And
when Elric had told his three lies to Cymoril, his betrothed, and had set his
ambitious cousin Yyrkoon as Regent on the Ruby Throne of Melniboné, and when he
had taken leave of Rackhir the Red Archer, he set off into lands unknown, to
seek knowledge which he believed would help him rule Melniboné as she had never
been ruled before.
But
Elric had not reckoned with a destiny already determining that he should learn
and experience certain things which would have a profound effect upon him. Even
before he encountered the blind captain and the Ship Which Sailed the Seas of
Fate, he was to find his life, his soul and all his idealism in jeopardy.
In
Ufych-Sormeer he was delayed over a matter involving a misunderstanding between
four unworldly wizards who amiably and inadvertently threatened the destruction
of the Young Kingdoms before they had served the Balance's ultimate purpose;
and in Filkhar he experienced an affair of the heart which he would never again
speak about; he was learning, at some cost, the power and the pain of bearing
the Black Sword.
But it
was in the desert city of Quarzhasaat that he began the adventure which was to
help set the course of his weird for years to come. . .
The
Chronicle of the Black Sword
PART
ONE
Is
there a madman with a brain To turn the stuff of nightmare sane And demons
crush and Chaos tame, Who'll leave his realm, forsake his bride And, tossed by
contradictory tides, Give up his pride for pain?
The
Chronicle of the Black Sword
1
A
Doomed Lord Dying
It was in
lonely Quarzhasaat, destination of many caravans but terminus of few, that
Elric, hereditary Emperor of Melniboné, last of a bloodline more than ten
thousand years old, sometime conjuror of terrible resource, lay ready for
death. The drugs and herbs which usually sustained him had been used in the
final days of his long journey across the southern edge of the Sighing Desert
and he had been able to acquire no replacements for them in this fortress city
which was more famous for its treasure than for its sufficiency of hie.
Slowly
and feebly the albino prince stretched his bone-coloured fingers to the light
and brought to vividness the bloody jewel in the Ring of Kings, the last
traditional symbol of his ancient responsibilities; then he let the hand fall.
It was as if he had briefly hoped the Actorios would revive him, but the stone
was useless while he lacked energy to command its powers. Besides, he had no
great desire to summon demons here. His own folly had brought him to
Quarzhasaat; he owed her citizens no vengeance. They, indeed, had cause to hate
him, had they but known his origins.
Once
Quarzhasaat had ruled a land of rivers and lovely valleys, its forests verdant,
its plains abundant with crops, but that had been before the casting of certain
incautious spells in a war with threatening Melniboné more than two thousand
years earlier. Quarzhasaat's empire had been lost to both sides. It had been
engulfed by a vast mass of sand which swept over it like a tide, leaving only
the capital and her traditions which in time became the prime reason for her
continuing existence. Because Quarzhasaat had always stood there, she must be
sustained, her citizens believed, at any cost throughout eternity. Though she
had no purpose or function, still her masters felt a heavy obligation to
continue her existence by whichever means they found expedient. Fourteen times
had armies attempted to cross the Sighing Desert to loot fabulous Quarzhasaat.
Fourteen times had the desert itself defeated them.
Meanwhile
the city's chief obsessions (some would say her chief industry) were the
elaborate intrigues amongst her rulers. A republic, albeit in name only, and
hub of a vast inland empire, albeit entirely covered by sand, Quarzhasaat was
ruled by her Council of Seven, whimsically known as the Six and One Other, who
controlled the greater part of the city's wealth and most of her affairs.
Certain other potent men and women, who chose not to serve in this septocracy,
wielded considerable influence while displaying none of the trappings of power.
One of these, Elric had learned, was Narfis, Baroness of Kuwai'r, who dwelled
in a simple yet beautiful villa at the city's southern extreme and gave most of
her attention to her notorious rival, the old Duke Ral, patron of Quarzhasaat's
finest artists, whose own palace on the northern heights was as unostentatious
as it was lovely. These two, Elric was told, had elected three members each to
the Council, while the seventh, always nameless and simply called the Sexocrat
(who ruled the Six), maintained a balance, able to sway any vote one way or the
other. The ear of the Sexocrat was most profoundly desired by all the many
rivals in the city, even by Baroness Narfis and Duke Ral.
Uninterested
in Quarzhasaat's ornate politics as he was in his own, Elric's reason for being
here was curiosity and the fact that Quarzhasaat was clearly the only haven in
a great wasteland lying north of the nameless mountains dividing the Sighing
Desert from the Weeping Waste.
Moving
his exhausted bones on the thin straw of his pallet, Elric wondered
sardonically if he would be buried here without the people ever knowing that
the hereditary ruler of their nation's greatest enemies had died amongst them.
He wondered if this had after all been the fate his gods had in store for him:
nothing as grandiose as he had dreamed of and yet it had its attractions.
When he
had left Filkhar in haste and some confusion, he had taken the first ship out
of Raschil and it had brought him to Jadmar, where he had chosen wilfully to trust
an old Ilmioran drunkard who had sold him a map showing fabled Tanelorn. As the
albino had half-guessed, the map proved a deception, leading him far from any
kind of human habitation. He had considered crossing the mountains to make for
Karlaak by the Weeping Waste but on consulting his own map, of more reliable
Melnibonéan manufacture, he had discovered Quarzhasaat to be significantly
closer. Riding north on a steed already half-dead from heat and starvation, he
had found only dried river-beds and exhausted oases, for in his wisdom he had
chosen to cross the desert in a time of drought. He had failed to find fabled
Tanelorn and, it seemed, would not even catch sight of a city which, in his
people's histories, was almost as fabulous.
As was
usual for them, Melnibonéan chroniclers showed only a passing interest in
defeated rivals, but Elric remembered that Quarzhasaat's own sorcery was said
to have contributed to her extinction as a threat to her half-human enemies: A
misplaced rune, he understood, uttered by Fophean Dals, the Sorcerer Duke,
ancestor to the present Duke Ral, in a spell meant to flood the Melnibonéan
army with sand and build a bulwark about the entire nation. Elric was still to
discover how this accident was explained in Quarzhasaat now. Had they created
myths and legends to rationalise the city's ill-luck entirely as a result of
evil emanating from the Dragon Isle?
Elric
reflected how his own obsession with myth had brought him to almost inevitable
destruction. "In my miscalculations," he murmured, turning dull
crimson eyes again towards the Actorios, "I have shown that I share
something in common with these people's ancestors." Some forty miles from
his dead horse, Elric had been discovered by a boy out searching for the jewels
and precious artefacts occasionally flung up by those sandstorms which
constantly came and went over this part of the desert and were partially
responsible for the city's survival as well as for the astonishing height of
Quarzhasaat's magnificent walls. They were also the origin of the desert's
melancholy name.
In
better health Elric would have relished the city's monumental beauty. It was a
beauty derived from an aesthetic refined over centuries and bearing no signs of
outside influence. Though so many of the curving ziggurats and palaces were of
gigantic proportions there was nothing vulgar or ugly about them; they had an
airy quality, a peculiar lightness of style which made them seem, in their
terra-cotta reds and glittering silver granite, their whitewashed stucco, their
rich blues and greens, as if they had been magicked out of the very air. Their
luscious gardens filled marvellously complex terraces, their fountains and
water-courses, drawn from deep-sunk wells, gave tranquil sound and wonderful
perfume to her old cobbled ways and wide tree-lined avenues, yet all this
water, which might have been diverted to growing crops, was used to maintain
the appearance of Quarzhasaat as she had been at the height of her imperial
power and was more valuable than jewels, its use rationed and its theft
punishable by the severest of laws.
Elric's
own lodgings were in no way magnificent, consisting as they did of a truckle
bed, straw-strewn flagstones, a single high window, a plain earthenware jug and
a basin containing a little brackish water which had cost him his last emerald.
Water permits were not available to foreigners and the only water on general
sale was Quarzhasaat's single most expensive commodity. Elric's water had
almost certainly been stolen from a public fountain. The statutory penalties
for such thefts were rarely discussed, even in private.
Elric
required rare herbs to sustain his deficient blood, but their cost, even had
they been available, would have proven far beyond his present means which had
been reduced to a few gold coins; a fortune in Karlaak but of virtually no
worth in a city where gold was so common it was used to line the city's
aqueducts and sewers. His expeditions into the streets had been exhausting and
depressing.
Once a
day the boy, who had found Elric in the desert and brought him to this room,
paid the albino a visit, staring at him as if at a curious insect or captured
rodent. The boy's name was Anigh and, though he spoke the Melnibonéan-derived
lingua franca of the Young Kingdoms, his accent was so thick it was sometimes
impossible to understand all he said.
Once
more Elric tried to lift his arm only to let it fall. That morning he had
reconciled himself to the fact that he would never again see his beloved
Cymoril and would never sit upon the Ruby Throne. He knew regret, but it was of
a distant kind, for his illness made him oddly euphoric.
"I
had hoped to sell you."
Elric
peered, blinking, into the shadows of the room on the far side of a single ray
of sunlight. He recognized the voice but could make out little more than a
silhouette near the door.
"But
now it seems all I have to offer in next week's market will be your corpse and
your remaining possessions." It was Anigh, almost as depressed as Elric at
the prospect of his prize's death. "You are still a rarity, of course.
Your features are those of our ancient enemies but whiter than bone and those
eyes I have never seen before in a man."
"I'm
sorry to disappoint your expectations." Elric rose weakly on his elbow. He
had deemed it imprudent to reveal his origins but instead had said he was a
mercenary from Nadsokor, the Beggar City, which sheltered all manner of
freakish inhabitants.
"Then
I had hoped you might be a wizard and reward me with some bit of arcane lore
which would set me on the path to becoming a wealthy man and perhaps a member
of the Six. Or you might have been a desert spirit who could confer on me some
useful power. But I have wasted my waters, it seems. You are merely an
impoverished mercenary. Have you no wealth left at all? Some curio which might
prove of value, for instance?" And the boy's eyes went towards a bundle
which, long and slender, rested against the wall near Elric's head.
"That's
no treasure, lad," Elric informed him grimly. "He who possesses it
could be said to bear a curse impossible to exorcise." He smiled at the
thought of the boy trying to find a buyer for the Black Sword which, wrapped in
a torn cassock of red silk, occasionally gave out a murmur, like a senile old
man attempting to recall the power of speech.
"It's
a weapon, is it not?" said Anigh, his thin, tanned features making his
vivid blue eyes seem large.
"Aye,"
Elric agreed. "A sword."
"An
antique?" The boy reached under his striped brown djellabah and picked at
the scab on his shoulder.
"That's
a fair description." Elric was amused but found even this brief
conversation tiring.
"How
old?" Now Anigh took a step forward so that he was entirely illuminated by
the ray of sunlight. He had the perfect look of a creature adapted to dwell
amongst the tawny rocks and the dusky sands of the Sighing Desert.
"Perhaps
ten thousand years." Elric found that the boy's startled expression helped
him forget, momentarily, his almost certain fate. "But probably more than
that..."
"Then
it's a rarity, indeed! Rarities are prized by Quarzhasaat's lords and ladies.
There are those amongst the Six, even, who collect such things. His honour the
Master of Unicht Shlur, for instance, has the armour of a whole Ilmioran army,
each piece arranged on the mummified corpses of the original warriors. And my
Lady Talith possesses a collection of war-instruments numbering several
thousands, each one different. Let me take that, Sir Mercenary, and I'll
discover a buyer. Then I'll seek the herbs you need."
"Whereupon
I'll be fit enough for you to sell me, eh?" Elric's amusement increased.
Anigh's
face became exquisitely innocent. "Oh, no, sir. Then you will be strong
enough to resist me. I shall merely take a commission on your first
engagement."
Elric
felt affection for the boy. He paused, gathering strength before he spoke
again. "You expect I'll interest an employer, here in Quarzhasaat?"
"Naturally,"
Anigh grinned. "You could become a bodyguard to one of the Six, perhaps,
or at least one of their supporters. Your unusual appearance makes you
immediately employable! I have already told you what great rivals and plotters
our masters are."
"It
is encouraging"-Elric paused for breath-"to know that I can look
forward to a life of worth and fulfillment here in Quarzhasaat." He tried
to stare directly into Anigh's brilliant eyes, but the boy's head turned out of
the sunlight so that only part of his body was exposed. "However, I
understood from you that the herbs I described grew only in distant Kwan, days
from here-in the foothills of the Ragged Pillars. I will be dead before even a
fit messenger could be half-way to Kwan. Do you try to comfort me, boy? Or are
your motives less noble?"
"I
told you, sir, where the herbs grew. But what if there are some who have
already gathered Kwan's harvest and returned?"
"You
know of such an apothecary? But what would one charge me for such valuable
medicines? And why did you not mention this before?"
"Because
I did not know if it before." Anigh seated himself in the relative cool of
the doorway. "I have made enquiries since our last conversation. I am a
humble boy, your worship, not a learned man, nor yet an oracle. Yet I know how
to banish my ignorance and replace it with knowledge. I am ignorant, good sir,
but not a fool."
"I
share your opinion of yourself, Master Anigh."
"Then
shall I take the sword and find a buyer for you?" He came again into the
light, hand reaching towards the bundle.
Elric
fell back, shaking his head and smiling a little. "I, too, young Anigh,
have much ignorance. But, unlike you, I think I might also be a fool."
"Knowledge
brings power," said Anigh. "Power shall take me into the entourage of
the Baroness Narfis, perhaps. I could become a captain in her guard. Maybe a
noble!"
"Oh,
one day you'll surely be more than either." Elric drew in stale air, his
frame shuddering, his lungs enflamed. "Do what you will, though I doubt
the sword will go willingly."
"May
I see it?"
"Aye."
With painful awkward movements Elric rolled to the bed's edge and plucked the
wrappings free of the huge sword. Carved with runes which seemed to flicker
unsteadily upon the blade of black, glowing metal, decorated with ancient and
elaborate work, some of mysterious design, some depicting dragons and demons
intertwined as if in battle, Stormbringer was clearly no mundane weapon.
The boy
gasped and drew back, almost as if regretting his suggested bargain. "Is
it alive?"
Elric
contemplated his sword with a mixture of loathing and something akin to
sensuality. "Some would say it possessed both a mind and a will. Others
would claim it to be a demon in disguise. Some believe it composed of the
vestigial souls of all damned mortals, trapped within as once, in legend, a
great dragon was said to dwell inside another pommel than that which the sword
now bears." To his own faint distaste, he found that he was taking a
certain pleasure in the boy's growing dismay. "Have you never looked upon
an artefact of Chaos before, Master Anigh? Or one who is wedded to such a
thing? Its slave, perhaps?" He let his long, white hand descend into the
dirty water and raised it to wet his lips. His red eyes flickered like dying
embers. "During my travels I have heard this blade described as Arioch's
own battlesword, able to slice down the walls between the very Realms. Others,
as they die upon it, believe it to be a living creature. There is a theory that
it is but one member of an entire race, living in our dimension but capable,
should it desire, of summoning a million brothers. Can you hear it speaking,
Master Anigh? Will that voice delight and charm the casual buyers in your
market?" And a sound came from the pale lips that was not a laugh yet
contained a desolate kind of humour.
Anigh
withdrew hastily into the sunlight again. He cleared his throat. "You
called the thing by a name?"
"I
called the sword Stormbringer but the peoples of the Young Kingdoms sometimes
have another name, both for myself and for the blade. The name is Soulstealer.
It has drunk many souls."
"You're
a dreamthief!" Anigh's eyes remained on the blade. "Why are you not
employed?"
"I
do not know the term and I do not know who would employ a 'dreamthief.'"
Elric looked to the boy for further explanation.
But
Anigh's gaze did not leave the sword. "Would it drink my soul,
master?"
"If
I chose. To restore my energy for a while, all I would have to do is let
Stormbringer kill you and perhaps a few more and then she'll pass her energy on
to me. Then, doubtless, I could find a steed and ride away from here, possibly
to Kwan."
Now the
Black Sword's voice grew more tuneful, as if approving of this notion.
"Oh,
Gamek Idianit!" Anigh got to his feet, ready to flee if necessary.
"This is like that story on Mass'aboon's walls. This is what those who
brought about our isolation were said to wield. Aye, the leaders bore identical
swords to these. The teachers at the school tell of it. I was there. Oh, what
did they say!" And he frowned deeply, an object lesson to anyone wishing
to point a moral concerning the benefits of attending at classes.
Elric
regretted frightening the boy. "I am not disposed, young Anigh, to
maintain my own life at the expense of others who have offered me no harm. That
is partly the reason why I find myself in this specific predicament. You saved
my life, child. I would not kill you."
"Oh,
master. Thou art dangerous!" In his panic he spoke a tongue more ancient
than Melnibonéan, and Elric, who had learned such things to aid his studies,
recognised it.
"Where
came you by that language, by that Opish?" the albino asked.
Even in
his terror the boy was surprised. "They call it the gutter cant, here in
Quarzhasaat. The thieves' secret. But I suppose it is common enough to hear it
in Nadsokor."
"Aye,
indeed. In Nadsokor, true." Elric was again intrigued by this minor turn
of events. He reached towards the boy, to reassure him.
The
motion caused Anigh to jerk up his head and make a noise in his throat. Clearly
he set no store by Elric's attempt to regain his confidence. Without further
remark, he left the room, his bare feet pattering down the long corridor and
the steps into the narrow street.
Convinced
that Anigh was now gone for good, Elric knew a sudden pang of sadness. He
regretted only one thing now, that he would never be reunited with Cymoril and
return to Melniboné to keep his promise to wed her. He understood that he had
always been and probably would always be reluctant to ascend the Ruby Throne
again, yet he knew it was his duty to do so. Had he deliberately chosen this
fate for himself, to avoid that responsibility?
Elric
knew that though his blood was tainted by his strange disease, it was still the
blood of his ancestors and it would not have been easy to deny his birthright
or his destiny. He had hoped he might, by his rule, turn Melniboné from the
introverted, cruel and decadent vestige of a hated empire into a reinvigorated
nation capable of bringing peace and justice to the world, of presenting an
example of enlightenment which others might use to their own advantage.
For a
chance to return to Cymoril he would more than willingly trade the Black Sword.
Yet secretly he had little hope that this was possible. The Black Sword was
more than a source of sustenance, a weapon against his enemies. The Black Sword
bound him to his race's ancient loyalties, to Chaos, and he could not see Lord
Arioch willingly allowing him to break that particular bond. When he considered
these matters, these hints at a greater destiny, he found his mind growing
confused and he preferred to ignore the questions whenever possible.
"Well,
perhaps in folly and in death, I shall break that bond and thwart Melniboné's
bad old friends."
The
breath in his lungs seemed to grow thin and no longer burned. Indeed, it felt
cool. His blood moved more sluggishly in his veins as he tried to rise and
stagger to the rough wooden table where his few provisions lay. But he could
only stare at the stale bread, the vinegary wine, the wizened pieces of dried
meat whose origins were best not speculated upon. He could not get up; he could
not summon the will to move. He had accepted his dying if not with equanimity
then at least with a degree of dignity. Falling into a languorous reverie, he
recalled his deciding to leave Melniboné, his cousin Cymoril's trepidation, his
ambitious cousin Yyrkoon's secret glee, his pronouncements made to Rackhir the
Warrior Priest of Phum, who had also sought Tanelorn.
Elric
wondered if Rackhir the Red Archer had been any more successful in his quest or
whether he lay somewhere in another part of this vast desert, his scarlet
costume reduced to rags by the forever sighing wind, his flesh drying on his
bones. Elric hoped with all his heart that Rackhir had succeeded in discovering
the mythical city and the peace it promised. Then he found that his longing for
Cymoril was growing and he believed that he wept.
Earlier
he had considered calling upon Arioch, his patron Duke of Chaos, to save him,
yet had continued to feel a deep reluctance even to contemplate the
possibility. He feared that by employing Arioch's help once more he would lose
far more than his life. Each time that powerful supernatural agreed to help, it
further strengthened an agreement both implicit and mysterious. Not that the
debate was anything more than notional, Elric reflected ironically. Of late
Arioch had shown a distinct reluctance to come to his aid. Possibly Yyrkoon had
superseded him in every way...
This
thought brought Elric back to pain, to his longing for Cymoril. Again he tried
to rise. The sun's position had changed. He thought he saw Cymoril standing
before him. Then she became an aspect of Arioch. Was the Duke of Chaos playing
with him, even now?
Elric
moved his gaze to contemplate the sword which seemed to shift in its loose silk
wrappings and whisper some kind of warning, or possibly a threat.
Elric
turned his head away. "Cymoril?" He peered into the shaft of
sunlight, following it until he looked through the window at the intense desert
sky. Now he believed he saw shapes moving there, shadows that were almost the
forms of men, of beasts and demons. As these shapes grew more distinct they
came to resemble his friends. Cymoril was there again. Elric moaned in despair.
"My love!"
He saw
Rackhir, Dyvim Tvar, even Yyrkoon. He called out to them all.
At the
sound of his own cracked speech he realised he had grown feverish, that his
remaining energy was being dissipated by his fantasies, that his body was
feeding on itself and that death must be close.
Elric
reached to touch his own brow, feeling the sweat pour from it. He wondered how
much each bead might fetch on the open market. He found it amusing to speculate
on this. Could he sweat enough to buy himself more water, or at least a little
wine? Or was this production of liquid in itself against Quarzhasaat's bizarre
water laws?
He
looked again beyond the sunlight, thinking he saw men there, perhaps the city's
guard come to inspect his premises and demand to see his licence to perspire.
Now it
seemed that the desert wind, which was never very far away, came sliding
through the room, bringing with it some elemental gathering, perhaps a force
which was to bear his soul to its ultimate destination. He felt relief. He
smiled. He was glad in several ways that his struggle was over. Perhaps Cymoril
would join him soon?
Soon?
What could Tune mean in that intemporal Realm? Perhaps he must wait for
Eternity before they could be together? Or a mere passing moment? Or would he
never see her? Was all that lay ahead for him an absence, a nothingness? Or
would his soul enter some other body, perhaps equally as sickly as his present
one, and be faced again with the same impossible dilemmas, the same terrible
moral and physical challenges which had plagued him since his emergence into
adulthood?
Elric's
mind drifted further and further from logic, like a drowning mouse swept away
from the shore, spinning ever more crazily before death brought oblivion. He
chuckled, he wept; he raved and occasionally slept as his life dissipated its
last with the vapours now pouring from his strange, bone-white flesh. Any
uninformed on-looker would have seen that some misborn diseased beast, not a
man at all, lay in its final and doubtless felicitous agonies upon that rough
bed.
Darkness
came and with it a brilliant panoply of people from the albino's past. He saw
again the wizards who had educated him in all the arts of sorcery; he saw the
strange mother he had never known, and a stranger father; the cruel friends of
his childhood with whom, bit by bit, he could no longer enjoy the luscious,
terrible sports of Melniboné; the caverns and secret glades of the Dragon Isle,
the slim towers and hauntingly intricate palaces of his unhuman people, whose
ancestors were only partially of this world and who had arisen as beautiful
monsters to conquer and rule before, with a deep weariness which he could
appreciate all the better now, declining into self-examination and morbid
fantasies. And he cried out, for in his mind he saw Cymoril, her body as wasted
as his own while Yyrkoon, giggling with horrible pleasure, practised upon it
the foulest of abominations. And then, again, he wanted to live, to return to
Melniboné, to save the woman he loved so deeply that often he refused to let
himself be conscious of the intensity of his passion. But he could not.
He
knew, as the visions passed and he saw only the dark blue sky through his
window, that soon he would be dead and there would be nobody to save the woman
he had sworn to marry.
By
morning the fever was gone and Elric knew he was but a short hour or two from
the end. He opened misted eyes to see the shaft of sunlight, soft and golden
now, no longer glaring directly in as it had the previous day, but reflected
from the glittering walls of the palace beside which his hovel had been built.
Feeling
something suddenly cool upon his cracked lips, he jerked his head away and tried
to reach for his sword, for he feared that steel was being positioned against
him, perhaps to cut his throat.
"Stormbringer..."
His
voice was feeble and his hand was too weak to leave his side, let alone grip
his murmuring blade. He coughed and realised that liquid was being dripped into
his mouth. It was not the filthy stuff he had bought with his emerald but
something fresh and clean. He drank, trying hard to focus his eyes. Immediately
before him was an ornamental silver flask, a golden, soft hand, an arm clothed
in exquisitely delicate brocade, a humorous face which he did not recognise. He
coughed again. The liquid was more than ordinary water. Had the boy found some
sympathetic apothecary? The potion was like one of his own sustaining distillations.
He drew a ragged, grateful breath and stared in wary curiosity at the man who
had resurrected him, however briefly. Smiling, his temporary saviour moved with
studied elegance in his heavy, unseasonable robes.
"Good
morning to you, Sir Thief. I trust I'm not insulting you. I gather you're a
citizen of Nadsokor, where all kinds of robbery are practised with pride?"
Elric,
conscious of the delicacy of his situation, saw fit not to contradict him. The
albino prince nodded slowly. His bones still ached.
The
tall, clean-shaven man slipped a stopper into his flask. "The boy Anigh
tells me you have a sword to sell?"
"Perhaps."
Certain now that his recovery was only temporary, Elric continued to exercise
caution. "Though I would guess 'tis the kind of purchase most would regret
making..."
"But
your sword is not representative of your main trade, eh? You have lost your
crooked staff, no doubt. Sold for water?" A knowing expression.
Elric
chose to humour the man. He allowed himself to hope for life again. The liquid
had revived him enough to bring back his wits, together with a proportion of
his usual strength. "Aye," he said, appraising his visitor.
"Maybe."
"So
ho? What? Do you advertise your own incompetence? Is this the way of the
Nadsokor Thieves' Company? Thou art a subtler felon than thy guise suggests,
eh?" This last was delivered in the same canting tongue Anigh had used on
the previous day.
Now
Elric realised that this wealthy person had formed an opinion of his status and
powers which, while at odds with any actuality, could provide him with a means
of escape from his immediate predicament. Elric grew more alert. "You'd
buy my services, is that it? My special prowess? That of myself and possibly my
sword?"
The man
affected carelessness. "If you like." But it was clear he suppressed
some urgency. "I have been told to inform you that the Blood Moon must
soon burn over the Bronze Tent."
"I
see." Elric pretended to be impressed by what to him was pure gibberish.
"Then we must move swiftly, I suppose."
"So
my master believes. The words mean nothing to me, but they have significance
for you. I was told to offer you a second draft if you appeared to respond
positively to that knowledge. Here." And smiling more broadly, he held out
the silver flask, which Elric accepted, drinking sparingly and feeling still
more strength return, his aches gradually dissipating.
"Your
master would commission a thief? What does he wish stolen that the thieves of
Quarzhasaat cannot steal for him?"
"Aha,
sir, you affect a literal-mindedness I cannot believe in now." He took
back the flask. "I am Raafi as-Keeme and I serve a great man of this
empire. He has, I believe, a commission for you. We have heard much of the
Nadsokorian skills and for some while have been hoping one of your folk might
wander this way. Did you plan to steal from us? None is ever successful. Better
to steal for us, I think."
"Wise
advice, I would guess." Elric rose in his bed and put his feet upon the
flagging. Already the liquid's strength was ebbing. "Perhaps you would
outline the nature of the task you have for me, sir?"
He
reached for the flask but it was withdrawn into Raafi as-Keeme's sleeve.
"By
all means, sir," said the newcomer, "when we have discussed a little
of your background. You steal more than jewels, the boy says. Souls, I
hear."
Elric
felt some alarm and looked suspiciously at the man whose expression remained
bland. "In a manner of speaking..."
"Good.
My master wishes to make use of your services. If you're successful you'll have
a cask of this elixir to carry you back to the Young Kingdoms or anywhere else
you desire to go."
"You
are offering me my life, sir," said Elric slowly, "and I am willing
to pay only so much for that."
"Ah,
sir, you have a streak of the merchant's bartering instinct, I see. I am sure a
good bargain can be struck. Will you come with me now to a certain
palace?"
Smiling,
Elric took Stormbringer in his two hands and flung himself back across the bed,
his shoulders against the wall and the source of the sunlight. Placing the
sword upon his lap, he waved his hand in mockery of lordly hospitality.
"Would you not prefer to stay and sample what I have to offer, Sir Raafi
as-Keeme?"
The
richly clad man shook his head deliberately. "I think not. You have
doubtless become used to this stink and to the stink of your own body, but I
can assure you it is not pleasant to one who is unfamiliar with it."
Elric
laughed as he accepted this. He rose to his feet, hooking his scabbard to his
belt and slipping the murmuring runesword into the black leather. "Then
lead on, sir. I must admit I'm curious to discover what considerable risks I am
to take that would make one of your own thieves refuse the kind of rewards a
lord of Quarzhasaat can offer."
And in
his mind he had already made a bargain: that he would not allow his life to
slip away so easily a second time. He owed that much, he had decided, to
Cymoril.
2
"The
Pearl at the Heart of the World"
In a
room through which mellow sunlight slanted in dusty bands from a massive grille
set deep into the ornately painted roof of a place called Goshasiz whose
complicated architecture was stained by something more sinister than time, Lord
Gho Fhaazi entertained his guest to further drafts of the mysterious elixir and
food which, in Quarzhasaat, was at least as valuable as the furnishings.
Bathed
and wearing fresh robes, Elric possessed a new vitality, the dark blues and
greens of his silks emphasising the whiteness of his skin and long, fine hair.
The scabbarded runesword leaned against the carved arm of his chair and he was
prepared to draw it and use it should this audience prove an elaborate trap.
Lord
Gho Fhaazi was modishly coiffed and clad. His black hair and beard were teased
into symmetrical ringlets, the long moustachios were waxed and pointed, the
heavy brows bleached blond above pale green eyes and a skin artificially
whitened until it resembled Elric's own. The lips were painted a vivid red. He
sat at the far end of a table which slanted down subtly towards bis guest, his
back to the light so that he almost resembled a magistrate sitting in judgement
on a felon.
Elric
recognised the deliberateness of the arrangement and was not put out by it.
Lord Gho was still relatively young, in his early thirties, and had a pleasant,
slightly high-pitched voice. He waved plump fingers at the plates of figs and
dates in mint leaves, of honeyed locusts, which lay between them, pushed the
silver flask of elixir in Elric's direction with an awkward display of
hospitality, his movements revealing that he performed tasks he would usually
have reserved for his servants.
"My
dear fellow. More. Have more." He was unsure of Elric, almost wary of him,
and it grew clear to the albino that there was some urgency involved in the
matter, which Lord Gho had not yet proposed, nor revealed through the courier
he had sent to the hovel "Is there perhaps some favourite food we have not
provided?"
Elric
raised yellow linen to his lips. "I'm obliged to you, Lord Gho. I have not
eaten so well since I left the lands of the Young Kingdoms."
"Aha,
just so. Food is plentiful there, I hear."
"As
plentiful as diamonds in Quarzhasaat. You have visited the Young
Kingdoms?"
"We
of Quarzhasaat have no need to travel." Lord Gho spoke in some surprise.
"What is there abroad that we could possibly desire?"
Elric
reflected that Lord Gho's people had a good deal in common with his own. He
reached and took another fig from the nearest dish and as he chewed it slowly,
savouring its sweet succulence, he stared frankly at Lord Gho. "How came
you to learn of Nadsokor?"
"We
do not travel ourselves-but, naturally, travellers come to us. Some of them
have taken caravans to Karlaak and elsewhere. They bring back the occasional
slave. They tell us such astonishing lies!" He laughed tolerantly.
"But there's a gram of truth, no doubt, in some of what they say. While
dreamthieves, for instance, are secretive and circumspect about their origins,
we have heard that thieves of every land are welcomed in Nadsokor. It takes
little intelligence to draw the obvious conclusion..."
"Especially
if one is blessed with only the barest information concerning other lands and
peoples." Elric smiled.
Lord
Gho Fnaazi did not recognise the albino's sarcasm, or perhaps he ignored it.
"Is Nadsokor your home city or did you adopt it?" he asked.
"A
temporary home at best," Elric told him truthfully.
"You
have superficial looks in common with the people of Melniboné, whose greed led
us to our present situation," Lord Gho informed him. "Is there
Melnibonéan blood in your ancestry, perhaps?"
"I
have no doubt of it." Elric wondered why Lord Gho failed to draw the most
obvious conclusion. "Are the folk of the Dragon Isle still hated for what
they did?"
"Their
attempt upon our empire, you mean? I suppose so. But the Dragon Isle has long
since sunk beneath the waves, a victim of our sorcerous revenge, and her puny
empire with her. Why should we give much thought to a dead race which was duly
punished for its infamy?"
"Indeed."
Elric realised that so thoroughly had Quarzhasaat explained away her defeat and
provided for herself a reason for taking no action, that she had consigned his
entire people to oblivion in her legends. He could not therefore be a
Melnibonéan, for Melniboné no longer existed. On that score, at least, he could
know some peace of mind. Moreover, so uninterested were these people in the
rest of the world and its denizens that Lord Gho Fhaazi had no further
curiosity about him. The Quarzhasaatim had decided who and what Elric was and
were satisfied. The albino reflected on the power of the human mind to build a
fantasy and then defend it with complete determination as a reality.
Elric's
chief dilemma now lay in the fact that he had no clear notion at all of the
profession he was thought to practise or of the task Lord Gho wished him to
perform.
The
Quarzhasaati nobleman lowered his hands into a bowl of scented water and washed
his beard, ostentatiously letting the liquid fall upon the geometrical mosaics
of the floor.
"My
servant tells me you understood his references," he said, drying himself
upon a gauzy towel. Again it was clear he usually employed slaves for this task
but had chosen to dine alone with Elric, perhaps for fear of his secrets being
overheard. "The actual words of the prophecy are a little different. You
know them?"
"No,"
said Elric with immediate frankness. He wondered what would happen if Lord Gho
realised that he was here under false pretences.
"When
the Blood Moon makes fire of the Bronze Tent, then the Path to the Pearl will
be opened."
"Aha,"
said Elric. "Just so."
"And
the nomads tell us that the Blood Moon will appear over the mountains in little
less than a week. And will shine upon the Waters of the Pearl."
"Exactly,"
said Elric.
"And
so the path to the Fortress shall, of course, be revealed." Elric nodded
with gravity and as if in confirmation. "And a man such as yourself, with
a knowledge at once supernatural and not supernatural, who can tread between
reality and unreality, who knows the ways along the borders of dreams and
waking, may break through the defences, overwhelm the guardians and steal the
Pearl!" Lord Gho's voice was a mixture of lasciviousness, venality and hot
excitement.
"Indeed,"
said the Emperor of Melniboné.
Lord
Gho took Elric's reticence for discretion. "Would you steal that Pearl for
me, Sir Thief?"
Elric
gave the matter apparent consideration before he spoke. "There is
considerable danger in the stealing, I would guess."
"Of
course. Of course. Our people are now convinced that none but one of your craft
is able even to enter the Fortress, let alone reach the Pearl itself!"
"And
where lies this Fortress of the Pearl?"
"I
suppose at the Heart of the World."
Elric
frowned.
"After
all," said Lord Gho with some impatience, "the jewel is known as the
Pearl at the Heart of the World, is it not?"
"I
follow your reasoning," said Elric, and resisted an urge to scratch the
back of his head. Instead he considered a further draft of the marvellous
elixir, although he was growing increasingly disturbed, both by Lord Gho's
conversation and the fact that the pale liquid was so delicious to him.
"But surely there is some other clue ... ?"
"I
had thought such things your sphere, Sir Thief. You must go, of course, to the
Silver Flower Oasis. It is the time when the nomads hold one of their
gatherings. Some significance, no doubt, concerning the Blood Moon. It is most
likely that at the Silver Flower Oasis the path will be opened to you. You have
heard of the oasis, naturally."
"I
have no map, I fear," Elric informed him, a little lamely.
"That
will be provided. You have never travelled the Red Road?"
"As
I've explained. I'm a stranger to your empire, Lord Gho."
"But
your geographies and histories must concern themselves with us!"
"I
fear we are a little ignorant, my lord. We of the Young Kingdoms, so long in
the shadow of wicked Melniboné, had not the opportunity to discover the joys of
learning."
Lord
Gho raised his unnatural eyebrows. "Yes," he said, "that would
be the case, of course. Well, well, Sir Thief, we'll provide you with a map.
But the Red Road's easy enough to follow since it leads from Quarzhasaat to the
Silver Flower Oasis and beyond are only the mountains the nomads call the
Ragged Pillars. They're of no interest to you, I think. Unless the Path of the
Pearl takes you through them. That's a more mysterious road and not, you'll
appreciate, marked on any conventional map at least. None that we possess. And
our libraries are the most sophisticated in the world."
So
determined was Elric to get the best from his reprieve that he was prepared to
continue with this farce until he was clear of Quarzhasaat and riding for the
Young Kingdoms again. "And a steed, I hope. You'll give me a mount."
"The
finest. Will you need to redeem your crooked staff? Or is that merely a kind of
sign of your calling?"
"I
can find another."
Lord
Gho put his hand to his peculiar beard. "Just as you say, Sir Thief."
Elric
determined to change the subject. "You have said little about the nature
of my fee." He drained his goblet and clumsily Lord Gho filled it again.
"What
would you usually ask?" said the Quarzhasaati.
"Well,
this is an unusual commission." Elric grew amused again at the situation.
"You understand that there are very few of my skill or indeed standing,
even in the Young Kingdoms, and fewer still who come to Quarzhasaat..."
"If
you bring me that specific Pearl, Sir Thief, you will have all manner of
wealth. At least enough to make you one of the most powerful men in the Young
Kingdoms. I would furnish you with an entire nobleman's household. Clothes,
jewels, a palace, slaves. Or, if you wished to continue your travels, a caravan
capable of purchasing a whole nation in the Young Kingdoms. You could become a
prince there, possibly even a king!"
"A
heady prospect," said the albino sardonically.
"Add
to that what I have already paid and shall be paying and I think you'll judge
the reward handsome enough."
"Aye.
Generous, no doubt." Elric frowned, glancing around the great room, with
its hangings, its rich gem-work, its mosaics of precious stones, its
elaborately ornamental cornices and pillars. He had it in mind to bargain
further, because he guessed it was expected of him. "But if I have a
notion of the Pearl's worth to you, Lord Gho- what it will purchase for you
here-you'll admit that the price you offer is not necessarily a large
one."
Lord
Gho Fhaazi grew amused in turn. "The Pearl will buy me the place on the
Council of Six which shall shortly be vacated. The Nameless Seventh has given
the Pearl as her price. It is why I must have it so soon. It is already
promised. You have guessed this. There are rivals, but none who has offered so
much."
"And
do these rivals know of your offer?"
"Doubtless
there are rumours. But I would warn you to keep silent on the nature of your
task..."
"You
do not fear that I could look for a better bargain elsewhere in your
city?"
"Oh,
there will be those who would offer you more, if you were so greedy and so
disloyal. But they could not offer you what I offer, Sir Thief." And Lord
Gho Fhaazi let his mouth form a terrible grin.
"Why
so?" Elric felt suddenly trapped and his instinct was to reach for
Stormbringer.
"They
do not possess it." Lord Gho pushed the flask towards the albino and Elric
was a little surprised to see that he had already drunk another goblet of the
elixir. He filled his cup once more and drank thoughtfully. Some of the truth
was coming to him and he feared it
"What
can be as rare as the Pearl?" The albino put down his goblet. He believed
he had an idea of the answer.
Lord
Gho was staring at him intently. "You understand, I think." Lord Gho
smiled again.
"Aye."
Elric felt his spirits drop and he knew a frisson of deep terror mixed with a
growing anger. "The elixir, I suppose..."
"Oh,
that's relatively easy to make. It is, of course, a poison-a drug which feeds
off its user, giving him only an appearance of vitality. Eventually there is
nothing left for the drug to feed upon and the death which results is almost
always unpleasant. What a wretch the stuff makes of men and women who only a
week or so earlier believed themselves powerful enough to rule the world!"
Lord Gho began to laugh, his little ringlets bobbing at his face and on his
head. "Yet, dying, they will beg and beg for the thing which has killed
them. Is that not an irony, Sir Thief? What's so rare as the Pearl? you ask.
Why, the answer must be clear to you now, eh? An individual's life, is it
not?"
"So
I am dying. Why then should I serve you?"
"Because
there is, of course, an antidote. Something which replaces everything the other
drug steals, which does not cause a craving in the one who drinks it, which
restores the user to full health in a matter of days and drives out the need
for the original drug. So you see, Sir Thief, my offer to you was by no means
an empty one. I can give you enough of the elixir to let you complete your task
and, so long as you return here in good time, I can give you the antidote.
You'll have gained much, eh?"
Elric
straightened himself in his chair and put his hand upon the pommel of the Black
Sword. "I have already informed your courier that my life has only limited
worth to me. There are certain things I value more."
"I
understood as much," said Lord Gho Fhaazi with cruel joviality, "and
I respect you for your principles, Sir Thief. Your point's well put. But
there's another life to consider, is there not? That of your accomplice?"
"I
have no accomplice, sir."
"Have
you not? Have you not, Sir Thief? Would you come with me?"
Elric,
mistrustful of the man, still saw no reason not to follow him when he strode
arrogantly through the huge, curving doorway of the hall. At his belt once more
Stormbringer grumbled and stirred like a suspicious hound.
The
passages of the palace, lined in green, brown and yellow marble to give the
feeling of a cool forest, scented with the most exquisite flowering shrubs, led
them past rooms of retainers, menageries, tanks of fish and reptiles, a
seraglio and an armoury, until Lord Gho arrived at a wooden door guarded by two
soldiers hi the unpractically baroque armour of Quarzhasaat, their own beards
oiled and forked into fantastically exaggerated shapes. They presented their
engraved halberds as Lord Gho approached.
"Open
this," he ordered. And one took a massive key from within his breastplate,
inserting it into the lock.
The
door opened upon a small courtyard containing a defunct fountain, a little
cloister and a set of living quarters on the far side.
"Where
are you? Where are you, my little one? Show yourself! Quickly now!" Lord
Gho was impatient.
There
was a clink of metal and a figure emerged from the doorway. It had a piece of
fruit in one hand, a loop or two of chain in the other, and it walked with
difficulty for the links were attached to a metal band riveted around its waist.
"Ah, master," it said to Elric, "you have not served me as I
would have hoped."
Elric's
smile was grim. "But maybe as you deserve, eh, Anigh?" He let his
anger show. "I did not imprison you, boy. I think the choice, in reality,
was probably your own. You tried to deal with a power which clearly recognises
no decencies."
Lord
Gho was unmoved. "He approached Raafi as-Keeme's manservant," he
said, staring at the boy with a certain interest, "and offered your
services. He said he was acting as your agent."
"Well,
so he was," agreed Elric, his smile more sympathetic in view of Anigh's
evident discomfiture. "But that surely is not against your laws?"
"Certainly
not. He showed excellent enterprise."
"Then
why is he imprisoned?"
"That's
a matter of expediency. You appreciate that, Sir Thief?"
"In
other circumstances I would suspect some minor infamy," said Elric
carefully. "But I know you, Lord Gho, to be a nobleman. You would not hold
this boy in order to threaten me. It would be beneath you."
"I
hope I am a nobleman, sir. Yet in such times as these not all nobles in this
city are bound by the old codes of honour. Not when such stakes are played for.
You appreciate that even though you are not yourself a nobleman. Or even, I
suppose, a gentleman."
"In
Nadsokor I am thought one," said Elric quietly.
"Oh,
but of course. In Nadsokor." Lord Gho pointed at Anigh, who smiled
uncertainly from one to the other, not following this exchange at all.
"And in Nadsokor, I am sure, they would hold a convenient hostage if they
could."
"But
this is unfair, sir." Elric's voice was trembling with rage and he had to
control himself not to reach his right hand towards the Black Sword on his left
hip. "If I am killed in pursuit of my goal, the boy dies, just as if I had
made my escape."
"Well,
yes, that is true, dear thief. But I expect you to return, you see. If
not-well, the boy will still be useful to me, both alive and dead."
Anigh
no longer smiled. Terror came slowly into his eyes. "Oh, masters!"
"He'll
not be harmed." Lord Gho placed a cold, powdered hand on Elric's
shoulders. "For you will return with the Pearl at the Heart of the World,
will you not?"
Elric
breathed deeply, controlling himself. He felt a need deep within him; a need he
could not readily identify. Was it bloodlust? Did he want to draw the Black
Sword and suck the soul from this scheming degenerate? He spoke evenly.
"My lord, if you would release the boy, I will assure you of my best
efforts... I will swear..."
"Good
thief, Quarzhasaat is full of men and women who give the most fulsome
reassurances and who, I am sure, are sincere when they do so. They will swear
great, important oaths upon all that is most holy to them. Yet should
circumstances change, they forget those oaths. Some security, I find, is always
useful to remind them of obligations undertaken. We are, you will appreciate,
playing for the very highest stakes. There are really none higher in the whole
world. A seat upon the Council." This last sentence was emphasised without
mockery. Clearly Lord Gho Fhaazi could see no greater goal. Disgusted by the
man's sophistry and contemptuous of his provincialism, Elric turned his back on
Lord Gho. He addressed the lad. "You'll observe, Anigh, that little luck
befalls those who league themselves with me. I warned you of this. Yet still I
shall endeavour to return and save you." His next sentence was uttered in
the thievish cant. "Meanwhile do not trust this filthy creature and make
every sensible effort to escape on your own."
"No gutter patois here!" cried
Lord Gho, suddenly alarmed, "or you both die at once!" Evidently he
did not understand the cant as his courier had done.
"Best
not to threaten me, Lord Gho." Elric returned his hand to the hilt of his
sword.
The
nobleman laughed. "What? Such belligerence! Understand you not, Sir Thief,
that the elixir you drink is already killing you? You have three weeks before
only the antidote will save you! Do you not feel the gnawing need for the drug?
If such an elixir were harmless, why, sir, we should all use it and become
gods!"
Elric
could not be sure if it was his mind or his body which felt the pangs. He
realised that even as his instincts drove him to kill the Quarzhasaati nobleman
his craving for the drug threatened to dominate him. Even close to death when
his own drugs failed him he had never craved anything so much. He stood with
his whole body trembling as he sought to master it again. His voice was icy.
"This is more than minor infamy, Lord Gho. I congratulate you. You are a
man of the cruellest and most unpleasant cunning. Are all those who serve upon
the Council as corrupt as yourself?"
Lord
Gho grew still more genial. "This is unworthy of you, Sir Thief. All I am
doing is assuring myself that you'll follow my interests for a while."
Again he chuckled. "I have assured myself, in fact, that for this period
of time your interests become mine. What is so wrong with that? I would not
think it befitting in a self-confessed .thief, to insult a noble of Quarzhasaat
merely because he knows how to strike a good bargain!"
Elric's
hatred for the man, who originally he had only disliked, still threatened to
consume him. But a new, colder mood took him as his hold over his own emotions
returned. "So you are saying that I am your slave, Lord Gho."
"If
you wish to put it so. At least until you bring me back the Pearl at the Heart
of the World."
"And
should I find this Pearl for you, how do I know you will supply me with the
poison's antidote?"
Lord
Gho shrugged. "That is for you to determine. You are an intelligent man
for an outlander, and have survived this long, I'm sure, on your wits. But make
no mistake. This potion is brewed for me alone and you'll not find the
identical recipe anywhere else. Best hold to our bargain, Sir Thief, and depart
from here ultimately a rich man. With your little friend all in one
piece."
Elric's
mood had changed to one of grim humour. With his strength returned, no matter
how artificially, he could wreak considerable destruction to Lord Gho and,
indeed, the whole city if he chose. As if reading his mind, Stormbringer seemed
to stir against his hip and Lord Gho permitted himself a small, nervous glance
towards the great runesword.
Yet
Elric did not want to die and neither did he desire Anigh's death. He decided
to bide his time, to pretend, at least, to serve Lord Gho until he discovered
more about the man and his ambitions, and found out more, if possible, of the
nature of the drug he so longed for. Possibly the elixir did not kill. Possibly
it was a potion common to Quarzhasaat and many possessed the antidote. But he
had no friends here, other than Anigh, not even temporary allies serving
interests prepared to help him against Lord Gho as a common enemy.
"Perhaps,"
said Elric, "I do not care what becomes of the boy."
"Oh,
I think I read your character well enough, Sir Thief. You are like the nomads.
And the nomads are like the people of the Young Kingdoms. They place
unnaturally high values on the lives of those with whom they associate. They
have a weakness for sentimental loyalties."
Elric
could not help considering the irony of this, for Melnibonéans thought
themselves equally above such loyalties and he was one of the few who cared
what happened to those not of his own immediate family. It was the reason he
was here now. Fate, he reflected, was teaching him some strange lessons. He
sighed. He hoped they did not kill him.
"If
the boy is harmed when I return, Lord Gho-if he is harmed hi any way-you will
suffer a fate a thousand times worse than any you bestow on him. Or, I'll add,
on me!" He turned blazing red eyes upon the aristocrat. It seemed that the
fires of Hell raged inside that skull.
Lord
Gho shuddered, then smiled to hide his fear. "No, no, no!" His
unnatural brow clouded. "It is not for you to threaten me! I have
explained the terms. I am unused to this, Sir Thief, I warn you."
Elric
laughed and the fire in his eyes did not fade. "I will make you used to
everything you have accustomed others to, Lord Gho. Whatever happens. Do you
follow me? This boy will not be harmed!"
"I
have told you..."
"And
I have warned you." Elric's lids fell over his terrible eyes, as if he
closed a door on a Realm of Chaos, yet still Lord Gho took a step backward.
Elric's voice was a cold whisper. "By all the power I command, I will be
revenged upon you. Nothing will stop that vengeance. Not all your wealth. Not
death itself."
This
tune when Lord Gho made to smile he failed.
Anigh
grinned suddenly, like the happy child he had been before these events.
Evidently he believed Elric's words.
The
albino prince moved like a hungry tiger towards Lord Gho. Then he staggered a
little and drew a sharp breath. Clearly the elixir was losing its strength, or
demanding more of him, he could not tell. He had experienced nothing like this
before. He longed for another draft. He felt pains hi his belly and chest, as
if rats chewed him from within. He gasped.
Now
Lord Gho found a vestige of his former humour. "Refuse to serve me and
your death's inevitable. I would caution you to greater politeness, Sir
Thief."
Elric
drew himself up with some dignity. "You should know this, Lord Gho Fhaazi.
If you betray any part of our bargain I will keep my oath and bring such
destruction upon you and your city you will regret you ever heard my name. And
you will only hear who I am, Lord Gho Fhaazi, before you die, your city and all
its degenerate inhabitants dying with you."
The
Quarzhasaati made to reply then bit back his words, saying only: "You have
three weeks."
With
his remaining strength, Elric dragged Stormbringer from its scabbard. The black
metal pulsed, black light pouring from it while the runes carved upon the blade
twisted and danced and a hideous, anticipatory song began to sound in that
courtyard, echoing through all the old towers and minarets of Quarzhasaat.
"This sword drinks souls, Lord Gho. It could drink yours now and give me
more strength than any potion. But you have a minor advantage over me for the
moment. I'll agree to your bargain. But if you lie..."
"I
do not lie!" Lord Gho had retreated to the other side of the barren
fountain. "No, Sir Thief, I do not lie! You must do as I say. Bring me the
Pearl at the Heart of the World and I will repay you with all the wealth I
promised, with your own life and that of the boy!"
The
Black Sword growled, clearly demanding the nobleman's soul there and then.
With a
yelp, Anigh disappeared into the little room.
"I'll
leave in the morning." Reluctantly Elric sheathed the sword. "You
must tell me which of the city's gates I must use to travel upon the Red Road
to the Silver Flower Oasis. And I will want your honest advice on how best to
ration that poisoned elixir."
"Come."
Lord Gho spoke with nervous eagerness. "There is more in the hall. It
awaits you. I had no wish to spoil our encounter with bad manners..."
Elric
licked lips already growing unpleasantly dry. He paused, looking towards the
doorway from which the boy's face could just be seen.
"Come,
Sir Thief." Lord Gho's hand again went to Elric's arm. "In the hall.
More elixir. Even now. You long for it, do you not?"
He
spoke the truth, but Elric let his hatred control his lust for the potion. He
called: "Anigh! Young Anigh!"
Slowly
the boy emerged. "Aye, master."
"I
swear you'll suffer no harm from any action of mine. And this foul degenerate
now understands that if he hurts you in any way while I am gone he will die in
the most terrible torment. And yet, boy, you must remember all I've said, for I
know not where this adventure will lead me." And Elric added hi the cant:
"Perhaps to death."
"I
hear you," said Anigh hi the same tongue. "But I would beg you,
master, not to die yourself. I have some interest in your remaining
alive."
"No
more!" Lord Gho strode across the courtyard signalling for Elric to
accompany him. "Come. I'll supply you with all you need to find the
Fortress of the Pearl."
"And
I would be most grateful if you did not let me die. I would be a most grateful
boy, master," said Anigh from behind them as the door closed.
3
On the
Red Road
So it
was that next morning Elric of Melniboné left ancient Quarzhasaat not knowing
what he sought or where to find it; knowing only that he must take the Red Road
to the Silver Flower Oasis and there find the Bronze Tent where he would learn
how he might continue on the Path to the Pearl at the Heart of the World. And
if he failed in this numinous quest, his own life at very least would be
forfeit.
Lord
Gho Fhaazi had offered no further illumination and it was evident the ambitious
politician knew no more than he had repeated.
"The
Blood Moon must make fire of the Bronze Tent before the Pathway to the Pearl
shall be revealed."
Knowing
nothing of Quarzhasaat's legends or history and very little of her geography,
Elric had decided to follow the map he had been given to the oasis. It was simple
enough. It showed a trail stretching for at least a hundred miles between
Quarzhasaat and the oddly named oasis. Beyond this were the Ragged Pillars, a
range of low mountains. The Bronze Tent was not named and neither was there any
reference to the Pearl.
Lord
Gho believed the nomads to be better informed but had not been able to
guarantee that they would be prepared to talk to Elric. He hoped that, once
they understood who he was, and with a little of Lord Gho's gold to reassure
them, they would be friendly, but he knew nothing of the Sighing Desert's
interland, nor its people. He knew only that Lord Gho despised the nomads as
primitives and resented occasionally admitting them into the city to trade.
Elric hoped the nomads would be better mannered than those who still believed
this whole continent to be under their rule.
The Red
Road was well-named, dark as half-dried blood, cutting through the desert
between high banks which suggested it had once been the river on whose sides
originally Quarzhasaat had been built. Every few miles the banks descended to
reveal the great desert in all directions-a sea of rolling dunes which stirred
in a breeze whose voice was faint here but still resembled the sighing of some
imprisoned lover.
The sun
climbed slowly into a glaring indigo sky as still as an actor's backdrop and
Elric was grateful for the local costume provided him by Raafi as-Keeme before
he left, a white cowl, loose white jerkin and breeches, white linen shoes to
the knee and a visor which protected his eyes. His horse, a bulky, graceful
beast capable of great speed and endurance, was similarly clothed in linen, to
protect it from both the sun and the sand which blew in constant gentle drifts
across the landscape. Clearly some effort was made to keep the Red Road free of
the drifts which gathered against its banks and gradually built them into
walls.
Elric
had lost none of his hatred either of his situation or of Lord Gho Fhaazi;
neither had he lost his determination to remain alive and rescue Anigh, return
to Melniboné and be reunited with Cymoril. Lord Gho's elixir had proved as
addictive as he had claimed and Elric carried two flasks of it in his
saddle-bags. Now he truly believed it must indeed kill him eventually and that
only Lord Gho possessed an antidote. This belief reinforced his determination
to be revenged upon that nobleman at the earliest possible opportunity.
The Red
Road seemed endless. The sky shivered with heat as the sun climbed higher. And
Elric, who disapproved of useless regret, found himself wishing he had never
been foolish enough to buy the map from the Ihnioran sailor or to venture so
badly prepared into the desert.
"To
summon supernatural to aid me now would compound the folly," he said aloud
to the wilderness. "What's more, I might need that aid when I reach the
Fortress of the Pearl." He knew that his self-disgust had not merely
caused him to commit further foolishness, but still dictated his actions.
Without it, his thoughts might have been clearer and he might better have anticipated
Lord Gho's trickery.
Even
now he doubted his own instincts. For the past hour he had guessed that he was
being followed but had seen no one behind bun on the Red Road. He had taken to
glancing back suddenly, to stopping without warning, to riding back a few
yards. But he was apparently as alone now as he had been when he began the
journey.
"Perhaps
that damned elixir addles my senses also," he said, patting the dusty
cloth of his horse's neck. The great bulwarks of the road were falling away
here, becoming little more than mounds on either side of bun. He reined in the
horse, for he fancied he could see movement that was more than drifting sand.
Little figures ran here and there on long legs, upright like so many tiny
manikins. He peered hard at them but then they were gone. Other, larger
creatures, moving with far slower speeds, seemed to creep just below the
surface of the sand while a cloud of something black hovered over them,
following them as they made their ponderous way across the desert.
Elric
was learning that, hi this part of the Sighing Desert at least, what appeared
to be a lifeless wilderness was actually no such thing. He hoped that the large
creatures he detected did not regard man as a worthwhile prey.
Again
he received a sense of something behind him and turning suddenly thought he
glimpsed a flash of yellow, perhaps a cloak, but it had disappeared in a slight
bend behind him. His temptation was to stop, to rest for an hour or two before
continuing, but he was anxious to reach the Silver Flower Oasis as soon as
possible. There was little time to achieve his goal and return with the Pearl
to Quarzhasaat.
He
sniffed the ah". The breeze brought a new smell. If he had not known
better he would have thought someone was burning kitchen waste; it was the same
acrid stink. Then he peered into the middle-distance and detected a faint plume
of smoke. Were there nomads so close to Quarzhasaat? He had understood that
they did not like coming within a hundred miles or more of the city unless they
had specific reasons to do so. And if people were camped here, why did they not
set their tents closer to the road? Nothing had been said of bandits, so he did
not fear attack, but he remained curious, continuing his journey with a certain
caution.
The walls
rose up again and blocked his view of the desert, but the stink of burning grew
stronger and stronger until it was almost unbearable. He felt the stuff
clogging his lungs. His eyes began to stream. It was a most noxious smell,
almost as if someone were burning putrefying corpses.
Again
the walls sank a little until he could see over them. Less than a mile away, as
best he could judge, he saw about twenty plumes of smoke, darker now, while
other clouds danced and zigzagged about them. He began to suspect that he had
come upon a tribe who kept their cooking fires alight as they travelled in
waggons of some kind. Yet it was hard to know what kind of waggons would easily
cross the deep drifts. And again he wondered why they were not on the Red Road.
Tempted
to investigate he knew he would be a fool to leave the road. He might again
become lost and be in even worse condition than when Anigh had found him all
those days ago on the far side of Quarzhasaat.
He was
about to dismount and rest his mind and eyes, if not his body, for an hour,
when the wall nearest him began to heave and quake and large cracks appeared in
it. The terrible smell of burning was even closer now and he cleared his
throat, coughing to rid himself of the stench while his horse began to whinny
and refuse the rein as he tried to drive him forward.
Suddenly
a flock of creatures ran directly across his path, bursting from the newly made
holes in the walls. These were what he had mistaken for tiny men. Now that he
saw them more closely he realised they were some kind of rat, but a rat which
ran on long hind-legs, its forelegs short and held up high against its chest,
its long, grey face full of sharp little teeth, its huge ears making it seem
almost like some flying creature attempting to leave the ground.
There
came a great rumbling and cracking. Black smoke blinded Elric and his horse
reared. He saw a shape moving out of the broken banks-a massive, flesh-coloured
body on a dozen legs, its mandibles clattering as it chased the rats which were
clearly its natural prey. Elric let the horse have its head and looked back to
get a clearer view of a creature he had thought existed only in ancient times.
He had read of such beasts but had believed them extinct. They were called
firebeetles. By some trick of biology the gigantic beetles secreted oily pools
in their heavy carapaces. These pools, exposed to the sunlight and the flames
already burning on other backs, would catch fire so that sometimes as many as
twenty spots on the beetles' impervious backs would be burning at any one time
and would only be extinguished when a beast dug its way deep underground during
its breeding season. This was what he had seen in the distance.
The
firebeetles were hunting.
They
moved with awful speed now. At least a dozen of the gigantic insects were
closing in on the road and Elric realised to his horror that he and his horse
were about to be trapped in a sweep designed to catch the man-rats. He knew
that the firebeetles would not discriminate where flesh was concerned and he
could well be eaten by purest accident by a beast which was not known for
making prey of men. The horse continued to rear and snort and only put all
hooves on the ground when Elric forced it under his control, drawing
Stormbringer and considering how useless even that sorcerous sword would be
against the pink-grey carapaces from which flames now leapt and guttered.
Stormbringer drew scant energy from natural creatures like these. He could only
hope for a lucky blow, splitting a back, perhaps, and breaking through the
tightening circle before he was completely trapped.
He
swung the great black battle-blade down and severed a waving appendage. The
beetle hardly noticed and did not pause for a second in its progress. Elric
yelled and swung again and fire scattered. Hot oil was flung into the air as he
struck the firebeetle's back and again failed to do it any significant harm.
The shrieking of the horse and the wailing of the blade now mingled and Elric
found himself yelling as he turned the horse this way and that in search of
escape while all around his horse's feet the man-rats scurried in terror,
unable to burrow easily into the hard clay of that much-travelled road. Blood
spattered against Elric's legs and arms, against the linen which clad his horse
to below its knees. Little spots of flaming oil flared on cloth and burned
holes. The beetles were feasting, moving more slowly as they ate. There was
nowhere in the circle a gap large enough for horse and rider to escape.
Elric
considered trying to ride the horse over the backs of the great beetles, though
it seemed their shells would be too slippery for purchase. There was no other
hope. He was about to force the horse forward when he heard a peculiar humming
in the air around him, saw the air suddenly fill with flies and knew that these
were the scavengers which always followed the firebeetles, feeding off whatever
scraps they left and upon the dung they scattered as they travelled. Now they
were beginning to settle on him and his horse, adding to his horror. He slapped
at the things, but they formed a thick coat, crawling on every part of bun,
their noise both sickening and deafening, their bodies half-blinding him.
The
horse cried out again and stumbled. Elric desperately tried to see ahead. The smoke
and the flies were too much for both himself and his horse. Flies filled his
mouth and nostrils. He gagged, trying to brush them from him, spitting them
down to where the little man-rats squealed and died.
Another
sound came dimly to him, and miraculously the flies began to rise. Through
watering eyes he saw the beetles start to move all hi one direction, leaving a
space through which he might ride. Without another thought he spurred his horse
towards the gap, dragging great gasps of air into his lungs, still unsure if he
had escaped or whether he had merely moved into a wider circle of firebeetles,
for the smoke and the noise were still confusing him.
Spitting
more flies from his mouth, he adjusted his visor and peered ahead. The beetles
were no longer in sight, though he could hear them behind him. There were new
shapes in the dust and smoke.
There
were riders, moving on either side of the Red Road, driving the beetles back
with long spears which they hooked under the carapaces and used as goads, doing
the creatures no real harm but giving them enough pain to make them move, where
Elric's blade had failed. The riders wore flowing yellow robes which were
caught by the breeze of their own movement and lifted about them like wings as,
systematically, they herded the firebeetles away from the road and out into the
desert while the remainder of the man-rats, perhaps grateful for this
unexpected salvation, scattered and found burrows in the sand.
Elric
did not sheath Stormbringer. He knew enough to understand that these warriors
might well be saving him only incidentally and might even blame him for being
in their way. The other possibility, which was stronger, was that these men had
been following him for some time and did not wish the firebeetles to cheat them
of their prey.
Now one
of the yellow-clad riders detached himself from the throng and galloped up to
Elric, hailing him with spear raised.
"I
thank you mightily," the albino said. "You have saved my life, sir. I
trust I did not disrupt your hunt too much."
The
rider was taller than Elric, very thin, with a gaunt dark face and black eyes.
His head was shaved and both his lips were decorated, apparently with tiny
tattoos, as if he wore a mask of fine, multicoloured lace across his mouth. The
spear was not sheathed and Elric prepared to defend himself, knowing that his
chances against even so many human beings were greater than they had been
against the firebeetles.
The man
frowned at Elric's statement, puzzled for a moment. Then his brow cleared.
"We did not hunt the firebeetles. We saw what was happening and realised
that you did not know enough to get out of the creatures' way. We came as
quickly as we could. I am Manag Iss of the Yellow Sect, kinsman to Councillor
Iss. I am of the Sorcerer Adventurers."
Elric
had heard of these sects, who had been the chief warrior caste of Quarzhasaat
and had been largely responsible for the spells which inundated the Empire with
sand. Had Lord Gho, not trusting him completely, set them to following him? Or
were they assassins instructed to kill him?
"I
thank you, nonetheless, Manag Iss, for your intervention. I owe you my life. I
am honoured to meet one of your sect. I am Elric of Nadsokor in the Young
Kingdoms."
"Aye,
we know of you. We were trailing you, waiting until we were far enough from the
city to speak to you safely."
"Safely?
You're in no danger from me, Master Sorcerer Adventurer."
Manag
Iss was evidently not a man who smiled often and when he smiled now it was a
strange contortion of the face. Behind them, other members of the sect were
beginning to ride back, rehousing their long spears in the scabbards attached
to their saddles. "I did not think we were, Master Elric. We come to you
in peace and we are your friends, if you will have us. My kinswoman sends her
greetings. She is the wife of Councillor Iss. Iss remains, however, our family
name. We all tend to marry the same blood, our clan."
"I
am glad to make your acquaintance." Elric waited for the man to speak
further.
Manag
Iss waved a long, brown hand whose nails had been removed and replaced with the
same tattoos as those on his mouth. "Would you dismount and talk, for we
come with messages and the offer of gifts."
Elric
slipped Stormbringer back into the scabbard and swung his leg over his saddle,
sliding to the dust of the Red Road. He watched as the beetles lurched slowly
away, perhaps in search of more man-rats, their smoking backs reminding him of
the fires of the leper camps on the outskirts of Jadmar.
"My
kinswoman wishes you to know that she, as well as the Yellow Sect, is at your
service, Master Elric. We are prepared to give you whatever aid you require in
seeking out the Pearl at the Heart of the World."
Now
Elric felt a certain amusement. "I fear you have me at a disadvantage, Sir
Manag Iss. Do you journey in quest of treasure?"
Manag
Iss let an expression of mild impatience cross his strange face. "It is
known that your patron Lord Gho Fhaazi has promised the Pearl at the Heart of
the World to the Nameless Seventh and she, hi turn, has promised him the new
place on the Council in return. We have discovered enough to know that only an
exceptional thief could have been commissioned to this task. And Nadsokor is
famous for her exceptional thieves. It is a task which, I am sure you know, all
Sorcerer Adventurers have failed hi completing. For centuries members of every
sect have tried to find the Pearl at the Heart of the World, whenever the Blood
Moon rises. Those few who ever survived to return to Quarzhasaat were raving
mad and died soon after. Only recently have we received some little knowledge
and evidence that the Pearl does actually exist. We know, therefore, that you
are a dreamthief, though you disguise your profession by not carrying your
hooked staff, for we now know that only a dreamthief of the greatest skill
could reach the Pearl and bring it back."
"You
tell me more than I knew, Manag Iss," said Elric seriously. "And it
is true that I am commissioned by Lord Gho Fhaazi. But know you this also-I go
upon this journey reluctantly." And Elric trusted his instincts enough to
reveal to Manag Iss the hold that Lord Gho had over him.
Manag
Iss plainly believed him. His tattooed fingertips brushed lightly over the
tattoos of his lips as he considered this information. "That elixir is
well-known to the Sorcerer Adventurers. We have distilled it for millennia. It
is true that it feeds the very substance of the user back to him. The antidote
is much harder to prepare. I am surprised that Lord Gho claims to possess it.
Only certain sects of the Sorcerer Adventurers own small quantities. If you
would return with us to Quarzhasaat we shall, I know, be able to administer the
antidote to you within a day at the most."
Elric
considered this carefully. Manag Iss was employed by one of Lord Gho's rivals.
This made him suspicious of any offer, no matter how generous it seemed.
Councillor Iss, or the Lady Iss, or whoever it was desired to place their own
candidate upon the Council, would no doubt be prepared to stop at nothing to
achieve that end. For all Elric knew, Manag Iss's offer might merely be a means
of lulling him out of his wariness so that he might be the more easily
murdered.
"You'll
forgive me if I am blunt," said the albino, "but I have no means of
trusting you, Manag Iss. I know already that Quarzhasaat is a city whose chief
sport is intrigue and I have no wish to be involved in that game of plots and
counterplots which your fellow citizens seem to enjoy so thoroughly. If the
antidote to the elixir exists, as you say, I would be better disposed to
consider your claims if, for instance, you were to meet me at the Silver Flower
Oasis in, say, six days from today. I have enough elixir to last me three
weeks, which is the time of the Blood Moon plus the time of my journey from and
to your city. This will convince me of your altruism."
"I
shall also be frank," said Manag Iss, his voice cool. "I am
commissioned and bound by my blood oath, my sect contract and my honour as a
member of our holy guild. That commission is to convince you, by any means,
either to relinquish your quest or to sell the Pearl. If you will not
relinquish the quest, then I will agree to purchase the Pearl from you at any
price save, of course, a position on our Council. Therefore, I will match Lord
Gho's offer and add to it anything else you desire."
Elric
spoke with some regret. "You cannot match his offer, Manag Iss. There is
the matter of the boy whom he will kill."
"The
boy is of little importance, surely."
"Not,
doubtless, in the great scheme of things as they are played out in
Quarzhasaat." Elric grew weary.
Realising
he had made a tactical mistake, Manag Iss said hastily: "We'll rescue the
boy. Tell us how to find him." \
"I
think I'll keep to my original bargain," said Elric. "There seems
little to choose between the offers." "What if Lord Gho was
assassinated?" Elric shrugged and made to remount. "I'm grateful for
your intervention, Manag Iss. I'll consider your offer as I ride. You'll
appreciate I have little time to find the Fortress of the Pearl."
"Master
Thief, I would warn you-" At this Manag Iss broke off. He looked behind
him, along the Red Road. There was a faint cloud of dust to be seen. Out of it
emerged dim shapes, their robes pale green and Sowing behind them as they rode.
Manag Iss cursed. But he was smiling his peculiar smile as the leaders galloped
up.
It was
clear to Elric, from their garb, that these men were also members of the
Sorcerer Adventurers. They, too, had tattoos, but upon the eyelids and the
wrists, and their billowing surcoats, which reached to their ankles, bore an
embroidered flower upon them while the trimming of sleeves had the same design
in miniature. The leader of these newcomers jumped from his horse and
approached Manag Iss. He was a short man, handsome and clean-shaven save for a
tiny goatee which was oiled in the fashion of Quarzhasaat and drawn to an
exaggerated point. Unlike the Yellow Sect members, he carried a sword,
unscabbarded in a simple leather harness. He made a sign which Manag Iss
imitated.
"Greetings,
Oled Alesham, and peace upon you. The Yellow Sect wishes great successes to the
Foxglove Sect and is curious as to why you travel so far along the Red
Road." All this was spoken rapidly, a formality. Manag Iss doubtless was
as aware as Elric why Oled Alesham and his men followed.
"We
ride to give protection to this thief," said the leader of the Foxglove
Sect with a nod of acknowledgement to Elric. "He is a stranger to our land
and we would offer him help, as is our ancient custom."
Elric
himself smiled openly at this. "And are you, Master Oled Alesham, related,
by any chance, to some member of the Six and One Other?"
Oled
Alesham's sense of humour was better developed than that of Manag Iss.
"Oh, we are all related to everyone in Quarzhasaat, Sir Thief. We are on
our way to the Silver Flower Oasis and thought you might require assistance
with your quest."
"He
has no quest," said Manag Iss, then instantly regretted the stupidity of
the He. "No quest, that is, save the one he shares with his friends of the
Yellow Sect."
"Since
we are bound by our guild loyalties not to fight, we are not, I hope, going to
quarrel over who is to escort our guest to the Silver Flower Oasis," said
Oled Alesham with a chuckle. He was greatly amused by the situation. "Are
we all to journey together, perhaps? And each receive a little piece of the
Pearl?"
"There
is no Pearl," said Elric, "and shall not be if I am further hindered
in my journey. I thank you, gentlemen, for your concern, and I bid you all good
afternoon."
This
caused some consternation amongst the two rival sects and they were attempting
to decide what to do when over the rubble created by the firebeetles there rode
about a dozen black-clad, heavily veiled and cowled warriors, their swords
already drawn.
Elric,
guessing these to mean him no good, withdrew so that Manag Iss and Oled Alesham
and their men were surrounding him. "More of your kind, gentlemen?"
he asked, his hand on the hilt of his own sword.
"They
are the Moth Brotherhood," said Oled Alesham, "and they are
assassins. They do nothing but kill, Sir Thief. You would best throw in with
us. Evidently someone has determined that you should be murdered before you
even see the Blood Moon rising."
"Will
you help me defend myself?" said the albino, getting ready to fight.
"We
cannot," said Manag Iss, and he sounded genuinely regretful. "We
cannot do battle with our own kind. But they will not kill us if we surround
you. You would be best advised to accept our offer, Sir Thief."
Then
the impatient rage which was a mark of his ancient blood took hold of Elric and
he drew Stormbringer without further ado. "I am tired of these little
bargains," he said. "I would ask you to stand aside from me, Manag
Iss, for I mean to do battle."
"There
are too many!" Oled Alesham was shocked. "You'll be butchered. These
are skilled killers!"
"Oh,
so am I, Master Sorcerer Adventurer. So am I!" And with that Elric drove
his horse forward, through the startled ranks of Yellow and Foxglove Sects,
directly at the leader of the Moth Brotherhood.
The
runesword began to howl in unison with its master and the white-face glowed
with the energy of the damned while the red eyes blazed and the Sorcerer
Adventurers realised for the first tune that an extraordinary creature had come
amongst them and that they had underestimated him.
Stormbringer
rose in Elric's gloved hand, its black metal catching the rays of the glaring
sun and seeming to absorb them. The black blade fell, almost as if by accident,
and split the skull of the Moth Brotherhood's leader, clove him to his
breastbone and howled as it sucked the man's soul from him in the very split
second of his dying. Elric turned in his saddle, the sword swinging to bury its
edge in the side of the assassin riding up on his left. The man shrieked.
"It has me! Ah, no!" And he, too, died.
Now the
other veiled riders were warier, circling the albino at some distance while
they determined their strategy. They had thought they would need none, that all
they must do was ride a Young Kingdom thief down and destroy him. There were
five of the black riders left. They were calling on their fellow guild members
for aid, but neither Manag Iss nor Oled Alesham was ready to give orders to
their own people which could result in the unholy death they had already witnessed.
Elric
showed no such prudence. He rode directly at the next assassin, who parried
with great cleverness and even struck under Elric's guard for a second before
his arm was severed and he fell back hi his saddle, blood gouting from the
stump. Another graceful movement, half Elric's, half his sword's, and that man,
too, had his soul drawn from him. Now the others fell back amongst the yellow
and green robes of their brothers. There was panic in their eyes. They
recognised sorcery even if this was something more powerful than they had ever
anticipated.
"Hold!
Hold!" cried Manag Iss. "There is no need for any more of us to die!
We are here to make the thief an offer. Did old Duke Ral send you here?"
"He
wants no more intrigue around the Pearl," growled one of the veiled men.
"He said clean death was the best solution. But these deaths are not clean
for us."
"Those
who commission us have set the pattern," said Oled Alesham. "Thief!
Put up your sword. We do not wish to fight you!"
"I
believe that." Elric was grim. The bloodlust was still upon him and he
fought to control it. "I believe you merely wish to slay me without a
fight. You are fools all. I have already warned Lord Gho of this. I have the
power to destroy you. It is your good fortune that I am sworn to myself not to
use my power merely to make others perform my will to my own selfish ends. But
I am not sworn to let myself die at the hands of hired slaughterers! Go back!
Go back to Quarzhasaat!"
This
last was almost screamed and the sword echoed it as he lifted the great black
blade into the sky, to warn them of what would befall them if they did not
obey.
Manag
Iss said softly to Elric: "We cannot, Sir Thief. We can only pursue our
commissions. It is the way of our guild, of all the Sorcerer Adventurers. Once
we have agreed to perform a task, then the task must be performed. Death is the
only excuse for failure."
"Then
I must kill you all," said Elric simply. "Or you must kill me."
"We
can still make the bargain I spoke of," said Manag Iss. "I was not
deceiving you, Sir Thief."
"My
offer, too, is sound," said Oled Alesham.
"But
the Moth Brotherhood is sworn to kill me," Elric pointed out, almost
amused, "and you cannot defend me against them. Nor, I would guess, can
you do anything but aid them against me."
Manag
Iss was trying to draw back from the black-robed assassins but it was clear
they were determined to retain the safety of their guild ranks.
Then
Oled Alesham murmured something to the leader of the Yellow Sect which made
Manag Iss thoughtful. He nodded and signed to the remaining members of the Moth
Brotherhood. For a few moments they were in conference, then Manag Iss looked
up and addressed Elric.
"Sir
Thief, we have found a formula which will leave you in peace and allow us to return
with honour to Quarzhasaat. If we retreat now, will you promise not to follow
us?"
"If
I have your word you'll not let those Moths attack me again." Elric was
calmer now. He laid the crooning runeblade across his arm.
"Put
away your swords, brothers!" cried Oled Alesham, and the Moths obeyed at
once.
Next
Elric sheathed Stormbringer. The unholy energy which he had drawn from those
who sought to slay him was filling him now and he felt all the old heightened
sensibility of his race, all the arrogance and all the power of his ancient
blood. He laughed at his enemies. "Know you not whom you would kill,
gentlemen?"
Oled
Alesham scowled a little. "I am beginning to guess a little of your
origins, Sir Thief. Tis said that the lords of the Bright Empire carried such
blades as yours once, in a time before this time. In a time before history.
'Tis said those blades are living things, a race allied to your own. You have
the look of our long-lost enemies. Does this mean that Melniboné did not
drown?"
"I'll
leave that for you to think on, Master Oled Alesham." Elric suspected that
they plotted some trick but was almost careless. "If your people spent
less time maintaining their own devalued myths about themselves and more upon
studying the world as it is, I think your city would have a greater chance of
surviving. As it is, the place is crumbling beneath the weight of its own
degraded fictions. The legends which offer a race their sense of pride and
history eventually become putrid. If Melniboné drowns, Master Sorcerer
Adventurer, it will be as Quarzhasaat drowns now..."
"We
are unconcerned with matters of philosophy," Manag Iss said with evident
poor temper. "We do not question the motives or the y ideas of those who employ us. That is
written in our charters."
"And
must therefore be obeyed!" Elric smiled. "Thus you celebrate your
decadence and resist reality."
"Go
now," said Oled Alesham. "It is not your business to instruct us in
moral matters and not ours to listen. We have left our student days
behind."
Elric
accepted this mild rebuke and turned his tiring horse again towards the Silver
Flower Oasis. He did not look back once at the Sorcerer Adventurers but guessed
them to be deeper than ever in conversation. He began to whistle as the Red
Road stretched before him and the stolen energy of his enemies filled bun with
euphoria. His thoughts were on Cymoril and his return to Melniboné, where he
hoped to ensure his nation's survival by bringing about hi her the very changes
he had spoken of to the Sorcerer Adventurers. At this moment, his goal seemed a
little closer, his mind clearer than it had been for several months.
Night
seemed to come swiftly and with it a rapid descent hi temperature which left
the albino shivering and robbed him of some of his good humour. He drew heavier
robes from his saddle-bags and donned them as he tethered his horse and
prepared to build a fire. The elixir on which he had depended had not been
touched since his encounter with the Sorcerer Adventurers and he was beginning
to understand its nature a little better. The craving had faded, although he
was still conscious of it, and he could now hope to free himself of his
dependency without need of further bargaining with Lord Gho.
"All
I have to do," he said to himself as he ate sparingly of the food provided
him, "is to make sure that I am attacked at least once a day by members of
the Moth Brotherhood..." And with that he put away his figs and bread,
wrapped himself in the night-cloak and prepared to sleep.
His
dreams were formal and familiar. He was in Imrryr, the Dreaming City, and
Cymoril sat beside him as he lay back upon the Ruby Throne, contemplating his
court. Yet this was not the court which the emperors of Melniboné had kept for
the thousands of years of their rule. This was a court to which had come men
and women of all nations, from each of the Young Kingdoms, from Elwher and the
Unmapped East, from Phum, from Quarzhasaat even. Here information and
philosophies were exchanged, together with all manner of goods. This was a court
whose energies were not devoted to maintaining itself unchanged for eternity,
but to every kind of new idea and lively, humane discussion, which welcomed
fresh thought not as a threat to its existence but as a very necessity to its
continued well-being, whose wealth was devoted to experiment in the arts and
sciences, to supporting those who were needy, to aiding thinkers and scholars.
The Bright Empire brightness would come no longer from the glow of putrefaction
but from the light of reason and good will.
This
was Elric's dream, more coherent now than it had ever been. This was his dream
and it was why he travelled the world, why he refused the power which was his,
why he risked his life, his mind, his love and everything else he valued, for
he believed that there was no life worth living that was not risked in pursuit
of knowledge and justice. And this was why his fellow countrymen feared him.
Justice was obtained, he believed, not by administration but by experience. One
must know what it was to suffer humiliation and powerlessness, at least to some
degree, before one could entirely appreciate its effect. One must give up power
if one was to achieve true justice. This was not the logic of Empire, but it
was the logic of one who truly loved the world and desired to see an age dawn
when all people would be free to pursue their ambitions in dignity and
self-respect.
"Ah,
Elric," said Yyrkoon, crawling like a serpent from behind the Ruby Throne,
"thou art an enemy of your own race, an enemy of her gods and an enemy of
all I worship and desire. That is why you must be destroyed and why I must
possess all you own. All ..."
At
this, Elric woke up. His skin was clammy. He reached for his sword. He had
dreamed of Yyrkoon as a serpent and now he could swear he beard something
slithering over the sand not far off. The horse smelled it and grunted,
displaying increasing agitation. Elric rose, the night-cloak falling from him.
The horse's breath was steaming in the air. There was a moon overhead casting a
faintly blue light over the desert.
The
slithering came closer. Elric peered at the high banks of the road but could
make out nothing. He was sure that the firebeetles had not returned. And what
he heard next confirmed this certainty. It was-a great outpouring of foetid
breath, a rushing sound, almost a shriek, and he knew some gigantic beast was
nearby.
Elric
knew also that the beast was not of this desert, nor indeed of this world. He
could sniff the stink of something supernatural, something which had been raised
from the pits of Hell, summoned to serve his enemies, and he knew suddenly why
the Sorcerer Adventurers had called off their attack so readily, what they had
planned when they had let him go.
Cursing
his own euphoria, Elric drew Stormbringer and crept back into the darkness,
away from the horse.
The
roar came from behind him. He whirled and there it was!
It was
a huge catlike thing, save that its body resembled that of a baboon with an
arching tail and there were spines along its back. Its claws were extended and
it reared up, reaching for him as he yelled and jumped to one side, slashing at
it. The thing flickered with peculiar colours and lights, as if not quite of
the material world. He was in no doubt of its origin. Such things had been
summoned more than once by the sorcerers of Melniboné to help them against
those they sought to destroy. He searched his mind for some spell, something
which would drive it back to the regions from which it had been summoned, but
it had been too long since he had practised any kind of sorcery himself.
The
thing had got his scent now and was moving in pursuit as he ran rapidly and
erratically away from it across the desert, attempting to put as much space
between himself and the creature as possible.
The
beast screamed. It was hungry for more than Elric's flesh. Those who had
summoned it had promised it his soul at very least. It was the usual reward to
a supernatural beast of that kind. He felt its claws whistle in the air behind
him as it again attempted to seize him , and he turned, slashing at the
creature's forepaws with his sword. Stormbringer caught one of the pads and
drew something like blood. Elric felt a sickening wave of energy pour into him.
He stabbed this time and the beast shrieked, opening a red mouth in which
rainbow-coloured teeth glittered.
"By
Arioch," gasped Elric, "you're an ugly creature. Tis almost a duty to
send you back to Hell..." And Stormbringer leapt out again, slashing at
the same wounded paw. But this time the cat-thing saved itself and began to
gather itself for a spring which Elric knew he had little chance of surviving.
A supernatural beast was not as easily slain as the warriors of the Moth
Brotherhood.
It was
then he heard a yell and turning saw an apparition moving towards him in the
moonlight. It was manlike, riding on an oddly humped animal which galloped more
rapidly than any horse.
The
cat-creature paused uncertainly and turned, spitting and growling, to deal with
this distraction before finishing the albino.
Realising
that this was not a further threat but some passing traveller attempting to
come to his assistance, Elric shouted: "Best save yourself, sir. That
beast is supernatural and cannot easily be killed by familiar means!"
The
voice which replied was deep and vibrant, full of good humour. "I'm aware
of that, sir, and would be obliged if you could deal with the thing while I
draw its attention to myself." Whereupon the rider turned his odd mount
and began to ride at a reduced pace in the opposite direction. The supernatural
creature was not, however, deceived. Clearly those who had raised it had
instructed it as to its prey. It scented at the air, seeking out Elric again.
The
albino lay behind a dune, gathering his strength. He remembered a minor spell
which, given the extra energy he had drawn , already from the demon, he might
be able to employ. He began to , sing in the old, beautiful, musical language
they called High Mel-nibonean, and as he did so he took up a handful of sand
and passed it through the air with strange, graceful movements. Gradually, from
the grains of the dunes, a spiral of sand began to move upward, whistling as it
spun faster and faster in the oddly coloured moonlight.
The
cat-beast growled and rushed forward. But Erie stood between it and the whirling
spiral. Then, at the last moment, he moved aside. The spiral's voice rose still
higher. It was no more than a simple trick taught to young sorcerers by way of
encouragement, but it had the effect of blinding the cat-thing long enough for
Elric to charge and with his sword duck under the claws to plunge the blade
deep into the beast's vitals.
At once
the energy began to drain into the blade and from the blade into Elric. The
albino screamed and raved as the stuff filled him. Demon-energy was not unfamiliar
to him, but it threatened to make a demon of him, too, for it was all but
impossible to control.
"Aah!
It is too much. Too much!" He writhed in agony while the demonic
life-essence poured into him and the cat-thing roared and died.
Then it
was gone and Elric lay gasping on. the sand as the beast's corpse gradually
faded into nothingness, returning to the realm from which it had been summoned.
For a few seconds Elric wanted to follow the thing into its home regions, for
the stolen energy threatened to spill out of his body, burst its way from his
blood and his bones, but old habits fought to control this lust until at last
he once again had a rein upon himself. He began slowly to rise from the ground
only to hear the approach of hooves.
He
whirled, the sword ready, but saw it was the traveller who had earlier sought
to help him. Stormbringer felt no sentiment in the matter and stirred in his
hand, ready to take the soul of this friend as readily as it had stolen the
souls of Elric's enemies.
"No!"
The albino forced the blade back into its scabbard. He felt almost sick with
the energy leeched from the demon but he made himself take a grave bow as the
rider joined him. "I thank you for your help, stranger. I had not expected
to find a friend this close to Quarzhasaat."
The
young man regarded him with some sympathy and good will. He had startlingly
handsome features with dark, humorous eyes in his gleaming black flesh. On his
short, curly hair he wore a skull cap decorated with peacock feathers and his jacket
and breeches seemed to be of black velvet stitched with gold thread, over which
was thrown a pale-coloured hooded cloak of the pattern usually worn by desert
peoples in these parts. He rode up slowly on the loping, bovine mount which had
cloven hooves and a broad head, a massive hump above its shoulders, like that
of certain cattle Elric had seen in scrolls depicting the Southern Continent.
At the
young man's belt was a richly carved stick of some kind with a crooked handle,
about half his height, and on his other hip he wore a simple flat-hilted sword.
"I
had not expected to find an emperor of Melniboné in these parts, either!"
said the man with some amusement. "Greetings, Prince Elric. I am honoured
to make your acquaintance."
"We
have not met? How do you know my name?"
"Oh,
such tricks are nothing to one of my craft, Prince Elric. My name is Alnac Kreb
and I am making my way to the oasis they call the Silver Flower. Shall we
return to your camp and your horse? I am glad to say he is unharmed. What
powerful enemies you have, to send such a foul demon against you. Have you
given offence to the Sorcerer Adventurers of Quarzhasaat?"
"It
would seem so." Elric walked beside the newcomer as they made their way
back towards the Red Road. "I am grateful to you, Master Alnac Kreb.
Without your help, I should now be absorbed body and soul in that creature and
borne back to whatever hell gave birth to it. But I must warn you, there is
some danger that I shall be attacked again by those who sent it."
"I
think not, Prince Elric. They were doubtless confident of their success and,
what's more, wanted no further business with you, once they realised that you
were no ordinary mortal. I saw a pack of them -from three separate sects of
that unpleasant guild-riding rapidly back to Quarzhasaat not an hour since.
Curious as to what they fled from, I came this way. And so found you. I was
glad to be of some minor service."
"I,
too, am riding for the Silver Flower Oasis, though I know not what to expect
there." Elric had taken a strong liking to this young man. "I would
be glad of your company on the journey."
"Honoured,
sir. Honoured!" Smiling, Alnac Kreb dismounted from his odd beast and
tethered it close to Elric's horse, which was yet to recover from its terror,
though was now quieter.
"I
will not ask you to weary yourself further tonight, sir," Elric added,
"but I'm mightily curious to know how you guessed my name and my race. You
spoke of a trick of your craft. What would that trade be, may I ask?"
"Why,
sir," said Alnac Kreb, dusting sand from his velvet breeches. "I'd
thought you guessed. I am a dreamthief."
4
A
Funeral at the Oasis
The
Silver Flower Oasis is rather more than a simple clearing in the desert, as
you'll discover," said Alnac Kreb, dabbing delicately at his beautiful
face with a kerchief trimmed with glittering lace. "It is a great meeting
place for all the nomad nations, and much wealth comes to it to be traded. It
is frequented by kings and princes. Marriages are arranged and often take place
there, as do other ceremonies. Great political decisions are made. Alliances
are maintained and fresh ones struck. News is exchanged. Every manner of thing
is bartered. Not everything is conventional, not every desire is material. It
is a vital place, unlike Quarzhasaat, which the nomads visit reluctantly only
when necessity-or greed-demands."
"Why
have we seen none of these nomads, friend Alnac?" Elric
"They
avoid Quarzhasaat. For them the place and its people are the equivalent of
Hell. Some even believe that the souls of the damned are sent to Quarzhasaat.
The city represents everything they fear and everything that is at odds with
what they most value."
"I'd
be inclined to see eye to eye with those nomads." Elric allowed himself a
smile. Still free of the elixir, his body was again craving it. The energy his
sword had given him would normally have sustained him for a considerably longer
time. This was further proof that the elixir, as explained by Manag Iss, fed
off his very life-force to give him temporary physical strength. He was
beginning to suspect that he was feeding the elixir as well as his own
vitality. The distillation had come almost to represent a sentient creature,
like the sword. Yet the Black Sword had never given him the same sense of being
invaded. He kept his mind free of such thoughts as much as he could. "I
feel a certain kinship with them already," he added.
"Your
hope, Prince Elric, is that they find you acceptable!" And Alnac laughed.
"Though an ancient enemy of the Lords of Quarzhasaat must have certain
credentials. I have acquaintances amongst some of the clans. You must let me
introduce you, when the time comes."
"Willingly,"
said Elric, "though you have yet to explain how you came to know me."
Alnac
nodded as if he had forgotten the matter. "It is not complicated and yet
it is remarkably complex, if you do not understand the fundamental workings of
the multiverse. As I told you, I'm a dreamthief. I know more than most because
I am familiar with so many dreams. Let's merely say that I heard of you in a
dream and that it is sometimes my destiny to be your companion-though not for
long, I'd guess, in my present guise."
"In
a dream? You have yet to tell me what a dreamthief does."
"Why,
steal dreams, of course. Twice a year we take our booty to a certain market to
trade, just as the nomads trade."
"You
trade in dreams?" Elric was disbelieving.
Alnac
enjoyed his astonishment. "There are dealers at the market who'll pay well
for certain dreams. In turn they sell them to those unfortunates who either
cannot dream or have such banal dreams they desire something better."
Elric
shook his head. "You speak in parables, surely?"
"No,
Prince Elric, I speak the exact truth." He dragged the oddly hooked staff
from his belt. It reminded Elric of a shepherd's crook, though it was shorter.
"One does not acquire this without having studied the basic skills of the
dreamthief's craft. I am not the best in my trade, nor am I likely ever to be,
but in this realm, in this time, this is my destiny. There are few hi this
realm, for reasons you shall no doubt learn, and only the nomads and the folk
of Elwher recognise our craft. We are not known, save to a few wise people, in
the Young Kingdoms."
"Why
do you not venture there?"
"We
are not asked to do so. Have you ever heard of anyone seeking the services of a
dreamthief in the Young Kingdoms?"
"Never.
But why should that be?"
"Perhaps
because Chaos has so much influence in the West and South. There, the most
terrible nightmares can readily become reality."
"You
fear Chaos?"
"What
rational being does not? I fear the dreams of those who serve her." Alnac
Kreb looked away towards the desert. "Elwher and what you call the
Unmapped East have La the main less complicated inhabitants. Melniboné's influence
was never so strong. Nor was it, of course, in the Sighing Desert."
"So
it is my folk whom you fear?"
"I
fear any race which gives itself over to Chaos; which makes pacts with the most
powerful of supernatural; with the very Dukes of Chaos; with the Sword Rulers
themselves! I do not regard such dealings as wholesome or sane. I am opposed to
Chaos."
"You
serve Law?"
"I
serve myself. I serve, I suppose, the Balance. I believe that one can live and
let live and celebrate the world's variety."
"Such
philosophy is enviable, Master Alnac. I aspire to it myself, though I suppose
you do not believe me."
"Aye,
I believe you, Prince Elric. I am party to many dreams and you occur hi some of
them. And dreams are reality and vice versa hi other realms." The dreamthief
glanced sympathetically at the albino. "It must be hard for one who has
known millennia of power to attempt a relinquishing of such power."
"You
understand me well, Sir Dreamthief."
"Oh,
my understanding is only ever of the broadest kind hi such matters." Alnac
Kreb shrugged and made a self-deprecating gesture.
"I
have spent much tune hi seeking the meaning of justice, hi visiting lands where
it is said to exist, hi trying to discover how best it may be accomplished, how
it may be established so that all the world shall benefit. Have you heard of
Tanelorn, Alnac Kreb? There justice is said to rule. There the Grey Lords,
those who keep charge of the world's equilibrium, are said to have their
greatest influence."
"Tanelorn
exists," said the dreamthief quietly. "And it has many names. Yet in
some realms, I fear, it is no more than an idea of perfection. Such ideas are
what maintain us in hope and fuel our urge to make reality of dreams. Sometimes
we are successful."
"Justice
exists?"
"Of
course it does. But it is not an abstraction. It must be worked for. Justice is
your demon, I think, Prince Elric, more than any Lord of Chaos. You have chosen
a cruel and an unhappy road." He smiled delicately as he stared ahead of
them at the long, red trail stretching out to the horizon. "Crueller, I
think, than the Red Road to Silver Flower Oasis."
"You're
not encouraging, Master Alnac."
"You
must know yourself that there's precious little justice in the world that is
not hard fought for, hard won and hard held. It is in our mortal nature to make
such a burden the responsibility of others or, indeed, to seek out the
strongest forces and hope that by allying themselves with power they will
somehow survive better. Experience frequently proves them right, in the short
term at least. Yet poor creatures like yourself continue to try to relinquish
power while acquiring more and more responsibility. Some would say that it is
admirable to do as you do, that it builds character and strength of purpose,
that it reaches towards a higher form of sanity..."
"Aye.
And some would say it is the purest form of madness, at odds with all natural
impulses. I do not know what it is I long for, Sir Dreamthief, but I know I
hope for a world where the strong do not prey on the weak like mindless
insects, where mortal creatures may attain their greatest possible fulfillment,
where all are dignified and healthy, never victims of a few stronger than
themselves..."
"Then
you serve the wrong masters in Chaos, Prince. For the only justice recognised
by the Dukes of Hell is the justice of their own unchallenged existence. They
are like fresh-born babes in this. They are opposed to your every ideal."
Elric
grew disturbed and spoke softly when he replied. "But can one not use such
forces to defeat them-or at least challenge their power and adjust the
Balance?"
"Only
the Balance gives you the power you desire. And it is a subtle, sometimes
exceptionally delicate power."
"Not
strong enough in my world, I fear."
"Strong
only when sufficient numbers believe in it. Then it is stronger than Chaos and
Law combined." '
"Well,
I shall work for that day when the power of the Balance holds sway, Master
Alnac Kreb, but I am not sure I will live to see it."
"If
you live," said Alnac quietly, "I suspect it will not come. But it
will be many years before you are called upon to blow Roland's horn."
"A
horn? What horn is that?" But Elric's question was casual. He believed
that the dreamthief was making another allegorical allusion.
"Look!"
Alnac pointed ahead. "See in the far distance? There is the first sign of
the Silver Flower Oasis."
To
their left the sun was going down. It cast deep shadows across the dunes and
the high banks of the Red Road while the sky was darkening to a deep amber on
the horizon. Yet almost at the limit of his vision Elric made out another
shape, something that was neither a shadow nor a sand-dune but which might have
been a group of rocks.
"What
is it? What do you recognise?"
"The
nomads call it kashbeh. In our common tongue we would say it was a castle,
perhaps, or a fortified village. We have no exact word for such a place, for we
have no need of them. Here, in the desert, it is a necessity. The Kashbeh
Moulor Ka Riiz was built long before the extinction of the Quarzhasaatin Empire
and is named for a wise king, founder of the Aloum'rit dynasty which still
holds the place hi charge for the nomad clans and is respected above all other
peoples of the desert. It is a kashbeh sheltering anyone in need. Anyone who is
a fugitive may seek shelter there and be assured of a fair trial."
"So
justice exists in this desert, if nowhere else?"
"Such
places exist, as I said, throughout the realms of the multiverse. They are
maintained by men and women of the purest and most humane principles..."
"Then
is this kashbeh not Tanelorn, whose legend brought me to the Sighing
Desert?"
"It
is not Tanelorn, for Tanelorn is eternal. The Kashbeh Moulour Ka Riiz must be
maintained through constant vigilance. It is the antithesis of Quarzhasaat, and
that city's lords have made many attempts to destroy it."
Elric
felt the pangs of craving and he resisted reaching for one of his silver
flasks. "Is that also called the Fortress of the Pearl?"
At
this, Alnac Kreb laughed suddenly. "Oh, my good prince, clearly you have
only the haziest notion of the place and the thing you seek. Let me now say
that the Fortress of the Pearl may well exist within that kashbeh and that the
kashbeh could also have an existence within the Fortress. But they are in no
way the same!"
"Please,
Master Alnac, do not confuse me further! I pretended to know something of this,
first because I wished to extend my own life and then because I needed to
purchase the life of another. I would be grateful for some illumination. Lord
Gho Fhaazi thought me a dreamthief, after all, which supposes that a dreamthief
would know of the Blood Moon, the Bronze Tent and the location of the Place of
the Pearl."
"Aye,
well. Some dreamthieves are better informed than others. And if a dreamthief is
required for this task, Prince, if, as you've told me, Quarzhasaat's Sorcerer
Adventurers cannot achieve it, then I would guess the Fortress of the Pearl is
more than mere stones and mortar. It has to do with realms familiar only to a
trained dreamthief-but one probably more sophisticated than myself."
"Know
you, Master Alnac, that I have already travelled to strange realms in pursuit
of my various goals. I am not completely unsophisticated in such
matters..."
"These
realms are denied to most." Alnac seemed reluctant to say more but Elric
pressed him.
"Where
lie these realms?" He stared ahead, straining his eyes to { see more of
the Kashbeh Moulor Ka Riiz but failing, for the sun was now almost below the
horizon. "In the East? Beyond Elwher? Or in another part of the multiverse
altogether?"
Alnac
Kreb was regretful. "We are sworn to speak as little as we can of our
knowledge, save in the most crucial and specific of circumstances. But I should
inform you that those realms are at once closer and more distant than Elwher. I
promise you that I will not mystify you any more than I have done so already.
And if I can illuminate you and help you in your quest, that I will do
also." He made to laugh, to lighten his own mood. "Best ready
yourself for company, Prince. We shall have a great deal of it by nightfall, if
I'm not mistaken."
The
moon had risen before the last rays of the sun had vanished and its silver bore
a pinkish sheen, like that of a rare pearl itself, as they reached a rise in
the Red Road and looked down now upon a thousand fires. Silhouetted against
them were as many tall tents, settled on the sand so as to resemble gigantic
winged insects stretched out to catch the last warmth from above. Within these
tents burned lamps while men, women and children wandered in and out. A
delicious smell of mingled herbs, spices, vegetables and meats drifted up
towards them and the soft smoke of the fires rose and curled into the sky above
the great rocks on which perched the Kashbeh Moulor Ka Riiz, a massive tower
about which had grown a collection of buildings, some of wonderfully
imaginative architecture, the whole surrounded by a crenellated wall of
irregular but equally monumental proportions, all of the same red rock so that
it seemed to grow out of the very earth and sand that surrounded it.
At
intervals around those battlements great torches blazed, revealing men who were
evidently guards patrolling the walls and roofs, while through tall gates a
steady stream of traffic came and went across a bridge carved from the living
rock.
This
was, as Alnac Kreb had warned him, not the simple resting place of primitive
caravans Elric had expected to find on the Red Road.
They
were not challenged as they descended towards the wide sheet of water around
which blossomed a rich variety of palms, cypresses, poplars, fig trees and
cacti, but many looked at them with open curiosity. And not all the curious
eyes were friendly.
Their
horses were of a similar build to Elric's own, while others of the nomads rode
the bovine creatures favoured by Alnac. The sounds of bellowing, grunting and
spitting rose from every quarter and Elric could see that beyond the field of
tents lay corrals in which riding beasts as well as sheep, goats and other
creatures were penned.
But the
sight which dominated this extraordinary scene was that of some hundred or more
torches blazing hi a semi-circle at the water's edge.
Each
torch was held by a cloaked and cowled figure and each burned with a bright,
white steady flame which cast the same strong light upon a dais of carved wood
at the very centre of the gathering.
Elric
and his companion reined in their mounts to watch, as fascinated by this vision
as the scores of other nomads who walked slowly to the edge of the semi-circle
to witness what was clearly a ceremony of some magnitude. The witnesses stood
hi attitudes of respect, their various robes and costumes identifying their
clan. The nomads were of a variety of colours, some as black as Alnac Kreb,
some almost as white-skinned as Elric, with every shade in between, yet in
features they were similar, with strong-boned faces and deep-set eyes. Both men
and women were tall and bore themselves with considerable grace. Elric had
never seen so many handsome people and he was as impressed by their natural
dignity as he had been disgusted by the extremes of arrogance and degredation
he had witnessed in Quarzhasaat.
Now a
procession approached down the hill and Elric saw that six men bore a large,
domed chest on then shoulders, proceeding with grave slowness until they came
to the dais.
The
white light showed every detail of the scene. The men were drawn from different
clans, though all of the same height and all of middle age. A single drum began
to sound, its beat sharp and clear in the night air. Then another joined it,
then another, until at least twenty drums were echoing across the waters of the
oasis and the rooftops of Kashbeh Moulor Ka Riiz, their voices at once slow and
obeying complicated rhythmic patterns whose subtlety Elric gradually came to
marvel at.
"Is
it a funeral?" the albino asked his new friend.
Alnac
nodded. "But I know not who they bury." He pointed to a series of
symmetrical mounds in the distance beyond the trees. "Those are the nomad
burial grounds."
Now
another, older man, his beard and brows grey beneath his cowl, stepped forward
and began to read from a scroll he produced from his sleeve, while two others
opened the lid of the elaborate coffin and, to Elric's astonishment, spat into
it.
Now
Alnac gasped. He stood on his toes and peered, for the brands clearly
illuminated the coffin's contents. He turned, still more mystified, to Elric.
" Tis empty, Prince Elric. Or else the corpse is invisible."
The
rhythm of the drums increased in tempo and complexity. Voices began to chant,
rising and falling like waves in an ocean. Elric had never heard such music
before. He found that it was moving him to obscure emotions. He felt rage. He
felt sorrow. He found that he was close to weeping. And still the music
continued, growing in intensity. He longed to join in, but could understand
nothing of the language they used. It seemed to him that the words were older
by far than the speech of Melniboné, which was the oldest in the Young
Kingdoms.
And
then, suddenly, the singing and the drumming ended.
The six
men took the coffin from the dais and began to march away with it, towards the
mounds, and the men with the torches followed, the light casting strange
shadows amongst the trees, illuminating sudden patches of shining whiteness
which Elric could not identify.
As
suddenly as it had stopped, the drumming and the chanting began again, but this
time it had a celebratory, triumphant note to it. Slowly the crowd lifted its
heads and from several hundred throats came a high-pitched ululation, clearly a
traditional response.
Then
the nomads began to drift back towards their tents. Alnac stopped one, a woman
wearing richly decorated green and gold robes, and pointed to the disappearing
procession. "What is this funeral, sister? I saw no corpse."
"The
corpse is not here," she said, and she was smiling at his confusion.
"It is a ceremony of revenge, taken by all our clans at the instigation of
Raik Na Seem. The corpse is not present because its owner will not know he is
dead, perhaps for several months. We bury him now because we cannot reach him.
He is not one of us, not of the desert. He is dead, however, but merely unaware
of that fact. There is no mistake, though. We lack only the physical
body."
"He
is an enemy of your people, sister?"
"Aye,
indeed. He is an enemy. He sent men to steal our greatest treasure. They
failed, but they have done us profound harm in their failing. I know you, do I
not? You are the one Raik Na Seem hoped would return. He sent for a
dreamthief." And she looked back to the dais, where, beneath the light of
a single torch, a huge figure stood, bowed as if in prayer. "You are our
friend, Alnac Kreb, who aided us once before."
"I
have been privileged to do your people a trifling service in the past,
aye." Alnac Kreb acknowledged her recognition with his habitual grace.
"Raik
Na Seem waits upon you," she said. "Go in peace, and peace be with
your family and friends."
Puzzled,
Alnac Kreb turned to Elric. "I know not why Raik Na Seem should have sent
for me but I feel obliged to find out. Will you stay here or accompany me,
Prince Elric?"
"I
am growing curious about this whole affair," said Elric, "and would
know more, if that's possible."
They
made their way through the trees until they stood on the banks of the great
oasis, waiting respectfully while the old man remained in the position he had
assumed since the coffin had been carried off. Eventually he turned and it was
clear that he had been weeping. When he saw them he straightened up and, as he
recognised Alnac Kreb, he smiled, making a gesture of welcome. "My dear
friend!"
"Peace
be upon you, Raik Na Seem." Alnac stepped forward and embraced the old
man, who was at least a head and shoulders taller than himself. "I bring
with me a friend. His name is Elric of Melniboné, of that same people who were
the great enemies of the Quarzhasaatim."
"The
name has substance in my heart," said Raik Na Seem. "Peace be upon
you, Elric of Melniboné. You are welcome here."
"Raik
Na Seem is First Elder to the Bauradim Clan," Alnac said, "and a father
to me."
"I
am blessed by a good, brave son." Raik Na Seem gestured back towards the
tents. "Come. Take refreshment in my tent."
"Willingly,"
said Alnac. "I would learn why you are burying an empty casket and who
your enemy is that he should merit such elaborate ceremony."
"Oh,
he is the worst of villains, make no mistake of that." A deep sigh escaped
the old man as he led them through the throngs of tents until he reached a
massive pavilion into which he led them, their feet treading on richly patterned
carpets. The pavilion was actually a series of compartments, one leading into
another, each occupied by members of Raik Na Seem's family, which seemed vast
enough to be almost a tribe in itself. The smell of delicious food came through
to them as they were seated on cushions and offered bowls of scented water with
which to wash themselves.
Eventually,
as they ate, the old man told his story and, while it unfolded, Elric came to
realise that Fate had brought him to the Silver Flower Oasis at an auspicious
time, for he slowly recognised the significance of what was being said. At the
tune of the most recent Blood Moon, said Raik Na Seem, a group of men had come
to the Silver Flower Oasis asking after the road to the Place of the Pearl. The
Bauradim had recognised the name, for it was in their literature, but they
understood the references to be poetic metaphor, something for scholars and
other poets to discuss and interpret. They had told the newcomers this and
hoped that they would leave, for they were Quarzhasaatim, members of the
Sparrow Sect of Sorcerer Adventurers and as such notorious for their murky
wizardry and cruelty. The Bauradim wanted no quarrel, however, with any
Quarzhasaatim, with whom they traded. The men of the Sparrow Sect did not leave,
however, but continued to ask anyone they could about the Place of the Pearl,
which was how they came to learn of Raik Na Seem's daughter.
"Varadia?"
Alnac Kreb knew alarm. "They surely did not think she knew anything of
this jewel?"
"They
heard that she was our Holy Girl, the one we believe will grow to be our
spiritual leader and bring wisdom and honour to our clan. Because we say that
our Holy Girl is the receptacle of all our knowledge, they believed she must
know where this Pearl was to be found. They attempted to steal her."
Alnac
Kreb growled with sudden anger. "What did they do, Father?"
"They
drugged her, then made to ride away with her. We learned of their crime and
followed them. We caught them before they had completed half the length of the
Red Road back to Quarzhasaat and in their terror they threatened us with the
power of their master, the man who had commissioned them to seek out the Pearl
and use any means to bring it back to him."
"Was
his name Lord Gho Fhaazi?" asked Elric softly.
"Aye,
Prince, it was." Raik Na Seem looked at him with new curiosity. "Do
you know him?"
"I
know him. And I know him for what he is. Is that the man you buried?"
"It
is."
"When
do you plan his death?"
"We
do not plan it. We have been promised it. The Sorcerer Adventurers attempted to
use their arts against us, but we have such people of our own and they were
easily countered. It is not something we like to use, that power, but sometimes
it is necessary. A certain creature was summoned from the netherworld. It
devoured the men of the Sparrow Sect and before it left it granted us a
prophecy, that their master would die within the year, before the next Blood
Moon had faded."
"But
Varadia?" said Alnac Kreb urgently. "What became of your daughter,
your Holy Girl?"
"She
had been drugged, as I said, but she lived. We brought her back."
"And
she recovered?"
"She
half-wakes, perhaps once a month," said Raik Na Seem, controlling his
sadness. "But the sleep will not lift from her. Shortly after we found her
she opened her eyes and told us to take her to the Bronze Tent. There she
sleeps, as she has slept for almost a year, and we know that only a dreamthief
may save her. That was why I have sent word by every traveller and caravan we
have encountered, asking for a dreamthief. We are fortunate, Alnac Kreb, that a
friend heard our prayer."
The
dreamthief shook his handsome head. "It was not your message which brought
me hither, Raik Na Seem."
"Still,"
said the old man philosophically, "you are here. You can help us."
Alnac
Kreb seemed disturbed, but disguised his emotions quickly. "I will do my
best, that I swear. In the morning we shall visit the Bronze Tent."
"It
is well-guarded now, for more Quarzhasaatim have come since those first evil
ones, and we have been forced to defend our Holy Girl against them. That has
been a simple enough matter. But you spoke of the enemy we have buried, Prince
Elric. What do you know of him?"
Elric
paused for only a few seconds before he spoke. He told Raik Na Seem everything
which had happened: how he had been tricked by Lord Gho, what he had been told
to find, the hold which Lord Gho had over bun. He refused to lie to the old
man, and the respect he showed Raik Na Seem was apparently reciprocated, for
though the First Elder's face darkened with anger at the tale, he reached out
with a firm hand when it was finished and gripped Elric's arm in a gesture of
sympathy.
"The
irony is, my friend, that the Place of the Pearl exists only in our poetry and
we have never heard of the Fortress of the Pearl."
"You
must know that I would do your Holy Girl no further harm," said Elric,
"and that if I can help you and yours in any way, that is what I shall do.
My quest is ended here and now."
"But
Lord Gho's potion will kill you unless you can find the antidote. Then he'll
kill your friend, too. No, no. Let us look more positively at these problems,
Prince Elric. We have them in common, I think, for we are all victims of that
soon-dead lord. We must consider how to defeat his schemes. It is possible that
my daughter does indeed know something about this fabulous Pearl, for she is
the vessel of all our wisdom and has already learned more than ever my poor
head could hold..."
"Her
knowledge and her intelligence are as breathtaking as her beauty and her
amiability," said Alnac Kreb, still fuming at the of what the
Quarzhasaatim had done to Varadia. "If you had known her, Elric..."
He broke off, his voice shaking.
"We
are all in need of rest, I think," said the First Elder of the Bauradim.
"You shall be our guests and in the morning I shall take you to the Bronze
Tent, there to look upon my sleeping daughter and hope, perhaps with the sum of
all our wisdom, to find a means of bringing her waking mind back to this
realm."
That
night, sleeping in the luxury only a wealthy nomad's tent could provide, Elric
dreamed again of Cymoril, trapped in a drug slumber by his cousin Yyrkoon, and
it seemed that he slept beside her, that they were one and the same, as he had
always felt when they lay together. But now he saw the dignified figure of Raik
Na Seem standing over him and he knew that this was his father, not the
neurotic tyrant, the distant figure of his childhood, and he understood why he
was obsessed with questions of morality and justice, for it was this Bauradi
who was his true ancestor. He knew a kind of peace then, as well as some kind
of new, disturbing emotion, and when he awoke in the morning he was reconciled
to the fact that he was craving the elixir which at once brought him life and
death, and he reached for his flask and took a small sip before rising, washing
himself and joining Alnac and Raik Na Seem at the morning meal.
When
this was done, the old man called for the fleet, sturdy mounts for which the
Bauradim were famous, and the three of them rode away from the Silver Flower
Oasis, which bustled with every kind of activity, where comedians, jugglers and
snake-charmers were already performing their skills and storytellers had
gathered groups of children whose parents had sent them there while they went
about their business, and they rode towards the Ragged Pillars, seen faintly on
the morning horizon. These mountains had been eroded by the winds of the
Sighing Desert until they did, indeed, resemble huge columns of ragged red
stone, as if they should have supported the roof of the sky itself. Elric had
thought at first he observed the ruins of some ancient city. But Alnac Kreb had
told him the truth.
"There
are, indeed, many ruins in these parts. Farms, small villages, whole towns,
which the desert sometimes reveals, all engulfed by the sands summoned by the
foolish wizards of Quarzhasaat. Many built here, even after the sands came, in
the belief that they would disperse after a while. Forlorn dreams, I fear, like
so many of the things built by men."
Raik Na
Seem continued to lead them across the desert, though he used no map or
compass. Apparently he knew the way by habit and instinct alone.
They
stopped once at a spot where a tiny growth of cacti had been all but covered by
the sand and here Raik Na Seem took his long knife and sliced the plants close
to their roots, peeling them swiftly and handing the juicy parts to his
friends. "There was once a river here," he said, "and a memory
of it remains, far below the surface. The cactus remembers."
The sun
had reached zenith. Elric began to feel the heat sapping him and was forced
again to drink a little of the elixir, merely in order to keep pace with the
other two. And it was not until evening, when the Ragged Pillars were
considerably closer, that Raik pointed to something which flashed and glittered
hi the last rays of the sun. "There is the Bronze Tent, where the peoples
of the desert go when they must meditate."
"It
is your temple?" said Elric.
"It
is the nearest thing we have to a temple. And there we debate with our inner
selves. It is also the nearest thing we have to the religions of the West. And
it is there we keep our Holy Girl, the symbol of all our ideals, the vessel of
our race's wisdom."
Alnac
was surprised. "You keep her there always?"
Raik Na
Seem shook his head, almost amused. "Only while she sleeps in this
unnatural slumber, my friend. As you know, before this she was a normal little
child, a joy to all who met her. Perhaps with your help she will be that child
again."
Alnac's
brow clouded. "You must not expect too much of me, Raik Na Seem. I am an
inexpert dreamthief at best. There are those with whom I learned my craft who
would tell you so."
"But
you are our dreamthief." Raik Na Seem smiled sadly and put ' his hand on Alnac
Kreb's shoulder. "And our good friend."
The sun
had set by the time they approached the great tent which resembled those Elric
had seen at the Silver Flower Oasis but was several times the size, its walls
of pure bronze.
Now the
moon made its appearance hi the sky almost directly overhead. It seemed that
the sun's rays reached for it even as they began to sink beneath the horizon,
touching it with their colour, for it glowed with a richness Elric had never
seen in Melniboné or the lands of the Young Kingdoms. He gasped in surprise,
realising the specific nature of the prophecy.
A Blood
Moon had risen over the Bronze Tent. Here he would find the path to the
Fortress of the Pearl.
Though
it meant that his own life might now be saved, the Prince of Melniboné
discovered that he was only disturbed by this revelation.
5
The
Dreamthief's Pledge
"Here
is our treasure," said Raik Na Seem. "Here is what greedy Quarzhasaat
would steal from us." And there was sorrow as well as anger in his voice.
At the very
centre of the Bronze Tent's cool interior, in which tiny lamps burned over
hundreds of heaped cushions and carpets occupied by men and women in attitudes
of deep contemplation, was a raised level and on this a bed carved with
intricate designs of exquisite delicacy, set with mother-of-pearl and pale
turquoise, with milky jade and silver filigree and blond gold. Upon this, her
little hands folded on her chest, which rose and fell with profound regularity,
lay a young girl of about thirteen years. She had the strong beauty of her
people, and her hair was the colour of honey against her tawny skin. She might
have been sleeping as naturally as any child of her age save for the single
startling fact that her eyes, blue as the wonderful Vilmirian Sea, stared upward
towards the roof of the Bronze Tent and were unblinking.
"My
people believed that Quarzhasaat destroyed herself forever," said Elric.
"Would that they had, or that Mehiibone had shown less arrogance and
completed what their wizards began!" He rarely betrayed such ferocious
emotion towards those his race had defeated but now he knew only loathing for
Lord Gho, whose men, he was sure, had done this terrible thing. He recognised
the nature of the sorcery, for it was not unlike that he had learned himself,
though his cousin Yyrkoon had shown more interest in those specific arts and
cared to practise them where Elric did not.
"But
who can save her now?" said Raik Na Seem softly, perhaps a little
embarrassed by Elric's outburst in this place of meditation.
The
albino recovered himself and made a gesture of apology. "Are there no
potions which will rouse her from this slumber?" he asked.
Raik Na
Seem shook his head. "We have consulted everyone and everything. The spell
was cast by the leader of the Sparrow Sect and he was killed when we took our
premature revenge."
In
deference to those who sat within the Bronze Tent, Raik Na Seem now led them
out into the desert again. Here guards stood, their lamps and torches casting
great shadows across the sand, while the rays of the ruby moon drenched
everything with crimson, so it was almost as if they drowned in a tide of
blood. Elric was reminded how, as a youth, he had peered into the depths of his
Actorios, imagining the gem as a gateway into other lands, each facet
representing a different realm, for by then he already read much of the
multiverse and how it was thought to be constituted.
"Steal
the dream which entraps her," Raik Na Seem was saying, "and you know
that all we have will be yours, Alnac Kreb."
The
handsome black man shook his head. "To save her would be all the reward I
wanted, Father. Yet I fear I have not the skills... Has no other tried?"
"We
have been deceived more than once. Sorcerer Adventurers from Quarzhasaat,
either believing themselves possessed of your knowledge or thinking they could
accomplish what only a dreamthief can accomplish, have come to us, pretending
to be members of your craft. We have seen them all go mad before our eyes.
Several died. Some we let run back to Quarzhasaat in the hope they would be a
warning to others not to waste their lives and our time."
"You
sound very patient, Raik Na Seem," said Elric, remembering what he had
already heard and clearer now as to why Lord Gho so desperately sought a
dreamthief for this work. The news brought back to Quarzhasaat by the maddened
Sorcerer Adventurers had been garbled. What little Lord Gho had made of it, he
had passed on to Elric. But now the albino saw that it was the child herself
who possessed the secret of the path to the Pearl at the Heart of the World.
Doubtless, as the recipient of all her people's wisdom, she had learned of its
location. Perhaps it was a secret she must keep to herself. Whatever the
reason, it was obvious that the girl, Varadia, must wake from her sorcerous
sleep before any further progress could be made. And Elric knew that even if
she did wake it was not in his nature to question her, to beg for a secret
which was not his to know. His only hope would be if she offered the knowledge
freely to him but he knew that no matter what occurred he would never be able
to ask.
Raik Na
Seem seemed to understand a little of the albino's dilemma. "My son, you
are a friend of my son," he said in the formal manner of his people.
"We know that you are not our enemy and that you did not come here
willingly to steal what was ours. We know, too, that you had no intention of
taking from us any treasure to which we are guardian. Know this, Elric of
Melniboné, that if Alnac Kreb can save our Holy Girl, we shall do all we can to
put you on the path to the Fortress of the Pearl. The only reason for hindering
you would be if Varadia, awakened, warned us against giving this aid. Then, at
least, you will be told as much."
"There
could be no fairer promise," said Elric gratefully. "Meanwhile, I
pledge myself to you, Raik Na Seem, to help guard your daughter against all
those who would harm her and to watch over her until Alnac should bring her
back to you."
Alnac
had moved a little away from the other two and was standing in deep thought on
the edge of the torchlight, his white night-cloak drenched a dark pinkish hue
by the rays of the Blood Moon. From his belt he had drawn his hooked staff and
was holding it in his two hands, looking at it and murmuring to it, much as
Elric might speak to his own runesword.
At
length the dreamthief turned back to them, his face full of great seriousness.
"I will do my best," he said. "I will call upon every resource
within myself and upon everything I have been taught, but I should warn you
that I have weaknesses of character I have not yet overcome. These are
weaknesses which I can control if called upon to exorcise an old merchant's
nightmares or a boy's love-trance. What I see here, however, might defeat the
cleverest dreamthief, the most experienced of my calling. There can be no
partial success. I succeed or I fail. I am willing, because of the
circumstances, because of our old friendship, because I loathe everything that
the Sorcerer Adventurers represent, to attempt the task."
"It
is all I would hope," said Raik Na Seem somberly. He was impressed by
Alnac's tone.
"If
you succeed you bring the child's soul back to the world where it
belongs," said Elric. "What do you lose if you fail, Master
Dreamthief?"
Alnac
shrugged. "Nothing of any great value, I suppose."
Elric,
looking hard into his new friend's face, saw that he lied. But he saw, too,
that he wished to be questioned no further in the matter.
"I
must rest," said Alnac. "And eat." He wrapped himself in the
folds of his night-cloak, his dark eyes staring back at Elric as if he wished
for all the world to share some secret which he felt in his heart should never
be shared. Then he turned away suddenly, laughing. "If Varadia should wake
as a result of my efforts and if she knows the whereabouts of your terrible
Pearl, why then, Prince Elric, I'll have done most of your work for you. I'll
expect part of your reward, you know."
"My
reward will be the slaying of Lord Gho," said Elric quietly.
"Aye,"
said Alnac, moving towards the Bronze Tent, which shifted and shimmered like
some half-materialised artefact of Chaos, "that is exactly what I hope to
share!"
The
Bronze Tent consisted of the great central chamber and then a series of smaller
chambers, where travellers could rest and revive themselves, and it was to one
of these that the three men went to lay themselves down and, still wakeful,
consider the work which must begin the next day. They did not talk, but it was
several hours before all were eventually asleep.
In the
morning, while Elric, Raik Na Seem and Alnac Kreb approached the place where
the Holy Girl still lay, those who remained in the Bronze Tent drew back
respectfully. Alnac Kreb held his dreamwand gently in his right hand, balancing
it rather than gripping it, as he stared down into the face of the child he
loved almost as his own daughter. A long sigh escaped him and Elric saw that
his sleep had not apparently refreshed him. He looked drawn and unhappy. He
turned, smiling, to the albino. "When I saw you partaking of the contents
of that silver flask earlier, I had half a mind to ask / you for a little
..."
"The
drug's poison and it's addictive," said Elric, shocked. "I thought I
had explained as much."
"You
had." Alnac Kreb again revealed by his expression that he possessed thoughts
he felt unable to share. "I had merely thought " that in the circumstances, there would be little point in
fearing its power."
"That
is because you do not know it," said Elric forcefully. "Believe me,
Alnac, if there was any way in which I could help you in this task I would do
so. But to offer you poison would not, I think, be an act of friendship
..."
Alnac
Kreb smiled a little. "Indeed. Indeed." He slid his dream-wand from
hand to hand. "But you said that you would watch over me?" ,
"I
promised that, aye. And as you asked, the moment you tell me to carry the
dreamwand from the Bronze Tent, I shall do so."
"That
is all you can do and I thank you for that," said the dreamthief.
"Now I'll begin. Farewell for the moment, Elric. I think we are fated to
meet again, but perhaps not in this existence."
And
with those mysterious words Alnac Kreb approached the sleeping girl, placing
his dreamwand over her unblinking eyes, laying his ear against her heart, his
own gaze growing distant and strange, as if he entered a trance himself. He
straightened, swaying, then took the girl in his arms and lowered her gently to
the carpets. Next he lay down beside her, putting her lifeless hand within his
own, his dream-wand in the other. His breathing grew slower and deeper and
Elric almost thought he heard a faint song coming from within the dreamthief's
throat.
Raik Na
Seem bent forward, peering into Alnac's face, but Alnac did not see bun. With
his other hand he brought up the dreamwand so that the hook passed over their
clasped hands, as if to secure them, to bind them together.
To his
surprise, Elric saw that the dreamwand was beginning to glow faintly and to
pulse a little. Alnac's breathing grew deeper still, his lips opening, his eyes
staring directly above him, just as Varadia's ; stared.
. Elric
thought he heard the child murmur and it was no illusion , that a tremor passed
between Alnac and the Holy Girl while the dreamwand pulsed in tempo with their
mutual breathing and glowed brighter.
Then
suddenly the dreamwand was curling and writhing, moving with astonishing speed
between the two, as if it had entered their very veins and was following the
blood itself. Elric had the impression of a tangle of arteries and nerves, all
touched by the strange light from the dreamwand, then Alnac gave a single cry
and his breathing was no longer the steady movement it had been. Instead it had
become shallow, almost non-existent, while the child continued to breathe with
the same slow, deep, steady rhythm.
The
dreamwand had returned to Alnac. It seemed to bum from within his body, almost
as if it had become fused with his spine and cortex. The hooked end appeared to
glow from within his brain, flooding his flesh with indescribable luminance,
displaying every bone, every organ, every vein.
The
child herself seemed unchanged until Elric looked at her more closely, seeing
almost with horror that her eyes had turned from vibrant blue to jet black.
Reluctantly he looked from Varadia's face to Alnac's and saw what he had not
wished to see: The dreamthief's own eyes now bright blue. It was as if the two
of them had exchanged souls.
The
albino, with all his experience of sorcery, had never witnessed anything like
this and he found it disturbing. Gradually he was beginning to understand the
strange nature of a dreamthief's calling, why it could be so dangerous, why
there were so few who could practise the trade and why fewer still would wish
to.
Now a
further change began to take place. The crooked staff seemed to writhe again
and begin to absorb the dreamthief's very substance, taking the blood and the
vitality of flesh and bones and brain into itself.
Raik Na
Seem groaned with terror. He stepped backward, unable to control himself.
"Ah, my son! What have I asked of thee!"
Soon all
that remained of Alnac Kreb's splendid body seemed little more than a husk,
like the discarded skin of some transmuted dragonfly. But the dreamwand lay
where Alnac had first placed it upon his own hand and Varadia's, though it
seemed larger and glowed with an impossible brilliance, its colours constantly
moving through a spectrum part natural, part supernatural.
"I
think he is giving much in his attempt to save my daughter," said Raik Na
Seem. "Perhaps more than anyone should give."
"He
would give everything," Elric said. "I think that it is in his
nature. That is why you call him your son and why you trust him."
"Aye,"
said Raik Na Seem. "But now I fear that I lose a son as well as a
daughter." And he sighed and was troubled, perhaps wondering, if, after
all, he had been wise in begging this service of Alnac Kreb.
For
more than a day and a night Elric sat with Raik Na Seem and the men and women
of the Bauradim within the shelter of the Bronze Tent, their eyes fixed upon
the strangely wizened body of Alnac the Dreamthief which occasionally stirred
and murmured yet still seemed as lifeless as the mummified goats which the
sand-dunes sometimes revealed. Once Elric thought he heard the Holy Girl make a
sound and once Raik Na Seem rose to put his hand on his daughter's brow, then
returned shaking his head.
"This
is not the time to despair, father of my friend," said Elric.
"Aye."
The First Elder of the Bauradim drew himself up, then settled down again beside
Elric. "We set high store by prophecies here in the desert. It seems that
our longing for help might have coloured our reason."
They
looked out of the tent into the morning. Smoke from the still burning brands
drifted across the lilac-coloured sky, borne upward and to the north by the
light breeze. Elric found the smell almost sickening now, but his concern for
his new friend made bun forgetful of his own health. Occasionally he drank
sparingly of Lord Gho's elixir, unable to do more than control his craving, and
when Raik Na Seem offered him water from his own flask Elric shook his head.
Within him there were still many conflicts. He felt a strong comradeship with
these people, a liking for Raik Na Seem which he valued. He had grown to care
for Alnac Kreb, who had helped save his life in an action clearly as generous
as the man's general character. Elric was grateful for the Bauradim's trust of
him. Having heard his tale,; they would have been within their rights to banish
him at very least from the Silver Flower Oasis. Rather, they had taken him to
the Bronze Tent when the Blood Moon burned, allowing him to follow Lord Gho's
instructions, trusting him not to abuse their action. He was bound to them now
by a loyalty he could never break. Perhaps they knew this. Perhaps they read
his character as easily as they read Alnac's. This sense of their trust
heartened him, though it made his task all the more difficult, and he was
determined hi no way, however inadvertently, to betray it.
Raik Na
Seem sniffed the wind and looked back towards the distant oasis. A column of
black smoke marched into the sky, growing taller and taller, mingling with the
smoke closer at hand: some released afrit joining its fellows. Elric would not
have been surprised if it had taken shape before his eyes, so familiar had he
become with strange events in past days.
"There
has been another attack," said Raik Na Seem. He spoke unconcernedly.
"Let us hope it is the last. They are burning the bodies."
"Who
attacks you?"
"More
men of the Sorcerer Adventurer societies. I suspect their decisions have
something to do with the internal politics of the city. Dozens of them are
battling for some favour or other-perhaps the seat on the Council you
mentioned. From tune to tune their machinations involve us. This is familiar to
us. But I suppose the Pearl at the Heart of the World has become the only price
which will pay for the seat, eh? So as the story spreads, more and more of
these warriors are sent here to find it!" Raik Na Seem spoke with fierce
humour. "Let us hope they must soon run out of inhabitants and eventually
only the scheming lords themselves will be left, squabbling for nonexistent
power over a non-existent people!"
Elric
watched as a whole tribe of nomads rode past, keeping some distance away from
the Bronze Tent in order to show their respect. These tanned, white-skinned
people had burning blue eyes as bright as those which stared into nothing
within the tent and, when their hoods were thrown back, startlingly blond hair,
also like Varadia's. Their clothing distinguished them, however, from the
Bauradim. It was predominantly of a rich lavender shade with gold and dark
green trimming. They were heading towards the Silver Flower Oasis, driving
herds of sheep and riding the odd humped bull-like beasts which, as Alnac had
declared, were so well adapted to the desert.
"The
Waued Nii," said Raik Na Seem. "They are amongst the last at any
gathering. They come from the very edge of the desert and they trade with
Elwher, bringing that lapis lazuli and jade carving we all value so much. In
the winter, when the storms grow too intense for them, they even raid across
the plains and into the cities. Once, they boast, they looted Phum, but we
believe it was some other, smaller place which they mistook for Phum."
This was clearly a joke the desert peoples enjoyed at the expense of the Waued
Nii.
"I
had a friend who was once of Phum," said Elric. "His name was Rackhir
and he sought Tanelorn."
"Rackhir
I know. A good bowman. He travelled with us for a few weeks last year."
Elric
was strangely pleased by this news. "He was well?"
"In
excellent health." Raik Na Seem was glad of a subject to draw his mind
away from the fate of his daughter and his adoptive son. "He was a welcome
guest and hunted for us when we went close to the Ragged Pillars, for there's
game there which we lack the skill to find. He spoke of his friend. A friend
who had many thoughts and whose thoughts led him to many quandaries. That was
you, no doubt. I remember now. He must have been joking. He said that you were
a little on the pale side. He wondered what had become of you. He cared for
you, I think."
"And
I for him. We had something in common. As I feel a bond with your folk and with
Alnac Kreb."
"You
shared dangers together, I gather."
"We
had many strange experiences. He, however, was tired of the quest for such
things and hoped to retire, to find peace. Know you where he went from
here?"
"Aye.
As you say, he was searching for legendary Tanelorn. When he had learned all he
could from us, he bade us farewell and rode on to the West. We counselled him
not to waste himself in pursuit of a myth, but he believed he knew enough to
continue. Did you not wish to journey with your friend?"
"I
have other duties which call me, though I, too, have sought Tanelorn." He
would have added more but thought better of it. Any further explanation would
have led him into memories and problems he had no wish to contemplate at
present. His main concern was for Alnac Kreb and the girl.
"Ah,
yes. Now I recall. You are a king in your own country, of course. But a
reluctant one, eh? The duties are hard for a young man. Much is expected of you
and you bear upon your shoulders the weight of the past, the ideals and
loyalties of an entire people. It is difficult to rule well, to make good
judgements, to dispense justice fairly. We have no kings here amongst the
Bauradim, merely a group of men and women elected to speak for the whole clan,
and I think it is better to share those burdens. If all share the burden, if
all are responsible for themselves, then no single individual has to carry a
weight that is too much for them."
"The
reason I travel is to learn more of such means of administering justice,"
said Elric. "But I will tell you this, Raik Na Seem, my people are as
cruel as any in Quarzhasaat, and have more real power. We have a scanty notion
of justice, and the obligations of rule involve little more than inventing new
terrors by which we may cow and control others. Power, I think, is a habit as
terrible as the potion I must now sip in order to sustain myself. It feeds upon
itself. It is a hungry beast, devouring those who would possess it and those
who hate it-devouring even those who own it."
"The
hungry beast is not power itself," said the old man. "Power is
neither good nor evil. It is the use one makes of it which is good or evil. I
know that Melniboné once ruled the world, or that part of it she could find and
the part she did not destroy."
"You
seem to know more of my nation than my nation knows of you!" The albino
smiled.
"It
is said by our folk that we all came to the desert because we fled first
Melniboné and then Quarzhasaat. Each was as cruel as the other, each as
corrupting, and it did not matter to us which destroyed which. We had hoped
they would extinguish each other, of course, but that was not to be. The second
best thing occurred: Quarzhasaat almost destroyed herself and Melniboné forgot
all about her-and us! I believe that soon after their war, Melniboné became
bored with expansion and withdrew to rule only the Young Kingdoms. Now I hear
she rules even less."
"Only
the Dragon Isle now." Elric found that his thoughts were going back to
Cymoril and he tried to stop himself from thinking of her. "But many a
reaver's sought to sail against her and loot her wealth. They discover,
however, that she remains too powerful for them. They must continue to trade
with her instead."
'Trade
was ever War's superior," said Raik Na Seem, and looked suddenly back over
his shoulder at Alnac's withered body. The golden outline of the dreamwand was
glowing again and throbbing, as it had done from time to time since Alnac had
first lain down beside the girl.
"Tis
a strange organ," said Raik Na Seem softly. "Almost a second
spine."
He was
about to say more when there was a faint movement in Alnac's features and a
dreadful, desolate groan escaped the bloodless lips.
They
turned and went to kneel beside him. Alnac's eyes still blazed blue and
Varadia's were still black.
"He
is dying," whispered the First Elder. "Is it so, Prince Elric?"
Elric
knew no more than the Bauradi.
"What
can we do for him?" asked Raik Na Seem.
Elric
touched the cold, leathery carcass. He lifted an almost weightless wrist and
could hear no pulse beating. It was at this moment, startlingly, that Alnac's
eyes turned from blue to black and looked at Elric with all their old
intelligence. "Ah, you have come to help me. I have learned where the
Pearl lies. But it is too well protected."
The
voice was a whisper from the dust-dry mouth.
Elric
cradled the dreamthief in his arms. "I will help you, Alnac. Tell me
how."
"You
cannot. There are caverns... These dreams are defeating me. They are drowning
me. They are drawing me in. I am doomed to join those already doomed. Poor
company for one such as me, Prince Elric. Poor company..."
The
dreamwand pulsed and glowed white as bleached bones. The dreamthief's eyes
turned to blue again, then back to black. The thin air stirred in the leathery
remains of his throat. Suddenly there was horror in his face. "Ah, no! I
must find the will!"
The
dreamwand moved like a snake through his body, then slithered into Varadia,
then returned. "Oh, Elric," said the tiny voice, "help me if you
can. Oh, I am trapped. This is the worst I have ever known..."
His
words seemed to Elric to call to him directly from the grave, as if his friend
were already dead. "Elric, if there is some way..."
Then
the body shuddered, filled as if with a single huge breath, while the dreamwand
flickered and writhed again and then grew still, lying as it had first done
with the crook upon the two clasped hands.
"Ah,
my friend, I was a fool even to consider myself able to survive this..."
The tiny voice faded. "Would that I had understood the nature of her mind.
It is so strong! So strong!"
"Who
does he speak of?" asked Raik Na Seem. "My child? That which holds
her? My daughter is of the Sarangli women. Her grandmother could charm whole
tribes to believe they died of disease. I told him as much. What does he not
understand?"
"Oh,
Elric, she has destroyed me!" There was a tremor in the frail hand as it
reached towards the albino.
Then,
suddenly, all the colour and life came flooding back into Alnac's body. It
seemed to expand to its former size and vitality. The hooked staff became
nothing more than the artefact Elric had originally seen at Alnac's belt.
The
handsome dreamthief grinned. He was surprised. "I live! Elric, I
live!"
He took
a firmer grip on his staff and made to rise. Then he coughed and something
disgusting oozed from his lips, like a gigantic, half-digested worm. It was as
if he regurgitated his own rotten organs. He wiped the stuff away. For a moment
he was bewildered, the terror returning to his eyes.
"No."
Abac seemed reconciled suddenly. "I was too proud. I die, of course."
He collapsed backward onto the sheet as Elric again tried to hold him. With his
old irony the dreamthief shook his head. "A little too late, I think. It's
not my fate, after all, to be your companion, Sir Champion, in this
plane."
Elric,
to whom the words made no sense, believed Alnac to be raving and sought to
quieten him.
Then
the staff fell from the dreamthief's grasp and he rolled onto his side before a
wavering, sickly scream came out of him, then a stink which threatened to drive
Elric and Raik Na Seem from the Bronze Tent. It was as if his body putrefied
before their eyes even as the dreamthief tried to speak again and failed.
And
then Alnac Kreb was dead.
Elric,
mourning a brave, good man, felt then that his own doom and that of Anigh had
been determined. The dreamthief's death suggested forces at work of which the
albino understood nothing, for all his sorcerous wisdom. He had come across no
grimoire which even hinted of such a fate. He had seen worse befall those who
meddled with sorcery, but here was a sorcery which he could not begin to
interpret.
"He
is gone, then," said Raik Na Seem.
"Aye."
Elric's own breath shuddered in his throat. "Aye. His courage was greater
than any of us suspected. Including, I think, himself."
The
First Elder walked slowly to where his child still slept in her terrible
trance. He looked down into her blue eyes as if he almost hoped to see the
black eyes somewhere there within her.
"Varadia?"
She did
not respond.
Solemnly
Raik Na Seem took the Holy Girl and placed her back upon the raised block,
settling her into the cushions as if she merely slept a natural sleep and he,
her father, laid her down for her nightly rest.
Elric
stared at the remains of the dreamthief. He had doubtless understood the cost
of failure and perhaps that was the secret he had refused to share.
"It
is over," said Raik Na Seem gently. "Now I can think of nothing to do
for her. He gave too much." He was fighting not to lose himself in either
self-mortification or despair. "We must try to think what to do. Will you
help me in this, friend of my son?"
"If
I can."
As
Elric rose, shaking, to his feet he heard a sound behind him. He thought at
first it was some Bauradi woman come to mourn. He looked back at the light
which streamed in through the tent and saw only her outline.
It was
a young woman, but she was not of the Bauradim. She entered the tent slowly and
there were tears in her eyes as she stared down at Alnac Kreb's ruined body.
"I
am too late, then?"
Her
musical voice was full of the most intense sorrow. She reached a hand to her
face. "He should not have attempted such a task. They told me at the
Silver Flower Oasis that you had come here. Why could you not have waited a
little longer? Just a day more?"
It was
with great effort that she controlled her grief and Elric felt a sudden,
obscure kinship with her.
She
took another step towards the body. She was an inch or so shorter than Elric,
with a heart-shaped face framed by thick, brown hair. Slender and well-muscled,
she wore a padded jerkin slashed to show its red silk lining. She had soft
velvet breeches, embroidered felt riding boots and over all this an almost
transparent cotton dust-cloak pushed back from her shoulders. At her belt was a
sword, and cradled above her left shoulder was a hooked staff of gold and
ebony, a more elaborate version of the one which lay on the carpet beside
Alnac's corpse.
"I
taught him all he knew of his craft," she said. "But it was not
enough for this. How could he ever have thought that it would be! He could
never have achieved such a goal. He had not the character for it." She
turned away, brushing at her face. When she looked back her tears had gone and
she stared directly back into Elric's eyes.
"I
am Oone," she said. She bowed briefly to Raik Na Seem. "I am the
dreamthief you sent for."
PART
TWO
Is
there a daughter born in dreams
Whose
flesh is snow, whose ruby eyes
Stare
into realms whose substance seems
Strong
as agony, soft as lies?
Is
there a girlchild born of dreams
Who
carries blood as old as Time,
Destined
one day to blend with mine
And
give new lands a newer queen?
The
Chronicle of the Black Sword
1
How a
Thief May Instruct an Emperor
Oone
removed a date stone from her mouth and dropped it into the sand of the Silver
Flower Oasis. She reached her hand towards one of the brilliant cactus flowers
which gave the place its name. She stroked the petals with long, delicate
fingers. She sang to herself and it seemed to Elric that her words were a
lament.
Respectfully
he remained silent, sitting with his back to a palm tree looking to the distant
camp and its continuing activity. She had asked bun to accompany her but had
said little to him. He heard a calling from the kashbeh high above but when he
peered in that direction he saw nothing. The breeze blew over the desert and
red dust raced like water towards the Ragged Pillars on the horizon.
It was
almost noon. They had returned to the Silver Flower Oasis that morning and the
few remains of Alnac Kreb were to be burned with honour according to the
customs of the Bauradim that night.
Oone's
staff was no longer slung on her back. Now she held the dreamwand in both
hands, turning it over and over, watching the light on its burnish and polish
as if she had only now seen it for the first time. The other wand, Alnac's, she
had tucked into her belt.
"It
would have made my task a little easier," she said suddenly, "if
Alnac had not acted so precipitously. He did not realise I was coming and was
doing his best to save the child, I know. But a few more hours and I could have
used his help, perhaps successfully. Certainly I might have saved him."
"I
do not understand what happened to him," said Elric.
"Even
I do not know the exact cause of his fall," she said. "But I will
explain what I can. That is why I asked you to come with me. I would not wish
to be overheard. And I must demand your word that you will be discreet."
"I
am ever that, madam."
"Forever,"
she said.
"Forever?"
"You
must promise never to tell another soul what I tell you today, nor recount any
event which results from the telling. You must agree to be bound by a
dreamthief s code even though you are not of our kind."
Elric
was baffled. "For what reason?"
"Would
you save their Holy Girl? Avenge Alnac? Free yourself from the drug's slavery?
Adjust certain wrongs in Quarzhasaat?"
"You
know I would."
"Then
we may reach an agreement, for it is certain that, unless we help each other,
you and the girl and perhaps myself, too, will all be dead before the Blood
Moon fades."
"Certain?"
Elric was grimly amused. "Are you an oracle, too, then, madam?"
"All
dreamthieves are that, to some degree." She was almost impatient, as if
she spoke to a slow child. She caught herself. "Forgive me. I forget that
our craft is unknown in the Young Kingdoms. Indeed, it's rarely that we travel
to this plane at all."
"I
have met many supernatural in my life, my lady, but few who seem so human as
yourself."
"Human?
Of course I am human!" She seemed puzzled. Then her brow cleared.
"Ah. I forget that you are at once more sophisticated and less learned
than those of my own persuasion." She smiled at him. "I am still not
recovered from Alnac's unnecessary dissolution."
"He
need not have died." Elric's tone was flat, unquestioning. He had known
Alnac long enough to care for him as a Mend. He understood something of Oone's
loss. "And there is no way to revive him?"
"He
lost all essence," said Gone. "Instead of stealing a dream, he was
robbed of his own." She paused, then spoke quickly, as if she feared she
would regret her words. "Will you help me, Prince Elric?"
"Yes."
He spoke without hesitation. "If it is to avenge Alnac and save the
child."
"Even
if you risk Alnac's fate? The fate which you witnessed?"
"Even
that. Can it be worse than dying in Lord Gho's power?"
"Yes,"
she said simply.
Elric
laughed aloud at her frankness. "Ah, well. Just so, madam! Just so! What's
your bargain?"
She
moved her hand again towards the silver petals, balancing her wand between her
fingers. She was frowning, still not wholly certain of the rightness of her decision.
"I think that you are one of the few mortals on this earth who could
understand the nature of my profession, who'll know what I mean when I speak of
the nature of dreams and reality and how they intersect. I think, too, that you
have habits of mind which would make you, if not a perfect ally, then an ally
on whom I could to some extent depend. We dreamthieves have made something of a
science of a trade which logically can tolerate no consistent laws. It has
enabled us to pursue our craft with some success, largely, I suspect, because
we are able, to a degree, to impose our wills upon the chaos we encounter. Does
this make sense to you, Prince?"
"I
think so. There are philosophers of my own people who claim that much of our
magic is actually the imposition of powerful will upon the fundamental stuff of
reality, an ability, if you like, to make dreams come true. Some claim our
whole world was created thus."
Gone
seemed pleased. "Good. I knew there were certain ideas I would not have to
explain."
"But
what would you have me do, lady?"
"I
want you to help me. Together we can find a way to what the Sorcerer
Adventurers call the Fortress of the Pearl and by so doing one or both of us
might steal the dream which binds the child to perpetual sleep and free her to
wakefulness, return her to her people to be their seeress and their
pride."
"The
two are linked, then?" Elric began to rise to his feet, ignoring the call
of his ever-present craving. "The child and the Pearl?"
"I
think so."
"What
is the link?"
"In
discovering that, we shall doubtless discover how to free her."
"Forgive
me Lady Oone," said Elric gently, "but you sound almost as ignorant
as I!"
"In
some ways it is true that I am. Before I go further, I must ask you to swear to
abide by the Dreamthief's Code."
"I
swear," said Elric, and he held up the hand on which his Actorios glowed
to show that he swore by one of his people's most revered artefacts. "I
swear by the Rings of Kings."
"Then
I will tell you what I know and what I desire of you," said Oone. She
linked her free hand in his arm and led him further into the groves of palms
and cypress. Sensing the shuddering hunger in him which yearned for Lord Gho's
terrible drug, she seemed to show some sympathy.
"A
dreamthief," she began, "does exactly what the title implies. We
steal dreams. Originally our guild were true thieves. We learned the trick of
entering the worlds of other peoples' dreams and stealing those which were most
magnificent or exotic. Gradually, however, people began to call upon us to
steal unwanted dreams-or rather the dreams which entrapped or plagued friends
or relatives. So we stole those. Frequently the dreams themselves were in no
way harmful to another, only to the one who was in their power..."
Elric
interrupted. "Are you saying that a dream has some material reality? That
it can be seized, like a volume of verse, say, or money purse, and slipped free
of its owner?"
"Essentially,
yes. Or, I should say, our guild learned the trick of making a dream
sufficiently real for it to be handled thus!" She now laughed openly at
his confusion and some of the care went away from her for a moment. "There
is a certain talent needed and a great deal of training."
"But
what do you do with these stolen dreams?"
"Why,
Prince Elric, we sell them ft the Dream Market, twice a year. There's a fine
trade in almost any sort of dream, no matter how bizarre or terrifying. There
are merchants who purchase them and customers who would buy them. We distill
them, of course, into a form which can be transported and later translated. And
because we make the dreams take substance, we are threatened by them. That
substance can destroy us. You see what happened to Alnac. It takes a certain
character, a certain cast of mind, a certain attitude of spirit, all combining,
to protect oneself in the Dream Realms. But because we have codified these
realms we have also to a degree made them our own to manipulate."
"You
must explain more to me," said Elric, "if I am to follow you at all,
madam!"
"Very
well." She paused at the edge of the grove, where the earth grew dustier
and formed a territory between oasis and desert that was a little of both and
was neither. She studied the cracked earth as if the cracks were the outlines
of a singularly complicated map, a geometry which only she could understand.
"We
have made rules," she said. Her voice was distant, almost as if she spoke
to herself. "And codified what we have discovered over the centuries. And
yet we are still subject to the most unimaginable hazards..."
"Wait,
madam. Are you suggesting that Alnac Kreb, by some wizardry known only to your
guild, entered the world of the Holy Girl's dreams and there suffered
adventures such as you or I might suffer in this material world?"
"Well
put." She turned with a strange smile on her lips. "Aye. And his
substance went into that world and was absorbed by it, strengthening the
substance of her dreams..."
"The
dreams he hoped to steal."
"He
hoped to steal only one. The one which imprisons her in that perpetual slumber."
"And
then he would sell it, you say, at your Dream Market?"
"Perhaps."
She was clearly unwilling to discuss this aspect of the matter.
"Where
is that market held?"
"In
a realm beyond this one, in a place where only those of our profession, or
those who attend upon us, may travel."
"You'd
take me there?" Elric spoke from curiosity.
Her
glance was a mixture of amusement and caution. "Possibly. But first we
must be successful. We must steal a dream so that we may trade it there. Know
you, Elric, I have every desire to inform you of all you wish to learn, but
there are many things hard to explain to one who has not studied with our
guild. They can only be demonstrated or experienced. I am not a native of your
world, nor are most dreamthieves from this sphere. We are wanderers-nomads, you
might say-between many times and many places. We have learned that a dream in
one realm can be an undeniable reality hi another, while what is utterly
prosaic in that realm can elsewhere be the stuff of the most fantastic
nightmare."
"Is
all creation so malleable?" Elric asked with a shudder.
"What
we create must ever be, lest it die," she said, her tone one of ironical
finality.
"The
struggle between Law and Chaos echoes that struggle within ourselves between
unbridled emotion and too much caution, I suppose," Elric mused, aware
that she did not wish to pursue this particular conversation.
With
her foot Gone traced the cracks in the red earth. 'To learn more you must
become an apprentice dreamthief..."
"Willingly,"
said Elric. "I'm sufficiently curious now, madam. You spoke of your laws.
What are they?"
"Some
are instructive, some are descriptive. First I'll tell you that we have
determined that every Dream Realm shall have seven aspects, which we have
named. By naming and describing we hope to shape that which has no shape and
control that which few can begin to control. By such impositions we have
learned to survive in worlds where others would be destroyed within minutes.
Yet even when we perform such impositions, even that which our own wills define
can become transmuted beyond our control. If you would accompany me and aid me
in this adventure, you must know that I have determined we shall pass through
seven lands. The first land we call Sadanor, or the Land of Dreams-in-Common.
The second land is Marador, which we call the Land of Old Desires, while the
third is Paranor, the Land of Lost Beliefs. The fourth land is known to
dreamthieves as Celador, which is the Land of Forgotten Love. The fifth is
Imador, the Land of New Ambition, and the sixth is Falador, the Land of
Madness..."
"Fanciful
names indeed, madam. The Guild of Dreamthieves has a penchant for poetry, I
think. And the seventh? What is that named?"
She
paused before she replied. Her wonderful eyes peered into his, as if exploring
the recesses of his own skull. "That has no name," she said quietly,
"save any name the inhabitants shall give it. But there, if anywhere, you
will find the Fortress of the Pearl,"
Elric
felt himself trapped by that gentle yet determined gaze. "And how may we
enter these lands?" The albino forced himself to engage with these
questions though by now his whole body was crying out for a draft of Lord Gho's
elixir.
She
sensed his tension, and her hand on his arm was meant to calm and reassure him.
"Through the child," said Oone.
Elric
remembered what he had witnessed in the Bronze Tent and he shuddered. "How
is such a thing achieved?"
Oone
frowned and the pressure of her hand increased. "She is our gateway and
the dreamwands are our keys. There is no way hi which I will harm her, Elric.
Once we have reached the seventh aspect, the Nameless Land, there we might in
turn find the key to her particular prison."
"She
is a medium, then? Is that what has happened to her? Did the Sorcerer
Adventurers know something of her power and in attempting to use her put her
into this trance?"
Again
she hesitated, then she nodded. "Close enough, Prince Elric. It is written
in our histories, of which we have many, though most are inaccessible to us in
the libraries of Tanelorn, 'What lies within always has a form without and that
which is without takes a shape within.' Put another way, we sometimes say that
what is visible must always have an invisible aspect, just as everything
invisible must be represented by the visible."
Elric
found this too cryptic for him, though he was familiar enough with such
mysterious utterances from his own grimoires. He did not dismiss them, but he
knew they frequently required much pondering and certain experience before they
made complete sense. "You speak of supernatural realms, madam. The worlds
inhabited by the Lords of Chaos and of Law, by the elementals, by immortals and
the like. I know something of such realms and have even journeyed in them some
little way. But I have never heard of leaving part of one's physical substance
behind and travelling into those realms by means of a sleeping child!"
She
looked at him for a long moment as if she thought he was deliberately
disingenuous, then she shrugged. "You will find the realms of the
dreamthief very similar. And you would do well to memorise and obey our
code."
"You
are a strict order, then, madam..."
"If
we are to survive. Alnac had the instincts of a good dreamthief but he had not
acquired the full discipline. That was one of the chief reasons for his
dissolution. You on the other hand are familiar with the necessary disciplines,
for they were how you came by your knowledge of sorcery. Without those
disciplines you, too, would have perished."
"I
have rejected much of that, Lady Gone."
"Aye.
So I believe. But you have not lost the habit, I think. Or so I hope. The first
law the dreamthief obeys says, Offers of guidance must always be accepted but
never trusted. The second says, Beware the familiar, and the third tells us,
What is strange should be cautiously welcomed. There are many others, but it is
those three which encompass the fundamentals by which a dreamthief
survives." She smiled. Her smile was oddly sweet and vulnerable and Elric
realised she was weary. Perhaps her grief had exhausted her.
The
Melnibonéan spoke gently, looking back to the great red rocks of the Silver
Flower's protection and sanctuary. The voices were stilled now. Thin lines of
smoke ascended the rich blue of the sky. "How long does it take to
instruct and train one of your calling?"
She
recognised his irony now. "Five years or more," she said. "Alnac
had been a full member of the guild for perhaps six years."
"And
he failed to survive in the realm where the Holy Girl's spirit is held prisoner?"
"He
was, for all his skills, only an ordinary mortal, Prince Elric."
"And
you think I'm more than that?"
She
laughed openly. "You are the last Emperor of Melniboné. You are the most
powerful of your race, which is a race whose familiarity with sorcery is
legendary. True, you have left your bride to be waiting for you while you place
your cousin Yyrkoon on the Ruby Throne to reign as Regent until you return-a
decision only an idealist would make-but nonetheless, my lord, you cannot
pretend to me that you are in any way ordinary!"
In
spite of his craving for the poisonous elixir, Elric found himself laughing
back at her. "If I am such a man of qualities, madam, how is it that I
find myself in this position, contemplating death from the tricks of a second-rate
provincial politician?"
"I
did not say you admired yourself, my lord. But it would be foolish to deny what
you have been and what you could become."
"I
prefer to consider the latter, my lady."
"Consider,
if you will, the fate of Raik Na Seem's daughter. Consider the fate of his
people deprived of then: history and their oracle. Consider your own doom, to
perish for no good reason in a distant land, your destiny unfulfilled."
Elric
accepted this.
She
continued. "It is probable, too, that you have no rival as a sorcerer in
your world. While your specific skills might be of little use to you in the
adventure I propose, your experience, knowledge and understanding might make
the difference between success and failure."
Elric
had become impatient as his body's demand for the drug grew unbearable.
"Very well, Lady Gone. Whatever you decide, I shall agree to."
She
took a step back from him and looked at him coolly. "You had best return
to your tent and find your elixir," she said softly.
Familiar
desperation filled the albino's mind. "I shall, madam. I shall." And
turning he strode swiftly back towards the gathered tents of the Bauradim.
He
scarcely spoke to any of those who greeted him as he passed. Raik Na Seem had
moved nothing from the tent Elric had last shared with Alnac Kreb, and the
albino hastily drew the flask from his saddle-bag, taking a deep draft and
feeling, for a short while at least, the relief, the resurgence of energy, the
illusion of health which the Quarzhasaati's drug gave him. He sighed and turned
towards the entrance of the tent as Raik Na Seem came up, his brow furrowed,
his eyes full of pain which he tried to disguise. "Have you agreed to help
the dreamthief, Elric? Will you attempt to achieve what the prophecy predicted?
Bring our Holy Girl back to us? There is now less time than there ever was.
Soon the Blood Moon will be gone."
Elric
dropped the flask onto the carpet which covered the ground. He bent and picked
up the Black Sword, which he had unbuckled while he walked with Oone. The thing
thrilled in his fingers and he felt vaguely nauseated. "I will do whatever
is required of me," the albino said.
"Good."
The older man gripped Elric by the shoulders. "Oone has told me that you
are a great man with a great destiny and that this time is one of considerable
moment in your life. We are honoured to be part of that destiny and grateful
for your concern..."
Elric
accepted Raik Na Seem's words with all his old grace. He bowed. "I believe
that the health of your Holy Girl is more important than any fate of mine. I
will do whatever is possible to bring her back to you."
Oone
had entered behind the Bauradim's First Elder. She smiled at the albino.
"You are ready now?"
Elric
nodded and began to buckle on the Black Sword, but Oone stopped him with a
gesture. "You'll find the weapons you need where we travel."
"But
the sword is more than a weapon, Lady Oone!" The albino knew a kind of
panic.
She
held out Alnac's dreamwand to him. "This is all you need for our venture,
my lord Emperor."
Stormbringer
murmured violently as Elric let the sword fall back to the cushions of the
tent. It seemed almost to threaten him.
"I
am dependent..." he began.
She
shook her head gently. "You are not. You believe that sword to be part of
your identity but it is not. It is your nemesis. It is the part of you which
represents your weakness, not your strength."
Elric
sighed. "I do not understand you, my lady, but if you do not wish me to
bring the sword, I'll leave it."
Another
sound, a peculiar growl, from the blade, but Elric ignored it. He left both
flask and sword in the tent and strode to where horses awaited them to carry
them from the Silver Flower Oasis back to the Bronze Tent.
As they
rode a little distance behind Raik Na Seem, Gone told Elric something more of
what the Holy Girl meant to the Bauradim.
"As
you perhaps have already realised, the child holds in trust the history and the
aspirations of the Bauradim-their collected wisdom. Everything they know to be
true and of value is contained within her. She is the living representation of
her people's learning-what is the essence of their history-of a time before
they became desert dwellers even. If they lose her, there is every chance, they
believe, that they must begin their history all over again-relearn hard-won
lessons, relive experience and make the mistakes and blunders which so
painfully informed their people's understanding down the centuries. She is
Tune, if you like-their library, museum, religion and culture personified in a
single human being. Can you imagine, Prince Elric, what her loss means to them?
She is the very soul of the Bauradim. And that soul is imprisoned where only
those of a certain skill can even find her, let alone free her."
Elric
fingered the dreamwand which now replaced his runesword at his hip. "If
she were only an ordinary child, bringing sorrow to her family through her
condition, I would be inclined to help if I could," he said. "For I
like this people and their leader."
"Her
fate and yours are intertwined," said Gone. "Whatever your
sentiments, my lord, you probably have little real choice in the matter."
He did
not wish to hear this. "It seems to me, madam, that you dreamthieves are
altogether too familiar with myself, my family, my people and my destiny. It
makes me somewhat uncomfortable. Yet I cannot deny you know more than anyone,
save my betrothed, about my inner conflicts. How come you by this power of
divination and prophecy?"
She
spoke almost casually. "There is a land all dreamthieves have visited. It
is a place where all dreams intersect, where all that we have in common meets.
And we call that land the Birthplace of the Bone, where mankind first assumed
reality."
"This
is legend! And primitive legend at that!"
"Legend
to you. Truth to us. As one day you'll discover."
"If
Alnac could foretell the future, why did he not wait for you to come to help
him?"
"We
rarely know our own destinies, only the general movements of the tides and of
the figures who stand out in their world's histories. All dreamthieves, it is
true, know the future, for half their lives are spent without Time. For us
there is no past or future, only a changing present. We are free of those
particular chains while bound as strongly by others."
"I
have read of such ideas, but they mean very little to me." "Because
you lack experience to make sense of them." "You have already spoken
of the Land of Dreams-in-Common. Is that the same as the Birthplace of the
Bone?" "Perhaps. Our people are undecided on the point."
Temporarily invigorated by the drug, Elric began to enjoy the conversation,
much of which he saw as mere pleasant abstraction. Free of his runesword he
knew a kind of lightness of spirit which he had not experienced since the first
months of his courtship of Cymoril in those relatively untroubled years before
Yyrkoon's growing ambition had begun to contaminate life at the Melnibonéan
Court.
He
recalled something from one of his own people's histories. "I have seen it
said that the world is no more than what its denizens agree it is. I remember
reading something to that effect in The Gabbling Sphere which said, 'For who is
to say which is the inner world and which the outer? What we make reality may
be what will alone decides, and what we define as dreams may be the greater truth.'
Is that a philosophy close to your own, Lady Gone?" "Close
enough," she said. "Though it seems a little airy." They rode
like this, almost like two children on a picnic, until they reached the Bronze
Tent when the sun was setting and were led, once more, into the place where men
and women sat or lay around the great raised bed on which rested the little
girl who symbolised their entire existence.
It
seemed to Elric that the illuminating braziers and lamps were burning lower
than when last he was here, and that the child looked even paler than before,
but he forced an expression of confidence when he turned to Raik Na Seem.
"This time we shall not fail her," he said.
Oone
appeared to approve of Elric's words and watched carefully as, on her instructions,
Varadia's frail body was lifted from the bed and placed this time upon a huge
cushion which, in its turn, was set between two other cushions, also of great
size. She signed to the albino to lay his body down on the far side of the
child while she herself took up her position on the girl's left.
"Grasp
her hand, my lord Emperor," said Oone ironically, "and place the
crook of the dreamwand over both yours and hers, as you saw Alnac do."
Elric
felt some trepidation as he obeyed her, but he knew no fear for himself, only
for the child and her people, for Cymoril waiting for him in Melniboné, for the
boy who prayed in Quarzhasaat that he would return with the jewel his jailer
had demanded. His hand locked to the girl's by the dreamwand, he knew a sense of
fusion that was not unpleasant, yet seemed to burn as hot as any flame. He
watched as Oone did the same thing.
Immediately
Elric felt a power possess him and for a moment it was as if his body grew
lighter and lighter until it threatened to drift away on the slightest breeze.
His vision faded, yet dimly he could still see Oone. She seemed to be
concentrating.
He
looked into the face of the Holy Girl and for a second thought he saw her skin
turn still whiter, her eyes glow as crimson as his own, and a strange thought
came and went in his mind: If I had a daughter she would look thus...
And
then it was as if his bones were melting, his flesh dissolving, his whole mind
and spirit dissipating. He gave himself up to this sensation as he had
determined he must, since he now served Oone's purpose, and now the flesh
became flowing water, the veins and blood were coloured strands of air, his
skeleton flowed like molten silver, mingling with the Holy Girl's, becoming
hers, then flowing on beyond her, into caverns and tunnels and dark places,
into places where whole worlds existed in hollowed rock, where voices called to
him and knew bun and sought to comfort him or frighten him or tell him truths
he did not wish to learn; and then the air grew bright again and he felt Oone
beside him, guiding him, her hand on his, her body almost his body, her voice
confident and even cheerful, like one who moves towards familiar danger; danger
which she had overcome many times. Yet there was an edge to her voice which
made him believe she had never faced a danger as great as this one and that
there was every chance neither of them would return to the Bronze Tent or the
Silver Flower Oasis.
And
there was music which he understood was the very soul of this child turned into
sound. Sweet, sad, lonely music. Music so beautiful he would have wept had he
anything more than the airiest substance.
Then he
saw blue sky before him, a red desert stretching away towards red mountains on
the horizon, and he had the strangest of sensations, as if he were coming home
to a land he had somehow lost in his childhood and then forgotten.
2
In the
Marches at the Heart's Edge
As
Elric felt his bones re-form and the flesh resume its familiar weight and
contour he saw that the land they had entered seemed scarcely any different
from that which they had left. Red desert stretched before them, red mountains
lay beyond. So familiar was the landscape that Elric looked back, expecting to
see the Bronze Tent, but immediately behind him now yawned a chasm so vast that
no further side could be seen. He knew sudden vertigo and checked his balance,
somewhat to Oone's amusement
The
dreamthief was dressed in her same functional velvets and silks and seemed a
little amused by his response. "Aye, Prince Elric! Now we are indeed at
the very edge of the world! We have only certain choices here and they do not
include retreat!"
"I
had not considered it, madam." Looking more closely, he realised that the
mountains were considerably taller and were all leaning in the same direction,
as if bent by a tremendous wind.
"They
are like the teeth of some ancient predator," said Oone with a shudder of
one who might actually have stared into such a maw at some time in their
career. "Doubtless the first stage of our journey takes us there. This is
the land we dreamtnieves call Sadanor. The Land of Dreams-in-Common."
"Yet
you seem unfamiliar with the scenery."
"The
scenery varies. We know only the nature of the land. It may change in its
details. But where we travel is frequently dangerous not because it is
unfamiliar but because of its familiarity. That is the second rule of the
dreamthief."
"Beware
the familiar."
"You
learn well." She seemed unduly pleased by his response, as if she had
doubted her own description of his qualities and was glad to have them
confirmed. Elric began to realise the degree of desperation involved in this
adventure and was seized by that wild carelessness, that willingness to give
himself up to the moment, to any experience, which so set him apart from the
other lords of Melniboné, whose lives were ruled by tradition and a desire to
maintain their power at any cost.
Smiling,
his eyes alight with all their old vitality, he bowed ironically. "Then
lead on, madam! Let us begin our journey towards the mountains."
Gone, a
little startled by his mood, frowned. But she began to walk through sand so
light it stirred like water around her feet. And the albino followed.
"I
must admit," he said, after they had walked for perhaps an hour, without
noting any shift in the position of the light, "the more I am in this
place, the more it begins to disturb me. I thought the sun obscured, but now I
realise there is no sun hi the sky at all."
"Such
normalities come and go in the Land of Dreams-in-Common," said Gone.
"I
would feel more secure with my sword at my side."
"Swords
are easily come by here," she said.
"Drinkers
of souls?"
"Perhaps.
But do you feel the need for that peculiar form of sustenance? Do you crave
Lord Gho's drug?"
Elric
admitted to his own surprise that he had lost no energy. For perhaps the first
time in his adult life he had the sense that he was physically as other people,
able to sustain himself without calling on any form of artifice. "It
occurs to me," he said, "that I might be well-advised to make my home
here."
"Ah,
now you begin to fall into another of this realm's traps," she said,
lightly enough. "First there is suspicion and maybe fear. Then there is
relaxation, a feeling that you have always belonged here, that this is your
natural home, or your spiritual home. These are all illusions common to the
traveller, as I am sure you know. Here those illusions must be resisted, for
they are more than sentiment. They may be traps set to snare you and destroy
you. Be grateful that you have more apparent energy than that which you
normally know, but remember another rule of the dreamthief: Every gain is paid
for, either before or after the event. Every apparent benefit could well have
its contrary disadvantage."
Privately
Elric still thought the price for such a sense of well-being might be worth the
paying.
It was
at that moment that he saw the leaf.
It
drifted down from over his head, a broad, red-gold oak leaf, falling gently as
any ordinary autumn shedding, and landed upon the sand at his feet. Without at
first finding this extraordinary, he bent to pick the leaf up.
Oone
had seen it, too, and made as if to caution bun, then changed her mind.
Elric
laid the leaf on the palm of his hand. There was nothing unusual about it, save
that there was not a tree visible in any direction. He was about to ask Oone to
explain this phenomenon when he noticed that she was staring beyond him, over
his shoulder.
"Good
afternoon to you," said a jaunty voice. "This is luck indeed, to find
some fellow mortals in such a miserable wilderness. What trick of the Wheel
brought us here, do you think?"
"Greetings,"
said Oone, her smile growing broad. "You're ill-dressed, sir, for this
desert."
"I
was told neither of my destination nor of the fact that I was leaving..."
Elric
turned and to his surprise saw a small man whose sharp, merry features were
shadowed by an enormous turban of yellow silk. This headdress, at least as wide
as the man's shoulders, was decorated with a pin containing a great green gem
and from it sprouted several peacock feathers. He seemed to be wearing many
layers of clothing, all highly coloured, of silk and linen, including an
embroidered waistcoat and a long jacket of beautifully stitched blue patchwork,
each shade subtly different from the one next to it. On his legs were baggy
trousers of red silk and his feet sported curling slippers of green and yellow
leather. The man was unarmed, but hi his hands he held a startled black and
white cat upon whose back were folded a pair of silky black wings.
The man
bowed when he saw Elric. "Greetings, sir. You would be the incarnation of
the Champion on this plane, I take it. I am-" He frowned as if he had for
a second forgotten his own name. "I am something beginning with 'J' and
something beginning with 'C.' It will return to me in a moment. Or another name
or event will occur, I'm sure. I am your-what?-amanuensis, eh?" He peered
up into the sky. "Is this one of those sunless worlds? Are we to have no
night at all?"
Elric
looked to Gone, who did not seem wary of this apparition. "I did not ask
for a secretary, sir," he said to the small man. "Nor did I expect to
be assigned one. My companion and I are on a quest in this world..."
"A
quest, naturally. It is your role, as it is mine to accompany you. That's in
order, sir. My name is-" But again his own name eluded him. "Yours
is?"
"I
am Elric of Melniboné and this is Oone the Dreamthief."
"Then
this is the Land the dreamthieves call Sadanor, I take it. Good, then I am
called Jaspar Colinadous. And my cat's name is Whiskers, as always."
At
this, the cat gave voice to a small, intelligent noise, to which its owner
listened carefully and nodded.
"I
recognise this land now," he said. "You'll be seeking the Marador
Gate, eh? For the Land of Old Desires."
"You
are a dreamthief yourself, Sir Jaspar?" Gone asked in some surprise.
"I
have relatives who are."
"But
how came you here?" Elric asked. "Through a medium? Did you use a
mortal child, as we did?"
"Your
words are mysterious to me, sir." Jaspar Colinadous adjusted his turban,
the little cat tucked carefully under one voluminous silk sleeve. "I
travel between the worlds, apparently at random, usually at the behest of some
force I do not understand, frequently to find myself guiding or accompanying venturers
such as yourselves. Not," he added feelingly, "always dressed
appropriately for the realm or the moment of my arrival. I dreamed, I think, I
was the sultan of some fabulous city, where I possessed the most astonishing
variety of treasures. Where I was waited upon..." Here he coloured and
looked away from Gone. "Forgive me. It was a dream. I have awakened from
it now. Unfortunately the clothes followed me from the dream..."
Elric
believed the man's words were close to nonsense, but Gone had no difficulty
with them. "You know a road, then, to the Marador Gate?"
"Surely
I must, if this is the Land of Dreams-in-Common." Carefully he placed the
cat on his shoulder and then began to rummage in his sleeves, within his shirt,
in the pockets of his several garments, producing all manner of scrolls and
papers and little books, boxes, compacts, writing instruments, lengths of cord
and reels of thread, until one of the rolled pieces of vellum caused him to cry
out in relief. "Here it is, I think! Our map." He replaced all the
other items in exactly the places he had drawn them from and unrolled the
parchment. "Indeed, indeed! This shows us the road through yonder
mountains."
"Offers
of guidance..." began Elric.
"And
beware the familiar," said Oone softly. Then she made a dismissive
gesture. "Here we have conflict already, you see, for what is unfamiliar
to you is highly familiar to me. That is part of the nature of this land."
She turned to Jaspar Colinadous. "Sir? May I see your map?"
Without
hesitation, the small man handed it to her. "A straight road. It's always
a straightish road, eh? And only one. That's the joy of these Dream Realms. One
can interpret and control them so simply. Unless, of course, they swallow one
up completely. Which they are wont to do."
"You
have the advantage of me," said Elric, "for I know nothing of this
world. Neither was I aware that there are others like it."
"Aha!
Then you have so much wonder to anticipate, sir! So many marvels yet to
witness. I would tell you of them, but my own memory is not what it should be.
I frequently have only the vaguest of recollections. But there is an infinity
of worlds and some are yet unborn, some so old they have grown senile, some
born of dreams, some destroyed by nightmares." Jaspar Colinadous paused
apologetically. "I grow over-enthusiastic. I do not intend to confuse you,
sir. Just know you that I am a little confused myself. I am ever that. Does my
map make sense to you, Lady Dreamthief ?"
"Aye."
Gone was frowning over the parchment. "There is only one pass through
those mountains, which are called the Shark's Jaws. If we assume that the
mountains are lying to our north, then we must bear to the north-east and there
find the Shark's Gullet, as it's named here. We are much obliged to you, Master
Jaspar Colinadous." She rolled up the map and returned it to him. It
disappeared into one of his sleeves and the cat crept down to lie, purring, in
the crook of his arm.
For a
moment, Elric had the strongest instinct that this likable individual had been
called up by Oone from her own imagination, though it was impossible to believe
he did not exist in his own right, such a self-confident personality was he.
Indeed, Elric had the passing fancy that perhaps he, himself, was the phantasy.
"You'll
note there are dangers hi that pass," said Jaspar Colinadous casually, as
he fell in beside them. "I'll let Whiskers scout for us, if you like, when
we get closer."
"We
should be much obliged to you, sir," said Oone.
They
continued their journey across the bleak landscape, with Jaspar Colinadous
telling tales of previous adventures, most of which he could only half recall,
of people he had known, whose names escaped nun, and of great moments in the
histories of a thousand worlds whose importance now eluded him. To hear him was
like coming upon the old halls of Imrryr, on the Dragon Isle, where once huge
series of windows had told hi pictures the tales of the first Melnibonéans and
how they had come to then- present home. Now they were mere shards, small
fragments of the story, brilliant details whose context was only barely
imaginable and whose information was gone forever. Elric ceased trying to
follow Jaspar Colinadous's conversation but, as he had learned to do with the
fragments of glass, let himself enjoy them for then- texture and then: colour
instead.
The
consistency of the light had begun to disturb nun and eventually he interrupted
the little man in his flow and asked him if he, too, was not made uncomfortable
by it.
Jaspar
Colinadous took this opportunity to stop and remove his slippers, shaking sand
from them as Oone waited ahead of them, her stance impatient. "No, sir.
Supernatural worlds are frequently sunless, for they obey none of the laws we
are familiar with in our own. They may be flat, half-spheres, oval, circular,
even shaped like cubes. They exist only as satellites to those realms we call
'real,' and therefore are dependent not upon any sun or moon or planetary
system for their ordering, but upon the demands-spiritual, imaginative,
philosophical and so on-of worlds which do, in fact, require a sun to heat them
and a moon to move their tides. There is even a theory that our worlds are the
satellites and that these supernatural worlds are the birthplaces of all our
realities." His shoes again free from sand, Jaspar Colinadous began to
follow Oone, who was some distance on, having refused to wait upon them.
"Perhaps
this is the land ruled by Arioch, my patron Duke of Hell," said Elric.
"The land from which the Black Sword sprung."
"Oh,
quite possibly, Prince Elric. For, see, there's a hellish sort of creature
stooping on your friend at this very moment and us without a weapon between
us!"
The
three-headed bird must have flown at such a great height it had not been seen
to approach, but now it was dropping at terrifying speed from above and Oone,
alerted by Elric's cry of warning, began to run, perhaps hoping to divert it in
its descent upon her. It was like a gigantic crow, with two of its heads tucked
deep into its neck, while the other stretched out to help its downward flight,
its wings spread behind it, its claws extended, ready to seize the woman.
Elric
began to run forward, screaming at the thing. He, too, hoped that this activity
would disturb the creature enough to make it lose its momentum.
With a
terrible cawing which seemed to fill the entire heavens, the monster slowed its
descent a trifle in order to make a more accurate strike on the woman.
It was
then that Jaspar Colinadous cried from behind Elric:
"Jack
Three Beaks, thou naughty bird!" t The beast wavered in the air, turning
all heads towards the turbanned figure who strode decisively towards it across
the sand, his cat alert on his arm.
"What's
this, Jack? I thought you were forbidden living meat!" Jaspar Colinadous's
voice was contemptuous, familiar. Whiskers growled and gibbered at the thing,
though it was many times larger than the little cat.
With a
croak of defiance the bird flopped onto the sand and began to run at some
considerable speed towards Oone, who had stopped to witness this bizarre event.
Now she took to her heels again, the three-headed crow in pursuit.
"Jack!
Jack! Remember the punishment."
The
bird's cry was almost mocking. Elric began to stumble through the desert in its
track, hoping to find means of saving the dreamthief.
It was
then that he felt something cut through the air above his head, fanning him
with unexpected coolness, and a dark shape sped in pursuit of the thing Jaspar
Colinadous had called Jack Three Beaks.
It was
the black and white cat. The beast flung his little body at the bird's central
neck and sank all four sets of claws into the feathers. With a shrill scream
the gigantic three-headed crow whirled round, its other heads trying to peck at
the tenacious cat and just failing to reach it.
To Elric's
astonishment the cat seemed to swell larger and larger as if feeding on the
life-stuff of the crow, while the crow appeared to grow smaller.
"Bad
Jack Three Beaks! Wicked Jack!" The almost ridiculous figure of Jaspar
Colinadous strutted up to the thing now, wagging a finger, at which beaks
snapped but dared not bite. "You were warned. And now you must perish. How
came you here at all? You followed me, I suppose, when I left my palace."
He scratched his head. "Not that I recall leaving the palace. Ah,
well..."
Jack
Three Beaks cawed again, glaring with mad, frightened eyes in the direction of
his original prey. Oone was approaching again.
"This
creature is your pet, Master Jaspar?"
"Certainly
not, madam. It is my enemy. He knew he'd had his last warning. But I think he
did not expect to find me here and believed he could attack living prey with
impunity. Not so, Jack, eh?"
The
answering croak was almost pathetic now. The little black and white cat
resembled nothing so much as a feeding vampire bat as it sucked and sucked of
the monster's life-stuff.
Oone
watched in horror as gradually the crow shrank to a tiny, wizened thing and
Whiskers at last sat back, huge and round, and began to clean himself, purring
with considerable pleasure. Clearly pleased with his pet, Jaspar Colinadous
reached up to pat his head. "Good lad, Whiskers. Now poor Jack's not even
gravy for an old man's bread." He smiled proudly at his two new Mends.
"This cat has saved my life on many an occasion."
"How
had you the name of that monster?" Oone wished to know. Her lovely
features were flushed and she was out of breath. Elric was reminded suddenly of
Cymoril, though he could not exactly identify the similarity.
"Why,
it was Jack frightened the principality I visited before this." Jaspar
Colinadous displayed his rich clothing. "And how I came to be so favoured
by the folk of that place. Jack Three Beaks always knew the power of Whiskers
and was afraid of him. He had been terrorising the people when I arrived. I
tamed Jack-or strictly speaking, Whiskers did-but let him live, since he was a
useful carrion eater and the province was given to terrible heat in the summer.
When I fell through that particular rent hi the fabric of the mul-tiverse he
must have come with me, without realising I was already here with Whiskers.
There's little mystery to it, Lady Oone."
She
drew a deep breath. "Well, I'm grateful for your aid, sir."
He
inclined his head. "Now, had we better not move on toward the Marador
Gate? There are more, if less unexpected, dangers ahead of us hi the Shark's
Gullet. The map marks 'em."
"Would
that I had a weapon at my side," said Elric feelingly. "I would be
more confident, whether it were an illusion or no!" But he marched beside
the others as they moved on towards the mountain.
The cat
remained behind, licking his paws and cleaning himself, for all the world like
an ordinary domestic creature which had killed a pantry-raiding mouse.
At last
the ground began to rise as they reached the shallow foothills of the Shark's
Jaws and saw ahead of them a great, dark fissure in the mountains, the Gullet
which would lead them through to the next land of their journey. In the heat of
the barren wilderness the pass looked cool and almost welcoming, though even
from here Elric thought he could see shapes moving in it. White shadows
flickered against the black.
"What
manner of people live here?" he asked Gone, who had not shown him the map.
"Chiefly
those who have either lost their way or become too fearful to continue the
journey inward. The other name for the pass is the Valley of Timid Souls."
Gone shrugged. "But I suspect it is not from them that we shall be in
danger. At least, not greatly. They'll ally themselves with whatever power
rules the pass."
"And
the map says nothing of its nature?"
"Only
that we should be wary."
There
came a noise from behind them and Elric turned, expecting a threat, but it was
only Whiskers, looking a little plumper, a little sleeker, but back to his
normal size, who had at last caught up with them.
Jaspar
Colinadous laughed and bent to let the cat leap onto his shoulder. "We
have no need of weapons, eh? Not with such a handsome beast to defend us!"
The cat
licked his face.
Elric
was peering into the dark pass, trying to determine what he might find there.
For a moment he thought he saw a rider at the entrance, a man mounted on a
silvery grey horse, wearing strange armour of different shades of white and
grey and yellow. The warrior's horse reared as he turned it and rode back into
the blackness and Elric knew a sensation of foreboding, though he had never
seen the figure before.
Oone
and Jaspar Colinadous were apparently unaware of the apparition and continued
with untiring stride in the direction of the
Elric
said nothing of the rider but instead asked Gone how it was that they had all
walked for hours and felt neither hungry nor weary.
"It
is one of the advantages of this realm," she said. "The disadvantages
are considerable, however, since a sense of time is easily lost and one can
forget direction and goals. Moreover, it's wise to bear in mind that while one
does not appear to lose physical energy or experience hunger, other forms of
energy are being expended. Psychic and spiritual they may be, but they are just
as valuable, as I'm sure you appreciate. Conserve those particular resources,
Prince Elric, for you'll have urgent need of them soon enough!"
Elric
wondered if she, too, had caught sight of the pale warrior but, for a reason he
could not understand, was reluctant to ask her.
The hills
were growing taller and taller around them as, subtly, they moved into the
Shark's Gullet. The light was dimmer already, blocked by the mountains, and
Elric felt a chill which was not altogether the result of the shade.
He
became aware of a rushing sound and Jaspar Colinadous ran towards a high bank
of rocks to peer over them and look down. He turned, a little baffled. "A
deep chasm. A river. We must find a bridge before we can go on." He
murmured to his winged cat, which immediately took flight over the abyss and
was soon lost in the gloom beyond.
Forced
to pause, Elric knew sudden gloom. Unable to gauge his physical needs,
uncertain of what events took place in the world he had left, perturbed by the
knowledge that their time was running short and that Lord Gho would certainly
keep his word to torture young Anigh to death, he began to believe that he
could well be on a fool's errand, embarked on an adventure which could only end
in disaster for all. He wondered why he had trusted Gone so completely. Perhaps
because he had been so desperate, so shocked by the death of Alnac Kreb...
She
touched him on the shoulder. "Remember what I told you. Your weariness is
not physical here, but it manifests itself in your moods. One must seek
spiritual sustenance as assiduously as you would normally seek food and
water."
He
looked into her eyes, seeing warmth and kindness there. Immediately his despair
began to dissipate. "I must admit I was beginning to know strong
doubt..."
"When
that feeling overwhelms you, try to tell me," she said. "I am
familiar with it and might be able to help you..."
"So
I am entirely in your hands, madam." He spoke without irony.
"I
thought you understood that when you agreed to accompany me," she said
softly.
"Aye."
He turned in time to see the little cat coming back and alighting on Jaspar
Colinadous's shoulder. The turbanned man listened carefully and intelligently
and Elric was certain that the cat was speaking.
At last
Jaspar Colinadous nodded. "There's a good bridge not a quarter of a mile
from here and it leads to a trail winding directly into the pass. Whiskers
tells me that the bridge is guarded by a single mounted warrior. We can hope, I
suppose, that he will let us cross."
They
followed the course of the river as the sky overhead grew darker and darker and
Elric wished that, together with his lack of hunger and tiredness, he did not
feel the rapid drop in temperature which made his body shake. Only Jaspar
Colinadous was unaffected by the cold.
The
rough wall of rocks at the chasm's edge gradually fell away, curving inward
towards the pass, and very soon they saw the bridge ahead of them, a narrow
spur of natural stone pushing outward over the foaming river below. And they
heard the echo of the water as it plunged yet deeper down the gorge. Yet
nowhere was there the guard which the little cat had reported.
Elric
moved cautiously in the lead now, again wishing he had a weapon to give him
reassurance. He reached the bridge and set a foot upon it. Far down at the foot
of the chasm's granite walls grey foam leapt and danced and the river gave
voice to its own peculiar song, half triumph, half despair, almost as if it
were a living thing.
Elric
shivered and took another step. Still he saw no figure in that deepening gloom.
Another step and he was high above the water, refusing to look down lest the
water call him to it. He knew the fascination of such torrents and how one
could be drawn into them, hypnotised by their rush and noise.
"See
you any guard, Prince Elric?" called Jaspar Colinadous.
"Nothing,"
the albino cried back. And he took two more steps.
Gone
was behind him now, moving as cautiously as he. He peered to the bridge's
further side. Great slabs of dank rock, covered in lichen and oddly coloured
creepers, rose up and disappeared into the dark air above. The sound of the
river made him think he heard voices, little skittering sounds, the scuffle of
threatening limbs, but still he saw nothing.
Elric
was half-way across the bridge before he detected the suggestion of a horse in
the shadows of the gorge, the barest hint of a rider, perhaps wearing armour
which was the colour of his own bone-white skin.
"Who's
that?" The albino raised his voice. "We come in peace. We mean no
harm to anyone here."
Again
it might have been that the water made him believe he heard a faint, unpleasant
chuckle.
Then it
seemed the rush of water grew louder and he realised he heard the sound of
hooves on rock. Formed as if by the spray, a figure suddenly appeared on the
far side of the bridge, bearing down on him, its long, pale sword poised to
strike.
There
was nowhere to turn. The only way of avoiding the warrior was to jump from the
bridge into the torrent below. Elric found his vision dimmed even as he
prepared to spring forward, hoping to catch the horse's bridle and at least
halt the rider in his tracks.
Then
again there was a whirring of wings and something fixed itself on the
attacker's helm, slashing at the face within. It was Whiskers, spitting and
yowling like any ordinary alley cat engaged in a brawl over a piece of ripe
fish.
The
horse reared. The rider gave out a shriek of rage and pain and released the
bridle hi order to try to pull the little cat from him. Whiskers rushed upward
into the air, out of reach. Elric glimpsed glaring, silvery eyes, a skin which
glowed with the leper's mark, and then the horse, out of control, had slipped
on the wet rock and fallen sideways. For a moment it tried to get back to its
feet, the rider yelling and roaring as if demented, the long, white sword still
hi his hand. And then both had tumbled over the edge of the bridge and went
falling, a chaotic mixture of arms and hooves, down into the echoing chasm to
be swallowed by the distant, murky waters.
Elric
was gasping for breath. Jaspar Colinadous came to grip his arm and steady him,
helping him and Gone cross to the far side of the rocky slab and stand upon the
bank, still scarcely aware of what had happened to them.
"I'm
grateful again to Whiskers," said Elric with an unstable grin.
"That's a valuable pet you have, Master Colinadous."
"More
valuable than you know," said the little man feelingly. "He has
played a crucial part in more than one world's history." He patted the cat
as the beast returned to his arms, purring and pleased with himself. "I'm
glad we were able to be of service to you."
"We're
well rid of the bridge's guardian." Elric peered down into the foam.
"Are we to encounter more such attacks, my lady?"
"Most
certainly," she said. She was frowning as if lost in some conundrum only
she perceived.
Jaspar
Colinadous pursed his lips. "Here," he said. "Look how the gorge
narrows. It becomes a tunnel."
It was
true. They could now see how the rocks leaned in upon one another so that the
pass was little more than a cave barely large enough to let Elric enter without
bending his head. A set of crude steps led up to it and from time to time a
little flicker of yellow fire appeared within, as if the place were lit by
torches.
Jaspar
Colinadous sighed. "I had hoped to journey with you further than this, but
I must turn back now. I can go no further than the Marador Gate, which is what
this seems to be. To do so would be to destroy me. I must find other companions
now, in the Land of Dreams-in-Common." He seemed genuinely regretful.
"Farewell, Prince Elric, Lady Gone. I wish you success in your
adventure."
And
suddenly the little man had turned and walked swiftly back over the bridge, not
looking behind him. He left them almost as suddenly as he had arrived and was
gone back into the darkness before either could speak, his cat with him.
Gone
seemed to accept this and, at Elric's questioning glance, said: "Such
people come and go here. Another rule the dreamthief learns is Hold on to
nothing but your own soul. Do you understand?"
"I
understand that it must be a lonely thing to be a dreamthief, madam."
And
with that Elric began to climb the great rough-hewn steps which led into the
Marador Gate.
3
Of
Beauty Found in Deep Caverns
The
tunnel began to descend almost as soon as they had entered it. Where it had
first been cool, now the air became hot and humid so that sometimes it seemed
to Elric he was wading through water. The little lights which gave faint
illumination were not, as he had first thought, lamps or brands, but seemed
naturally luminescent, delicate nodes of soft, glowing substance, almost
fleshlike in appearance. He and Oone found that they were whispering, as if
unwilling to disturb any denizens of this place. Yet Elric did not feel afraid
here. The tunnel had the atmosphere of a sanctuary and he noticed that Oone,
too, had lost some of her normal caution, though her experience had taught her
to be wary of anything as a potentially dangerous illusion.
There
was no obvious transition from Sadanor to Marador, save perhaps a slight change
of mood before the tunnel opened up into a vast natural hall of richly glowing
blues and greens and golden yellows and dark pinks, all flowing one to the
other, like lava which had only recently cooled, more like exotic plants than
the rock they were. Scents, like those of the loveliest, headiest flowers, made
Elric feel as though he walked in a garden, not unlike the gardens he had known
as a child, places of the greatest security and tranquility; yet there was no
doubt that the place was a cavern and that they had travelled underground to
reach it.
At
first delighted by the sight, Elric began to feel a certain sadness, for until
now he had not remembered those gardens of childhood, the innocent happiness
which conies so rarely to a Melnibonéan, no matter what their age. He thought
of his mother, dead in childbirth, of his infinitely mourning father, who had
refused to acknowledge the son who, in his opinion, had killed his wife.
A
movement from the depths of this natural hall and Elric again feared danger,
but the people who began to emerge were unarmed and they had faces full of
restrained melancholy.
"We
have arrived in Marador," whispered Gone with certainty.
"You
are here to join us?" A woman spoke. She wore flowing robes of myriad,
glistening colour, mirroring the colours of the rock on walls and roof. She had
long hair of faded gold and her eyes were the shade of old pewter. She reached
to touch Elric-a greeting- and her hand was cold on his. He felt himself
becoming infected with the same sad tranquility and it seemed to him that there
could be worse fates than remaining here, recalling the desires and pleasures
of his past, when life had been so much simpler and the world had seemed easily
conquered, easily improved.
Behind
him Oone said in a voice which sounded unduly harsh to his ear: "We are
travellers in your land, my lady. We mean you no harm, but we cannot
stay."
A man
spoke. "Travellers? What do you seek?"
"We
seek," said Elric, "the Fortress of the Pearl."
Oone
was clearly displeased by his frankness. "We have no desire to tarry in
Marador. We wish only to learn the location of the next gate, the Paranor
Crate."
The man
smiled wistfully. "It is lost, I fear. Lost to all of us. Yet there is no
harm in loss. There is comfort in it, even, don't you feel?" He turned
dreaming, distant eyes on them. "Better not to seek that which can only
disappoint. Here we prefer to remember what we most wanted and how it was to
want it..."
"Better,
surely, to continue looking for it?" Elric was surprised by his own blunt
tone.
"Why
so, sir, when the reality can only prove inadequate when compared against the
hope?"
"Think
you so, sir?" Elric was prepared to consider this notion, but Oone's grip
on his arm tightened.
"Remember
the name that dreamthieves give this land," she murmured.
Elric
reflected that it was truly the Land of Old Desires. All of his own forgotten
yearnings were returning to him, bringing a sense of simplicity and peace. Now
he remembered how those sensations had been replaced by anger as he began to
realise that there was little likelihood of his dreams ever coming true. He had
raged at the injustice of the world. He had flung himself into his sorcerous
studies. He had become determined to change the balance of things and introduce
greater liberty, greater justice by means of the power he had in the world. Yet
his fellow Melnibonéans had refused to accept his logic. The early dreams had
begun to fade and with them the hope which had at first lifted his heart. Now
here was the hope offered him again. Perhaps there were realms where all he
desired was true? Perhaps Marador was such a world.
"If
I went back and found Cymoril and brought her here, we could live in harmony
with these people, I think," he said to Oone.
The
dreamthief was almost contemptuous.
"This
is called the Land of Old Desires-not the Land of Fulfilled Desire! There is a
difference. The emotions you feel are easy and easily maintained-while the
reality remains out of your reach, while you merely long for the unattainable.
When you set out to discover fulfillment, Elric of Melniboné, then you achieved
stature in the world. Turn your back on that determination-your own
determination to help build a world where justice reigns-and you'll lose my
respect. You'll lose respect for yourself. You'll prove yourself a liar and
you'll prove me a fool for believing you could help me save the Holy
Girl!"
Elric
was shocked by her outburst, which seemed offensive hi that particular
atmosphere of serenity. "But I think it is impossible to build such a
world. Better to have the prospect, surely, than the knowledge of
failure?"
"That
is what all hi this realm believe. Remain here, if you will, and believe what
they believe forever. But I think one must always make an attempt at justice,
no matter how poor the prospect of success!"
Elric
felt tired and wished to settle down and rest. He yawned and stretched.
"These people seem to have a secret I would learn. I think I will talk to
them for a while before continuing."
"Do
so and Anigh dies. The Holy Girl dies. And everything of yourself that you
value, that dies also." Gone did not raise her voice. She spoke almost in
a matter-of-fact tone. But her words had an urgency which broke Elric's mood.
It was not for the first time that he had considered retreating into dreams.
Had he done so, his people would now be ruled by him, and Yyrkoon would be dead
or exiled.
Thought
of his cousin and his cousin's ambition, of Cymoril waiting for him to return
so that they might be married, helped remind Elric of his purpose here and he
shook off the mood of reconciliation, of retreat. He bowed to the people of the
cavern. "I thank you for your generosity, but my own path lies forward,
through the Paranor Gate."
Oone
drew a deep breath, perhaps in relief. "Tune's not measured in any
familiar way here, Prince Elric, but be assured it's passing more rapidly than
I would like..."
It was
with a sense of deep regret that Elric left the melancholy people behind him
and followed her further into the glowing caverns.
Oone
added: "These lands are well-called. Be wary of the familiar."
"Perhaps
we could have rested there? Restored our energies?" said Elric.
"Aye.
And died full of sweet melancholy."
He
looked at her in surprise and saw that she had not been unaffected by the
atmosphere. "Is that what befell Alnac Kreb?"
"Of
course not!" She recovered herself. "He was fully able to resist so
obvious a trap."
Elric
now felt ashamed. "I almost failed the first real test of my determination
and my discipline."
"We
dreamthieves have the advantage of having been tested thus many times,"
she told him. "It gets easier to confront, though the lure remains as
strong."
"For
you, too."
"Why
not? You think I have no forgotten desires, nothing I would not wish to dream
of? No childhood which had its sweet moments?"
"Forgive
me, madam."
She
shrugged. "There's an attraction to that aspect of the past. To the past
in general, I suppose. But we forget the other aspects-those things which
forced us into fantasy in the first place."
"You're
a believer in the future, then, madam?" Elric tried to joke. The rock
beneath their feet became slippery and they were forced to make the gentle
descent with more caution. Ahead Elric thought he heard again the sound of the
river, perhaps where it now raced underground.
"The
future holds as many traps as the past," she said with a smile. "I am
a believer in the present, my lord. In the eternal present." And there was
an edge to her voice, as if she had not always held this view.
"Speculation
and regret offer many temptations, I suppose," said Elric; then he gasped
at what he saw ahead.
Molten
gold was cascading down two well-worn channels in the rock, forming a gigantic
V-shaped edifice. The metal flowed unchecked and yet as they approached it became
obvious that it was not hot. Some other agent had caused the effect, perhaps a
chemical in the rock itself. As the gold reached the floor of the cavern it
spread into a pool and the pool in turn fed a brook which bubbled, brilliant
with the precious stuff, down towards another stream which seemed at first to
contain ordinary water, but when Elric looked more carefully he saw that that
stream was, in turn, comprised of silver and the two elements blended as they
met. Following the course of this stream with his eyes, he saw that they met,
some distance away, with a further river, this one of glistening scarlet, which
might be liquid rubies. In all his travels, in the Young Kingdoms and the
realms of the supernatural, Elric had seen nothing like it. He made to move
towards it, to inspect it further, but she checked him.
"We
have reached the next gate," she said. "Ignore that particular
wonder, my lord. Look."
She
pointed between twin streams of gold and he could just make out something
shadowy beyond. "There is Paranor. Are you ready to enter that land?"
Remembering
the dreamthieves' term for it, Elric allowed himself an ironic smile. "As
ready as I shall ever be, madam."
Then,
just as he stepped towards the portal, there came the sound of galloping hooves
behind them. They rang sharply on the rock of the cavern. They echoed through
the gloomy roof, through a thousand chambers, and Elric had no time to turn
before something heavy struck his shoulder and he was flung to one side. He had
the impression of a deathly white horse, of a rider wearing armour of ivory,
mother-of-pearl and pale tortoiseshell, and then it was gone through the gate
of molten gold and disappearing into the shadows beyond. But there was no doubt
in EIric's mind that he had encountered one of the warriors who had already
attacked him on the bridge. He had the impression of the same mocking chuckle
as the hooves faded and the sound was absorbed by whatever lay beyond the gate.
"We
have an enemy," said Oone. Her face was grim and she clenched her hands to
her sides, clearly taking a grip on herself. "We have been identified
already. The Fortress of the Pearl does not merely defend. She attacks."
"You
know those riders? You have seen them before?"
She
shook her head. "I know their kind, that's all."
"And
we've no means of avoiding them?"
"Very
few." She was frowning to herself again, considering some problem she was
not prepared to discuss. Then she seemed to dismiss it and taking his arm led
him under the twin cascades of cool gold into a further cavern, which this time
suddenly filled with a gentle green glow, as if they walked beneath a canopy of
leaves in autumn sunlight. And Elric was reminded of Old Melniboné, at the
height of her power, when his people were proud enough to take the whole world
for granted, when entire nations had been remoulded for their passing pleasure.
As they emerged into a further cavern, so vast he did not at first realise they
were still underground, he saw the spires and minarets of a city, glowing with
the same warm green, which was as beautiful as his own beloved Imrryr, the
Dreaming City, which he had explored throughout his boyhood.
"It
is like Imrryr and yet it is not like Imrryr at all," he said in surprise.
"No,"
she said, "it is like London. It is like Tanelorn. It is like
Ras-Paloom-Atai." And she did not speak sarcastically. She spoke as if she
really did believe the city resembled those other cities, only one of which
Elric recognised.
"But
you have seen it before. What is it called?"
"It
has no name," she said. "It has all names. It is called whatever you
desire to call it." And she turned away, as if resting herself, before she
led him onward down the road past the city.
"Should
we not visit it? There may be people there who can help us find our way."
Gone
gestured. "And there may be those who would hamper us. It is now clear,
Prince Elric, that our mission is suspected and that certain forces could well
have the intention of stopping us at any cost."
"You
think the Sorcerer Adventurers have followed us?"
"Or
preceded us. Leaving at least something of themselves here." She was
peering cautiously towards the city.
"It
seems such a peaceful place," said Elric. The more he looked at the city
the more he was impressed by the architecture, all of the same greenish stone
but varying from yellow to blue. There were vast buttresses and curving bridges
between one tower and another; there were spires as delicate as cobwebs yet so
tall they almost disappeared into the roofs of the cavern. It seemed to reflect
some part of him which he could not at once recall. He longed to go there. He
grew resentful of Oone's guidance, though he had sworn to follow it, and began
to believe that she herself was lost, that she was no better suited to discover
their goal than was he.
"We
must continue," she said. She was speaking more urgently now.
"I
know I would find something within that city which would make Imrryr great
again. And in her greatness I could lead her to dominate the world. But this
tune, instead of bringing cruelty and terror, we could bring beauty and good
will."
"You
are more prone to illusion than I thought, Prince Elric," said Oone.
He
turned to her angrily. "What's wrong with such ambitions?"
"They
are unrealistic. As unreal as that city."
"The
city looks solid enough to me."
"Solid?
Aye, in its way. Once you enter its gate it will embrace you as thoroughly as
any long-lost lover! Come then, sir. Come!" She seemed seized by an
equally poor temper and strode on up an obsidian road which twisted along the
hill towards the city.
Startled
by her sudden change, Elric followed. But now his own anger was dissipating.
"I'll abide, madam, by your judgement. I am sorry..."
She was
not listening to him. Moment by moment the city came closer until soon they
were overshadowed by it, looking up at walls and domes and towers whose size
was so tremendous it was almost impossible to guess at their true extent.
"There's
a gate," she said. "There! Go through and I'll say farewell. I'll try
to save the child myself and you can give yourself up to lost beliefs and so
lose the beliefs you currently hold!"
And now
Elric looked closer at the walls, which were like jade, and he saw dark shapes
within the walls and he saw that the dark shapes were the figures of men, women
and children. He gasped as he stepped forward to peer at them, observing living
faces, eyes which were undying, lips frozen in expressions of terror, of
anguish, of misery. They were like so many flies in amber.
"That's
the unchanging past, Prince Elric," said Gone. "That's the fate of
those who seek to reclaim their lost beliefs without first experiencing the
search for new ones. This city has another name. Dreamthieves call it the City
of Inventive Cowardice. You would not understand the twists of logic which
brought so many to this pass! Which made them force those they loved to share
their fate. Would you stay with them, Prince Elric, and nurse your lost
beliefs?"
The
albino turned away with a shudder. "But if they could see what had
happened to earlier travellers, why did they continue into the city?"
"They
blinded themselves to the obvious. That is the great triumph of mindless need
over intelligence and the human spirit."
Together
the two returned to the path below the city and Elric was relieved when the
beautiful towers were far behind and they had passed through several more great
caverns, each with its own city, though none as magnificent as the first. These
he had felt no desire to visit, though he had detected movement in some and Oone
had said she suspected not all were as dangerous as the City of Inventive
Cowardice.
"You
called this world the Dream Realm," he said, "and indeed it's
well-named, madam, for it seems to contain a catalogue of dreams, and not a few
nightmares. It's almost as if the place were born of a poet's brain, so strange
are some of the sights."
"I
told you," she said, speaking more warmly now that he had acknowledged the
danger, "much of what you witness here is the semi-formed stuff of
realities that other worlds, such as yours and mine, are yet to witness. To
what extent they will come to exist elsewhere I do not know. These places have
been fashioned over centuries by a succession of dreamthieves, imposing form on
what is otherwise formless."
Elric
was now beginning to understand better what he had been told by Oone.
"Rather than making a map of what exists, you impose your own map upon
it!"
"To
a degree. We do not invent. We merely describe in a particular way. By that
means we can make pathways through each of the myriad Dream Realms, for, in
this alone, the realms comply one with the other."
"In
reality there could be a thousand different lands in each realm?"
"If
you would see it so. Or an infinity of lands. Or one with an infinity of
aspects. Roads are made so that the traveller without a compass may not wander
too far from their destination." She laughed almost gaily. "The
fanciful names we give these places are not from any poetical impulse, nor from
whim, but from a certain necessity. Our survival depends on accurate
descriptions!"
"Your
words have a profundity to them, madam. Though my survival has also tended to
depend on a good, sharp blade!"
"While
you depend upon your blade, Prince Elric, you condemn yourself to a singular
fate."
"You
predict my death, eh, madam?"
Oone
shook her head, her beautiful lips forming an expression of utmost sympathy and
tenderness. "Death is inevitable to almost all of us, in some shape or
another. And I'll admit, if Chaos ever conquered Chaos, then you will be the
instrument of that remarkable conquest. It would be sad, indeed, Prince Elric,
if in taming Chaos you destroyed yourself and all you loved into the
bargain!"
"I
promise you, Lady Gone, to do my best to avoid such a fate." And Elric
wondered at the look in the dreamthief's eyes and then chose not to speculate
further.
They
walked through a forest of stalagmites and stalactites now, all of the same
glowing colours, dark greens and dark blues and rich reds, and there was a
musical sound as water splashed from roof to floor. Every so often a huge drop
would fall on one or the other of them but such was the nature of the caverns
that they were soon dry again. They had begun to relax and walked arm in arm,
almost merry, and it was only then that they saw the figures flitting between
the upward-thrusting fangs of rock.
"Swordsmen,"
murmured Elric. He added ironically, "This is when a weapon would be
useful..." His mind was half with the situation, half feeling its way out
through the worlds of the elementals, seeking some kind of spell, some
supernatural aid, but he was baffled. It seemed that the mental paths he was
used to following were blocked to him.
The
warriors were veiled. They were dressed in heavy flowing cloaks and their heads
were protected by helms of metal and leather. Elric had the impression of cold,
hard eyes with tattooed lids and knew at once that these were members of the
Sorcerer Assassin guild from Quarzhasaat, left behind when their fellows had
retreated from the Dream Realms. Doubtless they were trapped here. It was
clear, however, that they did not intend to parley with Elric and Gone, but
were closing in, following a familiar pattern of attack.
Elric
was struck by a strangeness about these men. They lacked a certain fluidity of
movement and, the closer they came, the more he realised that it was almost
possible to see past their eyes and into the hollows of their skulls. These
were not ordinary mortals. He had seen men like them in Imrryr once, when he
had gone with his father on one of those rare times when Sadric chose to take
him upon some local expedition, out to an old arena whose high walls imprisoned
certain Melnibonéans who had lost their souls in pursuit of sorcerous
knowledge, but whose bodies still lived. They, too, had seemed to be possessed
by a cold, raging hatred against any not like themselves.
Oone
cried out and moved rapidly, dropping to one knee as a sword struck at her,
then clattered against one of the great pointed pillars. So close together were
the stalagmites that it was difficult for the swordsmen to swing or to stab and
for a while both the albino and the dreamthief ducked and dodged the blades
until one cut Elric's arm and he saw, almost in surprise, that the man had
drawn blood.
The
Prince of Melniboné knew that it was just a matter of time before they were
both killed and, as he fell back against one of the great rocky teeth, he felt
the stalagmite move behind him. Some trick of the cavern had weakened the rock
and it was loose. He flung all of his weight forward against it. It began to
topple. Quickly he got his body in front of it, supporting the thing on his
shoulder, then with all his energy he ran with the great rocky spear at his
nearest assailant.
The
point of the rock drove full into the veiled man's chest. The Sorcerer Assassin
uttered a bleak, agonised shout, and strange, unnatural blood began to well up
around the stone, gushing down and soaking into the warrior's bones, almost
reabsorbed by him. Elric sprang forward and dragged the sabre and the poignard
from his hands even as another of the attackers came upon him from the rear.
All his battle cunning, all his war skills, returned to Elric. Long before he
had come by Stormbringer he had learned the arts of the sword and the dagger,
of the bow and the lance, and now he had no need of an enchanted blade to make
short work of the second Sorcerer Assassin, then a third. Shouting to Oone to
help herself to weapons, he darted from rock to rock, taking the warriors one
at a time. They moved sluggishly, uncertainly now, yet none ran from him.
Soon
Oone had joined him, showing that she was as accomplished a fighter as he. He
admired the delicacy of her technique, the sureness of her hands as she parried
and thrust, striking with the utmost efficiency and piling up her corpses with
all the economy of a cat in a nest of rats.
Elric
took time to grin over his shoulder. "For one who so recently extolled the
virtues of words over the sword, you show yourself well-accomplished with a
blade, madam!"
"It
is often as well to have the experience of both before one makes the
choice," she said. She despatched another of their assailants. "And
there are times, Prince Elric, I'll admit, when a decent piece of steel has a
certain advantage over a neatly turned phrase!"
They
fought together like two old friends. Their techniques were complementary but
not dissimilar. Both fought as the best soldiers fight, with neither cruelty
nor pleasure in the killing, but with the intention of winning as quickly as
possible, while causing as little pain to their opponents.
These
opponents appeared to suffer no pain, as such, but every tune one died he
offered up the same disturbing wail of anguish, and the blood which poured from
the wounds was strange stuff indeed.
At last
the man and woman were done and stood leaning on their borrowed blades panting
and seeking to control that nausea which so often follows a battle.
Then,
as Elric watched, the corpses around them swiftly faded, leaving only a few
swords behind. The blood, too, disappeared. There was virtually nothing to say
that a fight had taken place in the great cavern.
"Where
have they gone?"
Oone
picked up a sheath and fitted her new sabre into it. For all her words, she
clearly had no intention of proceeding any further without arms. She placed two
daggers in her belt. "Gone? Ah." She hesitated. "To whatever
pool of half-living ectoplasm they came from." She shook her head.
"They were almost phantasms, Prince Elric, but not quite. They were, as I
told you, what the Sorcerer Adventurers left behind."
"You
mean part of them returned to our own world, as part of Alnac returned?"
"Exactly."
She drew a breath and made as if to continue.
"Then
why shall we not find Alnac here? Still alive?"
"Because
we do not seek him," she said. And she spoke with all her old firmness;
enough to make Elric proceed only a degree further with the subject.
"And
perhaps anyway we would not find him here, as we found the Sorcerer
Adventurers, in the Land of Lost Beliefs," said the albino quietly.
"True,"
she said.
Then
Elric took her in his arms for a moment and they remained, embracing, for a few
seconds, until they were ready to continue forward seeking the Celador Gate.
Later,
as Elric helped his ally across another natural bridge, below which flowed a
river of dull brown stuff, Gone said to him: "This is no ordinary
adventure for me, Prince Elric. That is why I needed you to come with me."
A
little puzzled as to why she should, after all, say something which they had
both taken for granted, Elric did not reply.
When
the snout-faced women attacked them, with nets and spikes, it did not take them
long to cut their way free and drive the cowardly creatures off, and neither
were they greatly inconvenienced by the vulpine things which loped on their
hindlegs and had claws like birds. They even joked together as they despatched
packs of snapping beasts which resembled nothing so much as horses the size of
dogs and spoke a few words of a human tongue, though without any sense of the
meaning.
Now at
least they were reaching the borders of Paranor and saw looming ahead of them
two enormous towers of carved rock, with little balconies and windows and
terraces and crenellations, all covered in old ivy and climbing brambles
bearing light yellow fruit.
"It
is the Celador Gate," said Gone. She seemed reluctant to approach it. Her
hand on the hilt of her sword, her other arm linked with Elric's, she stopped
and drew a deep, slow breath. "It is the land of forests."
"You
called it the Land of Forgotten Love," said Elric.
"Aye.
That's the dreamthieves' name." She laughed a little sardonically.
Elric,
uncertain of her mood and not wishing to intrude upon her, held back also,
looking from her to the gate and back again.
She
reached a hand to his bone-white features. Her own skin was golden, still full
of enormous vitality. She stared into his face. Then, with a sigh, she turned
away and stepped towards the gate, taking his hand and pulling him after her.
They
passed between the towers and here Elric's nostrils immediately were filled
with the rich smells of leaf and turf. All around them were massive oak trees
and elms and birches and every other kind of tree, yet all of them, though they
formed a canopy, grew not beneath the light of the open sky but were nurtured by
the oddly glowing rocks in the cavern ceilings. Elric had thought it impossible
for trees to grow underground and he marvelled at the health, the very
ordinariness, of everything.
It was
therefore with some astonishment that he observed a creature emerge from the
wood and plant itself firmly on the path along which they must move.
"Halt!
I must know your business!" His face was covered in brown fur and his
teeth were so prominent, his ears so large, his eyes so doelike, he resembled
nothing so much as an overgrown rabbit, though he was armoured solidly in
battered brass, with a brass cap upon his head, and his weapons, a sword and
spear of workmanlike steel, were also bound in brass.
"We
seek merely to pass through this land without doing harm or being harmed,"
said Oone.
The
rabbit-warrior shook his head. "Too vague," he said, and suddenly he
hefted his spear and plunged the point deep into the bole of an oak. The oak
tree screamed. "That's what he told me. And many more of these."
"The
trees were travellers?" said Elric.
"Your
name, sir?"
"I
am Elric of Melniboné and, like my lady Oone here, I mean you no disturbance.
We travel on to Imador."
"I
know no 'Elric' or 'Oone.' I am the Count of Magnes Doar and I hold this land
as my own. By my conquest. By my ancient right. You must go back through the
gate."
"We
cannot," said Gone. "To retreat would mean our destruction."
"To
proceed, madam, would mean the same thing. What? Shall you camp at the gates
forever?"
"No,
sir," she said. She put her hand to the hilt of her sword. "We will
hack our way through your forest if need be. We are on urgent business and will
accept no halt."
The
rabbit-warrior pulled the spear from the oak, which ceased to scream, and flung
it into another tree. This, in turn, set up a wailing and a moaning until even
the Count of Magnes Doar shook his head in irritation and drew his weapon out
of the trunk. "You must fight me, I think," he said.
It was
then that they heard a yell from the other side of the right pillar and
something white and rearing appeared there. It was another of the pale riders
in armour of bone, tortoiseshell and mother-of-pearl, his horrible eyes slitted
with hatred, his horse's hooves beating at a barrier which had not been there
when Oone and Elric passed through.
Then it
was down and the warrior was charging.
The
albino and the dreamthief made to defend themselves, but it was the Count of
Magnes Doar who moved ahead of them and jabbed his spear up at the warrior's
body. Steel was deflected by an armour stronger than it looked and the sword
rose and fell, almost contemptuously, slicing down through the brass helm into
the brain of the rabbit-warrior. He staggered backward, his hands clutching at
his head, his sword and spear abandoned. His round brown eyes seemed to grow
still wider and he began to squeal. He turned slowly, round and round, then
fell to his knees.
Elric
and Oone had positioned themselves behind the bole of one of the oaks, ready to
defend themselves when the rider attacked.
The
horse reared again, snorting with the same mindless fury as its master, and
Elric darted from his cover, seized the dropped spear and stabbed up to where
the breastplate and gorget joined, sliding the spearhead expertly into the
warrior's throat.
There
came a choking sound which in turn grew to a familiar chuckling and the rider
had turned his horse and was riding ahead of them again, along the path through
the forest, his body swaying and jerking as if in its death agonies, yet still
borne on by the horse.
They
watched it disappear.
Elric
was trembling. "If I had not already seen him die on the bridge from
Sadanor I would swear that was the same man who attacked me there. He has a
puzzling familiarity."
"You
did not see him die," said Oone. "You saw him plunge into the
river."
"Well,
I think he is dead now, after that stroke. I almost severed his head."
"I
doubt if he is," she said. "It's my belief he is our most powerful
enemy and we shall not have to deal with him in any serious way until we near
the Fortress of the Pearl itself."
"He
protects the Fortress?"
"Many
do." She embraced him again, swiftly, then sank to one knee to inspect the
dead Count of Magnes Doar. In death he more resembled a man, for already the
hair on his face and hands was fading to grey and even his flesh seemed on the
point of disappearance. The brass helm, too, had turned an ugly shade of
silver. Elric was reminded of Alnac's dying. He averted his eyes.
Oone,
too, stood up quickly and there were tears in her eyes. The tears were not for
the Count of Magnes Doar. Elric took her in his arms. He was suddenly full of
longing for someone he barely remembered from old dreams, the dreams of his
youth; someone who, perhaps, had never existed.
He
thought he felt a slight shudder run through Oone as he embraced her. He
reached out for a memory of a little boat, of a fair-haired girl sleeping at
the bottom of the vessel as it drifted out to open sea, of himself sailing a
skiff towards her, full of pride that he might be her rescuer. Yet he had never
known such a girl, he was sure, though Oone reminded him of that girl grown up.
With a
gasp Oone moved away from him. "I thought you were... It's as if I'd
always known you..." She put her hands to her face. "Oh, this damned
land is well-called, Elric!"
Elric
could only agree.
"Yet
what danger is there to us?" he asked.
She
shook her head. "Who knows? Much or little. None? The dreamthieves say
that it is in the Land of Forgotten Love that the most important decisions are
made. Decisions which can have the most monumental consequences."
"So
one should do nothing here? Make no decisions?"
She
passed her fingers through her hair. "At least we should be aware that the
consequences might not manifest themselves for a long while yet."
Together
they left the dead rabbit-warrior behind them and continued down the tunnel of
trees. Now from time to time Elric thought he saw faces peering at bun from the
green shadows. Once he was sure he saw the figure of his dead father, Sadric,
mourning for Elric's mother, the only creature he had ever truly loved. So
strong was the image that Elric called out:
"Sadric!
Father! Is this your Limbo?"
At this
Oone cried urgently. "No! Do not address him. Do not bring him to you. Do
not make him real! It is a trap, Elric. Another trap."
"My
father?"
"Did
you love him?"
"Aye.
Though it was an unhappy land of love."
"Remember
that. Do not bring him here. It would be obscene to recall him to this gallery
of illusions."
Elric
understood her and used all his habits of self-discipline to rid himself of his
father's shade. "I tried to tell him, Oone, how much I grieved for him in
his loss and his sorrow." He was weeping. His body was shaking with an
emotion from which he believed he had long since freed himself. "Ah, Oone.
I would have died myself to let him have his wife returned to him. Is there no
way...?"
"Such
sacrifices are meaningless," she said, gripping him hi both her hands and
holding him to her. "Especially here. Remember your quest. We have already
crossed three of the seven lands which will bring us to the Fortress of the
Pearl. We have crossed half this. That means we have already accomplished more
than most. Hold on to yourself, Prince of Melniboné. Remember who and what
depends upon your success!"
"But
if I have the opportunity to make something right that was so wrong...?"
"That
is to do with your own feelings, not what is and what can be. Would you invent
shadows and make them play out your dreams? Would that bring happiness to your
tragic mother and father?"
Elric
looked over his shoulder into the forest. There was no sign of his father now.
"He seemed so real. Of such solid flesh!"
"You
must believe that you and I are the only solid flesh in this entire land. And
even we are-" She stopped herself. She reached up to his face and kissed
it. "We will rest for a little, if only to restore our psychic
strength."
And
Oone drew Elric down into the soft leaves at the side of the path. And she
kissed him and she moved her lovely hands over his body and slowly she became
all that he had lost in his love of women and he knew that he, in turn, became
everything she had ever refused to allow herself to desire hi a man. And he
knew, without guilt or regret, that their love-making had no past and that its
only future lay somewhere beyond their own lives, beyond any realm they would
ever visit, and that neither would ever witness the consequences.
And in
spite of this knowledge they were careless and they were happy and they gave
each other the strength they would need if they ever hoped to fulfill their
quest and reach the Fortress of the Pearl.
4
The
Intervention of a Navigator
Surprised
by his own lack of confusion, filled with an apparent clarity, Elric stepped,
side by side with Gone, through the shimmering silver gateway into Imador,
called mysteriously by the dreamthieves the Land of New Ambition, and found
himself at the top of an heroic flight of steps which curved downward towards a
plain which stretched towards a horizon turned a pale, misty blue and which he
could almost have mistaken for the sky. For a moment he thought that he and
Gone were alone on that vast stairway and then he saw that it was crowded with
people. Some were engaged in hectic conversation, some bartering, some
embracing, while others were gathered around holy men, speech-makers,
priestesses, story-tellers, either listening avidly or arguing.
The
steps down to the plain were alive with every manner of human intercourse.
Elric saw snake-charmers, bear-baiters, jugglers and acrobats. They were dressed
in costumes typical of the desert lands-enormous silk pantaloons of green,
blue, gold, vermilion and amber; coats of brocade or velvet; turbans, burnooses
and caps of the most intricate needlework; burnished metal and silver, gold,
precious jewels of every kind. And there was an abundance of animals, stalls,
baskets overflowing with produce, with fabrics, with goods of leather and
copper and brass.
"How
handsome they are!" he remarked. It was true that though they were of all
shapes and sizes the people had a beauty which was not easily defined. Their
skins were all healthy, their eyes bright, their movements dignified and easy.
They bore themselves with confidence and good humour and while it was clear
they noticed Oone and Elric walking down the steps, they acknowledged them
without making any great effort to greet them or ask them their business. Dogs,
cats and monkeys ran about in the crowd and children played the cryptic games
all children play. The air was warm and balmy and full of the scents of fruit,
flowers and the other goods being sold. "Would that all worlds were like
this," Elric added, smiling at a young woman who offered him embroidered
cloth.
Oone
bought oranges from a boy who ran up to her. She handed one to Elric.
"This is a sweet realm indeed. I had not expected it to be so
pleasant." But when she bit into the fruit she spat it into her hand.
"It has no taste!"
Elric
tried his own orange and he, too, found it a dry, flavourless thing.
The
disappointment he felt at this was out of all proportion to the occurrence. He
threw the orange from him. It struck a step below and bounced until it was out
of sight.
The
grey-green plain appeared unpopulated. There was a road sweeping across it,
wide and well-paved, but there was not a single traveller visible, in spite of
the great crowd. "I wonder why the road is empty," he said to Oone.
"Do all these people sleep at nights on these steps? Or do they disappear
into another realm when then-business here is done?"
"Doubtless
that question will be answered for us soon enough, my lord."
She
linked her arm in his own. Since their love-making in the wood, a sense of
considerable comradeship and mutual liking had grown up between them. He knew
no guilt; he knew in his heart that he had betrayed no one and it was clear
Oone was equally untroubled. In some strange way they had restored each other,
making their combined energy something more than the sum. This was the kind of
friendship he had never really known before and he was grateful for it. He believed
that he had learned much from Oone and that the dreamthief would teach him more
that would be valuable to him when he returned to Melniboné to claim his throne
back from Yyrkoon.
As they
descended the steps it seemed to Elric that the costumes became more and more
elaborate, the jewels and headdresses and weapons richer and more exotic, while
the stature of the people increased and they grew still more handsome.
From
curiosity he stopped to listen to a story-teller who held a crowd entranced,
but the man spoke in an unfamiliar language- high and flat-which meant nothing
to him. He and Gone paused again, beside a bead-seller, whom he asked politely
if those gathered on the steps were all of the same nation.
The
woman frowned at him and shook her head, replying in still another language.
There seemed few words in it. She repeated much. Only when they were stopped by
a sherbet-seller, a young boy, could they ask their question and be understood.
The lad
frowned, as if translating their words in his head. "Aye, we are the
people of the steps. Each of us has a place here, one below the other."
"You
grow richer and more important as you descend, eh?" asked Gone.
He was
puzzled by this. "Each of us has a place here," he said again, and,
as if alarmed by their questions, he ran off up into the dense crowd above.
Here, too, there were fewer people and Elric could see that their numbers
thinned increasingly as the steps neared the plain. "Is this an
illusion?" he murmured to Oone. "It has the air of a dream."
"It
is our sense of what should be that intrudes here," she said, "and it
colours our perception of the place, I think."
"It
is not an illusion?"
"It
is not what you would call an illusion." She made an effort to find words
but eventually shook her head. "The more it seems an illusion to us, the
more it becomes one. Does that make sense?"
"I
think so."
At last
they were nearing the bottom of the stairway. They were on the last few steps
when they looked up to see a horseman riding towards them across the plain,
creating a huge pillar of dust as he came.
There
was a cry from the people behind them. Elric looked back and saw them all
rushing rapidly up the stairs and his impulse was to join them, but Oone stayed
him. "Remember we cannot go back," she said. "We must meet this
danger as best we can."
Gradually
the figure on the horse became distinguishable. It was either the same warrior
in the armour of mother-of-pearl, ivory and tortoiseshell or one who was
identical. He bore a white lance tipped with a point of sharpened bone and the
thing was aimed directly at Elric's heart.
The
albino jumped forward in a manoeuvre designed to confuse his attacker. He was
almost under the horse's hooves when he struck upward with his swiftly drawn
sword and cut at the lance. The force of the blow sent him reeling to one side
while Oone, reacting with almost telepathic coordination, almost as if they
were controlled by a single brain, leapt and thrust beneath the raised left
arm, seeking their assailant's heart.
Her thrust
was parried by a sudden movement of the rider's gauntletted right hand and he
kicked out at her. Now, for the first time, Elric saw his face clearly. It was
thin, bloodless, with eyes like the flesh of long-dead fish and a sneering gash
of a mouth, opening now in a grimace of contempt. Yet with a shock he saw, too,
something of Alnac Kreb! The lance swung to strike Oone's shoulder and send
her, too, to the ground.
Elric
was up again before the lance could return, his sword slashing at the horse's
girth-strap in an old trick learned from the Vilmirian bandits, but he was
blocked by an armoured leg and the lance returned to thrust at him while he
darted clear, giving Oone her opportunity.
Though
Elric and Oone fought as a single entity, their attacker was almost prescient,
seeming to guess their every move.
Elric
began to believe the rider to be wholly supernatural hi origin and even as he
feinted again he sent his mind out into the realms of the elementals, seeking
any aid which might possibly be available to him. But there was none. It was as
if every realm were deserted, as if, overnight, the entire world of elementals,
demons and spirits, had been banished to Limbo. Arioch would not aid him. His
sorcery was completely useless here.
Gone
cried out sharply and Elric saw that she had been flung back against the lowest
step. She tried to climb to her feet but something was paralysed. She could
hardly move her limbs.
Again
the pale rider chuckled and began to advance for the kill.
Elric
roared out his old battle-shout and raced towards their opponent, trying to
distract him. The albino was horrified at the possibility of harm coming to the
woman for whom he felt both profound love and comradeship and was willing to
die to save her.
"Arioch!
Arioch! Blood and souls!"
But he
had no runesword to aid him here. Nothing save his own wits and skills.
"Alnac
Kreb. Is this what remains of you?"
The
rider turned, almost impatiently, and flung the lance at the running man. His
answer.
Elric
had not anticipated this. He tried to throw, his body aside but the haft of the
lance struck his shoulder and he fell heavily into the dust, losing his grip on
the unfamiliar sabre. He began to scrabble towards it even as he saw the rider
draw his own long blade and continue towards the helpless Gone. He raised
himself to one knee and threw his poignard with desperate accuracy. The blade
went true, between the plates of the rider's back armour, and the lifted sword
fell suddenly.
Elric
reached his sabre, got to his feet and saw to his horror that the rider was
rearing over Gone, the sword again raised, ignoring the wound in his shoulder.
"Alnac?"
Again
Elric tried to appeal to whatever part of Alnac Kreb was there, but this time
he was completely ignored. That same hideous, inhuman chuckling filled the air,
the horse snorted, its hooves pawing at the woman as she struggled on the step.
Scarcely
aware of his own movement, Elric reached the rider and leapt upward, dragging
at his back, trying to haul him from the horse. The rider growled and managed
to turn. His whistling sword was parried by Elric's and the albino unseated
him. Together the pair fell to the sand, a few inches from where Oone lay.
Elric's sword-hand was crushed under his attacker's armoured back, but he managed
to tug the poignard free with his left hand and would have struck at those
hideous dead eyes had not the man's fingers closed on his wrist.
"You'll
kill me before you harm her!" Elric's normally melodic voice was a snarl
of hatred. But the warrior merely laughed again, the ghost of Alnac fading from
his eyes.
They
fought thus for several moments, neither gaining any true advantage. Elric
could hear his own breathing, the grunting of the armoured man, the whinnying
of the horse and Oone's gasp as she tried to get to her feet.
"Pearl
Warrior!"
It was
another voice. Not Oone's, but a woman's; and it carried considerable
authority.
"Pearl
Warrior! You must do no further violence to these travellers!"
The
warrior grunted but ignored the woman. His teeth snapped at Elric's throat. He
tried to turn the poignard towards the albino's heart. There were drops of
foaming saliva on his lips now-beads of white rimming his mouth.
"Pearl
Warrior!"
Suddenly
the warrior began to speak, whispering to Elric as if to a fellow conspirator.
"Don't listen to her. I can aid thee. Why do you not come with us and
learn to explore the Great Steppe, where all the hunting is rich? And there are
melons, tasting like the most delicate cherries. I can give thee such wonderful
clothing. Do not listen. Do not listen. Yes, I am Alnac, thy friend. Yes!"
Elric
was repelled by the insane babble, more than he had been by the creature's
horrible appearance and his violence.
"Think
of all the power there is. They fear thee. They fear me. Elric. I know thee.
Let us not be rivals. Together we can succeed. I am not free, but thou couldst
journey for us both. I am not free, but them wouldst never bear
responsibilities. I am not free, but, Elric, I have so many slaves at my
disposal. They are thine. I offer thee new wealth and new philosophies, new
ways of fulfilling every desire. I fear thee and thou fearest me. So we will
bind us together, one to the other. It is the only tie that ever means
anything. They dream of thee, all of them. Even I, who do not dream. Thou are
the only enemy..."
"Pearl
Warrior!"
With a
rattle of bone and ivory, of tortoiseshell and mother-of-pearl, the
leprous-skinned warrior disentangled himself from Elric. 'Together we can
defeat her," he mumbled urgently. "There would be no force to resist
us. I will give thee my ferocity!"
Nauseated
by all this, Elric climbed slowly to his feet, turning to stare in the same
direction as Oone, who now sat on the step, nursing limbs to which life seemed
to be restored.
A
woman, taller than either Elric or Oone, stood there. She was veiled and
hooded. Her eyes moved steadily from them to the one she called Pearl Warrior
and then she raised the great staff she held in her right hand and struck at
the ground with it.
"Pearl
Warrior! You must obey me!"
The
Pearl Warrior was furious. "I do not wish this!" He snarled and,
clattering, brushed at his breastplate. "You anger me, Lady Sough."
"These
are my charges and under my protection. Go, Pearl Warrior. Kill elsewhere. Kill
the true enemies of the Pearl."
"I
do not want you to order me!" He was surly, sulking like a child.
"All are enemies of the Pearl. You, too, Lady Sough."
"You
are a silly creature! Begone!" And she lifted the staff to point beyond
the stairway, where hazy rock could be seen, rising up forever.
He
spoke again, warningly. "You make me angry, Lady Sough. I am the Pearl
Warrior. I have the strength from the Fortress." He turned to Elric as if
to a comrade. "Ally yourself with me and we'll kill her now. Then we shall
rule-thou in thine freedom, me in my slavery. All of this and many other realms
beside, unknown to dreamthieves. Safety is there forever. Be mine. We shall be
married. Yes, yes, yes..."
Elric
shuddered and turned his back on the Pearl Warrior. He went to help Oone to her
feet.
Oone
was able to move all her limbs but she was still dazed. She looked back at the
steps which disappeared above them. Not a single one of the people who had
occupied that vast staircase was visible.
Troubled,
Elric glanced at the newcomer. Her robes were of different shades of blue, with
silver threads running through them, hemmed with gold and dark green. She
carried herself with extraordinary grace and dignity and stared back at Oone
and Elric with an air of amusement. Meanwhile the Pearl Warrior climbed to his
feet and stood defiantly to one side, alternately glaring at Lady Sough and
offering Elric a hideous conspiratorial smile.
"Where
are all the folk of the steps gone?" Elric asked her.
"They
have merely returned to their home, my lord," said Lady Sough. Her voice,
when she addressed him, was warm and full, yet retained all the authority with
which she had ordered the Pearl Warrior to stop his attack. "I am Lady
Sough and I bid you welcome to this land."
"We
are grateful for your intervention, my lady." Oone spoke for the first
time, though with a degree of suspicion. "Are you the ruler here?"
"I
am merely a guide and a navigator."
"That
mad thing there accepts your command." Oone rose, rubbing at her arms and
legs, glaring at the Pearl Warrior, who sneered, becoming shifty as Lady Sough
gave him her attention.
"He
is incomplete." Lady Sough was dismissive. "He guards the Pearl. But
he has such an insubstantial intelligence, he cannot understand the nature of
his task, nor who is friend or who foe. He can make only the most limited
choices, poor corrupt thing. The ones who put him to this work had, themselves,
only the faintest understanding of what was required in such a warrior."
"Bad!
I will not!" The Pearl Warrior began to utter his chuckle again.
"Never! It is why! It is why!"
"Go!"
cried Lady Sough, gesturing once more with her staff, her eyes glaring above
her veil. "You have no business with these."
"Dying
is unwise, madam," said the Pearl Warrior, lifting his shoulder hi a
gesture of defiant arrogance. "Beware thine own corruption. We may all
dissolve if this achieves that resolution."
"Go,
stupid brute!" She pointed at his horse. "And leave that spear behind
you. Destructive, insensate grotesque that you are."
"Am
I mistaken," said Elric, "or does he speak gibberish?"
"Possibly,"
murmured Gone. "But it could be he speaks more of the truth than those who
would protect us."
"Anything
will come and anything will have to be resisted!" said the Pearl Warrior
darkly as he mounted. He began to ride to where his lance had fallen after he
had thrown it at Elric. "This is why we are to be!"
"Begone!
Begone!"
He
leaned from his saddle, reaching towards the lance.
"No,"
she said firmly, as if to a silly child. "I told you that you should not
have it. Look what you have done, Pearl Warrior! You are forbidden to attack
these people again."
"No
alliance, then. Not now! But soon this freedom will be exchanged and all shall
come together!" Another appalling chuckle from the half-crazed rider and
he was digging his spurs into his horse's flanks, going at a gallop in the
direction he had come. "There shall be bonds! Oh, yes!"
"Do
his words make sense to you, Lady Sough?" Elric asked politely, when the
warrior had disappeared.
"Some
of them," she said. It seemed that she was smiling behind her veil.
"It is not his fault that his brain is malformed. There are few warriors
in this world, you know. He is perhaps the best."
"Best?"
Oone's
sardonic question went unanswered. Lady Sough reached out a hand on which
delicately coloured jewels glowed and she beckoned to them. "I am a
navigator here. I can bear you to sweet islands where two lovers could be happy
forever. I have a place that is hidden and safe. Can I take you there?"
Elric
glanced at Gone, wondering if perhaps she was attracted by Lady Sough's
invitation. For a second he forgot their purpose here. It would be wonderful to
spend a short idyll in Oone's company.
"This
is Imador, is it not, Lady Sough?"
"It
is the place the dreamthieves call Imador, aye. We do not call it by that
name." She seemed disapproving.
"We
are grateful for your help in this matter, my lady," said Elric, thinking
Oone a little brusque and seeking to apologise for his friend's manner. "I
am Elric of Melniboné and this is Lady Oone of the Dreamthieves' Guild. Do you
know that we seek the Fortress of the Pearl?"
"Aye.
And this road is a straight one for you. It can lead you forward to the
Fortress. But it might not lead you by the best route. I will guide you by
whatever route you wish." She sounded a little distant, almost as if she
were half-asleep herself. Her tone had become dreamy and Elric guessed she was
offended.
"We
owe you much, Lady Sough, and your advice is of value to us. What would you suggest?"
"That
you raise an army first, I think. For your own safety. There are such terrible
defences at the Fortress of the Pearl. Why, and before that, too. You are
brave, the both of you. There are several roads to success. Death lies at the
end of many other paths. Of this, you are, I am sure, aware..."
"Where
could we recruit such an army?" Elric ignored Oone's warning look. He felt
that she was being obstinate, overly suspicious of this dignified woman.
"There
is an ocean not far from here. There is an island in it. The people of that
island long to fight. They will follow anyone who promises them danger. Will
you come there? It is very good. There is warmth and secure walls. Gardens and
much to eat."
"Your
words have a strong degree of common-sense," said Elric. "It would be
worth, perhaps, pausing in our quest to recruit those ; soldiers. And I was
offered alliance by the Pearl Warrior. Will he help us? Can he be
trusted?"
"For
what you wish to do? Yes, I think." Her forehead furrowed. "Yes, I
think."
"No,
Lady Sough." Gone spoke suddenly and with considerable force. "We are
grateful for your guidance. Will you take us to the Falador Gate? Do you know
it?"
"I
know what you call the Falador Gate, young woman. And whatever your questions
or your desires, they are mine to answer and fulfill."
"What
is your own name for this land?"
"None."
She seemed confused by Oone's question. "There is not one. It is this
place. It is here. But I can guide you through it."
"I
believe you, my lady." Oone's voice softened. She took Elric by the arm.
"Our other name for this land is the Land of New Ambition. But new
ambitions can mislead. We invent them when the old ambition seems too hard to
achieve, eh?"
Elric
understood her. He felt foolish. "You offer a diversion, Lady Sough?"
"Not
so." The veiled woman shook her head. The movement had all her
gracefulness in it and she seemed a little wounded by the directness of his
question. "A fresh goal is sometimes preferable when the road becomes
impassable."
"But
the road is not impassable, Lady Sough," said Oone. "Not yet."
"That
is true." Lady Sough bowed her head a fraction. "I offer you all
truth in this matter. Every aspect of it."
"We
shall retain the aspect of which we are most sure," Oone continued softly,
"and thank you greatly for your help."
"It
is yours to take, Lady Oone. Come." The woman whirled, her draperies
lifting like clouds in a gale, and led them away from the steps to a place
where the ground dipped and revealed, when they were closer, a shallow river.
There a boat was moored. The boat had a curling prow of gilded wood, not unlike
the crook of Oone's dreamwand, and its sides were covered with a thin layer of
beaten gold, and bronze, and silver. Brass gleamed on rails, on the single
mast, and a sail, blue with threads of silver, like Lady Sough's robes, was
furled upon the yardarm. There was no visible crew. Lady Sough pointed with her
staff. "Here is the boat with which we shall find the gate you seek. I
have a vocation, Lady Oone, Prince Elric, to protect you. Do not fear me."
"My
lady, we do not," said Oone with great sincerity. Still, her voice was
gentle. Elric was mystified by her manner but accepted that she had a clear
notion of their situation.
"What
does this mean?" Elric murmured as Lady Sough descended towards her boat.
"I
think it means we are close to the Fortress of the Pearl," said Oone.
"She tries to help us but is not altogether sure how best to do it."
"You
trust her?"
"If
we trust ourselves, we can trust her, I think. We must know what are the right
questions to ask her."
"I'll
trust you, Oone, to trust her." Elric smiled.
At Lady
Sough's insistent beckoning they clambered into the beautiful boat, which
rocked only slightly on the dark waters of what seemed to Elric an entirely
artificial canal, straight and deep, moving in a sweeping curve until it
disappeared from sight a mile or two from them. He peered upward, still not
sure if he looked upon a strange sky or the roof of the largest cavern of all.
He could just see the stairs stretching away in the distance and wondered again
what had happened to the inhabitants when they had fled at the Pearl Warrior's
attack.
Lady
Sough took the great tiller of the boat. With a single movement she guided the
craft onto the centre of the waterway. Almost at once the ground levelled out
so that it was possible to see the grey desert on all sides, while ahead was
foliage, greenery, the suggestion of hills. There was a quality about the light
which reminded Elric of a September evening. He could almost smell the early
autumn roses, the turning trees, the orchards of Imrryr. Seated near the front
of the boat with Oone beside him, leaning on his shoulder, he sighed with
pleasure, enjoying the moment. "If the rest of our quest is to be conducted
in such a way, I shall be glad to accompany you on many such adventures, Lady
Oone."
She,
too, was in good humour. "Aye. Then all the world would desire to be
dreamthieves."
The
boat rounded a bend of the canal and they were alerted by figures standing on
both banks. These sad, silent people, dressed in white and yellow, regarded the
sailing barge with tear-filled eyes, as if they witnessed a funeral. Elric was
sure they did'not weep for himself or Oone. He called out to them, but they did
not seem to hear him. They were gone almost at once and they passed by gently
rising terraces, cultivated for vines and figs and almonds. The air was sweet
with ripening harvests and once a small, foxlike creature ran along beside them
for a while before veering off into a clump of shrubs. A little later, naked,
brown-skinned men prowled on all fours until they, too, grew bored and
disappeared into the undergrowth. The canal began to twist more and more and
Lady Sough was forced to throw all her weight upon the tiller to keep the boat
on course.
"Why
would a canal be built so?" Elric asked her when they were once more upon
a straight stretch of water.
"What
was above us is now ahead and what was below is now behind," she replied.
"That is the nature of this. I am the navigator and I know. But ahead,
where it grows darker, the river is unbending. This is made to help
understanding, I think."
Her
words were almost as confusing as the Pearl Warrior's, and Elric tried to make
sense by asking her further questions. "The river helps us understand
what, Lady Sough?"
"Their
nature-her nature-what you must encounter-ah, look!"
The
river was widening rapidly into a lake. There were reeds growing on the banks
now, silver herons flying against the soft sky.
"It
is no great distance to the island I spoke of," said Lady Sough. "I
fear for you."
"No,"
said Oone with determined kindness. "Take the boat across the lake towards
the Falador Gate. I thank you."
"This
thanks is ..." Lady Sough shook her head. "I would not have you
die."
"We
shall not. We are here to save her."
"She
is afraid."
"We
know."
"Those
others said they would save her. But they made her-they made it dark and she
was trapped..."
"We
know," said Oone, and laid a comforting hand on Lady Sough's arm as the
veiled woman guided the boat out onto the open lake.
Elric
said: "Do you speak of the Holy Girl and the Sorcerer Adventurers? What
imprisons her, Lady Sough? How can we release her? Bring her back to her father
and her people?"
"Oh,
it is a lie!" Lady Sough almost shouted, pointing to where, swimming
directly towards them, came a child. But the boy's skin was metallic, of
glaring silver, and his silver eyes were begging them for help. Then the child
grinned, reached to pull off its own head and submerged. "We near the
Falador Gate," said Oone grimly.
"Those
who would possess her also guard her," said Lady Sough suddenly. "But
she is not theirs."
"I
know," said Oone. Her gaze was fixed on what lay ahead of them. There was
a mist on the lake. It was like the finest haze which forms on water in an
autumn morning. There was an air of tranquilly which, clearly, she mistrusted.
Elric looked back at Lady Sough but the navigator's eyes were expressionless,
offering no clue to what dangers they might soon be facing.
The
boat turned a little and there was land just visible through the mist. Elric
saw tall trees rising above a tumble of rocks. There were white pillars of
limestone, shimmering faintly in that lovely light. He saw hummocks of grass
and below them little coves. He wondered if Lady Sough had, after all, brought
them to the island she had mentioned and was about to question her when he saw
what appeared to be a massive door of carved stone and intricate mosaic bearing
an air of considerable age.
"The
Falador Gate," said Lady Sough, not without a hint of trepidation.
Then
the gate had opened and a horrible wind rushed out of it, tearing at their hair
and clothing, clawing at their skins, shrieking and wailing in their ears. The
boat rocked and Elric feared it must capsize. He ran to the stern to help Lady
Sough with the tiller. Her veil had been ripped from her face. She was not a
young woman, but she bore an astonishing resemblance to the little girl they
had left in the Bronze Tent, the Holy Girl of the Bauradim. And Elric, taking
the tiller while Lady Sough replaced her veil, remembered that no mention had
ever been made of Varadia's mother.
Oone
was lowering the sail. The wind's initial strength had died and it was possible
to tack gradually towards the dark, strangely smelling entrance which had been
revealed as the mosaic door had blown down.
Three
horses appeared there. Hooves flailed at the air. Tails lashed. Then they were
galloping across the water in the direction of the boat. Then they had passed
it and vanished into the mist. Not one of the beasts had possessed a head.
Now
Elric knew terror. But it was a familiar terror and within seconds he had
regained control of himself. He knew that, whatever its name, he was about to
enter a land where Chaos ruled.
It was
only as the boat sailed under the carved rocks and into the grotto beyond that
he recalled he had none of his familiar spells and enchantments; not one of his
allies, nor his patron Duke of Hell, was available to him here. He had only
experience and courage and his ordinary sensibilities. And at that moment he
doubted if they were enough.
5
The
Sadness
of a
Queen
Who
Cannot Rule
The
mighty barrier of obsidian rock suddenly started to flow. A mass of glassy
green flooded down into the water which hissed and began to stink and mountains
of steam rose ahead of them. As the steam gradually dissipated, another river
was revealed. This one, flowing through the narrow walls of a deep canyon,
appeared of natural origin and Elric, his mind now keyed to interpretation,
wondered if it was not the same river they had crossed earlier, when he had
fought the Pearl Warrior on the bridge.
Then
the barge, which had seemed so sturdy, appeared all at once fragile as the
waters tossed it, roaring steadily downward until Elric thought they must
eventually reach the very core of the world.
Standing
with Lady Sough in the prow of the boat, Oone and Elric helped her use the
tiller to hold a course that was almost steady. And then, ahead, the river
ended without warning and they had tipped over a waterfall and before they knew
it were landing heavily in calmer water, the barge bobbing like a scrap of
bread on a pond, and overhead they could see a sky like diseased pewter in
which dark, leathery things flew and communicated with desolate cries above
palms whose leaves resembled nothing so much as viridian skins stretched out to
await a sun which never rose. There was a rich, rotten smell about the place
and the constant splashing and distant roaring of the water filled a silence
broken only by the flying creatures above the rocks and the foliage which
surrounded them.
It was
warm, yet Elric shivered. Oone drew up the collar of her doublet and even Lady
Sough gathered her robes more tightly about herself.
"Are
you familiar with this land, Lady Oone?" Elric asked. "You have
visited this realm before, I know, but you seem as surprised as I."
"There
are always new aspects. It is in the nature of the realm. Perhaps Lady Sough
can tell us more." And Oone turned courteously to their navigator.
Lady
Sough had secured her veils more firmly. She seemed unhappy that Elric had seen
her face. "I am the Queen of this land," she said, exhibiting no
pride or any other emotion.
"Then
you have minions who can assist us?"
"It
was a Queen for me, so that I had no power over it, only the land's protection.
This is where you call Falador."
"And
is it mad?" is
"It
has many defences."
"They
keep out what might also wish to leave," said Oone, almost to herself.
"Are you afraid of those who protect Falador, Lady Sough?"
"I
am Queen Sough now." A drawing up of the graceful body, but whether hi
parody or in earnest Elric could not tell. "I am protected. You are not.
Even I am not so able to guard you here."
The
barge continued to float slowly along the water-course. The slime of the rocks
appeared to shift and move as if alive and there were shapes in the water which
disturbed Elric. He would have drawn his sword if it had not seemed
ill-mannered.
"What
must we fear here?" he asked the Queen.
Now
they floated below a great spur of rock on which a horseman had positioned
himself. It was the Pearl Warrior, glaring down with the same mixture of
mockery and mindlessness. He lifted a long stick to which he had tied some
animal's sharp, twisted horn.
Queen
Sough shook her hand at him. "Pearl Warrior shall not do this! Pearl
Warrior cannot defy, even here!"
The
warrior let out his hideous chuckle and turned his horse back from the rock.
Then he was gone.
"Will
he attack us?" Oone asked the Queen.
Queen
Sough was concentrating on her tiller, steering the boat subtly along a smaller
water-course, away from the main river. Perhaps she already aimed to avoid any
conflict. "He is unpermitted," she said. "Ah!"
The
water had turned a ruby red and there were now banks of glistening brown moss,
gently rising towards the walls of rock. Elric was convinced he saw ancient
faces staring at him both from the banks and from the cliffs, but he did not
feel threatened. The red liquid looked like wine and there was a heady
sweetness here. Did Queen Sough know all the secret, tranquil places of this
world and was she guiding them through so as to avoid its dangers?
"Here
my friend Edif has influence," she told them. "He is a ruler whose
chief interest is poetry. Will it be now? I do not know."
They
had quickly become used to her strange speech forms and were finding her more
easily understood, though they had no idea who Edif might be and had passed
through his land into a place where the desert appeared suddenly on both sides
of them, beyond flanking lines of palms, as if they moved towards an oasis. Yet
no oasis materialised.
Soon
the sky was the colour of bad liver again and the rocky walls had risen around
them and there was the sticky, oppressive odour which reminded Elric of some
decadent court's anterooms. Perfume which had once been sweet but had now grown
stale; food which had once made the mouth water but which was now too old;
flowers which no longer enhanced but reminded one only of death.
The
walls on either side now had great jagged caves in them where the water echoed
and tumbled. Queen Sough seemed nervous of these and kept the barge carefully
in the centre of the river. Elric saw shadows moving within the caves, both
above and below the water. He saw red mouths opening and closing and saw pale,
unblinking eyes staring. They bad the air of Chaos-born creatures and he wished
mightily then for his runesword, for his patron Duke of Hell, for his
repertoire of spells and incantations.
The
albino was not altogether surprised when at last a voice spoke from one of the
caverns.
"I
am Balis Jamon, Lord of the Blood, and I wish to have some kidneys."
"We
sail on!" cried Queen Sough in response. "I am not your food nor
shall I ever be."
"Their
kidneys! Theirs!" the voice demanded implacably. "I have fed on no
true grub for so long. Some kidneys! Some kidneys!"
Elric
drew his sword and his dagger. Oone did the same.
"You'll
not have mine, sir," said the albino.
"Nor
mine," said Oone, seeking the source of the voice. They could not be sure
which of the many caves sheltered the speaker.
"I
am Balis Jamon, Lord of the Blood. You'll pay a toll here in my land. Two
kidneys for me!"
"I'll
take yours instead, sir, if you like!" said Elric defiantly.
"Will
you, now?"
There
was a great movement from the furthest cave and water foamed in and out. Then
something stooped and came wading into midstream, its fleshy body festooned
with half-decayed plants and ruined blooms, its horned snout lifted so that it
could stare at them from two tiny black eyes. The fangs in the snout were
broken, yellow and black, and a red tongue licked at them, flicking little
pieces of rotten meat into the water. It held one great paw over its chest and
when the paw was lowered it revealed a dark, gaping hole where the heart would
have been.
"I
am Balis Jamon, Lord of the Blood. Look what I must fill for me to live! Have
mercy, little creatures. A kidney or two and I'll let you pass. I have nothing
here, while you are complete. You must make justice and share with me."
"This
is my only justice for you, Lord Balis," said Elric, gesturing with a
sword, which seemed a feeble thing even to him.
"You
will never be complete, Balis Jamon!" called out Queen Sough. "Not
until you know more of mercy!"
"I
am fair! One kidney will do!" The paw began to reach towards Elric, who
cut at it but missed, then cut again and felt the sword strike the creature's
hide, which scarcely showed a mark. The paw grabbed at the sword. Elric
withdrew it. Balis Jamon growled with a mixture of frustration and self-pity
and reached both paws towards the albino.
"Stop!
Here's your kidney!" Oone held up something which dripped. "Here it
is, Balis Jamon. Now let us pass. We are agreed."
"Agreed."
He turned, evidently mollified, delicately took what she handed up to him and
popped it into the hole in his chest. "Good. Go!" And he waded
passively back towards his cave, honour and hunger both satisfied.
Elric
was baffled, though grateful that she had saved his life. "What did you
do, Lady Oone?"
She
smiled. "A large bean. Some of the provisions I still carried in my purse.
It looked similar to a kidney, especially when dipped in water. And I doubt if
he knows the difference. He seemed a simple creature."
Queen
Sough's eyes were lifted upward even as she steered the barge past the caves
and into a wider stretch of water where buffalo lifted their heads from where
they drank and stared at them with wary curiosity.
Elric
followed the navigator's gaze but saw only the same lead-coloured sky. He
sheathed his sword. "These creatures of Chaos seem simple enough. Less
intelligent in some ways than others I've encountered."
"Aye."
Oone was unsurprised. "That's likely, I think. She would be-"
The
boat was lifted suddenly and for a second Elric thought Lord Balis had returned
to take vengeance on them for tricking him. But they appeared to be on the
crest of a huge wave. The water level rose rapidly between the slimy walls and
now, on the cliffs' edges figures appeared. They were of every kind of
distorted shape and unlikely size and Elric was reminded a little of the beggar
populace of Nadsokor, for these, too, were dressed in rags and bore the
evidence of self-mutilation, as well as disease, wounding and ordinary neglect.
They were filthy. They moaned. They looked greedily at the boat and they licked
their lips.
Now,
more than ever before, Elric wished he had Stormbringer with him. The runesword
and a little elemental aid would have driven this rabble away in terror. But he
had only the blades captured from the Sorcerer Adventurers. He must rely upon
those, his alliance with Oone and their naturally complementary fighting
skills. There came a juddering from the bottom of the barge and the wave
receded as suddenly as it had risen, but now they were stranded on the very top
of the cliff, with the misshapen horde all around them, panting and grunting
and sniffing at their prey.
Elric
wasted no time with parleying but jumped at once from the boat's prow and cut
at the first two who grabbed for him. The blade, still sharp enough, severed
their heads and he stood over their bodies grinning at them like the wolf he
was sometimes called. "I want you all," he said. He used the battle
bravado he had learned from the pirates of the Vilmirian Straits. He moved
forward again and thrust, catching still another Chaos-creature in the chest.
"I must kill every one of you before I am satisfied!"
They
had not expected this. They shuffled. They looked at each other. They turned
their weapons in their hands, they adjusted their rags and tugged at their
limbs.
Now
Oone was beside Elric. "I want my fair share of these," she cried.
"Save them for me, Elric." Then she, too, darted forward and cut down
an ape-faced thing which carried a jewelled axe of beautiful workmanship,
clearly stolen from an earlier victim.
Queen
Sough called from behind them. "They have not attacked you. They only
threaten. Is this the true thing you must do?"
"It's
our only choice, Queen Sough!" cried Elric over his shoulder, and feinted
at two more of the half-human things.
"No!
No! It is not heroic. What can the guardian do, who is no longer a hero?"
Even
Oone could not follow this and when Elric met her eye in a question she shook
her head.
The
rabble was gaining some confidence now, closing in. Snouts sniffed at them.
Tongues licked saliva from slack lips. Hot, duly eyes full of blood and pus
squinted their hatred.
Then
they had begun to close and Elric felt his blade meet resistance, for he had
already blunted it on the first two creatures. Yet still the neck split and the
head fell to one side, glaring the while, hands clutching. Oone had her back to
his and together they moved so that they were protected from one side by the
boat, which the rabble did not seem to wish to touch. Queen Sough, in obvious
distress, wept as she watched but clearly had no authority over the
Chaos-creatures. "No! No! This does not help her to sleep! No! No! She is
in need of them, I know!"
It was
at that point that Elric heard the sound of hooves and saw, over the heads of
the closing crowd, the white armour of the Pearl Warrior.
"They
are his creatures!" he said in sudden understanding. "This is his own
army and he is to be revenged on us!"
"No!"
Queen Sough's voice was distant now, as if very far away. "This cannot be
useful! It is your army. They'll be loyal. Yes."
Hearing
her, Elric knew unexpected clarity. Was it that she was not really human? Were
all of these creatures merely shape-changers of some kind, disguising
themselves as humans? It would explain their strange cast of mind, the peculiar
logic, the strange phrasing.
But
there was no time for speculation, for now the creatures were hard about him
and Oone, so that it was hardly possible to swing their blades to keep them
back. Blood flowed, sticky and foetid, splashing on blades and arms and making
them gag. Elric felt he might be overwhelmed by the stench before he was
defeated by their weapons.
It was
clear they could not resist the mob and Elric was bitter, feeling that they had
come very close to the object of their quest only to be cut down by the most
wretched of the denizens of Chaos.
Then
more bodies fell at his feet and he realised that he had not killed them. Oone,
too, was astonished by this turn of events.
They
looked up. They could not understand what was happening.
The
Pearl Warrior was riding through the ranks of the rabble cutting this way and
that, jabbing with his makeshift spear, slicing with his sword, cackling and
crowing at every fresh life he took. His horrible eyes were alight with some
sort of amusement and even his horse was slashing at the rabble with its
hooves, nipping at them with its teeth.
"This
is the proper thing!" Queen Sough clapped her hands. "This is true.
This is to ensure honour for you!"
Gradually
driven back by the Pearl Warrior, by Elric and Gone as they resumed their
attack, the rabble began to break up.
Soon
the whole awful mob was running for the cliff edge, leaping into the abyss
rather than die by the Pearl Warrior's bone spear and his silver sword.
His
laughter continued as he herded the remainder to their doom. He screamed his
mockery at them. He raved at them for cowards and fools. "Ugly things.
Ugly! Ugly! Go! Perish! Go! Go! Go! Banished now, they are. Banished to that!
Yes!"
Elric and
Gone leaned against the barge trying to catch their breaths.
"I
am grateful to you, Pearl Warrior," said the albino as the armoured rider
approached. "You have saved our lives."
"Yes."
The Pearl Warrior nodded gravely, his eyes unusually thoughtful. "That is
so. Now we shall be equal. Then we shall know the truth. I am not free, as you.
You believe this?" His last question was addressed to Oone.
She
nodded. "I believe that, Pearl Warrior. I, too, am glad you helped
us."
"I
am the one who protects. This must be done. You go on? I was your friend."
Oone
looked back to where Queen Sough was nodding, her arms outstretched in some
kind of offering.
"Here
I am not your enemy," said the Pearl Warrior, as if instructing the
simple-minded. "If I were complete, we three would be a trinity of
greatness! Aye! Thou knowest it! I have not the personal. These words are hers,
you see. I think."
And
with that particularly mystifying pronouncement he wheeled his horse and rode
away over the grassy milestone.
"Too
many defenders, not enough protectors, perhaps." Gone sounded as odd as
the others. Before Elric could quiz her on this she had given her attention
back to Queen Sough. "My lady? Did you summon the Pearl Warrior to our
aid?"
"She
called him to you, I think." Queen Sough seemed almost in a trance. It was
odd to hear her speaking of herself in the third person. Elric wondered if this
was the normal mode here and again it occurred to him that all the people of
this realm were not human but had assumed human shape.
They
were now stranded high above the river. Going to the edge of the abyss, Elric
stared down. He saw only some bodies which had been caught on the rocks, others
drifting downstream. He was glad then that their boat was not having to
negotiate waters clogged with so many corpses.
"How
can we continue?" he asked Oone. He had a vision of himself and her in the
Bronze Tent, of the child between them. All were dying. He knew a pang of need,
as if the drug were calling to him, reminding him of his addiction. He
remembered Anigh in Quarzhasaat and Cymoril, his betrothed, waiting in Imrryr.
Had he been right to let Yyrkoon rule in his place? Every one of his decisions
seemed now to be foolish. His self-esteem, never high, was lower than he could
remember. His lack of forethought, his failures, his follies, all reminded him
that not only was he physically deficient, he was also lacking hi ordinary
common-sense.
"It
is in the nature of the hero," said Queen Sough in relation to nothing.
Then she looked at them and her eyes were maternal, kindly. "You are
safe!"
"I
think there is some urgency," said Oone. "I sense it. Do you?"
"Aye.
Is there danger in the realm we left?"
"Perhaps.
Queen Sough, are we far from the Nameless Gate? How can we continue?"
"By
means of the moth-steeds," she said. "The waters always rise here and
I have my moths. We have only to wait for them. They are on their way."
Her tone was matter-of-fact. "It was that rabble which could have been
yours. No more. But I cannot anticipate, you see. Every new trap is mysterious
to me, as it is to you. I can navigate, as you navigate. This is together, you
know."
Against
the horizon there were rainbow lights winking and shimmering, like an aurora.
Queen Sough sighed when she saw them. She was content.
"Good.
Good. That is not late! Just the other."
The
colours filled the sky now. As they came closer Elric realised that they
belonged to huge, filmy wings supporting slender bodies, more butterfly than
moth, of enormous size. Without hesitation the beasts began to descend until
the three of them as well as the barge were engulfed by soft wings.
"Into
the boat!" cried Queen Sough. "Quickly. We fly."
They
hurried to obey her and at once the barge was rising into the air, apparently
carried on the backs of the great moths who flew beside the canyon for a while
before plunging down into the abyss.
"I
watched but there was nothing," said Queen Sough by way of explanation to
Elric and Gone. "Now we shall resume."
With
astonishing gentleness the creatures had deposited the barge on the river and
were flying back up between the walls of the canyon again, filling the whole
gloomy place with brilliant multi-coloured light before they vanished. Elric
rubbed at his brow. "This is truly the Land of Madness," he said.
"I believe it is I who am mad, Lady Oone."
"You
are losing confidence in yourself, Prince Elric." She spoke firmly.
"That is the particular trap of this land. You come to believe that it is
yourself, not what surrounds you, that has little logic. Already we have
imposed our sanity on Falador. Do not despair. It cannot be much longer before
we reach the final gate."
"And
what is there?" He was sardonic. "Sublime reason?" He felt the
same strange sense of exhaustion. Physically he was still capable of
continuing, but his mind and his spirit were depleted.
"I
cannot begin to anticipate what we shall find in the Nameless Land," she
said. "Dreamthieves have little power over what occurs beyond the seventh
gate."
"I've
noticed your considerable influence here!" But he did not mean to hurt
her. He smiled to show that he joked.
From
ahead they beard a howling, so painful that even Queen Sough covered her ears.
It was like the baying of some monstrous hound, echoing up and down the abyss
and threatening to shake the very boulders loose from the walls. As the river
bore them round the bend they saw the beast standing there, a great shaggy
wolflike beast, its head lifted as it howled again. The water rushed around its
huge legs, foamed against its body. As it turned its gaze upon them the beast
vanished completely. They heard only the echo of its howling. The speed of the
water increased. Queen Sough had removed her hands from the tiller to block her
ears. The boat swung in the water and bounced as it struck a rock. She made no
attempt to steer it Elric seized the long arm but in spite of using all his
strength he could do nothing with the boat. Eventually he, too, gave up.
Down
and down the river ran. Down into a gorge growing so deep that soon there was
scarcely any light at all. They saw faces grinning at them. They felt hands
reach out to touch them. Elric became convinced that every mortal creature who
had ever died had come here to haunt him. In the dark rock he saw his own face
many times, and that of Cymoril and Yyrkoon. Old battles were fought as he
watched. And old, agonising emotions came back to him. He felt the loss of all
he had ever loved, the despair of death and desertion, and soon his own voice
joined the general babble and he howled as loudly as the hound had howled until
Oone shook him and yelled at him and brought him back from the madness which
had threatened to engulf him.
"Elric!
The last gate! We are almost there! Hold on, Prince of Melniboné. You have been
courageous and resourceful until now. This will require still more of you, and
you must be ready!"
And
Elric began to laugh. He laughed at his own fate, at the fate of the Holy Girl,
at Anigh's fate and at Oone's. He laughed when he thought of Cymoril waiting
for him on the Dragon Isle, not knowing even now if he lived or died, if he was
free or a slave.
When
Oone shouted at him again, he laughed in her face.
"Elric!
You betray us all!"
He
paused in his laughter long enough to say softly, almost in triumph, "Aye,
madam, that is so. I betray you all. Have you not heard? It is my destiny to
betray!"
"You
shall not betray me, sir!" She slapped at his face. She punched him. She
kicked his legs. "You shall not betray me and you shall not betray the
Holy Girl!"
He knew
intense pain, not from her blows but from his own mind. He cried out and then
he began to sob. "Oh, Oone. What is happening to me?"
"This
is Falador," she said simply. "Are you recovered, Prince Elric?"
The
faces still gibbered at him from the rock. The air was still alive with all he
feared, all he most misliked in himself.
He was
trembling. He could not meet her gaze. He realised he was weeping. "I am
Elric, last of Melniboné's royal line," he said. "I have looked upon
horror and I have courted the Dukes of Hell. Why should I know fear now?"
She did
not answer and he expected no answer from her.
The
boat surged, swung again, lifted and dipped.
Suddenly
he was calm. He took hold of Oone's hand in a gesture of simple affection.
"I
am myself again, I think," he said.
"There
is the gateway," said Queen Sough from behind them. She had her grip on
the tiller again and with her other hand was pointing ahead.
"There
is the land you call the Nameless Land," she said. She spoke plainly now,
not in the cryptic phrasing she had used since they had met her. "There
you will find the Fortress of the Pearl. She cannot welcome you."
"Who?"
said Elric. The waters were calm again. They ran slowly towards a great archway
of alabaster, its edges trimmed by soft leaves and shrubs. "The Holy
Girl?"
"She
can be saved," said Queen Sough. "Only by you two, I think. I have
helped her remain here, awaiting rescue. But it is all I can do. I am afraid,
you see."
"We
are all that, madam," said Elric feelingly.
The
boat was caught by new currents and travelled still more slowly, as if
reluctant to enter the last gate of the Dream Realm.
"But
I am of no help," said Queen Sough. "I might even have conspired. It
was those men. They came. Then more came. There was only retreat thereafter. I
wish I could know such words. You would understand them if I had them. Ah, it
is hard here!"
Elric,
looking into her agonised eyes, realised that she was probably more of a
prisoner in this world than he and Gone. It seemed to him that she longed to
escape and was only kept here by her love of the Holy Girl, her protective
emotions. Yet surely she had been here long before Varadia had come?
The
boat had begun to pass under the alabaster arch now. There was a salty,
pleasant taste to the air, as if they approached the ocean.
Elric
decided he must ask the question which was on his mind.
"Queen
Sough," he said. "Are you Varadia's mother?"
The
pain in the eyes grew even more intense as the veiled woman turned away from
him. Her voice was a sob of anguish and he was shocked by it.
"Oh,
who knows?" she cried. "Who knows?"
PART
THREE
Is
there a brave lord birthed by Fate
To
wield old weapons, win new estates
And
tear down walls Time sanctifies,
Raze
ancient temples as hallowed lies,
His
pride to break, his love to lose,
Destroying
his race, his history, his muse,
And,
relinquishing peace for a life of strife,
Leave
only a corpse that the flies refuse?
The
Chronicle of the Black Sword
1
At the
Court of the Pearl
Again
Elric experienced that strange frisson of recognition at the landscape before
bun, though he could not remember ever seeing anything like it. Pale blue mist
rose around cypresses, date palms, orange trees and poplars whose shades of
green were equally pale; flowing meadows occasionally revealed the rounded
white of boulders and in the far distance were snow-peaked mountains. It was as
if an artist had painted the scenery with the most delicate of washes, the
finest of brushstrokes. It was a vision of Paradise and completely unexpected after
the insanity of Falador.
Queen
Sough had remained silent since she had answered Elric's question and a
peculiar atmosphere had developed among the three of them. Yet all the
uneasiness failed to affect Elric's delight at the world they had entered. The
skies (if skies they were) were full of pearly cloud, tinged by pink and the
faintest yellow, and a little white smoke rose up from a flat-roofed house some
distance away. The barge had come to rest in a pool of still, sparkling water
and Queen Sough gestured for them to disembark.
"You
will come with us to the Fortress?" asked Gone.
"She
does not know. I do not know if it is permitted," said the Queen, her eyes
hooded above her veil.
"Then
I shall say farewell now," and Elric bowed and kissed the woman's soft
hand. "I thank you for your assistance, madam, and trust you will forgive
me for the crudeness of my manners."
"Forgiven,
yes." Elric, looking up, thought Queen Sough smiled.
"I
thank you also, my lady." Done spoke almost intimately, as to one with
whom she might share a secret. "Know you how we shall find the Fortress of
the Pearl?"
"That
one will know." The Queen pointed towards the distant cottage.
"Farewell, as you say. You can save her. Only you."
"I
am grateful for your confidence also," said Elric. He stepped almost
jauntily onto the turf and followed Gone as they made their way across the
fields to the little house. "This is a great relief, my lady. A contrast,
indeed, to the Land of Madness!"
"Aye."
She responded a trifle cautiously, and her hand went to the hilt of her sword.
"But remember, Prince Elric, that madness takes many forms in all
worlds."
He did
not allow her wariness to let him lose his enjoyment. He was determined to
restore himself to the peak of his energies, in preparation for whatever might
lie ahead.
Gone
was first to reach the door of the white house. Outside were two chickens
scratching in the gravel, an old dog, tethered to a barrel, who looked up at
them over a grey muzzle and grinned, a pair of short-coated cats cleaning their
silvery fur on the roof over the lintel. Gone knocked and the door was opened
almost immediately. A tall, handsome young man stood there, his head covered by
an old bur-noose, his body clad in a light brown robe with long sleeves. He
seemed pleased to see visitors.
"Greetings
to you," he said. "I am Chamog Borm, currently in exile. Have you
come with good news from the Court?"
"We
have no news at all, I fear," said Gone. "We are travellers and we
seek the Fortress of the Pearl. Is it close by here?"
"At
the heart and the centre of those mountains." He waved with his hand
towards the peaks. "Will you join me for some refreshment?"
The
name the young man had given, together with his extraordinary looks, caused
Elric again to rack his brains, trying to recall why all this was so familiar
to him. He knew that he had only recently heard the name.
Within
the cool house, Chamog Borm brewed them a herbal drink. He seemed proud of his
domestic skills and it was clear he was no simple farmer. In one corner of the
room was heaped a pile of rich armour, steel chased with silver and gold, a
helm decorated with a tall spike, that spike decorated with ornamental snakes
and falcons locked hi conflict. There were spears, a long, curved sword,
daggers -weapons and accoutrements of every description.
"You
are a warrior by trade?" said Elric as he sipped the hot liquid.
"Your armour is very handsome."
"I
was once a hero," said Chamog Borm sadly, "until I was dismissed from
the Court of the Pearl."
"Dismissed?"
Gone was thoughtful. "On what charge?"
Chamog
Borm lowered his eyes. "I was charged with cowardice. Yet I believe that I
was not guilty, that I was subject to an enchantment."
And now
Elric recalled where he had heard the name. When he had arrived in Quarzhasaat
he had in his fever wandered hi the market places and listened to the
story-tellers. At least three of the stories he had heard had concerned Chamog
Borm, hero of legend, the last brave knight of the Empire. His name was
venerated everywhere, even hi the camps of the nomads. Yet Elric was sure
Chamog Borm had existed-if he had ever existed-at least a thousand years
earlier!
"What
was the action of which you were accused?" he asked.
"I
failed to save the Pearl, which now lies under an enchantment, imprisoning us
all in perpetual suffering."
"What
was that enchantment?" Oone asked quickly.
"It
became impossible for our monarch and many of the retainers to leave the
Fortress. It was for me to free them. Instead I brought a worse enchantment upon
us. And my punishment is contrary to theirs. They may not leave, and I may not
return." As he spoke he became increasingly melancholy.
Elric,
still astonished at this conversation with a hero who should have been dead
centuries before, could say little, but Oone seemed to understand completely.
She made a sympathetic gesture.
"Can
the Pearl be found there?" Elric asked, conscious of the bargain he had
made with Lord Gho, of Anigh's impending torture and death, of Oone's
predictions.
"Of
course." Chamog Bonn was surprised. "Some believe it rules the whole
Court, perhaps the world."
"Was
this always so?" Oone asked softly.
"I
have told you that it was not." He looked at them both as if they were
simpletons. Then he lowered his eyes, lost in his own dishonour and
humiliation.
"We
hope to free her," said Oone. "Would you come with us, to help
us?"
"I
cannot help. She no longer trusts me. I am banished," he said. "But I
can let you have my armour and my weapons so that part of me, at least, can
fight for her."
"Thank
you," said Oone. "You are generous."
Chamog
Borm grew more animated as he helped them choose from his store. Elric found
that the breastplate and greaves fitted him perfectly, as did the helmet.
Similar equipment was found for Oone and the straps tightened to adjust to her
slightly smaller body. They looked almost identical in then- new armour and
something in Elric was again struck, some deep sense of satisfaction that he
could hardly understand but which he welcomed. The armour gave him not only a
greater sense of security but a sense of deep recognition of his own inner
strength, a strength which he knew he must call upon to the utmost in the
encounter to come. Oone had warned him of subtler dangers at the Fortress of
the Pearl.
Chamog
Borm's gifts continued, in the shape of two grey horses which he led from their
stable at the back of the house. "These are Taron and Tadia. Brother and
sister, they were twin foals. They have never been separated. Once I rode them
into battle. Once I took up arms against the Bright Empire. Now the last
Emperor of Melniboné will ride in my place to fulfill my destiny and end the
siege of the Fortress of the Pearl."
"You
know me?" Elric looked hard at the handsome youth, seeking deception or
even irony, but there was none in those steady eyes.
"A
hero knows another, Prince Elric." And Chamog Borm reached out to grip
Elric's forearm in the gesture of friendship of the desert peoples. "May
you gain all you wish to gain and may you do so with honour. You, too, Lady
Oone. Your courage is the greatest of all. Farewell."
The
exile watched them from the roof of his little house until they were out of
sight. Now the great mountains were close, almost embracing them, and they
could see a wide, white road stretching through them. The light was like that
of a late summer afternoon, though Elric could still not be sure if it was sky
above them or the distant roof of a vast cavern, for the sun was still not in
evidence. Was the Dream Realm a limitless series of such caverns or had the
dreamthief mapped the entire world? Could they cross the mountains, or the
Nameless Land beyond and begin again to travel through the seven gates,
ultimately arriving back at the Land of Dreams-in-Common? And would they find
Jaspar Colinadous waiting for them where they had left him?
The
road, when they reached it, proved to be of pure marble, but the horses' hooves
were so well shod they did not slip once. The noise of their galloping began to
echo through the wide pass and herds of gazelles and wild sheep looked up from
their grazing to watch them pass, two silver riders on silver horses on their
way to do battle with the forces who had seized power at the Fortress of the
Pearl.
"You
have understood these people better than I," he said to Oone, as the road
began to twist upward towards the centre of the range and the light had grown
colder, the sky a bright, hard grey. "Do you know what we might expect to
find at the Fortress of the Pearl?"
She
shook her head in regret. "It is like understanding a code without knowing
what the words actually relate to," she told him. "The force is
powerful enough to banish a hero as potent as Chamog Borm."
"I
know only the legend, and that from a little I heard in the Slave Market at
Quarzhasaat."
"He
was summoned by the Holy Girl as soon as she realised that she was under
further attack. That is what I believe, at any rate. She did not expect him to
fail her. Somehow, indeed, he made matters worse. She felt betrayed by him and
banished him to the edge of the Nameless Land, there perhaps to greet and
assist others who might come to help her. That is no doubt why we are given all
the appurtenances of the hero, so that we may be as much like heroes as
he."
"Yet
we know this world less well. How may we succeed where he failed?"
"Perhaps
because of our ignorance," she said. "Perhaps not. I cannot answer
you, Elric." She rode close to him, leaning from her saddle to kiss that
part of his cheek exposed by the helmet. "Only know this. I will betray
neither her nor, if I can help it, you. Yet if I must betray one of you, I
suppose it will be you."
Elric
looked at her in bafflement. "Is that likely to be an issue?"
She
shrugged and then she sighed. "I do not know, Elric. Look. I think we have
come to the Fortress of the Pearl!"
It was
like a palace carved from the most delicate ivory. White against the silver
sky, it rose above the snows of the mountain, a great multitude of slender
spires and turretted towers, of cupolas, of mysterious structures which seemed
almost as if they had been arrested in mid-Sight. There were bridges and
stairways, curving walls and galleries, balconies and roof-gardens whose
colours were a spectrum of pastel shades, a myriad of different plants,
flowers, shrubs and trees. In all his travels Elric had only seen one place
that was the equal to the Fortress of the Pearl and that was his own city,
Imrryr. Yet the Dreaming City was exotic, rich, even vulgar-a romantic fancy
compared to the complicated austerity of this palace.
As they
approached on the marble road, Elric realised that the Fortress was not pure
white, but contained shades of blue, silver, grey and pink, sometimes a little
yellow or green, and he had the notion that the entire thing had been carved
from a single gigantic pearl. Soon they had reached the Fortress's only gate, a
great circular opening protected by spiked grilles which came from above and
below and both sides to meet at the centre. The Fortress was vast but even its
gate dwarfed them.
Elric
could think of nothing to do but cry out. "Open in the name of the Holy
Girl! We come to do battle with those who imprison her spirit here!"
His
words echoed through the towers of the Fortress and through the jagged peaks of
the mountains beyond and seemed to lose themselves in the heights of a cavern's
roof. In the shadows beyond the gateway he saw something scarlet move and then
vanish again. There came the smell of delicious perfume, mixed with the same
strange ocean scent they had noticed when they first reached the Nameless Land.
Then
the gates had parted, so swiftly that they seemed to melt into the air, and a
rider confronted them, his humourless chuckling by now all too familiar.
"This
is what should be, I think," said the Pearl Warrior.
"League
yourself with us again, Pearl Warrior," said Oone, with all her
considerable authority. "It is what she desires!"
"No.
It is so that she shall not be betrayed. You must dissolve. Now! Now!
Now!" His head was flung back as he screamed these last words, for all the
world like a dog gone rabid.
Elric
drew a sword from its scabbard. It shone with the same silver light that poured
from the Pearl Warrior's blade. Gone followed his example, though more
reluctantly.
"We
shall pass now, Pearl Warrior."
"Nothing
will here! I want your freedom."
"She
shall have it!" said Oone. "It is not yours, not unless she bestows
it upon you herself."
"She
says it is mine. I will be that. I will be that!"
Elric
could not follow this strange conversation and he chose not to waste time with
it. He urged his silver horse forward, the blade glaring in his hand. So
balanced was this sword, so familiar to his grip, that he felt for a moment
that it was somehow the natural contrast to his runesword. Was this a sword
forged by Law to serve its purposes, just as Stormbringer had, by all accounts,
been forged by Chaos?
The
Pearl Warrior guffawed and widened his awful eyes. Death was in them. The death
of the world. He lowered the same misshapen lance he had brandished at them
before and Elric saw it was encrusted with old blood. The warrior held his
ground and the lance was suddenly threatening Elric's eyes so that the albino
had to throw himself to one side to avoid its points, striking upward as he did
so and feeling a greater resistance to his blow than anything he had felt
before. The Pearl Warrior seemed to have gained strength since their last
encounter.
"Ordinary
soul!" The lips twisted in this insult, clearly as disgusting as any the
Pearl Warrior could conceive. And he began to chuckle again, this time because
Oone was riding at him, her sword stretched out full before her, a spear held
in her other hand, her reins between her teeth. The sword drove forward, the
spear swung back as she poised to throw. Then sword and spear struck the Pearl
Warrior at the exact same moment so that his breastplate cracked like the shell
of some great crustacean and was pierced by the sword.
Elric
marvelled at this strategy which he had never witnessed before. Oone's strength
and coordination were almost beyond credibility. It was a feat of arms warriors
would speak of for a thousand years to come, which many would try to emulate
and would die in the trying.
The
spear had done its work in breaking open the Pearl Warrior's armour and the
sword had completed the action. But the Pearl Warrior had not been killed.
He
groaned. He cackled. He floundered. His sword came up as if to protect his
chest from the blow already struck. His great horse reared and its nostrils
flared with fury. Oone turned her own mount away. Her sword had left its tip in
the Pearl Warrior's body. She was reaching for a second spear, for her dagger.
Elric
drove forward again, his own spear aimed at the cracked armour, hoping to
follow her example, but the blade struck the ivory and was turned. Elric lost balance
long enough for the Pearl Warrior to take the advantage. The sword struck the
steel of Elric's armour with a noise that made a cacophony within his helmet
and brought bright sparks flashing like a fire. He fell onto his horse's neck,
barely able to block the next thrust. Then the Pearl Warrior shrieked, the eyes
growing still wider, the mouth gaping red and the foul breath steaming from it,
while blood poured from under the gorget between his helmet and his
breastplate. He fell towards Elric and the albino realised that the haft of a
spear was sticking from his chest in exactly the same place where Oone had
broken the creature's armour. , "This will not remain so!" cried the
Pearl Warrior. It was a threat. "I cannot do that thing!"
Then he
tumbled in a heap from his horse and clattered like old bones onto the
flagstones of the courtyard. From behind him an ornamental fountain,
representing a fig tree in full fruit, began to spurt water, filling the
surrounding trough and overflowing until it touched the body of the Pearl
Warrior. The riderless horse began to scream, turning round and round, rearing,
foaming, then it galloped out through the gate and back down the marble road.
Elric
turned the heavy corpse over to make sure that no life was left in the Pearl
Warrior and to inspect the shattered armour. He remained admiring of Oone's
manoeuvre. "I have never seen that done before," he said, "and I
have fought beside and against famous warriors."
"A
dreamthief must know many things," she said, by way of acknowledgement of
his praise. "I learned such tactics from my mother, who was a greater
battle-woman than I shall ever be."
"Your
mother was a dreamthief?"
"No,"
said Gone absently as she inspected her ruined sword and then picked up the
Pearl Warrior's, "she was a queen." She tested the weight of the dead
creature's blade and discarded her own, trying it in her scabbard and finding
that it was a little too wide. Carelessly she stuck it in her belt and unhooked
the scabbard, throwing it upon the ground. The water from the fountain was
around their ankles now and was disturbing their horses.
Leading
the steeds, they passed under a heart-shaped arch and into another courtyard.
Here, too, fountains played, but these were not flooding. They seemed carved
out of ivory, like so much of the Fortress, and represented stylised herons,
their beaks meeting at a point above then- heads. Elric was reminded vaguely of
the architecture of Quarzhasaat, though this had none of the decadence of that
place, none of the look of senile old age which characterised the city at its
worst. Had the Fortress been built by the ancestors of the present lords of
Quarzhasaat, the Council of Six and One Other? Had some great king fled the
city millennia before and journeyed here to the Dream Realm? Was that how the
legend of the Pearl had come to Quarzhasaat?
Courtyard
after courtyard, each in its own way of extraordinary beauty, followed until
Elric began to wonder if this path was merely leading them through the Fortress
to the other side.
"For
such a large building it's somewhat underpopulated," he said to Gone.
"We
shall find the inhabitants soon enough, I think," Oone murmured. Now they
ascended a spiral causeway which led around a huge central dome. Although the
palace had such a mood and look of austerity, Elric did not find its
architecture cold and there was something almost organic about it, as if it had
been formed from flesh, then petrified.
Their
horses still with them, the sound now muffled by luxurious carpet, they moved through
halls and corridors whose walls were hung with tapestries and decorated with
mosaics, though they saw no pictures of living things, only geometrical
designs.
"We
near the heart of the Fortress, I think," Oone told him in a whisper. It
was as if she feared to be overheard, yet they had seen no one. She looked
beyond tall columns, through a series of rooms seemingly lit by sunshine from
without. Following her gaze, Elric had the impression of blue fabric wafting
through a door and vanishing. "Who was that?"
"All
the same," said Oone to herself. "All the same." Her sword was
drawn again, however, and she signed to Elric to imitate her. They entered
another courtyard. This one seemed to be open to the sky-the same grey sky they
had first seen in the mountains. Gallery after gallery rose up all around them,
many storeys to the top. Elric thought he saw faces peering back at him, then
something liquid struck his face and he almost inhaled the sickly red stuff
which covered his body. More of it was pouring down on them from every part of
the gallery and already the courtyard was knee deep in what seemed to Elric to
be human blood. He heard a muttering overhead, soft laughter, a cry.
"Stop
this!" he shouted, wading to the side of the chamber. "We are here to
parley. All we want is the Holy Girl! Give her spirit back to us and we shall
leave!"
He was
answered by a further shower of blood and he hauled his horse towards the next
door. There was a gate across it. He tried to lift it. He tried to bounce it
free of its mountings. He looked to Oone, who, wiping the red liquid from
herself, joined him. She reached out her long fingers and found some kind of
button. The gate opened slowly, almost reluctantly, but it opened. She grinned
at him. "Like most men, you become a brute when you panic, my lord."
He was
hurt by her joke. "I had no idea I should find such a means of opening the
gate, my lady."
"Think
of such things in future and you will stand a better chance of survival in this
Fortress," she said.
"Why
will they not parley with us?"
"They
probably do not believe that we are ready to bargain," she said. Then she
added: "In reality, I can only guess at their logic. Each adventure of a
dreamthief is different from the others, Prince Elric. Come." She led them
on past a series of pools full of warm water from which a little steam rose.
There were no bathers in the pools. Then Elric thought he saw creatures,
perhaps fish, swimming in the depths. He leaned forward to look, but Oone
pulled him back. "I warned you. Your curiosity could bring your
destruction and mine."
Something
threshed and bubbled in the pool and then was gone. All at once the rooms began
to shake and the water foamed. Cracks appeared hi the marble floors. Their
horses snorted with fear and threatened to lose their footing. Elric himself
almost toppled down into one of the fissures which had opened. It was as if an
earthquake had suddenly struck the mountains. Yet as they dashed hastily for
the next gallery, which opened onto a peaceful lawn, all signs of the
earthquake had vanished.
A man
approached them. In bearing, he resembled Queen Sough, but he was shorter and
older. His white beard hung upon a surcoat of gold cloth and in his hand he
held a salver on which were placed two leather bags. "Will you accept the
authority of the Fortress of the Pearl?" he said. "I am the seneschal
of this place."
"Who
do you serve?" Elric asked brusquely. His sword was still hi his hand and
he made no effort to disguise his readiness to use it.
The
seneschal looked bewildered. "I serve the Pearl, of course. This is the
Fortress of the Pearl!"
"Who
rules here, old man?" Oone asked him pointedly.
"The
Pearl. I have said so." .
"Does
no one rule the Pearl?" Elric was mystified.
"No
longer, sir. Now, will you take this gold and go? We have no wish to expend
more of our energies upon you. They flag, but they are not exhausted. I think
you will be dissolved soon."
"We
have defeated all your defenders," said Gone. "Why should we want
gold?"
"Do
you not desire the Pearl?"
Before
Elric could answer, Oone silenced him with a warning gesture.
"We
come only to secure the release of the Holy Girl."
The
seneschal smiled. "They have all made that claim, but what they want is
the Pearl. I cannot believe you, lady."
"How
can we prove our words?"
"You
cannot. We already know the truth."
"We
have no interest in bargaining with you, Sir Seneschal. If you serve the Pearl,
who does the Pearl serve?"
"The
child, I think." His brow furrowed. Her question had confused him, yet to
Elric it had seemed so simple. His admiration for the dreamthief's skill
increased.
"You
see, we can help you in this," said Oone. "The child's spirit is
imprisoned. And while it is imprisoned, so are you held captive."
The old
man offered the bags of gold again. "Take this and leave us."
"I
do not think we shall," said Oone firmly, and she led her horse forward,
past the old man. "Come, Elric."
The
albino hesitated. "We should question him more, Oone, surely?"
"He
could not answer more."
The
seneschal ran at her, swinging the heavy bags, the salver falling to the floor
with a clang. "She is not! It will hurt! This is not to be. Pain will
come! Pain!"
Elric
felt sympathy for the old man. "Oone. We should listen to him."
She
would not pause. "Come. You must."
He had
learned to trust her judgement. He, too, pushed past the old man, who beat at
his body with the bags of gold and wailed, the tears pouring down his cheeks
and into his beard. It took a different courage to perform that particular
action.
There
was another great curving doorway ahead of them, all elaborate lattice-work and
mosaic, bordered by bands of jade, blue enamel and silver. Two large doors of
dark wood, hinges and studs of brass, blocked their way.
Oone
did not knock. She reached gently towards the doors and placed her fingertips
against them. Gradually, just as with the other gate, the doors began to part.
They heard a faint noise from within, almost a whimper. The doors opened wider
and wider until they were completely back on their hinges.
For a
moment Elric was overwhelmed by what he saw.
A
grey-gold glow filled the great chamber which had been revealed to them. The
glow came from a column about the height of a tall man which was topped by a
globe. At the centre of the globe shone a pearl of enormous size, almost as big
as Elric's fist. Short flights of steps led up to the column from all sides,
and around these steps were what at first appeared to be ranks of statues. Then
Elric realised that they were men, women and children, dressed in all manner of
costumes, though most of them in the styles favoured in Quarzhasaat and by the
desert clans.
The old
man came stumbling behind them. "Do not hurt this!"
"We
defend ourselves, Sir Seneschal," Oone told him without turning to look at
him. "That is all you need to know from us."
Slowly,
still leading the silver horses, still with their silver swords in their hands,
the light from the pearl touching their silver armour and their helmets and
making these, too, glow with soft radiance, they made their way into the
chamber.
'This
is not to destroy. This is not to defeat. This is not to despoil."
Elric
shivered when he heard the voice. He looked over towards the distant walls of
the room and there was the Pearl Warrior, his armour all cracked and slimed
with blood, his face a terrible bruise, the eyes seeming alternately to fade
and take fire. And sometimes they were Alnac's eyes.
The
warrior's next words were almost pathetic. "I cannot fight you. No
more."
"We
are not here to hurt," said Gone again. "We are here to free
you."
There
was a movement amongst the still figures. A blue-gowned veiled woman appeared.
Queen Sough's own eyes had a suggestion of tears. "With these you
come?" She indicated the swords, the horses, the armour. "But our
enemies are not here."
"They
will be here soon," said Oone. "Soon, I think, my lady."
Still
baffled, Elric looked behind him, as if he would see their enemies. He made a
movement towards the Pearl at the Heart of the World, merely to admire a marvel.
At once all the figures came to life, blocking his path.
"You
will steal!" The old man sounded even more wretched than before, even more
impotent.
"No,"
said Oone. "It is not our purpose. You must understand that." She
spoke urgently. "Raik Na Seem sent us to find her."
"She
is safe. Tell him she is safe."
"She
is not safe. Soon she will dissolve." Oone turned her gaze on the
whispering throng. "She is separated, as we are separated. The Pearl is
the cause."
"This
is a trick," said Queen Sough.
"A
trick," echoed the wounded Pearl Warrior, and there was a faint chuckle
from his spoiled throat.
"A
trick," said the seneschal, and held out the bags of gold.
"We
come to steal nothing. We come to defend. Look!" Oone made a circular
movement with her sword to show them what they had evidently not yet seen.
Emerging
through the walls of the chamber, their hands filled with every imaginable
weapon, came the hooded, tattooed soldiers of Quarzhasaat. The Sorcerer
Adventurers.
"We
cannot fight them," said Elric quietly to his friend. "There are too
many of them." And he prepared himself for death.
2
The
Destruction in the Fortress
Then
Oone had mounted her silver horse and raised her silver sword. She called out:
"Elric, do as I do!" and urged the stallion into a canter so that its
hooves rattled like thunder in the chamber.
Prepared
to die with courage, even at the moment of apparent triumph, Elric climbed into
his saddle, took a spear in the hand that held the reins and with his sword
already swinging charged against the invaders.
Only as
they crowded around him, axes, maces, spears and swords lifted to attack, did
Elric understand that Oone's action had not been one of mere desperation. These
half-shades moved sluggishly, their eyes were misted, they stumbled and their
blows were feeble.
The
slaughter now became sickening to him. Following her example, he hacked and
stabbed from side to side, almost mechanically. Heads came away from bodies
like rotten fruit; limbs were sliced as easily as leaves from a stick; torsos
collapsed under the thrust of a spear or sword. Their viscous blood, already
the blood of the dead, clung to weapons and armour and their cries of pain were
pathetic to Elric's ears. If he had not sworn to follow Oone, he would have ridden
back and let her continue the work alone. There was little danger to them as
the veiled men continued to pour through the walls and be met by sharp steel
and cunning intelligence.
Behind
them, around the column of the Pearl, the courtiers watched. These clearly did
not know what a mediocre threat the two silver-armoured warriors confronted.
At last
it was done. Decapitated, limbless bodies were piled all around the hall. Elric
and Oone rode out of that slaughter and they were grim, unhappy, nauseated by
their own actions.
"It
is done," said Oone. "The Sorcerer Adventurers are slain."
"You
truly are heroes!" Queen Sough came down the steps towards them, her eyes
bright with admiration, her arms outstretched.
"We
are who we are," said Oone. "We are mortal fighters and we have
destroyed the threat to the Fortress of the Pearl." Her words had taken on
a ritualistic tone and Elric, trusting her, was content to listen.
"You
are the children of Chamog Borm, Brother and Sister of the Bone Moon, Children
of Water and Cool Breezes, Parents of the Trees..." The seneschal had
dropped his bags of gold and was shaken by his weeping. He wept with relief and
with joy and Elric saw how much he resembled Raik Na Seem.
Oone,
down from her horse again, was embraced by Queen Sough. Meanwhile, a shuffling
and cackling announced the approach of the Pearl Warrior.
"This
is no more for me," he said. Alnac's dead eyes had nothing but resignation
in them. "This is for dissolution..." And he fell forward onto the
marble floor, his armour all broken, his limbs sprawling, and there was no
longer any flesh on him, only bone, so that what was left of the Pearl Warrior
resembled little more than the inedible remains of a crab, the supper of some
sea-giant.
Queen
Sough came towards Elric, her arms outstretched, and she seemed much smaller
than when he had first encountered her. Her head hardly reached to his lowered
chin. Her embrace was warm and he knew she, too, was weeping. Then her veil
fell away from her face and he saw that she had lost years, that she was little
more than a girl.
Behind
Queen Sough the Lady Oone was smiling at him as astonished understanding filled
him. Gently he touched the girl's face, the familiar folds of her hair, and he
drew in a sudden breath.
She was
Varadia. She was the Holy Girl of the Bauradim. She was the child whose spirit
they had promised to free.
Oone
joined him, placing a protective hand upon Varadia's shoulder. "You know
now that we are truly your friends."
Varadia
nodded, looking about her at the courtiers, who had assumed their earlier
frozen stances. "The Pearl Warrior was the best there was," she said.
"I could summon none better. Chamog Borm failed me. The Sorcerer
Adventurers were too strong for him. Now I can release him from his exile."
"We
combined his strength with our own," said Gone. "Your strength and
our strength. That is how we succeeded."
"We
three are not shadows," said Varadia, smiling, as if at a revelation.
"That is how we succeeded."
Oone
nodded agreement. "That is how we succeeded, Holy Girl. Now we must
consider how to bring you back to the Bronze Tent, to your people. You carry
all their pride and history with you."
"I
knew that. I had to protect it. I thought I had failed."
"You
have not failed," said Oone.
"The
Sorcerer Adventurers will not attack again?"
"Never,"
said Oone. "Not here, nor anywhere. Elric and I will make sure of
it."
And
then Elric realised in admiration that it had been Oone, in the end, who had
summoned the Sorcerer Adventurers, summoned those shades for the last time;
summoned them so that she might demonstrate their defeat.
Oone
looked at him and warned him with her eyes not to say too much. But now he
realised that all that they had fought, save perhaps a little of the Pearl
Warrior and the Sorcerer Adventurers, had been a child's dreams. The hero of
legend, Chamog Borm, could not save her because she knew he was not real.
Similarly, the Pearl Warrior, chiefly her own invention, could not save her.
But he and Oone were real. As real as the child herself! In her deep dream, in
which she had disguised herself as a queen, seeking power but failing to find
it, just as she had described, she had known the truth. Unable to escape from
the dream, she had yet recognised the difference between her own invention and
that which she had not invented-herself, Oone and Elric. But Oone had had to
show that she could defeat what remained of the original threat, and in
demonstrating the defeat, she freed the child.
And yet
they were still within the dream, all three of them. The great Pearl pulsed as
powerfully as before, the Fortress with all its mazes and intertwined passages
and chambers was still their prison.
"You
understood," Elric said to Oone. "You knew what they spoke of. The
language was a child's language-a language seeking power and failing. A child's
understanding of power."
But
again Oone, with a glance, cautioned him to silence. "Varadia knows now
that power is never discovered in retreat. All one can hope to do by retreating
is to let one power destroy another or hide as one hides from a storm one
cannot control, until the force has passed. One cannot gain anything, save
one's own self. And ultimately one must always confront the evil that would
destroy one." It was almost as if she herself were in a trance and Elric
guessed that she repeated lessons learned in pursuit of her craft.
"You
did not come to steal the Pearl but to save me from its prison," said
Varadia as Oone took her young hands and held them tightly. "My father
sent you to help me?"
"He
asked our help and we gave it willingly," said Elric. At last he sheathed
the silver sword. He felt slightly foolish in the armour of a fairy-tale hero.
Oone
recognised his discomfort, "We shall give all this back to Chamog Borm, my
lord. Is he permitted to return to the Fortress, Lady Varadia?"
The
child grinned. "Of course!" She clapped her hands and through the
doorway to the Court of the Pearl, walking proudly, still in the clothes of his
banishment, came Chamog Borm, to kneel at the feet of his mistress.
"My
Queen," he said. There was strong emotion in his wonderful voice.
"I
return to you your armour and your weapons, your twin horses, Tadia and Taron,
and all your honour, Chamog Borm." Varadia spoke with warm pride.
Soon
Elric and Oone had discarded the armour and again wore only their ordinary
clothes. Chamog Borm was in his silver-and-gold-chased breastplate and greaves,
his helmet of gleaming silver, his swords and his spears in their sheaths at
hip and on horse. His other armour he bound to the back of Tadia. At last he
was ready. Again he kneeled before his Queen. "My lady. What task wouldst
thou have me accomplish for thee?"
Varadia
said deliberately: "You are free to travel where you will, great Chamog
Borm. But know only this-you must continue to fight evil wherever you find it
and you must never again allow the Sorcerer Adventurers to attack the Fortress
of the Pearl."
"I
swear."
With a
bow to Oone and Elric, the legendary hero rode slowly from the Court, his head
high with pride and noble purpose.
Varadia
was content. "I have made him again what he was before I called him. I now
know that legends in themselves have no power. The power comes from the uses
that the living make of the legend. The legends merely represent an ideal."
"You
are a wise child," said Oone admiringly.
"Should
I not be, madam? I am the Holy Girl of the Bauradim." Varadia spoke with
considerable irony and good humour. "Am I not the Oracle of the Bronze
Tent?" She lowered her eyes, perhaps in sudden melancholy. "I shall
be a child only a little longer. I think I shall miss my palace and all its
kingdoms..."
"Something
is always lost here." Oone placed a comforting hand on the child's
shoulder. "But much is gained also."
Varadia
looked back at the Pearl. Following her gaze, Elric saw that the entire Court
had now vanished, just as the crowds had vanished on the great staircase when
they had been attacked by the Pearl Warrior just before they first met Lady
Sough. He now realised that in that guise she herself had guided them to her
own rescue, as best she could. She had reached out to them. She had shown them
the way in which they could, with their wits and courage, accomplish her
salvation.
Varadia
was ascending the steps, her hands outstretched towards the Pearl. 'This is the
cause of all our misfortune," she said. "What can we do with
it?"
"Destroy
it, perhaps," said Elric.
But
Oone shook her head. "While it remains an undiscovered treasure thieves
will constantly seek it. This is the cause of Varadia's imprisonment in the
Dream Realm. This is what brought the Sorcerer Adventurers to her. It is why
they drugged and attempted to abduct her. All the evil comes not from the Pearl
itself but what evil men have made of it."
"What
shall you do?" asked Elric. "Trade it in the Dream Market when you
next go?"
"Perhaps
that is what I should do. But it would not be the means of ensuring Varadia's
safety in the future. Do you understand?"
"While
the Pearl is a legend, there will always be those who will pursue the
legend?"
"Exactly,
Prince Elric. So we shall not destroy it, I think. Not here."
Elric
did not care. So absorbed had he become in the dream itself, the revealing of
the levels of reality existing in the Dream Realm, that he had forgotten his
original quest, the threat to his life and that of Anigh in Quarzhasaat.
It was
for Oone to remind him. "Remember, there are those in Quarzhasaat who are
not only your enemies, Elric of Melniboné. They are the enemies of this girl.
The enemies of the Bauradim. You have still a further task to accomplish, even
when we return to the Bronze Tent."
"Then
you must advise me, Lady Oone," said Elric simply, "for I am a novice
here."
"I
cannot advise you with any great clarity." She turned her eyes away from
him, almost in modesty, perhaps in pain. "But I can make a decision here.
We must claim the Pearl."
"As
I understand it, the Pearl did not exist before the lords of Quarzhasaat
conceived of it, before someone discovered the legend, before the Sorcerer
Adventurers came."
"But
it exists now," said Oone. "Lady Varadia, would you give the Pearl to
me?"
"Willingly,"
said the Holy Girl, and she ran up the remaining steps and took the globe from
the plinth and threw it to the ground so that shards of milky glass shattered
everywhere, mingling with the bones and the armour of the Pearl Warrior, and
she took the Pearl in one hand, as an ordinary child might grasp a lost ball.
And she tossed it from palm to palm in delight, fearing it no longer. "It
is very beautiful. No wonder they sought it."
"They
made it, then they used it to trap you." Oone reached up and caught it as
Varadia threw it to her. "What a shame those who could conceive of such
beauty would go to such evil lengths to own it..." She frowned, looking
about her in sudden concern.
The
light was fading in the Court of the Pearl.
From
all around them came an appalling noise, an anguished groaning; a great
creaking and keening, a tortured screaming, as if all the tormented souls in
all the multiverse had suddenly given voice.
It
pierced their brains. They covered their ears. They stared in terror, watching
as the floor of the Court erupted and undulated, as the ivory walls with all
their wonderful mosaics and carvings began to rot before their eyes, crumbling
and falling, like the fabric in a tomb suddenly exposed to daylight.
And
then, over all the other noises, they heard the laughter.
It was
sweet laughter. It was the unaffected laughter of a child.
It was
the laughter of a freed spirit. It was Varadia's.
"It
is dissolving at last. It is all dissolving! Oh, my friends, I am a slave no
longer!"
Through
all the falling filthy stuff, through all the decay and dissolution which
tumbled upon them, through the destroyed carcass of the Fortress of the Pearl,
Oone came towards them. She was hasty but she was careful. She held one of
Varadia's hands.
"Not
yet! Too soon! We could all dissolve in this!"
She
made Elric take the child's other hand and they led her through the crashing,
shrieking darkness, out of the chamber, down through the swaying corridors, out
past the courtyards where fountains now gushed detritus and where the very
walls were constructed of putrefying flesh which began to rot to nothing even
as they went by. Then Oone made them run, until the final gateway lay ahead of
them.
They
reached the causeway and the marble road. There was a bridge ahead of them.
Oone almost dragged the other two towards it, running as fast as she could
possibly run, with the Fortress of the Pearl tumbling into nothing, roaring like
a dying beast as it did so.
The
bridge seemed infinite. Elric could not see to the further side. But at length
Oone stopped running and allowed them to walk, for they had reached a gateway.
The
gateway was carved of red sandstone. It was decorated with geometrical tiles
and pictures of gazelles, leopards and wild camels. It had an almost prosaic
appearance after so many monumental doorways, yet Elric felt some trepidation
hi passing through it.
"I
am afraid, Oone," he said.
"You
fear mortality, I think." She pressed on. "You have great courage,
Prince Elric. Make use of it now, I beg you."
He
quelled his terrors. His grip on the child's hand was firm and reassuring.
"We
go home, do we not?" said the Holy Girl. "What is it you do not want
to find there, Prince Elric?"
He
smiled down at her, grateful for her question. "Nothing much, Lady
Varadia. Perhaps nothing more than myself."
They
stepped together into the gateway.
3
Celebrations
at the Silver Flower Oasis
Waking
beside the still sleeping child, Elric was surprised to feel so refreshed. The
dreamwand, which had helped them attain substance in the Dream Realm, was still
hooked over their clasped hands and, looking across the child, he saw Oone
beginning to stir.
"You
have failed, then?"
It was
Raik Na Seem's voice, full of resigned sadness.
"What?"
Oone glanced at Varadia. Even as they watched, her skin began to shine with
ordinary health and her eyes opened to see her anxious father staring down at
her. She smiled. It was the easy, unaffected smile with which Oone and Elric
were already familiar.
The
First Elder of the Bauradim Clan began to weep. He wept as the seneschal of the
Court of the Pearl had wept; he wept in relief and he wept in joy. He took up
his daughter in his arms and he could not speak for the gladness in his heart.
All he could do was reach one hand out towards his friends, the man and woman
who had entered the Dream Realm to free his child's spirit, where it had fled
to escape the evil of Lord Gho's hirelings.
They touched
his hand and they left the Bronze Tent. They walked together into the desert
and then they stood face to face, staring into one another's eyes.
"We
have a dream in common now," said Elric. His voice was gentle, full of
affection. "I think the memory will be a good one, Lady Gone."
She
reached to hold his face hi her hands. "You are wise, Prince Elric, and
you are courageous, but there is a certain kind of ordinary experience you
lack. I hope that you are successful in finding it."
"That
is why I wander this world, my lady, and leave my cousin Yyrkoon as Regent on
the Ruby Throne. I am aware of more than one deficiency."
"I
am glad we dreamed together," she said.
"You
lost your true love, I think," Elric told her. "I am glad if I helped
you ease the pain of that parting."
She was
baffled for a moment, then her brow cleared. "You speak of Alnac Kreb? I
was fond of him, my lord, but he was more a brother to me than a lover."
Elric
became embarrassed. "Forgive my presumption, Lady Gone."
She
looked up into the sky. The Blood Moon had not yet waned. It cast its red rays
onto the sand, onto the gleaming bronze of the tent where Raik Na Seem welcomed
his daughter back to him. "I do not love easily in the way you mean."
Her voice was significant. She sighed. "Do you still plan to return to
Melniboné and your betrothed?"
"I
must," he said. "I love her. And my duty lies in Imrryr."
"Sweet
duty!" Her tone was sarcastic and she took a step or two away from him,
her head bowed, her hand on her belt. She kicked at the dust the colour of old
blood.
Elric
had disciplined himself against his heart's pain for too long. He could only
stand and wait until she walked back to him. And now she was smiling.
"Well, Prince Elric, would you join the dreamthieves and make this your
living for a while?"
Elric
shook his head. "It is a calling which requires too much of me, my lady.
Yet I am grateful for what this adventure has taught me, both about myself and
about the world of dreams. I still understand only a little of it I am still
not wholly sure where we travelled or what we encountered. I do not know how
much in the Dream Realm was the Lady Varadia's creation and how much was yours.
It was as if I witnessed a battle of inventors! And did I contribute? I do not
know."
"Oh,
without you, believe me, Prince Elric, I think I would have failed. You have
seen so much of other worlds! And you have read more. It does not do to analyse
too closely the creatures and places one encounters in the Dream Realm, but be
assured that you made your contribution. More, perhaps, than you'll ever
know."
"Can
reality ever be made from the fabric of those dreams?" he wondered.
"There
was an adventurer of the Young Kingdoms called Earl Aubec," she said.
"He knew how potent a creator of reality the human mind can be. Some say
he and his kind helped make the world of the Young Kingdoms."
Elric
nodded. "I've heard that legend. But I think it is as substantial as the
story of Chamog Borm, my lady."
"You
must think what you wish." She turned away from him to look at the Bronze
Tent. The old man and his daughter were emerging. From somewhere within, the
tent drums began to beat. There came a wonderful chanting, a dozen melodies
linked together, interwoven. Slowly all the people who had remained at the
Bronze Tent keeping vigil over the body of the Holy Girl began to gather around
Raik Na Seem and Varadia. Their songs were songs of intense joy. Their voices
filled the desert with the most gorgeous life and made even the distant
mountains echo.
Oone linked
her arm in Elric's, a gesture of comradeship, of reconciliation.
"Come," she said, "let us join the celebrations."
They
had only walked a few more paces before they were lifted on the shoulders of
the crowd and soon they were borne, laughing and infected by the general
joyousness, over the desert towards the Silver Flower Oasis.
The
celebrations began at once, as if the Bauradim and all the other desert clans
had been preparing for this moment. Every kind of delicious food was prepared
until the air was rich with an enormous variety of mouth-watering smells and it
seemed all the great spice warehouses of the world had been made to release
their contents. Cooking fires blazed everywhere, as did great brands and lamps
and candles, and from out of the Kashbeh Moulor Ka Riiz, overlooking the great
oasis, rode the Aloum'rit guardians in all the glory of their ancient armour,
their red-gold helmets and breastplates, their weapons of bronze and brass and
steel. They had huge forked beards and massive turbans wound around the spikes
of their helms. They wore surcoats of elaborate brocade and cloth-of-silver and
their high boots were embroidered with designs almost as intricate as those on
their shirts. They were proud, good-humoured men who rode at the sides of their
wives, who were also armoured and carried bows and slender spears. All had soon
mingled with the enormous crowd who had erected a large platform and placed a
carved chair upon it and sat the smiling Varadia in the chair so that all could
see the Holy Girl of the Bauradim restored to her clan, bringing back their
history, their pride and their future.
Raik Na
Seem still wept. Whenever he saw Oone and Elric he grasped them and pulled them
to him, thanking them, telling them, as best he could, what it meant to him to
have such friends, such saviours, such heroes.
"Your
names will be remembered by the Bauradim for all time. And whatever favour you
shall ask of us, so long as it be honourable, as we know it shall, then we
shall grant it to you. If you are in danger ten thousand miles away you will
send a message to the Bauradim and they will come to your aid. Meanwhile you
must know that you have freed the spirit of a good-hearted child from dark
captivity."
"And
that is our reward," said Oone, smiling.
"Our
wealth is yours," said the old man.
"We
have no need of wealth," Oone told him. "We have discovered better
resources, I think."
Elric
agreed with her. "Besides, there is a man in Quarzhasaat who has promised
me half an empire if I but do him a small service."
Oone
understood Elric's reference and laughed.
Raik Na
Seem was a little disturbed. "You go to Quarzhasaat? You still have
business there?"
"Aye,"
said Elric. "There is a boy who is anxiously awaiting my return."
"But
you have time to celebrate with us, to talk with us, to feast with myself and
Varadia? You have scarcely exchanged a word with the child!"
"I
think we know her pretty well," said Elric. "Enough to think highly
of her. She is indeed the greatest treasure of the Bauradim, my lord."
"You
were able to hold conversations in that gloomy realm where she was held
prisoner?"
Elric
thought to enlighten the First Elder, but Oone was quick to interrupt, so
familiar was she with such questions.
"Some,
my lord. We were impressed by her intelligence and her courage."
Raik Na
Seem's brow furrowed as another thought occurred to him. "My son," he
said to Elric, "were you able to sustain yourself in that realm without
pain?"
"Without
pain, aye," said Elric. Then he realised what had been said. For the first
time he understood what good had come about from his adventure. "Aye, sir.
There are benefits to assisting a dreamthief. Great benefits which I had not
until now appreciated!"
With
relish now Elric joined in the feasting, treasuring these hours with Oone, the
Bauradim and all the other nomad clans. Again he felt as if he had come home,
so welcoming were the people, and he wished that he could spend his life here,
learning their ways, their philosophies and enjoying their pastimes.
Later,
as he lay beneath a great date palm, rolling one of the silver flowers between
his fingers, he looked up at Oone, who sat beside him, and said: "Of all
the temptations I faced in the Dream Realm, this temptation is perhaps the
greatest, Oone. This is simple reality and I am reluctant to leave it. And
you."
"We
have no further destiny together, I think." She sighed. "Not in this
life, at any rate, or this world, perhaps. You shall be first a legend, then
there will be none left to remember you."
"My
friends will all die? I shall be alone?"
"I
believe so. While you serve Chaos."
"I
serve myself and my people."
"If
you would believe that, Elric, you must do more to achieve it. You have created
a little reality and perhaps will create a little more. But Chaos cannot be a
friend without it betraying you. In the end, we have only ourselves to look to.
No cause, no force, no challenge, will ever replace that truth..."
"It
is to be myself that I travel as I do, Lady Gone," he reminded her. He
looked out over the desert, over the tranquil waters of the oasis. He breathed
in the cool, scented desert air.
"And
you will leave here soon?" she asked.
"Tomorrow,"
he said. "I must. But I am curious to know what reality I have
created."
"Oh,
I think a dream or two has come true," she said cryptically, kissing nun
on the cheek. "And another will come true soon enough."
He did
not pursue the question, for she had taken the great Pearl from the pouch at
her belt and held it out to him.
"It
exists! It was not the chimera we believed it to be! You still have it!"
"It
is for you," she said. "Use it how you will. But that is what brought
you here to the Silver Flower Oasis. It is what brought you to me. I think I
will not trade it at the Dream Market. I would like you to have it. I think it
might be yours by right, Elric. Be that as it may, the Holy Girl gave it to me
and now I give it to you. It is what Alnac Kreb died because of, what all those
assassins died to possess..."
"I
thought you said that the Pearl did not exist before the Sorcerer Assassins
sought to find it."
"That
is true. But it exists now. Here it is. The Pearl at the Heart of the World.
The great Pearl of legend. Have you no use for it?"
"You
must explain to me..." he began, but she cut him short.
"Ask
me not how dreams take substance, Prince Elric. That is a question that
concerns philosophers in all ages and all places. I ask you again-have you no
use for it?"
He
hesitated, then reached out to take the lovely thing. He held it in his two
palms, rolling it back and forth. He wondered at its richness, its pale beauty.
"Aye," he said. "I think I have a use for it."
When he
had placed the jewel in his own pouch, Oone said very softly: "I think it
is an evil thing, that Pearl."
He
agreed with her. "I think so, too. But sometimes evil can be used to
counter evil."
"I
cannot accept that argument" She seemed troubled.
"I
know," he said, "you have already said as much." And then it was
his turn to reach towards her and kiss her tenderly upon the lips. "Fate is
cruel, Oone. It would be better if it provided us with one unaltering path.
Instead it forces us to make choices and then never to know if those choices
were for the best."
"We
are mortals," she said with a shrug. "That is our particular
doom."
She stroked
his forehead. "You have a troubled mind, my lord. I think I will steal a
few of the smaller dreams which make you uneasy."
"Can
you steal pain, Oone, and turn it into something to sell in your market?"
"Oh,
frequently," she said.
She
took his head in her lap and began to massage his temples. Her look was tender.
He said
sleepily: "I cannot betray Cymoril. I cannot..."
"I
ask no more of you but that you sleep," she said. "One day you will
have much to regret and you will know real remorse. Until then, I can take away
a little of what is unimportant."
"Unimportant?"
His voice was slurred as she gradually stroked him into slumber.
"To
you, I think, my lord. Though not to me..."
And the
dreamthief began to sing. She sang a lullaby. She sang of a sickly child and a
grieving father. She sang of happiness found in simple things.
And
Elric slept. And as he slept the dreamthief performed her easy magic and took
away just a few of the half-forgotten memories which had spoiled his nights in
the past and might spoil those yet to come.
And
when Elric awoke that next morning, it was with a light heart and an easy
conscience, only the faintest memories of his adventures in the Dream Realm, a
continuing affection for Oone and a determination to reach Quarzhasaat as soon
as possible and take to Lord Gho what Lord Gho most desired in all the world.
His
farewells to the people of the Bauradim were sincere and his sadness in parting
was reciprocated. They begged him to return, to join them on their travels, to
hunt with them as Rackhir, his Mend, had once hunted.
"I
will try to return to you one day," he said. "But first I have more
than one oath to fulfill."
A
nervous boy brought him his great black battle-blade. As he buckled on
Stormbringer the sword seemed to moan with considerable satisfaction at being
reunited with him.
It was
Varadia, clasping his hands and kissing them, who gave him the blessing of her
clan. It was Raik Na Seem who told him that he was now Varadia's brother, his
own son, and then Oone the Dreamthief stepped forward. She had decided to
remain a while as a guest of the Bauradim.
"Farewell,
Elric. I hope that we may meet again. In better circumstances."
He was
amused. "Better circumstances?"
"For
me, at any rate." She grinned, contemptuously tapping the pommel of his
runesword. "And I wish you well with your attempts to become that thing's
master."
"I
am its master now, I think," he said.
She
shrugged. "I'll ride with you a little way up the Red Road."
"I
would welcome your company, my lady."
Side by
side, as they had done in the Dream Realm, Elric and Gone rode together. And,
although he did not remember how he had felt before, Elric knew a certain
resonance of recognition, as if he had found his soul's satisfaction, so that
it was with sadness that eventually he parted from her to go on alone towards
Quarzhasaat.
"Farewell,
good friend. I'll remember how you defeated the Pearl Warrior in the Fortress
of the Pearl. That is one memory I do not think will ever fade."
"I
am flattered." There was a touch of melancholy irony in her voice.
"Farewell, Prince Elric. I trust you will find all that you need and that
you will know peace when you return to Melniboné."
"It
is my firm intention, madam." A wave to her, not wishing to prolong the
sadness, and he spurred his horse forward.
With
eyes which refused to weep she watched him ride away up the long Red Road to
Quarzhasaat.
4
Certain
Matters
Resolved
in Quarzhasaat
When
Elric of Melniboné rode into Quarzhasaat he was limp in his saddle, hardly
controlling his horse at all, and the people who gathered around him asked him
if he was ill, while some feared that he brought plague to their beautiful city
and would have driven him out at once.
The
albino lifted his strange head long enough to gasp out the name of his patron,
Lord Gho Fhaazi, and to say that all he lacked was a certain elixir which that
nobleman possessed. "I must have that elixir," he told them, "or
I will be dead before I have accomplished my task..."
The old
towers and minarets of Quarzhasaat were lovely in the fading rays of a huge red
sun and there was a certain peace about the city which comes when the day's
business is done and before it begins to take its pleasures.
A rich
water-merchant, anxious to find favour with one who might soon be elected to
the Council, personally led Elric's horse through the elegant alleys and
impressive avenues until they came to the great palace, all golds and faded
greens, of Lord Gho Fhaazi.
The
merchant was rewarded by a steward's promise to mention his name to the
nobleman, and Elric, now mumbling and whimpering to himself, sometimes groaning
a little and licking anxious lips, passed through into the lovely gardens
surrounding the main palace.
Lord
Gho himself came to meet the albino. He was laughing heartily at the sight of
Elric hi such poor condition.
"Greetings,
greetings, Elric of Nadsokor! Greetings, white-faced clown-thief. Oh, you are
not so proud today! You were profligate with the elixir I gave you and now you
return to beg for more-in worse condition than when you first arrived
here!"
"The
boy..." whispered Elric, as servants helped him from the horse. His arms
hung limply as they carried him on their shoulders. "Does he live?"
"In
better health than yourself, sir!" Lord Gho Fhaazi's pale green eyes were
full of exquisite malice. "And in perfect safety. You were most adamant
about that before you set off. And I am a man of my word." The politician
stroked the ringlets of his oily beard and chuckled to himself. "And you,
Sir Thief, do you also keep your word?"
"To
the letter," muttered the albino. His red eyes rolled back hi his head and
it appeared for a second that he died. Then he turned a painful gaze in Lord
Gho's direction. "Will you give me the antidote and all that you've
promised? The water? The wealth? The boy?"
"No
doubt, no doubt. But you have a poor bargaining position at present, thief.
What of the Pearl? Did you find it? Or are you here to report failure?"
"I
found it. And I have it hidden," said Elric. "The elixir has..."
"Yes,
yes. I know what the elixir does. You must have a fundamentally strong
constitution even to be able to speak by now." The Quarzhasaati supervised
the men and women who carried Elric into the cool ulterior of the palace and
placed him on great tasselled cushions of scarlet and blue velvet and gave him
water to drink and food to eat.
"The
craving grows worse, does it not?" Lord Gho took considerable pleasure at
Elric's discomfort. "The elixir must feed off you, just as you appear to
feed off it. You are cunning, eh, Sir Thief? You have hidden the Pearl, you
say? Do you not trust me? I am a nobleman of the greatest city in the
world!"
Elric,
all dusty from his long ride, sprawled on the cushions and wiped his hands
slowly on a cloth. "The antidote, my lord..."
"You
know I shall not let you have the antidote until the Pearl is in my
hands..." Lord Gho was expansively condescending as he looked down on his
victim. "To tell you the truth, thief, I had not expected you to be as
coherent as you are! Would you care for another draft of my elixir?"
"Bring it if you will."
Elric
appeared to be careless, but Lord Gho understood how desperate he must actually
be. He turned to give instructions to his slaves.
Then
Elric said: "But bring the boy. Bring the boy so that I may see he has
come to no harm and hear from his own lips what has taken place while I have
been gone..."
It's a
small request. Very well." Lord Gho Fhaazi signed to a slave. "Bring
the boy Anigh."
The
nobleman crossed to a great chair, placed on a small dais between brocaded
awnings, and slumped himself down in it while they waited. "I had scarcely
expected you to survive the journey, Sir Thief, let alone succeed in finding
the Pearl. Our Sorcerer Adventurers are the bravest, most skillful of warriors,
trained in all the arts of sorcery and incantation. Yet those I sent, and all
their brothers, failed! Oh, this is a happy day for me. I will revive you, I
promise, so that you can tell me all that happened. What of the Bauradim? Did you
kill many? You will recount everything so that when I present the Pearl to
obtain my position I can give the story that goes with it.
This
will add to its value, you see. When I am elected, I shall be asked to retail
such a story many times, I am sure. The Council will be so envious..." He
licked his painted red lips. "Did you have to kill that child? What was
the first thing you witnessed, for instance, when you reached the Silver Flower
Oasis?"
"A
funeral, as I recall..." Elric showed a little more animation. "Aye,
that was it."
Two
guards brought in a wriggling boy who did not seem greatly overjoyed when he
saw Elric stretched upon the cushions. "Oh, master! You are more wretched
than before." He stopped his struggling and tried to hide his disappointment.
There were no marks of torture on him. He seemed not to have been harmed.
"Are
you well, Anigh?"
"Aye.
My chief problem has been in passing the time. Occasionally his lordship there
has come to tell me what he will do if you fail to bring back the Pearl, but I
have read such things on the walls of the lunatic stockades and they are
nothing new to me."
Lord
Oho scowled. "Be careful, boy..."
"You
must have returned with the Pearl," said Anigh, glancing around him.
"That is so, eh, my lord? Or you would not be here?" He was a little
more relieved. "Are we to go now?"
"Not
yet!" growled Lord Oho.
"The
antidote," said Elric. "Do you have it here?"
"You
are too impatient, Sir Thief. And your cunning is matched by mine." Lord
Gho giggled and raised an admonishing finger. "I must have some proof that
you possess the Pearl. Would you give me your sword as surety, perhaps? You
are, after all, too weak to wield it. It is of no further use to you." He
reached a greedy hand towards the albino's hip and Elric made a feeble movement
away from him.
"Come,
come, Sir Thief. Be not afraid of me. We are partners in this. Where is the
Pearl? The Council congregates this evening at the Great Meeting House. If I
can bring them the Pearl then... Oh, I shall be powerful by tonight!"
"The
worm is so proud to be king of the dunghill," said Elric.
"Do
not anger him, master!" cried Anigh in alarm. "You have still to
learn where he hides the antidote!"
"I
must have the Pearl!" Lord Gho grew petulant in his impatience. "Where
have you hidden it, thief? In the desert? Somewhere in the city?"
Slowly
Elric raised his body on the cushions. "The Pearl was a dream," he
said. "It took your killers to make it real."
Lord
Gho Fhaazi frowned, scratching at his whitened forehead and showing further
nervousness. He looked suspiciously at Elric. "If you would have more
elixir, you had best not insult me, thief. Nor play any game. The boy could die
in an instant, and you with him, and I would be in no worse a position."
"But
you would better yourself, my lord, I think. With the price of a place on the
Council, I think." Elric seemed to gather strength and now he was upright
on the luxurious velvet, signing for the boy to come towards him. The guards
looked questioningly at their master, but he shrugged. Anigh walked, his brow
furrowed with curiosity, towards the albino. "You are greedy, my lord, I
think. You would own the whole of your world. This pathetic monument to your
race's ruined pride!"
Lord
Gho glared at him. "Thief, if you would recover yourself, if you would
take the antidote to make you free of the drug I gave you, you will be more
polite to me..."
"Ah,
yes," said Elric thoughtfully, reaching into his jerkin. He pulled out a
leather pouch. "The elixir which was to make me your slave!" He
smiled. He opened the pouch.
Onto
his extended palm now rolled the jewel for which Gho Fhaazi had offered half
his fortune, for which he had sent a hundred men to their deaths, for which he
had been prepared to abduct and kill one child and imprison another.
The
Quarzhasaati began to tremble. His painted eyes rounded. He gasped and bent
forward, almost fainting.
"It
is true," he said. "You have found the Pearl at the Heart of the
World..."
"Merely
a gift from a friend," said Elric. The Pearl still displayed on his hand,
he rose to his feet and put a protective arm around the boy. "In obtaining
it I found that my body lost its demand for the elixir and therefore has no
need for your antidote, Lord Gho."
Lord
Gho hardly heard him. His eyes were fixed on the great Pearl. "It is
monstrous big... Even larger than I had heard... It is real. I can see it is
real. The colour... Ah..." And he stretched towards it.
Elric
drew his hand back. Lord Gho frowned and looked up at the albino with eyes that
were hot with greed. "Did she die? Was it, as some said, in her
body?"
Anigh
shivered at Elric's side.
Full of
loathing, Elric's voice was still soft. "No one died at my hand who was
not already dead. As you are already dead, my lord. It was your funeral I
witnessed at the Silver Flower Oasis. I am now the agent of the Bauradim
prophecy. I am to avenge all the grief you brought to them and their Holy
Girl."
"What?
The others all sent their soldiers, too! The entire Council and half the
candidates had sects of Sorcerer Adventurers seeking the Pearl. Every one. Most
of those warriors failed or were killed. Or were executed for their failure.
You killed no one, you said. Well, so there's no blood on your hands, eh. All's
for the best. I'll give you what I promised, Sir Thief..."
Trembling
with lust, Lord Gho extended his plump hand to take the Pearl.
Elric
smiled and to Anigh's astonishment let the nobleman lift the Pearl from his
palm.
Breathing
heavily, Lord Gho caressed his prize. "Oh, it is lovely. Oh, it is so
good..."
Elric
spoke again, just as levelly as before. "And our reward, Lord Gho?"
"What?"
He looked up absently. "Why yes, of course. Your lives. You no longer need
the antidote, you say. Excellent. So you may go."
"I
believe you also offered me a large fortune. All manner of wealth. Great
stature amongst the lords of Quarzhasaat?"
Lord
Gho dismissed this. "Nonsense. The antidote would have sufficed. You are
not the type of person to enjoy such things. Breeding is required if they are
to be used wisely and with appropriate discretion. No, no. I will let you and
the boy go..."
"You
will not keep your original bargain, my lord?"
"There
was talk-but no bargain. The only bargain involved the boy's freedom and the
antidote to the elixir. You were mistaken."
"You
remember nothing of your promises...?"
"Promises?
Certainly not." The ringletted beard and hair quivered.
"...and
mine?"
"No,
no. You are irritating me." His eyes were still upon the Pearl. He fondled
it as another might fondle a beloved child. "Go, sir. While I am still
pleased with you."
"I
have many oaths to fulfill," said Elric, "and I do not break my
word."
Lord
Gho looked up, his expression hardening. "Very well. I am tired of this.
By this evening I shall be a member of the Six and One Other. By threatening
me, you threaten the Council. You are therefore enemies of Quarzhasaat. You are
traitors to the Empire and must be disposed of accordingly! Guards!"
"Oh,
you are a foolish fellow," said Elric. Then Anigh cried out, for unlike
Lord Gho, he had not forgotten the power of the Black Sword.
"Do
as he demands, Lord Gho!" shouted Anigh, fearing as much for himself as
for the nobleman. "I beg you, great lord! Do what he says!"
"This
is not how a member of the Council is addressed." Lord Gho's tone was that
of a baffled, reasonable individual. "Guards-take them from my hall at
once. Have them strangled or cut their throats-I care not..."
The
guards knew nothing of the runesword. They saw only a slender man who might
have been a leper and they saw a young, defenceless boy. They grinned, as if at
a joke of their master's, and then drew their blades, advancing almost
casually.
Elric
pressed Anigh behind him. His hand went to Stormbringer's hilt. "You are
unwise to do this," he told the guards. "I have no particular wish to
kill you."
Behind
the soldiers one of the servants opened the door and slipped out into the
corridor. Elric watched her go. "Best copy her," he said. "She
has some idea, I think, of what will happen if you threaten us further..."
The
guards laughed openly now. "This is a madman," said one. "Lord
Gho is well rid of him!"
They
came at Elric in a rush and then the runesword was howling in the cool air of
that luxurious chamber-howling like a hungry wolf freed from a cage and longing
only to kill and to feed.
Elric
felt the power surge through him as the blade took the first guard, splitting
him from crown to breastbone. The other tried to change direction from attack
to flight, stumbled forward and was impaled on the blade's tip, his eyes
horrified as he felt his soul being drawn from him into the runesword.
Lord
Gho cringed in his great chair, too frightened to move. In one hand he clutched
the great Pearl. His other hand was held palm outward as if he hoped to ward off
Elric's blow.
But the
albino, strengthened by his borrowed energy, sheathed the black blade and took
five quick strides across the hall to mount the dais and stare down into Lord
Gho's face, which twisted in terror.
'Take
the Pearl back. For my life..." whispered the Quarzhasaati. "For my
life, thief..."
Elric
accepted the offered jewel, but he did not move. He reached into the pouch at
his belt and drew forth a flask of the elixir Lord Gho had given him.
"Would you care for something to help you wash it down?"
Lord
Gho trembled. Beneath the chalky substance on his skin his face had gone still
paler. "I do not understand you, thief."
"I
want you to eat the Pearl, my lord. If you can swallow it and live, well, it
will be clear that the prophecy of your death was premature."
"Swallow
it? It is too large. I could hardly get it into my mouth!" Lord Gho
sniggered, hoping that the albino joked.
"No,
my lord. I think you can. And I think you can swallow it. After all, how else
would it have got into the body of a child?"
"It
was-they said it was a-a dream..."
"Aye.
Perhaps you can swallow a dream. Perhaps you can enter the Dream Realm and so
escape your fate. You must try, my lord, or else my runesword drinks your soul.
Which would you prefer?"
"Oh,
Elric. Spare me. This is not fair. We made a bargain."
"Open
your mouth, Lord Gho. Who knows? The Pearl might shrink or your throat expand
like a snake's. A snake could easily swallow the Pearl, my lord. And you,
surely, are superior to a snake?"
Anigh
whispered from the window where he had been staring with studied gaze,
unwilling to look upon a vengeance he regarded as just but distasteful.
"The servant, Lord Elric. She has alarmed the city."
For a
second a desperate hope came into Lord Gho's green eyes and then faded as Elric
placed the flask on the arm of the great chair and drew the runesword part-way
from its scabbard. "Your soul will help me fight those new soldiers, Lord
Oho."
Slowly,
weeping and whimpering, the great Lord of Quarzhasaat began to open his mouth.
"Here
is the Pearl again, my lord. Put it in. Do your best, my lord. You have some
chance of life this way."
Lord
Gho's hand shook. But eventually he began to force the lovely jewel between his
reddened lips. Elric took the stopper from the elixir and poured some of the
liquid into the nobleman's distorted cheeks. "Now swallow, Lord Gho.
Swallow the Pearl you would have slain a child to own. And then I will tell you
who I am..."
A few
moments later the doors crashed inward and Elric recognised the tattooed face
of Manag Iss, leader of the Yellow Sect and kinsman to the Lady Iss. Manag Iss
looked from Elric to the distorted features of Lord Gho. The nobleman had
failed completely to swallow the Pearl.
Manag
Iss shuddered. "Elric. I heard that you had returned. They said you were
close to death. Clearly this was a trick to deceive Lord Gho."
"Aye,"
said Elric. "I had this boy to free."
Manag
Iss gestured with his own drawn sword. "You found the Pearl?"
"I
found it."
"My
Lady Iss sent me to offer you anything you desired for it."
Elric
smiled. "Tell her I shall be at the Council Meeting House in half an hour.
I shall bring the Pearl with me."
"But
the others will be there. She wishes to trade privately."
"Would
it not be wise to auction so valuable a thing?" said Elric.
Manag
Iss sheathed his sword and smiled a little. "You're a cunning one. I do
not think they know how cunning you are. Nor who you are. I have yet to tell
them that particular speculation."
"Oh,
you may tell them what I have just told Lord Gho. That I am the hereditary
Emperor of Melniboné," said Elric casually. "For that is the truth of
the matter. My Empire has survived rather more successfully than yours, I
think."
"That
could incense them. I am willing to be your friend, Melnibonéan."
"Thanks,
Manag Iss, but I need no more friends from Quarzhasaat. Please do as I
say."
Manag
Iss looked at the slaughtered guards, at the dead Lord Gho, who had turned a
strange colour, at the nervous boy, and he saluted Elric.
"The
Meeting House in half an hour, Emperor of Melniboné." He turned on his
heel and left the chamber.
After
issuing certain specific instructions to Anigh concerning travel and the
products of Kwan, Elric went out into the courtyard. The sun had set and there
were brands burning all over Quarzhasaat as if the city were expecting an
attack.
Lord
Gho's house was deserted of servants. Elric went to the stables and found his
horse and his saddle. He dressed the Baraudi stallion, carefully placing a
heavy bundle over the pommel, then he had mounted and was riding through the
streets, seeking the Meeting House where Anigh had told him it would be.
The
city was unnaturally silent. Clearly some order had been given to uphold a
curfew, for there was not even a city guard on the streets.
Elric
rode at an easy canter along the wide Avenue of Military Success, along the
Boulevard of Ancient Accomplishment and half a dozen other grandiosely named
thoroughfares until he saw the long low building ahead of him which, in its
simplicity, could only be the seat of Quarzhasaati power.
The
albino paused. At his side the black runesword crooned a little, almost
demanding a further letting of blood.
"You
must be patient," said Elric. "Could be there will be no need for
battle."
He thought
he saw shadows moving hi the trees and shrubberies around the Meeting House but
he paid them no attention. He did not care what they plotted or who spied on
him. He had a mission to fulfill.
At last
he had reached the doors of the building and was not surprised to find them
standing open. He dismounted, threw the bundle over his shoulder and walked
heavily into a large, plain room, without decoration or ostentation, hi which
were placed seven tall-backed chairs and a lime-washed oak table. Standing in a
semi-circle at one end of the table were six robed figures wearing veils not
unlike certain sects of the Sorcerer Adventurers. The seventh figure wore a
tall, conical hat which completely covered the face. It was this figure who
spoke. Elric was not unsurprised to hear a woman's tones.
"I
am the Other," she said. "I believe you have brought us a treasure to
add to the glory of Quarzhasaat."
"If
you believe this treasure to add to your glory, then my journey has not been
fruitless," said Elric. He dropped the bundle to the ground. "Did
Manag Iss tell you all I asked him to tell you?"
One of
the Councillors stirred and said, almost as an oath: "That you are the
progeny of sunken Melniboné, aye!"
"Melniboné
is not sunken. Nor does she cut herself off from the world's realities quite as
much as do you." Elric was contemptuous. "You challenged our power
long ago, and defeated yourselves by your own folly. Now through your greed you
have brought me back to Quarzhasaat when I would as readily have passed through
your city unnoticed."
"Do
you accuse us!" A veiled woman was outraged. "You who have caused us
so much trouble? You, who are of the blood of that degenerate unhuman race
which couples with beasts for its pleasures and produces"-she pointed at
Elric-"the like of you!"
Elric
was unmoved. "Did Manag Iss tell you to be wary of me?" he asked
quietly.
"He
said you had the Pearl and that you had a sorcerous sword. But he also said you
were alone." The Other cleared her throat. "He said you brought the
Pearl at the Heart of the World."
"I
have brought it and that which contains it," said Elric. He bent down and
tugged the velvet free of his bundle to reveal the corpse of Lord Gho Fhaazi,
his face still contorted, the great lump in his throat making it seem as if he
had an enormously enlarged Adam's apple. "Here is the one who first
commissioned me to find the Pearl."
"We
heard you had murdered him," said the Other with disapproval. "But
that would be a normal enough action for a Melnibonéan."
Elric
did not rise to this. "The Pearl is in Lord Gho Fhaazi's gullet. Would you
have me cut it out for you, my nobles?"
He saw
at least one of them shudder and he smiled. "You commission assassins to
kill, to torture, to kidnap and to perform all other forms of evil in your
name, but you would not see a little spilled blood? I gave Lord Gho a choice.
He took this one. He talked so much and ate and drank so copiously I thought he
might well have succeeded in getting the Pearl into his stomach. But he gagged
a little and I fear that was the end of him."
"You
are a cruel rogue!" One of the men came forward to look at his would-be
colleague. "Aye, that's Gho. His colour has improved, I'd say."
This
jest did not meet with the leader's approval.
"We
are to bid for a corpse, then?"
"Unless
you wish to cut the Pearl free, aye."
"Manag
Iss," said one of the veiled women, lifting her head. "Step out, will
you, sir?"
The
Sorcerer Adventurer emerged from a door at the back of the hall. He looked at
Elric almost apologetically. His hand went to his knife.
"We
would not have a Melnibonéan spill more Quarzhasaati blood," said the
Other. "Manag Iss will cut the Pearl free."
The
leader of the Yellow Sect drew a deep breath and then approached the corpse.
Swiftly he did what he had been ordered to do. Blood poured down his arm as he
held up the Pearl at the Heart of the World.
The
Council was impressed. Several of the members gasped and they murmured amongst
themselves. Elric believed they had suspected him of lying to them, since lies
and intrigues were second nature to them.
"Hold
it high, Manag Iss," said the albino. "It is this that you all
desired so greedily that you were prepared to pay for it with what was left of
your honour."
"Be
careful, sir!" cried the Other. "We are patient with you now. Name
your price and then begone."
Elric
laughed. It was not pleasant laughter. It was Melnibonéan laughter. At that
moment he was a pure denizen of the Dragon Isle. "Very well," he
said, "I desire this city. Not its citizens, not any of its treasure, nor
its animals, not even its water. I would let you leave with everything you can
carry. I desire only the city itself. It is, you see, mine by hereditary
right."
"What?
This is nonsense. How could we agree?" *
"You
must agree," said Elric, "or you must fight me."
"Fight
you? There is only one of you."
"There
is no question of it," said another Councillor. "He is mad. He must
be put down like a crazed dog. Manag Iss, call in your brothers and their
men."
"I
do not believe it is advisable, cousin," said Manag Iss, clearly
addressing Lady Iss. "I think it would be wise to parley."
"What?
Have you turned coward? Has this rogue an army with : hun?"
Manag
Iss rubbed at his nose. "My lady..."
"Call
in your brothers, Manag Iss!"
The captain
of the Yellow Sect rubbed at one silk-clad arm and he frowned. "Prince
Elric, I understand that you force us to a challenge. But we have not
threatened you. The Council honestly came here to bid for the Pearl..."
"Manag
Iss, you repeat their lies," said Elric, "and that is not an
honourable thing to do. If they meant me no harm, why were you and all your
brothers standing by? I saw almost two hundred warriors in the grounds."
"That
was a precaution only," said the Other. She turned to her fellow Councillors.
"I told you I thought it was stupid to summon so many so soon."
Elric
said evenly: "Everything you have done, my nobles, has been stupid. You
have been cruel, greedy, careless of others' lives and wills. You have been
blind, thoughtless, provincial and unimaginative. It seems to me that a
government so careless of anything but its own gratification should be at very
least replaced. When you have all left the city I will consider electing a
governor who will know better how to serve Quarzhasaat. Then, later perhaps, I
will let you back into the city..."
"Oh,
slay him!" cried the Other. "Waste no more time on this. When that's
done we can decide amongst ourselves who owns the Pearl"
Elric
sighed almost regretfully and said: "Best parley with me now, madam,
before I myself lose patience. I shall not, once I have drawn my blade, be a
rational and merciful being..."
"Slay
him!" she insisted. "And have done with it!"
Manag
Iss had the face of a man condemned to more than death. "Madam..."
She
strode forward, her conical hat swaying, and tugged the sword from the
scabbard. She raised the blade to behead the albino.
He
reached out swiftly. His arm was a striking snake. He gripped her wrist.
"No, madam! I am, I swear, giving you fair warning..."
Stormbringer
murmured at his side and stirred.
She
dropped the sword and turned away, nursing her bruised wrist.
Now
Manag Iss reached for his fallen blade, making as if to sheath it, and then,
with a subtle movement, tried to bring the weapon up and take Elric in the
groin, an expression of resignation crossing his terrified features as the
albino, anticipating him, sidestepped and in the same action drew the Black
Sword, which began to sing its strange demonic song and glow with a terrible
black radiance.
Manag
Iss gasped as his heart was pierced. The hand that still held the Pearl seemed
to stretch out, offering it back to Elric. Then the jewel had rolled from his
fingers and rattled on the floor. Three Councillors rushed forward, saw Manag
Iss's dying eyes and stepped backward.
"Now!
Now! Now!" cried the Other, and, as Elric had expected, from every cranny
of the Meeting House, members of the various sects of Sorcerer Adventurers
came, their weapons at the ready.
And the
albino began to grin his horrible battle-grin, and his red eyes blazed and his
face was the skull of Death and his sword was the vengeance of his own people,
the vengeance of the Bauradim and all those who had suffered under the
injustice of Quarzhasaat over the millennia.
And he
offered up the souls he took to his patron Duke of Hell, the powerful Duke
Arioch who had grown sleek on many lives dedicated to him by Elric and his
black blade.
"Arioch!
Arioch! Blood and souls for my lord Arioch!"
Then
the true slaughter began.
It was
a slaughter to make all other such events pale into insignificance. It was a
slaughter that would never be forgotten in all the annals of the desert
peoples, who would learn of it from those who fled Quarzhasaat that
night-flinging themselves into the waterless desert rather than face the white
laughing demon on a Bauradi horse who galloped up and down their lovely streets
and taught them what the price of complacency and unthinking cruelty could be.
"Arioch!
Ariochl Blood and souls!"
They
would speak of a white-faced creature from Hell whose sword poured with
unnatural radiance, whose crimson eyes blazed with hideous rage, who seemed
possessed, himself, of some supernatural force, who was no more master of it
than were his victims. He killed without mercy, without distinction, without
cruelty. He killed as a mad wolf kills. And as he killed, he laughed.
That
laughter would never leave Quarzhasaat. It would remain on the wind which came
in from the Sighing Desert, in the music of the fountains, the clang of the metal-workers'
and jewellers' hammers as they fashioned their wares. And so would the smell of
blood remain, together with the memory of slaughter, that terrible loss of life
which left the city without a Council and an army.
But
never again would Quarzhasaat foster the legend of her own power. Never again
would she treat the desert nomads as less than beasts. Never again would she
know that self-destructive pride so familiar to all great empires in decline.
And
when the slaughter was finished, Elric of Melniboné slumped in his saddle,
sheathing a sated Stormbringer, and he gasped with the demon power which still
pulsed through him and he took a great Pearl from his belt and held it to the
rising sun.
"They
have paid a fair price now, I think."
He
tossed the thing into a gutter where a little dog licked congealing blood.
Above,
the vultures, called from a thousand miles around by the prospect of memorable
feasting, were beginning to drop like a dark cloud upon the beautiful towers
and gardens of Quarzhasaat.
Elric's
face held no pride in his achievement as he spurred his horse for the West and
the place on the road where he had told Anigh to await them with enough Kwani
herbs, water, horses and food to cross the Sighing Desert and seek again the
more familiar politics and sorceries of the Young Kingdoms.
He did
not look back on the city which, in the name of his ancestors, had been
conquered at last.
5
An
Epilogue at the Waning of the Blood Moon
The
celebrations at the Silver Flower Oasis had continued long after the news came
of Elite's vengeance-taking on those who would have harmed the Holy Girl of the
Bauradim. The news was brought by Quarzhasaatim, fleeing from the city in an
action which had no precedent in all their long history.
Oone
the Dreamthief, who had stayed at the Silver Flower Oasis longer than was
necessary and who was yet reluctant to leave and go about her proper business,
learned of Elric's vengeance without joy. The news saddened her, for she had
hoped for something else to happen.
"He
serves Chaos as I serve Law," she said to herself. "And who is to say
which of us is the worse enslaved?" But she sighed and threw herself into
the festivities with a force which was less than spontaneous.
The
Bauradim and the other nomad clans did not notice, for their own pleasure was
intensified. They were rid of a tyrant, of the only thing in the desert lands
that they had ever feared.
"The
cactus tears our flesh so that we shall be shown where water is," said
Raik Na Seem. "Our troubles were great, but thanks to you, Oone, and Elric
of Melniboné, our troubles turned to triumphs. Soon some of us will visit
Quarzhasaat and set out the terms on which we intend to trade in future. There
will be a welcome equality about the transaction, I think." He was greatly
amused. "But we will wait until the dead are decently eaten."
Varadia
took Oone's hand and they walked together beside the pools of the great oasis.
The Blood Moon was waning and the silver petals of the flowers were shining
brighter still. Soon the Blood Moon must wane and the flowers shed their petals
and then it would be time for the people of the desert to go their different
ways.
"You
loved that white-faced man, did you not?" Varadia asked her friend.
"I
hardly knew him, child."
"I
knew you both very well, not so long ago." Varadia smiled. "And I am
growing rapidly, am I not? You said as much yourself."
Oone
was forced to agree. "But there was no hope for it, Varadia. We have such
different destinies. And I have scant sympathy for the choices he makes."
"He
is driven, that one. He has little in the way of ordinary volition." She
pushed a strand of honey-coloured hair away from her dark features.
"Perhaps,"
said Oone. "Yet some of us can refuse the destiny that the Lords of Law
and Chaos set out for us and still survive, still create something which the
gods are forbidden to touch."
Varadia
was sympathetic. "What we create remains a mystery," she said.
"It is still hard for me to understand how I made that Pearl, creating the
very thing my enemies sought in order to escape them. And then it became
real!"
"I
have known this to happen," said Oone. "It is those creations that a
dreamthief seeks and earns a living from." She laughed. "That Pearl
would bring me a good wage for a long time if I took it to market."
"How
is it that reality is formed from dreams, Oone?"
Oone
paused and looked down into the water which reflected the faint pink disc of
the moon. "An oyster, threatened by intrusion from without, seeks to
isolate that threat by forming the thing around it that eventually becomes a
pearl. Sometimes that is how it happens. At other times the will of humanity is
so strong, the desire for something so intense, that they will bring into
existence that which was thought until then to be impossible. It is not
unusual, Varadia, for a dream to be made reality. This knowledge is one of the
reasons why my respect for humanity is maintained, in spite of all the
cruelties and injustices I witness in my travels."
"I
think I understand," said the Holy Girl.
"Oh,
you will understand all this very well in time," Oone assured her.
"For you are one of those capable of such creation."
A few
days later Oone was ready to ride away from the Silver Flower Oasis, towards
Elwher and the Unmapped East. Varadia spoke with her for the last time.
"I
know you have a further secret," she said to the dreamthief. "Will
you not share it with me?"
Oone
was astonished. Her regard for the girl's sensitive intelligence increased.
"Do you want to talk more about the nature of dreams and reality?"
"I
think you carry a child, Oone," said Varadia directly. "Is that not
so?"
Oone
folded her arms and leaned against her horse. She shook her head in frank good
humour. "It is true that all the wisdom of your people is accumulated in
you, young woman."
"The
child of one you have loved and who is lost to you?"
"Aye,"
said Oone. "A daughter, I think. Maybe even a brother and a sister, if the
omens are properly interpreted. More than pearls can be conceived in dreams,
Varadia."
"And
will the father ever know his offspring?" gently asked the Holy Girl.
Oone
tried to speak and discovered that she could not. She looked away quickly
towards distant Quarzhasaat. Then, after a few moments, she was able to force
herself to answer.
"Never,"
she said.