s eyes, and he said, in a distant voice, “Martin, by the love I once bore
you, be gone or your life is forfeit.”
Mustering courage against the most consuming fear he had ever felt,
Martin shouted, “I’ll not stand and watch you slaughter helpless men!”
Again a distant voice answered, steeped in ancient majesty and lost
grandeur regained. “These come into my world, Martin. None may seek that which
is my domain, my preserve, mine alone! Shall you, too, come into my world,
Martin?” With inhuman speed Tomas wheeled, and two Tsurani died.
Martin charged, crossing the gap between them in a bound, and
knocked Tomas away from the prisoners. They went down in a heap, and Martin
grabbed at the wrist that held the golden sword.
A strong man capable of carrying a freshly killed buck for miles,
Martin was no match for Tomas. As easily as picking up a bothersome infant,
Tomas pushed Martin aside and came lightly to his feet. Martin sprang at Tomas
again, but this time Tomas stood ready. He simply seized Martin by the tunic
and said, “None may interfere with my will.” He tossed Martin across the
clearing as if he weighed less than a tenth his weight. Martin’s arms flailed
the air as he arced high over the ground, striving to control his fall. He
landed hard, and all around could hear the breath explode from his lungs as he
struck.
Dolgan rushed to his side, for the elves were still held in thrall
by what they had witnessed. The dwarven chief poured water from a skin at his
side upon Martin’s face and shook him awake. The strangled cries of terror from
the Tsurani slaves watching soldiers being butchered greeted Martin as he
regained his wits.
Martin struggled to focus his vision, the scene before him swimming
and shifting. When he could see, he drew a hissing breath in horror.
Tomas struck down the last Tsurani soldier and began to advance upon
the cringing slaves. They appeared unable to move, watching with wide eyes the
bringer of their destruction, looking like nothing so much to Martin as a band
of deer startled by a sudden light in the night.
A ragged cry came from Martin’s lips as Tomas killed the first
Tsurani slave, a pitiful-looking willow of a man. Longbow struggled to rise,
senses reeling, and Dolgan helped him to his feet.
Tomas raised his sword and another died. Again the golden blade was
raised, and he looked into the face of his victim. Eyes round with fear, a
young boy, no more than twelve years old, stood waiting for the blow that would
end his life.
Suddenly time expanded for Tomas, the moment frozen in his mind. He
studied the shock of dark hair and the large brown eyes of the boy. The child
crouched awaiting the death he saw over him, his head shaking no, as his lips
formed a single phrase over and over.
In the faint light of the clearing, Tomas saw an old ghost, the
specter of a friend long forgotten. A remembered bond, from his earliest
memories as a child, reassociated itself with his consciousness. Images
blurred, past and present confused, and he said, “Pug?”
Within his mind, pain exploded, and another will sought to overwhelm
him.
Pug!
it shrieked.
Kill
him! came a raging answer, and within him two wills
battled.
No! screamed the other.
To everyone in the glade, Tomas stood frozen, shaking with some
inner struggle, his sword still held high, waiting for release.
These
are the enemy! Slay them.
He is a boy! Only a boy!
He is the enemy!
A boy!
Tomas’s
face became a mask of pain; his teeth clenched, and every muscle drew taut,
stretching skin tightly over skull. His eyes grew round, and perspiration began
to flow from under his helm, down his brows and cheeks.
Martin stumbled to his feet. He moved slowly, every gesture bringing
pain from the battering he had taken.
Tomas’s hand slowly moved downward, each inch a shaking, trembling
passage as he warred within. The boy was transfixed, unable to move, his eyes
following the movement of the blade.
I am
Ashen-Shugar! I am Valheru! sang a voice within, in
a torrent of anger, battle madness, and bloodlust.
Against
this sea of rage stood a single rock, a calm, small voice within that said,
simply, I am Tomas.
Again
and again the sea of hate crashed over the rock of calm, each time engulfing
it, then sliding back, to come again. But each time the tide diminished and the
rock stood clear, rising above the mad surf. A shattering of something, the
thundering of ages lost and passing, rocked Tomas’s mind. He reeled, then swam
within an alien landscape, seeking a pinpoint of light he knew was his way to
freedom. Tides swept him along, and he battled, struggling to keep his head
above the strangling black sea. A shrieking, evil wind blew overhead, and to
his ears it sang a song of woeful meter. He struck out, and again he saw a
pinpoint of light. Again the tide engulfed him, forcing him away from his goal,
but this time it was weaker. Once more he struggled toward the light. Then came
a surge, a last, terrifying assault culminating in a total attack upon him I
am Ashen-Shugar! There came a breaking of the will, something snapping like
the dead branch of a tree under the weight of newly fallen snow, like the sound
of old winter ice breaking at spring’s touch, as if the last assault took too
great a toll.
The
black sea lost its fury and subsided, and he was again standing upon firm
ground, a single rock I am Tomas. In the distance the pinpoint of light
began to expand before his eyes, racing forward to engulf him.
I am
Tomas.
“Tomas!”
He blinked and saw he was again in the glade. Before him crouched
the boy, waiting to die. He turned his head and saw Martin, sighting along a
cloth-yard arrow, drawn hard against his cheek. The Huntmaster of Crydee said,
“Put down your sword, or by the gods, I’ll kill you where you stand.”
Tomas’s gaze wandered about the glade, and he saw the dwarves with
weapons drawn, as had some of the older elves. Calin, still shaking, had his
sword out and was slowly advancing upon him.
Martin watched Tomas closely, not fearing him, but respectful of his
awesome strength and speed. He waited and saw the flicker of madness still in
Tomas’s eyes, then, as if a veil were lifted, saw them clear. Abruptly the golden
sword fell from his hand, and the pale, nearly colorless eyes filled with
tears. Tomas dropped to his knees, and a moan of terrible anguish was torn from
his lips, and Tomas cried out, “Oh, Martin, what have I become?”
Martin lowered his bow, watching as Tomas gathered his arms about
himself. Into the glade came Tathar and the other Spellweavers. They approached
Tomas and then surveyed the others in the glade. So terrible were Tomas’s sobs
of anguish, so filled with sorrow and remorse, that many of the elves
discovered they also wept.
Tathar said to Martin Longbow, “We felt the fabric of our spells
torn asunder a short while ago, and came at once. We feared the Valheru had
come, rightly it seems.”
Martin said, “Now?”
“The other side of the balance. That the Valheru is at last
displaced by the boy there can be no doubt, but the boy now must feel the
weight of ages of slaughter, and the guilt over joy felt when taking other
lives. The burdens felt by mortals are again his, and we shall now see if he can
withstand them. This agony may prove his end.”
Martin left the ancient elf and crossed to Tomas. In the dim light
he was the first to perceive the change. Gone were the alien cast to his
features, the gleaming eyes, the haughty brow. Again he was Tomas, a man,
though there were still legacies of his experience that would forever proclaim
him something more than a man: the elven ears, the pale eyes. Gone was the Lord
of Power, the Old One, the Valheru. Where before a Dragon Lord had stood now
crouched a troubled, sick man in torment over what he had done.
Tomas raised his head as Martin touched him upon the shoulder.
Red-rimmed eyes, nearly mad from grief, regarded Martin for a brief moment,
then closed as if seeking oblivion to all around. For some time the elves and
dwarves watched, and the Tsurani slaves were silent, aware that some miracle
had occurred, not understanding, but suddenly sure they were spared. For some
time they watched, as Martin Longbow cradled the sobbing man in white and gold,
who cried in anguish so terrible to hear.
***
Aglaranna
sat upon her sleeping pallet, brushing her long red-gold hair. As before, she
waited for Tomas, half hoping, half fearing he would come.
A shout from outside caused her to rise. She gathered her robes
around her and left her quarters. Standing upon a platform, she watched as a
group of elves and dwarves came toward Elvandar’s heart. With them came Martin
Longbow and some humans, clearly out-worlders from their dress.
Her hands went to her mouth as she gasped. In the center of the
group walked Tomas, at his side a young boy with eyes wide at the splendor of
Elvandar.
Aglaranna was unable to move, fearful that what she witnessed was
the product of delusion born of hope. Time sped past as she waited, then Tomas
stood before her. Leaving the boy, he stepped forward. Martin took the boy by
the hand and led him away, the others following, giving the Elf Queen and Tomas
the solitude they needed.
Tomas reached out slowly and touched her face, and he drank in the
sight of her, as if seeing her as he had first at Crydee. Then, without words,
he slowly, gently enfolded her in his arms. He held her in silence, letting her
feel the warmth of the love that filled him at sight of her.
After a time he whispered in her ear, “For each moment of sorrow I
have visited upon you, O my lady, I pray the gods grant me a year to gift you
with joy. I am again your adoring subject.”
Too filled with happiness to speak, the Elf Queen simply clung to
him, her sorrow only a dim memory.
28
EMISSARY
The troops stood quietly.
Long columns of men awaited their turn at passing through the rift
into Midkemia. Officers walked by, their presence ensuring discipline in the
lines. Laurie, in the mask and robe of a Red Priest, was impressed at the level
of control these officers had over their men. He judged the Tsurani code of
honor, where orders were followed without question, a very alien thing.
He and Kasumi moved quickly down the line, heading for the first
detachment behind the one now entering the rift. Laurie bent his knees and
stooped, to detract from his noticeable height. As they had hoped, more
soldiers than not looked away as the bogus Red Priest passed.
When they reached the head of the column, Kasumi fell in. His
younger brother, who had been promoted to Strike Leader for this offensive,
seemed to pay no attention to his commander’s late arrival, or to the priest of
Turakamu who arrived with him.
After a seemingly interminable delay, the command came, and they
stepped forward into the shimmering glow of “nothingness” that marked the rift
between the two worlds. There was a brief flash of lights, a momentary
dizziness, and they found themselves walking forward into a light Midkemian
rain. Sheets of wetness, little more than a heavy mist, fell around them. The
Tsurani soldiers, hot-weather-bred, wrapped cloaks about themselves.
A staging officer briefly conferred with Kasumi, and the troops were
ordered to move off to the northeast a specified distance and erect a camp.
Kasumi and Hokanu were then to report to the Warlord’s tent for briefings. The
Warlord himself was back in Kentosani, the Holy City, preparing for the
Imperial Games, but his subcommander was to instruct them in their duties and
areas of responsibility until his return.
They quickly moved up toward the front and set up camp Once the
commander’s tent was up, Laurie and the Shinzawai brothers ducked inside. While
bundles containing Midkemian clothing and weapons were unpacked, Kasumi said,
“As soon as we return from our meeting with the subcommander, we will eat.
Tonight we will lead a patrol of our area and try to slip through the lines.”
Kasumi looked at his brother. “After we have gone, brother, it will be your responsibility
to hide our departure for as long as possible Once there has been fighting
reported, you may claim we have been lost to the enemy.”
Hokanu agreed. “We had best report now.”
Kasumi looked at Laurie. “Stay inside. We want no risk. You are the tallest
damned priest I have ever seen.”
Laurie nodded. He sat upon some cushions and waited.
The patrol moved silently through the trees. The rain had stopped,
but the weather had turned colder, and Laurie suppressed a shiver. Years in the
hot climes of Kelewan had driven away his ability to ignore the chill. He
wondered about the new troops from Tsuranuanni and how they would react when
the first snowfalls came. Most likely with studied indifference, regardless of
what they felt inside. A Tsurani soldier would never let himself appear upset
by something as trivial as solid water falling from the sky.
They elected the North Pass, for it led to the largest front, and
they were less likely to be noticed passing through the lines. They reached the
head of the pass, and a station guard passed them along. Once outside the
valley they struck slightly more eastward than their patrol called for.
Beyond the rolling hills and light woods was the road from LaMut to
Zun. Once the two travelers had left their patrol and reached the road, they
would head for Zun, buy horses, and ride south. With luck they would reach
Krondor in two weeks. There they would change mounts and head for Salador,
where they would find passage on a ship for Rillanon.
The only obstacle between them and the road was a large portion of
the Kingdom’s Army. If they were discovered by a Kingdom patrol, they would try
to pass themselves off as travelers who had been captured by the Tsurani and
escaped. There could be no question of Laurie being Tsurani, and Kasumi’s
command of the King’s Tongue was so complete that he could easily pass for a Kingdom
citizen from the Vale of Dreams; several languages were spoken in that border
area with Great Kesh, so Kasumi’s slight accent would be reasonable.
The patrol moved at a dogtrot that ate up miles. Laurie ran beside
Kasumi, marveling at the soldiers’ stamina. They might not be showing fatigue,
but he was feeling it. Hokanu signaled for the patrol to stop at the head of a
large, flat area near the woods. “Here we will start our swing back to our
patrol area. We should not see any Tsurani soldiers from here. Let us hope, for
your sake, we don’t meet with Kingdom troops either.”
He gave a signal, and they moved out. Laurie and Kasumi were handed
backpacks and clothing. They quickly changed, then followed the route taken by
the patrol. They would follow for a short distance, using the patrol for cover
should any Kingdom troops be nearby.
They moved into a small vale and found the patrol held up by
something ahead. The last man in line motioned them for quiet. They moved to
the head of the line, and Laurie looked around for a quick exit route should
there be any trouble. Hokanu said softly, “I thought I heard something, but
there has been no sound for several minutes.”
Kasumi nodded. “Then move forward. We will wait until you have
crossed that open area ahead, then follow to the woods.” He indicated a stand
of trees, on the other side of the clearing.
When the patrol had reached the center of the open area, the clouds
parted and shafts of moonlight lit up the area “Damn!” Kasumi swore under his
breath. “They might as well light torches now.”
Suddenly the trees erupted with motion and sound. The ground
trembled as riders came charging forward, out from the trees that hid them.
Each wore heavy chain mail and a full helm. Long lances were leveled at the
surprised Tsurani soldiers.
The Tsurani had barely enough time to ready a rude line for defense
before the riders were upon them. Cries of horses and men filled the air, and
the Tsurani fell before the charge. The riders rode over the Tsurani and
re-formed at the end of the vale where the two fugitives hid. They wheeled
about and charged again. The Tsurani survivors of the last charge, less than
half the men, moved quickly up the west side of the vale, where the trees and
incline of the hillside would counter the horsemen’s ability to charge.
Laurie touched Kasumi’s arm and motioned to the right. It was
evident the Tsurani officer was barely holding himself in check from joining
his men. Suddenly Kasumi was off, hugging the edge of the trees as he ran low.
Laurie followed and spotted what appeared to be a rough path heading eastward.
He grabbed Kasumi’s sleeve and pointed. They turned their backs to the fighting
and moved off.
The next day found two travelers moving down the road to Zun. Both
wore woolen shirts, trousers, and cloaks. Closer examination by a trained eye
would have revealed that the material was not really wool, but something like
it. Their belts and boots were made from needra hide dyed to resemble leather.
The fashion was Midkemian, as were the swords they wore on their belts.
One was obviously a minstrel, for he wore a lute slung over his
backpack. The other looked to be a freebooter mercenary. Any casual observer
would have been unlikely to guess their origins, or the riches carried in those
backpacks, for each had a small fortune in gems tucked away in the bottom of
his pack.
A northbound troop of light cavalry passed them on the road, and
Laurie said, “Things have changed since I was last here. Those men in the
forest were Royal Krondonan Lancers, and those who just passed wore the colors
of Quester’s View. All the forces of the Armies of the West must be marshaling
here. Something seems to be in the air. Perhaps they have somehow gleaned your
Warlord’s plan for a major offensive?”
“I don’t know. Whatever is happening does not seem to indicate that
things are as stable as we have been led to believe back home. Alliances are
very uneasy since the death of the Lord of the Minwanabi and the emergence of
new forces in the Great Game. The Warlord may be more desperate than my father
judged. And the concentration of troops here makes me think the Warlord’s
victory may not be easily won.” Kasumi was quiet for a moment as they walked
along the road. “I hope that Hokanu was among those who reached the trees.” It
was the first time he had mentioned his brother, and Laurie could think of
nothing to say.
Two days later, Laurie, a minstrel late of Tyr-Sog, and Kenneth, a
mercenary from the Vale of Dreams, sat in the Green Cat Inn in the city of Zun.
Both ate with hearty appetite, for they had lived on soldiers’ rations—cakes of
grain and dried fruit—for two days.
Laurie had spent over an hour negotiating with a less than reputable
gem broker for several smaller stones’ value. He had settled for one third
their actual worth, stating, “If he thinks they are stolen, he will not be too
quick to ask questions.”
Kasumi asked, “Why didn’t you sell him all the stones?”
“Your father has given us enough to retire on for the rest of our
days. I doubt if all the brokers in Zun could raise the gold to pay for them.
We will sell a few as we travel; besides, they weigh less than gold.”
Finishing their meal, the two men paid and left. Kasumi could only
just refrain from staring at all the metal he could see everywhere, a
lifetime’s riches on Kelewan. Just the cost of the meal in silver could support
a Tsurani family for a year.
They hurried along one of the city’s business streets, heading to
the south gate Near there, they had been informed, a reputable trader in horses
would sell them mounts and tack for a fair price. They found the man, a thin,
hawk-beaked fellow by the name of Brin. Laurie spent the better part of an hour
haggling with the horse trader for two of his better mounts. They left him
expressing concern over their ability to sleep nights after cheating an honest
businessman out of the money he needed to feed his starving children.
As they rode through the gate that put them on the road to Ylith,
Kasumi said, “Much of this land of yours seems odd, but as you haggled with
that merchant, I was reminded of home. Our traders are much more polite and
would never think of raising their voices in such a manner, but it is still the
same thing. They all have starving children.”
Laurie laughed and spurred his mount forward. Soon they were out of
sight of the city.
South of Quester’s View they passed more troops on the road, this
time Kingdom regulars and auxiliaries trudging along on foot while their
officers rode Laurie and Kasumi had stopped to untack and graze their horses
while the column moved past. The fighter watched the soldiers passing with an
expert’s eye. Red-uniformed soldiers marched in tight formation, while the more
ragged auxiliaries still managed a look of organization. The baggage train
moved in good order, experienced cart drivers keeping the animals in proper
intervals. When they passed, Kasumi said, “Those soldiers are better than any
I’ve seen so far on your world, Laurie Those in red look like professionals.
They march well. And those others seem experienced, despite their motley look.”
Laurie nodded. “I recognize the standard. That’s the garrison of
Shamata, in the Vale of Dreams. They have had their fair share of fighting
Kesh’s dog-soldiers and are a veteran outfit. Those others are auxiliaries,
Valemen mercenaries; a less tender band of lads you’d be hard pressed to find.”
Laurie started to resaddle his horse. “They’re as seasoned a force of men as
your countrymen will have faced, in truth.”
When the horses were tacked up, Laurie and Kasumi remounted and rode
on. Soon they could see the Bitter Sea, as the road rounded the hills of
Quester’s View.
Laurie pulled up his horse and stared out to sea. “What is it?”
asked Kasumi.
Laurie shaded his eyes. “Ships! A whole fleet of them sailing
north.” He sat for a moment watching, and at last Kasumi could see dots of
white upon the blue of the sea.
“Where are they bound?” Kasumi asked.
“Ylith is the only major point north of here. They must be carrying
supplies for the war.”
They resumed their ride. A sense of urgency descended upon them
both, as everything they saw pointed to an intensification of the war, and the
longer they tarried, the less likely the success of their mission.
Fourteen days later, they reached the northern gate of Krondor. As
they rode through, they were regarded suspiciously by several guards dressed in
black and gold. Once beyond earshot of the gate guards, Laurie said, “Those are
not the Prince’s tabards. The banner of Bas-Tyra flies over Krondor.”
They rode slowly for a minute, then Kasumi said, “What does it
mean?”
“I don’t know. But I think I know a place we can find out.” They
rode through a series of streets bounded on each side by warehouses and
commercial enterprises. Sounds from the docks, several streets away, could be
heard. Otherwise the district was quiet. “Strange,” remarked Laurie, as they
rode on. “This part of the city is usually busiest at this time of day.”
Kasumi looked around, not sure of what he expected to see. The
Midkemian cities, compared to those of the Empire, seemed small and dirty.
Still, there was something strange about the lack of activity here. Both Zun
and Ylith had been teeming with soldiers, traders, and citizens at midday, even
though they were smaller cities than Krondor. As they rode, a feeling of
disquiet visited Kasumi.
They entered a section of the city even more run-down than the
warehouse district. Here the streets were narrow, with four- and five-story
buildings hugging closely to either side Dark shadows abounded, even at noon.
Those in the street, a few traders and women going to market, moved quietly and
with speed. Everywhere the riders looked, they could see expressions of caution
and distrust.
Laurie led Kasumi to a gate, behind which the upper part of a
three-story building could be seen. Laurie leaned over in the saddle and pulled
on a bell rope. When there was no answer after a few minutes, he pulled again.
A moment later a peek window in the door slid aside, two eyes could
be seen, and a voice said, “What’s your business?”
Laurie’s tone was sharp. “Lucas, is that you? What is happening when
travelers can’t gain entrance?”
The eyes widened, and the peek window slid shut. The gate swung open
with a creaking protest, and a man stepped out to push it wide. “Laurie, you
scoundrel!” he said as he admitted the riders. “It’s been five—no, six years.”
They rode in, and Laurie was shocked by the condition of the inn.
Off to one side was a dilapidated stable. Opposite the gate a sign hung over
the main entrance, depicting in faded hues a parrot of many colors with wings
spread. They could hear the gate close behind them.
The man called Lucas, tall and gaunt, with grey hair, said, “You’ll
have to stable the animals yourself. I am alone here and must return to the
common room before my guests steal everything there. I’ll see you and your
friend inside and we can talk.” He turned away, and the two riders were left to
tend to their mounts.
As they removed the saddles from the horses, Laurie said, “There is
a lot happening here that I don’t understand. The Rainbow Parrot was never a
showplace, but it was always one of the better taverns in the Poor Quarter.” He
quietly rubbed down his animal. “If there is any place we can find out what is
truly going on in Krondor, this is it. And one thing I have learned over my
years of traveling through the Kingdom is when gate guards are watching
travelers closely, it is time to stay somewhere they are not likely to visit.
You can get your throat cut quickly in the Poor Quarter, but you’ll rarely see
a guardsman about. And if they do come, the man who was trying to cut your
throat will more than likely hide you until they are gone.”
‘And then try to cut your throat.”
Laurie laughed. “You learn quickly.”
When the horses were cared for, the two travelers carried their
saddles and packs into the inn. Inside they were greeted by the sight of a
dimly lit common room, with a long bar along the rear wall. On the left stood a
large fireplace, and on the right a stairway leading upward. There were a
number of empty tables in the room, and two with customers. The newcomers were
given a quick look by the guests, who then returned to their drinks and quiet
conversation.
Laurie and Kasumi crossed over to the bar, where Lucas stood
cleaning some wine cups with a less than clean rag. They dropped their packs at
their feet, and Laurie said, “Any Keshian wine?”
Lucas said, “A little, but it is expensive. There has been little
trade with Kesh since the trouble started.”
Laurie looked at Lucas, as if weighing the cost “Then two ales.”
Lucas drew two large tankards of ale and said, “It is good to see
you, Laurie. I’ve missed that tender voice of yours.”
Laurie said, “That’s not what you said the last time. As I recall,
you likened it to the screeching of a cat looking for a fight.”
They chuckled over that, and Lucas said, “With things so bleak, I
have mellowed toward those who were true friends. There are few of us left.” He
threw a pointed look at Kasumi.
Laurie said, “This is Kenneth, a true friend of mine, Lucas.”
Lucas continued to regard the Tsurani for a moment, then smiled
“Laurie’s recommendation counts heavily. Welcome.” He extended his hand, and
Kasumi shook with him, Kingdom fashion.
“I am pleased at your welcome.”
Lucas frowned at the sound of his accent. “An outlander?”
“From the Vale of Dreams,” said Kasumi.
“The Kingdom side,” added Laurie.
Lucas studied the fighter. After a moment he shrugged. “Whatever. It
matters not a whit to me, but be wary. These are suspicious times, and there is
little love wasted on strangers. Take care who you speak with, for there are
rumors that Kesh’s dog-soldiers are ready to move north again, and you are not
far from being Keshian.”
Before Kasumi could say anything, Laurie said, “Is there to be
trouble with Kesh, then?”
Lucas shook his head. “I can’t say. The market has more rumors than
a beggar has boils.” His voice lowered. “Two weeks back, traders arrived with
word the Empire of Great Kesh was again fighting far to the south, seeking to
subdue their former vassals in the Confederacy once more. So things should stay
quiet for a while. They learned the folly of a two-front war over a hundred
years back when they managed to lose all of Bosania and still not beat the
Confederacy.”
Laurie said, “We have been traveling for a very long time and have
heard little news. Why is Bas-Tyra’s banner over Krondor?”
Lucas quickly looked around the room. The drinkers seemed oblivious
to the conversation at the bar, but Lucas motioned for silence. “I will show
you a room,” he said loudly. Both Laurie and Kasumi were a little surprised,
but picked up their belongings and followed Lucas upstairs without comment.
He led them to a small room, with two beds and a nightstand. When
the door was closed behind, he said, “I trust you, Laurie, so I’ll ask no
questions, but know things have changed greatly since last you were here. Even
in the Poor Quarter there are ears that belong to the Viceroy. Bas-Tyra has the
city under his boot-heel, and it is a foolish man who speaks without seeing who
is listening.”
Lucas sat down on one of the beds, and Laurie and Kasumi sat across
from him Lucas continued, “When Bas-Tyra came to Krondor he carried the King’s
warrant naming him ruler of Krondor, with full viceregal powers. Prince Erland
and his family were locked up in the palace, though Guy calls it ‘protective
custody.’ Then Guy came down hard on the city. Press-gangs roamed the
waterfront, and many a man now sails in Lord Jessup’s fleet without his wife or
children knowing what became of their old pa. Since then, any who speak against
the Viceroy or King simply vanish, ‘cause Guy’s got a secret police listening
at every door in the city.
“Taxes increase each year to pay for the war, and trade’s drying up,
except for those selling to the army for the war, and they’re getting paid in
worthless vouchers. These are hard times, and the Viceroy’s doing nothing to
make them easier. Food is scarce, and there is little money to pay for what
there is. Many farmers have lost their farms for taxes, and now the land lies
fallow for want of someone to till it. So the farmers wander into the city,
swelling the population. Most of the young men have been drafted into the army
or the fleet. Be careful you aren’t picked up by the guards, for whatever
reason, and be wary of the press-gangs.
“Still,” Lucas said with a chuckle, “things got lively around here
for a time when Prince Arutha came to Krondor.”
“Borric’s son? He’s in the city?” asked Laurie.
A twinkle of pleasure showed in Lucas’s eyes. “No longer.” He
chuckled again. “Last winter, as bold as bright brass, the Prince comes sailing
into Krondor. He must have taken the Straits of Darkness during the winter, or
he never would have reached the city when he did.” He quickly told them of
Arutha and Anita’s escape.
Laurie said, “Did they return to Crydee?”
Lucas nodded. “A trader in from Carse a week ago was full of news of
this and that. One thing he heard was some Tsurani were acting up around
Jonril, and the Prince of Crydee was ready to come down to help if needed. So
Arutha must have made it back.”
Laurie said, “Guy must have been fit to burst at the news.”
Lucas’s smile vanished. “Well, he was, Laurie. He’d tossed Prince
Erland into the dungeon to get his permission to marry Anita. He kept him there
after he heard of Anita’s escape. I guess he thought the girl would come back
rather than let her father stay in a damp cell, but he was wrong. Now the
word’s on the street the Prince is near death from the chill. That’s why the
city’s in such a state. No one knows what will happen if Erland dies. He’s well
liked, and there might be trouble.” Laurie looked at Lucas with an unspoken
question. “Nothing like rebellion,” Lucas answered. “We’re too dispirited. But
a few of Guy’s guards may turn up missing at muster, and there’ll be many
inconveniences getting supplies to the garrison and palace and the like. And I
wouldn’t wish to be the Viceroy’s taxman when he’s next sent into the Poor
Quarter.”
Laurie considered what he had heard “We are headed east. What about
conditions on the road?”
Lucas slowly shook his head. “There is still some traveling done.
Once past Darkmoor, you should have scant trouble, I’m thinking. We hear that
things in the East are more as they used to be. Still, I’d move carefully.”
Kasumi asked, “Will we be troubled leaving the city?”
“The north gate is still the best way. It is undermanned, as usual.
For a small fee, the Mockers can see you safely through.”
“Mockers?” asked the fighter.
Lucas raised his brows in surprise “You are from a long way off. The
Guild of Thieves. They remain in control of the Poor Quarter, and the Upright
Man still has influence with the merchants and traders, especially along the
docks. The warehouse district is their second home, after the Poor Quarter.
They can get you out, if you have any trouble at the gate.”
Laurie said, “We will keep that in mind, Lucas. What of your family?
I have not seen them around.”
Lucas seemed to shrink into himself, “My wife is dead, Laurie, of
the fever, a year ago. My sons are both in the army. I have heard little of
them in a year. Last time I received a message, they were in the north with
Lords Borric and Brucal.
“The city is full of veterans of the war. You can see them
everywhere. They are the ones with missing limbs, or blind eyes. But they
always wear their old tabards. And a pathetic sight they are, too.” He got a
faraway look in his eyes. “I just hope my boys don’t end up like that.”
Laurie and Kasumi said nothing. Lucas came out of his reverie. “I
must return downstairs . . . Supper will be ready in four hours, though nothing
like I used to serve.” As the innkeeper turned to go, he said, “If you need to
contact the Mockers, let me know.”
After he had left, Kasumi said, “It is a hard thing to know your
country, Laurie, and still look upon the war as glorious.”
Laurie nodded.
The warehouse was dark and musty. Except for Laurie and Kasumi and
two fresh horses, it was empty. They had stayed at the Rainbow Parrot the night
before and had purchased new mounts at great expense, then had tried to leave
the city. When they had reached the city gates, they had been stopped by a
detachment of Bas-Tyra’s guards. When it was obvious that the guards were not
likely to let them leave without trouble, Laurie and Kasumi had broken away
from them, and a mad dash through the city had followed. They had lost their
pursuers in the Poor Quarter and had returned to the Rainbow Parrot. Lucas had
sent word to the Upright Man, and now they waited for a thief to guide them out
of the city.
A whistle broke the silence, and Laurie and Kasumi had their swords
in hand in an instant. A high-pitched chuckle greeted them, and a small figure
dropped from above. In the dark it was difficult to see where the figure sprang
from, but Laurie suspected their visitor had been hiding in the rafters for
some time.
The figure stepped forward, and in the dim light they could see it
was a boy, no older than thirteen. “There’s a party at Mother’s,” the newcomer
said.
“And a good time will be had by all,” Laurie answered.
“You’re the travelers, then.”
“You’re the guide?” asked Kasumi, taking no effort to hide the
surprise in his voice.
The boy’s voice was filled with bravado. “Aye. Jimmy the Hand is
your guide. And a better one in all Krondor you’ll not find.”
Laurie said, “What’s to be done?”
“First there’s the matter of payment. It’s a hundred sovereigns
each.”
Without comment Laurie dug out several small gems and handed them
over “Will these do?”
The boy turned to the warehouse door and cracked it slightly,
admitting a shaft of moonlight. He inspected the gems with an expert’s eye and
returned to stand before the two fugitives. “These’ll do. For another hundred,
you can have this.” He offered a piece of parchment.
Laurie took it, but couldn’t make out what was written on it in the
dim light. “What is it?”
Jimmy chuckled. “A royal warrant, allowing the bearer to travel the
King’s Highway.”
“Is it genuine?” asked the minstrel.
“My word. I nicked it myself from a trader from Ludland this
morning. It’s valid for another month.”
“Done,” said Laurie, and the minstrel gave the boy another gem.
When the gems were safely in the thief’s pouch, he said, “Soon we’ll
be hearing a brouhaha at the gate. A few of the boys will put on some mummery
for the guards. When everything’s up in the wind, we’ll slip through.”
He returned to the door and looked out without further comment.
While they waited, Kasumi whispered, “Can he be trusted?”
“No, but we have no choice. If the Upright Man could show a larger
profit by turning us in, he might. But the Mockers have little love for the
guards, and now less than usual, according to Lucas, so it is unlikely. Still,
keep your wits about you.”
Time stretched on interminably, then suddenly shouts could be heard.
Jimmy signaled with a sharp whistle, which was answered by another from
outside. “It’s time,” he said, and was out the door.
Laurie and Kasumi led their horses out after him. “Follow closely
and quickly,” their small guide said as he set off.
They rounded the corner of a building and could see the north gate.
A group of men were involved in a brawl, many appearing to be sailors from the
docks. The guards were doing their best to restore order, but each time one
pushed a combatant away from the fray, another would appear from the shadows
around the gate and join in. In a few minutes every guard was involved in
breaking up the fight, and Jimmy said, “Now!”
He broke from the building, with the travelers close behind, and
dashed to the wall next to the gatehouse. They edged their way along in the
shadows, the horses’ clatter covered by the noise of the brawl. When they were
near the gate, a single guard could be seen, on the other side, whom they
hadn’t been able to see from their previous location.
Laurie gripped Jimmy’s shoulder “We’ll have to take him quickly.”
Jimmy said, “No. If weapons are drawn, the guards will leave that
little bit of fun like a burning whorehouse. Leave him to me.”
Jimmy sprang forward and ran to the guard. As the guard brought his
spear forward across his chest and shouted, “Halt!” Jimmy kicked him hard in
the leg, above the boot. The man let out a howl, then looked at his small
assailant with fury on his face “Why you little—”
Jimmy stuck out his tongue and started to run toward the docks. The
guard set out in hot pursuit, and the two travelers slipped through the gate.
Once outside the city, they mounted quickly and rode off. As they rode away
from Krondor, they could hear the sounds of the brawl.
They rested a day at Darkmoor, in an inn in the town below the
castle. They had been two days in the hills and needed to rest their mounts
before journeying over the grasslands to Malac’s Cross. The town was quiet, and
little of interest occurred until the inn door opened and a man in dirty brown
robes entered. The man was old and bent with years, and thin to the point of
gauntness. The innkeeper looked up from cleaning ale cups and said, “What do
you wish?”
Softly the old man said, “Please, sir, a little food.”
“Can you pay?”
“I can fashion spells to rid your inn of vermin, should you be
plagued by rats, sir. Perhaps—”
“Begone! I have no food for beggars or magicians. Get out! And if I
find my milk clabbered, I’ll set my dogs upon you!”
The magician looked around. Laurie reached across the table and
touched Kasumi upon the arm. His Tsurani heritage was betraying him, as he was
showing open astonishment at what he saw. Before him stood a magician, being
treated as shabbily as his clothes. Laurie’s touch caused him to regain his
composure. The magician slowly turned and left the inn.
Laurie sprang up and crossed to the innkeeper. Slapping some coins
on the table, he said, “Quick. A joint of cold meat, a loaf of bread, and a
skin of wine.”
The innkeeper looked surprised, but the coins on the bar convinced
him to do as ordered. When the items ordered were upon the bar, Laurie scooped
them up. He paused a moment to grab a wedge of cheese off a platter and rushed
out the door. Kasumi was as amazed as the innkeeper appeared to be.
Laurie looked down the road and saw the old man, his posture erect
as he moved along with a staff in one hand, using it as a walking stick. He ran
after the man and, when he had overtaken him, said, “Excuse me, but I was in
the tavern a moment ago, and . . .” He held out the food and wineskin.
He saw pride diminish in the old man’s eyes. “Why are you doing
this, minstrel?”
Laurie said, “I have a friend who is a magician, a special friend.
He did me a great kindness once, and I . . . it’s something of a repayment.”
The magician accepted this explanation and took the food. While he
struggled with the burden, Laurie slipped a pair of gems into the magician’s
empty belt pouch. There would be enough there to insure the magician never had
to go hungry again if he lived modestly. “What is this magician’s name; perhaps
I know him?”
“Milamber.”
The old man shook his head. “I have not heard of him. Where does he
abide?”
Laurie looked to the west, where the sun set behind the hills. With
strong emotions in his voice, he said, “Far from here, my friend. Very far from
here.”
The ship beat against the waves, while the crew reefed the sails
Laurie and Kasumi stood on deck watching the spires and towers of Rillanon as
the ship put into harbor. “A fabulous city,” said the former Tsurani officer.
“Not as large as the cities of home, but so different. All those tiny fingers
of stone and the colors of the banners make it look like a city of legend.”
“Strange,” said Laurie, “Pug and I felt the same when we first saw
Jamar. I suppose it is simply that they’re so different from each other.”
They stood on the open deck, cool in the breezes, but still able to
feel the warmth of the sun. Both were dressed in the finest clothing they could
buy in Salador, for they wished to be presentable at court and knew they had
little chance of being admitted to see the King should they look like simple
vagabonds.
The ship’s captain ordered the last sails taken in, and the ship
slid into place alongside the docks a few moments later. Ropes were thrown, to
men waiting on the quay, and the vessel was quickly made fast.
As soon as they were able, the two travelers were down the gangway
and making their way through the city Rillanon, the fabled and ancient capital
of the Kingdom of the Isles, stood bedecked in colors, flashing brightly in the
sunlight, but there was an undercurrent of tension in the atmosphere of the
streets and markets. Everywhere they passed, people spoke in hushed tones, as
if they feared someone might overhear them, and even the hawkers in the street
stalls seemed to offer their wares halfheartedly.
It was nearly the noon hour, and without seeking rooms, they headed
straight for the palace. When they reached the main gate, an officer in the
purple and gold of the Royal Household Guard inquired their business.
Laurie said, “We bring messages of the greatest importance to the
King, regarding the war.”
The officer considered. They were dressed well enough and didn’t
appear to be the usual madmen with predictions of doom, or prophets of some
nameless truth, but they were not officials of the court or army either. He
decided on the course of action followed most often in the armies of all
nations in all times: passing them along to a higher authority.
A guard escorted them to the office of an assistant to the Royal
Chancellor. Here they were made to wait for a half hour before the assistant
would see them. They entered the man’s office and were confronted by the
Steward of the Royal Household, a self-important little man with a potbelly and
a chronic wheeze when he spoke. “What business do you gentlemen have?” he
inquired, making it clear that his estimation of them was provisional.
“We carry word to the King regarding the war,” Laurie answered.
“Oh?” he sniffed, “and why aren’t these documents or messages or
whatever they are being delivered by the proper military pouch?”
Kasumi, obviously frustrated with the wait now that they were in the
palace, said, “Let us speak with someone who can take us to the King.”
The Steward of the Royal Household looked outraged. “I am Baron
Gray. I am the one to whom you will speak, man! And I have a good mind to have
the guards toss you into the street. His Majesty cannot be bothered with every
charlatan who tries to seek an audience. I am the one you must satisfy, and you
have not.”
Kasumi stepped forward and gripped the man by the front of his
tunic. “And I am Kasumi of the Shinzawai. My father is Kamatsu, Lord of the
Shinzawai, and Warchief of the Kanazawai Clan. I will see your King!”
Lord Gray paled visibly. He frantically pulled at Kasumi’s hand and
tried to speak. His shock at what he had just heard and what he felt at being
handled this way raced within him. It all proved to be too much for him to
speak. He nodded frantically until Kasumi released him.
Brushing at his tunic front, the man said, “The Royal Chancellor
will be informed—at once.”
He walked to a door, and Laurie watched him in case he called for
guards, thinking them madmen. Whatever else the man thought, Kasumi’s manner
convinced him he was something quite different from anything heretofore seen. A
messenger was sent, and in a few minutes an elderly man entered the room.
He simply said, “What is it?”
“Your Grace,” said the Steward, “I think you had best talk to these
men and consider if His Majesty should see them.”
The man turned to study the two other men in the office. “I am Duke
Caldric, the Royal Chancellor. What reason do you have to see His Majesty?”
Kasumi said, “I bring a message from the Emperor of Tsuranuanni.”
The king sat in a pavilion on a balcony overlooking the harbour.
Below, a mountain river passed directly before the palace, part of the original
defense design though no longer needed as a moat. Graceful bridges could be
seen arching above it, carrying people from one side of the river to the other.
King Rodric sat, seemingly attentive to what Kasumi was saying. He
toyed absently with a golden ball in his right hand, while Kasumi outlined in
detail the Emperor’s message of peace.
Rodric was silent for a while after Kasumi finished, as if weighing
what he had heard. Kasumi handed a sheaf of documents to Duke Caldric, then
waited for the King’s answer. After another moment of silence Kasumi added,
“The Emperor’s proposals are outlined in these parchments in detail, Your
Majesty, should you wish to study them at your leisure. I will wait upon your
convenience to carry your reply.”
Still Rodric was silent, and the courtiers gathered nearby looked at
one another nervously Kasumi was about to speak again when the King said, “I am
always amused when watching my little subjects hurrying about the city, like so
many ants. I often wonder what they think, living out their simple little
lives.” He turned to look at the two emissaries. “You know, I could order any
one of them put to death. Just pick one out, from this very balcony, should I
choose I could just say to my guards, ‘See that fellow in the blue cap? Go hack
his head off,’ and they would, you know. That’s because I’m King.”
Laurie felt a chill run up his back. This was worse than anything he
had imagined. The King seemed not to have heard a single word spoken Kasumi
said very quietly in the Tsurani language, “If we should fail, one of us must
carry word back to my father.”
At this, the King’s head snapped up His eyes grew wide, and he spoke
with a tremble in his voice “What is this?” His voice rose in pitch “I will
have no one whispering!” His face took on a feral appearance “You know they are
always whispering about me, the disloyal ones. But I know who they are, and I
will see them on their knees before me, yes I will. That traitor Kerus was on
his knees before I had him hanged. I would have hanged his family had they not
fled to Kesh.” He then studied Kasumi. “You think to trick me with your strange
story and these so-called documents. Any fool could see through your guise. You
are spies!”
Duke Caldric looked pained and tried to calm the King. Several
guards stood nearby, shifting their weight from foot to foot, uncomfortable at
what they were hearing.
The King pushed the solicitous Duke away. His voice took on a
near-hysterical tone “You are agents of that traitor Borric. He and my uncle
were plotting to take my throne. But I stopped that. My uncle Erland is dead .
. .” He paused for a moment, as if confused. “No, I mean he is ill. That is why
my loyal Duke Guy was sent from Bas-Tyra to rule Krondor until my beloved uncle
was well . . .” His eyes seemed to clear for a moment, then he said, “I am not
feeling well Please excuse me I will speak to you again tomorrow.” He rose from
his chair. After he had taken a step, he turned back to look at Laurie and
Kasumi “What was it you wanted to see me about? Oh yes, peace. Yes, that is
good. This war is a terrible thing. We must end it so that I can go back to my
building. We must begin the building again.”
A page took the King’s arm and led him away. The Royal Chancellor
said, “Follow me, and say nothing.”
He hurried them through the palace and led them to a room with two
guards before the door. One guard opened the door for them, and they entered
Inside they found a bedroom with two large beds and a table with chairs in the
corner. The Chancellor said, “Your arrival is poorly timed. Our King is, as you
no doubt can see, a sick man, and I fear that he will not recover. I hope he
will be better able to understand your message tomorrow. Please stay here until
you are sent for. A meal will be brought to you.”
He crossed over to the door, and before he left said, “Until
tomorrow.”
A shout awoke them in the night. Laurie rose quickly and went to the
window Peering through the curtains, he could see a figure on the balcony
below. In his nightshirt, King Rodric stood sword in hand, poking into the
bushes. Laurie opened the window as Kasumi joined him. From below they could
hear the King’s cries: “Assassins! They have come!” Guards ran out and searched
the bushes, while court pages led the shrieking monarch back to his room.
Kasumi said, “In truth, the gods have touched him. They must surely
hate your nation.”
Laurie said, “I am afraid, friend Kasumi, that the gods have little
to do with this. Right now I think we had best see to finding a way out of
here. I have a feeling that His Royal Majesty is ill suited for the finer
points of negotiating a peace. I think we had best make our way west and speak
with Duke Borric.”
“Will he be able to stop the war, this Duke?”
Laurie crossed over to the chair upon which his clothing was draped.
Picking up his tunic, he said, “I hope so. If the lords here can watch the King
behave in such a manner and do nothing, then we will have civil war soon.
Better to settle one war before beginning another.”
They dressed quickly Laurie said, “Let us hope we can find a ship
putting out on the morning tide. If the King orders the port closed, we are
trapped. It is a long swim.”
As they gathered up their belongings, the door opened and the Royal
Chancellor entered. He stopped and saw them standing there, fully dressed.
“Good,” he said, quickly closing the door. “You have as much sense as I had
hoped you would. The King has ordered the spies put to death.”
Laurie was incredulous “He thinks us spies?”
Duke Caldric sat in one of the chairs by the table, fatigue clearly
showing on his face. “Who knows what His Majesty is thinking, these days? There
are a few of us who try to stay his more terrible impulses, but it becomes more
and more difficult each day. There is a sickness in him that is terrible to
watch. Years ago he was an impetuous man, it is true, but there was also a
vision to his plans, a certain mad brilliance that could have made this the
greatest nation in Midkemia.
“There are many in the court now who take advantage of him, using
his fears to further their own designs. I am afraid that soon I will be branded
traitor and join the others in death.”
Kasumi buckled on his sword. “Why stay, Your Grace? If this is true,
why not come with us to Duke Borric?”
The Duke looked at the older son of the Shinzawai. “I am a noble of
the Kingdom, and he is my King I must do whatever I can to keep him from
harming the Kingdom, even if the price is my life, but I cannot raise arms
against him, nor aid those who do. I don’t know how things are with your world,
Tsurani, but here I must stay. He is my King.”
Kasumi nodded “I understand. In your place, I would do the same. You
are a brave man, Duke Caldric.”
The Duke stood. “I am a tired man. The King has taken strong drink,
from my hand. He will drink from no other, for he fears poison. I had the
chirurgeon give him something for sleep. You should be out to sea when he
awakens. I don’t know if he will remember your visit, but rest assured that
someone will remind him within a day, or two at the outside So do not linger.
Make straight for Lord Borric and tell him what has happened.”
Laurie said, “Is Prince Erland truly dead?”
“Yes. Word reached us a week ago His failing health could not
withstand the cold dungeon. Borric is now heir to the throne. Rodric has never
wed: his fear of others is too deep. The fate of the Kingdom rests with Borric
Tell him so.”
They crossed to the door. Before the Duke opened it, he said, “Also
tell him that it is likely I will be dead should he come to Rillanon. It will
be a good thing, for I would have to stand against any who raised arms against
the Royal Standard.”
Before
Laurie or Kasumi could say anything, he opened the door. Two guards stood
outside, and the Duke ordered them to escort Laurie and Kasumi to the docks.
“The Royal Swallow is anchored in the harbour. Give this to the
captain.” He held out a piece of paper to Laurie. “It is a royal warrant,
commanding him to carry you to Salador.” He held out a second paper. “This is
another, commanding any of the Armies of the Kingdom to aid your travel.”
They grasped each other by the hand, then the two emissaries
followed the guards down the corridor. Laurie looked over his shoulder at
Caldric as they left. The old Duke waited, stoop-shouldered and tired, his face
lined by worry and sorrow, as well as fear. As they turned a corner, losing
sight of the Duke, Laurie thought no price in the world would make him exchange
places with that old man.
The
horses were lathered. The riders whipped them up the hill. They were on the
last leg of their journey to Lord Borric, begun over a month before, and the
end was in sight. The Royal Swallow had sped them to Salador, where they
had left at once for the West. They had slept little along the way, trading for
fresh mounts or commandeering them, whenever possible, from horse patrols with
the royal warrant given them by Caldric Laurie wasn’t sure, but he suspected
they had covered the distance faster than it had ever been traveled before.
Several times since leaving Zun, they had been challenged by
soldiers. Each time they had presented the Chancellor’s warrant and were passed
through. Now they approached the Duke’s camp.
The Tsurani Warlord had unleashed his major offensive. The Kingdom
forces had held for a week, then collapsed, when ten thousand fresh Tsurani
soldiers had come pouring through their lines, tipping the balance. The
fighting had been bitter then, a raging, running battle lasting three days,
before the Kingdom army was finally routed. When it was over, a large portion
of the front had fallen, and the Tsurani had thrown up a salient out of the
North Pass.
Now the elves and dwarves, as well as the castles of the Far Coast,
were cut off from the main force of the Kingdom army. There was no
communication of any sort, for the pigeons used to carry messages had been
destroyed when the old camp had been overrun. The fate of the other fronts was
unknown.
The Armies of the West were regrouping, and it took Laurie and
Kasumi some time to find the headquarters camp. As they rode up to the command
pavilion, they saw signs of bitter defeat on every side. It was the worst
setback of the war for the Kingdom. Everywhere they looked they saw wounded or
sick men, and those who showed no wounds had the look of despair.
A guard sergeant inspected their warrant and sent a guard with them
to show them where the Duke’s tent stood. They reached the large command tent,
and a lackey took their mounts from them as the guard went inside. A moment
later a tall young man, blond-bearded and wearing the tabard of Crydee, came
out. Behind him appeared a stout man with a grey beard—a magician by his
garb—and another man, large, with a ragged scar down his face. Laurie wondered
if they might be old friends Pug had spoken of, but quickly focused his
attention on the young officer, who stopped before him. “I bring a message to
Lord Borric.”
The young man smiled a bitter smile, then said, “You may give me the
message, sir. I am Lyam, his son.”
Laurie said, “I mean no disrespect, Highness, but I must speak with
the Duke in person. So I was instructed by Duke Caldric.”
At mention of the Royal Chancellor’s name, Lyam exchanged glances
with his companions, then held aside the tent flap. Laurie and Kasumi entered,
the others following. Inside, there was a small brazier burning and a large
table with maps upon it. Lyam led them to another section of the huge tent,
curtained off from the rest. He pulled back the hanging, and they saw a man
lying upon a sleeping pallet.
He was a tall man, with dark hair streaked with grey. His face was
drawn, drained of blood, his lips nearly blue. His breathing was ragged, each
breath rattling loudly as he slept. He wore clean bed clothing, but heavy
bandages could be seen beneath his loose collar.
Lyam put back the hanging as another man entered the tent. Old, with
a near-white mane of hair, he was still erect and broad-shouldered. Softly he
said, “What is this?”
Lyam answered, “These men bring messages for Father from Caldric.”
The old warrior stuck out his hand. “Give them to me.”
When Laurie hesitated, the man nearly barked, “Damn it, fellow, I’m
Brucal. With Borric wounded, I’m commander of the Armies of the West.”
Laurie said, “I’ve no written message, Your Grace. Duke Caldric says
to introduce my companion. This is Kasumi of the Shinzawai, emissary of the
Emperor of Tsuranuanni, who carries an offering of peace to the King.”
Lyam said, “Is there to be peace at last?”
Laurie shook his head. “Sadly, no. The Duke also said to say this:
the King is mad, and the Duke of Bas-Tyra has slain Prince Erland. He fears
only Lord Borric can save the Kingdom.”
Brucal was visibly shaken by the news. To Lyam he quietly said, “Now
we know the rumors to be true. Erland was Guy’s prisoner. Erland dead. I can
scarcely believe it.” Shaking off his shock, he said, “Lyam, I know your mind
is upon your father now, but you must bend thought to this: your father is near
death; you will soon be Duke of Crydee. And with Erland dead, you will also be
heir to the throne by right of birth.”
Brucal sat heavily upon a stool near the map table. “This is a heavy
burden thrust upon you, Lyam, but others in the West will look to you for
leadership as they once looked to your father. If there was ever any love
between the two realms, it is now strained to the breaking point, with Guy upon
the throne in Krondor. It is now clear for all to see, Bas-Tyra means to be
King, for a mad Rodric cannot be allowed his throne much longer.” He fixed Lyam
with a steady gaze. “You will soon have to decide what we in the West shall do.
Upon your word, we have civil war.”
29
DECISION
The Holy City was festive.
Banners flew from every tall building People lined the streets,
throwing flowers before the nobles who were carried on their litters to the
stadium. It was a day of high celebration, and who could feel troubled on such
a day?
One who did feel troubled arrived in the pattern room of the
stadium, the final reverberations of a chime signaling the appearance of a
Great One of Tsuranuanni Milamber shrugged off his preoccupation for a moment
as he left the pattern room, near the central gallery of the Grand Imperial
Stadium. The crowd of Tsurani nobles, idling away the time before the games
began, parted to allow Milamber to pass through the archway leading to the magicians’
seats. Glancing around the small sea of black robes, he noticed Shimone and
Hochopepa, who were keeping a place for him.
They signaled greetings as he left the aisle between the magicians’
section and the Imperial Party’s and joined them. Below, on the arena floor,
some of the dwarf-like folk from Tsubar—the so-called Lost Land across the Sea
of Blood—were fighting large insect creatures, like cho-ja but without
intelligence. Soft wooden swords and essentially harmless bites from mandibles
provided a conflict more comic than dangerous. The commoners and lesser nobles
already in their seats laughed in appreciation. These contests kept them amused
while the great and near-great were waiting to enter the stadium. Tardiness in
Tsuranuanm became a virtue when one reached a certain social level.
Shimone said, “It is a shame you took so long getting here,
Milamber. There was a singularly fine match a short while ago.”
“I was under the impression the killing wasn’t to begin just yet.”
Hochopepa, munching nuts cooked in sweet oils, said, “True, but our
friend Shimone is something of an aficionado of the games.”
Shimone said, “Earlier young officers of noble family fought with
training weapons to first blood, to better display their skills and win honors
for their clans—”
“Not to mention the fruits of some rather heavy wagering,”
interjected Hochopepa.
Ignoring the remark, Shimone continued. “There was a spirited match
between sons of the Oronalmar and the Keda. I’ve not seen a better display in
years.”
While Shimone described the match, Milamber let his gaze wander. He
could see the small standards of the Keda, Minwanabi, Oaxatucan, Xacatecas,
Anasati, and other great families of the Empire. He noticed that the banner of
the Shinzawai was absent, and wondered at it Hochopepa said, “You seem much
preoccupied, Milamber.”
Milamber nodded agreement “Before leaving for today’s festival, I
received word that a motion to reform land taxes and abolish debt slavery had
been introduced in the High Council yesterday. The message came from the Lord
of the Tuclamekla, and I couldn’t for the life of me understand why he sent it
until, near the end, he thanked me for providing the concepts of social reform
the motion was intended to enact. I was appalled at such an action.”
Shimone laughed “Had you been so thick-witted a student, you’d still
be wearing the white robe.”
Milamber looked back blankly, and Hochopepa said, “You go about
causing all sorts of rumblings with your speeches before the Assembly, constantly
harping on all manner of social ills, and then sit dumbfounded because someone
out there listened?”
“What I said to our brother magicians was not intended for
discussion outside the Assembly halls.”
“How unreasonable,” said Hochopepa. “Someone in the Assembly spoke
to a friend who wasn’t a magician!”
“What I’d like to know,” said Shimone, “is how this potful of
reforms placed before the High Council by the Hunzan Clan has your name
appended to it?”
Milamber looked uncomfortable, to the delight of his friends. “One
of the young artists who worked on the murals at my estate is a son of the
Tuclamekla. We did discuss differences between Tsurani and Kingdom cultures and
social values, but only as an outgrowth of our discussions of the differences
in styles of art.”
Hochopepa looked skyward, as if seeking divine guidance. “When I
heard the Party for Progress—which is dominated by the Hunzan Clan, which is
dominated by the Tuclamekla Family—cited you as inspiration, I could scarcely
believe my hearing, but now I can see your hand is in every problem plaguing
the Empire.” He looked at his friend with a mock-serious expression. “Tell me,
is it true the Party for Progress is going to change its name to the Party of
Milamber?”
Shimone laughed while Milamber fixed Hochopepa with a baleful look.
“Katala thinks it amusing when I get upset by this sort of thing, Hocho. And
you might think it funny as well, but I want it publicly known I did not intend
for this to happen. I simply offered some observations and opinions, and what
the Hunzan Clan and the Party for Progress does with them is not my doing.”
Hochopepa said in chiding tones, “I fear that if so famous a
personage as yourself wishes not to have such things occur, then such a
personage should have his mouth sewn shut.”
Shimone laughed, and Milamber felt his own mirth rise. “Very well,
Hocho,” answered Milamber. “I will take the blame. Still, I don’t know if the
Empire is yet ready for the changes I think needed.”
Shimone said, “We have heard your arguments before, Milamber, but
today is not the time, nor is this the place for social debate. Let us attend
to the matters at hand Remember, many of the Assembly are offended by your
concerns over matters they judge political. And while I tend to support your
notions as refreshing and progressive, keep in mind you are making enemies.”
Trumpets and drums sounded, signaling the approach of the Imperial
Party and cutting off further conversation. The Tsubar folk and the insectoids
were chased from the arena, handlers herding them away. When the field was
cleared, grounds keepers hurried out with rakes and drags to smooth the sand.
The sound of the trumpets could be heard again, and the first members of the
imperial procession, heralds in the imperial white, entered. They carried long,
curved trumpets, fashioned from the horns of some large beast, which curled
around their shoulders to end above their heads. They were followed by drummers
who beat a steady tattoo.
When they were in position in the front of the imperial box, the
Warlord’s honor guard entered. Each wore armor and helm finished in needra hide
bleached free of all color. Around the breastplate and helm of each, precious
gold trim gleamed in the sun Milamber heard Hochopepa mutter at the waste of
this rare metal.
When they were stationed, a senior herald shouted, “Almecho,
Warlord!” and the crowd rose, cheering. He was accompanied by his retinue
including several in black robes—the Warlord’s pet magicians, as the others of
the Assembly referred to them. Chief among these were the two brothers, Elgahar
and Ergoran.
Then the herald cried, “Ichindar! Ninety-one times Emperor!” The
crowd roared its approval as the young Light of Heaven made his entrance. He
was attended by priests of each of the twenty orders. The crowd stood
thundering. On and on it went, and Milamber wondered if the love of the Tsurani
people would sustain the Light of Heaven should a confrontation between Warlord
and Emperor take place. In spite of the Tsurani reverence for tradition, he did
not think the Warlord a man to step down meekly from his office—a thing unheard
of in history— should the Emperor so order.
As the noise died down, Shimone said, “It seems, friend Milamber,
that the contemplative life doesn’t suit the Light of Heaven. Can’t say that I
blame him, sitting around all day with no one for company but a lot a priests
and silly girls chosen for their beauty instead of conversational ability. Must
become frightfully boring.”
Milamber laughed. “I doubt most men would agree.”
Shimone shrugged. “I constantly forget you were quite old when you
were trained, and you have a wife also.”
At mention of wives, Hochopepa looked pained. He interrupted. “The
Warlord is going to make an announcement.”
Almecho rose and held his hands aloft for silence. When the stadium
fell quiet, his voice rang out. “The gods smile upon Tsuranuanni! I bring news
of a great victory over the otherworld barbarians! We have crushed their
greatest army, and our warriors celebrate! Soon all the lands called the
Kingdom will be laid at the Light of Heaven’s feet.” He turned and bowed
deferentially to the Emperor.
Milamber felt a stab at the news. Without being aware, he began to
stand, only to have Hochopepa grip his arm and hiss, “You are Tsurani!”
Milamber shook himself free of the unexpected shock and composed
himself “Thank you, Hocho. I nearly forgot myself.”
“Hush!” said Hochopepa.
They returned their attention to the Warlord. “. . . and as a sign
of our devotion to the Light of Heaven, we dedicate these games to his honor.”
A cheer rang through the arena, and the Warlord sat down.
Milamber spoke quietly to his friends. “It seems the Emperor is less
than ecstatic at the news.” Hochopepa and Shimone turned to watch the Emperor,
who was sitting with a stoic expression upon his face.
Hochopepa said, “He hides it well, but I think you are right,
Milamber Something in all this disturbs him.”
Milamber said nothing, knowing well enough the cause, this victory
would blunt the Blue Wheel peace initiative, and would gain the Warlord more
power at the Emperor’s expense.
Shimone tapped Milamber upon the shoulder “The games begin.”
As the doors on the arena floor opened to admit the combatants,
Milamber studied the Emperor. He was young, in his early twenties, and
possessed a look of intelligence. His brow was high, and his reddish-brown hair
was allowed to grow to his shoulders. He turned in Milamber’s direction, to
speak with a priest at his side, and Milamber could see his clear green eyes
glint in the sun. Their eyes made contact for a moment, and there was a brief
flicker of recognition, and Milamber thought: So you have been told of my part
in your plan. The Emperor continued his conversation, without missing a beat,
and no one else saw the exchange.
Hochopepa said, “This is a clemency spectacle. They will all fight
until only one stands. He will be pardoned for his crimes.”
“What are their crimes?” Milamber asked.
Shimone answered. “The usual Petty theft, begging without temple
authority, bearing false witness, avoiding taxes, disobeying lawful orders, and
the like.”
“What about capital crimes?”
“Murder, treason, blasphemy, striking one’s master, all are
unpardonable crimes.” His voice rose to carry over the crowd noises. “They are
put in with war prisoners who will not serve as slaves. They are sentenced to
fight over and over until they are killed.”
A guard of soldiers left the floor, abandoning the sand to the
prisoners. Hochopepa said, “Common criminals. There will be little sport.”
There seemed to be accuracy in the remark, for the prisoners were a
sad-looking lot. Naked but for loincloths, they stood with weapons and shields
that were foreign to them. Many were old and sick, seemingly lost and confused,
holding their axes, swords, and spears loosely at their sides.
The trumpet sounded the start of combat, and the old and sick ones
were quickly killed. Several had never even raised their weapons in defense,
being too confused to try to stay alive. Within minutes nearly half the
prisoners lay dead or dying on the sand. Shortly the action slackened, as
combatants came to face opponents of more equal skill and cunning. Slowly the
numbers diminished, and the free-flowing notous nature of the contest changed.
Occasionally when an opponent fell, a combatant was left standing next to
another fighting pair. Often this resulted in three-way combat, which the mob
approved with loud cheering, as the awkward combat would result in an excess of
bloodshed and pain.
At the end three fighters remained. Two of them had not managed to
resolve their conflict. Both were on the verge of exhaustion. The third man
approached cautiously, keeping equal distance between himself and both men,
looking for an advantage.
He had it a few seconds later. Using knife and sword, he jumped
forward and dealt one of the combatants a blow to the side of the head that
felled him. Shimone said, “The idiot! Couldn’t he see the other man is the
stronger fighter? He should have waited until one man was clearly at an
advantage, then struck at him, leaving the weaker opponent to fight.”
Milamber felt shaky. Shimone, his former teacher, was his closest
friend after Hochopepa. Yet for all his education, all his wisdom, he was
howling after the blood of others as if he were the most ignorant commoner in
the least expensive seat. No matter how he tried, Milamber could not master the
Tsurani enthusiasm .for the death of others. He turned to Shimone and said,
“I’m sure he was a little too busy to trouble himself over the finer points of
tactics.” His sarcasm was lost on Shimone, closely watching the combat.
Milamber noticed Hochopepa was ignoring the contest. The wily
magician was taking note of every conversation in the stands: to him the games
were only another opportunity to study the subtle aspects of the Game of the
Council. Milamber found this blindness to the death and suffering below as
disturbing as Shimone’s enthusiasm.
The fight was quickly over, the man with the knife winning. The
crowd greeted the victory with enthusiasm. Coins were thrown on the sand, so
that the victor would return to society with a small amount of capital.
While the arena was being cleared, Shimone called over a herald and
inquired about the balance of the day’s activities. He turned to the others,
obviously pleased at the news. “There are only a few matched pairs, then two
special matches, a team of prisoners against a starving harulth, and a match
between some soldiers from Midkemia and captured Thuril warriors. That should
prove most interesting.”
Milamber’s expression indicated that he didn’t agree. Judging the
time right for the question, he said, “Hocho, have you noticed any of the
Shinzawai Family in attendance?”
He glanced around the stadium, looking for the family banners of the
more prominent houses of the Empire. “Minwanabi, Anasati, Keda, Tonmargu,
Xacatecas, Acoma . . . No, Milamber. I can’t say if any of your former, ah,
benefactors are to be seen about. Not that I would expect them to be.”
“Why?”
“They find themselves in the Warlord’s bad graces of late. Something
to do with failing some task or another he gave them. And I have heard that
they are considered suspect, despite their clan’s suddenly rejoining the war
effort. The Kanazawai Clan is lost in its past glories, and the Shinzawai are
the most old-fashioned of the lot.”
Through the afternoon the matches wore on, each more artful than the
previous as the skill level of the opponents increased Soon the last pairs were
done. Now the crowd waited in hushed anticipation, even the nobles quieted, for
the next event was unusual. A team of twenty fighters, Midkemian from their
size, marched out into the center of the arena. They carried ropes, weighted
nets, spears, and long curved knives. They wore only loincloths, their bodies
oiled and gleaming in the late afternoon light. They stood around looking
relaxed, but the soldiers in the crowd recognized the subtle signs of tension
common to fighters before a battle. After a minute the large double doors at
the opposite end of the stadium opened, and a six-legged horror came shambling
into the arena.
The harulth was all long teeth and sharp claws, complete with a
belligerent attitude and a hidelike armor, and close to the size of a Midkemian
elephant. It hesitated only long enough to blink at the light, then charged
straight at the party of men before it.
They scattered before the creature, seeking to confuse it. The
harulth, through simple- or single-mindedness, pursued one hapless fellow. In
three enormous strides he ground the man underfoot, then gobbled him down in
two bites. The others regrouped behind the animal and quickly deployed the
nets. The hexapod spun about, faster than looked possible for a creature of such
bulk, and charged again. This time the men waited until the last moment, tossed
the nets, then dived away. The nets were edged with hooks to catch in the thick
hide of the beast. It stepped into them and soon was busily tearing apart the
mesh. While it was momentarily occupied, the spearmen ran in to strike. The
harulth reacted in confusion, not being sure from which quarter its torment
originated. The spears were proving ineffectual, for they could not penetrate
the hide of the beast. Quickly realizing the futility of this approach, one
fighter grabbed another and pointed to the rear of the creature. They dashed
back toward the tail, which was sweeping back and forth along the ground with
the force of a battering ram.
They conferred momentarily, then dropped their spears as the
creature decided upon a target. It lashed forward and had another man in its
maw. For a moment it was still as it swallowed its prey. The two men at the
rear ran forward, leaping high up onto the tail of the animal. It seemed not to
notice for a moment, then reacted by swinging around violently, throwing the
second man off. Having come completely about, it stopped to devour the stunned
man. The other somehow contrived to hang on and employed the few moments the
harulth used to eat his comrade to pull himself higher on the creature’s tail,
where it joined the animal’s haunches. With an overhand stroke he plunged his
long-bladed knife between two vertebrae where they were outlined by
loose-hanging skin. It was a desperate gamble, and the stadium crowd screamed
approval. The knife penetrated the tough cartilage between the bone segments
and pierced the spinal column. The creature bellowed with rage and started to
spin, threatening to toss the unwelcome rider, but in a moment the rearmost
pair of legs collapsed. The harulth stood baffled for a moment, its two forward
pairs of legs pulling against the dead weight of its hind quarters. Twice it
tried vainly to snap at its small tormentor, but its thick neck was
insufficient for the task. The man pulled the blade loose and crawled forward
along the spine while the surviving spearmen darted in and out, distracting the
creature. Three times he was nearly tossed off the animal’s back, but somehow
he managed to retain his position. When he found himself slightly forward of
the middle pair of legs, he drove his blade between vertebrae. The central legs
collapsed an instant later, and the man was thrown clear of the animal’s back.
The harulth screamed its rage and pain, but was effectively immobilized. The
fighters backed away and waited. Two spinal cuts proved to be enough, for
minutes later the harulth fell over in shock, thrashed its forelegs for a time,
and lay still.
The crowd shouted its enthusiastic approval of the contest, for
never had a group of fighters bested a harulth without losing at least five
times as many men. In this contest only three had died. The fighters stood
around, exhaustion causing weapons to fall from limp fingers. The battle had
lasted less than ten minutes, but the expenditure in energy, concentration,
sweat, and fear had worn each man to near-prostration. Numbly oblivious to the
crowds cheering, they stumbled toward the exit. Only the man who had actually
driven in the knife showed any expression, and he was openly weeping as he
moved across the sand.
“Why do you think that man is so distraught?” asked Shimone. “It was
a grand triumph.”
Milamber said in a voice forced to calmness, “Because he is
exhausted and afraid, and sick from it.” He then added softly, “And he is very
far from home.” He swallowed hard, struggling against outrage, then said, “He
knows it is for nothing. Again and again he will march into this arena, to
fight other creatures, other men, even friends from his homeland, and sooner or
later he will die.” Hochopepa stared at Milamber, and Shimone looked confused.
“But for chance, I might have been with those below,” added Milamber. “Those
who fought are men. They had families and homes, they loved and laughed. Now
they wait to die.”
Hochopepa waved a hand absently. “Milamber, you have a disturbing
habit of taking things personally.”
Milamber felt sickened and angered by the bloody spectacle, but
forced those emotions down within himself. He was determined to stay. He would
be Tsurani.
The sand was cleared and trumpets blew again, signaling the final
match of the afternoon. A dozen proud-looking warriors dressed in leather
battle harnesses, wristbands set with studs, and headdresses plumed in many
colors came striding out of one end of the arena. Milamber had never seen their
like in person, but recognized their dress from his vision on the tower. These
were the descendants of the proud Serpent Riders, the Thuril Each wore a
hard-eyed expression of grim determination.
From the other end, twelve warriors in color-splashed imitations of
Midkemian armor marched out. Their own metal armor had been deemed both too
valuable and too dull for the contest, and Tsurani artisans had provided
stylized imitations.
The Thuril stood watching the newcomers with implacable contempt. Of
all the races of humanity, only the Thuril had been able to withstand the
Empire. The Thuril were uncontestedly the finest mountain fighters in Kelewan,
and their mountain holds and high farm pastures were impossible to conquer.
They had held the Empire at bay for years until peace had been declared. They
were a tall people, the result of their lack of interbreeding with the shorter
races of Kelewan, whom they considered inferior.
The trumpets blew again, and a hush fell over the crowd. A herald
shouted in a clear voice, “As these soldiers of the Thuril Confederacy have
violated the treaty between their own nations and the Empire, by making war
upon the soldiers of the Emperor, they have been cast out by their own people,
who have named them outlaws and bound them over for punishment. They will fight
the captives from the world of Midkemia. All will strive until one is left
standing.” The crowd cheered.
The trumpet sounded, and the fighters squared off. The Midkemians
crouched, weapons at the ready, but the Thuril stood tall, defiant looks upon
their faces. One of the Thuril strode forward, halting before the nearest
Midkemian. With contemptuous tones he spoke rapidly and made a sweeping motion
around the arena.
Milamber felt a hot flush of anger begin to grow inside, coupled
with shame at what he was seeing. There were games in Midkemia—he had heard of
them—but they were nothing like this. The men who fought in Krondor and other
places throughout the Kingdom were professionals who made a living by fighting
to first blood. Occasionally a duel to the death would be fought, but it was
always a personal matter, after all other means of settling the dispute had
been exhausted. This was a mindless waste of human life for the titillation of
the bored and idle, the satiated in search of more and more vivid reminders
that their own lives were worth something. Milamber looked around and felt
disgust at the expressions on the faces of those nearby.
The Thuril warrior continued his ranting, while the Midkemian
watched, with something in their manner suggesting a shift of mood. Before,
they were tensed, battle-ready, now they seemed almost relaxed. The Thuril
continued pointing up at the assembled throng.
Then a Midkemian, tall and broad-shouldered, stepped forward as if
to speak. The Thuril came on guard, his sword high, ready to strike. A voice
rang out from behind, as another warrior said something that carried a note of
reassurance. The first Thuril visibly relaxed.
The Midkemian slowly removed his helm, revealing a tired, haggard
face, framed by damp, stringy black hair. He looked about the arena while the
crowd began to whisper and grumble at the unexpected behavior of the warriors,
and then gave a curt nod. He dropped his sword and shield and said something to
his companions. Quickly the other fighters in the arena followed suit, and soon
all weapons were lying upon the ground.
Milamber wondered at this strange behavior, and Shimone said, “This
will end a shambles. The Thuril will not fight their own kind, and it seems
they won’t fight the barbarians either. I once saw six Thuril kill everyone
sent against them, then refuse to fight one another. When the guards came to
kill them, they fought, driving them back. Finally bowmen on the wall had to
shoot them down It was a disgrace. The crowd rioted, and the games director was
torn to bits. Over a hundred citizens died.”
Milamber felt relief: at least he would be spared the spectacle of
Katala’s people and his own killing one another. Then the crowd began to shout
their disapproval, jeering the reluctant combatants.
Hochopepa nudged Milamber and said, “The Warlord appears less than
amused by this.”
Milamber saw the Warlord’s livid expression as he watched his
presentation to the Emperor turned into a farce. Almecho slowly rose from his
place near the Light of Heaven and bellowed, “Let the fighting begin!”
Burly handlers, guards who worked on behalf of the games director,
ran into the arena, wielding whips. They circled the motionless fighters and
began lashing out at them Milamber felt his gorge rise as the handlers laid
about, tearing the exposed skin from the arms and legs of the Thuril and
Midkemian soldiers. No stranger to the whip when in the swamp, he knew its
terrible touch. He felt each stroke as it fell upon those on the sand below.
The crowd began to grow restive, for watching motionless men being
whipped was not what they had come to see. Jeers and catcalls rang down upon
those in the imperial box, and a few bolder souls threw litter and small coins
into the arena, showing what they thought of such sport. Finally one of the
handlers grew impatient, stepped up to a Thuril warrior, and struck him across
the face with a whip handle. Before the handler could react, the Thuril sprang
forward and tore the whip from the startled man’s hands. In an instant he had
it firmly wrapped about the man’s throat, choking him.
The other handlers turned their attention to the warrior attacking
their companion and began to flail wildly at him. After a dozen or so blows the
Thuril began to wobble, and fell to his knees. But he held tightly to the whip,
strangling the gasping handler. Again and again blows rained down upon the
Thunl, until all his armor ran red with blood from the lashing. Still he held on
to his victim.
When the handler died, eyes protruding from a blue face, whatever
strength left to the Thuril seemed to die as well. As the handler’s limp body
came to rest on the sand, the Thuril warrior fell beside him.
It was a Midkemian soldier who reacted first. With cold detachment
he simply picked up a sword and ran one of the handlers through. Then, as one,
the Thuril and Midkemian soldiers had weapons in hand, and within a minute all
the handlers were dead. Then, again as one, the prisoners threw their weapons
to the ground.
Milamber battled to stay calm in the face of such display. He felt
nothing but admiration for those men. They accepted death rather than slay one
another. Possibly some of those men had ridden through the valley with him on
the raid to discover the rift machine so many years before. Outwardly he
appeared calm, a Tsurani, but inwardly he seethed.
Hochopepa whispered, “I have a bad feeling here. Whatever gain
Almecho sought from this day to bolster his position with the Emperor is badly
shaken. I fear he is not taking well your former countrymen’s reluctance to die
for the entertainment of the Light of Heaven.”
Milamber nearly spit when he said, “Damn such entertainment.” He
looked at Hochopepa with a burning expression, one never seen by the fat
magician before. Milamber half stood as he added, “And damn all those who find
pleasure in such bloody sport.”
Hochopepa seized him by the arm and tried to pull him firmly into
his seat, saying, “Milamber, remember yourself!”
Milamber pulled himself free, ignoring the command.
Milamber and his companions looked to the imperial box, where a
guard captain conferred with the Warlord. Milamber felt a strange hot flush
inside and for a moment battled a sudden impulse to use his powers to put the
Warlord amid those below, to see how he fared against those who refused to die
gracefully at his command.
Then Almecho’s voice rang out, silencing all those nearby. “No, no
bowmen. Those animals will not die a warrior’s death.” He turned to one of his
pet magicians and issued instructions. The black-robed man nodded and began to
incant. Milamber felt his neck hairs rise as the presence of magic made itself
known.
A hushed sound of awe swept about the stadium as those on the sand
below fell senseless, to roll about in a daze.
The
Warlord shouted, “Now go bind them, build a platform, and hang them for all to
see.”
Stunned
silence greeted his words, then shouts of “No!” — “They are warriors!” — and —
“This is without honor!” rang throughout the crowd.
Hochopepa
closed his eyes and sighed audibly. He spoke to himself much as his companions
“The Warlord lets his famous temper get the best of him once more, and now we
have a debacle before us. This will not help his position in the High Council
or the stability of the Empire.” Like an enraged beast at bay, the Warlord
turned, and all nearby fell silent, but those at greater distances picked up
the cries. By Tsurani standards this was too much of an indignity to be visited
on any save those without honor. While balking the mob’s sport, the prisoners
had shown they were still fighting men, and as such deserved an honorable
death.
Hochopepa turned to speak to Milamber, then stopped himself as he
saw the expression on his friend’s face. Milamber’s anger was now fully
revealed, his rage a match for the Warlord’s. Sensing something terrible was
about to occur, Hochopepa sought Shimone’s attention, only to find he was also
silently watching Milamber’s fearsome countenance. All Hochopepa could manage
to say was a quiet “Milarnber, no!” Then the slave-become-magician was moving.
He swept past the shocked Hochopepa, saying only, “See to the
Emperor’s safety.” Milamber was reeling with the impact of sudden emotion
bottled up for years, now surging free. A strange and powerful certainty struck
him. I am not Tsurani! he acknowledged to himself. I could not be a party to
this. For the first time since donning the black robe, his two natures were in
harmony. This was a dishonor by the standards of both cultures, something that
filled him with a dread purpose free of any doubt.
Save those near the imperial box, the entire crowd was chanting,
“The sword, the sword, the sword,” demanding a warrior’s death for each man
below. The rhythm became a pounding pulse beat for Milambcr, heightening’his
nearly unchecked fury.
Reaching a point between the magicians and the imperial box,
Milamber regarded the soldiers and carpenters rushing onto the arena floor. The
stunned Midkemians and Thuril were being bound like animals for slaughter, and
the crowd’s anger was reaching a dangerous level. Some of the younger officers
of noble families in the lower levels of the stadium seemed ready to take
swords and jump onto the sand, to contest personally for the prisoners’ right
to die as warriors. These had been valiant foemen, and many of those watching
had fought against both Thuril and Kingdom soldiers. They would willingly kill
these men on the field of battle, but would not watch this humiliation visited
on brave enemies.
A black flood of anger, loathing, and sorrow poured through
Milamber. His mind screamed in outrage, despite his attempts to control it. His
head tilted back, and his eyes rolled up into his head, and as had happened
twice before in his life, letters of fire appeared in his mind’s eye. But never
before had he had the strength to seize the moment, and with a nearly animal
joy he dived into the newly opening well of power within. His right arm shot
forward, and energy exploded from his hand. A bolt of blue flame, scintillating
even in the sunlight, hurled downward, to strike the sand amid the Warlord’s
guards. Living men were swept in all directions, like leaves before the wind.
Those just entering with the materials for the scaffolding were knocked to
their knees by the blast, and those in the lower seats were stunned by its
fury. All noise in the arena stopped as the crowd fell into mute shock.
All eyes turned to the source of that bolt, while those near him
reflexively drew back. He was red-faced with anger, and the whites of his eyes
showed around dark irises as he scanned the arena. With a short chopping motion
of one hand, the magician said, “No more!”
No one moved save Hochopepa and Shimone. They had no idea what
Milamber’s intentions were, but in the face of this act they took his command
seriously. They hurried to where a half-stunned, half-fascinated young Emperor
sat watching with everyone else in the stadium. They quickly conferred with
Ichindar, and a moment later the Emperor’s seat was empty.
Milamber looked to his left as a bellow of outrage sounded. “Who
dares this!”
Milamber was confronted by the sight of the Warlord, standing like
an enraged demigod in his white armor. The Warlord’s expression matched
Milamber’s.
“I dare this!” Milamber shouted back. “This cannot be; will not be!
No more will men die for the sport of others!”
Barely holding himself in check, Almecho, Warlord of the Nations of
Tsuranuanni, screamed, “By what right do you do this thing!” The cords on his
neck stood out clearly, and every muscle of his body quivered as sweat beaded
his brow.
Milamber’s voice lowered, and his words came carefully measured with
controlled, defiant rage. “By my right to do as I see fit.” He then spoke to a
nearby guard. “Those on the arena floor are to be released. They are free!”
The guard hesitated for a moment, then his Tsurani training came to
the fore. “Your will, Great One.”
The Warlord shouted, “You will stay!”
The crowd hissed with intaken breath. In the history of the Empire
such a confrontation between Great One and Warlord had never occurred. The
guard stopped, and Milamber spoke through a snarl. “My words are as law. Go!”
Suddenly the guard was moving, and the Warlord screamed his rage.
“You break the law! No one may free a slave!”
His anger boiling back up again, Milamber shouted back, “I can! I am
outside the law!”
The Warlord fell back, as if struck an invisible blow. In his life
no one had dared to thwart his will in this manner. No Warlord in history had
ever been forced to endure such public shame. He was dazed.
Near the Warlord another magician leaped to his feet. “I call you
traitor and false Great One. You seek to undermine the Warlord’s rule and bring
chaos to the order of the Empire. You will recant this effrontery!”
Instantly there was frantic activity as all within earshot scrambled
to get clear of the two magicians. Milamber regarded the Warlord’s pet. “Do you
think to match your powers against mine?”
The Warlord looked at Milamber with naked hatred on his face. He never
took his eyes from the young magician’s face as he said to his pet, “Destroy
him!”
Milamber’s arms shot upward, crossing at the wrists Instantly a soft
golden nimbus of light surrounded him. The other magician hurled a bolt of
energy, and the blue ball of fire struck harmlessly against the gold shield.
Milamber tensed, suffused with anger. Twice before in his life, when
attacked by the trolls and when fighting with Roland, he had reached into
hidden reservoirs of power and drawn upon them. Now he tore aside the last
barriers between his conscious mind and those hidden reserves. They were no
longer a mystery to him but the wellspring from which all his power stemmed.
For the first time in his experience, Milamber came to understand fully what he
was, who he was: not a Black Robe, limited by the ancient teachings of one
world, but an adept of the Greater Art, a master in full possession of all the
energy provided by two worlds.
The Warlord’s magician regarded him in fear. Here was more than a
curiosity, a barbarian magician. Here stood a figure to awe, arms stretched
upward, body trembling with rage, eyes seemingly aglow with strength.
Milamber clapped his hands above his head, and thunder pealed,
rocking those around him. Energy exploded upward from his hands, held high
above his head. A vortex of coruscating forces spun above him, rising like a
bowshot. The fountain continued until it was high overhead. It began to
flatten, covering the stadium like a great canopy. The dazzling display
continued briefly, then the skies seemed to explode, blinding many who were
looking upward. The sky turned dark, and the sun faded as if grey veils were
slowly being drawn before it.
Milamber’s voice carried to the farthest corner of the stadium as he
said, “That you have lived as you have lived for centuries is no license for
this cruelty. All here are now judged, and all are found wanting.”
More magicians departed, disappearing from their seats, but many yet
remained. More judicious commoners fled by nearby exits, but still many waited,
thinking this but another contest for their amusement. Many were too drunk or
excited by the spectacle for the magician’s warning to reach them.
Milamber’s arm swept an arc around him. “You who would take pleasure
from the death and dishonor of others, see then how well you face destruction!”
A gasp from the crowd answered his pronouncement.
Milamber raised one hand high overhead, and all became silent. Even
the light summer breeze ceased. Then with a terrible strength, he spoke. They
paled at his words, for it was as if death had become incarnate and had spoken.
Echoing throughout the stadium were the words of Milamber: “Tremble and
despair, for I am Power!”
A shrill keening sound began, with Milamber at its source. The very
air shuddered as mighty magic was forged “Wind!” Milamber cried.
A bitter breeze reeking of carrion, foul and loathsome in its touch,
blew through the stadium. A low moan of sorrow and fear was carried away by the
wind. It blew stronger and, each moment it grew, carried more menace, more
despair. It turned colder, until it was stinging to those who had rarely known
cold. Men wept at its biting caress, and high above the stadium, clouds formed
in the murk.
The winds howled, drowning out the cries of the multitude in the
arena. Nobles tried to flee, now too terrified to do anything but claw past
their own families, trampling the old and slow underfoot. Many were buffeted to
their knees, or knocked from the seats to the sands of the arena floor.
Great thunderheads, black and grey, raced overhead, seeming to swirl
around a point directly over Milamber’s head. The magician was engulfed in an
eerie light, pulsating with energy. He stood at the center of the storm, a
terrible figure in the dark. The wind shrieked its fury, but Milamber’s voice
cut through the sound like a knife.
“Rain!”
A cold rain fell, blown hard before the gale. Quickly it grew in
tempo, becoming a pounding torrent, then a deluge. The cascade pelted those
below, painfully driving them down, beating them senseless with a frightening
strength clearly unnatural. A few managed to flee to the tunnels, while others
clutched at one another in terror.
Other magicians tried to counter the spells but could not, and
fainted from the exertion. Never had there been such a display of raw power.
Here was a true master of magic, one who could control the very elements, come
into his own. The magician who had challenged Milamber lay back across his
seat, stunned, his eyes blinking as he struggled to sort some semblance of
order out of the chaos around. The Warlord tried to withstand the storm,
struggling to remain upright and refusing to submit to the terror of those
around him.
Milamber dropped his arm, then raised one hand before him,
stretching outward. “Fire!” he shouted, and again all could hear him.
The clouds seemed to burn. The heavens erupted as sheets of terrible
colors, flames of every hue, ran not through the darkness. Jagged bolts of
lightning flashed across the sky, as if the gods were announcing the final
judgment of mankind. People screamed in primitive terror at the element gone
mad.
Then the rain of fire began. Drops struck arms and clothing, faces
and cloaks, and began to burn. Shrieks of pain came from all sides, and people
tried vainly to swat out the fires that burned their flesh. More magicians
disappeared from the arena, taking their unconscious comrades. Milamber stood
alone in the magicians’ section. The stink of burned flesh filled the air,
mixed with the acrid odor of fear.
Milamber crossed his arms before him. He turned his gaze downward.
“Earth!”
From below a deep rumbling commenced. The ground under the stadium
began to tremble slightly. The vibrations grew in intensity, and the air was
filled with an angry buzzing, as if a swarm of giant insects had surrounded the
arena. Then a low rumbling added its harmony to the buzzing, and the ground
began to move.
The vibrations became a shaking, then a violent rolling, surging,
motion. Milamber stood calmly, as if on an island. It was as if the soil, the
earth, had become fluid. People were thrown down onto the arena floor. The huge
stadium throbbed from forces primeval. Statues tumbled from their pedestals,
and the huge gates were ripped from their hinges, in a crackling splintering of
ancient wood. They moved from before the tunnels in a staggering, drunken walk,
then fell to the sand, crushing those who lay before them. Many of the beasts
below the arena were driven mad by the earthquake and thrashed in their cages,
smashing locks and opening doors. They fled the tunnels and raced over the
fallen gates; they bellowed, howled, and roared at the fire rain Enraged by
terror, they fell upon the stunned spectators lying on the sand, killing at
random. A man would sit dazed, absently slapping at the burning drops from the
skies, while another a few feet away was being gutted by some horror from the
distant forests.
Now the arena itself began to wail as the ancient stones moved,
slipping across one another. Mortar a millennium old turned to dust in an
instant as the very stadium crumbled. Cries for mercy were swept away by the
winds or drowned in the cacophony of destruction. The fury mounted, and the
world seemed ready to be torn asunder. Milamber raised his hands above his head
again. He brought his palms together, and the mightiest thunder peal of all
sounded. Then, abruptly, the chaos ceased.
Above, the sky was clear and sunny, a light breeze once more blowing
from the east. The ground stood as it should, motionless and solid, and the
rain of fire was a memory.
The silence that followed was deafening. Then the groans of the
injured and the sobs of the terrified could be heard. The Warlord remained
standing, his face drained of all color, small burns scarring his features and
arms. In place of the mighty leader of the Empire stood a man bereft of any
emotion save terror. His eyes were wide enough to show whites His mouth moved,
as if he were trying to speak, but no words were forthcoming.
Milamber raised his hands overhead again, and the Warlord fell back
with a sob of fear. The magician clapped his hands and was gone.
The afternoon breeze carried the scent of summer flowers. In the
garden Katala was playing a word game with William, she had insisted they
should both learn the language of her husband’s homeland.
It was almost evening, for they were farther east than the Holy
City. The sun was low in the west, and the shadows in the garden were long.
Without the chime announcing Milamber’s arrival, Katala was startled when her
husband appeared in the doorway of their home. She rose slowly from her seat,
for she sensed at once something was wrong. “Husband, what is it?”
William ran up to his father, while Milamber said, “I will tell you
everything later. We must take William and flee.”
William tugged on his father’s black robe. “Papa!” he cried,
demanding attention. Milamber picked up his son and hugged him tightly, then
said, “William, we are going on a journey to my homeland. You must be a brave
boy and not cry.”
William stuck out his lower lip, for if his father was asking him
not to cry, then there must be a very good reason to do so, but he nodded and
held back the tears.
“Netoha! Almorella!” Milamber called, and in a moment the two
servants entered the garden. Netoha bowed, but Almorella rushed to Katala’s
side Katala had insisted she accompany them to Milamber’s new home when he
brought his family from the Shinzawai estate. She was more sister to Katala and
aunt to William than a slave. She could see at once that something was wrong,
and tears came unbidden to her eyes.
“You’re leaving,” she said, a statement more than a question.
Netoha looked at his master “Your will, Great One?”
Milamber said, “We are leaving. We must. I am sorry.” Netoha took
the news stoically, in the proper Tsurani fashion, but Almorella embraced
Katala, openly weeping.
Milamber said, “I wish to ensure that you are both provided for. I
have prepared documents against this day. When we have gone, you will find all
my work cataloged in my study. Above my study table, on the top shelf, you will
find a parchment with a black seal upon it. I am giving the estate to you,
Netoha.” He said to Almorella, “I know you two care for each other. The
document giving Netoha the estate also contains a provision granting you your
freedom, Almorella. He will make you a good husband. Even the Emperor cannot
set aside a document bearing a Great One’s seal, so do not worry.”
Almorella’s expression was a mixture of complete disbelief,
happiness, and sorrow. She nodded slowly that she understood, thanks clearly
showing in her eyes.
Milamber returned his attention to Netoha. “I am deeding the lower
pasture land to Xanothis the herdsman. Provide well for the others of this
household, Netoha.
“Now, in my study you will also find several parchments sealed with
red wax. These must be burned at once. Whatever you do, do not break the seals
before you burn them. All other works are to be sent to Hochopepa of the
Assembly, with my deepest affection and the wish that he find them useful. He
will know what to do with them.”
Almorella again embraced Katala, then kissed William. Netoha said,
“Quickly, girl. You’re not mistress of this estate yet, and there is important
work to do.” The hadonra started to bow, then said, haltingly, “Great One, I .
. . I wish you well.” He quickly bowed and started for the study Milamber could
see a hint of moisture in his eyes.
Almorella, tears running down her cheeks, followed Netoha into the
house. Katala turned to Milamber “Now?”
“Now.” As he took them to the pattern room, he said, “There is one
thing I must find out before we attempt the rift.” He held his wife, with their
son between them, and willed himself to another pattern.
They were shrouded in a white haze for an instant, then were in a
different room. They hurried through the door, and Katala saw they went into
the home of the Shinzawai lord.
They hurried to Kamatsu’s study and opened the door without
ceremony. Kamatsu looked up, annoyed at the interruption. His expression
changed immediately when he saw who was at his door. “Great One, what is it?”
he asked, as he arose.
Milamber quickly conveyed the events of the day, and Katala paled at
the recounting. The Lord of the Shinzawai shook his head. “You may have set
processes in motion that will forever change the internal order of the Empire, Great
One. I hope it is not a death blow. In any event, it will take years to gauge
their effects. Already the Party for Progress is making overtures to the Party
for Peace for alliance. In a short time you have had great effect upon my
homeland.”
Kamatsu continued, preventing Milamber from speaking. “That is not a
thing of the moment, though. You who were once my slave have learned greatly,
but you are still not Tsurani. You must understand the Warlord cannot allow
such a setback and save face. He most likely will take his life in shame, but
those who follow his lead—his family, his clan, his subordinates—will all mark
you for death. Already there may be assassins hired, or magicians who are ready
to act against you. You have no choice but to flee to your homeland with your
family.”
William decided it was appropriate now to cry, for in spite of his
attempts at bravery his mother was frightened, and the boy felt it. Milamber
turned away from Kamatsu and incanted a spell, and William was immediately
asleep. “He will sleep until we are safe.” Katala nodded and knew it was for
the best, but still she disliked the necessity.
“I have no fear of any magician, Kamatsu,” Milamber said, “but I
fear for the Empire. I know now that, no matter how hard my teachers in the Assembly
tried, I can never be Tsurani. But I do serve the Empire. In my disgust over
what I witnessed in the arena, I became sure of what I’ve suspected for some
time now. The Empire must change its course, or it is doomed to fall. The
rotten, weak heart of this culture cannot support its own weight much longer,
and like a ngaggi tree with a rotten core, it will collapse under its own
weight. There are other things, things of which I may not speak, that I have
learned in my time here, that tell me great change must come.
“I must leave, for should I stay, the Assembly, the High Council,
all the Empire will be divided. I would have difficulty leaving the Empire were
it not in the best interest of Tsuranuanni for me to depart. That is my
training. But before I leave, I must know, has there been word from Laurie and
your son of the Emperor’s overture of peace?”
“No. We know they disappeared during a skirmish the first night
Hokanu’s men searched the area after the fight and found no signs of them, so
it is assumed they were safely away. My younger son is certain they reached a
road behind Kingdom lines. Since then we have had no further word. Other
members of our faction wait with as much trepidation as I.”
Milamber considered. “Then the Emperor is still not ready to act. I
had hoped it might be soon, so we could safely leave under the truce, before
opposition to me becomes organized. Now, with the Warlord’s announcement of
victory over Duke Borric’s army, we may never see peace.”
Kamatsu said, “It is clear you are not Tsurani, Great One. With the
Warlord in disgrace from your destruction of games he dedicated to the Light’
of Heaven, the War Party will be in disorder. Now the Kanazawai Clan will once
more remove itself from the Alliance for War. Our allies in the Blue Wheel will
work doubly hard to press for a truce in the High Council. The War Party is
without an effective leader. Even should the Warlord prove shameless and not
kill himself, he will be quickly removed, for the War Party needs a strong
leader, and the Minwanabi are ambitious; for three generations they have sought
the white and gold. But others in the High Council will press the claims as
well. The War Party will be in disarray, and we shall gain time to strengthen
our position, as the Game of the Council continues.”
Kamatsu looked long at Milamber. “As I have said, there are those
who are already plotting to take your life. Make for your homeworld now. Do not
delay, and you should likely win safely through. It might not occur to any but
a few that you will strike for the rift at once. Any other Great One would take
a week putting his house in order.” He smiled at Milamber. “Great One, you were
a fresh breeze in a stale room while you were with us. I am sorry to see you
leave our land, but you must go at once.”
“I hope the day will come when we may meet again as friends, Lord of
the Shinzawai, for there is much that our two people could learn from one
another.”
The Shinzawai lord placed his hand upon Milamber’s shoulder. “I hope
also for that day, Great One I will send prayers with you. One thing more. If
you should perchance see Kasumi in your homeworld, tell him his father thinks
of him. Now go, and good-bye.”
“Good-bye,” said Milamber. He took his wife by the arm and hurried
back toward the pattern room. When they reached it, a chime sounded, and
Milamber pushed his wife and son behind him. A brief haze of white appeared
over the pattern in the floor, and Fumita stood there, startled.
“Milamber!” he said, stepping forward.
“Stop, Fumita!”
The older magician stood still “I mean you no harm. Word of what
occurred has reached those of the Assembly not attending the games. The
Assembly is in turmoil. Tapek and the other Warlord’s pets demand your life.
Hochopepa and Shimone argue on your behalf. Never has such discord been seen In
the High Council, the War Party demands an end to the independence of the
Assembly during times of war, and the Party for Progress and the Party for
Peace are in open alliance with the Blue Wheel Party. The Empire is upside
down.”
The older magician seemed to droop visibly as he related this. He
looked years older than Milamber had ever remembered seeing him. “I think you
may have been right in many of your beliefs, Milamber. We must have changes in
the Empire if we are not to decay, but so many changes so quickly? I don’t
know.”
There was a moment of silence between them; Milamber said, “What I
did was for the Empire, Fumita. You must believe that.”
The older magician nodded slowly. “I believe you, Milamber, or at
least I wish to.” He seemed to stand more erect. “Whatever the outcome there
will be much for the Assembly to do when things have settled. Perhaps we can
steer the Empire to a healthier course.
“But you must go quickly. No soldier will try to stop you, for only
a few outside the Holy City know of your actions, but the Warlord’s pets may
already be seeking you out. You caught our brothers by surprise at the games,
and none singly could stand against you, but if they coordinate against you,
even your vaunted powers will avail you little. You would have to kill another
magician, or be killed in turn.”
“Yes, Fumita, I know. I must go. I have no desire to kill another
magician, but I shall if I must.”
Fumita looked pained at hearing this. “How are you to reach the
rift? You haven’t been to the staging area, have you?”
“No, but I go to the City of the Plains, and from there I can
command litter.”
“It is too slow. The litter will take over an hour to reach the
staging area.” He reached into his robe and pulled out a transfer device. He
held it out to Milamber. “The third setting will take you directly to the rift
machine.”
Milamber took it. “Fumita, I mean to try to close the rift.”
Fumita shook his head. “Milamber, even with your powers I don’t
think you can. Scores of magicians worked to create the great rift, and the
controlling spells were established only on the Kelewan side. The Midkemian
machine is only to stabilize the rift’s location.”
“I know, Fumita. You’ll soon know, for I’ve sent my works to Hocho.
My ‘mysterious’ research has been an intensive study of rift energies.
“I may now know more about them than any other magician in the
Assembly. I know it would be a desperate, possibly destructive, action from the
Midkemian side, but this war must end.”
“Then get free to your homeworld and wait. The Emperor will act
soon, I am sure. The Warlord could not have been handed a bigger blow by losing
the war than the one you handed him in the arena. If the Light of Heaven orders
peace, then perhaps we can deal with the question of the rift. Stay your hand
until you’ve learned what the King’s reaction to the peace offer is.”
“Then you also play the Great Game?”
Fumita smiled. “I am not the only magician to descend into playing
politics, Milamber. Hochopepa and I have been a part of this from the onset. Go
now, and may the gods be with you. I wish you a safe journey and a long,
prosperous life on your homeworld.”
He then walked past Milamber and his family. Once he was out of
sight, Milamber activated the device.
The soldier jumped. One moment he had been sitting under a tree,
shaded from the setting sun’s heat, then the next moment a magician with a
woman and child suddenly appeared before him. By the time he was on his feet,
they were moving toward the rift machine, several hundred yards away. When they
reached the machine, a platform with tall poles rising up on either side of it,
between which a glimmering “nothingness” could be seen, an officer who was in
charge of the troops moving through snapped to attention.
“Get these men back from the platform.”
“Your will, Great One.” He barked orders, and the men fell back.
Milamber took Katala by the hand and led her through the rift.
One step, a moment of disorientation, and they were standing in the
middle of the Tsurani camp in the valley in the Grey Towers. It was night, and
campfires burned brightly. Several officers were startled at the unusual
arrival, but stepped out of their way.
Milamber said, “Have you captured horses?”
One of the officers nodded dumbly.
“Bring two, at once. Saddled.”
“Your will, Great One,” said the man, and rushed off. Soon a soldier
brought two horses toward him. When the soldier came close, Milamber could see
it was Hokanu. The younger Shinzawai son looked quickly about as he handed the
reins to Milamber. “Great One, we have just received word something terrible
has occurred at the Imperial Games, though the reports are vague. I suspect
your sudden appearance here has something to do with those reports. You must be
away quickly, for these are the Warlord’s men in camp, and should they arrive at
the same conclusion, there is no telling what they might risk.”
Milamber held William while Katala mounted with Hokanu’s aid. He
handed their son up to her and mounted his own steed. “Hokanu, I have just seen
your father. Go to him; he has need of you.”
“I will return to my father’s estate, Great One.” The young Tsurani
hesitated, then added, “Should you see my brother, tell him I live, for he does
not know.”
Milamber said he would, then turned to Katala and took the reins of
her horse. “Hold to the saddle horn, beloved. I will carry William.”
Without another word they rode out of camp. Several times guards
started to challenge them, but the sight of the black robe stopped them. They
rode for hours in the moonlight. Milamber could hear the shouts of soldiers as
he led his family to safety.
Katala bore up under it all like the warriors she was descended
from, and Milamber marveled at her. She had never sat a horse before, but she
made no complaint. To be taken from her home and whisked away to a strange, dark
world, where she knew no one, must be a frightening experience. She revealed a
tough fiber to her character he had only guessed at before.
After the seemingly endless ride, a voice sounded from out of the
darkness. Dim shadowy figures could be seen moving among the trees. “Halt! Who
rides this night?” The voice was speaking the King’s Tongue. The three riders
halted, and the man in front, with relief in his voice, shouted, “Pug of
Crydee!”
30
UPHEAVAL
Kulgan sat quietly.
It was a reunion tempered with sadness. Pug stood near Lord Bornc’s
bed, openly showing his grief as the dying Duke smiled wanly up at him. Lyam,
Brucal, and Meecham waited a short way off, speaking softly, and Katala
distracted William while the Duke and Pug spoke.
Bornc’s voice came softly, weak from his illness, and his face
contorted with pain as he struggled for breath. “I am glad to see you . . .
returned to us, Pug. And doubly glad to see your wife and child.” He coughed,
and a foam appeared at the corner of his mouth, flecked with blood.
Katala’s eyes were tearing, for the open affection her husband held
for this man touched her. Borric motioned toward Kulgan, and the stout magician
came to stand next to his former pupil. “Yes, Your Grace.”
Borric whispered, and Kulgan turned to Meecham “Will you see Katala
and the boy to our tent? Laurie and Kasumi are waiting there.”
Katala threw Pug a questioning look, and he nodded Meecham had
already picked up the boy, who regarded him with some skepticism. When they had
left, Borric struggled to sit higher, and Kulgan helped him, placing pillows
behind his back. The Duke coughed loudly and long, his eyes clenched tightly
shut from pain.
When at last he could breathe again, he sighed, then spoke slowly.
“Pug, do you remember when I rewarded you for saving Carline from
the trolls?” Pug nodded, afraid to speak for the emotions he felt. Borric
continued, “Do you remember my promise of another gift?” Again Pug nodded.
“Would that Tully were here to give it to you now, but I will tell you in brief.
I have long thought the Kingdom wastes one of its greatest resources by
regarding magicians as outcasts and beggars. Kulgan’s faithful service over the
years has shown me I was right. Now you return, and though I understand only a
little of what you’ve told, I can see you have become a master of your arts. It
was my hope you would, for I have had a vision.
“I had left a sum of gold in trust for you, against the day you
became a master magician. With it, I would like you and Kulgan, and other
magicians, to establish a center for learning, where all may come and share.
Tully will give you the documents with my instructions, explaining in detail my
design. But for now I can only ask: Will you accept this charge? Will you build
an academy for the study of magic and other knowledge?”
Pug nodded, tears in his eyes. Kulgan stood agape, not trusting what
he had heard His fondest wish, his life’s ambition, shared with the Duke in the
idle hours of speaking of dreams over cups of wine, was now granted.
Borric began to cough again, then when the fit passed, said, “I hold
title to an island, in the heart of the Great Star Lake, near Shamata. When
this war is at last done, go there and build your academy Perhaps someday it
will be the greatest center for learning in the Kingdom.”
Again the Duke was racked by coughing, the sound more terrible than
before. He gasped after the attack, barely able to talk. He motioned for Lyam
to come close, pointed to Pug, and said, “Tell him,” then fell back upon his
pillows.
Lyam swallowed hard, fighting back the tears, and spoke to Pug.
“When you were taken by the Tsurani, Father wished for some memorial in
remembrance. He considered what would be proper, for you had shown bravery on
three occasions, twice saving Kulgan’s life in addition to my sister’s. He
judged the only thing you lacked was a name, for none knew your parentage. So
he ordered a document drawn up and sent to the Royal Archives, inscribing your
name on the rolls of the family conDoin, adopting you into our house.” Lyam
forced a smile. “I only wish times were gladder to share such news with you.”
Overcome with emotion, Pug sank to his knees at the Duke’s side. He
took the Duke’s hand and kissed his signet, unable to speak. Softly Borric
said, “I could be no more proud of you than were you my own son.” He gasped for
breath. “Bear our name with honor.”
Pug squeezed the once powerful hand, now weak and limp. Bornc’s eyes
began to close, and he struggled for breath. Pug released his hand, and the
Duke motioned for all to come closer. Even old Brucal was red-eyed as they
waited for the Duke’s life to slip away.
To Brucal he whispered, “You are witness, old companion.”
The Duke of Yabon raised an eyebrow and looked questioningly toward
Kulgan. “What does he mean?”
Kulgan said, “He wishes you to witness his dying declaration. It is
his right.”
Borric looked at Kulgan and said, “Care for all my sons, old friend.
Let the truth be known.”
Lyam said to Kulgan, “Why does he say ‘all my sons’? What truth?”
Kulgan stared at Borric, who nodded weakly. The magician’s words
came quietly. “Your father acknowledges his eldest son, Martin.”
Lyam’s eyes grew wide. “Martin?”
Borric’s arm shot out in a sudden surge of strength, catching at
Lyam’s sleeve. He pulled Lyam to him and whispered, “Martin is your brother. I
have wronged him, Lyam. He is a good man, and well do I love him.” To Brucal he
croaked a single word, “Witness!”
Brucal nodded. With tears streaming down into his white moustache,
he swore, “So do I, Brucal, Duke of Yabon, bear witness.”
Suddenly Borric’s eyes went blank. His death rattle sounded deep in
his chest, and he lay still.
Lyam fell to his knees and wept, and the others also let their grief
come unrestrained. Never to Pug had a moment been so bittersweet.
That night it was a quiet group in the tent that Meecham had
commandeered for Pug and his family. The news of Borric’s death had cast a pall
over the camp, and much of Kulgan’s joy at seeing his apprentice returned
safely had been blunted. The day slowly passed, with everyone becoming
reacquainted, though they spoke softly and felt little joy. Occasionally one
would leave the tent, wandering off to be alone with his thoughts for a while.
Nine years of history had been exchanged slowly, and now Pug spoke of his flight
from the Empire.
Katala kept one eye on William, who lay curled up on a bed with one
arm thrown over Fantus. The firedrake and the boy had taken one look at each
other and decided they were friends. Meecham sat by the cook fire, watching the
others carefully Laurie and Kasumi sat on the floor, Tsurani fashion, while Pug
finished his narrative.
Kasumi was the first to speak. “Great One, how is it that you could
leave the Empire now, and not before?”
Kulgan raised one eyebrow. He was still absorbing the changes in his
former apprentice. This talk of Greater Path and Lesser Path was still
difficult to understand, and he couldn’t believe the Tsurani attitude toward
the boy. He amended that, the young man.
“After my confrontation with the Warlord, it became clear to me that
I would serve the Empire by leaving, for my continued presence could only bring
divisiveness at a time the Empire needs to heal itself. The war must be ended,
and peace established, for the Empire is being drained.”
“Aye,” added Meecham, “as is the Kingdom. Nine years of war are
bleeding us dry.”
Kasumi was equally discomforted by the casual tone these people took
toward Pug. “Great One, what if the Emperor cannot stop the new Warlord? The
council will surely be quick to elect one.”
“I don’t know, Kasumi. I will then have to try to close the rift.”
Kulgan pulled long on his pipe, then blew a thick cloud. “I am still
not clear on everything you have said, Pug. From what you have said, I can see
nothing that will prevent them from opening another rift.”
“There is nothing, except that rifts are unstable things. There is
no way to control where a rift will go; it was mere chance that caused the one
between this world and Kelewan. Once that one was established, others could
follow, as if the path between the two worlds acted to other rifts like a
lodestone to metal.
“The Tsurani could attempt to re-establish the rift, but each
attempt would probably take them to other, new worlds. If they returned here,
it would be by the merest chance, one in thousands. If the rift is closed, it
would be years before they returned, if ever.”
“From what you said about the Warlord’s taking his own life,” said
Kulgan, “can we expect a respite in the fighting?”
It was Kasumi who answered. “I fear not, friend Kulgan, for I know
this Warlord’s Subcommander. He is Minwanabi, a proud family from a powerful
clan, and it would serve his cause well when the High Council meets for his
clan to bring word of a great victory. Most likely he will attack in force
within days.”
Kulgan shook his head. “Meecham, you had best ask Lord Lyam to join
us; he must hear this.” The tall franklin rose and left the tent.
Kasumi frowned. “I have come to know this world a little, and I
agree with the Great One. Peace would surely profit us both, but I do not see
it coming.”
The young Duke followed Meecham into the tent a few minutes later,
and Kasumi repeated his warning. “We had best be ready, then, for the attack,”
said Lyam.
Kasumi looked uncomfortable. “Lord, I must beg your pardon, but
should fighting come, I cannot stand against my own people. May I have your
permission to return to my own lines?”
The Duke considered this, and Pug noticed that his face was becoming
lined with the strain of command. Gone were the laughing eyes and ever present
smile. Now he resembled his father more than ever “I understand. I will order
you passed through the lines, if I have your parole that you will repeat
nothing you have heard here.”
Kasumi agreed and rose to leave. Pug stood also and said, “I will
issue one last order to you, Kasumi, as a magician of Tsuranuanni. Return to
your father, for he has need of you. One more soldier dying will aid your
nation little.”
Kasumi bowed his head. “Your will, Great One.”
Kasumi embraced Laurie and left with Lyam.
Kulgan said, “You have told me so much that is difficult to absorb I
think for now we had best retire, for I feel the need of resting.”
As the old magician rose, Pug said to him, “There is one thing I
have been waiting to ask. What of Tomas?”
“Your childhood friend is well and with the elves of Elvandar. He is
a warrior of great renown, as he had wished to be.”
Pug smiled. “I am glad to hear that Thank you.”
Kulgan, Laurie, and Meecham bade them good night and left Katala
said, “Husband, you are tired. Come rest.”
Pug crossed over to the bed she sat upon “You amaze me. You have
been through so much tonight, and yet you fret about me.”
She took his hand “When I am with you, everything is as it should
be. But you look as if the weight of the world sits upon you.”
“The weight of two worlds, I fear, love.”
They were awakened by the sound of trumpets. As they rose from the
bed, Pug and Katala were startled by Laurie rushing into the tent. From the
light behind him as he tossed aside the tent flap, it was evident that they had
slept late. “The King comes!” He held out some clothing to Pug. “Put these on.”
Seeing the wisdom of not walking the camp in the black robe, Pug
complied Katala pulled her robe on over her head, while Laurie turned his back.
She went over to William, who was sitting up in his bed. looking frightened. He
quickly calmed down and started to pull on Fantus’s tail, causing the drake to
snort a protest over such indignities.
Pug and Laurie left the tent and walked to the commander’s pavilion,
overlooking the camp of the Kingdom armies. Away to the southeastern end of the
camp they could see the royal party quickly approaching, and could hear the
cheers of the soldiers as they saw the royal banner pass. Thousands of soldiers
took up the cheer, for they had never seen the King before, and his presence
served to lift their spirits, badly sagging since the rout by the Tsurani.
Laurie and Pug stood off to one side of the command tent, but close
enough to ensure they could hear what transpired. Duke Brucal kept his eyes on
the King, but Lyam noticed the two and nodded his approval of their presence.
The two lines of Royal Household Guard rode up to the front of the
tent, then parted so the King might ride to the fore. Rodric, King of the
Realm, rode on a huge black war-horse, who pawed at the ground as he came to a
halt before the two dukes. Rodric was dressed in a gaudy array of gold-trimmed
battle armor, with many flutings and reliefs fashioned into the breastplate.
His helm was golden, with a circlet crown. A royal purple plume flew from the
crest, blown by the morning wind.
When he had been sitting for a moment, he removed his helm and
handed it to a page. He stayed atop his horse and studied the two commanders,
looking down at them with a crooked smile. “What, have you no greeting for your
liege lord?”
The dukes bowed. Brucal said, “Your Majesty. We were just surprised.
We had no word.”
Rodric laughed, and the sound was tinged with madness. “That is
because I sent no word. I wanted to surprise you.” He looked at Lyam. “Who is
this in the tabard of Crydee?”
“Lyam, Your Majesty,” answered Brucal. “The Duke of Crydee.”
The King shouted, “He is Duke only if I say he is Duke.” With a
sudden change of mood, he said, in solicitous tones, “I am sorry to hear of
your father’s death.” He then giggled. “But he was a traitor, you know. I was
going to hang him.” Lyam tensed at Rodric’s words, and Brucal gripped his arm.
The King saw and screamed, “You would attack your King? Traitor! You
are one with your father and the others. Guards, seize him!” He pointed at the
young man.
Royal guards dismounted, and the soldiers of the West who stood
nearby moved to stop them. “Stop!” commanded Brucal, and the western soldiers
stopped. He turned to Lyam. “On your word, we have civil war,” he hissed.
Lyam said, “I submit, Your Majesty.” The western soldiers grumbled.
The King said coldly, “I shall have to hang you, you know. Take him
to his tent and keep him there.” The guards complied. The King turned his
attention to Brucal. “Are you loyal to me, my lord Brucal, or shall there be a
new Duke in Yabon as well as Crydee?”
“I am ever loyal to the crown, Your Majesty,” came the answer.
The King dismounted. “Yes, I believe that.” He giggled again. “You
knew my father thought highly of you, didn’t you?” He took the Duke’s arm, and
they entered the command tent.
Laurie touched Pug’s shoulder and said, “We had best stay in our
tents. If one of those courtiers recognizes me, I may join the Duke on the
gibbet.”
Pug nodded. “Get Kulgan and Meecham, and have them meet us in my
tent.”
Laurie hurried off, and Pug returned to his tent Katala was feeding
William from a bowl of stew from the night before. “I fear we have found
another pot of trouble, love,” Pug said. “The King is in camp, and he is madder
than I dreamed possible. We must leave soon, for he has ordered Lyam
imprisoned.”
Katala looked shocked. “Where will we go?”
“I can manage to take us to Crydee, to Prince Arutha I know the
court of Castle Crydee as well as if there were a pattern there I should have
no trouble transporting us.”
Laurie, Meecham, and Kulgan joined them a few minutes later, and Pug
outlined his plan for escape Kulgan shook his head. “You take the boy and
Katala, Pug, but I must stay.”
Meecham added, “And I.”
Pug looked incredulous. “Why?”
“I served Lyam’s father, and now I serve him. If the King tries to
execute Lyam, there will be fighting. The Armies of the West will not stand
idly by and watch Lyam hanged. The King has only the Royal Guard, and they will
be easily defeated. Once that happens, it is civil war. Bas-Tyra will lead the
Armies of the East. Lyam will need my aid.”
Meecham said, “The issue won’t be quickly decided. The Armies of the
West are veteran, but they’re tired. There’s little spirit left in them. The
Armies of the East are fresh, and Black Guy is the best general in the Kingdom.
Lyam’s unproved. It’ll be a long struggle.” Pug understood what they were saying.
“It may not reach that point, though. Brucal seems ready to follow Lyam’s lead,
but if he changes his mind? Who knows if Ylith, Tyr-Sog, and the others will
follow Lyam without Yabon’s lead?”
Kulgan sighed. “Brucal will not waver. He hates Bas-Tyra as much as
Borric did, though for less personal reasons. He sees Guy’s hand in every move
to break the West. I think the Duke of Yabon would happily take Rodric’s head,
but even so, Lyam may submit rather than risk a civil war and lose the West to
the Tsurani. We shall have to see what passes.
“Which is all the more reason you must go to Crydee, Pug. If Lyam
dies, then Arutha is heir to the crown. Once begun, the King cannot stop the
killing until Arutha is dead. Even Martin—whose claim would be blemished by his
illegitimacy—and Carline would be hunted down and killed. Perhaps Anita as
well. Rodric would not risk a western heir to the throne. Upon Lyam’s death,
the bloodletting will not end until either Rodric or Arutha sits the throne of
the Kingdom uncontested. You are the most powerful magician in the Kingdom.”
Pug started to protest “I know enough of the arts to know your skills from the
events you related to us. And I remember your promise as a boy. You are capable
of feats unmatched by any in our world. Arutha will have grave need of your
aid, for he would not let his brother’s death go unpunished. Crydee, Carse, and
Tulan will march once the Tsurani have been dealt with. Others, especially
Brucal, would join them. Then we would have civil war.”
Meecham spat out of the tent. He froze, holding aside the tent flap
for a moment, then said, “I think the argument is over. Look.”
They joined him at the opening. None had the franklin’s sharp
eyesight, and at first they couldn’t see what he was pointing out. Then slowly
they recognized the cloud of dust hanging in the air, far to the southeast. It
spread across the horizon for miles, a dirty brown ribbon that ran below the
blue of the sky.
The franklin turned to look at the others “The Armies of the East.”
They stood near the command pavilion, among a group of LaMutian
soldiers. With Laurie, Kulgan, Pug, and Meecham was Earl Vandros of LaMut, the
former cavalry officer who had commanded the raid through the valley years ago,
when they had first seen the rift. He had gained the title upon his father’s
death, less than a year after Pug’s capture, and had proven to be one of the
Kingdom’s most able field commanders.
A company of nobles was riding up the hill toward the pavilion. The
King and Brucal stood waiting for them. Next to each lord rode a
standard-bearer, who held the banner of that noble Vandros announced the name
of each army represented. “Rodez, Timons, Sadara, Ran, Cibon, they’re all
here.” He turned to Kulgan. “I doubt there are a thousand soldiers left between
here and Rillanon.” Laurie said, “There is one whose banner I don’t see.
Bas-Tyra.” Vandros looked. “Salador, Deep Taunton, Pointer’s Head . . . no, you
are right. The golden eagle on black is not among the standards.”
Meecham said, “Black Guy is no fool. He is already upon the throne
of Krondor. Should Lyam be hanged, and Rodric fall in battle, it would be only
a short step to the throne in Rillanon.”
Vandros looked back at the gathering nobles. “Nearly the entire
Congress of Lords is present. Should they return to Krondor without the King,
then Guy would be King in short order. Many of these are his men.”
Pug said, “Who is that under the banner of Salador? It is not Lord
Kerus.”
Vandros spat upon the ground. “It is Richard, formerly Baron of
Dolth, now Duke of Salador. The King hung Kerus, and his family fled to Kesh.
Now Richard rules the third most powerful duchy in the East. He is one of Guy’s
favorites.”
When the nobles, were assembled before the King, Richard of Salador,
a red-faced bear of a man, said, “My liege, we are assembled. Where are we to
camp?”
“Camp? We make no camp, my lord Duke We ride!” He turned to Lord
Brucal. “Marshal the Armies of the West, Brucal.” The Duke gave the signal, and
heralds ran through the camp, shouting the order to muster. The battle drums
and war trumpets were shortly sounding throughout the western camp.
Vandros left to join his soldiers, and soon there were few observers
nearby. Kulgan, Pug, and the others moved off to one side, keeping clear of the
King’s gaze.
The King said to the assembled nobles, “We have had nine years of
the western commander’s tender ways. I shall lead the attack that will drive
the foe from out of our lands.”He
turned to Brucal. “In deference to your advancing years, my lord Duke, I am
giving command of the infantry to Duke Richard. You will stay here.”
The old Duke of Yabon, who was in the process of donning his armor,
looked stung. He said nothing save, “Your Majesty,” his tone cold and strained.
He stiffly turned and entered the command tent.
The King’s horse was brought, and Rodric mounted. A page handed up
his crowned helm, and the King placed it upon his head. “The infantry shall
follow as quickly as possible. Now we ride!”
The King spurred his horse down the hill, followed by the Royal
Guard and the assembled nobles. When he was out of sight, Kulgan turned to the
others and said, “Now we wait.”
The day grew long. Every hour that passed was like a slowly
unfolding day. They sat in Pug’s tent, wondering what was occurring to the
west.
The army had marched forward, under the King’s banner, with drums
and trumpets sounding. Over ten thousand horsemen and twenty thousand foot
soldiers had advanced upon the Tsurani. There were only a few soldiers left in
camp, the wounded and an orderly company. The quiet outside was unnerving after
the almost constant camp noise of the previous day.
William had grown restless, and Katala had taken him outside to play.
Fantus welcomed the opportunity to rest untroubled by his tireless playmate.
Kulgan sat quietly, puffing on his pipe. He and Pug passed the time
by occasionally speaking of matters magical, but mostly were silent.
Laurie was the first to break the tension. He stood and said, “I
can’t take this waiting anymore. I think we should go to Lord Lyam and help
decide what is to be done once the King returns.”
Kulgan waved him back into his seat. “Lyam will do nothing, for he
is his father’s son and would not start a civil war, not here.”
Pug sat absently toying with a dagger. “With the Armies of the East
in camp, Lyam knows that an outbreak of fighting would hand the West to the
Tsurani and crown to Bas-Tyra. He’ll walk to the gibbet and put the rope around
his own neck rather than see that.”
“It’s the worst kind of foolishness,” countered Laurie.
“No,” answered Kulgan, “not foolishness, minstrel, but a matter of
honor. Lyam, like his father before him, believes that the nobility have a
responsibility to give their lives’ work, and their lives if need be, for the
Kingdom. With Borric and Erland dead, Lyam is next in line for the throne. But
the succession is unclear, for Rodric has not named an heir. Lyam could not
bear to wear the crown if he would be thought a usurper Arutha is another
matter, for he would simply do what was expedient, take the throne—though he
would not wish to—and worry about what was said of him when it was said.”
Pug nodded. “I think that Kulgan has the right of things. I do not
know the brothers as well as he, but I think it might have been a better thing
had the order of their birthing been reversed. Lyam would make a good king, but
Arutha would make a great one. Men would follow Lyam to their deaths, but the
younger brother would use his shrewdness to keep them alive.”
“A fair assessment,” conceded Kulgan. “If there is anyone who could
find a way out of this mess, it is Arutha. He has his father’s courage, but he
also has a mind as quick as Bas-Tyra’s. He could weather the intrigues of court,
though he hates them.” Kulgan smiled “When they were boys, we called Arutha the
‘little storm cloud,’ for when he got angry, he would turn to black looks and
rumbles, while Lyam would be quick to anger, quick to fight, and quick to
forget.”
Kulgan’s reminiscences were interrupted by the sound of shouting
from outside. They jumped up and rushed out of the tent.
A blood-covered rider, in the tabard of LaMut, sped past them, and
they ran to follow. They reached the command tent as Lord Brucal came out. The old
Duke of Yabon said, “What news?”
“The Earl Vandros sends word. Victory!” Other riders could be heard
approaching the camp. “We rode through them like the wind. The line on their
east is breached, and the salient is rent. We broke them, isolating those in
the salient, then wheeled to the west and rolled back those who sought to aid
them. The infantry now holds fast, and the cavalry drives the Tsurani back into
the North Pass. They flee in confusion! The day is ours!”
A wineskin was handed to the rider, who sounded as if his voice
would fail. He tilted it over his face and let the wine pour into his mouth. It
ran down his chin, joining the deeper red splattered over his tabard. He threw
aside the wineskin. “There is more. Richard of Salador has fallen, as has the
Earl of Silden. And the King has been wounded.”
Concern showed on Brucal’s face “How does he fare?”
“Badly, I fear,” said the rider, holding his nervous horse as it
pranced around. “It is a grievous wound. His helm was cleaved by a broadsword
after his horse was killed beneath him. A hundred died to protect him, for his
royal tabard was a beacon to the Tsurani. He comes now.” The rider pointed back
the way he had come.
Pug and the others turned to see a troop of riders approaching. In
the van rode a royal guardsman with the King held before him. The monarch’s
face was covered in blood, and he held to the saddle horn with his right hand,
his other arm dangling limply at his side. They stopped before the tent, and
soldiers helped the King from the horse. They started to carry him inside, but
he said, in a weak and slurred voice, “No Do not take me from the sun. Bring a
chair so I may sit.”
Nobles were riding up even as a chair was placed for the King. He
was lowered into it and leaned back, his head lolling to the left. His face was
covered with blood, and white bone could be seen showing through his scalp
wound.
Kulgan moved to Rodric’s side “My King, may I attend?”
The King struggled to see who was speaking. His eyes seemed to lose
focus for a moment, then became clear. “Who is speaking? The magician? Yes,
Borric’s magician. Please, I am in pain.”
Kulgan closed his eyes, willing his powers to ease the King’s
suffering. He placed his hand upon Rodric’s shoulder, and those nearby could
see the ruler of the Kingdom visibly relax. “Thank you, magician. I feel more
at ease.” Rodric struggled to turn his head slightly. “My lord Brucal, please
bring Lyam to me.”
Lyam was in his tent, under guard, and a soldier was sent to bring
him out. Moments later the young man knelt before his cousin. “My liege, your
wound?”
Kulgan was joined by a Priest of Dala, who agreed with his
assessment of the wound. He looked at Brucal and shook his head slowly. Herbs
and bandages were brought, and the King was cared for. Kulgan left the priest
to his ministrations and returned to stand where the others looked on. Katala
had joined them, holding William in her arms. Kulgan said, “I fear it is a mortal
wound. The skull is broken, and fluids seep through the crack.”
In silence they watched. The priest stood to one side and began
praying for Rodric. All the nobles, save those commanding the infantry, were
now arrayed before the King. More horsemen could be heard riding into camp.
They joined the others who stood watching and were told what had happened. A
hush fell over the assembly as the King spoke.
“Lyam,” he said in a faint voice. “I have been ill, haven’t I?” Lyam
said nothing, his face betraying conflicting emotions. He had little love for
his cousin, but he was still the King.
Rodric ventured a weak smile. One side of his face moved only
slightly, as if he could not control the muscles well Rodric reached out with
his good right hand, and Lyam took it. “I do not know what I have been thinking
of late. So much of what has happened seems like a dream, dark and frightening.
I have been trapped within that dream, but now I am free of it.” Sweat appeared
upon his brow, and his face was nearly white. “A demon has been driven from me,
Lyam, and I can see much of what I have done was wrong, even evil.”
Lyam knelt before his King. “No, my King, not evil.”
The King coughed violently, then gasped as the attack subsided.
“Lyam, my time grows short.” His voice rose a little, and he said, “Brucal,
bear witness.” The old Duke looked on, his face an implacable mask. He stepped
over next to Lyam and said, “I am here, Your Majesty.”
The King gripped Lyam’s hand, pulling himself a little more upright
His voice rose as he said, “We, Rodric, fourth of that name, hereditary ruler
of the Kingdom of the Isles, do hereby proclaim that Lyam conDoin, our blood
cousin, is of the royal blood. As oldest conDoin male, he is named Heir to the
throne of our Kingdom.”
Lyam shot Brucal an alarmed look, but the old Duke gave him a curt
shake of his head, commanding silence. Lyam bowed his head, and his sorrow was
heartfelt. He tightly gripped the King’s hand. Brucal said, “So do I, Brucal,
Duke of Yabon, bear witness.”
Rodric’s voice sounded faint. “Lyam, one boon do I ask. Your cousin
Guy has done what he has done at my command. I grieve for the madness that
drove me to have Erland deposed. I knew his going to the dungeon was his death
warrant, and I did nothing to halt it. Have mercy on Guy. He is an ambitious
man, but not an evil one.”
The King then spoke of his plans for the Kingdom, asking that they
be continued, though with more regard for the populace. He spoke of many other
things: of his boyhood, and his sorrow that he had never married. After a time
his speech became too slurred to understand, and his head fell forward upon his
chest.
Brucal ordered guards to attend the King. They gently raised him and
carried him inside. Brucal and Lyam entered the tent, while the other nobles waited
outside. More new arrivals were gathering, and they were told the news. Nearly
a third of the Armies of the Kingdom stood before the commander’s pavilion, a
sea of upturned faces extending down the hill. Each stood without speaking,
waiting out the death watch.
Brucal closed the tent flap behind and shut out the red glow of the
sunset. The Priest of Dala examined the King, then looked at the two dukes “He
will not regain consciousness, my lords. It is only a matter of time.”
Brucal took Lyam by the arm and led him to one side. In a hushed
whisper he said, “You must say nothing when I proclaim you Heir, Lyam.”
Lyam pulled his arm from Brucal’s grasp, fixing his gaze upon the
old warrior “You bore witness, Brucal,” he whispered back. “You heard my father
acknowledge Martin as my brother, legitimizing him. He is the oldest conDoin
male. Rodric’s proclamation of succession is invalid. It presumed I was the
oldest!”
Brucal spoke quietly, but his words were ungentle. “You have a war
to end, Lyam. Then, if you should accomplish that small feat, you have to take
your father and Rodric back to Rillanon, to bury them in the tomb of your
ancestors. From the day Rodric is interred, there will be twelve days of
mourning, then on noon of the thirteenth, all the claimants for the crown will
present themselves before the priests of Ishap, and the entire, bloody damn
Congress of Lords. Between now and then you’ll have plenty of time to decide
what to do. But for now, you needs must be Heir. There is no other way.
“Have you forgotten Bas-Tyra? Should you dither, he’ll be in
Rillanon with his army a month before you. Then you’ll have bitter civil war,
boy. As soon as you agree to keep your mouth shut, I’m ordering my own trusted
troops to Krondor, under royal seal, to arrest Black Guy. They’ll toss Bas-Tyra
into the dungeon before his own men can stop them— there’ll be enough loyal
Krondorians around to ensure that. You can have him held until you reach
Krondor, then cart him off to Rillanon for the coronation, either your own or
Martin’s. But you must act, or by the gods, we’ll have Guy’s lackeys brewing
civil war within a day of your naming Martin the true Heir. Do you understand?”
Lyam nodded silently. With a sigh he said, “But will Guy’s men let
him be taken?”
“Even the captain of his own guard will not stand against a royal
warrant, especially countersigned by the representatives of the Congress of
Lords I shall guarantee signatures on the warrant,” he said, clenching his
gloved fist before his face.
Lyam was quiet for some time, then said, “You are right. I have no
wish to visit trouble upon the Kingdom. I will do as you say.”
The two men returned to the King’s side and waited. Nearly another
two hours passed before the priest listened at the King’s chest and said, “The
King is dead.”
Brucal and Lyam joined the priest in a silent prayer for Rodric.
Then the Duke of Yabon took a ring from Rodric’s hand and turned to Lyam.
“Come, it is time.”
He held aside the tent flap, and Lyam looked out. The sun had set,
and the night sky glittered with stars. Fires had been lit and torches brought,
so that now the multitude appeared to be an ocean of firelight. Not one man in
twenty had left, though they were all tired and hungry after the victory.
Brucal and Lyam appeared before the tent, and the old Duke said,
“The King is dead.” His face was stony, but his eyes were red-rimmed. Lyam
looked pale but stood erect, his head high.
Brucal held something above his head. A glint of deep red fire
reflected off the small object as it caught the torchlight. The nobles who
stood close nodded in understanding, for it was the royal signet, worn by all
the conDoin kings since Delong the Great had crossed the water from Rillanon to
plant the banner of the Kingdom of the Isles upon the mainland shore.
Brucal took Lyam’s hand and placed the ring upon his finger. Lyam
studied the old and worn ring, with its device cut into the ruby, still
undimmed by age. As he raised his eyes to behold the crowd, a noble stepped
forward. It was the Duke of Rodez, and he knelt before Lyam. “Your Highness,”
he said. One by one the others before the tent, nobles of both East and West,
knelt in homage, and like a wave rippling, all those assembled knelt, until
Lyam alone was standing.
Lyam looked at those before him, overcome with emotion and unable to
speak. He placed his hand upon Brucal’s shoulder and motioned for them all to
stand.
Suddenly the multitude was upon its feet, and the cheer went up,
“Hail, Lyam! Long live the Heir!” The soldiers of the Kingdom roared their approval,
doubly so, for many knew that hours ago the threat of civil war had hung over
their heads. Men of both East and West embraced and celebrated, for a terrible
future had been avoided.
Lyam raised his hands, and soon all were silent. His voice rang out
over their heads, and all could hear him say, “Let no man rejoice this night.
Let the drums be muffled and the trumpets blown low, for tonight we mourn a
King.”
Brucal pointed at the map. “The salient is surrounded, and each
attempt to break through to the main body has been turned back. We have
isolated nearly four thousand of their soldiers there.” It was late night.
Rodric had been buried with what honor could be afforded in the camp.
There had been none of the trappings common to a royal funeral, but the
business of war made it necessary. He had been quickly embalmed and buried in
his armor next to Borric, on a hillside overlooking the camp. When the war was
over, they would be returned to the tombs of their ancestors in Rillanon.
Now the young Heir looked over the map, gauging the situation in
light of the latest communique from the front. The Tsurani held in the North
Pass, at the entrance to the valley. The infantry had dug in before them,
bottling up those in the valley, and isolating both the forces along the river
Crydee and what was left of the salient.
“We have broken their offensive,” said Lyam, “but it is a two-edged
sword. We cannot attempt to fight on two fronts. We must also be ready should
the Tsurani try to move against us from the south. I see no quick ending yet,
in spite of our gains.”
Brucal said, “But surely those in the salient will surrender soon.
They are cut off, with little food or water, and cannot expect to be resupplied
In a matter of days they will be starving.”
Pug interrupted. “Forgive me, Lord Brucal, but they will not.”
“What can they gain by resisting? Their position is hopeless.”
“They tie up your forces that would otherwise be attacking the main
camp. Soon the situation in Tsuranuanni will be resolved enough for magicians
to return from the Assembly. Then food and water can be transported in without
interference. And each day they hold strengthens the Tsurani as reinforcements
arrive from Kelewan. They are Tsurani and will gladly die rather than be taken
captive.”
Lyam asked, “Are they so honor bound to die, then?”
“Yes. On Kelewan they know only that captives become slaves. The
idea of a prisoner exchange is unknown to them.”
“Then we must bring all our weight to bear upon the salient at
once,” said Brucal. “We must crush them and free our soldiers to deal with
other threats.”
“It will prove costly,” Lyam observed. “This time there will be no
element of surprise, and they are dug in like moles. We could lose two men for
each of theirs.”
Kulgan had been sitting off to one side with Laurie and Meecham. “It
is a tragedy that we have gained only a broadening of the fighting. And so soon
after the Emperor’s offer of peace.”
Pug said, “Perhaps it is still not too late.”
Lyam looked at Pug. “What do you mean? Kasumi must have already sent
word that the peace was refused.”
“Yes, but there may still be time to send word that there will be a
new king who is willing to talk peace.”
“Who will carry the message?” asked Kulgan. “Your life might be
forfeit if you return to the Empire.”
“We may be able to solve two problems at once. Your Highness, may I
have your leave to promise the Tsurani in the salient safe passage to their
lines?”
Lyam considered this. “I will, if I have their parole not to return
for a year’s time.”
“I will go to them, then,” said Pug. “Perhaps we can still end this
war in spite of the calamities that have befallen us.”
The Tsurani guards, nervous and alert, tensed at the sound of an
approaching rider. “They come!” one shouted, and men seized weapons and hurried
to the barricades. The southern earthworks were still intact, but here at the
western edge of the former salient the pickets had thrown up a hasty barrier of
felled trees and shallow trenches.
Bowmen stood ready, arrows notched, but the expected charge did not
come. A single figure on horseback came into view. His hands were raised
overhead, palms together in the sign for parley. And more, he wore the black
robe.
The rider walked his horse to the edge of the barricade and asked,
in perfect Tsurani, “Who commands here?”
A startled officer said, “Commander Wataun.”
The rider snapped, “You forget your manners, Strike Leader.” He took
note of the colors and devices on the man’s breastplate and helm. “Are the
Chilapaningo so lacking in civility?”
The officer came to attention. “Your pardon, Great One,” the man
stammered. “It is only that you were unexpected.”
“Bring Commander Wataun here.”
“Your will, Great One.”
The commander of the Tsurani salient came a short time later. He was
a bandy-legged, barrel-chested old fighter, and Great One or not, his first
concern was for the welfare of his troops. He looked at the magician
suspiciously. “I am here, Great One.”
“I have come to order you and your soldiers back to the valley.”
Commander Wataun smiled ruefully and shook his head. “I regret,
Great One, that I may not. Word of your exploits has been carried to us here,
and that the Assembly has called your status into question. You may be no
longer outside the law by now. If you had not come under a sign of parley, I
would have you taken, though it would cost us dearly.”
Pug felt a hot flush come to his cheeks. He had known it was likely
the Assembly would cast him out, but to hear this still caused him pain.
Ruefully, he knew that because of the training he had undergone, he would still
feel a sense of loyalty to that alien place and would never fully feel at home
in his native land.
With a sigh Pug said, “What then will you do?”
The Force Commander shrugged “Hold our position. Die if we must.”
“Then I will make you an offer, Commander. You must decide if it is
a trick or not. Kasumi of the Shinzawai carried an offer from the Light of
Heaven to the Midkemian King. It was an offer of peace. The King rejected it,
but now there is to be a new king who is willing to make peace. I would ask you
to carry word to the Holy City, to the Emperor, that Prince Lyam will accept
peace. Will you do so?”
The commander considered. “If what you say is true, then I would be
a fool to waste my men. What guarantees are you willing to make?”
“I give you my word, as a Great One—if that means anything still—
that what I say is true. I also promise that your men will be given safe
conduct back to the valley, on promise they return to the Empire for a year’s
time. And I will ride to the valley entrance, to your lines, as hostage. Is
that enough?”
The commander thought it over for a moment as he surveyed his tired,
thirsty troops. “I will agree, Great One. If it is the Light of Heaven’s will
that the war end, who am I to prolong it?”
“The Oaxatucan have long been known for their bravery. Let it be
said they are also worthy of honor for their wisdom.”
The commander bowed, then turned to his soldiers. “Pass the word. We
march home.”
Word that the Emperor would agree to peace reached the camp four
days later. Pug had given a message to Wataun to be carried through the rift.
It bore the black seal of the Assembly, and no one would impede its swift
delivery. It had been addressed to Fumita, asking him to carry word to the Holy
City that the new King of the Realm would not require retribution but would
accept peace.
Lyam had shown visible emotion when Pug had read the message. The
Emperor himself would come through the rift in a month’s time and would sign
formal treaties with the Kingdom. Pug had felt close to tears when he read the
news, which soon spread through the camp that the war was over. A great
cheering could be heard.
Pug and Kulgan sat in the older magician’s tent. For the first time
in years they had been feeling something like their old relationship. Pug was
finishing up a long explanation of the Tsurani system of instructing novices.
“Pug,” said Kulgan around a long pull on his pipe. “It seems that
now the war is over, we can return to the business of magicians. Only now it is
you who are master, and I who would be student.”
“There is much we may learn from each other, Kulgan. But I fear old
habits die hard I don’t think I could ever get used to the idea of your being a
student. And there are many things you are capable of that I still cannot do.”
Kulgan seemed surprised. “Really? I would have thought my simple
arts beneath your greatness.”
Pug felt the old embarrassment from when he had been Kulgan’s student.
“You make sport of me yet.”
Kulgan laughed. “Only a little, boy. And you are still a boy to one
of my advancing years. It is not easy for me to see an indifferent apprentice
become the most powerful magician of another world.”
“Indifferent was the proper word for it. At first I only wanted to
be a soldier. I think you knew that. Then when I had finally decided to devote
myself to study, the invasion began.” Pug smiled. “I think you felt sorry for
me that day when I stood alone before the Duke’s court, the only boy not
called.”
“That is partly true, though I was the first to sense the power in
you. And the judgment was borne out, no matter the amazing events required to
bring your ability to fruition.”
Pug sighed. “Well, the Assembly is nothing if not complete in its
training. Once the power is detected, there are but two options, success or
death. With all other thoughts banished, there is little to concern the student
but the study of magic. Without that, I doubt I would ever have amounted to
much.”
Kulgan said, “I think not. Had the Tsurani never come, there would
still have been a path to greatness for you to follow.”
They sat and talked and were comforted by each other’s presence.
After a while they lit fires, for darkness was falling. Katala came to the tent
to see if her husband was to join her and the boy at the celebration feast
being given by King Lyam. She looked inside and saw the two of them lost in
conversation.
She backed out and, with a faint smile on her lips, returned to her
son.
31
DECEPTIONS
Tomas awoke with a start.
In the predawn darkness something strange called to him. He sat up,
every sense extended, trying to recapture what had awakened him.
Aglaranna stirred next to him. Since his return from the
confrontation with Martin over the Tsurani prisoners, he had been free of the
alien dreams and the blind rages. He was no longer the boy from Crydee or the
ancient Dragon Lord, but a new being possessing qualities of both.
She came awake and slowly reached out to touch his shoulder. The
muscles were relaxed, free of the tension that marked his grappling with an
ancient dream. She breathed a long sigh, then said, “Tomas, what is it?”
He reached up to cover her hand with his own. “I don’t know.
Something odd occurred a moment ago.” He sat with his head slightly turned, as
if listening to something distant. “A change . . . a shift in the pattern of
things, perhaps.”
The Elf Queen said nothing. Since becoming his lover she had grown
used to his uncanny ability to sense events elsewhere, an ability unmatched by
even the most gifted of the ancient Spellweavers. A remnant of his Valheru
heritage, this awareness had come fully into bloom since he recovered his humanity.
She thought it strange, yet reassuring, that his Valheru powers had become more
pronounced and acute only since regaining his humanity. It was as if some force
had conspired to keep them blunted until he possessed the wisdom to use them.
Tomas stopped listening. “It is something to the east, a mixture of
rejoicing and a great sadness.” His voice sounded thick with emotion. “An age
is dying.”
He rolled off the sleeping pallet and stood, powerful muscles
revealed to Aglaranna’s elven eyes in the dim light. He stood at the door of
their sleeping chamber, looking out over Elvandar, listening to the sounds of
the night. Everything appeared calm.
The scent of the forest, thick, sweet, and heady, was overlaid with
the faint hints of aromas from last night’s supper, and the smell of bread
fresh from the oven for this morning’s meal. Night birds sang, while day birds
began their predawn warbling, and the sun prepared to rise in the east. The
touch of cool air upon his naked skin was a caress to Tomas, and he felt more
complete and at peace than he had ever been in his young life.
Aglaranna’s arms went around his waist, and he felt her press tight
against him. He could feel the beat of her heart as she held him close. “My
lord, my love,” she said, “return to our bed.”
He turned within the circle of her arms and felt the warmth of her
body against his. “There is something . . . “He gripped her close, but gently.
“There is a feeling of hope.”
She could feel his heat as his desire answered hers. “Hope. Would
that it is true.”
He looked down at her face, his senses as acute in the gloom as
hers, drinking in the sight of her. “Never lose hope, my Queen.”
He kissed her deeply, and whatever awakened him was quickly
forgotten.
Lyam sat quietly in his tent. He was composing the message he would
send to Crydee when a guard entered and announced the arrival of Pug and
Kulgan. Lyam rose and greeted them, and when the guards left, indicated they
should sit. “I am sorely in need of your wisdom.” He sat back and waved at the
parchments before him. “If Arutha is to reach us in time for the peace
conference, these must leave today. But I have never been much for letters, and
I also confess to great difficulty in sharing the events of the last week.”
Kulgan said, “May I?” pointing to the letter.
Lyam waved consent, and the magician picked up the parchment and
began to read. “ ‘To my beloved brother and sister: It is with the deepest
sorrow I must tell you of our father’s death. He was injured mortally in the
great Tsurani offensive, leading a counterattack to rescue surrounded soldiers,
mainly Hadati hillmen, auxiliaries to the garrison of Yabon. The Hadati sing
his name and make sagas in his honor, such was his bravery. He passed thinking
of his children, and his love for us all was undiminished.
“ ‘The King has also passed, and it has fallen to me to lead our
armies. Arutha, I would have you here, for we now are at the war’s end. The
Emperor is willing to make peace. We shall meet in the north valley of the Grey
Towers in twenty-nine days time, at noon. Carline, I would have you take ship
to Krondor with Anita, for there is much to be done there, and Princess Alicia
will have need of her daughter. I will join you with Arutha once peace has been
made. With love, and sharing in your sorrow, I am, your most loving brother,
Lyam.’ ”
Kulgan was quiet for a moment, and Lyam said, “I thought you might
be able to add something or other, to lend elegance to it.”
Kulgan said, “I think you announced your father’s passing with
simplicity and gentleness. It is a fine message.”
Lyam shifted uncomfortably in his chair. “There is so much yet to
write. I have said nothing about Martin.”
Kulgan took up a quill. “I will copy this again, for your pen is a
bit strangled, Lyam.” With a warm smile he added, “You were always one to
prefer the sword to the quill. I’ll add some instructions to the end, asking
that Martin go to Krondor with your sister. Gardan and Fannon should also make
the journey. And an honor company of the castle garrison. It will make it seem
you mean to honor those who served so well in Crydee. Then you will have ample
time to decide how to tell Martin what you must.”
Pug shook his head sadly. “I only wish you could add Roland’s name
to that list.” Since coming to the camp, he had learned of the Squire of
Tulan’s death. Kulgan had told him of what he knew of events in Crydee and
elsewhere concerning his old friends over the last few years.
Lyam said, “Curse me for a fool! Carline has no idea you are back,
Pug. You must add that, Kulgan.”
Pug said, “I hope it will not come as too much of a shock.”
Kulgan chuckled. “Not so much of a shock as discovering you’ve a
wife and child.”
Memories of his boyhood and his tempestuous relationship with the
Princess returned, and Pug said, “I hope also she has outgrown some of the
notions she held nine years ago.”
Lyam laughed for the first time since his father’s death, genuinely
entertained by Pug’s discomfort. “Rest assured, Pug I’ve had many long
communications with my brother and sister over the years, and I judge Carline a
greatly changed young woman from the girl you once knew. She was fifteen years
old when last you saw her. Think of your own changes in the last nine years.”
Pug nodded.
Kulgan finished his copy work and handed the document to Lyam. He
read it and said, “Thank you, Kulgan. You’ve added just the right note of
gentleness.”
The tent flap opened and Brucal entered, his old, lined face
animated with glee. “Bas-Tyra’s fled!”
“How?” asked Lyam. “Our soldiers must still be a week from Krondor,
maybe more.”
The old Duke sat heavily in a chair. “We found a hidden cage of
messenger pigeons, belonging to the late Richard of Salador. One of his men
sent word to Guy of Rodric’s death, and your being named Heir. We’ve questioned
the fellow, a valet of Richard’s He’s admitted to being one of Bas-Tyra’s spies
in Richard’s court. Guy’s fled the city, knowing one of your first acts as King
will be to have him hung. My guess is he will make straight for Rillanon.”
“I would have thought that would be the last place on Midkemia he
would wish to be,” remarked Kulgan.
“Black Guy is no man’s fool, whatever else may be said of him. He’ll
be underground, no doubt, but you’ll see his handiwork again before we are
through. Until the crown is resting upon Lyam’s head, Guy is still a power in
the Kingdom.”
Lyam looked troubled at the last remark, thinking of his father’s
dying declaration. Since Brucal’s admonition to say nothing of Martin, everyone
had spoken only of Lyam’s coronation, nothing of Martin’s possible claim to the
crown.
Lyam let these disturbing thoughts pass by as Brucal continued
speaking: “Still, with Bas-Tyra on the sly, most of our troubles are now
behind. And with the war near an end, we can get back to the business of
rebuilding the Kingdom. And I for one am glad I am getting too old for much
more of this nonsense of war and politics. I only regret I am without a son, so
I could announce in his favor and retire.”
Lyam studied Brucal with affectionate disbelief. “You’ll never bow
down gracefully, old war dog. You’ll go to your deathbed scratching and clawing
every inch of the way, and that day is years off.”
“Who’s talking of dying?” snorted Brucal. “I mean to hunt my hounds
and fly my falcons, and do some fishing as well. Who knows? I may find some
comely wench hearty enough to keep up with me, say about seventeen or eighteen
years of age, and remarry and father a son yet. If that young fool Vandros ever
gathers his wits about him and marries my Felinah, you just see how fast he’ll
become Duke of Yabon when I retire.
“Why she still waits for him is anybody’s guess.” He heaved himself
up from his chair. “I am for a hot bath and some sleep before supper. By your
leave?”
Lyam motioned he might leave and, when he was gone, said, “I will
never get used to this business of people needing my permission to come and
go.”
Pug and Kulgan rose from their chairs. Kulgan said, “You had better,
for everyone will ask it of you from now on. With your permission . . . ?”
Feigning disgust, Lyam motioned they might go.
The council sat in assembly as Aglaranna took her place upon the
throne. Besides the normal council, Martin Longbow was present, standing beside
Tomas. When all were in place, Aglaranna said, “You have asked for council,
Tathar. Now tell us what cause you bring before us.”
Tathar bowed slightly to the Queen. “We of the council felt it time
for an understanding.”
“Of what, Tathar?” asked the Elf Queen.
Tathar said, “We have labored long to bring a peaceful, secure
ending to this business of Tomas. It is known by all here that our arts were
turned to calming the rage within, softening the might of the Valheru, so the
young man who was transformed would not be overwhelmed in the course of time.”
He paused, and Martin leaned close to Tomas. “Trouble.”
Tomas startled him with a slight smile and a wink. Once more Martin
was reassured that the mirthful boy he had known in Crydee was as much present
in this young man as the Dragon Lord. “Everything will be fine,” said Tomas in
a whisper.
“We have,” said Tathar, “come to judge this business done, for Tomas
is no longer to be feared as an Old One.”
Aglaranna said, “That is happy news indeed. But is this then cause
for a council?”
“No, lady. Something else must also be laid to rest. For while we no
longer fear Tomas, still we will not place ourselves under his rule.”
Aglaranna stood, outrage clear upon her face. “Who dares to presume
this? Has there been a single word from any to suggest that Tomas seeks to
rule?”
Tathar stood firm before his Queen’s displeasure. “My lady, you see
with a lover’s eyes.” Before she could answer, he held up his hand. “Speak not
sharp words with me, daughter of my oldest friend; I make no accusations. That
he shares your bed is no one’s concern save yourself. We begrudge you nothing.
But he now has the means of a claim, and we would have the matter settled now.”
Aglaranna paled, and Tomas stepped forward. “What means?” he said,
his voice commanding.
Tathar looked slightly surprised. “She carries your child. Did you
not know?”
Tomas was bereft of words. Conflicting feelings ran through him. A
child! Yet he had not been told. He looked at Tathar “How do you know?”
Tathar smiled, and there was no mockery in it. “I am old, Tomas I
can see the signs.”
Tomas looked to Aglaranna. “It is true?”
She nodded. “I would not tell you until it was no longer possible to
hide the truth.”
He felt a stab of uncertainty. “Why?”
“To spare you any worry. Until the war is through, you must put your
mind to nothing else. I would not burden you with other thoughts.”
Tomas stood quietly for a moment, then threw back his head and
laughed, a clear, joyous sound. “A child Praise the gods!”
Tathar looked thoughtfully at Tomas. “Do you claim the throne?”
“Aye, I do, Tathar,” Tomas said, a smile upon his face.
Calin spoke for the first time. “It is my inheritance, Tomas. You
will have to contest with me for it.”
Tomas smiled at Calin. “I will not cross swords with you, son of my
beloved.”
“If you seek to be King among us, then you must.”
Tomas walked over to Calin. There had never been any affection
between them, for more than the others, Calin had feared Tomas’s potential
threat to his people and now stood ready to fight if need be.
Tomas placed his hand upon Calin’s shoulder and looked deeply into
his eyes. “You are Heir. I speak not of being your King.” He stepped away and
addressed the council. “I am what you see before you, a being of two heritages.
I possess the power of the Valheru, though I was not born to it, and my mind
remembers ages long gone to dust. But I can remember a boy’s memories and can
again feel the joy in laughter and a lover’s touch.” He looked at the Elf
Queen. “I claim only the right to sit beside my Queen, with your blessings, as her
consort. I will take only what rule she and you give, nothing more. Should you
give none, still I will remain at her side.” Then, with firmness, he added,
“But I will not stand down from this: our child shall have a heritage
unblemished by a sinister birth.”
There was a general murmur of approval, and Tomas faced Aglaranna.
“If you will take me as husband?” he said in the ancient elven language.
Aglaranna sat with eyes gleaming. She looked to Tathar “I will. Is
there any who denies me the right?”
Tathar looked around at the other councillors. Seeing no dissension,
Tathar said, “It is permitted, my lady.”
Abruptly there was a shout of approval from the gathered elves, and
soon others were coming to investigate the unusual display of activity in the
council. They in turn joined in the celebration, for all knew of the Queen’s
love for the warrior in white and gold, and they judged him a fit consort.
Calin said, “You are wise in our ways, Tomas. Had you done
otherwise, there would have been strife, or lingering doubt. I thank you for
your prudence.”
Tomas took his hand in a firm grip. “It is only just, Calin. Your
claim is without question. When your Queen and I have journeyed to the Blessed
Isles, then our child will be your loyal subject.”
Aglaranna came to Tomas’s side, and Martin joined them, to say, “Joy
in all things.” Tomas embraced his friend, as did the Queen.
Calin shouted for silence. When the noise had died, he said, “It is
time for clear speaking. Let all know that what has been fact for years is now
openly acknowledged. Tomas is Warleader of Elvandar, and Prince Consort to the
Queen. His words are to be obeyed by all save the Queen. I, Calin, have
spoken.”
“And I, too, say this is true,” echoed Tathar. Then the council
bowed before the Queen and her husband-to-be.
Martin said, “It is well I shall leave Elvandar as happiness
returns.”
Aglaranna said, “You are leaving?”
“I fear I must. There is still a war, and I am still Huntmaster of
Crydee. Besides,” he said with a grin, “I fear young Garret is growing overly
content to rest and partake of your largess. I must harry him along the trail
before he gets fat.”
“You’ll stay for the wedding?” asked Tomas.
As Martin began to apologize, Aglaranna said, “The ceremony can be
tomorrow.”
Martin conceded. “One more day? I will be pleased.”
Another shout went up, and Tomas could see Dolgan pushing through
the crowd When the dwarf chief stood before them, he said, “We were not invited
to the council, but when we heard the shouts, we came.” Behind him Tomas and
Aglaranna could see the other dwarves approaching.
Tomas placed his hand upon Dolgan’s shoulder. “Old companion, you
are welcome. You have come to a celebration. There is to be a wedding.”
Dolgan fixed them both with a knowing smile. “Aye, and high time.”
The rider spurred his horse past the lines of Tsurani soldiers. He
was still discomforted by the sight of so many of them passing to the east, and
the recent enemy watched him ride by with guarded expressions as he headed
toward Elvandar.
Laurie pulled in his horse near a large outcropping of rock where a
Tsurani officer in black-and-orange armor supervised the passing soldiers. From
his officer’s plume and insignia, he was a Force Leader, surrounded by his
cadre of Strike Leaders and Patrol Leaders. To the Force Leader he said, “Where
lies the closest ford across the river?”
The other officers regarded Laurie with suspicion, but if the Force
Leader felt any surprise at the barbarian’s nearly perfect Tsurani, he did not
show it. He inclined his head back the way his men marched from and said, “A
short way from here. Less than an hour’s march. Faster on your beast, I’m sure.
It is marked by two large trees on either side of a clearing, above a place
where the river falls a short way.”
Laurie had no difficulty identifying the house colors the man wore,
as it was one of the Five Great Families, and said, “Thank you, Force Leader.
Honor to your house, son of the Minwanabi.”
The Force Leader stood erect. He did not know who this rider was,
but he was courteous, and that courtesy must be returned. “Honor to your house,
stranger.”
Laurie rode forward past the dispirited Tsurani soldiers plodding
along the banks of the river. He found the clearing above the small falls and
rode into the water. The river ran swiftly here, but the horse managed to cross
without incident Laurie could feel the spray from the falls as the wind blew it
back in his direction. It felt cool and refreshing after the hot ride. He had
been in the saddle since before daybreak and would not finish his ride until
after night had fallen. By then he would be close enough to Elvandar to be
intercepted by elven sentries. They would certainly be watching the Tsurani
withdrawal with interest, and one could guide him to their Queen.
Laurie had volunteered to carry the message, for it was felt that
the messenger would be less likely to encounter trouble if he could speak
Tsurani. He had been challenged three times during his ride, and each time he
had explained his way past suspicious Tsurani officers. There might be a truce,
but there was little trust yet.
When he was clear of the river, Laurie dismounted, for his horse was
tired. He walked the animal to cool it off. He pulled the saddle from the
mount’s back and was rubbing him down with a brush carried in his saddlebags
when a figure stepped out from among the trees. Laurie was startled, for the
figure was not an elf. He was a dark-haired man with grey at the temples,
dressed in a brown robe, and holding a staff. He approached the minstrel,
without hurry and seemingly at ease. He stopped a few feet away and leaned on
his staff. “Well met, Laurie of Tyr-Sog.”
The man possessed a strange manner, and Laurie did not remember
having met him before. “Do I know you?”
“No, but I have knowledge of you, troubadour.”
Laurie edged closer to his saddle, where his sword lay. The man
smiled and waved his hand in the air. Abruptly Laurie was filled with calm, and
he stopped moving for his sword. Whoever this man was, he was obviously
harmless, he thought.
“What brings you to the elven forest, Laurie?”
Without knowing why, Laurie answered. “I bring messages to the Elf
Queen.”
“What are you to say?”
“That Lyam is now Heir, and peace has been restored. He invites the
elves and the dwarves to the valley in three weeks’ time, for there will they
seal the peace.”
The man nodded. “I see. I am on my way to see the Elf Queen. I will
carry word. You must have better things you can do with your time.”
Laurie started to protest, but stopped. Why should he travel to
Elvandar when this man was bound there anyway? It was a waste of time.
Laurie nodded. The man chuckled. “Why don’t you rest here for the
night? The sound of water is soothing, and there is little chance of rain.
Tomorrow return to the Prince and tell him that you carried the message to
Elvandar. You spoke with the Queen and Tomas, and they were agreed to the
Prince’s wishes. The dwarves of Stone Mountain will hear also. Then tell Lyam
that the elves and the dwarves will come. He may rest assured, they will come.”
Laurie nodded. What the man was saying made a great deal of sense.
The stranger turned to leave, then said, “By the way, I think you’d best not
mention our meeting.”
Laurie said nothing, but accepted what the stranger said without
question. After the man was gone, he felt a great sense of relief that he was
on his way back from Elvandar and that his message had been received.
The ceremony took place in a quiet glade, with Aglaranna and Tomas
exchanging vows before Tathar. No one else was there, as was the elven way,
while they pledged their love. Tathar invoked the blessings of the gods and
instructed them on their duty, one to the other.
When the ceremony was complete, Tathar said, “Now return to
Elvandar, for it is time for feasting and celebration. You have brought joy to
your people, my Queen and my Prince.”
They rose from their kneeling positions and embraced. Tomas stepped
back and said, “I would have this day remembered, beloved.” He turned and
cupped his hands around his mouth. In the ancient language of the elves he
cried, “Belegroch! Belegroch! Attend us.”
The sound of hooves pounding the earth could be heard. Then a small
band of white horses raced into the glade, ran toward them, and reared in
salute to the Elf Queen and her consort Tomas leaped upon the back of one. The
elf steed stood quietly, and Tathar said, “By no other way could you have shown
so well that you are now one with us.”
Aglaranna and Tathar mounted, and they rode back to Elvandar. When
they came into sight of the tree-city, a great shout went up from the assembled
elves. The sight of the Queen and her Prince Consort riding the elf steeds was,
as Tathar said, a confirmation of Tomas’s place in Elvandar.
The feasting went on for hours, and Tomas observed that the joy he
felt was shared by everyone. Aglaranna sat next to him, for a second throne had
been placed in the council hall, acknowledging Tomas’s rank. Every elf who was
not keeping watch over the outworlders came to stand before them, pledging
loyalty and offering blessings on the union. The dwarves also offered their
congratulations and joined in the festivities wholeheartedly, filling the
glades of Elvandar with their boisterous singing.
Long into the night the celebration wore on Suddenly Tomas
stiffened. A chilled wind seemed to pass through him. Aglaranna gripped his
arm, sensing something amiss “Husband, what is it?”
Tomas stared into space “Something . . . strange . . . like the
other night: hopeful, but sad.”
Abruptly there was a shout from the edge of the clearing below
Elvandar. It cut through the sound of the celebration, but what was being said
was unclear. Tomas rose, with Aglaranna at his side, and crossed to the edge of
the huge platform. Looking down, he could see an elven scout below, clearly out
of breath. “What is afoot?” Tomas shouted.
“My lord,” came the reply, “the outworlders—they withdraw.”
Tomas was rooted in place. Those simple words struck him like a
blow. His mind couldn’t comprehend the Tsurani’s leaving after all these years
of fighting. He shook off the feeling. “To what ends? Do they marshal?”
The scout shook his head. “No, my lord, they are not staging. They
move slowly, without alarm. Their soldiers look dispirited. They break camp
along every mile of the Crydee and turn east.” The guard’s upturned face showed
an expression of stunned but joyful understanding. He looked at those nearby,
then with a smile said simply, “They are leaving.”
A shout of incredible joy went up, and many openly wept, for it
seemed that at last the war was ended. Tomas turned and saw tears on the face
of his wife. She embraced him, and they stood quietly for a moment. After a
time the new Prince Consort of Elvandar said to Calin, who stood nearby, “Send
runners to follow, for it may be a trick.”
Aglaranna said, “Do you truly think so, Tomas?”
He shook his head. “I only wish to make sure, but something inside
tells me this is truly the end. It was the hope of peace with the sadness of
defeat mingled together that I felt.”
She touched his cheek, and he said, “I will send runners to the
Kingdom camp and inquire of Lord Borric what is happening.”
She said, “If it is peace, he will send word.”
Tomas looked at her. “True. We shall wait, then.” He studied her
face, centuries old, but still filled with the beauty of a woman in her first
bloom. “This day will doubly be remembered as a day to celebrate.”
Neither Tomas nor Aglaranna was surprised when Macros arrived in
Elvandar, for they had ceased being amazed at the sorcerer after his first
visit. Without ceremony he stepped forward from the trees surrounding the
clearing and crossed toward the tree-city.
The entire court was assembled, including Longbow, when Macros came
to stand before the Queen and Tomas. He bowed and said, “Greetings, lady, and to
your consort.”
“Welcome, Macros the Black,” said the Queen. “Have you come to
unravel the mystery of the outworlders’ withdrawal?”
Macros leaned upon his staff and nodded “I bring news.” He seemed to
consider his words carefully. “You should know that both the King and the Lord
of Crydee are dead. Lyam is now Heir.”
Tomas noticed Martin. The Huntmaster’s face was drained of blood.
His features remained impassive, but it was clear to Tomas that Martin was
rocked by the news. Tomas turned toward Macros. “I knew not the King, but the
Duke was a fine man. I am sorry for such news.”
Macros went over to Martin. Martin watched the sorcerer, for while
he had never met him, he knew him by reputation, having been told by Arutha of
the meeting upon his island and by Tomas of his intervention during the Tsurani
invasion of Elvandar. “You, Martin Longbow, are to go at once to Crydee. There
you will sail with the Princesses Carline and Anita for Krondor.” Martin was
about to speak when Macros raised his hand; those of the court paused as if
taking a breath. In a near-whisper Macros said, “At the last, your father spoke
your name in love.” Then his hand dropped, and all was as it had been.
Martin felt no alarm, but rather a sense of comfort from the
sorcerer’s words, he knew no one else had been aware of the brief remark.
Macros said, “Now hear more glad tidings. The war is over Lyam and
Ichindar meet in twenty days’ time to sign a peace treaty.”
A cheer went up in the court, and those above shouted the news to
those below. Soon all of the elven forests echoed with the sound of rejoicing.
Dolgan again entered the council, wiping his eyes. “What’s this? Another
celebration without us while I nap? You’ll make me think we’re no longer
welcome.”
Tomas laughed “Nothing of the kind, Dolgan. Fetch your brethren and
have them join our celebration. The war is over.”
Dolgan took out his pipe and knocked the dottle from it, kicking the
burned-out tabac over the edge of the platform. “Finally,” he said as he opened
his pouch. He turned away, as if intent upon filling his pipe, and Tomas
pretended not to notice the wetness upon the dwarven chief’s face.
Arutha sat upon his father’s throne, alone in the great hall. He
held the message from his brother, which he had read several times, trying to
understand that their father was truly gone. Grief sat heavy upon him.
Carline had taken the news well She had gone to the quiet garden
beside the keep, to be alone with her thoughts.
Thoughts ran not through Arutha’s mind. He remembered the first time
his father had taken him hunting, then another time when he had come back from
hunting with Martin Longbow and how proudly he had listened to his father
exclaim over the large buck he had taken. He vaguely recalled the ache when he
had learned of his mother’s death, but it was a distant thing, dulled by time.
The image of his father enraged in the King’s palace suddenly came to him, and
Arutha let out a slow sigh. “At least,” he said to himself, “most of what you
had wished has come to pass, Father. Rodric is gone and Guy is in disgrace.”
“Arutha?” said a voice from the other side of the hall.
Arutha looked up: stepping from the shadows of the doorway came
Anita, her satin-slippered feet making no sound as she crossed the stone floor
of the hall.
Lost in his thoughts, he hadn’t noticed her enter. She carried a
small lamp, for evening had cast the hall into deep gloom. “The pages were
reluctant to disturb you, but I couldn’t see you sitting alone in the
darkness,” she said. Arutha felt pleasure at the sight of her and relief she
had come. A young woman of uncommon sense and tender ways, Anita was the first
person Arutha had known to see beneath his surface calm and dry humor. More
than those who had known him since boyhood, she understood his moods and could
lighten them, knowing the right words to comfort him.
Without waiting for him to answer, she said, “I have heard the news,
Arutha. I am so terribly sorry.”
Arutha smiled at her. “Not yet over your own grief at your father’s
passing, and you share mine. You are kind.”
Word of Erland’s death had come a week before on a ship from
Krondor. Anita shook her head, her soft red hair moving in a rippling wave
around her face. “Father was very ill for many years. He prepared us well for
his death. It was a near-certainty when he was put into the dungeon. I knew
that when we left Krondor.”
“Still, you show strength. I hope I am able to bear up as well.
There is so much to be done.”
She spoke quietly. “I think you will rule wisely, Lyam in Rillanon,
you in Krondor.”
“I? In Krondor? I’ve avoided thinking about that.”
She sat at his side, taking the throne Carline sat in when at her
father’s side in court. She reached over and placed her hand upon Arutha’s,
resting on the arm of the throne. “You must. After Lyam, you are Heir to the
crown. The Prince of Krondor is the Heir’s office. There is no one to rule
there but you.”
Arutha looked uncomfortable. “Anita, I have always assumed I would
someday become Earl of some minor keep, or perhaps seek a career as an officer
in one of the Border Barons’ armies. But I had never thought to rule. I am not
sure I welcome being Duke of Crydee, let alone Prince of Krondor. Besides, Lyam
will marry, I am sure—he always caught the girls’ eyes, and as King he’ll certainly
have his pick. When he has a son, the boy can be Prince of Krondor.”
Anita shook her head firmly. “No, Arutha. There is too much work to
be done now. The Western Realm needs a strong hand, your hand. Another Viceroy
is not likely to win trust, for each lord will suspect any other who is named.
It must be you.”
Arutha
studied the young woman. In the five months she had been at Crydee, he had come
to care dearly for her, though he had been unable to express his feelings,
finding words lacking when they were together. She was each day more a
beautiful woman, less a girl. She was still young, which made him
uncomfortable. With the war in progress, he had kept his thoughts away from
their respective fathers’ plans for a possible marriage, revealed to him that
night aboard the Sea Swift. Now, with peace at hand, Arutha was suddenly
confronted with that question.
“Anita, what you say is possibly true, but you also have a claim to
the throne. Didn’t you say your father’s plan for our marriage was designed to
bolster your claim to Krondor?”
She looked at him with large green eyes. “That was a plan to foil
Guy’s ambitions. It was to strengthen your father’s or brother’s claim to the
crown should Rodric die heirless. Now you need not feel bound to those plans.”
“Should I take Krondor, what will you do?”
“Mother and I have other estates. We can live quite well upon the
revenues, I am sure.”
Struggling with emotions within himself, Arutha spoke slowly. “I
have not had time to weigh this in my mind. When I was last in Krondor, I
learned how little I know of cities, and I know less than that of governing.
“You were raised for such undertakings. I . . . I was only a second
son. My education is lacking.”
“There are many able men, here and in Krondor, who will advise you.
You have a good head for things, Arutha, the ability to see what must be done,
and the courage to act. You will do well as Prince of Krondor.”
She rose and leaned over to kiss his cheek. “There is time for you
to decide how best to serve your brother, Arutha Try not to let this new
responsibihty weigh too heavily upon you.”
“I will try Still, I would feel better knowing vou were close by—you
and your mother.” he added with a rush.
She smiled warmly “We will be close at hand should you have need of
our advice, Arutha. We will likely stay upon our estate in the hills near
Krondor, just a few hours’ ride from the palace. Krondor is the only home I’ve
known, and Mother has lived nowhere else since she was a girl. Should you wish
to see us, you have but to command, and we will happily come to court. And
should you wish to find respite from the burdens of office, you will be a
welcome guest.”
Arutha smiled at the girl “I suspect I will be visiting with
regularity, and I hope I do not wear out my welcome.”
“Never, Arutha.”
Tomas stood alone on the platform, watching the stars through the
branches above. His elven senses informed him someone had come up behind. With
a nod he greeted the sorcerer. “I am but twenty-five years in this life,
Macros, though I bear memories of ages. All my adult life I have been waging
war. It seems a dream.”
“Let us not turn this dream into a nightmare.”
Tomas studied the sorcerer. “What do you mean?”
Macros said nothing for a time, and Tomas awaited his words with
patience. At last the sorcerer spoke. “There is this thing which must be done,
Tomas, and it has fallen to you to finish this war.”
“I like little the tone of your words. I thought you said the war
was finished.”
“On the day of the meeting between Lyam and the Emperor, you must
marshal the elves and dwarves to the west of the field. When the monarchs meet
in the center of the field, then will there be treachery.”
“What treachery?” Tomas’s face showed his anger.
“I may say little more, save that when Ichindar and Lyam are seated,
you must attack the Tsurani with all your forces. Only this way can Midkemia be
saved from utter destruction.”
A look of suspicion crossed Tomas’s face. “You ask much for one
unwilling to give more.”
Macros stood tall, holding his staff to one side, like a ruler his
sceptre.
His dark eyes narrowed, and his brows met over his hooked nose. His
voice stayed soft, but his words were hot with anger. Even Tomas felt something
akin to awe in his presence.
“More!” he said, biting off the word. “I gave you all, Valheru! You
are here by dint of my actions over many years. More of my life than you will
know has been given to preparing for your coming. Had I not bested, then
befriended Rhuagh, you would never have survived in the mines of Mac Mordain
Cadal. It was I who prepared the armor and sword of Ashen-Shugar, leaving them
with the Hammer of Tholin and my gift to the dragon, so that centuries later
you would discover them. It was I who set your feet upon the path, Tomas. Had I
not come to aid you, years past, Elvandar would now be ashes. Do you think
Tathar and the other Spellweavers of Elvandar were the only ones to work on
your behalf? Without my aid over these last nine years, you would have been
destroyed utterly by the dragon’s gifts. No mere human could have withstood
such ancient and powerful magic without the intervention only I could make.
When you were swept along upon your dream quests to the past, it was I who
guided you back to the present, I who returned you to sanity.” The sorcerer’s
voice rose. “It was I who gave you the power to influence Ashen-Shugar! You
were my tool!” Tomas stepped back before the controlled fury of the sorcerer’s
words. “No, Tomas, I have not given you much. I have given you everything!”
For the first time since donning the armor in Mac Mordain Cadal,
Tomas felt fear. In the most basic fiber of his being he suddenly was aware of
how much power the sorcerer possessed, and that should Macros choose, he could
brush him aside like a nettlesome insect “Who are you?” he asked quietly,
controlled fear in his voice.
Macros’s anger vanished. He leaned once again upon his staff, and
Tomas’s fears fled and with them all memory of his fears. With a chuckle,
Macros said, “I tend to forget myself upon occasion. My apologies.” Then he
grew serious once again. “I do not ask this thing from any demand of gratitude.
What I have done is done, and you owe me nothing. But know this: both the
creature called Ashen-Shugar and the boy called Tomas shared an abiding love of
this world, each in his own way, incomprehensible to each other as that love
was. You possess both aspects of the love of land: the desire of the Valheru to
protect and control, and the desire of the keep boy to nurture and nourish. But
should you fail in this task I set before you, should you stint in resolve when
the moment is nigh, then know with dread certainty, this world upon which we
stand shall be lost, lost beyond recalling. This on my most holy oath is the
truth.”
“Then I shall do as you instruct.”
Macros smiled. “Go then to your wife, Prince Consort of Elvandar,
but when it is time, marshal your army. I go to Stone Mountain, for Harthorn
and his soldiers will join you. Every sword and war hammer is needed.”
“Will they know you?”
Macros gazed at Tomas. “Indeed they will know me, Tomas of Elvandar,
never doubt.”
“I shall gather all the might of Elvandar, Macros.” A grim note
entered his voice. “And for all time, we will put an end to this war.”
Macros waved his staff and vanished. Tomas waited alone for a time,
struggling with a newfound fear, that this war would last forever.
32
BETRAYAL
The armies stood facing one another.
Seasoned veterans eyed each other across the open valley floor, not
quite ready to feel at ease in the presence of an enemy they had fought for
nine years and longer. Each side was composed of honor companies, representing
the nobles of the Kingdom and clans of the Empire. Each numbered in excess of a
thousand men. The last of the Tsurani invasion army was now entering the rift,
returning home to Kelewan, leaving only the Emperor’s honor detachment behind.
The Kingdom army was still camped at the mouths of the two passes into the
valley and would not leave the area until the treaty was finalized. There was still
a cautious aspect to the newfound trust.
On the Kingdom side of the valley, Lyam sat astride a white
war-horse, awaiting the Emperor’s arrival. Nearby the nobles of the Kingdom,
their armor cleaned and polished, sat their horses. With them were the leaders
of the Free Cities militia and a detachment of Natalese Rangers.
Trumpets sounded from across the field, and the Emperor’s party
could be seen emerging from the rift. Imperial banners fluttered in the breeze
as the procession moved to the head of the Tsurani contingent.
Awaiting the Tsurani herald, who was walking across the several
hundred yards that separated the opposing monarchs, Prince Lyam turned to
regard those who sat on horseback nearby. Pug, Kulgan, Meecham, and Laurie were
accorded their position of honor by dint of their service to the Kingdom Earl
Vandros and several other officers who had distinguished themselves were also
close by. Next to Lyam sat Arutha, astride a chestnut war-horse, who pranced in
place out of high spirits.
Pug looked around, feeling a giddy sensation at the sight of all the
symbols of two mighty nations with whose fates he had been so closely tied.
Across the open field he could see the banners of the powerful families of the
Empire, all familiar to him: the Keda, the Oaxatucan, the Minwanabi, and the
rest. Behind him were the fluttering banners of the Kingdom, all the duchies
from Crydee in the west to Ran in the east.
Kulgan noticed his former student’s far-off gaze and tapped him on
the shoulder with the long staff he was holding. “Are you all right?”
Pug turned. “I’m fine. I was just a little overwhelmed for a moment,
engulfed in memories. It seems strange to see this day, in a way. Both sides of
the war were bitter enemies, and yet I have ties with both lands. I find I have
feelings I’ve yet to explore.”
Kulgan smiled. “There will be much time for introspection later
Perhaps Tully and I can offer some aid.” The old cleric had accompanied Arutha
on his brutal ride, not wishing to miss the peace meeting. The fourteen days in
the saddle had taken a toll, however, and now he lay ill in Lyam’s tent. It had
taken a command from Lyam to keep him there, for he had been determined to
accompany the royal party.
The Tsurani herald reached a place before Lyam. He bowed low, then
said something in Tsurani. Pug rode forward to translate. “He says, ‘His Most
Imperial Majesty, Ichindar, ninety-one times Emperor, Light of Heaven, and
ruler of all the nations of Tsuranuanni, sends greetings to his brother
monarch, His most Royal Highness, Prince Lyam, ruler of the lands known as the
Kingdom. Will the Prince accept his invitation to join with him at the center
of the valley?’ ”
Lyam said, “Tell him that I return his greetings and will be pleased
to meet with him at the appointed place.” Pug translated, with the appropriate
Tsurani formality, and the herald bowed low and returned to his own lines.
They could see the imperial litter being carried forward Lyam
signaled that his escort should accompany him, and they rode out to meet the
Emperor in the center of the valley floor Pug, Kulgan, and Laurie rode with the
honor escort, Meecham waited with the soldiers.
The Kingdom horsemen reached the designated place first and waited while
the imperial retinue approached. The litter was born on the backs of twenty
slaves, chosen for their uniformity in height and appearance. Their thick
muscles bunched under the strain of carrying the heavy, gold-encrusted litter.
Gauzy white curtains hung from gold-inlaid wooden supports, decorated with gems
of great value and beauty. The rare metal and gems caught the sun’s rays and
glittered brightly.
Behind the litter marched representatives of the most powerful
families in the Empire, clan Warchiefs. There were five of them, one for each
family eligible to elect a new Warlord.
The litter was lowered, and Ichindar, Emperor of the nations of
Tsuranuanni, stepped out. He was dressed in golden armor, its value
immeasurable by Tsurani standards. Upon his head was a crested helm covered in
the same metal. He walked over to Lyam, who had dismounted to meet him. Pug,
who was to translate, dismounted and walked to stand to one side of the two
rulers. The Emperor nodded curtly to him.
Lyam and Ichindar studied one another, and both seemed surprised at
the other’s youthfulness. Ichindar was only three years older than the new
Heir.
Lyam began by welcoming the Emperor with friendship and the hope of
peace Ichindar responded in kind. Then the Light of Heaven stepped forward and
extended his right hand. “I understand this is your custom?”
Lyam took the hand of the Emperor of Tsuranuanni. Suddenly the
tension broke, and cheers went up from both sides of the valley. The two young
monarchs were smiling, and the handshake was vigorous and firm.
Lyam said, “May this be the beginning of a lasting peace for our two
nations.”
Ichindar answered, “Peace is a new thing to Tsuranuanni, but I trust
we will learn quickly. My High Council is divided over my actions. I hope the
fruits of trade and the prosperity gained by learning from one another will
unify attitudes.”
“That is my wish also,” said Lyam. “To mark the truce, I have
ordered a gift prepared for you.” He signaled, and a soldier trotted out from
the Kingdom lines, leading a beautiful black war-horse behind. A black saddle
set with gold was upon its back, and from the saddle horn hung a broadsword,
with a jeweled scabbard and hilt.
Ichindar regarded the horse with a little skepticism, but was awed
by the workmanship of the sword. He hefted the great blade and said, “You honor
me, Prince Lyam.”
Ichindar turned to one of his escorts, who ordered a chest carried
forward. Two slaves set it before the Emperor. It was carved ngaggi wood,
finished to a deep and beautiful shine. Scrollwork surrounded bas-relief
carvings of Tsurani animals and plants. Each had been cleverly stained in
lighter and darker tones, in nearly lifelike detail. In itself it was a fine
gift, but when the lid was thrown back, a pile of the finest cut stones, all
larger than a man’s thumb, glistened in the sun.
The Emperor said, “I would have difficulty justifying reparation to
the High Council, and my position with them is not the best at present, but a
gift to mark the occasion they cannot fault. I hope this will repair some of
the destruction my nation has caused.”
Lyam bowed slightly. “You are generous and I thank you. Will you
join me for refreshments?” The Emperor nodded, and Lyam gave a command for a
pavilion to be erected. A dozen soldiers galloped forward and dismounted
Several carried poles and bolts of material. In short order a large, open-sided
pavilion was erected. Chairs and a table were set up under the covering. Other
soldiers brought wine and food and placed them upon the table.
Pug pulled out a large cushioned chair for the Emperor, as Arutha
did for his brother. The two rulers sat, and Ichindar said, “This is quite a
bit more comfortable than my throne. I must have a cushion made.”
Wine was poured, and Lyam and the Emperor toasted each other. Then a
toast to peace was offered. Everyone present drank it.
Ichindar turned to Pug. “Great One, it seems that this meeting will
prove more salubrious to those around than our last.”
Pug bowed. “I trust so, Your Imperial Majesty I hope I am forgiven
my disruption of the Imperial Games.”
The Emperor frowned. “Disruption? It was closer to destruction.”
Pug translated for the others while Ichindar smiled ruefully in
appreciation. “This Great One has done many innovative things in my Empire. I
fear we will not see the end of his handiwork long after his name is forgotten.
Still, that is a thing of the past. Let us concern ourselves with the future.”
The honored guests from both camps stood in the pavilion as the two
monarchs began their discussion of the best way to establish relationships
between the two worlds.
Tomas watched the pavilion Calin and Dolgan waited on either side.
Behind them more than two thousand elves and dwarves stood ready. They had
entered the valley through the North Pass, moving by the Kingdom forces that
were gathered. They had circled around the clearing, gathering in the woods to
the west, where they were accorded a clear view of the proceeding. Tomas said
to both his comrades, “I see little to indicate trickery.”
A second dwarf, Harthom of Stone Mountain, walked over to them.
“Aye, elfling. All looks peaceful enough, in spite of the sorcerer’s warning.”
Abruptly there was a heat shimmer across the field, as if their
vision swam and flickered, then Tomas and the others could see Tsurani soldiers
drawing weapons.
Tomas turned to those behind and said, “Be ready!”
A kingdom soldier rode up to the pavilion. The Tsurani lords looked
at him with distrust, for so far the only soldiers who neared the pavilion were
those serving refreshments.
“Your Highness!” he shouted. “Something strange is occurring.”
“What?” said Lyam, disturbed at the man’s excitement.
“From our position we can see figures moving through the woods to
the west.”
Lyam rose and saw figures near the edge of the trees. After a moment,
while Pug translated the exchange for the Emperor, Lyam said, “That would be
the dwarves and elves.” He turned to Ichindar. “I sent word to the Elf Queen
and the dwarven Warleaders of the peace. They must be now approaching.”
The Emperor came over to Lyam and studied the woods “Why are they
remaining in the trees? Why do they stay hidden?”
Lyam turned to the horseman. “Ride and bid those in the trees join
us.”
The guard obeyed. When he was halfway to the woods, a shout went up
from the trees, and green-clad elves and armored dwarves came running forward.
Battle chants and cries filled the air. Ichindar looked at the onrushing
figures in confusion. Several of his companions drew weapons. A soldier from
the Tsurani lines dashed to the pavilion and cried, “Majesty, we are undone. It
is a trap!”
Every Tsurani backed away, swords drawn. Ichindar shouted, “Is this
how you treat for peace? Mouthing pledges while you plot treachery?”
Lyam didn’t understand his words, but the tone made the meaning
clear. He gripped Pug’s arm and said, “Tell him I know nothing of this!”
Pug tried to raise his voice over the commotion in the pavilion, but
the Tsurani nobles were backing away, surrounding the Light of Heaven, while
soldiers were rushing forward from the Tsurani lines to join in protecting
Ichindar.
Lyam shouted, “Back! Back to our own lines!” as the Tsurani soldiers
approached. The Midkemians quickly mounted.
Pug heard Ichindar’s voice carrying over the noise: “Treacherous
one, you show your true nature. Never will Tsuranuanni deal with those without
honor. We will grind your Kingdom into dust!”
Sounds of fighting erupted as the elves and dwarves clashed with the
Tsurani soldiers. Lyam and the others raced back to their own soldiers, who sat
waiting to join the fight. As Lyam reined up, Lord Brucal said, “Shall we
advance, Highness?”
Lyam shook his head. “I will not be a party to treachery.”
He regarded the scene before him. The elves and dwarves were pushing
the Tsurani back toward the rift machine. The Emperor and his guards were
circling, avoiding the fighting, keeping the thousand honor guards between the
attackers and themselves. Runners could be seen disappearing into the rift.
A moment later Tsurani soldiers erupted from the rift. They rushed
forward to engage the attackers. The collapsing Tsurani line held, then started
to push the elves and dwarves back.
Arutha moved his horse next to Lyam’s. “Lyam! We must attack. Soon
the elves and the dwarves will be overwhelmed. There are ten thousand more
Tsurani on the other side of that rift, only a step away. If you ever hope to
end this bloody war, we must capture and hold that machine.”
Pug forced his own horse to the other side of Lyam’s mount “Lyam!”
he shouted. “You must do as Arutha says.”
Doubt still held the young Heir. Pug raised his voice even louder
“Understand this: for nine years you’ve faced only a part of the might within
the Empire, only those soldiers belonging to the clans of the War Party. Until
now you had many hidden allies, blocking a major effort against the Kingdom.
But now this betrayal has inflamed the one man who can command unquestioned
obedience from all the clans of the Empire. Ichindar can order every clan of
Tsuranuanni to marshal!
“You’ve never faced more than thirty thousand warriors along all
fronts. By tomorrow those thirty thousand can be back in this valley. In a week
double again that number. Lyam, you have no idea how vast his powers are.
Within a year he can send a million men and a thousand magicians against us!
You must act!”
Lyam sat stiffly, the bitterness of the moment clearly showing in
his expression. “Can you aid us?”
“I may, should you open a path for me to reach the machine, but I
don’t know if I have the ability to shut off the rift. Other powers I have, but
even if I overcame my conditioning and could oppose the Empire and I killed
every man on this field, it would avail little, for a greater host would still
be but a step away.”
Lyam gave a curt nod. Slowly he faced Arutha. “Send gallopers to the
North and South passes. Call all the Armies of the Kingdom to arms.” Arutha
wheeled and shouted the order, and riders sped away toward both passes.
Lyam looked back toward Pug. “If you can help, do so, but not until
the way is safe. You are the only master of your arts upon this world.”
Indicating Laurie, Meecham, and Kulgan, he said, “Keep them from the fighting
as well, for they have no part in it. Stay back, and should we fail, use your
arts to go to Krondor. Carline and Anita must be taken to the east, to their
grand-uncle Caldric, for the West will surely be Tsurani.” He drew his sword
and gave the order to advance.
The thousand horsemen lumbered forward, a moving wall of steel
gaining momentum as officers shouted orders, keeping the columns orderly. Then
Lyam signaled the charge, and the lines became ragged as horsemen rushed across
the clearing toward the Tsurani. The Tsurani heard the rumbling of cavalry, and
many fell back from the elves and dwarves to form a shield wall. Pug, Laurie,
Meecham, and Kulgan watched while the Kingdom horsemen collided with it. Horses
and men screamed as long spears bent and broke. The shield wall wavered as men
died, but others leaped forward to take their places, and the Kingdom host was
turned back. Lyam re-formed his troops and charged again, this time breaking
through the shields.
Pug could see the right side of the Tsurani forces rolled back
before the horsemen, but the Emperor himself rallied the balance of his
soldiers, and the center of the line held. Even at this distance Pug could see
the Tsurani nobles entreating the Emperor to flee.
The emperor stood with sword drawn, shouting orders. He refused to
leave the field. He was forming his men into a tight circle protecting the rift
machine, so others could return to this valley from Kelewan. He looked and saw
that soldiers were now rushing forth from the rift in greater numbers Soon
there would be enough of them to destroy the King’s small force.
A faint trembling could be felt beneath his feet, then one of the
Tsurani lords pointed behind the Emperor Ichindar saw hundreds of horsemen
erupting from the trees to the north. The northern cavalry units were the first
to answer Lyam’s call. The Emperor directed newly arriving soldiers to the
north line to meet the new threat.
A shout from the left caused him to turn. A tall warrior, clad in
white and gold, was cutting a swath through the Tsurani guards, heading
straight for the Light of Heaven. All the Tsurani lords rushed to cut him off.
A clan Force Leader stood nearby. He raced to the Emperor and shouted, “Your
Majesty, you must leave. We can hold only a short while. If you are lost, the
Empire is without a heart, and the gods will turn their faces from us.”
The Emperor tried to push past him, as the gold-and-white giant cut
down another Tsurani lord. The officer said, “May heaven understand,” and
struck Ichindar across the back of the head with the flat of his sword. The
Emperor crumpled to the ground, and the Force Leader shouted for soldiers to
carry him through the rift. “The Emperor is overcome! Take him to safety!”
Without question the soldiers picked up the supreme ruler and conveyed him to
the machine.
A Strike Leader rushed to the Force Leader’s side, shouting, “Sir,
all our lords have been killed!” The Force Leader saw that the tall warrior was
being forced back by the sheer number of Tsurani soldiers intercepting him, but
not until after he had butchered every senior Warchief who had accompanied the
Emperor. A quick glance informed the Force Leader the Emperor was near safety,
as the guards carrying Ichindar disappeared from view at the far side of the
rift. More soldiers came streaming through from the near side of the rift.
Seeing no more time to waste, the Force Leader said, “I will act as Force
Commander! You are acting Subcommander. More men to the north!” The man rushed
off to place more men along the north line as the cavalry from the North Pass
bore down in a mad gallop.
The attackers from the north hit the Tsurani position with a
thunderous crash. The hastily erected shield wall wavered, but finally held.
The Force Commander looked about and prayed they could hold until sufficient
reinforcements arrived.
Pug and his three companions could see the northern elements of the
Kingdom army hit the shield wall. Spears shattered and horses fell, while
screaming men were trampled underfoot. The wall still held, and the Kingdom
forces withdrew to re-form for another charge. Lyam’s command was being pushed
back, and he ordered a withdrawal, so that he could coordinate his attack with
the one from the north. The elves and dwarves under Tomas were among the
Tsurani, to the west, and were causing them the most difficulty, though they
also were being slowly repulsed.
As the horsemen pulled back, the Tsurani’s attention was turned to
the elves and dwarves. Those behind the north and south shield positions left
their posts to lend support to their comrades on the west flank.
Seeing this, Meecham observed, “If the elves don’t withdraw, the
Tsurani will overwhelm them.” As if he had been heard, the four observers could
see the western confrontation broken off Elves and dwarves retreated under
cover of elven bowmen.
Kulgan said to Pug, “This respite serves to strengthen the Tsurani.”
They could see the flood of Tsurani soldiers coming through the rift. “If Lyam
does not reach the machine after the next charge, the Tsurani will gain in
strength as we weaken.”
Pug said, “He can bottle them up only if he can station bowmen at
the entrance to the rift. A steady stream of bowfire through it should keep
them back long enough to erect some sort of barrier. Then we might be able to
render it inoperative.”
Laurie said, “Can’t it be destroyed? The other way is fraught with
risk.”
Pug sat quietly for a moment. “I don’t know if my powers are
sufficient to destroy the rift. But I think it is time to try.”
As he started to spur his horse, a voice behind rang out: “No!”
They all turned and saw a brown-clad figure standing, staff in hand,
where no one had been a moment earlier. “Even your powers are not equal to the
task, Great One.”
“Macros!” Kulgan exclaimed.
Macros smiled a bitter smile. “As I foretold, I am here when the
need is greatest, the hour most grave.”
Pug said, “What is to be done?”
“I will close the rift, but I have need of your aid.” He returned
his attention to Kulgan. “I see you still have the staff I gave you. Good.
Dismount.”
Pug and Kulgan got down from their mounts. Pug had forgotten that
Kulgan’s ever present staff had been the one Macros had given him.
Macros went over to stand before Kulgan “Plant the end of the staff
firmly in the ground.” He turned and handed the staff he carried to Pug. “This
staff is twin to that one. Hold it tightly, and never for an instant release
your hold, if you have any hope of surviving our task.” He regarded the
conflict a short distance away. “It is almost the appointed hour, but not
quite. Listen carefully, for time grows short.” He looked at Pug, then Kulgan.
“When this is all over, if the rift is destroyed, then return to my island.
There you will find explanations for everything that has occurred, though
perhaps not to your full satisfaction.” Again there was a bitter smile.
“Kulgan, if you have any hope of seeing your former pupil again, hold to that
staff with all the strength you possess. Keep Pug in your mind, and never let
the staff break contact with Midkemian soil. Is that understood?”
Kulgan said, “But what of yourself?”
Macros’s tone was harsh. “My safety is my own concern. Trouble not
yourself about me. My place in this drama was as foreordained as your own. Now
watch.”
They returned their attention to the battle. The northern elements
of the Kingdom army charged, and Lyam and Tomas gave orders for their own units
to join in the attack. The horsemen hit the shield walls again, and the Tsurani
lines broke. For a moment the Kingdom cavalry was in command of the field, and
the Tsurani collapsed inward. Then, as the advantage of the charge was offset
by the milling swarm of foot soldiers who cut horses out from under riders, or
conspired to pull horsemen to the ground, the balance returned. A sea of
battling figures could be seen around the rift machine. There was no
organization, and little discipline. Men fought to survive, not for any gain in
position. The sounds of metal clashing against hardened wood and hides rang
through the valley. Everywhere the onlookers turned their attention, blood
flowed, and the sound of death was terrible.
Macros looked at Pug and said, “Now is the time. Walk with me.”
Pug walked behind the brown-robed sorcerer. He held tightly to
Macros’s staff, for he believed the sorcerer’s warning that it was his only
hope of surviving what lay before them. They walked through the battle, as if
some agent were protecting them. Several times a soldier turned to strike, only
to be intercepted by one from the other side. Horses would be ready to trample them
only to wheel away at the last instant. It was as if a path opened before them
and closed behind.
They approached what was left of the Tsurani line. A shield holder
fell to a horseman’s lance. They stepped over the fallen body and entered the
small, relatively calm circle around the rift Soldiers were still pouring forth
from the rift, and the circle was widening. Macros and Pug mounted the platform
to the far side of the rift, while soldiers rushed out of the near side. The
soldiers seemed oblivious to the two magicians.
Macros stepped into the void of the rift Pug entered behind Instead
of the expected emergence into Kelewan, they hung in a colorless place. There
was little sensation of direction. The place was without light, but not dark,
only various shades of grey. Pug found himself alone, with only the sound of
his heart beating in his ear to reassure him that existence had not ceased.
Softly he said, “Macros?”
Macros’s voice came to him: “Here, Pug.”
“I cannot see you.”
A chuckle was heard. “No, for there is no light. What you see is a
faint illusion granted by my arts so you might have some point of reference
here. Without ample preparation, even your vaunted powers would avail you
little in keeping your sanity, Pug. Simply accept that the human mind is poorly
equipped to deal with this place.”
“What is this place?”
“This is the place between. Here the gods struggled during the Chaos
Wars, and here we shall do our work.”
“Men are dying, Macros We should hurry.”
“Here there is no time, Pug Relative to those who battle, we are
frozen in an instant. We could grow old and die, and not a full second would
pass upon the battlefield.
“But we must still be quickly about our task. Even I could not do
this without spending a bit of energy to keep us alive, energy we’ll need to
finish this business. We dare not tarry long, but there are a few things I
would say to you. I have waited a long while for you to fulfill your promise. I
could not close the rift without your aid.”
Pug spoke, though his senses rebelled at the grey landscape on all
sides and the disembodied voice that seemed a short distance away from him. “It
was you who turned the rift aside, when the Stranger came and the Enemy sought
to reclaim the nations of Tsuranuanni. Surely that took awesome power.”
He could hear the sorcerer chuckle. “You remember that detail? Well,
I was younger then.” As if he knew it was an unsatisfactory answer, Macros
added, “Then the rift was a wild thing, created by the wills of those who stood
atop the towers of the Assembly. I only turned it to another place, balking the
Enemy’s design, and that at great risk. Now this rift is a controlled thing,
firmly anchored in Kelewan, managed by a machine. That which controls it, many
intricate spells, keeping it in harmony with Midkemia, keeps me from
manipulating it. All I may do is end it, but for that I need help.
“Before we end this particular drama, I would say this to you: you
will understand most things after you reach my island. But one thing above all
I ask of you to bear in mind as you hear my message. Please remember I did what
I did because it was my fate. I would ask you to think of me kindly.”
While he could not see the sorcerer, Pug felt his presence close by.
He started to speak, but was interrupted by Macros’s voice. “When I am done,
use whatever shred of energy you have left to will yourself to Kulgan. The
staff will aid you, but you must bend all your efforts to that task. If you
fail, you will perish.”
It was Macros’s second warning, and Pug felt dread for the first
time in years. “What of yourself?”
“Take care of yourself, Pug. I have other concerns.”
There came a sensation of change, as if the fabric of nothingness
around them was subtly altering. Macros said, “At my command, you must unleash
the full fury of your power. All that you did at the Imperial Games was but a
shadow of what you must do now.”
“You know of that?”
Again there was a chuckle. “I was there, though my seat was poor
compared to your own. I must admit it was quite impressive. Even I would have
been hard-pressed to provide as spectacular a show. Now, there is no more time.
Await my command, then let your power flow toward me.”
Pug said nothing. He could feel the sorcerer’s presence before him,
as if it were being defined for him by Macros. Again he felt the sensation of
twisting change around him. Suddenly there was a blinding light, then darkness.
An instant later all around him erupted in mad displays of energy, much like
those he witnessed in the rift of the Golden Bridge. On every side blinding
colors exploded, primal forces he did not recognize.
“Now, Pug!” came Macros’s cry.
Pug bent his will to the task. He reached down into the deepest
recesses of his being. From there he brought forth all he could of the magic
power he had gained from two worlds. Forces sufficient to destroy mountains,
move rivers from their courses, and level cities to rubble, all these he
focused. Then, like casting away something painful to hold, he directed all
this energy toward where he sensed the sorcerer to be. There came an
unimaginable, insane explosion of those forces, and the primal matter of time
and space screamed in protest at its presence Pug could feel it writhe and
twist around him, as if the fundamental universe were trying to cast the
invaders out. Then there came a sudden release, and they were expelled.
Pug found himself floating in total blackness. He drifted, numb and
without coherent thought. His mind was unable to accept what he had sensed, and
he was close to losing consciousness. He felt his fingers go lax, and the staff
began to slip from his hand. He clutched spasmodically at it from blind
instinct. He then felt a faint tugging. His mind resisted the cool blackness
that was trying to overtake him, and he tried to remember something. It was
growing cold around him, and he could feel his lungs burning for lack of air.
He tried to remember something once-more, but it would not come to him. Then he
felt the tug again, and a faint but familiar voice seemed to sound close by.
“Kulgan?” he said weakly, and let the darkness take him.
***
The
Tsurani Force Commander was alive. He wondered at that miracle as he saw those
around him who lay dead before the rift machine. The explosion a minute before
had killed hundreds, and others lay dazed a little way beyond.
He rose and took stock of what was occurring. The terrible
destruction of the rift had not served to aid the Kingdom forces, either.
Riders frantically tried to control near-hysterical horses, and other mounts
could be seen running madly away, their riders thrown from their backs. All about,
confusion reigned. But those at the edge of the conflict were less dazed than
the others, and the fighting was resuming.
There was little hope; now that Kelewan was cut off to them, either
of aid or of a safe return. Still, they numbered only slightly less than the
enemy, and there was a chance that the field could yet be theirs. There might
be time to worry about the rift later.
Abruptly the sounds of fighting stopped as the Kingdom forces
withdrew. The Force Commander looked about and, still seeing no officer of
greater rank, started shouting orders to ready the shield wall for another
assault.
The Kingdom forces were slowly regrouping. They did not attack, but
took up position opposite the Tsurani. The Force Commander waited, while his
soldiers made ready the lines. On all sides Kingdom horsemen stood ready, but
still they did not come.
Slowly the tension grew. The Force Commander ordered a platform
raised. Four Tsurani grabbed a shield, he stood upon it, and they lifted him
up. His eyes widened. “They have reinforcements.” Far to the south he could see
the advancing columns of the South Pass Kingdom forces. They had been farther
removed from the parley site and were only now reaching the battlefield.
A shout from the opposite direction caused him to look to the north:
lines of the Kingdom infantry were advancing from the trees. Again he turned
his attention southward and strained his eyes. In the distant haze he could see
the signs of a large force of infantry following behind the cavalry. The officer
ordered the shield lowered, and his Subcommander said, “What is it?”
“Their entire army is in the field.” He swallowed hard, the usual
Tsurani impassivity broken. “Mother of gods! There must be thirty thousand of
them.”
“Then we shall give them a battle worthy of a ballad before we die,”
said the Subcommander.
The Force Commander looked about him. On all sides stood bleeding,
wounded, and dazed soldiers. Of the Kingdom armies arrayed against them, only a
third had fought. Fully twenty thousand rested soldiers approached four
thousand Tsurani, half of them unable to fight at their normal efficiency.
The Force Commander shook his head. “There will be no fighting. We
are cut off from home, perhaps for all time. There is no purpose.”
He stepped past his startled Subcommander and walked beyond the
shield wall. Raising both hands above his head in the sign of parley, he walked
toward Lyam, slowly, dreading the moment when he would be the first Tsurani
officer in living memory to surrender his forces. It took only a matter of
minutes to reach the Prince. He removed his helm and knelt.
He looked up at the tall, golden-haired Prince of the Kingdom and
said, “Lord Lyam. Into your care I give my men. Will you accept surrender?”
Lyam nodded. “Yes, Kasumi. I will accept surrender.”
Darkness. Then a gathering greyness. Pug forced his heavy eyelids
open. Above him was the familiar face of Kulgan.
The face of his old teacher split into a wide smile “It is good to
see you are with us again. We did not know if you were really alive. Your body
was so cold to the touch. Can you sit up?”
Pug took the offered arm and found that Meecham knelt next to him,
aiding him to sit up. He could feel the cold leave his limbs as the bright
sunlight warmed his body. He sat still for a moment, then said, “I think I will
live.” As he said it, he could feel strength returning to him. After a moment
he felt able to stand and did so.
Around him he could see the assembled armies of the Kingdom. “What
has happened?”
Laurie said, “The rift is destroyed, and the Tsurani who remain have
surrendered. The war is over.”
Pug felt too weak for emotion. He looked at the faces of those
around him and could see deep relief in their eyes. Suddenly Kulgan engulfed
him in a hug. “You risked your life to end this madness. It is your victory as
much as any man’s.”
Pug stood quietly, then stepped away from his former master. “It is
Macros who ended the war. Did he return?”
“No. Only you, and as soon as you were here, both of the staffs
disappeared. There is no sign of him.”
Pug shook his head, clearing away the fogginess. “What now?”
Meecham looked over his shoulder. “It might be wise if you joined
Lyam. There seems to be some commotion taking place.”
Laurie and Kulgan assisted Pug, for he was still weak from his
ordeal within the rift. They walked to where Lyam, Arutha, Kasumi, and the
assembled Kingdom nobles stood waiting. Across the field they could see the
elves and dwarves approaching, with the northern Kingdom forces behind.
Pug was surprised to see the older son of the Shinzawai present, for
he had thought him back on Kelewan. He looked a figure of deletion, standing
without weapon or helm, and with head downcast, so he didn’t see Pug and the
others arrive.
Pug turned his attention to the elves and dwarves. Four figures
walked at their head. Two he recognized, Dolgan and Calin. There was another
dwarf with them who was unknown to the magician. As the four reached a place
before the Prince, Pug realized that the tall warrior in white and gold was his
boyhood friend. He stood speechless, amazed at the change in Tomas, for his old
friend was now a towering figure who resembled an elf as much as a human.
Lyam was too exhausted for outrage. He looked at the Warleader of
Elvandar and said quietly, “What cause did you have to attack, Tomas?”
The Prince Consort of the elves said, “The Tsurani drew weapons,
Lyam. They were ready to attack the pavilion. Could you not see?”
In spite of his fatigue, Lyam’s voice rose. “I saw only your host
attack a conference of peace. I saw nothing in the Tsurani camp that was
untoward.”
Kasumi raised his head. “Your Highness, on my word, we drew weapons
only when we were set upon by those.” He pointed at Tomas’s forces.
Lyam turned his attention back to Tomas. “Did I not send word that
there was to be a truce, and a peace?”
“Aye,” answered Dolgan, “I was there when the sorcerer brought
word.”
“Sorcerer?” said Lyam. He turned and shouted, “Laurie! I would have
words with you.”
Laurie stepped forward and said, “Highness?”
“Did you carry word to the Elf Queen as I bid?”
“On my honor. I spoke with the Elf Queen herself.”
Tomas looked Lyam in the eye, head tilted back, an expression of
defiance upon his face. “And I swear that I have never seen that man before
this moment. Word of the planned Tsurani treachery was carried to us by
Macros.”
Kulgan and Pug came forward “Your Highness,” said Kulgan, “if the
sorcerer’s hand is in this—and it has been in everything else, it seems— then
it may be best to unravel this mystery at leisure.”
Lyam still fumed, but Arutha said, “Let it be. We can sort out this
mess back at the camp.”
Lyam gave a curt nod. “We return to camp.” The Heir turned to Brucal
and said, “Form a proper escort for the prisoners and bring them along.” He
then looked at Tomas. “You I would also have in my tent when we return. There
is much we must explain.” Tomas agreed, though he did not look happy at the
prospect. Lyam shouted, “We return to camp at once. Give the order.”
Kingdom officers rode toward their companies, and the order was
given. Tomas turned away and found a stranger standing next to him. He looked
at the smiling face, then Dolgan said, “Are you blind, boy? Can’t you recognize
your own boyhood companion?”
Tomas looked at Pug as the exhausted magician moved close “Pug?” he
said softly. Then he reached out and embraced his once-lost foster brother.
“Pug!”
They stood together quietly, amid the clamor of armies on the move,
both with tears upon their faces. Kulgan placed his hands upon both men’s
shoulders. “Come, we must return. There is much to speak of, and thank the
gods, there is now ample time to do so.”
The camp was in full celebration. After more than nine years, the
soldiers of the Kingdom knew they would not have to risk death or injury
tomorrow. Songs rang out from around campfires, and laughter came from all
quarters. It mattered little to most that others lay wounded in tents, tended
by the priests, and that some would not live to see the first day of peace, or
taste the fruits of victory. All the celebrants knew was that they were among
the living, and they reveled in the fact. Later there would be time for
mourning lost comrades. Now they drank in life.
Within Lyam’s tent, things were more subdued. Kulgan had given a
great deal of thought to the day’s occurrences as they had ridden back. By the
time they had reached the tent, the magician from Crydee had pieced together a
rough picture of what had occurred. He had presented his opinion to those
assembled there, and was now finishing.
“It would seem, then,” said Kulgan, “that Macros intended for the
rift to be closed. Everything points to the terrible duplicity as having been
used for that purpose.”
Lyam sat with Arutha and Tully by his side. “I still can’t understand
what would possess him to undertake such grave measures. Today’s conflict cost
over two thousand lives.”
Pug spoke up. “I suspect we may find the answer to that and other
questions when we reach his island. Until then I don’t think we can begin to
guess.”
Lyam sighed. He said to Tomas, “At least I am convinced that you
acted in good faith. I am pleased. It would have been a hard thing to imagine
you responsible for all the carnage today.”
Tomas held a wine cup, from which he sipped. “I also am pleased that
we have no cause for contention. But I feel ill-used in this matter.”
“As were we all,” echoed Harthorn and Dolgan.
Calin said, “It is likely that we have all played a part in some
scheme of the Black One’s. Perhaps it is as Pug has said, and we shall learn
the truth at Sorcerer’s Isle, but I for one resent this bloody business.”
Lyam looked to where Kasumi sat stiffly, eyes forward, seemingly
oblivious to what was being said around him. “Kasumi,” Lyam said, “what am I to
do with you and your men?”
Kasumi’s eyes came into focus at mention of his name. He said, “Your
Highness, I know something of your ways, for Laurie has taught me much. But I
am still Tsurani. In our land the officers would be put to death, and the men
enslaved. I may not advise you in this matter. I do not know what is the usual
method of dealing with war prisoners in your world.”
His tone was flat, without emotion. Lyam was about to say something,
but a signal from Pug silenced him. There was something the magician wanted to
say. “Kasumi?”
“Yes, Great One?” Tomas looked surprised at the honorific, but said
nothing. There had been time only for the most superficial exchange of
histories between the two boyhood friends as they had returned to the camp.
“What would you have done if you had not surrendered to the Prince’s
custody?”
“We would have fought to the death, Great One.”
Pug nodded “I understand. Then you are responsible for preserving
the lives of nearly four thousand of your men? And thousands more Kingdom
soldiers?”
Kasumi’s expression softened, revealing his shame. “I have been
among your people, Great One. I may have forgotten my Tsurani training. I have
brought dishonor upon my house. When the Prince has disposed of my men, I will
ask permission to take my own life, though it may be too much of an honor for
him to grant.”
Brucal and others looked shocked at this. Lyam showed no expression,
but simply said, “You have earned no dishonor. You would have aided no cause in
dying. There ceased to be one when the rift was destroyed.”
Kasumi said, “It is our way.”
Lyam said, “No longer. This is now your homeland, for you have no
other. What Kulgan and Pug have said about rifts makes it unlikely you shall
ever return to Tsuranuanni. Here you will remain, and it is my intention to see
that prospect turned to good advantage for us all.”
A faint flicker of hope entered Kasumi’s eyes. The Heir turned
toward Lord Brucal and said, “My lord Duke of Yabon. How do you judge the
Tsurani soldiers?”
The old Duke smiled. “Among the finest I have ever beheld.” Kasumi
showed a little pride at-the remark. “They match the Dark Brotherhood for
ferocity and are of nobler nature, they are as disciplined as Keshian
dog-soldiers and have the stamina of Natalese Rangers. On the whole they are
without question superior soldiers.”
“Would an army of such provide additional security for our troubled
northern borders?”
Brucal smiled. “The LaMutian garrison was among the hardest hit
during the war. They would be a valuable addition there.”
The Earl of LaMut echoed his Duke’s comment Lyam turned to Kasumi.
“Would you still take your life if your men could remain freemen and soldiers?”
The Shinzawai son said, “How is that possible, Your Highness?”
“If you and your men will swear loyalty to the crown, I will place
you under the command of the Earl of LaMut. You will be both freemen and
citizens and will be given the charge to defend our northern border against the
enemies of humanity who abide in the Northlands.”
Kasumi sat silently, unsure of what to say. Laurie stepped over to
Kasumi and said, “There is no dishonor.”
Kasumi’s face broke into an expression of open relief. “I accept, as
I am sure my men will.” He paused, then added, “We came as an honor guard for the
Emperor. From what I have heard said here, we have been used by this sorcerer
as much as anyone. I would not have any more blood spilled on his account. I
thank Your Highness.”
Lord Vandros said, “I think a Knight-Captaincy would be proper for
the leader of nearly four thousand Do you agree, my lord Duke?” Brucal nodded
in agreement, and Vandros said, “Come, Captain, we should speak with your new
command.”
Kasumi rose, bowed to Lyam, and left with the Earl of LaMut. Arutha
touched his brother on the shoulder. Lyam turned his head, and the Prince said,
“Enough of matters of state. It is time to celebrate the ending of the war.”
Lyam smiled. “True.” He turned to Pug. “Magician, run and fetch your
lovely wife and fine son. I would have things that smack of home and family
about.”
Tomas looked at Pug “Wife? Son? What is this?”
Pug laughed. “There is much to talk about. We can catch up with each
other after I bring my family.”
He made his way to his own tent, where Katala was telling William a
story. They both jumped up and ran to him, for they had not seen him since his
return. He had sent a soldier with the news that he was well but busy with the
Prince.
“Katala, Lyam would like you to join us for dinner.”
William tugged at his father’s robe. “I want to come too, Papa.”
Pug picked up his son. “You too, William.”
The celebration within the tent was of a quieter sort than the one
taking place outside. Still, they had been entertained by Laurie’s ballads and
had enjoyed the exhilaration of knowing that peace had finally come. The food
was the same camp fare as before, but somehow it tasted better. A great deal of
wine had also added to the festive mood.
Lyam sat with a cup of wine in his hand. Around the tent the others
were engaged in quiet conversation. The Heir was a little drunk, and none
grudged him that relief, for he had endured much in the last month Kulgan,
Tully, and Arutha, who knew him best, understood that Lyam was thinking of his
father, who but for a Tsurani arrow would now be sitting here with them. With
the responsibility of first the war, then the succession thrust upon him, Lyam
had not found time for mourning as his brother had. Now he was fully feeling
the loss.
Tully stood. In a loud voice he said, “I am tired, Your Highness.
Have I your leave to withdraw?”
Lyam smiled at his old teacher. “Of course. Good night, Tully.”
The others in the tent quickly followed suit and took leave of the
Heir. Outside the pavilion the guests bade each other good night. Laurie,
Kulgan, Meecham, and the dwarves also left, leaving Pug and his family standing
with Calin and Tomas.
The childhood friends had spent the evening exchanging histories of
the last nine years. Each was equally amazed at the other’s story. Pug had
expressed interest in the Dragon Lords’ magic, as had Kulgan. They expressed an
interest in visiting the Dragon’s Hall someday. Dolgan allowed he would be
willing to guide them should they wish to make the journey.
Now the reawakened friendship glowed within the two young men,
though they understood it was not what it had once been, for there had been
many and great changes in both. As much as by the dragon armor and the black
robe, this point was dramatized by the presence of William and Katala.
Katala had found the dwarves and elves fascinating—William had found
everything fascinating, especially the dwarves, and now lay asleep in his
mother’s arms. Of Tomas she didn’t know what to make. He resembled Calin in
many ways, but still looked a great deal like the other men in camp.
Tomas regarded the sleeping boy. “He has his mother’s looks, but
there is enough devil in him to put me in mind of another boy I knew.”
Pug smiled at that. “His life will be far calmer, I hope.”
Arutha left his brother’s tent and came to join them. He stood
beside the two boys who had ridden with him to the mines of Mac Mordain Cadal
so many years ago. “I should probably not say this, but years ago — when you
first came to visit my father, Calin — two boys were overheard in conversation
while they tussled in a hay wagon.”
Tomas and Pug both looked at the Prince uncomprehendingly. “You
don’t remember, do you?” Arutha asked “A blond thin-ribbed lad was sitting atop
a shorter boy promising he would someday be a great warrior who would be
welcomed in Elvandar.”
Pug and Tomas both laughed at that. “I remember,” said Pug.
“And the other promised to become the greatest magician in the
Kingdom.”
Katala said, “Perhaps William will also grow up to realize his dream.”
Arutha smiled with a wicked light in his eyes. “Then watch him
closely. We had a long chat before he went to sleep, and he told me he wanted
to grow up to be a dwarf.” All of them laughed, except Katala, who looked at
her son for a moment with worry upon her face, but then she, too, joined in the
merriment.
Arutha and Calin bade the others good night, and Tomas said, “I,
too, will be to bed.”
Pug said, “Will you come to Rillanon with us?”
“No, I may not I would be with my lady. But when the child is born,
you must guest with us, for there will be a great celebration.” They promised
they would come Tomas said, “We are for home in the morning. The dwarves will
return to their villages, for there is much work to be done there. They have
been overlong from their families. And with the return of Tholin’s hammer,
there is talk of a moot, to name Dolgan King in the West.” Lowering his voice,
he added, “Though my old friend will most likely use that hammer on the first
dwarf to openly suggest it in his presence.” Placing his hand upon Pug’s
shoulder, he said, “It is well we both came through this; even in the depths of
my strange madness, I never forgot about you.”
Pug said, “I never forgot you either, Tomas.”
“When you unravel this mystery on Sorcerer’s Isle, I trust you will
send word?”
Pug said he would. They embraced, saying good-bye, and Tomas walked
away, but stopped and looked back, a boyish glint in his eyes. “Still, I would
love to be there when you meet Carline again with a wife and son in tow.”
Pug flushed, for he viewed that coming reunion with mixed feelings.
He waved to Tomas as he walked from sight, then found Katala regarding him with
a determined look upon her face. In even, measured tones she said, “Who is
Carline?”
Lyam looked up as Arutha entered the command tent. The younger
brother said, “I thought you would have retired by now. You’re exhausted.”
“I wanted some time to think, Arutha. I have had little time alone
and wanted to put things in order.” His voice was tired and troubled.
Arutha sat next to his brother “What sort of things?”
“This war, Father, you, I”—he thought of Martin— “other things . . .
Arutha, I don’t know if I can be King.”
Arutha raised his eyebrows a little. “It is not as if you had a
choice, Lyam. You will be King, so make the best of it.”
“I could refuse the crown in favor of my brother,” said Lyam slowly,
“as Erland renounced it in favor of Rodric.”
“And what a fine kettle of soup that became. Should you want a civil
war, that would be one way to get it. The Kingdom cannot afford a debate in the
Congress of Lords. There are still too many wounds to be healed between East
and West. And du Bas-Tyra is still at large.”
Lyam sighed. “You would make a better king, Arutha.”
Arutha laughed. “Me? I am little pleased at the prospect of being
Prince of Krondor Look, Lyam, when we were boys, I envied you the affection you
gained so quickly People always preferred you to me. As I grew older, I
understood it wasn’t that I was disliked; it was simply there was something
about you that brings out trust and love in people. That is a good quality for
a king to possess. I never envied the fact you would follow Father as Duke, nor
do I now envy your crown. I once thought I might take some time after the war
to travel, but now that will not be possible, for I must rule Krondor. So do
not wish this additional burden of the entire Kingdom upon me. I would not take
it.”
“Still, you would make a better king.” Lyam caught Arutha’s gaze and
held it.
Arutha paused, frowned, then fixed his brother with a skeptical
look. “Perhaps, but you are to be King, and I expect you will remain King for
quite some time.” He stretched as he rose. “I am for bed. It has been a long
and hard day.” Nearing the entrance to the tent, he said, “Ease your doubts,
Lyam. You will be a good ruler. With Caldric to advise you, and the others,
Kulgan, Tully, and Pug, you will lead us through this time of rebuilding.”
Lyam said, “Arutha, before you go . . .” Arutha waited, as Lyam made
a decision. “I wish you to go with Kulgan and Pug to Sorcerer’s Isle. You’ve
been there once before, and I’d like your judgment on what is found there.”
Arutha was displeased and started to object. Lyam cut him off. “I know you wish
to go to Krondor, but it will take only a few days. There will be twelve days
between the time we reach Rillanon and the coronation, ample time for you to
join us.”
Arutha again began to object, then with a wry smile, acceded. “Trust
in yourself, Lyam. If I won’t take the crown, you’re left with it.” As he
departed the tent, he added with a laugh, “There’s no other brother to claim
it.”
Lyam sat alone, absently sipping at his wine. With another long sigh
he said to himself, “There is one other, Arutha, and may the gods help me
decide what is right to do.”
33
LEGACY
The ship dropped anchor.
The crew secured the sails aloft while the landing party made ready
Meecham watched the preparation of the longboat. The magicians were anxious to
reach the castle of Macros, for they had more questions than the others. Arutha
was also curious, after resigning himself to the voyage. He found he also had
little desire to take part in the long funeral procession that had left from
Ylith the day they sailed. He had buried his grief for his father deep inside
and would deal with it in his own time. Laurie had stayed with Kasumi to aid
the assimilation of the Tsurani soldiers into the LaMutian garrison, and would
meet them later in Rillanon.
Lyam and his nobles had shipped for Krondor, escorting the bodies of
Borric and Rodric. They would be joined by Anita and Carline, then all would
convey the dead in a procession of state to Rillanon, where they would be laid
to rest in the tomb of their ancestors. After the traditional period of twelve
days’ mourning, Lyam would be crowned King. By then all who would attend the
coronation would have gathered in Rillanon. Pug and Kulgan’s business should be
completed in ample time for them to reach the capital.
The boat was readied, and Arutha, Pug, and Kulgan joined Meecham.
The longboat was lowered, and six guards bent their backs to the oars.
The sailors had been greatly relieved that they were not required to
accompany the landing party, for in spite of the magicians’ reassurances, they
had no desire to set foot upon Sorcerer’s Isle.
The boat was beached, and the passengers stepped out. Arutha looked
about. “There seems to have been no change here since we last came.”
Kulgan stretched, for the ship’s quarters had been cramped, and he
enjoyed the sensation of dry land under his feet again. “I would have been
surprised to find it otherwise. Macros was one to keep his house in order, I
wager.”
Arutha turned and said, “You six will stay here. If you hear our
call, come quickly.” The Prince started toward the path up the hill, and the
others fell in without comment. They reached the place where the path forked,
and Arutha said, “We come as guests. I thought it best not to appear invaders.”
Kulgan said nothing, being occupied with observing the castle they
were approaching. The strange blue light that had been so visible when they had
last visited the island was absent from the window of the high tower. The
castle had the look of a place deserted, without movement or sound. The
drawbridge was down and the portcullis raised. Meecham observed, “At least we
won’t have to storm the place.”
When they reached the edge of the drawbridge, they halted. The
castle rose above them, its high walls, and taller towers, forbidding. It was
built of dark stone, unfamiliar to them. Around the great arch over the bridge,
strange carvings of alien creatures regarded them with fixed gazes. Horned and
winged beasts sat perched atop ledges, seemingly frozen in an instant, so
cleverly were they fashioned.
They stepped on the bridge and crossed the deep ravine that separated
the castle from the rest of the island Meecham looked down, seeing the rock
walls of the crevice fall away to the level of the sea, where waves crashed
through the passage between. “It serves better than most moats I’ve seen. You’d
think twice before trying to cross this while someone was shooting at you from
the walls.”
They entered the court and looked about, as if expecting to see
someone appear at one of the many doors in the walls at any moment. Nowhere was
there sign of any living creature, yet the grounds about the central keep were
well tended and in order.
When no one was forthcoming, Pug said, “I imagine we’ll find what
we’re after in the keep.” The others moved with him toward the broad stairs
that led to the main doors. As they mounted the steps, the large doors began to
swing open, until they could all see a figure standing in the darkness beyond.
As the doors finished their movement with a loud thump against the keep walls,
the figure stepped forward into the sunlight.
Meecham’s sword was in his hand without thinking, for the creature
before them bore a strong resemblance to a goblin. After a brief examination,
Meecham put up his weapon; the creature had made no threatening gesture, but
simply stood waiting for them at the top of the stairs.
It was taller than the average goblin, being nearly Meecham’s
height. Thick ridges dominated its forehead, and a large nose was the focus of
its face, but it was nobler in features than a goblin. Two black, twinkling
eyes regarded them as they resumed their climb. As they came up to it, the
creature gave a toothy grin. Its head was covered with a thick mat of black
hair, and its skin was tinged with the faint green of the goblin tribe, but it
lacked the hunched-shouldered posture of a goblin, instead standing erect much
like a man. It wore a finely fashioned tunic and trousers, both bright green.
Upon its feet were a pair of polished black boots, reaching nearly to its
knees.
The creature said, grinning, “Welcome, masters, welcome. I am
Gathis, and I have the honor of acting as your host in my master’s absence.”
There was a slight hiss to its speech.
Kulgan said, “Your master is Macros the Black?”
“Of course. It has been ever thus. Please enter.”
The four men accompanied Gathis into the large entry hall and stopped
to look about. Except for the absence of people and of the usual heraldic
banners, this hall looked much like the one in Castle Crydee.
“My master has left explicit instructions for your visit, as much as
was possible to anticipate, so I have prepared the castle for your arrival.
Would you care for some refreshments? There are food and wine ready.”
Kulgan shook his head. He was unsure of what this creature was, but
he was not overly comfortable with anything that so resembled a servant of the
Dark Brotherhood. “Macros said there would be a message. I would see it at
once.”
Gathis bowed slightly. “As you will. Please come with me.”
He led them along a series of corridors to a flight of stairs that
spiraled up into the large tower. They mounted the steps and soon came to a
locked door. “My master said you would be able to open this door. Should you
fail, you are impostors, and I am to deal with you harshly.”
Meecham gripped his sword at hearing this, but Pug placed his hand
on the big franklin’s arm. “Since the rift is closed, half my power is lost,
that which I gained from Kelewan, but this should prove no obstacle.”
Pug concentrated upon opening the door. Instead of the usual
response of the door swinging open, a change occurred in the door itself. The
wood seemed to become fluid, flowing and ebbing as it fashioned its surface
into a new form. In a few moments a face could be seen, formed in the wood. It
looked like a bas-relief, with a slight resemblance to Macros. It was very
lifelike in detail and appeared to be asleep. Then its eyelids opened, and they
could see that the eyes were alive, black centers showing against white. Its
mouth moved, and a voice issued from it, the sound deep and resonant as it
spoke in perfect Tsurani. “What is the first duty?”
Without thinking, Pug answered, “To serve the Empire.”
The face flowed back into the door, and when there was no trace of
it before them, the door swung aside. They entered and found themselves in the
study of Macros the Black, a large room occupying the entire top of the tower.
Gathis said, “I take it I have the honor of hosting Masters Kulgan,
Pug, and Meecham?” He then studied the fourth member of the party. “And you
must be Prince Arutha?” When they nodded, he said, “My master was unsure if
Your Highness would attend, though he thought it likely. He was certain the
other three gentlemen would be here.” He indicated the room with a sweep of his
hand. “All that you see is at your disposal. If you will excuse me, I will
return with your message and some refreshments.”
Gathis left, and all four looked at the contents of the room. Except
for one bare wall where it was obvious that a bookcase or cupboard had recently
been removed, the entire room was surrounded with tall shelves from floor to
ceiling, all heavily laden with books and scrolls. Pug and Kulgan were almost
paralyzed by indecision about where to begin their investigation.
Arutha solved that problem by crossing over to a shelf where lay a
large parchment bound with a red ribbon. He took it down and laid it upon the
round table in the center of the room. A shaft of sunlight from the room’s
single large window fell across the parchment as he unrolled it.
Kulgan came over to see what he had found “It is a map of Midkemia!”
Pug and
Meecham crossed over to stand behind Kulgan and Arutha. “Such a map!” Prince
Arutha exclaimed “I have never seen its like.” His finger stabbed at a spot
upon a large landmass in the center “Look! Here is the Kingdom.” Across a small
portion of the map were inscribed the words Kingdom of the Isles. Below
could be seen the larger borders of the Empire of Great Kesh. To the south of
the Empire, the states of the Keshian Confederacy were clearly shown.
“To the best of my knowledge,” said Kulgan, “few from the Kingdom
have ever ventured into the Confederacy. Our only knowledge of its members is
through the Empire and a few of our more venturesome captains who’ve visited
some of their ports. We hardly know the names of these nations, and nothing
about them.”
Pug
said, “We learn much about our world in an instant. Look at how small a part of
this continent the Kingdom is.” He pointed to the great sweep of the Northlands
to the north of the Kingdom, and the far-reaching mass of land below the
Confederacy. The entire continent bore the inscription Triagia.
Kulgan
said, “It appears there is a great deal more to our Midkemia than we had
dreamed.” He indicated additional landmasses across the sea. These were labeled
Wiсet and Novindus. Upon each, cities and states were delineated.
Two large chains of islands were also shown, many with cities marked. Kulgan
shook his head. “There have been rumors of traders from far distant lands,
venturing into the trading ports in the Keshian Confederacy, or treating with
the pirates of Sunset Islands, but they are only rumors. It is small wonder we
have never heard of these places. It would be a brave captain who set his ship
upon a course for so far a port.”
They were brought out of their study by the sound of Gathis
returning to the room. He carried a tray with a decanter and four wine cups.
“My master bade me say that you are to enjoy the hospitality of his home as
long as you desire.” He placed the tray on the table and poured wine into the
cups. He then removed a scroll from within his tunic and handed it to Kulgan.
“He bade me give you this. I will retire while you consider my master’s
message. Should you need me, simply speak my name, and I will return quickly.”
He bowed slightly and left the room.
Kulgan regarded the scroll. It was sealed with black wax, impressed
with the letter M. He broke the seal and unrolled the parchment. He started to
read to himself, then said, “Let us sit.”
Pug rolled up the large map and put it away, then returned to the
table where the others were sitting. He pulled out a chair and waited with
Meecham and Arutha while Kulgan read. Kulgan shook his head slowly. “Listen,”
he said, and read aloud:
“ ‘To the magicians Kulgan and Pug, greetings. I have anticipated
some of your questions and have endeavored to answer them as best I can. I fear
there are others that must go begging, as much about myself must remain known
only to me. I am not what the Tsurani would call a Great One, though I have
visited that world, as Pug knows, upon a number of occasions. My magic is
peculiar to myself and defies description in your terms of Greater and Lesser
Paths Suffice it to say I am a walker of many paths.
“ ‘I see myself as a servant of the gods, though that may be only my
vanity speaking. Whatever the truth is, I have traveled to many lands and
worked for many causes.
“ ‘Of my early life I will say little. I am not of this world,
having been born in a land distant both in space and time. It is not unlike
this world, but there are ample reasons to count it strange by your standards.
“ ‘I am older than I care to remember, old even by the elves’
reckoning. For reasons I do not understand, I have lived for ages, though my
own people are as mortal as yours. It may be that when I entered into the magic
arts, I unwittingly gave this near-immortality to myself, or it may be the
gift—or curse—of the gods.
“ ‘Since becoming a sorcerer, I have been fated to know my own
future, as others know their pasts. I have never retreated from what I knew to
be before me, though often I wished to I have served great kings and simple
peasants both. I have lived in the greatest cities and the rudest huts. Often I
have understood the meaning of my participation, sometimes not, but always I
have followed the foreordained path that was set for me.’ ”
Kulgan stopped for a moment “This explains how he knew so much.” He
resumed his reading.
“ ‘Of all my labors, my role in the rift war was the hardest. Never
have I experienced such desire to turn from the path before me. Never have I
been responsible for the loss of so many lives, and I mourn for them more than
you can know. But even as you consider my “treachery,” consider my situation.
“ ‘I was unable to close the rift without Pug’s aid. It was fated
for the war to continue while he learned his craft on Kelewan. For the terrible
price paid, consider the gain. There now is one upon Midkemia who practices the
Greater Art, which was lost in the coming of man during the Chaos Wars. The
benefit will be judged only by history, but I think it a valuable one.
“ ‘As to my closing the rift once peace was at hand, I can only say
it was vital. The Tsurani Great Ones had forgotten that rifts are subject to
the Enemy’s detection.’ ” Kulgan looked up in surprise. “Enemy? Pug, this
refers to something I think you need explain.”
Pug told them quickly of what he knew of the legendary Enemy. Arutha
said, “Can such a terrible being really exist?” His expression betrayed
disbelief.
Pug said, “That it once existed, there is no doubt, and for a being
of such power still to endure is not beyond imagining. But of all conceivable
reasons for Macros’s actions, this is the last I would have thought possible.
No one in the Assembly had dreamed of it. It’s incredible.”
Kulgan resumed reading. “ ‘It is to him like a beacon, drawing that
terrible entity across space and time. It might have been years more before he
would have appeared, but once here, all the powers of your world would be
hard-pressed, perhaps even insufficient, to dislodge him from Midkemia. The
rift had to be closed. The reasons I chose to ensure its closing at the cost of
so many lives should be apparent to you.’ ”
Pug interrupted. “What does he mean, ‘should be apparent’?”
Kulgan said, “Macros was nothing, it seems, if not a student of
human nature. Could he alone have convinced the King and Emperor to close the
rift, with so much to be gained by keeping it open? Perhaps, perhaps not, but
in any event there would have been the all-too-human temptation to keep it open
‘just a little longer.’ I think he knew that and was ensuring there would be no
choice.” Kulgan returned to reading the scroll. “ ‘As to what will happen now,
I cannot say. My seeing of the future ends with the explosion of the rift.
Whether it is, finally, my appointed hour, or simply the beginning of some new
era of my existence, I do not know In the event you have witnessed my death, I
have decided upon the following course. All my research, with some exceptions,
is contained within this room. It is to be used to further the Greater and
Lesser Arts. It is my wish that you take possession of the books, scrolls, and
tomes contained here and use them to that end. A new epoch of magic is
beginning in the Kingdom, and it is my wish for others to benefit from my
works. In your hands I leave this new age.’
“It is signed, ‘Macros.’ ”
Kulgan placed the scroll upon the table Pug said, “One of the last
things he said to me was he wished to be remembered kindly.”
They said nothing for a time, then Kulgan called, “Gathis!”
Within seconds the creature appeared at the doorway “Yes, Master
Kulgan?”
“Do you know what is contained within this scroll?”
“Yes, Master Kulgan. My master was most explicit in his
instructions. He made sure that we were aware of his requirements.”
“We?” said Arutha.
Gathis smiled his toothy grin. “I am but one of my master’s
servants. The others are instructed to keep from your sight, for it was feared
their presence might cause you some discomfort. My master lacked most of the
human prejudices and was content to judge each creature he met on its own
merits.”
“What exactly are you?” asked Pug.
“I am of a race akin to the goblins, as the elves are to the Dark
Brotherhood. We were an old race and perished but for a few, long before humans
came to the Bitter Sea. Those that were left were brought here by Macros, and I
am the last.”
Kulgan regarded the creature. In spite of his appearance, there was
something about him that was likable. “What will you do now?”
“I will wait here for my master’s return, keeping his home in order.”
“You expect him to return?” asked Pug.
“Most likely. In a day, or a year, or a century. It does not matter.
Things will be ready for him should he return.”
“What if he has perished?” asked Arutha.
“In that event, I shall grow old and die waiting, but I think not. I
have served the Black One for a very long time. Between us is . . . an
understanding. If he were dead, I think I would know. He is merely . . .
absent. Even if he is dead, he may return. Time is not to my master as it is to
other men. I am content to wait.”
Pug thought about this. “He must truly have been the master of all
magic.”
Gathis’s smile broadened. “He would laugh to hear that, master. He
was always complaining of there being so much to learn and so little time to
learn it. And that from a man who had lived years beyond numbering.”
Kulgan said, as he rose from his chair, “We will have to fetch men
to carry all these things back to the ship.”
Gathis said, “Worry not, master. Retire to your ship when you are
ready. Leave two boats on the beach at the cove. At first light the next day
you will find everything placed aboard, packed for shipment.”
Kulgan nodded. “Very well; then we should start at once to catalog
all these works, before we move them.”
Gathis went over to a shelf and returned with a rolled parchment.
“In anticipation of your needs, master, I have prepared such a listing of all
the works here.”
Kulgan
unrolled the parchment and began reading the inventory of works. His eyes
widened. “Listen,” he said, excitedly. “There’s a copy of Vitalus’s Expectations
of Matter Transformation here.” His eyes grew bigger still. “And Spandric’s
Temporal Research. That work was thought lost a hundred years ago!” He
looked at the others, wonder upon his face. “And hundreds of volumes with
Macros’s name on them. This is a treasure beyond measure.”
Gathis said, “I am pleased that you find it so, master.”
Kulgan started to ask for those volumes to be brought to him, but
Arutha said, “Wait Kulgan. Once you begin, we’ll have to tie you up to get you
out of here. Let us return to the ship and wait for all this to be brought. We
must be off soon.”
Kulgan looked like a child whose sweets had been taken from him.
Arutha, Pug, and Meecham all chuckled at the stout magician Pug said, “There is
no good reason to stay now. We shall have years to study these after the
coronation. Look around, Kulgan. Do you mean to inhale all this in one breath?”
A look of resignation crossed Kulgan’s face. “Very well.”
Pug surveyed all in the room “Think of it. An academy for the study
of magic, with Macros’s library at the heart.”
Kulgan’s eyes grew luminous. “I had all but forgotten the Duke’s
bequest. A place to learn. No longer will an apprentice learn from this master
or that, but from many. With this legacy and your own teachings, Pug, we have a
wonderful start.”
Arutha said, “Let us be on our way if we’re to have any sort of
start. There’s a new king to crown, and the longer you tarry, the more likely
you’ll lose yourself in here.”
Kulgan looked as if his good name were impugned. “Well, I will take
a few things to study while on the ship—if you have no objections?”
Arutha raised a placating hand. “Whatever you wish,” he said with a
rueful smile “But please, no more than we can reasonably lug down to the boat.”
Kulgan smiled, his mood lightening. “Agreed.” He turned to Gathis.
“Would you fetch those two volumes I mentioned.”
Gathis held out the two volumes, old and well read. Kulgan looked
surprised, while Gathis said, “I thought you might reach such an understanding
and removed them from the shelves while you discussed the matter.”
Kulgan walked toward the door, shaking his head slowly as he
regarded the two books he held. The others followed, and Gathis closed the door
behind them. The goblinlike creature guided them to the courtyard and bid them
a safe journey at the door of the keep.
When the large doors had closed behind them, Meecham said, “This
fellow Macros seems to have raised five questions for each he answered.”
Kulgan said, “You have that right, old friend. Perhaps we will gain
additional knowledge from his notes, and other works. Perhaps not, and maybe
that’s the right of it.”
34
RENAISSANCE
Rillanon was in a festive mood.
Everywhere banners rippled in the breeze, and garlands of summer
flowers replaced the black bunting that had marked the period of mourning for
the late King and his cousin Borric. Now they would be crowning a new king, and
the people rejoiced. The people of Rillanon knew little of Lyam, but he was
fair to view, and generous with his smile in public. To the populace it was as
if the sun had come out from behind the dark clouds that had been Rodric’s
reign.
Few among the people were aware of the many royal guards who
circulated throughout the city, always alert for signs of Guy du Bas-Tyra’s
agents and possible assassins. And fewer still noticed the plainly dressed men
who were always near when groups gathered to speak of the new King, listening
to what was said.
Arutha cantered his horse toward the palace, leaving Pug, Meecham,
and Kulgan behind. He cursed the fate that had delayed them nearly a week,
becalmed less than three days from Krondor, then the slowness of their journey
to Salador. It was midmorning, and already the Priests of Ishap were bearing
the King’s new crown through the city. In less than three hours they would
appear before the throne and Lyam would take the crown.
Arutha reached the palace, and shouts from the guards echoed across
the vast courtyard, “Prince Arutha arrives!”
Arutha gave his mount to a page and hurried up the steps to the
palace. As he reached the entranceway, Anita came running in his direction, a
radiant smile on her face. “Oh,” she cried, “it is so good to see you!”
He smiled back at her and said, “It is good to see you, also. I must
get ready for the ceremony. Where is Lyam?”
“He has secreted himself in the Royal Tomb. He left word you were to
come straight away to him there.” Her voice was troubled. “There is something
strange taking place here, but no one seems to know what it is. Only Martin
Longbow has seen Lyam since supper last night, and when I saw Martin, he had
the strangest look upon his face.”
Arutha laughed. “Martin is always full of strange looks. Come, let
us go to Lyam.”
She refused to let him ignore the warning. “No, you go alone, that
is what Lyam ordered. Besides, I must dress for the ceremony. But, Arutha,
there is something very queer in the wind.”
Arutha’s manner turned more reflective. Anita was a good judge of
such things. “Very well. I’ll have to wait for my things to be brought from the
ship, anyway I will see Lyam, then when this mystery is cleared up, join you at
the ceremony.”
“Good.”
“Where is Carline?”
“Fussing over this and that. I’ll tell her you’ve arrived.”
She kissed his cheek and hurried off. Arutha hadn’t been to the
vault of his ancestors since he was a boy, the first time he had come to
Rillanon, for Rodric’s coronation. He asked a page to lead him there, and the
boy guided him through a maze of corridors.
The palace had been through many transformations over the ages, new
wings being added on, new constructions over those destroyed by fire,
earthquake, or war, but in the center of the vast edifice the ancient first
keep remained. The only clue they were entering the ancient halls was the
sudden appearance of dark stone walls, worn smooth by time. Two guards stood
watch by a door over which was carved a bas-relief crest of the conDoin kings,
a crowned lion holding a sword in its claws. The page said, “Prince Arutha,”
and the guards opened the door. Arutha stepped through into a small anteroom,
with a long flight of stairs leading down.
He followed the stairs past rows of brightly burning torches that
stained the stones of the walls with black soot. The stairs ended, and Arutha
stood before a large, high-arched doorway. On both sides loomed heroic statues
of ancient conDoin kings. To the right, with features dulled with age, stood
the statue of Dannis, first conDoin King of Rillanon, some seven hundred fifty
years past. To the left stood the statue of Delong, the only King called “the
Great,” the King who first brought the banner of Rillanon to the mainland with
the conquest of Bas-Tyra, two hundred fifty years after Dannis.
Arutha passed between his ancestors’ likenesses and entered the
burial vault. He walked between the ancient forebears of his line, entombed in
the walls and upon great catafalques Kings and queens, princes and princesses,
scoundrels and rogues, saints and scholars lined his way. At the far end of the
huge chamber he found Lyam sitting next to the catafalque that supported his
father’s stone coffin. A likeness of Borric had been carved in the coffin’s
surface, and it looked as if the late Duke of Crydee lay sleeping.
Arutha approached slowly, for Lyam seemed deep in thought. Lyam
looked up and said, “I feared you might come late.”
“As did I. We had wretched weather and slow progress, but we are all
here. Now, what is this strange business? Anita told me you’ve been here all
night, and there is some mystery. What is it?”
“I have given great thought to this matter, Arutha. The whole of the
Kingdom will know within a few hours’ time, but I wanted you to see what I have
done and hear what I must say before any others.”
“Anita said Martin was here with you this morning. What is this,
Lyam?”
Lyam stepped away from his father’s catafalque and pointed.
Inscribed upon the stones of the burial place were the words:
HERE LIES BORRIC, THIRD DUKE OF
CRYDEE,
HUSBAND OF CATHERINE,
FATHER OF
MARTIN,
LYAM,
ARUTHA,
AND CARLINE
Arutha’s
lips moved, but no words came forth. He shook his head, then said, “What
madness is this?”
Lyam came between Arutha and the likeness of their father. “No
madness, Arutha. Father acknowledged Martin on his deathbed. He is our brother.
He is the eldest.”
Arutha’s face became contorted with rage. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
His voice was tormented. “What right had you to hide this from me?”
Liam raised his own voice. “All who knew were sworn to secrecy. I
could not risk anyone knowing until the peace was made. There was too much to
lose.”
Arutha shoved past his brother, looking in disbelief at the
inscription. “It all makes an evil sense. Martin’s exclusion from the Choosing.
The way Father always kept an eye on his whereabouts. His freedom to come and
go as he pleased.” Bitterness rang in Arutha’s words. “But why now? Why did
Father acknowledge Martin after so many years of denial?”
Lyam tried to comfort Arutha. “I’ve pieced together what I could
from Kulgan and Tully. Besides them, no one knew, not even Fannon. Father was a
guest of Brucal’s when he was in his first year of office, after Grandfather’s
death. He tumbled a pretty serving girl and conceived Martin. It was five years
before Father knew of him. Father had come to court, met Mother, and married.
When he learned of Martin, he had already been abandoned by his mother to the
monks of Silban’s Abbey. Father chose to let Martin remain in their care.
“When I was born, Father began to feel remorse over having a son
unknown to him, and when I was six, Martin was ready for Choosing. Father
arranged to have him brought to Crydee. But he wouldn’t acknowledge him, for
fear of shaming Mother.”
“Then why now?”
Lyam looked at the likeness of their father. “Who knows what passes
through a man’s mind in the moments before death? Perhaps more guilt, or some
sense of honor. Whatever the reason, he acknowledged Martin, and Brucal bore
witness.”
Anger still sounded in Arutha’s voice. “Now we must deal with this
madness, regardless of Father’s reasons for creating it.” He fixed Lyam with a
harsh stare. “What did he say when you brought him down to see this?”
Lyam looked away, as if pained by what he now said “He stood silently,
then I saw him weep. Finally he said, ‘I am pleased he told you.’ Arutha, he
knew.” Lyam gripped his brother’s arm. “All those years Father thought him
ignorant of his birthright, and he knew. And never once did he seek to turn
that knowledge to his own gain.”
Arutha’s anger subsided. “Did he say anything more?”
“Only ‘Thank you, Lyam,’ and then he left.”
Arutha paced away for a moment, then faced Lyam. “Martin is a good
man, as good a man as I’ve ever known. I’ll be the first to say so. But this acknowledgment!
My gods, do you know what you’ve done?”
“I’m aware of my actions.”
“You’ve placed all we’ve won over the last nine years in the
balance, Lyam. Shall we fight ambitious eastern lords who might rally in
Martin’s name? Do we end one war simply to begin an even more bitter one?”
“There will be no contestation.”
Arutha stopped his pacing. His eyes narrowed. “What do you mean? Has
Martin promised to voice no claim?”
“No. I have decided not to oppose Martin should he choose the
crown.”
Arutha was speechless for a moment, in shock as he regarded Lyam.
For the first time he understood the terrible doubts his brother had been
voicing over being King. “You don’t want to be King,” he said, his tone
accusatory.
Lyam laughed bitterly. “No sane man would. You have said as much
yourself, brother. I don’t know if I am a match for the burdens of kingship.
But the matter is out of my hands now. If Martin speaks for himself as King, I
will acknowledge his right.”
“His right! The royal, signet passed to your hand, before most of
the Lords of the Kingdom. You are not sick Erland deferring to his brother’s
son because of ill health and by reason of no clear succession. You are the
named Heir!”
Lyam lowered his head. “The announcement of succession is invalid,
Arutha. Rodric named me Heir as ‘eldest conDoin male,’ which I am not. Martin
is.”
Arutha confronted his brother. “A pretty point of law, Lyam, but one
that may prove the destruction of this Kingdom! Should Martin voice a claim
before the congress assembled, the Priests of Ishap will break the crown, and
the matter passes to the Congress of Lords for resolution. Even with Guy in
hiding, there are dozens of dukes, scores of earls, and a host of barons who
would willingly cut their neighbors’ throats to convene such a congress. Such
bargaining would end with half the estates in the Kingdom switching hands in
trade for votes. It would be a carnival!
“If you take the crown, Bas-Tyra cannot act. But if you back Martin,
many will refuse to follow. A deadlocked congress is exactly what Guy wishes.
I’ll bet all I own he is somewhere in the city at this very moment, plotting
against such an event. If the eastern lords bolt, Guy will emerge, and many
will flock to his banner.”
Lyam appeared overwhelmed by his brother’s words. “I cannot say what
will happen, Arutha. But I know I could not do other than I have done.”
Arutha looked on the verge of striking Lya.m “You may have inherited
the burden of Father’s sense of family honor, but it will fall to the rest of
us to deal with the killing! Heaven’s mercy, Lyam, what do you think will
happen if some heretofore nameless huntsman sits the conDoin throne simply
because our father tumbled a pretty maid nearly forty years ago! We shall have
civil war!”
Lyam stood firm. “Should our positions have been reversed, would you
have robbed Martin of his birthright?”
Arutha’s anger vanished. He looked at his brother with open
amazement on his face. “Gods! You feel guilt because Father denied Martin all
his life, don’t you?” He stepped away from Lyam, as if trying to gain
perspective on him. “Should our positions have been reversed, I most assuredly
would deny Martin his birthright. After thirty-seven years, what matter a few
more days? After I was King, firm on my throne, then I would make him a duke,
give him an army to command, name him First Adviser, whatever need be to salve
my conscience, but not until the Kingdom was secure. I would not wish Martin to
play Borric the First to Guy’s Jon the Pretender, and I would do whatever must
be done to see that would not come to pass.”
Lyam sighed with deep regret. “Then you and I are two different
sorts of men, Arutha. I told you back at camp I thought you would make a better
king than I. Perhaps you are right, but what’s done is done.”
“Does Brucal know of this?”
“Only we three.” He looked directly at Arutha “Only our father’s
sons.”
Arutha flushed, irritated at the remark. “Don’t misunderstand me,
Lyam. I hold Martin in no little affection, but there are issues here much
larger than any personal consideration.” He thought quietly for a moment. “Then
it is in Martin’s hands. If you had to do this, at least you did right in not
making it a public matter. There will be shock enough should Martin come forth
at the coronation. At least with advance warning we can prepare.”
Arutha moved toward the stairs, then stopped and faced his brother.
“What you said cuts both ways, Lyam. Perhaps because you cannot deny Martin,
you’ll make a better king than I. But as much as I love you, I’ll not let the
Kingdom be destroyed over the succession.”
Lyam seemed unable to contest with his brother any longer. Fatigue,
a weary resignation toward what fate would bring, sounded in his words. “What
will you do?”
“What must be done. I will ensure that those who are loyal to us are
forewarned. If there comes a need to fight, then let us have the advantage of
surprise.” He paused for a moment. “I have nothing but the greatest affection
for Martin, Lyam, you must know that I hunted with him as a boy, and he was in
no small part responsible for my safely getting Anita away from Guy’s
watchdogs, a debt beyond repaying. In another time and place, I would gladly
accept him as my brother. But should it come to bloodshed, Lyam, I’ll willingly
kill him.”
Arutha left the vault of his ancestors. Lyam stood alone, feeling
the chill of ages press in upon him.
Pug looked out the window, reminiscing. Katala came to his side, and
he came out of his reverie. “You look lovely,” he said. She was dressed in a
brilliant gown of deep red, with golden trim at the bodice and sleeves. “The
finest Duchess of the court could not match your beauty.”
She smiled at his flattery. “I thank you, husband.” She spun,
showing off the gown. “Your Duke Caldric is the true magician, I am thinking.
How his staff could manage to find all these things and have them ready in two
short hours is true magic.” She patted at the full skirt. “These heavy gowns
will take some practice getting around in. I think I prefer the short robes of
home.” She stroked the material. “Still, this is a lovely cloth. And in this
cold world of yours, I can see the need.” The weather had turned cooler, now
that summer was waning. In less than two months snow would begin falling.
“Wait until winter, Katala, if you think it’s cold now.”
William came running into the room, from the bedroom that adjoined
their own. “Mama, Papa,” he yelled in boyish exuberance. He was dressed in a
tunic and trousers befitting a little noble, of fine material and workmanship.
He leaped into his father’s outstretched arms. “Where are you going?” he asked
with a wide-eyed look.
Pug said, “We go to see Lyam made King, William. While we are gone,
you mind the nurse and don’t tease Fantus.”
He said he would and wouldn’t, respectively, but his impish grin put
his credibility in doubt. The maid who was to act as William’s nurse entered
and took the boy in tow, leading him back into his own room.
Pug and Katala left the suite Caldric had given them and walked
toward the throne room. As they turned a corner, they saw Laurie leaving his
room, with Kasumi standing nervously to one side.
Laurie brightened upon seeing them and said, “Ah! There you are. I
was hoping we’d see you two before all the ceremonies had begun.”
Kasumi bowed to Pug, though the magician now wore a fashionable
russet-colored tunic and trousers in place of his black robe. “Great One,” he
said.
“That is a thing of the past here, Kasumi. Please call me Pug.”
“You two look so handsome in your new clothes and uniform,” said
Katala. Laurie wore bright clothing in the latest fashion, a yellow tunic with
a sleeveless overjacket of green, and tight-fitting black trousers tucked into
high boots. Kasumi wore the uniform of a Knight-Captain of the LaMutian
garrison, deep green tunic and trousers, and the grey wolf’s-head tabard of
LaMut.
The minstrel smiled at her. “In all the excitement of the last few
months, I had forgotten I had a small fortune in gems with me. Since I cannot
conspire to return them to the Lord of the Shinzawai, and his son refuses to
take them, I suppose they are mine by rights. I will no longer have to worry
about finding a widow with an inn.”
Pug said, “Kasumi, how goes it with your men?”
“Well enough, though there is still some discomfort between them and
the LaMutian soldiers. It should pass in time. We had an encounter with the
Brotherhood the week after we left. They can fight, but we routed them. There
was much celebrating among all the men in the garrisons, both Tsurani and
LaMutian. It was a good beginning.”
It had been more than an encounter. Word had reached Rillanon of the
battle. The Dark Brothers and their goblin allies had raided into Yabon,
overrunning one of the border garrisons, weakened during the war. The Tsurani
had turned from their march to Zun, dashed northward, and relieved the
garrison. The Tsurani had fought like madmen to save their former enemies from
the larger goblin host, which they had driven back into the mountains north of
Yabon.
Laurie winked at Pug. “Having made something of heroes of
themselves, our Tsurani friends were given quite a welcome when they arrived
here in Rillanon.” Being distant from the center of the war, the city’s
citizens felt little fear or hatred toward their former enemies, giving them a
welcome that would have been unimaginable in the Free Cities, in Yabon, or
along the Far Coast. “I think Kasumi’s men were a little overcome by it all.”
“In truth they were,” agreed Kasumi. “Such a reception on our
homeworld would have been impossible, but here . . .”
“Still,” continued Laurie, “they seemed to take it in stride. The
men have developed a rapid appreciation for Kingdom wines and ale, and they’ve
even managed to overcome their distaste for tall women.”
Kasumi looked away with an embarrassed smile on his face. Laurie
said, “Our dashing Knight-Captain was guested a week ago by one of the richer
merchant families—one seeking to develop broader trade with the West. He has
since been seen often in the company of a certain merchant’s daughter.”
Katala laughed, and Pug smiled at Kasumi’s embarrassment Pug said,
“He was always a quick student.”
Kasumi lowered his head, cheeks flushed, but grinning broadly.
“Still, it is a hard thing learning that your countrywomen have such freedom.
Now I see why you two were always so strong-willed. You must have learned from
your mothers.”
Laurie’s attention was diverted by someone approaching. Pug noticed
a look of open admiration upon the singer’s face. The magician turned and was
greeted by the sight of a beautiful young woman approaching with a guard
escort. Pug’s eyes widened as he recognized Carline. She was as lovely a woman
as her girlhood had promised. She came up to them and with a wave of her hand
dismissed the guard. She looked regal in a fine green gown, with a pearl-studded
tiara crowning her dark hair.
“Master magician,” she said, “have you no greeting for an old
friend?”
Pug bowed before the Princess, and Kasumi and Laurie did also.
Katala curtseyed as she had been shown by one of the maids. Pug said, “Princess,
you flatter me by remembering a simple keep boy.”
Carline smiled, with a gleam in her blue eyes “Oh, Pug . . . you
were never a simple anything.” She looked past him to Katala. “Is this your
wife?” When he nodded and introduced them, the Princess kissed Katala’s cheek
and said, “My dear, I had heard you were lovely, but the reports my brother
gave did you little justice.”
Katala said, “Your Highness is gracious.”
Kasumi had returned to his nervous posture, but Laurie stood unable
to take his eyes from the young woman in green Katala had to grip his arm
firmly to recapture his attention. “Laurie, will you show Kasumi and me about
the palace a little, before the ceremonies begin?”
Laurie smiled broadly, bowed to the Princess, and accompanied Kasumi
and Katala down the hallway Pug and the Princess watched their retreating
backs.
Carline said, “Your wife is a most perceptive woman.”
Pug smiled. “She is indeed remarkable.”
Carline looked genuinely glad to see him. “I understand you also
have a son.”
“William. He is a little devil, and a treasure.”
There was a trace of envy in Carline’s expression “I would like to
meet him.” She paused, then added, “You’ve been most fortunate.”
“Most fortunate, Highness.”
She took his arm and they slowly started to walk “So formal, Pug? Or
should I call you Milamber, as I have heard you were known?”
He saw her smile and returned it. “I sometimes don’t know, though
here Pug seems more proper.” He grinned. “You seem to have learned a great deal
about me.”
She feigned a small pout “You were always my favorite magician.”
They shared a laugh. Then, lowering his voice, Pug said, “I am so
very sorry about your father’s death, Carline.”
She clouded a little. “Lyam told me you were there at the last. I am
glad he saw you safely back before he died. Did you know how much he cared for
you?”
Pug felt himself flush with emotion. “He gave me a name; there is
little more he could have done to show me. Did you know that?”
She brightened. “Yes, Lyam also told me that. We’re cousins of
sorts,” she said with a laugh. As they walked, she spoke softly. “You were my
first love, Pug, but even more, you were always my friend. And I am pleased to
see my friend once more home.”
He stopped and kissed her lightly upon the cheek. “And your friend
is most pleased to be home.”
Blushing slightly, she led him to a small garden on a terrace. They
walked out into bright sunlight and sat upon a stone bench. Carline let out a
long sigh. “I only wish Father and Roland, could be here.”
Pug said, “I was also grieved to hear of Roland’s death.”
She shook her head. “That jester lived as much in his few years as
most men do in their entire lives. He hid much behind his raffish ways, but do
you know, I think he may have been one of the wisest men I’ll ever know. He
took every passing minute and squeezed all the life from it he could.” Pug
studied her face and saw her eyes were bright with memory. “Had he lived, I
would have married him. I suspect we would have fought every day, Pug; oh, how
he could make me angry. But he could make me laugh as well. He taught me so
very much about living I shall always treasure his memory.”
“I am pleased you are at peace with your losses, Carline. So many
years a slave, then a magician, in another land have changed me much. It seems
you have greatly changed as well.”
She tilted her head to look at him. “I don’t think you’ve changed
all that much, Pug. There’s still some of the boy in you, the one who was so
rattled by my attentions.”
Pug laughed. “I guess you’re right. And in some ways you are also
unchanged, or at least you still have the knack of rattling men if friend
Laurie’s reaction is any measure.”
She smiled at him, her face radiant, and Pug knew a faint tugging,
an echo of what he had felt when he was a boy. But now there was no discomfort,
for he knew he would always love Carline, though not in the way he had imagined
as a boy. More than any tumultuous passion, or the deep bond he had with
Katala, he knew what he felt was affection and friendship.
She pursued his last comment. “That beautiful blond man who was with
you a few minutes ago? Who is he?”
Pug smiled knowingly. “Your most devoted subject, from all
appearances. He is Laurie, a troubadour from Tyr-Sog, and a rascal of limitless
wit and charm. He has a loving heart and a brave spirit, and is a true friend.
I’ll tell you sometime of how he saved my life at peril of his own.”
Carline again cocked her head to one side. “He sounds a most
intriguing fellow.” Pug could see that while she was older and more
self-possessed and had known sorrow, much about her remained unchanged.
“I once, in jest, promised him an introduction to you. Now I am sure
he would be most delighted to make Your Highness’s acquaintance.”
“Then we must arrange it.” She rose. “I fear I must go make ready
for the coronation. Any time now the bells will sound and the priests will
arrive. We shall speak again, Pug.”
Pug came to his feet as well. “I shall enjoy it, Carline.”
He presented his arm. A voice from behind said, “Squire Pug, may I
speak with you.”
They turned around and found Martin Longbow standing some distance
away, farther back in the garden. He bowed to the Princess. Carline said,
“Master Longbow! There you are I’ve not seen you since yesterday.”
Martin smiled slightly. “I’ve had a need to be alone. In Crydee when
such a mood strikes, I return to the forest. Here”—he indicated the large
terraced garden—“this was the best I could manage.”
She looked quizzically at him, but shrugged off the remark. “Well, I
expect you will manage to attend the coronation. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I
must be off.” She accepted their polite good-byes and left.
Looking at Pug, Martin said, “It is good to see you once again,
Pug.”
“And you, Martin. Of all my old friends here, you are the last to
greet me. Except for those still in Crydee I’ve yet to see, you’ve made my
homecoming complete.” Pug could see Martin was troubled. “Is something wrong?”
Martin looked out over the garden, toward the city and sea beyond.
“Lyam told me, Pug. He told me you know as well.”
Pug understood at once. “I was there when your father died, Martin,”
he said, his voice remaining calm.
In silence Martin began to walk, and when he came to the low stone
wall around the garden he gripped it hard. “My father,” he said, bitterly. “How
many years I waited for him to say, ‘Martin, I am your father.’ ” He swallowed hard.
“I never cared for inheritance and such things I was content to remain
Huntmaster of Crydee. If only he had told me himself.”
Pug thought over his next words. “Martin, many men do things they
regret later. Only a few are granted the opportunity to make amends. Had a
Tsurani arrow taken him quickly, had a hundred other things come to pass, he
might not have had the chance to do what little he did.”
“I know, but still that is cold comfort.”
“Did Lyam tell you his last words? He said, ‘Martin is your brother.
I have wronged him, Lyam. He is a good man, and well do I love him.’ ”
Martin’s knuckles turned white gripping the stone wall. Quietly he
replied, “No, he did not.”
“Lord Borric was not a simple man, Martin, and I was only a boy when
I knew him, but whatever else may be said of him, there was no meanness of
spirit in the man. I don’t pretend to understand why he acted as he did, but
that he loved you is certain.”
“It was all such folly. I knew he was my father, and he never knew I
had been told by Mother. What difference in our lives had I gone to him and
proclaimed myself?”
“Only the gods might know.” He reached out and touched Martin’s arm.
“What matters now is what you will do. That Lyam told you means he will make
public your birthright. If he’s already told others, the court will be in an
uproar. You are the eldest and have the right of first claim. Do you know what
you will do?”
Studying Pug, Martin said, “You speak calmly enough of this. Doesn’t
my claim to the throne disturb you at all?”
Pug shook his head. “You would have no way of knowing, but I was
counted among the most powerful men in Tsuranuanni. My word was in some ways
more important than any king’s command. I think I know what power can do, and
what sort of men seek it. I doubt you have much personal ambition as such,
unless you’ve changed a great deal since I lived in Crydee. If you take the
crown, it will be for what you believe are good reasons. It may be the only way
to prevent civil war, for should you choose the mantle of King, Lyam will be
the first to swear fealty. Whatever the reason, you would do your best to act
wisely. And if you take the purple, you will do your best to be a good ruler.”
Martin looked impressed. “You have changed much, Squire Pug, more
than I would have expected. I thank you for your kind judgment of me, but I
think you are the only man in the Kingdom who would believe such.”
“Whatever the truth may be, you are your father’s son and would not
bring dishonor upon his house.”
Again Martin’s words were tinged with bitterness. “There are those
who will judge my birth itself a dishonor.” He looked out over the city below,
then turned to stare at Pug. “If only the choice were simple, but Lyam’s seen
that it is not. If I take the crown, many will balk. If I renounce in Lyam’s
favor, some may use me as an excuse to refuse Lyam their allegiance.
“Gods above, Pug. Were the issue between Arutha and myself, I would
not hesitate for an instant to stand aside in his favor. But Lyam? I’ve not
seen him for seven years, and those years have changed him. He seems a man
beset with doubts. An able field commander, no question, but a king? I am faced
with the fearful prospect I would prove a more able king.”
Pug spoke softly. “As I have said, should you claim the throne, you
will do so for what you,judge good reasons, reasons of duty.”
Martin’s right hand closed into a fist, held before his face. “Where
ends duty and begins personal ambition? Where ends justice and begins revenge?
There is a part of me, an angry part of me, that says, ‘Wring all you can from
this moment, Martin.’ Why not King Martin? And then another part of me wonders
if Father may have placed this upon me knowing someday I must be King. Oh, Pug,
what is my duty?”
“That is something each of us must judge for himself alone. I can
offer you no counsel.”
Martin leaned forward upon the rail, hands covering his face. “I
think I would like to be alone for a time, if you do not mind.”
Pug left, knowing a troubled man considered his fate. And the fate
of the Kingdom.
Pug found Katala with Laurie and Kasumi, speaking with Duke Brucal
and Earl Vandros. As he approached, he could hear the Duke saying, “So we’ll
finally have a wedding, now that this young slow-wit”—he indicated Vandros—“has
asked for my daughter’s hand. Maybe I’ll have some grandchildren before I die,
after all. See what comes of waiting so many years to marry. You’re old before
your children marry—” He inclined his head when he saw Pug. “Ah, magician,
there you are.”
Katala smiled when she saw her husband. “Did you and the Princess
have a nice reunion?”
“Very nice.”
Prodding him in the chest with her forefinger, she said, “And when
we’re alone, you’ll repeat every single word.”
The others laughed at Pug’s embarrassment, though he could see she
was only having fun with him.
Brucal said, “Ah, magician, your wife is so lovely, I wish I were
sixty again.” He winked at Pug. “Then I’d steal her from you, and damn the
scandal.” He took Pug by the arm and said to Katala, “If you’ll forgive me,
lady, instead I’ll have to steal a moment of your husband’s time.”
He steered Pug away from the surprised group and when they were out
of earshot said, “I have grave news.”
“I know.”
“Lyam is a fool, a noble fool.” He looked away for a moment, his
eyes filming over with memory. “But he is his father’s son, and his
grandfather’s grandson as well, and like both before him has a strong sense of
honor.” The old eyes came into sharp focus again. “Still, I wish his sense of
duty were as clear.” Lowering his voice even more, he said, “Keep your wife
close about. The guards in the hall wear the purple and will die defending the
King, whoever he may be. But it may get messy. Many of the eastern lords are
impulsive men, overly used to having their petty demands instantly gratified. A
few might open their mouths and find themselves chewing steel.
“My men and Vandros’s are positioned throughout the palace, while
Kasumi’s Tsurani are outside, at Lyam’s request. The eastern lords don’t like
it, but Lyam is Heir, and they cannot say no. With those who will stand with
us, we can seize the palace and hold it.
“With du Bas-Tyra hiding, and Richard of Salador dead, the eastern
lords have lost their leadership. But there are enough of them on the island,
with enough of their ‘honor guards’ in and around the city, to turn this island
into a pretty battleground should they flee the palace before a king is named.
No, we’ll hold the palace. No traitorous easterner will leave to plot treason
with Black Guy. Each one will bend a knee before whichever brother takes the
crown.”
Pug was surprised by this. “You’ll support Martin, then?”
Old Brucal’s voice became harsh, though he kept it low. “No one will
plunge my Kingdom into civil war, magician. Not while I have a breath left to
spend. Arutha and I have spoken. Neither of us likes the choices, but we are
clear on our course. Should Martin be King, all will bow before him. Should
Lyam take the crown, Martin will swear fealty or not leave the palace alive.
Should the crown be broken, we hold this palace, and no lord leaves until a
congress has named one brother King, even if we’re a year in that bloody damned
hall. We’ve already picked up several of Guy’s agents in the city. He’s here in
Rillanon, there’s no doubt. If even a handful of nobles can win free of the palace
before a congress is convened, we have civil war.” He struck his fist into his
open hand. “Damn these traditions. As we speak, the priests walk toward the
palace, each step bringing them closer to the moment of choice. If only Lyam
had acted sooner, given us more time, or not acted at all. Or if we could have
caged Guy. If we could have spoken to Martin, but he’s vanished . . .”
“I’ve spoken to Martin.”
Brucal’s eyes narrowed. “What is his mood? What are his plans?”
“He’s a troubled man, as well you might imagine. To have all this
put upon him with scant time to adjust. He has always known who his father was,
and was resigned to take the secret with him to the grave, I’ll wager, but now
he is suddenly thrust into the heart of the matter. I don’t know what he will
do. I don’t think he’ll know, until the priests put the crown before him.”
Brucal stroked his chin. “That he knew and tried not to use that
knowledge for his own gain speaks well of him. But there’s still no time.” He
indicated the group by the main door to the hall. “You’d best be back to your
wife. Keep your wits sharp, magician, for we may have need of your arts before
this day is through.”
They returned to the others, and Brucal led Vandros and Kasumi
inside, speaking with them in low tones. Before Katala could speak, Laurie
said, “What is afoot? When I took Katala and Kasumi outside to a balcony
overlooking the courtyard, I saw Kasumi’s men everywhere. For a moment I
thought the Empire had won the war. I couldn’t get a thing from him.”
Pug said, “Brucal knows they can be trusted to follow Kasumi’s
orders without question.”
Katala said, “What is this, husband? Trouble?”
“There is little time to explain. There may be more than one
claimant to the crown. Stay near Kasumi, Laurie, and keep your sword loose. If
there’s trouble, follow Arutha’s lead.”
Laurie nodded, his face set in a grim expression of understanding.
He entered the hall, and Katala said, “William?”
“He is safe. If there is trouble it will be in the great hall, not
in the guest quarters. It will be afterward the true grief will begin.” Her
expression showed she didn’t understand fully, but she quietly accepted what he
said. “Come, we must take our places inside.”
They hurried into the great hall, to a place of honor near the
front. As they passed by the throng gathered to see the King crowned, they
could hear the buzz of voices as rumor swept the room. They came up to Kulgan,
and the stout magician nodded greeting. Meecham waited a few paces behind, his
back to a wall. His eyes surveyed the room, marking the positions of all within
a sword’s length of Kulgan. Pug noticed the old, long-bladed hunter’s knife was
loose in its scabbard. He might not know what the problem was, but he would be
instantly ready to protect his old companion.
Kulgan hissed, “What is going on? Everything was calm until a few
minutes ago, now the room is abuzz.”
Pug leaned his head closer to Kulgan’s and said, “Martin may
announce for the crown.”
Kulgan’s eyes widened “Gods and fishes! That’ll set this court on
its ear.” He looked around and saw most of the Kingdom’s nobles had taken their
places within the hall. With a sigh of regret he said, “It’s too late to do
anything now but wait.”
Amos crashed through the garden, swearing furiously. “Why the hell
does anyone want all these bloody posies about anyway?”
Martin looked up and barely caught the crystal goblet thrust at him
by Amos Trask. “What—” he said, as Amos filled it with wine from a crystal
decanter he held.
“Thought you might be in need of a bracer, and a shipmate to share
it with.”
Martin’s eyes narrowed. “What do you mean?”
Amos filled his own goblet and took a long pull. “It’s all over the
palace now, fellow-me-lad. Lyam’s a good enough sort, but he’s got rocks for
ballast if he thinks he can have a crew of stonecutters put your name on your
father’s tomb, then hush them up with something as petty as a royal command.
Every servant in the palace knew you were the new first mate within an hour
after those boys finished work. It’s all up in the wind, you can believe me.”
Martin drank the wine and said, “Thank you, Amos.” He studied the
deep red wine in the glass. “Shall I be King?”
Amos laughed, a good-natured, hearty sound. “I have two thoughts on
that, Martin. First, it’s always better to be captain than deckhand, which is
why I’m a captain and not a deckhand. Second, there’s some difference between a
ship and a kingdom.”
Martin laughed. “Pirate, you’re no help at all.”
Amos looked stung. “Blast me, I got you to laugh, didn’t I?” He
leaned over, resting an elbow on the garden wall while he poured more wine into
his cup. “See here, there’s this pretty little three-master in the royal
harbor. I’ve not had much time, but with the King’s pardon being declared,
there’s plenty of good lads fresh from the brig who’d jump to sail with Captain
Trenchard. Why don’t we cast off from here and go a’roving?”
Martin shook his head. “That sounds fine. I’ve been on a ship three
times in my life, and with you I nearly got killed all three times.”
Amos looked injured. “The first two times were Arutha’s fault, and
the third time wasn’t my fault I didn’t send those Ceresian pirates to chase us
from Salador to Rillanon. Besides, if you sign aboard with me, we’ll do the
chasing. The Kingdom Sea’s a whole new sea for Trenchard to sail. What do you
say?”
Martin’s voice turned somber. “No, Amos, though I’d almost as soon
sail with you as return to the forest. But what I must decide cannot be run
from. For good or ill, I am the eldest son, and I have the first claim to the
crown.” Martin looked hard at Amos. “Do you think Lyam can be King?”
Amos shook his head. “Of course, but that’s not the question, is it?
What you want to know is, can Lyam be a good King? I don’t know, Martin. But
I’ll tell you one thing. I’ve seen many a sailor gone pale with fear in battle,
yet fight without hesitation. Sometimes you can’t know what a man’s capable of
until the time comes for him to act.” Amos paused for a moment, considering his
words. “Lyam’s a good enough sort, as I said. He’s scared silly of becoming
King, and I don’t blame him. But once upon the throne . . . I think he could be
a good enough King.”
“I wish I could know you were right.”
A chime sounded, then great bells began to ring. “Well,” said Amos,
“you don’t have much time left to decide. The Priests of Ishap are at the outer
gates, and when they reach the throne room, there’s no cutting grapples and
sailing away. Your course will be set.”
Martin turned away from the wall. “Thank you for your company, Amos,
and the wine. Shall we go change the fate of the Kingdom?”
Amos drank the last of the wine from the crystal decanter. He tossed
it aside and over the sound of shattering glass said, “You go decide the fate
of the Kingdom, Martin. I’ll come along later, perhaps, if I can’t arrange for
that little ship I spoke of. Maybe we’ll sail together again. If you change
your mind about being King, or decide you’re in need of quick transportation
from Rillanon, fetch yourself down to the docks before sundown. I’ll be about
somewhere, and you’ll always be welcome in my crew.”
Martin gripped his hand tightly. “Always fare well, pirate.”
Amos
left and Martin stood alone, ordering his thoughts as best he could, then,
making his decision, he began his journey to the throne room.
***
By
craning his neck, Pug could see those entering the great hall. Duke Caldric
escorted Erland’s widow, Princess Alicia, down the long isle toward the throne.
Anita and Carline followed. From Kulgan came the observation, “By those grim
expressions and pale complexions, I wager Arutha has told them what may come.”
Pug noticed how Anita held tightly to Carline’s hand when they
reached their appointed places. “What a thing, to discover you’ve an elder
brother in these circumstances.”
Kulgan whispered, “They all seem to be taking it well enough.”
Gongs announced the Ishapian priests had entered the anteroom, and
Arutha and Lyam entered. Both wore the red mantles of Princes of the Realm and
walked quickly to the front of the hall. Arutha’s eyes darted around the room,
as if trying to judge the temper of those on all sides. Lyam looked calm, as if
somehow resigned to accept whatever fate brought.
Pug saw Arutha whisper a short word to Fannon, and the old
Swordmaster in turn spoke to Sergeant Gardan. Both looked about tensely, hands
near sword hilts, watching everyone in the room.
Pug could see no sign of Martin. He whispered to Kulgan, “Perhaps
Martin has decided to avoid the issue.”
Kulgan looked about. “No, there he is.”
Pug saw where Kulgan indicated with a bob of his head. By the far
wall, near a corner, a giant column rose Standing deep within its shadow was
Martin. His features were hidden, but his stance was unmistakable.
Bells began to chime, and Pug looked to see the first of the
Ishapian priests entering the great hall. Behind, others followed, all walking
in unison at the same measured pace. From the side doors came the sound of
bolts being driven into place, for the hall traditionally was sealed from the
start of the ceremony to its end.
When sixteen priests had entered the room, the great doors were
closed behind. The last priest paused before the door, a heavy wooden staff in
one hand and a large wax seal in the other. Quickly he affixed the seal to the
doors. Pug could see that the seal bore the seven-sided device of Ishap
inscribed upon it, and he felt the presence of magic within it. He knew the
doors could not be opened save by the one who affixed the seal, or by another
of high arts, and then at great risk.
When the doors were sealed, the priest with the staff walked forward
between the lines of his brother priests, who waited, incanting soft prayers.
One held the new crown, fashioned by the priests, resting upon a cushion of
purple velvet. Rodric’s crown had been destroyed by the blow that had ended his
life, but had it survived, according to custom it would have been interred with
him. Should no new King be crowned today, this new crown would be smashed upon
the stones of the floor, and no new one made until the Congress of Lords
informed the priests they had elected a new king. Pug marveled how much
importance could be attached to such a simple circlet of gold.
The priests moved forward, to stand before the throne, where other
priests of the lesser orders were already waiting. As was the custom, Lyam had
been asked if he wished his family priest to officiate at the investiture, and
he had agreed. Father Tully stood at the head of the delegation from the Temple
of Astalon. Pug knew the old priest would be quick to take charge of things
without question, regardless of which of Borric’s sons took the crown, and
counted it a wise choice.
The chief Ishapian priest struck his staff upon the floor, sixteen
even, measured blows. The sound rang through the hall, and when he was done,
the throne room was silent.
“We come to crown the King!” exclaimed the head priest.
“Ishap bless the King!” answered the other priests.
“In the name of Ishap, the one god over all, and in the name of the
four greater and twelve lesser gods, let all who have claim to the crown come
forth.”
Pug found himself holding his breath as he saw Lyam and Arutha come
to stand before the priests. A moment later Martin stepped from the shadows and
walked forward.
As Martin came into view, there was a hissing of intaken breath, for
many in the hall had either not heard the rumor or not believed it.
When all three were before the priest, he struck the floor with the
heavy staff. “Now is the hour and here is the place.” He then touched Martin
upon the shoulder with his staff, resting it there as he said, “By what right
do you come before us?”
Martin spoke in a clear, strong voice. “By right of birth.” Pug could
feel the presence of magic. The priests were not leaving the claims to the
throne subject to honor and tradition alone. Touched by the staff, no one could
bear false witness.
The same procedure was repeated and the same answer given by Lyam
and Arutha.
Again the staff rested upon Martin’s shoulder as the priest asked,
“State your name and your claim.”
Martin’s voice rang out. “I am Martin, eldest son of Borric, eldest
of the royal blood.”
A slight buzzing ran through the hall, silenced by the priest’s
staff striking the floor. The staff was placed upon Lyam’s shoulder, and he
answered, “I am Lyam, son of Borric, of the royal blood.”
A few voices could be heard saying, “The Heir!”
The priest hesitated, then repeated the question to Arutha, who
answered, “I am Arutha, son of Borric, of the royal blood.”
The priest looked at the three young men, then to Lyam said, “Are
you the acknowledged Heir?”
Lyam answered with the staff resting upon his shoulder. “The right
of succession was given to me in ignorance of Martin. It is a false bequest,
for Rodric thought me the eldest conDoin male.”
The priest removed the staff and conferred with his fellow priests.
The hall remained silent as the priests gathered together to discuss the
unforeseen turn of events. Time passed torturously, until at last the chief
priest turned once more to face them. He surrendered his staff and was handed
the golden circle that was the crown of the Kingdom. He uttered a brief prayer:
“Ishap, give all before us in this matter guidance and wisdom. Let the
appointed one do right.” In a strong voice he said, “That the succession is
flawed is clear.” He placed the crown before Martin. “Martin, as eldest son of
the royal blood you have the right of first claim. Will you, Martin, take up
this burden, and will you be our King?”
Martin looked at the crown. Silence hung heavy in the room as every
eye was fixed upon the tall man in green. Breath was held as the throng in the
hall waited upon his answer.
Then Martin slowly reached out and took the crown from the cushion
upon which it rested. He raised it up, and every gaze in the room followed it,
as it caught a ray of light entering through a high window, scattering
glittering glory throughout the hall.
Holding it above his head, he said, “I, Martin, do hereby abdicate
my claim to the crown of the Kingdom of the Isles, for now and forever, on my
own behalf and on behalf of all my issue from now henceforth to the last
generation.” He moved suddenly and placed the crown upon Lyam’s brow. Martin’s
voice rang out once more, his words a defiant challenge. “All hail Lyam! True
and undoubted King!”
There was a pause, as those in the hall took in what they had seen.
Then Arutha faced a stunned, silent crowd, and his voice filled the air. “Hail
Lyam! True and undoubted King!”
Lyam stood flanked by his brothers, one to each side, and the hall
erupted into shouts and cheers. “Hail Lyam! Hail the King!”
The chief priest let the shouting continue for a time, then
recovered his staff and struck the floor, bringing silence. He looked at Lyam
and said, “Will you, Lyam, take up this burden and be our King?”
Looking at the priest, Lyam answered, “I will be your King.”
Again the room sounded with cheers, and the chief priest let the din
go unchecked. Pug looked and saw relief on the faces of many, Brucal, Caldric,
Fannon, Vandros, and Gardan, all who had stood ready to face trouble.
Again the head priest silenced the room with the striking of his
staff. “Tully of the order of Astalon,” he called, and the old family priest
stepped forward.
Other priests removed Lyam’s red mantle, replacing it with the
purple mantle of kingship. The priests stepped away, and Tully came before
Lyam. To Martin and Arutha he said, “All in the Kingdom thank you for your
forbearance and wisdom.” The brothers left Lyam’s side and returned to stand
with Anita and Carline.
Carline smiled warmly at Martin, took his hand, and whispered,
“Thank you, Martin.”
Tully faced the crowd and intoned, “Now is the hour and here is the
place. We are here to witness the coronation of His Majesty, Lyam, first of
that name, as our true King. Is there any here who challenge his right?”
Several eastern lords looked unhappy, but no objection was raised.
Tully again faced Lyam, who went on his knees before the priest. Tully placed
his hand upon Lyam’s head. “Now is the hour and here is the place. It is to you
this burden has fallen, Lyam, first of that name, son of Borric, of the conDoin
line of kings. Will you take up this burden and will you be our King?”
Lyam answered, “I will be your King.”
Tully removed his hand from Lyam’s head and reached down to take his
hand, gripping the royal signet upon it. “Now is the hour and here is the
place. Do you, Lyam conDoin, son of Borric, of the line of kings, swear to
defend and protect the Kingdom of the Isles, faithfully serving her people, to
provide for their welfare, weal, and prosperity?”
“I, Lyam, do so swear and avow.”
Tully began a long liturgy, then when the prayers were done, Lyam
rose. Tully removed his ritual miter and handed it to the Head Priest of Ishap,
who passed it along to another of Tully’s order. Tully knelt before Lyam and
kissed his signet. He then rose and escorted Lyam to the throne, while the
Ishapian priest incanted, “Ishap bless the King!”
Lyam sat. An ancient sword, once carried by Dannis, the first
conDoin King, was brought to him and rested across his knees, a sign he would
defend the Kingdom with his life.
Tully turned and nodded to the Chief Priest of Ishap, who struck the
floor with his staff. “Now it is past, the hour of our choosing I hereby
proclaim Lyam the First our right, true, and undisputed King.”
The crowd responded with a roar. “Hail Lyam! Long live the King!”
The Priests of Ishap chanted low, and the chief priest led them to
the door. He struck the wax seal with his staff, and it split with a cracking
sound. He struck the door three times more, and the guards outside opened it.
Before stepping out, he intoned the last phrase of the ritual of coronation. To
those outside the hall, not privileged to watch the ceremony, he announced,
“Let the word go forth. Lyam is our King!”
Faster than a bird’s flight, the word went out of the hall, through
the palace, and into the city. Celebrants in the street toasted the new
monarch, and not one in a thousand knew how close disaster had come to visiting
the Kingdom this day.
The Ishapian priests left the hall, and all eyes returned to the new
ruler of the Kingdom.
Tully motioned to the members of the royal family, and Arutha,
Martin, and Carline came before their brother Lyam extended his hand, and
Martin knelt and kissed his brother’s signet. Arutha followed, then Carline.
Alicia led Anita to the throne, the first of the long line of nobles
who followed, and the lengthy business of accepting the fealty of the peers of
the realm began. Lord Caldric bent a trembling knee to his King, and there were
tears of relief upon his face as he rose. When Brucal swore his loyalty, he
briefly spoke to the King as he stood, and Lyam nodded.
Then in turn came the other nobles of the Kingdom until, hours
later, the last of the Border Barons, those guardians of the Northern Marches,
vassal to no Lord but the King, rose and returned to stand with the others in
the hall.
Handing the sword of Dannis to a waiting page, Lyam stood and said,
“It is our wish that a time of celebration be at hand. But there are matters of
state that must be attended to at once. Most are of a happy nature, but first
there is one sad duty that must be discharged.
“There is one absent today, one who sought to gain the throne upon
which we are privileged to sit. That Guy du Bas-Tyra did plot treason cannot be
denied. That he did commit foul murder is unquestioned. But it was the late
King’s wish that mercy be shown in this matter. As it was Rodric’s dying
request, I shall grant this boon, though it would be our pleasure to see Guy du
Bas-Tyra pay in full for his deeds.
“Let the word go from this day that Guy du Bas-Tyra is named outlaw
and banished from our Kingdom, his titles and lands forfeit to the crown. Let
his name and arms be stricken from the role of Lords of the Kingdom. Let no man
offer him shelter, fire, food, or water.” To the assembled lords he added, “Some
here have been allied with the former Duke, so we have little doubt he will
hear our judgment. Tell him to flee, to go to Kesh, Queg, or Roldem. Tell him
to hide in the Northlands if no other will take him, but should he be found
inside our borders within a week’s time, his life is forfeit.”
No one in the hall spoke for a moment, then Lyam said, “It has been
a time of great sorrow and suffering in our realms; now let us embark upon a
new era, one of peace and prosperity.” He indicated that his two brothers
should return to his side, and as they approached, Arutha looked at Martin.
Suddenly he grinned and, in an unexpected display of emotion, hugged both
Martin and Lyam. For a brief instant all in the hall were silent as the three
brothers clung closely to one another, then again cheers filled the room.
While the clamor continued, Lyam spoke to his brothers. At first
Martin smiled broadly, then suddenly his expression changed. Both Arutha and
Lyam nodded vigorously, but Martin’s face drained of color. He started to say
something, his manner intense and remonstrative. Lyam cut him off and held up
his hand for silence.
“There is a new ordering of things in our Kingdom. Let it be known
that from this day forward, our beloved brother Arutha is Prince of Krondor,
and until such time as there is a son in our house, Heir to the throne.” At the
last, Arutha seemed less than pleased. Then Lyam said, “And it is our wish that
the Duchy of Crydee, home of our father, stay within our family so long as his
line remains. To this end I name Martin, our beloved brother, Duke of Crydee,
with all lands, titles, and rights pertaining thereunto.”
A cheer again rose from the crowd. Martin and Arutha left Lyam’s
side, and the new King said, “Let the Earl of LaMut and Knight-Captain Kasumi
of LaMut approach the throne.”
Kasumi and Vandros started. Kasumi had been nervous all day, for
Vandros had placed a great trust in him His Tsurani impassivity asserted
itself, and he fell in beside Vandros as he reached the throne.
Both men knelt before Lyam, who said, “My lord Brucal has asked us
to make this happy announcement. His vassal the Earl Vandros will wed his
daughter, the Lady Felinah.”
From the crowd Brucal’s voice could be heard clearly saying, “And
it’s about time.” Several of the older courtiers from Rodric’s court blanched,
but Lyam joined in the general laughter.
“It is also the Duke’s wish that he be allowed to retire to his
estates, where he may seek the rewards of a long and useful service to his
Kingdom. We have given consent. And as he has no son, it is also his wish that
his title pass to one able to continue in the service of the Kingdom, one who
has shown uncommon ability in commanding the LaMutian garrison of the Armies of
the West during the late conflict. For his many brave actions and his faithful
service, we hereby approve his marriage and are pleased to name Vandros Duke of
Yabon, with all lands, titles, and rights pertaining thereunto. Rise, Lord
Vandros.”
Vandros rose, a little shaken, then returned to the side of his
father-in-law-to-be. Brucal struck him a friendly blow on the back and gripped
his hand. Lyam turned his attention to Kasumi and smiled. “There is one here
before us who was recently counted our enemy. He is now counted as our loyal
subject. Kasumi of the Shinzawai, for your efforts to bring peace to two
warring worlds, and your wisdom and courage in the defense of our lands against
the Brotherhood of the Dark Path, we give to you command of the garrison of
LaMut, and name you Earl of LaMut, with all lands, titles, and rights
pertaining thereunto. Rise, Earl Kasumi.”
Kasumi was speechless. He slowly reached out and took the King’s
hand, as he had seen the other nobles do, and kissed the signet. To the King he
said, “My lord King, my life and my honor do I pledge.”
Lyam said, “My lord Vandros, do you accept Earl Kasumi as your
vassal?”
Vandros grinned. “Happily, Sire.”
Kasumi rejoined Vandros, his eyes illuminated by pride. Brucal
administered another hearty slap on the back.
Several more offices were given, for there were vacancies from the
intrigues of Rodric’s court and from deaths in the war. When it seemed all
business was over, Lyam said, “Let Squire Pug of Crydee approach the throne.”
Pug looked at Katala and Kulgan, surprised at being called “What . .
. ?”
Kulgan pushed him forward “Go and find out.”
Pug came before Lyam and bowed. The King said, “What has been done
was a private matter, between our father and this man. Now it is our wish all
in our realm know that this man, once called Pug, the orphan of Crydee, has had
his name inscribed upon the rolls of our family.” He held out his hand, and Pug
knelt before him. Lyam presented his signet and then took Pug by the shoulders
and bade him rise. “As it was our father’s wish, so it is ours. From this day let
all in our Kingdom know this man is Pug conDoin, member of the King’s family.”
Many in the hall were surprised by Pug’s adoption and elevation, but
those who knew of his exploits cheered lustily as Lyam said, “Behold our cousin
Pug, Prince of the Realm.”
Katala ignored all propriety and ran forward to embrace her husband.
Several of the eastern lords frowned, but Lyam laughed and kissed her upon the
cheek.
“Come!” Lyam cried. “It is now time for celebration. Let the
dancers, musicians, and tumblers come forth. Let tables be brought and food and
wine be placed upon them. Let merriment reign!”
The festivities continued. Celebration had run unchecked throughout
the afternoon. A herald next to the King’s table read messages to the King from
those unable to attend, many nobles and the King of Queg, as well as monarchs
of the small kingdoms of the eastern shores. Important merchants and
Guildmasters from the Free Cities also sent congratulations. There were also
messages from Aglaranna and Tomas, and from the dwarves of the West at Stone
Mountain and the Grey Towers Old King Halfdan, ruler of the dwarves of the East
in Dorgin, sent his best wishes, and even Great Kesh had sent greetings, with a
request for more meetings to settle peacefully the issue of the Vale of Dreams.
The message was personally signed by the Empress.
Hearing the last message, Lyam said to Arutha, “For Kesh to have
sent us a personal message in so short a time, the Empress must boast the most
gifted spies in Midkemia. You’ll have to keep your wits about you in Krondor.”
Arutha sighed, not happy at that prospect. Pug, Laurie, Meecham,
Gardan, Kulgan, Fannon, and Kasumi all sat at the royal table. Lyam had
insisted they join the royal family. The new Earl of LaMut still seemed in
shock at his office, but his happiness was clearly showing, and even in this
noisy hall the sound of his warriors outside singing Tsurani songs of
celebration could be faintly heard. Pug mused over the discomfort that must be
causing the royal porters and pages.
Katala joined her husband, reporting their son napping, and Fantus
as well, exhausted from play. Katala said to Kulgan, “I hope your pet will be
able to withstand such constant aggravation.”
Kulgan laughed. “Fantus thrives on the attention.”
Pug said, “With all those rewards being passed out, Kulgan, I’m
surprised there was no mention of you. You’ve given faithful service to the
King’s family as long as anyone save Tully and Fannon.”
Kulgan snorted. “Tully, Fannon, and I all met with Lyam yesterday,
before we knew he was going to acknowledge Martin and throw the court into
turmoil. He began to mumble something or another about offices and rewards and
such, but we all begged off. When he began to protest, I told him I didn’t care
what he did for Tully and Fannon, but if he tried to haul me up before all
those people, I’d straightway turn him into a toad.”
Anita, overhearing the exchange, laughed. “So it is true!”
Pug, remembering the conversation he had with Anita in Krondor, so
many years ago, joined in the merriment. He looked back on all that had
occurred to him in the years since he had first chanced to come to Kulgan’s
cottage in the forests, and reflected for a moment. After much risk and many
conflicts he was safe with family and friends, with a great adventure, the
building of the academy, yet to come. He wished that a few others—Hochopepa,
Shimone, Kamatsu, Hokanu, as well as Almorella and Netoha—could share in his
happiness. And he wished Ichindar and the Lords of the High Council could know
the true reason for the betrayal on the day of peace. And most of all, he
wished Tomas could have joined them.
“So thoughtful, husband?”
Pug snapped out of his mood and smiled “Beloved, I was thinking that
in all things I am a most fortunate man.”
His wife placed her hand upon his and returned his smile. Tully
leaned across the table and inclined his head toward the other end, where
Laurie sat enraptured by Carline, who was laughing at some witticism he had
made. It was obvious she found him as charming as Pug had promised; in fact,
she looked captivated. Pug said, “I think I recognize that expression on
Carline’s face. I think Laurie may be in for some trouble.”
Kasumi said, “Knowing friend Laurie, it is a trouble he will
welcome.”
Tully looked thoughtful. “There is a duchy at Bas-Tyra now in need
of a duke, and he does seem a competent enough young man Hmmm.”
Kulgan barked, “Enough! Haven’t you had your fill of pomp? Must you
go marrying the poor lad off to the King’s sister so you can officiate in the
palace again? Gods! They just met today!”
Tully and Kulgan seemed about to launch into another of their famous
debates when Martin cut them both off “Let us change the subject. My head is
awhirl, and we don’t need your bickering.”
Tully and Kulgan exchanged startled looks, then both smiled. As one
they said, “Yes, my lord.”
Martin groaned while those close by joined in the laughter. Martin
shook his head. “This seems so strange, after so much fear and worry such a
short time back. Why, I nearly chose to go with Amos—” He looked up. “Where is
Amos?”
Upon hearing the seaman’s name, Arutha also looked up from his
conversation with Anita. “Where is that pirate?”
Martin answered. “He said something about arranging for a ship. I
thought he was only making light, but I haven’t seen him since the coronation.”
Arutha said, “Arranging for a ship! The gods weep!” He stood and said,
“With Your Majesty’s permission.”
Lyam said, “Go and fetch him back. From all you have told me, he
warrants some reward.”
Martin stood and said, “I’ll ride with you.”
Arutha smiled. “Gladly.”
The two brothers hurried from the hall, making quick time to the
courtyard. Porters and pages held horses for guests departing early. Arutha and
Martin grabbed the first two in line, unceremoniously leaving two minor nobles
without mounts. The two noblemen stood with mouths open, caught halfway between
anger and amazement. “Your pardon, my lords,” shouted Arutha as he galloped his
horse toward the gate.
As they rode through the gates of the palace, across the arched
bridge over the river Rillanon, Martin said, “He said he would sail at
sundown!”
“That gives us scant time!” shouted Arutha. Down winding streets
they flew to the harbor.
The city was thick with celebrants, and several times they had to
slow to avoid harming those who crowded the streets. They reached the
harborside and pulled up their mounts.
A single guard sat as if sleeping before the entrance to the royal
docks. Arutha jumped down from his horse and jostled the man. The guard’s helm
fell from his head as he toppled over, slumping to the ground. Arutha checked
him and said, “He’s alive, but he’ll have a head on him tomorrow.”
Arutha remounted and they hurried along Rillanon’s long dockside to
the last wharf. Shouts from men in the rigging of a ship greeted them as they
turned their horses toward the end of a long pier.
A beautiful vessel was slowly moving away from the docks, and as
they pulled up, Martin and Arutha could see Amos Trask standing upon the
quarterdeck. He waved high above his head, still close enough so they could see
his grinning face. “Ha! It seems all ends well!”
Arutha and Martin dismounted as the distance between ship and pier
slowly lengthened. “Amos!” shouted Arutha.
Amos pointed at a distant building. “The boys who stood watch here
are all in that warehouse. They’re a little bruised, but they’re alive.”
“Amos! That’s the King’s ship!” yelled Arutha, waving for the ship
to put back.
Amos
Trask laughed. “I thought the Royal Swallow a grand name. Well, tell
your brother I’ll return it someday.”
Martin began to laugh. Then Arutha joined in. “You pirate!” shouted
the youngest brother. “I’ll have him give it to you.”
With a deep cry of despair, Amos said, “Ah, Arutha, you take all the
fun out of life!”