EMPIRE
OF THE EAST
FRED
SABERHAGEN
INTRODUCTION
BOOK
ONE
THE
BROKEN LANDS
I
Hear
Me, Ekuman
The
Satrap Ekuman's difficulties with his aged prisoner had only begun when he got
the fellow down into the dungeon under the Castle and tried to begin a serious
interrogation. The problem was not, as you might have thought from a first look
at the old man, that the prisoner was too fragile and feeble, liable to die at
the first good twinge of pain. Not at all. It was almost incredible, but
actually the exact opposite was true. The old man was actually too tough, his
powers still protected him. All through the long night he not only defended
himself, but kept trying to hit back.
Ekuman's
two wizards, Elslood and Zarf, were adepts as able as any that the Satrap had
ever encountered west of the Black Mountains, far too strong for any lone
prisoner to overcome, especially here on their own ground. Yet the old man
fought - in pride and stubbornness, perhaps, and doubtless with the realization
that his fighting could cause powers so enormous to be arrayed against him,
could create a tension so great, that his inevitable collapse would bring him
sudden and relatively painless death.
The
intensity of the silent struggle mounted all through the darkest morning hours,
when human powers are known to wane, and others may reach their peak. Ekuman
and his wizards could not identify the particular forces of the West that the
old man called upon, but certainly they were not trivial. Long before the end,
the air within the buried dungeon seemed to Ekuman to be ringing audibly with
powers; and his human eyesight misinformed him that the ancient vaults of the
stone ceiling had elongated and receded into some mysterious distance. Zarf's toad-familiar,
wont to jump with glee during the interrogation of stubborn prisoners, had
taken refuge in a puddle of torchlight near the foot of the ascending stair,
for once wanting nothing to do with the dark corners of the chamber. It
crouched there solemnly, goggle eyes following its master as he moved about.
Elslood
and Zarf took turns standing on the rim of the pit, three meters deep, at whose
bottom the old man had been chained. They had with them talismans of their
choice, and had drawn signs on floor and wall. They of course could gesture
freely - though on the level of physical action the struggle was very quiet, as
was to be. expected when it involved wizards of this rank.
While
one of Ekuman's magicians took his turn at maintaining the pressure, the other
stood back before the Satrap's elevated chair, conferring with him. They were
all sure that the old man was a leader, perhaps the very chief, of those who
called themselves the Free Folk. These were bands of the native populace,
reinforced by some stiff-necked refugees from other lands, who hid themselves
in hills and coastal swamps and carried on an unremitting guerrilla warfare
against Ekuman.
It was
only through a stroke of fortune that a routine search operation in the swamps
had netted the old man. Zarf and a troop of forty soldiers had come upon him
sleeping in a hut. Ekuman was beginning to believe that if the old man had
chanced to be awake, they might not have taken him at all. Even with the
prisoner at his present disadvantage, Elslood and Zarf together had not even
managed to learn his name.
Down in
the pit the guttering torchlight flashed with unusual brightness from chains
that were of no ordinary metal. Blood puddled darkly at the old man's feet, but
not a drop of it was his. Lifeless before him one of Ekuman's dungeon-wardens
lay. This man had approached the chained wizard incautiously, to be surprised
when his own torture-knife whipped itself out of its sheath to fly up and bury
its dull blade to the hilt in its owner's throat. After that, Ekuman had
ordered all his human servitors save the two wizards from the chamber.
Later,
when the prisoner had begun to display small but unmistakeable signs of
weakening, Ekuman considered having the wardens in again, to try what little
knives and flames might do. But the wizards advised against it, pleading that
the best chance for a cruel prolongation of agony, for extracting useful
information from the victim, lay in finishing by the powers of magic alone the
process they had begun. Their pride was stung.
The
Satrap thought about it, and let his wizards have their way, while he sat
attentively through the long hours of the test. He had a high wall of a
forehead, and a full, darkish beard. He wore a simple robe of black and bronze;
his black boots shifted now and then upon the stone floor.
Only
when the night outside was drawing to its end -though day and night in here
were all the same -did the old man break silence at last. He spoke to Ekuman,
and the words evidently formed no spell, for they came clearly enough through
the guarded air above the torture-pit. When toward the end of the speech the
victim's breath began to fail, Ekuman stood up from his chair and leaned
forward to hear better. On the Satrap's face at that moment was a look of
politeness, as of one simply showing courtesy to an elder.
"Hear
me, Ekuman!"
The
toad-familiar crouched lower, becoming utterly motionless, at the sound of
those first words.
"Hear
me, for I am Ardneh! Ardneh, who rides the Elephant, who wields the lightning,
who rends fortifications as the rushing passage of time consumes cheap cloth.
You slay me in this avatar, but I live on in other human beings. I am Ardneh,
and in the end I will slay thee, and thou wilt not live on."
Given
the circumstances, Ekuman knew no alarm at being threatened. The word
"Elephant," though, caught his attention sharply. He glanced quickly
at his wizards when it was uttered. Zarf's and Elslood's eyes fell before his,
and he returned his full attention to the prisoner.
Pain
showed now in the prisoner's face, and sounded in his voice. Defenses
crumbling, powers failing, he was quickly becoming no more than an old man, no
more than another victim about to die. He labored on, with croaking speech.
"Hear
me, Ekuman. Neither by day nor by night will I slay thee. Neither with the
blade nor with the bow. Neither with the edge of the hand . . .nor with the
fist. Neither with the wet . . . nor with the dry ..."
Ekuman
strained to hear more, but the old lips had ceased to move. Now only the
flicker of torchlight gave the illusion of life to the victim's face, as it did
to the face of the dead torturer at his feet.
The
ringing pressure of invisible forces faded quickly from the dank air. As Ekuman
straightened, sighing, and turned from the pit, he could not resist a quick
glance upward to make sure that the vaulting had settled back where it
belonged.
Zarf,
slightly the junior of the two wizards, had gone to open a door and call the
wardens in to see to the disposal of the corpses. As the magician turned back
from this errand, Ekuman demanded: "You will examine the old one's body,
with special care?"
"Yes,
Lord." Zarf did not sound optimistic about the results to be expected from
such an autopsy. His toad-familiar, however, was now grown lively again, and
ready to begin the job. It burbled shrilly as it hopped into the pit and began
its usual routine of pranks with the two bodies.
Ekuman
stretched, wearily, and began to ascend the worn stone stair. Something had
been accomplished, one of the rebel chieftains killed. But that was not enough.
The information Ekuman required had not been gained.
Halfway
up the first curved flight of stairs he stopped, turned back his head, and
asked: "What make you of that speech the ancient blessed me with?"
Elslood,
three steps behind, nodded his fine gray head, knit his well-creased brow, and
pursed his dry lips thoughtfully; but at the moment Elslood could find nothing
to say.
Shrugging,
the Satrap went on up. It needed a hundred and more stone steps to raise him
from the dungeon to gray morning air in a closed courtyard, from courtyard to
keep, and from keep to the tower where his own quarters were. At several points
Ekuman acknowledged, without pausing, the salutes of bronze-helmed soldiers
standing guard.
Once
above ground, the stairs curved through the Castle's massive, newly
strengthened walls. The bulky keep was three tall stories high, and the tower
rose two levels more above its roof. Most of the tower's lower level was taken
up by a single large room, the Presence Chamber, wherein Ekuman generally
conducted his affairs of state. At one side of this large round chamber space
had been given to the wizards, covered alcoves in which they might keep their
implements, benches and tables where they might do their work under their
Lord's most watchful eye.
It was
straight to this side of the Presence Chamber that Elslood went as soon as he
and Ekuman had ascended to the tower. Around him here he had all the sorcerer's
impedimenta: masks, and talismans, and charms not easily nameable, all most
curiously wrought, piled on stands and tables and depending from the wall. On a
stand a single thick brown candle burned, pale of flame now in the cool morning
light that filtered through the high narrow windows.
Pausing
first to mutter a secret precautionary word, Elslood put out a hand to set
aside the arras which concealed an alcove. Within this space the Satrap allowed
him to keep to himself certain private volumes and devices. The drapery pulled
back revealed an enormous black guardian-spider, temporarily immobilized by the
secret word, crouched on a high shelf. The tall wizard reached his long arm
past the spider to withdraw a dusty volume.
When it
was brought into the light Ekuman saw that it was an Old World book, of
marvelous paper and binding that had already outlasted more than one generation
of parchment copies. Technology, thought the Satrap, and despite himself he
shivered slightly, inwardly, watching the fair white pages turned so familiarly
by Elslood's searching fingers. It was not easy for one belonging to a world
that thought itself sane and modern and stable to accept the reality of such
things. Not even for Ekuman, who had seen and handled the evidences of
technology more frequently than most. This book was not the only Old World
remnant preserved within his Castle's walls.
And
somewhere'outside his walls, waiting to be found -the Elephant. Ekuman rubbed
his palms together in impatience.
Having
taken his book to the window for the light, Elslood had evidently located in it
the passage he sought. He was reading silently now, nodding to himself like a
man confirming an opinion.
At last
he cleared his throat and spoke. "It was a quotation, Lord Ekuman, nearly
word for word. From this-which is either a fable or a history of the Old World,
I know not which. I will translate." Elslood put back his wizard's hood
from his bush of silvery hair, cleared his throat again, and read out in a firm
voice:
"Said
Indra to the demon Namuci, I will slay thee not by day or night, neither with
the staff nor with the bow, neither with the palm of the hand nor with the
fist, neither with the wet nor with the dry." "Indra?"
"One
of the gods, Lord. Of lightning . . ." "And of Elephants?"
Sarcasm bit in Ekuman's voice. Elephant was the name of some creature, real or
mythical, of the Old World. Here in the Broken Lands depictions of this beast
were to be seen in several places: stamped or painted on Old World metal, woven
into a surviving scrap of Old World cloth that Ekuman had seen, and carved,
probably at some less ancient time, upon a rock cliff in the Broken Mountains.
And
now, somehow, the Elephant had come to be the symbol of those who called
themselves the Free Folk. Far more important, a referent of this symbol still
existed in the form of some real power, hidden somewhere in this land that
refused to accept Ekuman as its conqueror -so the Satrap's wizards assured him,
and so he believed. By all surface appearances the land was his, the Free Folk
were only an outlaw remnant; yet all the divinings of his magicians warned him
that without the Elephant under his control his rule was doomed to perish.
Still
he was not really expecting the answer that Elslood gave him:
"Possibly,
Lord, quite possibly. In at least one image that I have seen elsewhere, Indra
is shown as mounted on what I believe to be an Elephant." "Then read
on."
The
ominous tone was plain in Ekuman's voice; the wizard read on quickly: "
'But he killed him in the morning twilight, by sprinkling over him the foam of
the sea.' The god Indra killed the demon Namuci, that is."
"Hum."
Ekuman had just noticed something: In-dra-Ardneh. Namuci-Ekuman. Of course a
power of magic could reside in words, but hardly in this simple transposition
of syllables. The discovery of the apparent verbal trickery brought him relief
rather than alarm. The old man, unable to strike back with effect, had still
managed to work some subtlety into a dying threat. Subtlety was hardly
substance, even in magic.
Ekuman
let himself smile faintly. "Fragile sort of demon, to die of a little
sea-spray," he commented.
Relieved,
Elslood indulged himself in a light laugh. He leafed through a few more pages
of his book. "As I recall the story, Lord, this demon Namuci had kept his
life, his soul, hidden in the sea-foam. Therefore was he vulnerable to
it." Elslood shook his head. "One would have thought it a fairly
clever choice for a hiding place."
Ekuman
grunted noncommittally. At the sound of a step he turned, to see Zarf entering
the Presence Chamber. Zarf was younger and shorter than Elslood and also
resembled far less the popular conception of a wizard. Judged by appearance,
Zarf might have been a merchant or a prosperous farmer-save for the
toad-familiar, which rode now under a fold of cloak at his shoulder, all but
invisible save for its lidded eyes.
"You
have already finished looking at the old man's body? It told you nothing?"
'
"There
is nothing to be learned from that, Lord." Zarf tried to meet Ekuman's
gaze boldly, then looked away. "I can make a further examination later-but
there is nothing."
In
silent but obvious dissatisfaction Ekuman regarded his two magicians, who
awaited his pleasure standing motionless but otherwise quite like children in
their fear. It was a continual enjoyment to the Satrap to have power over
people as powerful as these. Of course it was not by any innate personal
strength or skill that Ekuman could dominate Elslood and Zarf. His command over
them had been given to him in the East, and well they knew how effectively he
might enforce it. The toad-familiar, beneath any threat of punishment, squealed
shrilly in some private mirth.
Having
given the wizards time to consider the possible consequences of his wrath,
Ekuman said, "Since neither of you can now tell me anything of value, you
had better get to your crystals and ink-pools and see what you can learn. Or
has either of you some stronger method of clairvoyance to propose?"
"No,
Lord," said Elslood, humble.
"No,
Lord." But then Zarf dared to attempt defense. "Since this Elephant
we seek is doubtless not a living creature, but some work of . . .engineering,
science . . ." The absurd words still came hard to Zarf. "... then to
locate it, to find out anything about it more than we know already, that it
exists and is important, this may be beyond the skill of any man in divination.
. . ." And Zarf's voice trailed off in fear as his glance returned to
Ekuman's face.
Ekuman
moved wearily across the Presence Chamber, opened a door, and set foot upon the
stair that led up to his private apartments. "Find me the Elephant,"
he ordered, simply and dangerously, ere he began to climb. As he went, his
voice came drifting down to them: "Send me the Master of the Troops, and
the Master of the Reptiles as well. I will have my power in this land made
secure, and I will have it quickly!"
"The
day of his daughter's wedding draws near," Zarf whispered, nodding
solemnly. The two men looked grimly at each other. Both knew how important it
was to Ekuman that his power should be, or at least appear, seamless and
perfect on the day when the Lords and Ladies from other Satrapies around
appeared here at the Castle for the wedding feast.
"I
will go down," sighed Elslood at last, "and try if I may learn
something from the old one's corpse. And I will see to it that the ones he
wants are summoned. Do you stay here and endeavor again to achieve some useful
vision." Zarf, nodding in agreement, was already hurrying to the alcove
where he kept his own devices; he would pour a pool of ink and gaze into it.
On the
first landing of the stair below the Presence Chamber Elslood drew aside to
make room, and bowed low to the Princess Charmian, who was going up. Her beauty
rose through the dim passage like a sun. She wore cloth of bronze and silver
and black, and a scarf of red and black for her betrothed. Her serving-women,
whom she chose for ugliness, came following in a nervous file.
Charmian
ascended past Elslood without deigning to give him a word or glance. For his
part, as always, he could not keep himself from following her with his eyes
until she was out of sight.
He
straightened, then, and put a hand into a secret pocket of his robe and touched
the long strands of her golden hair that he kept there. Those hairs had been
obtained at deadly risk, and twisted, with many a powerful incantation, into an
intricate magic knot of love. And then, alas, the love-charm had proved useless
to Elslood -as he had known all along, in his heart, that it would be. Any
mastery of love was forbidden him, as part of the price of his great sorcerer's
power.
And he
thought now that the knot of Charmian's golden hair would be of doubtful
benefit to any man. One as utterly evil as the Princess could hardly be moved
by any charm to anything like love.
II
Rolf
When he
came to the end of the furrow and swung the rude plow around and chanced to
raise his eyes, Rolf beheld a sight both expected and terrible -the winged
reptiles of the Castle were coming out to scour the countryside once again.
May
some demon devour them, if they come near our fowl today! he thought. But he
was no sorcerer to have the ordering of demons. He could do nothing but stand
helplessly and watch.
At
Rolf's back, the afternoon sun was some four hours above the Western Sea, the
shore being several kilometers from where Rolf stood, the land between for the
most part low and marshy. Looking ahead, he could see above nearby treetops
part of the jagged line of the Broken Mountains, half a day's walk to the east.
He could not see the Castle itself, but he knew well where it was, perched on
the south side of the central pass that pierced those mountains through from
east to west. The reptiles came from the Castle, and there dwelt those who had
brought the reptiles to the Broken Lands-folk so evil that they seemed
themselves inhuman, though they wore human form.
Spreading
westward now from the direction where the Castle lay, in Rolfs eyes disfiguring
all the fairness of the springtime sky, came a swarming formation of dots. Rolf
had heard that the reptiles' human masters sent them out to search for
something more than prey, that there was something hidden that Ekuman most
desperately desired to find. Whether that was true or not, the reptiles most
certainly ravaged the farmers' lands for food and sport.
Rolf's
sixteen-year-old eyes were sharp enough to pick out now the movement of
leathery wings. The flying creatures of the Castle swelled slowly in his
vision, the thin and spreading cloud their hundreds made came hurtling toward
him. He knew that their eyes were sharper even than his. Almost daily now the
reptiles came, picking over the land already so much robbed and torn by the new
masters from the East; a land that had now grown hungry despite its richness,
with every month more farmers killed or robbed and driven from their soil. With
villages turned into prison camps, or emptied out to give the Satrap Ekuman the
slave labor that he must have to build his Castle stronger still. . . .
Did the
foul grinning things fly ten or only five times faster than a man might run?
With a big-boned hand Rolf put back a mop of his black hair, tilting back his
head to watch as the vanguard of the reptiles now came nearly straight above
him. A belt of rope around Rolf's lean waist held up his trousers of good
homespun; his shirt of the same stuff was open in the warmth of spring and
work. He was of quite ordinary height, and spare as a knotted rope. His shoulders
in their bony flatness looked wider than they were. Only his wrists and
callused hands and his bare feet seemed to have been made a size or so too big
to fit the rest of him.
In the
distance the reptiles had seemed to be flying in a compact formation. But now
Rolf could see that they had been scattered widely by their differences of
course and speed. Here and there a single flyer would pause, coasting in wide
flat circles, to scan something on the earth below. Sometimes then the reptile
would straighten out again into effortless speed of flight, having decided that
whatever it had seen was not worth dropping for.
But
sometimes it would dive. Stoop. Plunge wing-folded, like a falling rock -
Above
Rolf's home! With a shock at his heart he saw the winged predator plummeting to
strike. Before it vanished below the level of the trees Rolf was running toward
it, toward his home. The clearing and the little house were invisible from
here, more than a kilometer away over broken, scrub-grown country.
The
reptile would be diving after the fowl in their coop, that must be it, though
after the last attack Rolf's mother had tried to hide the coop under a net of
strings, woven with vines and branches to make a screen. Rolf's father still
lay abed with a crushed foot, mangled by a falling stone while he had been
doing his stint of forced labor on the Castle. Small Lisa might be running out
now as she had run out to challenge the last reptile, to strike with a broom or
a hoe at a fanged intelligent killer who was nearly as big as she. . . .
Between
the field where he had been working and his home, Rolf's path lay across land
made unplow-able by its ravines and rocks. The familiar track wound shallowly
uphill and down; it leaped and bounded under him now, with the big strides of
his running. Never before had he gone over this path so fast. He kept looking
ahead, and his fear kept growing, because of the strange fact that the raiding
reptile had not yet risen, with prey or without.
Someone
might have defied the Castle's law and slain the thing-but who, and how? Rolf's
father could scarcely stand up from his bed. His mother? In obedience to
another Castle law, the household had already been stripped of any weapon
larger than a short-bladed kitchen knife. Little Lisa -Rolf pictured her,
fighting with some garden implement against those teeth and talons, and he
tried to run faster yet.
So it
did not seem reasonable that the reptile should be dead. Yet neither should it
be sitting at ease and unmolested, dining on some slaughtered hen. By now Rolf
was close enough to his home to have heard sounds of fighting or alarm, but
there was only ominous silence.
When he
ran at last into the clearing and beheld the total ruin of the simple dwelling
that had been his home, it seemed to Rolf that he knew already what he must
find, that he had known it from his first sight of the stooping reptile.
And at
the same time the truth was becoming unknowable. It was beyond anything that
the mind could hold.
Smoke
and flames, such as he had seen in the past devouring other houses destroyed by
the invader, might have made the truth before him now more credible. But the
only home Rolf could remember had been simply kicked apart, knocked to pieces
like a child's play-hut, like something not worth burning. It had been a small
and simple structure; no great strength had been needed to topple its thatch
and poles.
Rolf
was scarcely aware of crying out. Or of the reptile, flapping up in heavy alarm
from where it had been crouched over a dead fowl - one of the birds set free by
the collapse of the coop when the flimsy house had been knocked down. The
destruction had been done before the reptile came. By some roving party of the
soldiers of the Castle-who else? No one in the Broken Lands knew when the
invaders might come to him, or what might be done to him when they did.
Digging
wildly in the shabby wreckage of the little house, Rolf uncovered shapes that
seemed misplaced as in a dream. He found trivial things. Here was a cooking
pot, the worn place on its handle somehow startling in its familiarity. And
here . . .
A voice
that had been shouting names, Rolf's own voice, now fell silent. He stood
looking down at something still and supine, a shape of flesh and hair and
unfamiliar nakedness and blood. His mother had looked something like this thing
of death. She had resembled this, this shape that now lay here amid all the
other ruined things and shared all their stillness.
Rolf
had to go on looking. Here was the body of a man, clothed, with a face very
like his father's. His father's eyes, calm and unprotesting now, were opened
toward the sky. No more fear and worry and held-in anger. No more answers to
give a son. No more pain and sickness from a crushed foot. No more pain, though
there was blood, and Rolf saw now that his father's open shirt revealed
red-lipped, curious wounds. Why yes, Rolf thought to himself, nodding, those
are the wounds that a sword must make. He had never seen the like before.
He
shouted no longer. He looked around for the reptile but it had gone. After he
had searched on through what was left of the house and the few outbuildings, he
came to a halt at the edge of the clearing. He realized vaguely that he was
standing in an attitude of thoughtfulness, though in fact his mind was almost
entirely blank. But he had to think. Lisa was not here. If she had been hiding
nearby, surely all his noise would have brought her out by now.
He was
distracted by the plodding into the clearing of the workbeast he had been
plowing with. The animal had developed the trick of freeing itself from the
harness if he left it standing alone in the field for any reason. When it came
trotting into the home clearing now it halted at once, to stand shivering and
whinnying at the strangeness of what it found. Rolf without thinking spoke to
the animal and walked toward it, but it turned and bolted as if thrown into
panic by the very ordinariness of his behavior amid this . . . yes, it was
strange that he could be so calm.
His heart
gave another leap and he began again a frenzied digging through the wreckage.
But no, Lisa's body was not here. He circled around the clearing, staring at
everything as if to make sure of what it was. Then he began coursing in a
widening circle through the surrounding woods. His mind made a motionless
corpse of every fallen log. He began to call Lisa's name again, softly. Either
she had run far away, or else the soldiers had . . .
It was
not believable, it was not possible that the soldiers could have come here and
committed all these horrors, and he, Rolf, had remained out in the fields
calmly plowing. So it had not really happened at all. Because it was not
possible. And all the while he knew that it was true.
. . .
Or else the soldiers had taken Lisa with them. If the murders were possible, so
might that be. Rolf found himself back in the clearing, averting his eyes from
the nakedness of the thing that had been his mother. He did not let himself
think of how her clothes had been taken from her, or why, though those also
were things he knew. The men from the Castle. The soldiers. The invaders. The
East.
"Lisa!"
He was out in the scrub forest again, calling more loudly for his sister. The
afternoon was very warm even here in the shade of the trees. Rolf raised his
arm to wipe sweat from his face with his sleeve, and saw that in his hand he
was carrying the little kitchen knife, which he must have picked up from amid
the ruins of the house.
And
then a little later, when his mind with a little inward jump moved another
notch on its recovery from the craziness of shock, he found himself walking
along the narrow rutted road that passed near what had been his home. The world
around him looked strangely normal, as if this were nothing but another day. He
was trudging in an easterly direction, taking the way that would bring him to a
larger highway and ultimately to the Castle brooding on its height above the
pass. Where did he think he was going? What was it he meant to do?
Again a
little later, the world became thin and gray before his eyes. He felt that he
was fainting, and he saw down quickly in the grass beside the road. He did not
faint. He did not rest either, though the muscles of his legs were quivering
with exhaustion. He saw that his clothes had recently been torn in several
places. He had just been running through the woods, calling Lisa's name. But
she was gone, and he was not going to be able to get her back.
Gone.
All of them gone.
After a
period of sitting, he became aware with a slight start that a man was standing
near him in the yellow-gray dust of the road. There were sandaled feet and a
pair of buskined ankles, and masculine calves with lean muscle and sparse wiry
black hair. At first Rolf could think only that the man must be a soldier, and
Rolf wondered if he might get out his knife and strike before the soldier
killed him -he had thrust the -kitchen knife awkwardly under the rope that was
his belt, with his shirt closed over it for concealment.
But
when Rolf raised his eyes he saw that the man was no soldier. He appeared to be
unarmed, and looked not at all dangerous.
"Is
there -something wrong?" The man's voice was precise, and gently accented,
one of the few voices Rolf had ever heard that spoke in its tones of far places
and strange peoples. The speaker's mild eyes blinked down at Rolf, from a face
too woebegone in expression and too ordinary in most of its features for the
hawk nose to give it pride.
The man
was no peasant. Though his clothes were not the finery of an important person,
they were better than Rolf's. He was dusty with long walking, and he had a pack
on his back. His simple knee-length cloak was half open, and from under it one
lean, dark-haired arm extended in a rotating, questioning gesture.
"There
is something much wrong, hey?"
Finding
an answer for that question was an insurmountable problem at the moment. Rolf
soon gave up the effort. He gave up on everything.
The
next thing he was clearly aware of was the mouth of a water bottle being applied
to his own mouth. If his mind had forgotten thirst his body had not, and for a
few moments he swallowed ravenously. Then in reaction he nearly vomited. Good
clean water choked him and stung his nose, but it stayed down at last. The
drink shocked him, revived him, lifted him another notch toward rational
function. He found himself standing, leaning on the man. He pulled away and
looked at him.
The man
was a little taller than Rolf, not quite as dark. His face seemed leaner than
his body, and somehow finer, as if he had trained his face to show only a part
of a great and unrelenting worry - "ascetic" was not a word or
concept that Rolf had at his command.
"Oh,
my. Something very much wrong?" The mild eyes blinked rapidly a time or
two, and the lean face essayed a tentative smile, as if hoping to be
contradicted, to hear that things might prove not so terrible after all. But
the smile faded quickly. The stubby-fingered hands recapped the wafer bottle
and reslung it under the cloak, then came up to clasp themselves as if
beseeching to be allowed to know the worst.
It took
Rolf a little time, but he stammered out the essentials of his story. Before
the telling was finished, he and the man were walking along together on the
road, now going away from the highway and the Castle, heading back in the
direction from which Rolf had come. Rolf noticed this distantly, without
feeling that it mattered in the least which way he walked. The shadows of the
trees were lengthening now, and all the winding road was cool and gray.
"Ah.
Oh. Terrible, terrible!" the man kept murmuring as he listened. He had
ceased to wring his hands, and walked with them clasped behind his back. Now
and then he hoisted and shifted his pack, as if the weight of it was still
unfamiliar after all his travels. During the pauses in Rolfs story the man
asked his name, and told him that his own name was Mewick. And when Rolf ran
out of speech the man Mewick kept talking to him, asking idle-sounding
questions about the road and the weather, questions that kept Rolf from
withdrawing again into a daze. Also Mewick related how he was walking along the
coast of the great sea from north to south, offering for sale the finest
collection of magical implements, amulets and charms to be found on the open
market anywhere. Mewick smiled sadly as he made this claim, like a man who did
not expect to be believed.
"Have
you there - " Rolf's voice choked, so he was forced to start over, but
then the words came out strong. "Have you there in your pack anything that
can be used to track men down and kill them?"
On
hearing this question the peddler only looked more gloomy than ever, and at
first gave no answer. As he walked he kept turning his head to shoot glances of
apparent concern at Rolf.
"Killing
and more killing," the peddler said at last, shaking his head in disgust.
"No, no, I carry no such things in my pack. No-but today is not your day
for being lectured. No, no, how can I talk to you now?"
They
came to a branch in the road, where the right-hand fork led to the clearing
where Rolfs home had been. Rolf stopped suddenly. "I must go back,"
he said with an effort. "I must see to it that my parents are
buried."
Wordlessly,
Mewick went with him. Nothing had changed in the clearing except for the lengthening
of the shadows. What had to be done did not take the two of them long, digging
with shovel and hoe in the soft earth of what had been the garden. When the two
graves had been filled and mounded over, Rolf gestured at the pack which Mewick
had laid aside, and asked, "Have you anything there that . . . ? I would
put some spell of protection on the graves. I could pay you for it later.
Sometime."
Frowning
bitterly, Mewick shook his head. "No. No matter what I said before, I have
nothing here that is worth the giving. Except some food," he added,
brightening just slightly. "And that is for the living, not the dead.
Could you eat now?"
Rolf
could not. He looked around the clearing, for the last time, as he thought.
Lisa had not answered to his renewed calling of her name.
Mewick
was slowly getting into the harness of his pack again, seemingly hesitant about
just what to say or do next. "Then walk with me," he offered at last.
"Tonight I think I know a place to stay. Not many kilometers. A good place
to rest."
The sun
would soon be setting. "What place?" Rolf asked, though he did not
feel any real concern for where he was going to spend the night.
Mewick
stood considering the lay of the land, as if he could see for a distance
through the woods. He looked to the south and asked a couple of questions about
the roads that skirted the swamps in that direction. "It will be shorter,
I think, if we do not go around by road," he said at last.
Rolf
had no will now to debate or even to think. Mewick had helped him. Through
Mewick he was maintaining some hold on life and reason, and he would go along
with Mewick. Rolf said, "Yes, we can go cross-country if you like, and
come out on the road near the swamp."
True to
this prediction, they emerged from the scrub forest to strike the south-going
coastal road, just as the sun was redly vanishing behind a low cloudbank on the
sea-horizon. From the point where they struck the road it ran almost perfectly
straight south for about a kilometer over the level land ahead of them, and
then curved inland to the left to avoid the beginning of the swamps.
The
woods having been left behind, there were open fields stretching on either side
of the road, all unplowed and untended. In two places Rolf saw houses standing
deserted and half-ruined in their abandoned gardens. He kept walking on beside
Mewick, feeling himself beyond tiredness, feeling floating and unreal. He could
generate no surprise when Mewick stopped in the road and turned to him,
slipping the pack from his own back and holding it out to Rolf.
"Here,
you carry for a little while, hey? Not heavy. You be an apprentice
magic-salesman. Just for now, hey?"
"All
right." Indifferently he took the pack and slipped it on. Geegaws and
trash, his father had said, speaking of the things that the smooth-talking
magic vendors peddled from farm to farm.
"What
is this, hey?" Mewick asked sharply. He had spotted the outline of the
handle of the little kitchen knife, made visible now by the pack straps
tautening the shirt around Rolf's waist. Before Rolf could make the effort of
answering, Mewick had pulled the knife out, exclaimed in disgust, and pitched
it far away into the tall roadside weeds. "No good, no! Very much against
the law here in the Broken Country, to carry a weapon concealed."
"The
Castle law." The words came in a dead voice through a closed jaw.
"Yes.
If Castle soldiers see you have a knife -ha!" Apparently anxious to defend
his action in throwing away Rolfs property, Mewick seemed to be making an
effort to scowl fiercely. But he was not very good at it.
Rolf
stood with shoulders slumped, staring blankly ahead of him. "It doesn't
matter. What could I do with a little knife? Maybe kill one. I have to find a
way to kill many of them. Many."
"Killing!"
Mewick made a disgusted sound. He motioned with his head and they walked on. It
was the last of day, just before the beginning of dusk.
Mewick
mumbled in his throat, as if rehearsing arguments. Like a man forgetful, lost
in thought, he lengthened his strides until he was a couple of paces ahead of
Rolf.
Rolf
heard the trotting hooves at a distance on the road behind him and turned, one
hand feeling at his waist for the knife that was no longer there. Three
soldiers were approaching at leisurely mounted speed, short black lances
pointed up at the deepening clearness of the sky. Rolf's hands moved
indecisively to the pack straps; in another moment he might have shucked them
from his shoulders and darted from the road in search of cover. But Mewick's
hand had taken a solid grip on the back of Rolf's shirt, a grip that held until
Rolf relaxed. The barren fields bordering the road here afforded next to no
cover anyway, which no doubt explained why just three soldiers came trotting
the road so boldly on the verge of twilight.
The
troopers all wore uniforms of some black cloth and bronze helmets, and had
small round shields of bronze hanging loosely on their saddles. One of them was
half-armored as well, wearing greaves and a cuirass of a color that dully
approximated that of his helm. He rode the largest steed and was probably, Rolf
thought, a sergeant. These days the Castle-men rarely appeared on duty wearing
any insignia of rank.
"Where
to, peddler?" the sergeant demanded in a grating voice; he reined in his
animal as he caught up with Mewick and Rolf. He was a stocky man whose
movements were slow and heavy as he got down from the saddle-he seemed to be
dismounting only because of a wish to rest and stretch. The two troopers with
him sat their mounts one on each side of the road, looking relaxed but calmly
alert, their eyes more on the tufts of tall grass around them and the marsh
ahead than on the two unarmed walkers they had overtaken. Rolf understood after
a moment that the soldiers must be taking him for Mewick's servant or bound
boy, since he had been walking two paces behind, carrying the load, and he was
poorly dressed.
But
that thought and others were only on the surface of Rolf's mind, passing
quickly and without reflection. All he could really think of now was that these
soldiers might be the ones. These very three.
Mewick
had begun to speak at once, bowing before the dismounted sergeant, explaining
how he was hiking on his humble but important business through the Broken Lands
from north to south, being welcomed by the valiant soldiers everywhere, because
they knew he had most potent charms and amulets for sale, at prices most
exceedingly reasonable, sir.
The
sergeant had planted himself standing in the middle of the road, and was now
rotating his head as if to ease the muscles of his neck. "Take a look in
that pack," he ordered, speaking over his shoulder.
One of
the troopers swung down from his saddle and approached Rolf, while the other
remained mounted, continuing to scan the countryside. The two dismounted had
left their lances in boots fixed to their saddles, but each wore a short sword
as well.
The
soldier who came to Rolf was young himself, he could have had a little sister
of his own somewhere in the East. He did not see Rolf at all except as an
object, a burden-carrier upon which a pack was hung. Rolf moved his shoulders
to let the pack slide free and the soldier took it from him. At some time when
the men of the Broken Lands still worked in the ways of peace, someone had
filled and strengthened the road at this low place; under his bare feet Rolf
could feel fist-sized rocks amid the sand and clay.
The
sergeant was standing leaning his dull gaze on Mewick as if trying to bore
through him with it; the soldier took the pack there and dumped it on the
ground between then, a cascade of gimcrackery on the damp earth. There fell out
rings .and bracelets and necklaces, tumbling and bouncing with love-charms of
anonymous plaited hair, with amulets of carven wood and bone. Most of the
objects were scribbled or shallowly inscribed with unreadable markings,
meaningless signs meant to impress the credulous.
The
sergeant idly stirred the mess with his toe while Mewick, blinking and
hand-wringing, waited silently before him.
The
young soldier stuck his own foot into the scattered pile and teased out a
muddied love-charm, which he then bent to pick up. With his fingers he cleaned
mud from the knot of long hair, and then held it up, looking at it
thoughtfully. "Why is it," he asked of no one in particular, "we
never catch a young girl out here?"
At that
moment the mounted man had his head turned away, looking back over his
shoulder. Rolf, without an instant's foreknowledge of what he was going to do,
moving in a madness that was like calm, bent down and picked from the roadbed a
rock of killing size, and threw it with all his strength at the head of the
young dismounted soldier.
The
young man was very quick, and managed somehow to twist himself out of the way
of the missile. It flashed in a grazing blur past the astonishment of his
fishwide eyes and mouth. With a sensation of deep but calm regret at having
missed, Rolf bent to pick up another stone. Without time for surprise, he saw
from the corner of his eye that the stocky sergeant was slumping folded to the
ground, and that Mewick's arm was drawn back, about to hurl a small bright
thing at the man who was still mounted.
The
young soldier who had dodged Rolfs first rock had drawn his short sword now,
and was charging at Rolf. Rolf had another rock ready to throw, and the tactics
he employed with it came from children's play-battles with clods of mud. A
faked throw first, a motion of the arm to make the adversary duck and doge,
then the real throw at the instant of the foe's straightening up. This way Rolf
could not get full power behind it, but still the rock stopped the soldier,
crunching into the lower part of his face. The soldier paused in his attack for
just a moment, standing as if in thought, one hand raised toward his bloodied
jaw, the other still holding out his short sword. And in that instant Mewick
was on him from the side. A looping kick came in an unlikely-looking horizontal
blur to smash into the soldier's unprotected groin; and as he doubled, helmet falling
free, Mewick's elbow descended at close range upon his neck, with what seemed
the impact of an ax.
Two
riderless beasts plunged and reared in the little road, and now there were
three of them as the last of the troopers finally dismounted, in a delayed
slumping fall, clutching at a short knife-handle fastened redly to his throat.
In another moment the three freed animals were galloping back along the road to
the northeast, in the direction from which they had come.
Rolf
was aware of the sudden strident calling of a reptile in alarm, high overhead.
Still he could do nothing but stand watching stupidly while Mewick, his short
cloak flying, hopped back and forth across the road, cutting one throat after
another with the practiced careful motions of a skillful butcher. The last of
the three soldiers to die was the one who had been first to fall, the stocky
sergeant; he seemed to have been ripped from groin to navel in the first moment
of the fight.
Rolf
watched Mewick's knife make its last necessary stroke, be wiped clean on the
sergeant's sleeve, and then vanish back into some concealed sheath under
Mewick's cloak. His mind beginning to function again, Rolf looked about him,
noted how one black lance lay useless and unblooded at the side of the road,
then bent at last to pick up the young soldier's short sword.
With
this weapon in his grip Rolf followed Mewick at a run, going south along the
road, and then off the road on its western side, pounding across a weed-grown
fallow field toward the nearest arm of swamp. Twilight was gathering, and the
reptile's cries grew fainter.
Even as
he and Mewick ran splashing into the first puddles of the bog, Rolf could hear
distant hooves and shouts behind them.
The
Castle-men made no long pursuit -not at night, not into the swamps. Still the
fugitives' way had been anything but easy. Now at midnight, wading through
hip-deep water, sliding and staggering amid strange phosphorescent growths,
more than half asleep on his feet, ready to fall but for the support of
Mewick's arm, Rolf became suddenly aware of an enormous winged shape that
drifted over him as silent as a dream. It was certainly no reptile but it was
far bigger than any bird that he had ever seen. He thought it questioned him
with words in a soft hooting sibilance, and that Mewick whispered something in
reply. A moment later as the creature flew behind and above him, Rolf could see
its rounded and enormous eyes by their reflection of some sharp new little
light.
Yes, on
the land ahead there was a tiny tongue of fire. And now the ground rose to
become solid underfoot. The winged questioner had vanished into the night, but
now from near the fire there stepped forward a huge blond man, surely some
warrior chieftain, to speak familiarly with Mewick, to look at Rolf and offer
him a greeting.
There
was a shelter here, a camp. At last Rolf was able to sit down, to let go. A
woman's voice was asking him if he wanted food. ...
III
The
Free Folk
Yes, my
parents are dead and under the earth -so Rolf told himself in the instant after
awakening, before he had so much as opened his eyes to see where he was lying.
My mother and father are dead and gone. And my sister -if Lisa is not dead, why
she may wish she were.
Having
reassured himself that he was capable of coping with these thoughts, Rolf did
open his eyes. He found himself looking up through the small chinks in the
slant of a lean-to shelter, an arm's reach above his face. The higher side of
the low shelter was braced upon some slender living tree trunks, and it seemed
to have been made mainly by the weaving together of living branches with their
leaves. The interstitial chinks of sky were pure with bright sunlight; the day
was well advanced.
He did
not remember crawling into this shelter. Maybe someone had put him to bed here,
like an infant. But that did not matter. He raised himself upon one elbow,
crackling the dead leaves that he had slept on. The movement awakened a dozen
aches in his body. His clothing was all rips and mud. His stomach was hollow
with hunger.
Lying
real and solid on the leaves beside him was the short sword that he had taken
yesterday from the dead soldier. He saw again in his mind's eye the thrown
stone from his own hand crunching into the soldier's teeth and bringing out
blood. He put out a hand and gripped the captured weapon for a moment by the
hilt.
Somewhere
close by, quite near outside the lean-to, a few voices were murmuring together
in a steady businesslike fashion; Rolf could not quite make out the words. In
another moment he got up to his hands and knees and, leaving the sword behind
him, crawled out of the shelter. He emerged almost within the group of three
people who sat talking around a small smokeless fire.
Mewickwas
one of the group, sitting cross-legged and at ease, his cloak laid aside. Also
at the fire was the big blond man that Rolf remembered seeing the night before,
and beside this man a woman who resembled him enough to be his sister. When
Rolf, appeared all three of them fell silent and turned to look at him.
Once
outside the lean-to, Rolf got stiffly to his feet. He addressed his first words
to Mewick: "I am sorry, for starting that fight yesterday. I could have
gotten you killed."
"Yes,"
Mewick nodded. "So. But you had reason, if not excuse. From now on you
will be sane, hey?"
"Yes,
I will." Rolf drew in a deep breath. "Will you teach me to fight like
you can?"
Mewick
had no quick answer, and the question was allowed to drop for the time being.
The
woman by the fire wore man's clothes, which was natural enough for camping in
the swamp, and her long blond hair was pulled back and bound up into a tight
knot.
"So,
your name is Rolf," she said, hitching herself around to face him more
fully. "I am Manka. My husband Loford here and I have had something of
your story from Mewick."
The
blond man nodded solemnly, and the woman went on: "There's a pool safe to
wash in on the other side of the hummock, Rolf. Then come back and have some
food, and we'll talk."
Rolf
nodded and turned away, going around the lean-to and the little clump of trees
which occupied the center of this island of firm ground, some fifteen or twenty
paces across. On the side of the hummock away from the fire a steep short bank
dropped down to water which looked deeper and clearer than that of the
surrounding swamp.
Only
after Rolf had washed, and dressed himself again, and climbed the bank meaning
to rejoin the others, did he see a living creature perched high in the biggest
of the central trees. Right against the trunk a brownish-gray mass of feathers
rested, big as a small man crouching. So dully colored was this form, so
motionless, so shapelessly folded upon itself, that Rolf had to look twice to
be convinced that it was not a part of the tree. When he thought to look for
the giant bird's feet he saw that they were three-toed, bigger than a reptile's
and armed with even more formidable talons. He still could not see how, under
all the feathers, the bird's head had been folded down out of sight.
He was
still turning his own head to look up into the tree as he rejoined the others
around the fire.
"Strijeef
is our friend," Loford told Rolf, seeing where Rolf's attention was fixed.
"His kind have speech and thought; they call themselves the Silent People.
Like our friend Mewick here they have been driven from their own lands. Now
they stand here with us, their backs like ours against the sea."
Manka
had ladled stew from a cooking-pot into a gourd for Rolf. After thanking her
and starting to eat, he motioned with his head toward the bird and asked,
"He sleeps now?"
"His
folk sleep all day," Loford said. "Or at least they hide. Full
sunlight is a great strain on their eyes, so by daylight their enemies the
reptiles will find and kill them when they can. By night it is the birds' turn
to hunt the leatherwings."
"I'm
glad to hear that someone hunts them." Rolf nodded. "I wondered why
they went flapping back to the Castle every day at sunset." And then he
busied himself with the plentiful good food, meanwhile listening to the others'
talk.
Mewick
was bringing word to the Free Folk in the swamp from other resistance bands who
lived and fought along the coast to the north of the Broken Lands. That portion
of the seaboard was now also occupied by men and creatures from the East, under
the rule of Ekuman's peer, the Satrap Chup. This Chup was supposed to be even
now on his way south, to marry Ekuman's daughter in the Castle.
And the
Satraps of other neighboring lands were said to be coming here, too, for the
festivities. Each of them, like Ekuman and Chup, held power in his own region,
ruling with the soldiers and under the black banner of the East.
When
there was a pause in the talk, Rolf asked, "I've wondered-what is the
East? Or who is it? Is there some king over it all?"
"I
have heard different things," said Loford slowly, "about those who
are Ekuman's overlords; I know almost nothing about them. We are in an odd
corner of the world here. I don't even know much about the higher powers of the
West." Rolfs face must have shown a dozen more questions struggling to be
formulated, for Loford smiled at him. "Yes, there is a West, too, and we
are part of it, we who are willing to fight for the chance to live like men.
The West has been defeated here. But it is not dead. I think Ekuman's masters
will be too busy elsewhere to send any great new power to his aid - if we can
find a way to bring down the power that he has already."
There
was a little silence. Rolf's heart leaped up at the thought of bringing down
Ekuman, but he had seen the sobering reality of the Satrap's strength - the
long columns of soldiers on parade, meant to overawe, hundreds mounted and
thousands more on foot; and the strengthened walls of the great Castle.
Loford,
having finished some private thought of his own, resumed his speech. "If
Ekuman can expect no help, neither can we. The people of the Broken Lands will
have to break their own chains or continue to wear them." Shaking his
great head sadly, he looked at Mewick. "I had hoped you might bring us
word of some free army still in the field in the north. Some prince of the West
still surviving there - or at least some government trying to be neutral. That
would have been a good encouragement."
"Prince
Duncan of Islandia survives," said Mewick. "But I think he has no
army on the mainland now. Perhaps beyond the sea are other independent
states." His mournful mouth gave a tiny twitch upward at the corners.
"I am here to help, if that encourages anyone."
"It
does indeed," Loford said. Then, with a visibly quick change of thought,
he threw a narrow-eyed look at Rolf. "Tell me, lad, what do you know of
the Elephant?"
Rolf
was taken by surprise. "The Elephant? Why, it's some wizard's symbol. I
don't know what it means. I have seen it -maybe six times in all."
"Where
and when?"
Rolf
thought. "Once, woven into a bit of cloth, that I saw at a magic-show in
town. And there is a place up in the Broken Mountains where someone has carved
it in the rock - " He went on, enumerating as best he could the times and
places where he had glimpsed the strange image of the impossible beast with its
prehensile nose and swordlike horns or teeth.
Loford
listened with close attention. "Anything else? Any talk you might have
heard, even, especially during the last few days?"
Rolf
shook his head helplessly. "I spent those days plowing in the fields.
Until ..."
"Aye,
of course." Loford let out a groaning sigh. "I grasp at straws. But
we must try every chance to find the Elephant, before those of the Castle find
it."
Rolf
supposed that the big man was talking about another magically important
Elephant-image. "Ask help of a wizard?" he suggested.
Loford's
jaw dropped. Mewick's eyebrows went up, his face took on an odd expression, and
he made odd choking gasps - it took Rolf another moment to realize that Mewick
was laughing. Manka's eyes seemed to flash angrily at first, but then she too
had to smile.
"Have
you ever heard of the Big One, child?" she demanded of Rolf, in a voice
half-irritated, half-amused.
A light
dawned. Once, long ago, Rolf had been sitting in a market town on Social Night,
resting from his play to listen to the talk of men. The amateur wizards of the
countryside had been assembled, discussing the feats of the professionals. •The
Big One from south of the delta would have done such and such a thing easily,
someone had said, using the name as a standard of excellence. And the men
listening had nodded soberly, their farmer-beards bobbing. Yes, the Big One. The
name impressed them all, and for the little boy Rolf it had for a time
afterward called up a mental picture of an enormous and powerful being, nodding
benignly over farm and hill and marsh.
"No,
it is all right," Loford, now smiling himself, assured Rolf. "You
give me good advice. I must keep in mind that I am far from being the greatest
wizard in the world." His smile vanished. "I am just the best one we
now have available, since the Old One was taken under the Castle to die."
Mewick
said to him, "You must take over the Old One's leadership in magic. But
who is going to lead in other matters, now that he is gone? I speak plainly.
You are not - not too practical, always, I think."
"Yes,
yes, I know that I am not." Loford sounded irritated. "Thomas,
perhaps. I hope he will lead. Oh, he's brave enough, and as much set against
the Castie as anyone. But to really lead, to seize responsibility, that's
something else again."
The
talk went on. Manka ladled out more stew for Rolf, and he went on eating and
listening. Always the thoughts and plans of the others came looping back to the
mysterious Elephant. Rolf came gradually to understand that they were speaking
of something more than an image, that the name meant some thing or creature of
the Old World still existing, here somewhere in the Broken Lands. And this
creature or thing loomed in the near future with terrible importance for East
and West alike. This much -but, maddeningly, no more - could Lo-ford's powers
tell him of the Elephant.
Mewick
suddenly stopped talking in mid-sentence, his eyes turned skyward, one hand
shol out and frozen in a gesture meant to keep the others still. But it was too
late, they had been discovered from above, in spite of the trees' shelter.
Overhead
there sounded a clangorous shouting of reptiles. A dozen of the flying
creatures were diving to the attack, coming in at an angle under the trees,
talons spread, long snouts open to bare their teeth.
Rolf
dived into the shelter and jumped out again with his sword. Mewick and Manka
had already caught up bows and quivers from their small pile of equipment
beside the fire; in another instant one of the attackers was flopping on the
ground at Rolf's feet, transfixed by an arrow.
The
main target of the attack, Rolf saw, was the bird huddled in the tree. The bird
roused itself as the reptiles, momentarily baffled by branches, came whirling
around it; but it seemed to be blinded, rendered stupid by the light.
Before
the scaly ones could work their way in among the branches, their attack was
broken up. Arrow after arrow sang at them, hitting more often than not. And
Rolf leaped right in among the lower branches, sword thrusting and slashing
high and wide. He could not be sure that he wounded any of the reptiles, though
he harvested leaves and twigs in plenty. But between sword and arrows the
leatherwings were forced to retreat, whirling upward in a shrieking swarm of
gray-green rage. Arrows had brought down four of them, and these Rolf now had
the satisfaction of finishing with his blade. They screamed words at him as
they died, half-comprehensible curses and threats; still the slaughtering meant
no more to him than killing beasts.
Having
risen out of bow-shot, the surviving reptiles maintained a flying circle
directly above the hummock, cawing and screaming mightily.
"When
they do that, it means there's soldiers coming," Manka said. She had
already slung her bow on her back and was moving speedily to gather up the rest
of the camp's scanty equipment. "Quick, young one, go and uncover the
canoe."
Rolf
had seen the dugout, camouflaged by branches, floating against the bank near
the pool-where he had washed. He ran now to load things into it. Manka called
to the bird. Following her voice it descended from the tree, impressive talons
groping blindly and clumsily as it walked, feeling for the prow of the canoe.
With one surprising extension of its wings it mounted there and perched,
muffling itself in folded wings so that it resembled some badly-stuffed
figurehead.
Mewick,
a bow still in his hands, was trotting anxiously from one side of the hummock
to the other, trying to learn from which direction the soldiers were
approaching. Loford, standing ankle-deep at the water's edge beside the canoe,
kept bending and scooping up massive handfuls of grayish swamp-bottom muck.
Each time he muttered over the glob, and then let it dribble back into the
water. At last one string of droplets veered from the vertical, went spraying
out sideways as if caught by a strong blast of wind.
Loford
pointed in the same direction. "They come from that way, Mewick," he
called out softly.
"Then
let us go the other way, quick!" Mewick came running to the canoe.
But
Loford was now muttering faster than ever, and making odd sweeping motions with
his arms, like a man trying to swim backward through the air. His fingertips
threw droplets of muck. He kept up this gesticulating even while Manka was
guiding him to take his seat in the dugout, so that he nearly swamped it in his
clumsiness, for all the others could do to maintain balance. And I thought him
a warrior! said Rolf to himself with a pang, looking back impatiently from his
position in the foremost seat. Then Rolf's jaw began to drop. He saw ripples
growing in the swamp-water, swells that came from no wind or current. Growing
in amplitude with each motion of the Big One's steadily sweeping arms, the
waves followed the timing of those arms; and they did not spread like ordinary
waves but instead, gathered together building higher.
Manka
shoved off from shore, and then paddled from the rear seat, while the nexus of
disturbed water raised by the Big One's magic followed sluggishly after the
canoe. Rolf paddled in the front, his sword in the canoe bottom ready to hand.
Mewick, still holding the bow with a long arrow nocked, was in the second seat,
whispering Rolf directions on which way to steer among the rotting tree-stumps
and the small overgrown hummocks of firm land. Rolf kept glancing back. In the
third seat, Loford still labored to build his spell. He shifted his great
weight awkwardly and once more nearly rolled the canoe. Rolf thought that they
were going over, but a muddy projection like a sheeted hand bulged up above the
surface of the water to hold, briefly but strongly, against the gunwale. Then
Rolf understood that he was witnessing the raising of an elemental, and his
respect for Loford jumped to a new high.
The
reptiles had seen the first of the raising too, for one of them now left the
circular formation that was holding over the canoe, and flew back over the big
hummock the canoe had just left, crying out a warning.
But the
warning might be too late to do the pursuing but still invisible soldiers any
good. Urged on by the ever smaller and more precise movements of Loford's hands,
the disturbance in the shallow water behind the canoe had become a slow,
fantastic boil, which mounted higher and higher and now raced away, sweeping
back around the big hummock, beyond which the enemy must be drawing near.
Now the
water around the canoe was grown quite still again. As if by some command, Rolf
and Manka had both ceased to paddle. All but the blinded bird sat looking back
and waiting.
Loford's
hands were still outspread. "Paddle!" he urged, in a sudden fierce
whisper. For a moment Rolf was unable to obey-because he saw now, on the other
side of the big hummock, and mounting almost instantly to the height of its
central trees, a great upwelling structure of mud and slime and water. Shouts
greeted the elemental, the startled and fearful voices of men enough to fill
many canoes. Rolf could not see those men, but beyond the trees he could see
the thing of mud marching among them ponderously. It was gray and black, and
shiny as if with grease, and what little shape it had oozed from it as it
moved.
Screams
rang out that came from no reptilian throats, and then sharp splashing told of
men floundering clear of overturned boats. There followed more confused
yelling, and then the rhythmic work of paddles straining in retreat.
"Paddle!"
Loford said. "It may turn back now after us."
Rolf
paddled, at Mewick's direction steering into a channel of sorts that ran
between half-formed banks of earth.
"Paddle!"
Loford urged again, though Rolf and Manka were already hard at work. Rolf's hasty
glance over his shoulder showed him that the elemental, shrunken but still tall
as a man, had come racing back around the hummock and was in full pursuit of
its creator and the boat that bore him. The wave-shape jetted watery,
unintelligible sounds in little bursts of spray; it shrank still more as it
closed the distance between itself and the canoe. Loford was soothing the thing
he had raised up, soothing and destroying it, his voice whispering to it once
more, his hands working with firm, down-pressing gestures.
Such
life as the elemental had went ebbing away from it with its volume. What
finally came purling under the dug-out was no more than a sluggish wave,
roiling the tiny green plants that scummed the water's surface. As it passed,
lifting him, Rolf saw turning within it the thonged sandal of a Castle soldier.
He watched in vain to see if any more satisfying trophy might be displayed.
Screaming
in rage, but staying impotently out of bow-shot, the reptiles still followed
the canoe. In a little while, trees began to close more thickly over the
waterway the craft was following, and a mass of swamp-forest ahead promised
almost complete shelter. Now in their frustrated fury a few of the reptiles
dared to dive, screeching, at the bird which still perched motionless upon the
dugout's prow.
Rolf
was quick to drop the paddle and grab his sword again. With Mewick's arrows
flying at them and the sword-blade singing past their heads, the leatherwings
had to sheer away. They climbed again, and disappeared above what was becoming
an almost solid roof of greenery.
Rolf
looked gloomily at his sword, unstained in this latest skirmish.
"Mewick-teach me to use weapons?"
".
. . in self-defense," Mewick muttered, sitting up. He seemed to have
thrown himself into the bottom of the canoe to escape the sword's last swipe.
"Oh!
I'm sorry." Rolfs ears burned. He took up his paddle and applied himself
to its use, looking straight ahead.
After a
while Mewick's voice behind him said, "Yes, all right, then I will teach
you, when I can. Since the sword is in your hand already."
Rolf
looked back. "And other kinds of fighting, too? The way you kicked that
Castle-man yesterday . . ."
"Yes,
yes, when there is time." Mewick's voice held no enthusiasm. "These
are not things to be learned in a week or a month."
The
channel they had been following divided, came together, and then branched
again. Manka, now choosing their way from her position in the stern, seldom
hesitated over which branch to take. Loford's magic continued to be of help; it
opened walls of interlaced vines ahead of the canoe -or at least made them
easier to open by hand -and then knitted them once more into a barrier after
the craft had passed. Rolf paddled in the direction he was bidden, meanwhile
keeping a sharp lookout ahead.
Looking
ahead, Rolf was the first to see the young girl gazing down at them from a
lookout's perch in a high tree; he rested his paddle and was about to speak
when Manka said, "It's all right. She's a sentry of the big camp."
The
brown-haired girl in the tree, dressed like Manka in male clothing, also
recognized the Big One and his wife. She came sliding down from her observation
post and ran along the bank to greet them. To Rolf and Mewick she was
introduced as Sarah; Rolf guessed she was about fourteen years old.
And she
was obviously anxious about something. "I don't suppose any of you have
any word of Nils?" she asked, looking from one person to another.
Nils
was Sarah's boy friend, seemingly about Rolf's age or a little older. He had
gone out on some kind of raid or scouting expedition with the other young men
of the Free Folk, and they were overdue. No one in the canoe was able to give
Sarah any information, but they all tried to reassure her, and she waved after
them cheerfully enough when they paddled on.
Very
soon after passing the sentry-post, they came to an island much larger than the
one they had fled earlier in the day. A dozen canoes were already beached at a
muddy landing-place, from which well-worn trails branched into the woods. Along
one of these paths six or eight people came filing to greet the newcomers as
they landed.
By now
the afternoon was far advanced. Here in the deep shade of the island's trees
the bird, Strijeef, began to come out of his lethargy. He raised his head and
said a few words in his musical voice, then flew soundlessly up into a stout
tree where he settled himself again. This time he did not hide his head but
peered out slit-eyed from among puffed feathers. A few words of the bird's
speech seemed to have been directed at Rolf, but he had been unable to
understand.
"The
bird bids you thanks, for fighting off reptiles," said a tall young man,
taking note of Rolfs perplexity.
"He
is quite welcome," said Rolf. Then in a bitter tone he added, "I had
the chance to kill some of them and I failed."
The man
shrugged and said something encouraging. Introducing himself as Thomas, he
began to question Rolf about the events of the last two days. Thomas was
perhaps ten years Rolf's senior, strongly built and serious of manner. He had
greeted the other new arrivals as old friends, and had questioned them at once
about the movements of the enemy.
While
Rolf was giving Thomas and the others a description of his missing sister, the
group walked from the landing-place to what was evidently the main camp, where
a dozen large shelters had been built under concealing trees. Rolfs story was
received with sympathy, but no surprise; most of his hearers could have matched
it with something from their own lives. The description of Lisa would be
circulated, but Thomas warned Rolf there was little reason to be hopeful.
The
evening meal of the camp was just ready; there was no shortage of fish and
succulent stew. A company that grew gradually to fifteen or twenty people was
gathering about the cooking fire.
The
food drew most of Rolf's attention, but he heard the word being passed in from
a lookout that another canoe was coming. It bore only a lone messenger, who was
soon being entertained at fireside. He brought some apparently routine news,
and after he had spoken in conference with Loford, Thomas, and several others,
another messenger was dispatched. Obviously this camp was some center of
command, in contact with other groups of Free Folk. But while the message
brought by the man in the canoe was being discussed, Rolf sensed something
strained in the decision-making process here. Many people seemed to be taking
part in it, not all of them quite willingly. They spoke with slow hesi-tance, each
weighing his neighbors' reactions as he went on from word to word. No one
seemed eager to push himself or his ideas forward.
"If
only the Old One were here!" one man lamented, seemingly exasperated by
the length of a debate which had sprung up, over whether or not a certain cache
of weapons should be moved.
"Well,
he's not," a woman answered. "And he's not coming back."
"He
was Ardneh, if you ask me," said the first speaker. "And now no one
is."
Rolf
had not heard of Ardneh before. And so a little later, when Loford sat down
beside him to eat, he asked the wizard what the man had meant.
Loford
answered casually at first. "Oh, we've come to use the name as a symbol
for our cause. For our hopes of freedom. We seem to be trying to build ourselves
a god."
A what?
Rolf wondered silently.
Chewing
slowly on a morsel of fish, Loford squinted into the firelight, which seemed
now to brighten rapidly with the fading of the day. Now he spoke more intently.
"In
a vision I myself have beheld Ardneh in this guise: the figure of a warrior,
armed with the thunderbolt, mounted on the Elephant."
Rolf
was much impressed. "But Ardneh is real, then? A living being, some kind
of demon or elemental?"
The
movement of Loford's massive shoulders might have meant that the question had
no answer. "He was a god of the Old World, or so we think."
Curiosity
left Rolf no choice but to reveal the depth of his ignorance. "What is a
god?"
"Oh,"
said Loford, "we have no gods, these days." He interested himself
more in his food.
"But
were gods like demons?" Rolf asked helplessly, when it seemed that no more
information was forthcoming. Once he started trying to find out about something
he hated to quit.
"They
were more than that; but I am only a country wizard and I know little." In
the Big One's voice there sounded a momentary weight of sadness.
And
then Rolf forgot about probing such deep matters, for Sarah came to join the
group about the fire, having just been relieved of sentry duty. Rolf talked with
her while she ate her evening meal. Her boys' clothes could not disguise the
prettiness of her face nor the shapeliness of her tiny body, and he felt
disinclined to seek out any other company.
She
talked with him easily enough, heard his story with sympathy, listened
carefully to a description of his sister-then she related almost casually how
her family too had been destroyed by the men and creatures of the Castle.
Her
mask of calm lifted when another messenger was reported arriving by dugout, and
when this man came to the fire she listened with a bright spark of
interest-which soon faded. The news had nothing to do with Nils.
The sun
had now been down for some time, and Sarah grew steadily more attractive in the
warm glow of firelight. But Rolfs meditations on this subject were interrupted
by the arrival of yet another messenger.
This
one came by air. Strijeef, who had awakened rapidly and begun to move about as
the last light faded from the sky, was the first to see the approaching bird. But
Strijeef had only just gotten into the air and uttered his first greeting hoot
before the new arrival was down, stooping with startling speed through the
leafy roof above the fires, then on the ground, shivering and gasping rapidly
in what seemed near-exhaustion. People gathered around it quickly, shading its
eyes from the firelight, offering it water and demanding to hear the news that
inspired such effort.
The
first words this bird uttered came out well mixed with gasping hoots and
whistles, but they were loud and plain enough to be understood by even Rolf's
unpracticed ears: "I have-found the Elephant."
The
bird was a young female, whose name Rolf understood as Feathertip. Early last
evening she had been prowling near the Castle. That place and its high reptile
roosts were defended, by stretched cords and nets, from any bird's attack, but
there was always the chance just after sunset of intercepting some reptile
tardily hurrying home.
Last
night there had been several stragglers, but , Feathertip had been disappointed
in her attempt to catch them; it had simply taken her too long to get near the
Castle from her daytime hiding place in the forest. The latest of the
leatherwings had got himself home safe in the darkness just ahead of her.
So it
had occurred to her to try to find a place very near the Castle in which to
hide during the daylight hours. With this in mind she had flown along the
northern side of the pass upon whose southern edge the Castle perched. The pass
interrupted the thin line of the Broken Mountains. On the northern side of the
break the mountain ended in a jumble of crevices and narrow canyons which
promised some concealment. In the moonlight, Feathertip flew there searching
for some ledge or cranny so well hidden that the reptiles would not be likely
to see it during their daylight patrols, so high and inaccessible that no
patrol of soldiers would be able to get near.
The
great birds' eyes were at their best by moonglow and in the tricky shadows of
the night. Still Feathertip had twice passed by the opening before she paused,
on her third flight through a narrow canyon, to investigate what seemed no more
than a dark spot on a sheltered face of rock.
The
spot turned out to be a hole, the entrance of a cave. An opening not only
concealed from any but the most careful of winged searches, but so narrow that
Feathertip thought that if worst came to worst, she might even be able to
defend it in the light. And so she determined to stay.
Seeking
out the inner recesses of the cave, to find what other entrances there might be
and also to escape as far as possible the pressure of the morning sun, the bird
had made her great discovery. Through a narrow descending shaft -down which one
of the heavy wingless people should be able to climb if he took care
-Feathertip had reached a cave as smooth as the inside of an egg, and long and
wide enough to hold a house. The bird knew the sign of the Elephant, and this
sign was on each flank of the enormous-creature? -thing? Feathertip could not
decide which word applied) which alone occupied the cave, and which in her
opinion could hardly be anything but the Elephant itself.
Four-legged?
No, it had seemed to have no legs at all. Had it a grasping nose, and teeth
like swords? No -at least not quite. But never had the bird seen anything like
that which waited unmoving in the buried cave.
By now
Feathertip had regained her breath, and was plainly enjoying her telling of a
story that made the heavy wingless people crowd around to question her so
impatiently. She was established now with her back to a shaded fire, and for
the most part the humans saw her as a dark soft outline, having huge eyes that
now and then sparked faintly with the caught reflection of something
luminescing out in the swamp.
She
stuck stubbornly to her conviction that the thing in the cave could be nothing
less than the Elephant itself. No, it had not moved; but it did not seem dead
or ruined. On what seemed to be its head it did have several projections, all
of them looking stiff as claws. No, Feathertip had not touched the Elephant.
But every part of it looked very hard, like something made of metal.
Sarah
was explaining to Rolf that the birds always had difficulty in describing
man-made things; some of them could not distinguish between an ax and a sword.
The strength of their minds just did not lie in that direction.
The
questioning of the bird had begun to trail off into repetition. The air of
hesitancy, of unwillingness to take up the responsibility of leadership, still
seemed to dominate the group.
"Well,
someone must be sent to see what this thing is," Thomas said, looking
about him at the others. "One or more of us heavy wingless ones. And as
soon as possible. That much is plain."
A
discussion began on which of the various bands of Free Folk scattered through
the countryside was closest to the cave, and which would have the easiest and
safest route to get there.
Thomas
cut the discussion short. "We're only about eighteen kilometers from the
cave ourselves-I think it will be fastest after all if one or two of us go from
here."
Loford
was sitting smiling in silent approval as Thomas began to lead. Thomas turned
now to the bird and said, "Feathertip-think carefully now. Is there any
possible way for a human being to climb to the entrance of this cave of
yours?"
"Whoo.
No. Unless they made a stairway in the rock."
"How
high a stairway would it have to be?"
"Eleven
times as high as you." On matters of height the birds were evidently very
quick and accurate.
"We
are none of us mountain climbers, and we are in a hurry." Thomas began to
pace nervously, then quickly stopped. "We do have ropes, of course. Is
there some projection in this cave or about it, around which you could drop a
loop of rope, to let us climb?"
There
was no such projection inside the upper cave, Feathertip said after some
thought. On the opposite side of the canyon was a pinnacle where she could hang
a rope; but a human climbing there would still have to get across the canyon and
in beneath an overhang.
"Could
I jump this chasm? How wide is it?"
The
distance of a good running broad jump, it seemed. And it would have to be
accomplished from a standing start of precarious footing.
There
was argument, and the rudiment of a plan emerged.
"Look,
we know a bird can't lift an adult human," said Thomas. "But we've
two birds here now, both big and strong of their kind."
People
interrupted with objections.
"Let
me finish. They can't lift a man cleanly, but couldn't they help him jump?
Swing him, delay his fall, as he jumps from atop this pinnacle of rock to get
across the canyon?"
The
birds both said they thought that something of the sort might just be possible.
And no one was able to think of a better plan for getting a human quickly into
the cave; of course the ground would have to be examined first. In any case no
large party with ladders and other cumbersome equipment could be sent with any
safety to work so near the Castle.
Thomas's
enthusiasm was building steadily. "It must be done somehow, and the birds'
help may make it possible. We'll see what way looks best when we get there. And
there's no time to waste. If I leave here within the hour, I can be hidden
among the rocks on the north side of the pass before dawn. Just lie low during
the daylight hours, and then tomorrow night - "
Loford
asked him, "You?"
Thomas
smiled wryly. "Well, you've been prodding me to assume some kind of
leadership."
"This
is not a leader's job. It's one for a scout. Why you? You're needed here to
make decisions."
Others
jumped into the argument. It was soon more or less agreed that two people ought
to go, but there was no agreement on who they should be. Every man and woman
who was not slow with age, or recovering from a wound, volunteered.
"Heights don't scare me at all," Rolf offered.
"Me
neither!" Sarah wanted to go. She claimed that she was lighter than any of
the others, certainly an advantage if it came to a matter of being partially
supported by birds.
"Ah!"
said Thomas to her, a spark of humor in his eye. "But what if Nils comes
back and finds that you've gone off alone with me?"
That
quieted Sarah-for a while-but Thomas found the others' squabbling harder to put
down. At last he had to nearly shout, "All right, all right! I know the
land as well as anyone. I suppose I can decide as well as anyone what to do
about the Elephant when I reach it. So I am going. Loford will be the leader
here -so far as I have any authority to name one. Mewick-you must stay in the swamps
for a while, to talk to others of our people as they come in, tell them about
the situation in the north and elsewhere, so they'll understand we cannot
expect any help . . . now, let's see. Will I be light enough to jump into this
cave with a boost from two birds?"
He
stretched out his arms. Strijeef and Feathertip took to the air and hovered
about him, and each carefully clenched their feet around one of his wrists.
Then their wings beat powerfully, the strokes becoming faintly audible, their
breeze whipping up sparks and ashes from the remnants of a fire. But Thomas's
feet did not leave the ground. Only when he jumped up could the two birds hold
him in the air, and then only for the barest moment.
"Try
it with me!" Sarah now demanded. With great exertion the birds could lift
Sarah just about a meter off the ground, and hold her there for a count of
three. What jumping she could manage did not help very much.
She was
elated, but Thomas kept shaking his head at her. "No, no. We may have to
do some fighting, or - "
"I
can shoot a bow!"
He
ignored her protests, and nodded toward Rolf. "Try him next, he seems
about the lightest."
The
birds rested briefly, then gripped the ends of a piece of rope which Rolf had
found and looped around his body under his arms. "At the cave I'll need my
hands free to cling and climb," he explained. Then he leaped upward with
all the spring in his legs, just as the two birds lifted mightily. He rose till
his feet were higher than a tall man's head, from which elevation it took him a
count of five to fall to the ground against the birds' continued pull.
"Well."
Thomas considered. "That would seem to be about the best that we can
do."
"I'm
ready to hike," Rolf told him. "I've rested most of the day. Just paddled
in the dugout."
Thomas,
staring at him thoughtfully, cracked a faint smile. "You call that
resting, hey?" He looked across the fire at Mewick.
Mewick
said, "I think the young one has got all the madness out of his
system."
Thomas
looked back at Rolf. "Is that true? If I take you, we may run into a fight
but we're not looking for one."
"I
understand that." The madness for revenge was not gone, far from it. But
it had grown into something cold and patient. Calculating.
Thomas
stared at Rolf a moment longer; then he smiled. "Very good. Then let's get
started."
IV
The
Cave
The
earliest light of dawn found Rolf and Thomas lying side by side, facing south
across the pass, in the mouth of a narrow crevice between towering rocks. The
pass before them was not distinguished by any name; though it was the only
clean break in the Broken Mountains for many kilometers both north and south.
They were both worn with swamp-paddling and cross-country hiking through the
night just past-with their furtive wading crossing of the river Dolles, and
their last climb, racing against the coming of dawn, to their present position.
The
spot they had reached was a commanding one. By moving a meter forward, out of
the mouth of the tiny canyon, they might have seen to their right the Dolles
winding like a lazy snake along the foot of the mountains from north to south.
Beyond the river stretched Rolf's home country of farmlands and lowlands and
swamps. And in the distance, plainly visible, was the blue vagueness of the
western sea.
Straight
ahead of the tiny canyon's mouth, the barren land fell downward for some two
hundred meters in a gradually decreasing slope to where the east-west highway
threaded the bottom of the pass. And south beyond the highway the land rose
again in an equivalent slope, to a foothill of the southern mountain chain; and
upon that foothill stood the gray and newly strengthened walls of the Castle.
To the
left of the Castle, Rolf could see part of the desert country that rolled down
from the all-but-rainless inland slopes of the Broken Mountains, and stretched
on for perhaps two hundred kilometers to the high and forbidding Black
Mountains. The desert looked hot already, though the sun was scarcely risen.
"The
leatherwings are up betimes," said Thomas quietly, nodding straight ahead.
The early sun was bright on the net-protected houses and perches clustered on
the upper parts of the high Castle, showing a gray-green movement of reptile
bodies under the nets. Ekuman's flag of black and bronze had evidently flown
all night from a pole on the flat roof of the keep. And there were other
decorations dangling high on wall and parapet; the tiny whitish stick-figures
that Rolf knew had once been people, good people, who had displeased the land's
new masters and had been lifted up there to be living toys and food for the
leatherwings.
The
only living men to be seen now on the high places were dots of black and
bronze, the movements of their arms and legs barely distinguishable at this
distance. They were about the morning routine of furling the protective nets
from around the reptiles' roosts. Now the gray-green dots came into plainer
view, swelling and contracting. The reptiles would be stretching their wings.
Cawing and whining drifted faintly across the pass. In another moment the first
of them were airborne, making room for more and more to appear on the perches.
Soon the air above the Castle grew cloudy with their circling swarm.
"And
now we had better make sure to lie low," said Thomas, casting a look
around at their hiding place. To their rear, the narrow crevice in which they
lay twisted back into the foot of the mountain, its sandy floor losing itself
among huge tumbled boulders and splintered outcroppings of rock. A shoulder of
the mountain had slumped and fallen here an age ago. Somewhere back in that
jumble, this little crevice grown wider had high on one of its walls the hidden
cave-entrance. Strijeef and Fea-thertip had taken shelter there for the day.
Getting Rolf or Thomas somehow into the cave would have to wait for another
night.
Directly
above Thomas and Rolf, the rock-bulges of the canyon walls shut out the sky
entirely. The reptile swarm centered above the Castle had now spread until its
thinned edges reached this far and farther, but still there came no cawing of
alarm from overhead, no gathering of faces at the Castle wall. Rolf found it
moment by moment easier to believe that he and Thomas would not be seen today
if they kept still.
Keeping
still was not going to be hard. The folk in the swamp had given Rolf sandals,
but still his feet were sore from the long, fast hike. And he was tired in
every muscle.
Lying
stretched out in the sand, nerves still sleep-lessly taut, he let his gaze
wander eastward again. In the far distance the Black Mountains looked grayly
insubstantial with the morning sunlight almost at their backs. Much nearer, but
still well out over the badlands, clouds were forming a high knot that promised
rain. Rolf knew that under those clouds the Oasis of the Two Stones must lie,
though a low elevation of the land between kept him from seeing that round
fertile patch. Years ago Rolf's father had brought him here to the pass, to
show him the Castle -then an innocent and wondrous ruin -and had also pointed
out to him where the Oasis lay amid the desert, and had told him of the wonder
of its rainfall.
Rolf
suddenly realized that something strange was happening to the clouds. Instead
of remaining gathered above the one always-favored spot they were moving now,
coming roughly toward the pass.
This
seemed to him so odd that he called it to Thomas's attention. Thomas slid a few
centimeters forward and peeked cautiously out of the canyon mouth to look for
himself.
"Something
must have gone awry with their magic out there," he said shortly.
"I
wonder what their magic is."
Thomas
shook his head. The distant knot of vapor had already darkened into a
thunderstorm, and was chasing its shadow toward them across the desert,
lighting itself from within by a sudden flicker of lightning.
"I
suppose the invaders are holding the Oasis too," Rolf said. He thought he
could hear the thunder, tiny and distant.
Thomas
nodded. "Quite a strong garrison, I understand." He pulled himself
back. "We'd better take turns on watch, and each get some sleep while we
can."
Rolf
said he could not sleep yet, so Thomas agreed to let him take the first watch.
Then Thomas opened his pack and took out a marvelous thing. It was an Old World
device, he explained, that was supposed to have come from beyond the western
sea. It had been cherished for generations in the family of a man who now had
joined a band of Free Folk.
The
device consisted of a pair of metal cylinders, each about the length of a man's
hand. The cylinders were clasped side by side with metal joints that fitted and
worked with incredible smooth precision, as Rolf saw when Thomas let him take
the device carefully into his hands. He had never before had the chance to
handle anything of the Old World so freely, and he had never before seen such
workmanship in metal.
Each
end of each cylinder was glass, and looking through them made everything
suddenly a dozen times closer. At first Rolf was less impressed by the function
of the thing than by the form. But gradually Thomas made him understand that
there was no magic involved here; Thomas said that Old World devices never
depended upon it. Instead the illusion of closeness came somehow from what
Thomas called pure technology; the thing was a tool, like a saw or a spade, but
instead of working wood or soil it worked on light. It needed only whatever
power eyes could give it, looking through its double tubes.
No
magic needed, to move a man's point of vision out from his body and bring it
back again. It was an eerie thought. Technology was a word that Rolf had heard
perhaps a dozen times in his life before today, and then always in some joking
context; but now the truth of what it meant began to gradually impress itself
upon him.
"How
do you know there's no magic in them?"
Thomas
shrugged slightly. "No one can feel any. Wizards have tried."
Rolf
handled the eyeglasses with an eagerly growing fascination as he drew the
Castle near him and pushed it away again. He searched for the thunderstorm, but
it had dissipated already. He looked at Thomas's face, a mountain-blur of
nearness.
"Don't
look at the sun through those, your eyes will burn out."
"I
won't." Rolf already felt an affinity for technology deeper than any he
had ever felt for the things of magic; he had known enough not to look at a sun
made a dozen times more dazzling.
Something
in the satisfaction of the glasses eased the tension that had so far kept him
from feeling sleepy; he yawned and felt his eyelids drooping. Thomas announced
that he himself had better take the first watch after all.
Rolf
rolled against the rock wall of the canyon, put down his head and at once
dropped off to sleep, to awaken with a violent start when his arm was touched.
He had little sense of time having passed, but he did feel rested, and the sun
was near the zenith.
Having
the Old World glasses to use, Rolf found the time of the afternoon watch
passing quickly. At the main gate of the Castle, there was a more or less
continual coming and going, of both soldiers and civilians. A few wagonloads of
provisions came jolting over the bridge that spanned the Dolles in the midst of
what was now a half-deserted village at the foot of the Castle's hill. Barrels
and bales and sacks were carried up on slave-back to the Castle from the barges
moored at the village landing-place. Only slaves labored now in what Rolf
remembered as a free and thriving town. Dots of bronze and black stood guard
with whips that became visible only through the glasses.
Rolf
did not watch that for long. Each time a party of soldiers came down from the
Castle, or passed below him in either direction through the pass, he watched
them tensely, ready to rouse Thomas in an instant should any turn upslope
toward these rocks.
Thomas
had rolled under a bulge of rock as far as a man could get, and there he slept.
Now and then he would utter a faint groan and make abortive motions with his
powerful arms. Somehow it seemed wrong and discouraging to Rolf that a man
healthy and strong, a successful leader, should have to put up with bad dreams.
Rolf
swept the landscape once more with his glasses. Here was something new, coming
toward the Castle from the southwest, the general direction of the swamps. In a
little while Rolf made out that it was a group of slaves or prisoners being
marched along a road. First he had seen only the dust raised by their slow
progress; now through the glasses he could see that they were men and women
both, chained or roped together, perhaps fifteen of them. Now he could see the
arm of a bronze-helmed guard rise and snap and fall back again. A long time
later the faint pop of the whip came drifting across the intervening valley of
the pass.
He did
not want to watch this and yet could not keep from watching. The prisoners'
faces became visible. More bewildered conscripts for the endless building . . .
Rolf
nearly dropped the glasses. He raised them again quickly, and with shaking
fingers turned the knurled knob that Thomas had taught him to use for greatest
clarity. Still the image wavered before him, until he remembered to rest his
elbows once more in the sand.
A
little behind the other prisoners, and bound more lightly if at all, was ayoung
girl who looked like Sarah. She was riding, mounted on a huge beast behind a
soldier. She looked like Sarah all the more as they came slowly closer. If it
was not some terrible trick of these demon-begotten glasses . . . Rolf kept
trying to tell himself that it was only that.
At last
he woke Thomas. Thomas was instantly alert, but still just too late to see the
girl as the Castle's maw swallowed the last of the prisoners and their guard.
The teeth of its portcullis snapped shut behind them.
Thomas
put down the glasses he had just raised. "Are you sure it was Sarah?"
"Yes."
Rolf stared at a double handful of sand and pebbles, into which he was digging
his fingers until they hurt.
"Well."
It seemed to Rolf that Thomas was taking the news with unnatural calm.
"Did you recognize anyone else?"
"No.
I don't think any were people from our camp."
"So.
There might have been some word about Nils come into the swamp, and Sarah went
out to try to make sure of it-whatever it was. And she just got picked up.
Those things happen. Anyway, there's nothing we can do about it, except to go
on with what we're doing now." When Rolf nodded, he put a hand on Rolf's
shoulder for a moment, then turned away again against the rock. "I should
sleep a little longer. Be sure and rouse me before the sun goes down."
But
Thomas could scarcely have fallen asleep before Rolf was shaking him again.
More people were approaching the Castle, and had popped suddenly into Rolf's
view, their earlier progress having been hidden from him by the rock he
sheltered against. Not in chains did these folk come, but in great splendor, on
a gaily-painted river barge descending the Dolles, escorted on each shore by a
hundred mounted men.
This
time Thomas looked long before handing the glasses back to Rolf. "It's the
Satrap Chup, coming down from his own robber's roost in the north. Ekuman's
son-in-law to be."
The
barge tied up at the central landing-place. In the center of those who
disembarked was a powerful-looking man in black trousers and cuirass trimmed
with red, mounted on a magnificent riding-beast. And beside him on a white
animal came riding a young girl with blonde hair of marvel-ous length; so fair
was her skin, so beautiful her face, that Rolf wondered again, aloud, if the
glasses might not add a shading of magic to the things they showed.
"No,
no," Thomas reassured him, dryly. "You'll not have seen herbefore,
because her habit is to stay in the Castle or very near it. But that's
Charmian, Ekuman's daughter. She evidently went halfway to meet her bridegroom,
and now comes finishing his journey with him. It might be an interesting
wedding; I've heard there's another in the Castle who dotes on her."
"How
could you hear that?"
"The
Castle servants are human if the masters are not. They're too frightened to
talk much, but sometimes a single word can travel marvelously."
Rolf
had heard of Charmian's existence, but had not really thought about her until
now. "I thought that Ekuman had no wife."
"He
had once, or perhaps she was only a favored concubine. Then he went East, to
perfect himself in . . . the ways that he has chosen."
Rolf
did not understand. "He went East?"
"From
where he came to begin with I do not know, but he has been to the Black
Mountains, to pledge himself to Som the Dead."
That
name was new to Rolf. Later he would seek to learn more, but now he took a turn
at thoughtful silence. It was beyond his understanding that a fiend like Ekuman
should have a lovely daughter, to be given away like some kindly farmer's,.with
a feast.
Thomas's
thoughts were evidently running along the same lines. "I wonder sometimes
why such as these bother to marry. Hardly to pledge their love. I think not
even to pledge each other any kind of honest help in life."
"Why,
then? " Rolf wanted to think of anything but what might be happening to
Sarah.
Thomas
shrugged. "It's hard to remember sometimes that Ekuman and those about him
are still human, that the crimes they commit are human crimes. I've heard
Loford say that if the Satraps live for many years, growing stronger in their
evil, it sometimes happens that they are summoned East at last, to stay."
"Why?"
"To
become something more or less than human, I think that was the way Loford put
it." Thomas yawned. "Loford wasn't sure, and I'm talking in total
ignorance. You want another nap?"
"No.
I don't feel tired."
So
Thomas did sleep again, but he roused himself well before sunset, and then Rolf
was willing enough to take another nap himself. He only dozed, and got up
without being wakened as the shadows began to deepen.
Like
the humans of the Castle, the reptiles had been coming and going in small
numbers all through the day, but now they came from all directions, in haste to
reach their roosts before night. Now was the time when Feathertip, if she had
been following her original plan, would have come soaring forth. Tonight she
could have caught more than one straggler made careless by the Castle's
nearness. But with a far greater enterprise hanging in the balance, the birds
would not hunt reptiles tonight. The leatherwings came home unmolested, to
slowly blacken the rooftops of the Castle with their clusters.
And in
the earliest of the true night the two birds came silently down the canyon,
following the dim twisting channel of it with scarcely a wing-movement. Their
huge shapes were over Rolf before he had more than imagined that he saw them.
Rolf
and Thomas were each carrying ropes, long and strong but thin, wound about them
under their shirts. Thomas unwound a long rope now from his ribs, and tied one
end of it into a loop, of a size Feathertip directed.
The two
birds then flew back up the canyon. Behind them a trailing end of rope tickled
over the sand and over shadowed, broken rocks where human feet must move with
caution.
Rolf
and Thomas followed. The looped rope had already been hung for climbing when
they caught up with the birds, who sat waiting on the canyon floor.
"Well,"
said Thomas. He set down his pack, then tugged hard on the rope, to make sure
that the loop was holding solidly on the invisible peak, about eleven times his
height. Then he hesitated. At last he said, "If I'm killed or left
unconscious beyond rousing -I've seen men that way after a fall- then you must
just go on as best you can."
"I
know."
After
that Thomas delayed no more but climbed, swiftly and surely; Rolf envied the
strength of arm that could swing a big man up like that. For a few moments
Thomas's climbing figure was outlined vaguely against the stars. Then he passed
out of sight above a convexity of rock. Soon after that, the hanging rope's
gyrations ceased.
From
where he stood Rolf could see only that loose descending rope, and nothing of
what was going on above. He could see where Thomas would come down, if he fell.
At that place a hard flat surface would have been bad enough, but the actuality
was worse, a jumble of sharp upjutting stony corners.
The
rope hung still, and held time with it. Then the long line started swaying
again. Rolf let out his breath in a huge silent puff. The birds were first to
settle to the ground, and then the man, who slid the last distance with his
sandaled feet clamping the rope.
Having
got down, Thomas leaned as if for needed support against the face of the rock
he had just quitted. Then he wiped at his face with his sleeve and said,
"I didn't try it. The only way is with the birds."
Strijeef
hooted, "Tooo heavy." Feathertip made a nodding motion that she must
have adopted from humans.
"Then
I'll go." Rolf looked at the birds, telling himself how strong they were,
especially now when they had just had a good day's rest. But he could not keep
his eye from moving beyond them to mark how the sharp rocks stood in the bottom
of the crevice. "That's what I came along for."
"Yes."
Thomas now sounded stubbornly angry. Rolf found himself half-wishing that the
man might change his mind and, after all, attempt the leap himself-and make it,
of course. But Thomas did not change his mind.
Rolf
divested himself of his pack, and his extra ropes. Such things could be lifted
easily to him later, if he -after he had reached the cave. He kept the short
length of rope for the birds to grip and swing him by.
"Good
luck," said Thomas.
Rolf
nodded. And then he was climbing the long rope, hauling with his hands and
walking with his feet against the rock. He remembered you were not supposed to
look down from a high place, so he did not.
And
then before he had any time to think about what came next, he had reached the
pinnacle. There was just room for him to crouch on the peak of the tall rock.
The world looked unreal from here-the stars above, the sparks of torches on the
distant Castle. The moon, huge and nearly full, was just starting up across the
desert.
The
birds were hovering at Rolf's sides. He handed each of them an end of the short
rope looped under his arms. His eyes were searching downward among the
deceptive shadows on the cliff-face opposite. "I don't see the cave. Where
is it?"
"Hoo.
Stand up."
He
stood, holding out his arms for balance. With gentle pulls at the rope the
birds turned him, facing him in the right direction. They had wound the
rope-ends tight in all their talons.
"I
still don't see it."
"We
will bring you to it. Jump high, jump far, and then grab rock when you
can."
He
remembered when he was a child, jumping on a dare from a tree tall enough to
offer a frightening drop. Take no time to think, and jump straight out, then
you could do it. . . delay, and you might never go ... and after the bold jump
had come the hard triumphant landing . . . don't look down.
"This
way?"
"This
way." Their wingtips multiplied soft blessings near his head. "Now
bend and jump!"
Giving
himself to the birds, he leaped, fear adding spring to his legs. The lifting
power that he could feel on the ropes was heartening -for a moment. Then he was
falling. It was not the sheer empty dropping from the tree, but neither was it
flying, or being held. Rolf's arms turned panicky and thrashed ahead of him for
something to grip. Impossible for human eyes to judge a distance here at night.
The enormous wings worked on above him; their wind and that of his falling
whirled against his face, while the horizontal momentum of his leap still
carried him toward the wall of stone where the cave must be. That wall was
moving upward frighteningly as his fingers scraped it. It bulged toward him,
and his fingers were free in the air of a sudden aperture -and then Rolf jolted
to a halt, arms thrusting into the cave over its lip which struck him in the
chest. His knees banged painfully into the wall below. He clung there seemingly
without a grip, held by his extended arms' friction on smooth rock. The
supporting pull on the ropes ceased while the birds walked over him and into
the cave. Then they pulled again, from in front. With beak and talon they
helped him drag his heaviness up and into the safe hole.
Once he
had solidity under him he sat without moving, trying to get his hands to loosen
their compulsive gripping of whatever came in reach. To the panting, quivering
birds he said, "Tell -tell Thomas I made it."
"He
has seen youuu did not fall. Hoo. He knows you made it." But after only a
moment's rest the birds took to the air and left him. They would be back very
soon with his tools and supplies. Rolf swore that by then he would be able to
let go the rock and do something useful.
It was
a mighty good thing that Thomas had had the guts not to attempt the jump. His
weighty muscles and his big bones would have pulled him down for sure, down to
be broken on the rocks . . . but there was no point in such thoughts now. Rolf
forced himself to relax.
Strijeef
was back even before Rolf had expected him, dropping a rope-tied pack hastily
at Rolf's feet.
"Rooolf,
big patrol from the Castle is coming on the ground. Thomas will run away, so if
he is caught it will not be here. We Silent People must help him, we will come
back when we can. Soldiers cannot climb here. Thomas says find out what you
can."
"Yes,"
Rolf stammered after a moment. "All right. Tell him don't worry. I'll find
out." There seemed to be nothing more that needed saying.
The
bird waited just a moment longer, gazing at Rolf with its wide wise-seeming
eyes, swollen drops of ghostly light here in the dim cave. "Good
luck," it said, and brushed him with a wingtip.
"You
too."
When
Strijeef had vanished, Rolf sat in silence, listening. After what seemed a long
time he heard hooves passing somewhere below, making muffled sounds in sand and
scraping very faintly over rock. For a while the movements seemed to slow down,
to pause; then they proceeded at a faster rate that soon took them altogether
out of earshot.
Straining
to hear more, he told himself that Thomas certainly could not have been taken
without a struggle and outcry. The birds would be eyes for Thomas. He must
certainly have got away.
Time
passed, bringing no further sounds. Rolf undid the rope from around the pack,
and found food and water, more rope, flint and steel, small waxy torches, and a
small chisel wrapped against clinking. With this last tool he was to carve in
the rock some sort of notch in which a climbing rope could be anchored. The
madness of birds and jumping would not have to be repeated.
He
thought it over. The soldiers who had passed below were evidently gone now,
either back to the Castle or in pursuit of Thomas, or simply continuing
theirpatrol. They would not have left only one or two men here, not at night,
and if they had left more than that he should be able to hear something from
them. But they might well send men here in the morning. And in the morning the
reptiles would be out. All in all, it seemed that now was the best time for
stonecutting.
To
muffle the sounds he emptied the pack and set the chisel under it. Then he
chose a rock for his mallet and got to work, pausing after every tap to listen.
The rope he meant to anchor here was already fastened to the middle of a short
stout stick, and he needed only to reshape a wrinkle in the floor a bit to have
a place where this anchor could be solidly fixed.
So his
noisemaking was soon over. He repacked his gear and sat listening for another
while. Once he thought the wind brought him some distant cry, whether animal or
human he could not say. He shivered slightly. He felt wide awake. Should he
start now on his exploration of the inner cave?
He could
make a tentative beginning anyway. He crawled away from the cave mouth, going
into utter darkness, groping before him with his hands. He had gone only a few
meters when his foremost hand came down on nothingness. He stretched himself
out on the brink of a vertical shaft and reached forward as well as he could,
but could not touch the other side.
He went
back to his pack and got out one of his torches. These were stiff-stemmed
wax-rushes from the swamp, dried and dipped in animal fat, then cast by Loford
under some kind of fire-spell that was meant to make them burn smokelessly and
bright. But at last Rolf decided not to light the torch, to put off further
exploration until morning. Daylight would doubtless filter even into the lower
cave, so he might climb down without having to hold a torch. And besides, he
kept expecting one of the birds to come back at any moment, bringing him word
of what had happened to Thomas. And besides that -he was reluctant to go down
to face the Elephant alone at midnight.
He sat
down near the cave mouth and, despite his situation, easily fell asleep. Twice
he awakened with a start from dreams of falling, to find himself clutching at
the rock. And each time he woke he worried a little more because the birds had
not yet come back. Surely Thomas must have got away by now, or been caught? And
had the birds been shot down too, by luck and by torchlight?
Rolf
passed the time dozing and waking, until a more violent start after a period of
deeper sleep roused him to the awareness that daylight was at hand. At least
now he could feel certain that the birds would not come, not until another
evening had arrived.
He had
cut his socket into the rock so that it would hold the anchor stick firmly
against a pull from either direction. He set the stick in place now, and from
it hung his longest rope into the inner shaft. With full daylight he started
the descent, pack strapped firmly on his back.
The
chimney at its top was perhaps three meters wide; it narrowed irregularly as he
went lower. It had the look of a natural fault, some splitting of the hill that
perhaps had happened at the same time as the dumping and scattering of the
rock-jumble outside.
As Rolf
moved further down the daylight lessened, but still for the first twenty meters
he did not need a torch. Then, at what he thought was approximately the level
of the ground outside, the chimney ended in a hole, through which the rope went
vanishing into blackness. Supporting himself on feet braced on opposite sides
of the diminished shaft, Rolf freed his hands and struck fire to a rushlight.
It burned cleanly. He thought the flame and trace of smoke showed a gentle
upward movement of the air around him.
Rolf
followed his rope, gripping it between his sandaled feet, keeping one hand free
to hold the torch. He was in a huge wide hollow place. After descending only a
few meters more, he could set his feet on a floor of smooth and level stone.
The
rays of his rushlight fell across the cave, upon a closed pair of enormous
doors. Before him stood a motionless rounded shape, twice taller than a man and
perhaps a thousand times as bulky.
Rolf
knew that he had found the Elephant.
V
Desert
Storm
Thomas
could see nothing of Rolfs bird-supported leap across the chasm, and could hear
only the faint scrambling noise of his arrival at the cave. But that, at the
moment, was quite enough. Thomas allowed himself a single sigh of relief.
It took
the birds only a few more moments to put an end to his relief, by descending with
the news that a mounted patrol was moving in his direction from the Castle, was
in fact already crossing the highway at the bottom of the pass.
That
meant they were not much over two hundred meters away, and Thomas got moving
even before he spoke. "If they catch me here they'll keep poking around in
these rocks. I'll head for the western slope. Tell Rolf to find out what he can
in the cave. And make sure no ropes are hanging out in sight."
He was
just working his way out of the rocks on the western side, thinking to get back
to the swamps if he could, and communicate with Rolf for a day or two by bird,
when Strijeef came spinning above him again, with word that more men were
approaching from the west, coming uphill from the riverbank. "You must go east,
Thomas. We will help."
He
hated to leave Rolf, but the youngster in the cave would just have to depend on
his own brains and nerve. Thomas got out of the rocks at last on the eastern
side, and started moving furtively down the first open slope of the vast
desert. He had a water bottle with him, and could lie low in the wasteland for
a day. When night fell again he could work north and get back across the
mountains somewhere; the Broken Mountains were nowhere high or wide enough to
keep an agile man on foot from finding his way through.
He
cursed the brightness of the moon as he angled down the long open slope,
heading away from pass and Castle. After going something over a hundred meters
he paused and listened. He thought he could hear the muffled sounds of soldiers
in considerable numbers moving in the area he had just left. He would have
given much to know whether it was just a routine patrol, or whether they had
seen or suspected something. Sarah was in the Castle. If the enemy had the
least reason to connect her with the Free Folk, she might easily have been
forced by now to tell everything she knew. It was Thomas's own fault,
doubtless, that she knew so much. He supposed that he and the other leaders
would have to be more secretive in their planning, hide themselves from their
own people half the time, keep the rank and file from knowing anything beyond
what they were absolutely required to know. There had to be ways to organize a
rebellion properly. To install a rigid command structure and iron discipline.
Such things were probably vital and would have to be used-if Ekuman let the
Free Folk survive long enough to learn them.
If he
meant to survive he had better get on with his retreat. He had gone only a
little -way further when, looking back, he saw the enemy begin to come out of
the rocks, tall wraith-like shapes on riding-beasts emerging in the moonlight.
Thomas crouched down again and kept on moving slowly away. The enemy troop
fanned out as they left the rocks, riding slowly in his general direction.
Obviously they hadn't seen him yet, but neither were they ready to go home for
the night.
Their
apparently random choice of a direction to search further was uncomfortably
accurate. With an underhand fling Thomas pitched a pebble way out to the
southeast, at right angles to the line of his retreat. They heard it, all
right; he saw some of them stop at the sound. They would think it was probably
an animal, but would be suspicious. Now their whole rank of twenty men or
thereabouts came to a halt. Thomas continued to pace softly and steadily away
from them. When they got underway again they were headed more to the east.
He
might have lain still now and let them pass him at a little distance, but there
was always the chance that they might turn again, and he didn't want them
pinning him against the mountain. So he kept on retreating along his original
line, getting a little farther out into the desert and breathing a little
easier. He was just congratulating himself that the pebble-tossing had been
exactly the right move, when one of the birds came drifting swiftly over his
head, hooting to him in the lowest of warning notes. Thomas turned, and what he
saw in the moonlight froze him in midstride. He felt himself suddenly huge and
nakedly exposed. The long open slope that a moment before had been so free and
sheltering in its distance was now a barren trap.
A vast
fan-formation of a hundred risers or more was coming down on him from the
north. Their line extended from the side of the mountain, sheer and unclimbable
just here, out into the desert farther than a man could see at night from where
Thomas stood. It was now all too plain to him that the smaller force which had
chased him out of the rocks was intended only to drive the game into the net.
They might be only engaged in training exercises, but the trap was very real.
He was
one man, and unmounted; they could scarcely have seen him yet. Both birds came
over Thomas's head for a moment, but they only turned together there in silence
and rose again. There was nothing that needed to be said; they would do what
they could, he knew, to help him get away.
The
trap looked very tight. He had stopped moving now because there was no place to
go. If he was taken alive ... he knew too much to risk that. He drew a long
knife, his only weapon, from his belt. It would be utterly foolish to try to
dash through the enemy line. As the noose drew tighter he huddled down, making
himself as small as possible, in the moon-shadow of a tiny bush. With one hand
he scraped up sand, trying to cover his legs sticking out of the shadow. It was
not going to be enough, and yet there was nothing better he could do. Unless
the birds could create some distraction.
The
ghostly-looking line of troopers came on at a walk that looked unhurried but
still covered ground. At the point of their line nearest Thomas, they were so
close together that a bush-bounder could not have crept unseen between them.
The cursed moon seemed growing brighter by the moment. Surely they must all see
him now, they were only playing with him. With only a knife he might not even
be able to kill one of them. He ceased trying to cover his legs, and held his
breath and waited. The line was almost upon him.
Suddenly
the rider nearest Thomas stood up straight in his stirrups. He had grown a
monstrous winged helmet, a blot of darkness that dragged and lifted at him,
tearing from him a terrible cry of pain and fear. His riding-beast panicked and
bucked, and those next in line on either side reared up, their masters
struggling to control them. "Birds!" The word was passed in low
voices, quickly, to the right and left.
The
first man who had been struck drove off his attacker somehow. The line
continued to move forward. There was another flurry of movement a little
distance off, and then another. Both birds were now attacking, making it seem
that there were more than two of them. Ranging up and down the line from the
spot where the first man had been struck, Strijeef and Feathertip spread pain
and confusion, dragged one man from his saddle, got home on others with beak or
talon, veered off from the attack if they found a man ready to meet them with
sword or short lance.
There
was no telling how long the birds could keep it up. Thomas forced himself to move
toward the enemy, out of the shadow of the bush, flat on his belly. It seemed
unbelievable that they did not see him. But the riders were looking up into the
starry air, guarding themselves. Their beasts were all prancing now,
uncertainly if not in downright panic.
On his
belly Thomas slid forward one meter after another, keeping his face turned down
and hidden. A riding-beast snorted almost over his head, and hooves trampled
past, almost hitting him. If the beast saw him, the rider did not.
He heard
a grunt of triumph from one of the men in the line that had now drawn past him,
and simultaneously a scream whose like he had never heard before from the
throat of man or beast. A little scuffle ended in a fluttering sound that he
had never before heard made by the wings of the Silent People. And then very
quickly the desert was once more almost silent.
Thomas
now lay on his face without moving, without trying to look around. The
knife-handle in his hand was slippery with sweat. He breathed the dust of the
desert floor. His ears told him that the line of troopers was moving on still,
going away from him.
When
the sounds were far away he rose cautiously to knees and elbows, and turned his
head. The mounted men were many meters distant now and still receding; he could
not see that any of them carried a feathered trophy. He crawled, circling as
widely as he dared over the area where the birds had fought the men. But he
could find no trace, not even a feather.
The
birds had saved him, whether they had died for him or not. Dead or wounded,
they were gone. Thomas crawled out into the desert until he had put sufficient
distance between himself and the enemy to feel safe in standing up. Looking
back, he saw that the noose had tightened all the way. The enemy force, once
gathered, seemed to be breaking up into smaller bands. There was no telling how
they might move next to scour the plain. The only course for Thomas was to keep
moving away from them, farther and farther out into the desert. Well, so be it,
then. He would turn back westward when he could. Maybe it would have to be
tomorrow night. He had his water bottle.
At dawn
he was still walking; by now the Castle and the pass were many kilometers
behind him. The Black Mountains ahead were not perceptibly closer. Nearly
barren, the land around him undulated to the horizon in all directions, without
a sign of men or man-made things.
Daylight
was liable to bring reptiles. The notch of the pass behind him was too distant
for him to see the leatherwings rising above the Castle, but he knew they would
be there. He would soon have to hole up for the day.
The
scanty vegetation here offered no really promising place to hide. He would go
on a little, looking for a bigger bush. Now in the growing light he began to
notice an odd thing. The sand in places had a crusty, pocked, granular look, as
if it had recently been rained on. Yes, just a day ago he and Rolf had seen the
improbable rainstorm moving over this part of the desert. The Oasis of the Two
Stones was in this general area, though Thomas could not see it for the rolling
of the land between. He went on, still searching for a good hiding place, and
casting frequent anxious glances up at the brightening sky.
Then he
saw a reptile, but it was on the ground, and dead -and, like the rain-stippled
sand around it, something of a marvel. He stepped over a low dune to find the
reptile's body there in the hollow before him. It lay sprawled and twisted,
gray-green no longer but swollen and black.
The
death was not the marvel -reptiles had their diseases and misfortunes, and
certainly their enemies -but rather the manner of the death. The body was
swelled enough to split the scaly skin, but not with decay, rather as if the
creature had been roasted alive. Yet the sand around showed no signs of fire or
great heat, only the faint marks of yesterday's rain.
Around
the swollen body stretched a strap that held a pouch -the reptile had been one
of Eku-man's couriers. Thomas turned the child-sized body over with his foot.
The pouch itself was burned black and torn; the charred fabric crumbled further
at his touch. There was no heat left in it now. Inside, his gingerly probing
found what had doubtless been a written message, but the paper dissolved into
ash-powder at a breath.
There
was something in the pouch, however, that did not dissolve. A closed case of
some heavy metal. It was of a shape that might contain some precious jewel, but
the size of Thomas's two fists. He turned it over carefully in his hands. It
was not an Old World thing, he decided, for its shape and joining lacked the
incredible precision that distinguished the metalworking of the ancients. It
was blackened and battered. Thomas could not read the signs that were graven on
it, but as he weighed it in his hands he felt certain that he held some
powerful magic. The enemy would hardly freight his couriers with mere
gimcracks.
So the
thing must be taken to Loford. Thomas buried the reptile and its emptied pouch
with hasty scrapings of sand, to keep the others of its kind from finding it.
Walking
on, he shook the strange case in his hands and could feel a shifting weight
inside. He turned it over and over, and felt the natural temptation to open it.
But caution prevailed over curiosity, and he thrust it unopened into his pack.
Looking
up again for reptiles, Thomas was pleased to see that the sky was clouding
over. If there was to be a peculiar rainy season this year in the desert, well,
he would take advantage of it; clouds would hide him from the reptiles better
than any of these scanty bushes could.
As the
sun came up a rim of clear sky brightened all around the horizon; but directly
overhead a solid low overcast a couple of kilometers in diameter developed. The
grayness of it thickened and darkened in swirls and ominous gatherings of
vapor, while Thomas mentally cheered it on. A good rain would not only protect
him from aerial observation, but could eliminate any chance of his running out
of water.
Thomas
sat down for a rest. The clouds showed no inclination to blow in any direction
today, the air seemed windless. The first grumble of thunder sounded overhead;
the first big drops came pelting down. He put out his tongue to taste them.
There
was a flare and flicker above, then thunder once again. Sullenness growing in
the atmosphere, and an electric pause. And then a high-pitched scream, that
brought Thomas leaping to his feet and spinning around. From the same direction
that he had come, a young woman was now running toward him, some fifty meters
away. She wore a simple farm-girl's dress, and a wide hat such as the folk of
the Oasis wore when working their unshaded fields. As she ran toward Thomas she
was crying out, "Oh, throw it! Throw it away from you!"
Some
buried part of his mind must have been aware already of the danger, for now he
did not hesitate an instant. He scooped the blackened thing of power out of his
pack and in the same motion of his arm lobbed the weight of it away from him,
putting all his strength into the effort. And then the air seared white around
him, and a shock great beyond hearing seemed to tear apart the world.
VI
Technology
With
slow steps Rolf walked twice around the Elephant, keeping a cautious distance
from it, holding his torch high.
Except
for the impression that it gave of enormous and mysterious power, this before
him did not much resemble the creature depicted in the symbols. This was a
flattened metal lozenge of smooth regular curves, built low to the ground for
something of its massive size. Here could be seen no fantastically flexible
snout, no jutting teeth. There was no real face at all, only some thin hollowed
metal shafts projecting all in one direction from the topmost hump. Looking
closely Rolf could see that around that hump, or head, were set some tiny
glassy-looking things, like the false eyes of some monstrous statue.
Elephant
was legless, which only made it all the more impressive by raising the question
of how its obvious power was to be unfolded and applied. Neither were there any
proper wheels, such as a cart or wagon had. Instead Elephant rested on two
endless belts of heavy, studded metal plates, whose shielded upper course ran
higher than Rolf's head.
On the
dull metal of each flank, painted small in size but with Old World precision,
was the familiar sign -the animal shape, gray and powerful, some trick of the
painter's art telling the viewer that what it represented was gigantic. In its
monstrous gripping nose the creature in the painting brandished a sharp-pointed
spear, jagged all along its length. Under its feet it trod the symbols:
426th
ARMORED DIVISION
-whose
meaning, and even language, were strange to Rolf. Now, holding his breath, he
ventured to put out a hand and touch a part of one of the endless belts, a
plate of armor too heavy for a man to carry or for a riding-beast to wear into
a fight. Nothing seemed to happen from the touch. Rolf dared to lay his hand
flat on the featureless surface of the Elephant's metal flank.
Then he
stepped back and looked around the rest of the cave. There was not much to see.
A few openings in the curving walls, holes too small for men to enter. Maybe
they were chimneys of a sort; the air in the cave was good. And there were the
huge doors set in the wall just ahead of Elephant -if "ahead" was the
direction in which the projections on the topmost hump were pointing.
These
doors were flat expanses of metal, seemingly covering an opening of just the
right size to permit Elephant's passage. The vertical cracks of imperfect
closure at the doors' edges were noticeably wider at the bottom than at the
top, as if the great panels had "been slightly warped. Through each
widened crack a small heap of pebbly dirt had sometime trickled to the floor
below.
Rolf
knelt thoughtfully to finger some of this debris. As nearly as he could
calculate, the floor here was at approximately the same vertical level as that
of the canyon outside. The same landslide that had made the rock-jumble out
there might easily have buried these doors.
He
closed his eyes for a moment to better visualize the various distances and
directions of his movements in coming into the cave. Yes, it seemed so. Let
these doors be opened, and some of the house-sized rocks outside them cleared
away, and Elephant would be free.
His
rush-light had burned down to a finger-searing shortness and he lighted another
from it. The air in the cave seemed as fresh as ever, and what little smoke his
torch gave off was rising steadily. It would be far too much dispersed and
faint for anyone to notice at the outer entrance of the cave.
Rolf
walked again around Elephant, running his hand along its surface. On this
circuit he paid much closer attention to details. This was like handling
Thomas's eyeglasses; there was no feeling of magic here, but a sense of other
powers that somehow seemed to suit Rolf better than wizardry.
High on
one vast armored flank, just above the covered upper leveM of the endless
tread, was a barely perceptible circular line, like the crack of a very
close-fitting door. Recessed in the surface of this circle was a handle that
might tug it open, if it was indeed a door. And now Rolf saw there were four
small steps, set into the solid metal, ascending from floor level to the
circle.
He took
a deep breath, gripped his torch precariously between his teeth, and climbed.
The handgrip on the door accepted his fingers easily. Deep in his throat he
muttered a protective spell, half-forgotten since his childhood-and then he
pulled. His first tug was resisted, and his second. Then, when he dared lean
all his weight outward from the handle, ancient stiffness yielded with a sudden
crack of sound. The door, incredibly thick, swung open on a hinge. In that
moment a sharp, straining click sounded somewhere in Elephant's inside, and
there was light, striking out of the door like the golden beams of the sun.
Already
off balance, Rolf half-leaped, half-fell from Elephant's side, his torch
landing on the stone floor beside him. He did not need the torch, with the flood
of true illumination washing out of Elephant's opened side. That golden glow
was not as bright as sunlight, he saw now, but it was as steady as the sun,
without smoke or flames or flickering
Now
Ardneh will appear, Rolf thought, and made himself stand up. He had some idea,
or thought he did, of how a demon should look, but no ideas at all about a god.
He waited, but no creature of any sort appeared. Elephant was as immobile as
ever.
He
chose to take the light as a favorable sign, and once more climbed the steps,
pausing to marvel at the balance of the heavy door that he had opened. He
paused again with his eyes just above the lower rim of the doorway, for the
shapes inside were of a bewildering variety and all at first seemed utterly
strange. Printed or graven symbols, not one of which Rolf could read, were
sprinkled" thickly everywhere. Nothing moved; nothing was clearly
menacing. The light as steady as the sun came from little panels that glowed
like white-hot iron but yet seemed to radiate no warmth.
Pulling
himself up gradually until he was halfway into the doorway, Rolf listened. From
somewhere deeper inside Elephant came very faint murmuring, a little like
running water, a little like soft wind. Wind it was, perhaps, for air was
moving faintly out of the doorway, past Rolf's face.
He sat
in the doorway a little longer, probing the strangeness before him with busy
eyes. Actually the open space inside Elephant was not very big. Three or four
men would pretty well fill it, and be crowded among all the strange objects
that were already there. But now Rolf could see certain indications that humans
were meant to enter. The door itself had an immensely strong but simple latch
that could be worked only from inside. And the narrow clear paths of the metal
floor had been roughly surfaced, as if to provide good traction for human feet.
And from the fixed furniture of peculiar objects there extended several
projections that looked like tool-handles, made to fit the grip of human
fingers.
Soon
Rolf was crouching entirely inside the doorway, bathing in the heatless light,
continuing to marvel. From here he could see more. Three objects that had
puzzled him at first he suddenly understood to be chairs. They were low and
stoutly made, faced not toward one another but side by side, turned in what
seemed to be the direction Elephant was facing, toward the huge flat doors.
With
gradually increasing boldness, Rolf carefully stood upright -though he was not
tall, he had little head-room-and made his way step by step, touching things
with deliberate caution, to the central chair. This chair was thickly surfaced
with stuff that might once have been good padding but was now hard and brittle.
It cracked at his touch and sent up a cloud of dust when he at last dared to
sit on it. The dust made him sneeze, but soon it was borne away by the
mysterious whispering circulation of the air.
Around
the three seats and in front of them were ranged many incomprehensible objects,
made of metal and glass and substances more difficult to name. Here were
several of the handles that might have been those of tools or weapons;
experiments first cautious and then more energetic convinced Rolf that none of
these handles were intended to be pulled free to reveal simple tools of some
sort on their working ends.
Elephant
seemed to be accepting Rolf as some huge placid work-beast might tolerate a
baby's prodding; when this comparison occurred to Rolf he smiled. A feeling of
possessive power was growing in him. All these wonders were becoming his -
already they belonged more to him than to any other living man. Suppose Thomas
were here now, or Loford. Suppose one of the clever and mighty wizards of the
Castle. Would any of them dare do this? And Rolf raised a hand, and touched
casually one of the light-panels, which gave off only the faintest warmth.
Sitting
in the middle chair, he noticed that above each seat there hung a mask. Each
mask had a strap, as if to hold it on a human head, and two glass rounds for
eyes. From each mask's nose there curled away a snout of more than Elephantine
length, to fit into a socket in the wall. Rolf's first touch made the face of
the mask that rested above his chair crack dryly, and broke the long snout into
a shower of dust and brittle fragments.
Blinking
his eyes and brushing powder out of his hair, he looked around him
apprehensively. But still nothing happened. Even the murmuring whispering
seemed to be smoothing itself down nearer silence.
Rolf
sighed out a long shuddering breath and was aware that, for the moment at
least, the last of his fear had left him. His being here was all right, all
right with whatever powers were in charge. He waited. The quiet air seemed
pregnant with importance. The movement of the air carried the fresh dust away.
A broken mask perhaps did not matter to Ardneh, for Ardneh was not a demon. He
was - something more than that. If he was anything at all.
On a
sudden impulse Rolf spoke soft words aloud. "Ardneh? You were a god in the
Old World, where this Elephant was made. I know that much. I don't know any
spells to call you up. Since you're not a demon maybe spells aren't needed-I
don't know."
He
paused. Encouragement seemed to wrap him, through the softly moving air.
"Loford
says that you have come to stand for freedom, and so I ... I wish that you
would work through me. Someone said that the Old One was Ardneh, in a way, and
in the same way I want to be Ardneh too." For a moment Rolf in his
imagination saw himself as the warrior of Loford's vision, mounted on Elephant,
armed with the thunderbolt in his hands. And for a moment the dream did not
seem ridiculous.
Still
no voice but the steady fading murmuring answered him. Rolf twisted in his
seat, suddenly feeling like a fool kid playing, talking to himself. He sneezed
again in the fresh dust raised by his movement. So much for that. It would be
nice to have a sorcerer's power, but there was no point in playing at it like a
child. He had no real control of demons, nor of gods either, whatever they
might be.
He
decided to get on with the job. Again he began to test the objects before him
and around him with his hands, pulling and prodding and twisting carefully. If
there was a magical aspect to Elephant, he was incapable of dealing with it. He
would just have to approach it like a farmer confronted with some strange and
enormous tool, trying the handles that should make it work-Rolf grunted in
surprise, and snatched his hands away from the table-like thing before him.
Within a glassy panel on that table a series of dots of light had suddenly
appeared, all regular in form and spacing though no two alike in color. Above
and around the dots and also limned in pure light were sets of characters, in a
language unreadable to Rolf. The largest said: CHECKLIST.
After
contemplating this for a little time, and reassuring himself that nothing more
serious had happened, Rolf was emboldened to put his hand back on the control
he had last touched, and push where he had just pulled. The lights in the panel
before him obediently died away. He turned them on and off and on again,
savoring new power.
The
upper most dot on the panel was bright orange. A small knobbed lever at the
side of the panel, near Rolf's right hand, had also acquired a marking of
orange light. He pushed it, and it moved with a click.
NUCLEAR
POWER IGNITION sprang out in orange characters beneath CHECKLIST on the panel.
And at the same moment Elephant grunted.
The
grunt came from deep in Elephant's guts. It repeated itself, and turned into a
groan, like the agony of some deep bellyache. Rolf, stricken suddenly by all
old fears redoubled, grabbed at the little lever to reverse what he had done.
His shaking fingers missed, as the whole bulk of Elephant lurched beneath him.
The groaning divided itself into divers voices, like those of a cage full of
demons all in torment and wrestling one against another. Rolf sat paralyzed,
afraid to try to stop them now, afraid to let them go. The voices slowly
managed harmony in their wrath, their shouting racing faster, blurring into a
single shuddering roar.
NUCLEAR
POWER ON
Rolf
might have leaped up and fled, but for the thought that he could never get out
of the cave before Ardneh struck him down. He clutched his dust-exhaling chair
and waited.
Nothing
struck him. Instead, Elephant's shaking gradually diminished. The roaring
deepened, becoming smoother and more certain. An exhilarating sense of enormous
power being delivered into his hands blended with Rolf's returning confidence,
making it stronger than ever.
The
orange dot was gone now from beside the NUCLEAR POWER ON legend inside the
glass panel, and the markings of orange light were gone from the little lever.
The next highest dot in the panel was purple, and now purple markings glowed on
another small handle, this one at Rolf's left.
This
time he closed his eyes in wincing anticipation as the control clicked under
his fingers. When he opened them again he knew another brief spasm of fear. A
ring like a giant's collar, nearly a meter in diameter, was descending from
above his chair to encircle his head.
The
ring came to a halt, not touching him, at the level of his eyes. The inner
surface of it was flat and bright, shot with moving patterns of light, the way
he supposed a wizard's crystal might look if the visions were uncertain. But
soon this confusion cleared away, and Rolf found that by some power he was
looking through the surface of the wide ring as if it was a window. This was
something more in-pressive than Thomas's far-seeing glasses. He could see the
cave around him, the big flat doors ahead, with perfect ease, as if the solid
mass of Elephant had become transparent as water.
Purple
was gone. Now there was a red dot on the panel, and a red-lit control to
handle.
ARMAMENT
INOPERATIVE
A pair
of thin red lines, crossing each other at right angles, had appeared on his
vision-ring. Rolf pressed at the red control again, and a spurt of what looked
like liquid fire came lashing feebly from one of the projections on Elephant's
snout. It was as if Elephant had retched up a mouthful of pure flame, and
fouled its own forequarters with its spitting. Only one drop of the flame shot
as far as the doors ahead, where it hung heavily, oozing lower like a
fire-tear, leaving a blackened trace above it.
Now
Rolf sat still for some time, watching the spattering of fire cool and blacken
on the door and on Elephant's impervious metal hide. At last he tried again the
control that had brought the fire, but this time nothing came. The red dot,
unlike the previous ones, stayed on the panel, along with ARMAMENT INOPERATIVE,
though he could make the thin red cross-lines on his vision-ring come and go.
He
decided that he would go on anyway to the next color, which was a spring-sky
blue. He got the blue dot to go out, and went on, testing control after
control. There were others that stayed lighted, turning red. Some caused
strange rumblings or cracklings around him. Some controls produced no effect
that he could see, except for changing the lights on the panel.
When
finally the lowest dot in the sequence winked away, the CHECKLIST legend
vanished with it. And now for the first time light appeared on the two most
prominent handgrips within his reach, outlining them in bright green. These two
handles, sturdy enough to have fit a plow, stood one on each side of his chair.
He had tried moving them before, without result. Now he tried again.
At his
first gentle pressure on the levers, the roaring beneath him, which had
gradually been smoothing itself down to a lower level of noise, came swelling
up. Rolf hesitated, waited, and then stiffened his arms, pushing the two levers
forward. Groaning anew, Elephant gave a lurching start and moved. Suddenly the
doors were very close ahead. Startled, Rolf yanked both levers back. His great
mount bucked, with a sound of studded metal plates laboring like monstrous
claws on the stone floor, and then lurched into reverse. It gathered speed. Now
the rear wall of the cave was very close behind. Again Rolf over-reacted, pushing
the levers forward hard. In his haste he moved them unevenly this time, the
right farther than the left. Elephant skewed toward his left as he advanced
again. His right shoulder touched a door just as Rolf, fighting against panic,
once more reversed his two hand controls. Any child could use a pair of reins.
You had to let the creature you were driving know that you were boss. The
homely thought-pattern helped him get himself under control, and when he had
done that he found that the control of Elephant was easy.
Carefully,
with the beginning of skill, he eased his great mount forward and backward.
There did not seem to be room for a full turn, but he started a turn to the
left and stopped and came back and began one to the right. At last he brought
Elephant back to somewhere near his original position, standing still and
quietly vibrating.
He
dared then to let go of the controls, to wipe sweat from his face. He nodded to
himself-quite enough for one day, yes. He had probably pushed his luck too far
already. He had to find out now if he could put Elephant back to sleep.
Following
what seemed to him the commonsense way to accomplish this, Rolf began to return
the controls he had moved to their original positions, in the reverse order
from that which he had used to wake the Elephant up. The system worked. The
colored dots began reappearing on the panel, bottom to top. Soon the
vision-ring dimmed, became opaque, rose up away from his head. And soon after
that the roar of power mumbled down into silence, and all the characters and
dots of CHECKLIST vanished behind dark glass once more.
Slowly,
trembling with a tension he had not fully realized till now, Rolf climbed out
of the hole in Elephant's side. At first he left the door open, the light
pouring out, while he stood on the stone floor marveling. Yes, it had all
really happened. There was a fresh gouge-scar where Elephant's shoulder had
touched the surface of the enormous door; there were blackened spots on the
door and on Elephant's own surface, where the spattering of fire had
fallen-maybe Elephant's thunderbolts had grown feeble with the passing of the
years. If so, it hardly seemed to matter. The size and power and metallic
invulnerability of the Elephant seemed weapons great enough for any battle.
In a
moment of imagination he saw himself battering down the Castle walls, rescuing
Sarah. But he must rest, to be ready for the night, when surely birds would
come, and possible human help as well.
He
lighted a rush, then climbed the Elephant's flank again to push shut the
massive door, the door's last closure shutting off the light inside. Going up
the rope with the torch between his teeth, he could envision Loford and Thomas
and the others refusing to believe all he had to tell.
The
upper cave was bright with midday. He took off his pack, and ate and drank a
little. There was only a mouthful of water remaining in the bottle. Probably
the birds would bring him more, as soon as darkness fell. Yes, they would
certainly be back tonight.
Excited
as he was, Rolf soon fell asleep sitting on hard rock in the high cave, and
awoke only as the first darkness was welling up outside. He shook the water in
his bottle, and then drank down the last of it, for now the birds would surely
be here soon.
Full night
came, and he looked for them with every passing moment, and yet they did not
come.
Sitting
now in the cave's very mouth, he could see some of the sky, and mark the stars.
Let that bright blue one, he thought, pass from sight behind the pinnacle opposite,
and time enough will have passed. I can be sure then that there's something
wrong. But they must be here before the heavens have turned the star that far.
Surely any moment now . . .
The
blue star rode its measured course and vanished. Half-relieved at being forced
to action, Rolf stood up, biting his lip. All right, then. Something was very
wrong. He was going to have to leave the cave and try to get back to the swamp
and find his friends. Not only was he out of water, but the information he had gained
was too important to be delayed.
Still
nothing but the night-wind seemed to be stirring in the dark outside the cave.
He anchored his climbing rope again, put on his pack, and then began to lower
himself outside. He kept the free length of the rope coiled up, paying it out
only as he went down. Looking down now at what the moonlight showed him of the
rocks below, he thought he must have been a half-wit or a great hero, to have
made that jump that got him into the cave.
His
feet touched down at last. Now was the time for the enemy, who had been waiting
patiently, to rush out . . . but no rush came. They had never known that he was
here.
After
several tries he managed to whip his rope free of its anchorage above; he
reached as best he could, balanced on the tumbled stones, to catch the
anchor-stick as it came falling. But he failed to catch it, so it made a soft
clatter when it hit. But no one came, only the night breeze still whispering
softly along the canyon.
He made
a quick job of coiling the long rope into his pack. And then he set off for the
swamps, working his way cautiously out of the canyon and the rocks to emerge on
the western slope of the mountain's foot with the river below him. He angled
northward down this slope, heading away from pass and Castle. He had gone only
about a hundred meters when the feel of sandy soil under his feet suggested
that it might be a good idea for him to bury his pack with all its equipment.
He could hardly keep quiet about where he had been if they caught him with all
of that, and he would travel lighter and faster without it.
When he
had covered up the pack he went on, getting down toward the east bank of the
Dolles, still half-expecting to be greeted at any moment by the hooting of a
bird.
He avoided
the places where he and Thomas, on their way up to the pass, had seen soldiers.
After a couple of kilometers he got down to the water's edge. Here he knew the
river was shallow clear across; he waded in, clothes and all.
He had
hardly climbed out on the western bank before the Castle soldiers sprang out of
hiding to seize him. He turned at once to flee, but something that felt
incredibly hard and heavy struck him on the side of the head.
He was
face down in the riverside mud. As if through a muffling fog he could hear the
voices over him.
"That
settled 'im down good." A brief laugh. "Did this one get t' the
barges? See if he's got any loot on "im."
Hands
turned and shook and prodded him. "Naw, nothin'."
"What'll
we do, hang 'im in a tree? We haven't hung a thief on this side of the river
yet."
"Um.
No, they need workers, up at the Castle. This 'un looks healthy enough to be
some use. If you didn't scramble his brains."
VII
The Two
Stones
Thomas,
still dazzled by a dance of luminous afterimages before his eyes, his ears
ringing, raised his head and began to try to regather his wits. He was lying on
the desert, where a moment ago he had fallen or had been flung. It was raining
hard. He wiped a hand across his eyes, trying to see more clearly. A little
distance away the farm-girl in the wide hat knelt, looking at him.
"You
are not dead," she was saying. "Oh, I'm glad. You're not one of them,
are you? Oh no, of course you're not. I'm sorry."
"Of
course I'm not." Let the young woman be dried out a little, he thought,
and she would be quite good looking. He noticed that there was no wedding ring
on her finger. "Why did you yell a warning? How did you know what was
going to happen?"
The
girl had turned away from him, and was looking around her now, as if for some
lost object. "Since I did save your life, will you help me now, please?
I've got to find it."
"The
thing that was in that case, hey?"
"Yes,
where did it go?"
"If
it was mine I'm not sure I'd ever want to see it again."
"Oh,
but I -must." She stood up, peering this way and that.
"My
name is Thomas."
"Oh
-I am Olanthe."
"Of
the Oasis? I see you wear one of their hats."
"I.
. .yes. Now will you help me find the Stone?"
She
seemed to realize too late that the last word had let slip another bit of
information.
"The
Stone, hey?" An idea struck him. "The Oasis of the Two Stones; I
suppose the name means something. Would this Stone you're looking for be one of
those? I'd just like to know what it was that nearly killed me."
The
rain was slowing down. Olanthe turned away from him, searching, walking a
widening spiral over the sand.
"Olanthe?
I have good reason to be curious, don't you think? I wish you no harm out in
your Oasis. I was a farmer once myself. Say, how did you get out past the
guards?"
"You
were a farmer? What are you now?" "Now I fight."
She
gave him an appraising glance. "I hear the real fighters are in the
swamps."
"And
I do want to thank you for shouting a warning. You could have done it sooner,
though, hey?" Her eyes turned away, roving distractedly over the nearby
dunes and bushes. "I ... did see you, bending over the dead reptile. At
first I thought you might be only a bandit."
"This
Stone of yours draws lightning somehow, and it killed the reptile. You followed
meIwaiting for the lightning to come again, so you could pick up the Stone from
my burned body. And then you couldn't do it."
"I
didn't know you, I was afraid," she said in a small voice. "Help me
find it, please, it's very important."
"I
can understand that. Look,you don't have to be frightened of me, farm-girl, if
what you say is true. Keep your Stone. We in the swamps don't need its
rain." The rain had all but stopped; Thomas looked up at the sky, where
rents and gaps of blue were showing through the cloudy mass. "Since you
seem to be no better friend than I am of the reptiles, you'd better take
shelter under one of these bushes, as I intend to do."
"First
I must find the Stone! It can't be far."
"All
right, I give up. If they see you running around here they'll find me too. Does
the thunderbolt actually hit the Stone? At least you can tell me something
about it while we search."
They
were both casting over the mounded desert now, eyes on the ground, walking in
loops and circles that moved them apart and brought them together again.
Olanthe spoke rapidly. "The bolt always hits the Stone directly, yes, and
sometimes throws it for many meters. After that the storm can end." She added
what was probably a warning: "You see, whoever formed the Stone meant to
make it proof against any one creature's greed. Only when possession of it
passes from one to another does its virtue take effect, and summon up a
thunderstorm."
Thomas
had just seen something, twenty meters away. It was the Stone in its case, if
he was not mistaken, but picking it up was not going to be easy.
In a
moment Olanthe had noticed his fixed attention and was walking at his side.
"Oh!" she said, seeing what he saw. The blackened metal case was
half-submerged under what appeared to be the flat shimmering surface of a pool
of water some eight meters across, filling a small hollow between dunes.
"Mirage-plant!"
Thomas
nodded. "And about the biggest one I've seen." There was no doubt
about what the thing was; reason told that any such flourishing pond of real
water here was totally improbable.
In
itself, the illusion was flawless. Sunlight sparkled off the seeming surface of
the pond (though the rain, which had now stopped, would have fallen through
without splashing and shown the pond not to hold water.) Small green plants,
genuine enough, living on moisture doled out by the quasi-intelligent
masterplant below, rimmed around the illusive pool. This camouflage gave an
appearance of coolness to the surface of the pond, which was in fact only a
plane maintained between layers of air of different temperatures. This surface
rippled faintly, like real water, with the wind. Thomas knew that if one bent
to drink and brought his eyes within a meter of the surface, the illusion
failed. Man or animal would jump back, once that point was reached; but if they
were that close, none lived who could jump fast enough.
Thomas
frowned at the sky, where the clouds were still dispersing, not gathering anew.
"Did you not tell me that a new storm was summoned up every time the Stone
changed hands, and that a bolt must come to strike the Stone itself? If so, we
need only wait, and our little pond here will be safely boiled."
They
had stopped about ten meters from the mirage. Olanthe shook her head. "A
storm comes only when the Stone is taken up by human hands, or by a creature
like the reptile that is capable of speech."
The
Stone rested in a shallow part of the seeming pool, under the surface. It would
seem to be very easy simply to step forward and pick it up.
Thomas
got some rope out of his pack and made a lasso, with which he had a try at
casting around the case. The loop sank silently through the surface of the
"water," and then at once snapped taut. Thomas dug his heels into the
sand; Olanthe came to lend her slender strength to his aid, but shortly it was
either let go or be dragged in. From just outside the zone of real danger, the
two of them watched with fascination while the rope's tail whipped out of sight
like that of a plunging snake. But there was evidently little to the
mirage-plant's liking in the rope -a few moments later it was spat out, wound
into a knotty ball and looking otherwise the worse for wear, spat or tossed
through the air to land a dozen meters away.
At
Olanthe's suggestion they next had a try at filling in or smothering the
mirage-plant with sand. But the sand was flung back at them faster than they,
keeping at a safe distance, could scoop it into the depression. And there were
no rocks available to throw.
"If
only it would spit out your Stone, as it does sand and rope," Thomas
griped. "But no, it must have a taste for magic."
Now
that she knew where the Stone was, Olanthe did not seem much worried about retrieving
it. She said, "Well, then, one of us must just try to distract the
creature, while the other rushes up and grabs the Stone."
"Oh,
just like that? Your life is not overly important to you?"
"The
Stone is life, to the people at the Oasis." She looked at him haughtily.
"Oh, I will be the one to expose myself to danger and create a
distraction. It is my property that we are trying to save. And your plan of
lassoing it did not work out very well."
The
last accusation was undeniable, but he still had not connected it logically to
the new plan when he found himself volunteering insistently to create the
distraction himself-though if he gave himself time to think about it, he was
not at all sure which of the two roles was the more dangerous. The girl
couldn't have maneuvered him into taking the part she wanted him to have, could
she? Just that quickly and easily?
Having
rehearsed their plan briefly, Thomas and Olanthe separated, then approached the
innocent-looking pool from opposite sides. After an exchange of nods, Thomas
rushed forward shouting. In one hand he was carrying his knife, in the other
the chewed-up rope, which he had partially untangled. He braked to a halt at
the last instant, going down on all fours in the sand. He reached forward and
lashed with the rope at the surface of the mirage. It seemed that the trick
might work, for the creature beneath began grabbing again at the once-rejected
fibers.
Olanthe
was very quick, and her timing perfect. Unfortunately however she fumbled the Stone
in the instant of picking it up, and was forced to reach for it again. Looking
across from the other side of the pool, Thomas for the first time saw the
deadly tendrils of the mirage-plant as they shot above the surface of the
illusion, looping and snapping about the girl's body with marvelous speed. He
shouted. He hurled himself around the edge of the pool and plunged into the
struggle, slashing with his knife. Only when he was enmeshed himself did he
realize that, incredibly, the deadly network had not been able to hold the
girl, that she was backing away quite free. He had no time to wonder about her
luck, for his own was not so good. He was gripped around the waist and head.
His blade severed one of the tough, elastic tendrils, but two more snapped
around him, their suckers thirsting for his blood. One curled around his right
arm, in which he held his knife. His left hand was already caught behind his
back. He was sprawled on the sand, only his feet, dug in desperately, keeping
him from being dragged to his death. The apparent water-surface had entirely
vanished now, as the carnivorous plant devoted its full energy to hauling in
this stubborn prey. When the pull of it dragged Thomas half upright again he
could see down into the hollow, see the nest of writhing mouths and the white
animal-bones between them, where the illusion had shown nothing but a sandy
bottom.
Thomas
cried out something. He saw the girl, a look of anguish on her face, reaching
into her small pack. Her hand emerged holding a grayish, egg-shaped object
which she thrust out toward him. "Here!"
He had
to drop his useless knife to take the thing she pressed into his clutching
fingers. It was hard and heavy in his grasp. Before he could wonder what he was
supposed to do with it, he felt the mirage-plant's grip loosening. It was as if
his skin and clothing had suddenly developed surfaces of oil and melting ice.
In a moment he had pulled free and was several meters away. He lay gasping on
the sand while he watched the frustrated tendrils wave about disconsolately and
then withdraw.
Olanthe,
the Thunderstone in its battered case still under her arm, came to kneel beside
him; she reached out a tentative hand to take back the small gray Stone that
Thomas still held; but instead he shot out his own hand and took her by the
wrist.
"One
moment, my girl. Bring out yet another Stone and destroy me with it, if you
will, but first I will have some explanations."
Still,
when she made no answer but only struggled silently to pull away from him, he
let her go. When he had done this, she was willing to sit on the sand nearby,
looking apologetic. "I -I have no more Stones. There are no more."
"Aha.
That's something. Yes, that's good. If it were the Oasis of the Dozen Stones, I
don't know what -" He broke off suddenly and looked up. "The sun is
being hidden once again. I take it we may soon expect another
thunderbolt?"
She
waved a slenderhand impatiently. "Oh yes, of course, since the
Thunderstone has changed hands again in coming back to me. But that's all
right. I'll leave it here on the sand, and we'll just go a little distance off
and wait. Then after it's been hit I'll be able to carry it safely."
"May
I suggest that you leave it at a safe distance from the mirage-plant? So that
we won't have to ... hey? And while we sit through another rainfall, you might
explain to me the virtues of this other Stone."
The
clouds were swiftly thickening once more. Thomas and Olanthe, their clothing
not yet dried from the previous storm, left the Thunderstone in a gentle hollow
between dunes and went a few score paces distant to sit together under the
useless shelter of a desert bush.
She
blurted out, "I didn't want you to know about the Stone of Freedom too.
Otherwise I could have simply walked up to the mirage-plant and taken my
property back."
"Yes,
I see that, now."
"I'm
sorry. Those suckers didn't draw any blood, did they? Good. Well, now you know
our secrets, and I must trust you. We need help at the Oasis. The invaders
are-we can't endure them."
"Who
can? We may be able to help each other." The new rain began to fall.
Thomas was thoughtful. "Tell me more about these Stones."
The
origin of the two Stones, Olanthe said, was lost in the past. Since the
beginnings of the history of the Oasis the farmers there had possessed them
both. The folk of the Oasis for the most part lived in harmony with one
another, content to stay half-isolated from the rest of the world, though they
had been friendly and hospitable to visitors and exhausted travelers who
strayed in from the desert. The secrets of the two Stones had been kept within
their settlement.
The
desert soil was rich, lacking only water. And whenever the fields of the Oasis
needed rain, he who held the Stone of Thunder at the time would present it to
his neighbor; so water came just to suit the farmers' wishes, and drought and
flood were alike unknown. The other talisman, called the Stone of Freedom or
the Prisoner's Stone, was kept hidden, and only the elders of the Oasis knew of
its existence. It was of little use to honest men as long as freedom ruled the
land.
Then
the foul invaders from the East had come, in force too strong to be resisted.
The elders had somehow managed to preserve the secrets of both Stones.
"Alas,
it was my own father who broke the pact of secrecy. Oh, he acted not through
any wish to help the invaders, no, the very opposite." After saying that
Olanthe fell silent for a moment, her eyes downcast, rain dripping from the
brim of her wide fieldworker's hat.
"How,
then?" Thomas wiped rain from his own eyes. This was becoming a soggy
desert indeed. He felt vaguely cheered by the reflection that a certain
mirage-plant might be the first of its species ever to drown.
Olanthe
was looking down at her hands folded in her lap. "The commander of the
invaders' garrison . . . that is . . .he wanted ..."
"Something
to do with you?"
"Yes.
. . me." She nodded, and looked up. "When I was unwilling, they made
threats . . ." She fell silent, until Thomas reached out and took her
hand.
"Afterward
- " She had to clear her throat and start over. "Afterward, my
fatherwas -he happened to have the Thunderstone in his fields at the time. He
unearthed it from its hiding place - "
The
latest bolt came smashing down at the Stone forty or fifty meters away, making
Thomas jump for all that he had been expecting it, jarring his teeth and bones
anew.
"-and,
pretending to curry favor, he gave it to the garrison commander. My father
acted as if he was pleased that the pig had taken a fancy to me. My father told
him that the Stone had something to do with the Oasis' rain, but of course he
never mentioned lightning.
"They-they
stood talking inside the invaders' compound, there, in what used to be a park.
My father said later that he could hear the thunder starting overhead while
they stood there, and he smiled at his enemy, the man who had . . .and then the
commander turned away, with the Thunder-stone under his arm, to walk across the
parade-ground to his quarters. He never finished his walk."
Thomas
nodded. He squeezed Olanthe's hand slightly. She went on: "Next day a
soldier picked the Stone up and brought it right to the one who had been second
in command, and was now in charge. They knew it was something of magical importance,
but they guessed no more than that. Before another storm could break over their
heads they had put the Thunderstone into the pouch of a courier reptile and
dispatched it to the wizards at the Castle. We knew this because we could see
the growing storm follow the reptile out over the desert. We knew the storm
must catch up before the leather-wing reached the Castle. It was necessary for
someone to go out and recover the Stone, before it fell again into the hands of
enemies or strangers. Without it, the Oasis would die for lack of water."
"How
were you chosen?"
"A
girl can search as well as a man. And others of the enemy would be-would be
after me, now that the old commander is dead. And my father would do something
else -and perhaps bring destruction on us all.
"So
the elders were willing enough that I should leave, and they gave me the Stone
of Freedom, which for its bearer sets fences and guards and all confinements at
naught. Now I must return the Thunderstone to the Oasis somehow, and then -I
don't know what I'll do."
"I
see." Thomas shifted in his drenched clothes. The rain was thinning again.
The Thunderstone had not been moved far by the latest bolt -he could see it, a
small dark lump on the sand.
He
stretched out his hand with the Stone of Freedom in it to Olanthe. "The
Stones are yours. But tell me, what use are they, what use is life itself, to
your people, as long as the invaders are there?"
She
accepted the Stone. "What can we do? What are you getting at? I must take
back the Thunderstone or all will perish."
"The
Oasis can live for a few more days at least without it. And remember this:
while it's there, the enemy may find it, realize what it is, and perfect his
power over you."
She
asked again, pleading now, "What can we do?"
Thomas
smiled. He stood up, just as the sun broke out once more. "I can think of
several things. And I know those who will be able to think of more. Come with
me to the swamps!"
VIII
Chup
Dazed
as he was by the blow on the head, Rolf still had wit enough left to realize
that the soldiers thought him nothing more than a thief, who had been trying to
get aboard one of the barges in the river. They asked him no questions, and he
said nothing at all.
Feet
hobbled and hands bound painfully behind him, he was taken to a command post
concealed in trees right by the riverbank. His head throbbing, he sat on the
ground and tried to think of nothing. There were too many soldiers for him to
have a hope of getting loose, and they seemed discouragingly capable as they
went about their routines of duty.
At
earliest daylight the watch was changed. The soldiers who had caught Rolf now
tied a leading cord around his neck, freed his legs, and took him up the road
to the Castle, tethered behind a riding-beast like some small animal being led
to slaughter.
The
journey was not long. The road followed the west bank of the Dolles for a
couple of kilometers, joining on the way with other roads that converged toward
the pass. Shortly the pass came in sight, with the village and its bridge in
the foreground, and the Castle brooding above.
Crossing
the bridge, Rolf raised his eyes to the northeast, looking at the high, distant
rocks that only a day ago had hidden him in safety. Now he saw that which
deepened his despair-reptiles were on those rocks, and in the air above them,
thick as flies on dead meat. And, marching up that slope, like bronze-black
ants, a company of soldiers.
The
enemyhad found the cave, then. That must be it. Rolf brought his eyes back to
the bridge under his feet, hardly aware any longer of his surroundings. He was
lost, and all else too.
Once
over the bridge, the soldiers began to relax their vigilance. In the nearly
deserted village square they halted, straightening their uniforms, evidently
getting in proper shape for appearance in the Castle.
Rolf
stood staring dully at the rump of the riding-beast that he was tethered to,
until a movement at the corner of his eye caused him to turn his aching head.
The village inn, a two-story timber structure, was evidently still in business,
for two men were standing on its porch.
His
heart leaped when he recognized Mewick. There could be no mistake, the lean
figure was the same, though liberal streaks of gray in the dark hair had added
twenty years of age -added them credibly, when seen above the lined gravity of
Mewick's face. The short cloak and the magic peddler's pack were gone. Mewick
was wearing moderately rich clothing now, putting Rolf in mind of merchants he
had seen now and then, who were said to be from far islands in the sea.
Rolf
looked away, holding his face blank. Let him make one blunder now, and Mewick
could be dragged away beside him, both to meet some grimmer fate than that of a
mere thief. Desperately, Rolf tried to think of some way of passing on to
Mewick his new knowledge of the Elephant.
The
porch of the inn was not ten meters distant. He could hear Mewick talking with
a rotund man, perhaps the innkeeper, about problems of trade and snipping, the
prevalence of bandits. Mewick sounded gloomy as ever. Let him ask something
about the soldiers swarming on yonder hill-let him ask something that I can
answer yes or no, thought Rolf, and I will nod my head or shake it, enough for
him to see.
But
Mewick asked no such thing -dared not, or could not think of a useful question
that could be made to sound innocent. Rolf could not either. Tonight when he
was in the dungeon they would both think often questions Mewick might have
asked. Or of some other way of passing information. But at least Rolf knew that
Mewick must have seen him - that was something, that his fate was not entirely
unknown to his friends. Staring straight ahead, Rolf made one nodding motion of
his head.
The
soldiers were ready now, and dragged him on again. Once out of the little
village, the road ascended, worn deep here by the daily passage of an army. The
walls and towers of the Castle swelled with nearness now. The main gate stood
open, the portcullis looking more than ever like the teeth in some vast jaw.
In an
inner courtyard, where the stables were, Rolf's bonds were taken off, and he
was given to guards who wore no bronze helmets and carried no swords, but had
only keys and cudgels at their belts. These pushed him into a doorway at the
base of the keep, and from thence led him downward over worn, damp stairs. Just
underground, the passage became level, dark and narrow. It was lined with
cells, separated by heavy grilles of iron. Some of these were crowded with
wretched figures while others waited empty, doubtless for the return of slaves
who labored somewhere up above. The smell was worse than that of any animal pen
that Rolf had ever visited. Rolf was sent with an impersonal kick to join the
apathetic bodies in one cell, and the door was made fast behind him.
The
morning light that entered so poorly into those upper dungeons had little
better success in penetrating the richly curtained windows of the upper tower.
It was not the sun that awoke the Satrap Ekuman today, but voices, quietly
excited, just outside his chamber door.
Blinking,
he roused himself in his vast bed. When his concubine of the night, who was
curled sleeping like some soft beast at her master's feet, made a movement that
impeded his stretching, he kicked at her irritably. Once on his feet, he
wrapped his body in a fur gown, then spent a moment in setting aside the
magical defense that guarded the door of his bedchamber from within, before he
called out to know whose business brought them to him at this hour.
It was
the Master of the Reptiles who was passed in by the guards. This Master was a
small man, usually phlegmatic in his manner. But his face was now aglow with
triumph, so that the sight of him made Ekuman's hopes blaze up before the man
had spoken.
"Sire,
we have found the Elephant for you!" That said, the Master rushed quickly
on with explanations, as Ekuman's expression bade him do-how he had zealously
investigated yesterday's report of a strange rumbling noise, heard by reptiles,
coming from under the ground on the north side of the pass. And then birds had
attacked troopers, during last night's maneuvers in that area -
"The
Elephant, the Elephant! Have you news of it or not?"
"Yes,
Lord!"
At
break of dawn the Master had sent hordes of reptiles to those rocks, under
orders to cover them centimeter by centimeter, crawling if need be, to find the
cause of the strange noise. They had found, first, the entrance to a cave,
holding signs that at least one human had recently been there, and birds as
well -
Observing
the countenance of his Lord, the Master of the Reptiles swallowed some words,
hastily condensing his story further. One reptile at least had seen the
Elephant in that cave -a thing of metal, huge as a house, with the familiar
symbol painted on its flanks.
"Very
good. You will be well rewarded, if all this proves to be the truth."
Ekuman tossed the man a jeweled ring, in token of more to come. Then the
Satrap, half-dressed as he was, descended to the lower level of the tower. Here
a doorway brought him out onto the flat roof of the keep, from whence a good
view could be had of the country across the pass.
The
Master of Reptiles, basking in his favor, hurried just behind. His other chief
subordinates, he knew, would be gathering round him momentarily, as soon as
they heard the tidings of the great discovery. And in fact Ekuman had no more
than rested his hands on the northern battlement, when there came the sound of
many climbing feet upon a nearby stair. Turning, he saw the Master of the
Troops coming up, with his officers and aides behind him.
Frowning
at the Master of the Troops, a tough graying soldier named Garl, Ekuman
demanded, "Just what are all those men doing over there?"
Carl's
face, which had been set to join in his Lord's triumph, quickly sobered.
"Lord, we are . . . consolidating the position against possible enemy
action. And I am waiting only for your word to send men into the cave
itself."
Ekuman
nodded. "You do well to await my word before taking such a step."
Zarf
had come up just in time to hear the last exchange of speech. "Lord,"
he volunteered, "it will be best if I am first into this cave." Then
he bowed slightly as the older wizard came puffing unimpressively up the
stairs. "Or Master Elslood, of course. If he is not required to be busy
elsewhere."
Ekuman
turned away from his wizards. Elslood and Zarf were well and firmly under his
thumb, and through them, all the others here. Yet he had heard of other Satraps
who doubtless had been as firmly seated and still had been overthrown by
intrigues in their own households-Som the Dead never seemed to care, if the
usurpers served him with equal or greater dedication.
So
Ekuman did not mean to trust a power as great as the Elephant's under the
personal control of anyone except himself. At least, he meant to reserve that
option until he had learned much more about the Elephant than his wizards had
yet been able to tell him.
Ekuman
said to Garl, "Signal at once to those across the pass. No human is to enter
that cave until I personally have given permission."
This
signaling was promptly attended to. Then noticing the Master of the Harem
hovering in the background, Ekuman was reminded of anothermat-ter to be taken
care of. He beckoned to the eunuch and said, "That girl I had last night
acted like one half-sick. Dispose of her."
"At
once, Lord." Then the eunuch reached behind him and with a conjurer's
motion pulled forward a short slender figure, garbed in a harem gown -until now
the girl had been hidden behind his bulk. "This girl I think will be very
lively, Lord. She was brought in two days ago, and at my direction has been
examined carefully and reserved for you."
"Hm."
Engrossed as he was with other matters, Ekuman took time to look at this girl.
Dark-haired and very young and certainly attractive. Her face colored when the
eunuch opened her gown. Silent, yet brave enough to scowl openly at him in hate
- yes, she was interesting. "Very well. But now is not the time for harem
matters." He dismissed the eunuch with a wave.
The
Master of the Reptiles stood now at Ekuman's side, and put what seemed to be a
new sense of his own importance into a tiny sound of throat-clearing.
"Lord? Is it your wish that I should make ready a courier to send East?
With word of our discovery?"
The man
was already grown presumptuous. But Ekuman would let him puff a little yet,
that correction when it came might be the more precise and salutary. "No,
I will send no word of this discovery yet. Not until I am more certain of just
what has been discovered yonder." If Elephant's power was all that had
been hinted, it was just possible that with it under his control he might even
be able to face east one day without cringing in utter subservience-but no, he
would not let even his inner thoughts follow that line. Not yet.
From
the direction,of the ascending stair, a loud masculine voice said, "Well!
The prettiest little piece I've seen in about a month!"
Ekuman
turned once again, to greet his neighbor and son-in-law to be. The Satrap Chup
was just mounting to the roof-terrace, golden Charmian on his arm. Ekuman knew
quite well the signals of his daughter's face; and glancing at her now he felt
immediately certain that Chup's thoughtless exclamation of praise for the new young
dark-haired slave would cost Chup some future moment's peace if nothing more.
'.
Ekuman's
chief sensation as he thought'about his daughter's impending marriage was one
of relief; her dedication to petty malice was so strong that he felt sure her
departure would rid his household of a whole vortex of minor intrigues. In fact
he thought with some approval that Charmian's presence might ultimately weaken
Chup, and that would bode well for Ekuman's own ambition. There were recurring
whispers on the wind saying that some one of the coastal Satraps might soon be
promoted to a position of suzerainty over all the others. These were whispers
only, perhaps meant merely to keep them all vying with one another to serve the
East, but still . . .
Chup
came pacing to Ekuman's side. He leaned his tall warrior's frame, dressed in
rich cloth of red and black, upon the parapet, and looked out at the activity
of men and reptiles on the north side of the pass.
Ekuman
said conversationally, "I thought, brother, that I might ride forth this
afternoon, to oversee this treasure-hunt my men are on. No doubt you've heard
the tales? If you would care to ride with me, of course, you will be
welcome."
Ekuman
had phrased the invitation in a style that left it quite open to acceptance or
polite refusal, and Chup elected to return the latter. "Naturally, elder
brother, your company is always a delight. And riding, even to poke around
among some rocks, would be a form of exercise. But-well, unless you - "
Ekuman
let himself suddenly remember something. "In truth it was a rather poor
suggestion for amusement. I have another, much more suited to a true warrior's
taste. You might divert yours elf and at the same time render me a true service
in preparing for the wedding celebration. As you know, I plan some gladiatorial
entertainment on that day-nothing professional, just some of these sturdy farm
lads - "
"I
like to watch amateurs go at it, if they've any spirit."
"Just
so, Brother Chup. Would you deign to visit the dungeons with my Master of the
Games? I'm sure no one in my employ could pick out fighting men as well as you
can. You may even find one or two with real training -if not, I knowyou'll spot
the raw ability . . ."
Chup
was nodding agreement, though with little enthusiasm, as Ekuman maneuvered him
away toward the stair. The Master of the Harem trailed in the rear, the arm of
the dark-haired slave-girl firmly in his massive grip. Charmian, her ethereal
face disfigured by one of her petty rages, was staring after them. The princess
was now alone upon the roof-terrace, except for her personal maid -and one
other.
Elslood
the wizard stood before Charmian and bowed his massive gray head slightly. He
was marking the hatred with which her eyes followed the lovely slave-girl.
"My Princess?"
Her
eyes turned on him, losing their look of hate but remaining as hopelessly
distant as ever. "Well?" she demanded. Soon she would be gone, and he
unable to follow. While she was yet here, he would take great risks, hoping
nothing more than to please her. Such was his doom, and he could do nothing
about it but try to conceal it from others; he could not even do that, he knew
with a sinking feeling, the very maidservant was now smiling at him openly.
Elslood
said, "That new harem-slave, my Princess; there is a circumstance I now
of, that I might be able to turn to your amusement - "
Listening,
Charmian began to smile.
Following
the jovial Master of the Games and the sallow chief warden through the
low-roofed dungeons, Chup wrinkled his nose and tried to hold his breath
against the stench. So far he had had nothing to say about the prospective
gladiators but a few terse expressions of scorn. Sturdy farm lads they might
once have been, but now they had rotted in their cages overlong. He suspected
that all the hale ones were up above, unloading barges or building walls.
Faugh! What did it serve, to pen men up like this? It served no aim that Chup
could see, but only created a foulness. If the men were objectionable and
useless, let them be killed. If good work was to be gotten from them, then at
least house them in fresh air and feed them, like draft animals of some value.
Chup
had as yet made no pilgrimage to the East, had pledged no allegiance to Som or
the other mysterious lords. He supposed he would go, some day soon. All men
must serve some master, or so the way of the world seemed to be. Charmian was
already egging him on, to get his wizards to arrange the matter. Charmian . .
.why did he want to marry her? He had women enough -ah, but none so fair. And
the greatest warrior must have the fairest princess, that was one of the things
a man fought for. So, once again, was the way of the world.
The
warden stopped before yet another dim and noisome cage, and delicately reminded
Chup of the fact that no gladiators had as yet been chosen: "We'd best
pick out today whatever your Lordship decides should be reserved for the games,
I think the foremen of the work-gangs will be down here soon enough, taking all
the bodies that can be made to lift and haul." And then the warden fell
abruptly silent, having just got a dirty look from the Master of the Games.
Probably new work-gangs were going to be sent across the pass to dig, and that
business was not something to be discussed before a visitor.
Chup
had a fairly good idea of what the Elephant-search was all about, and of course
he was keen on learning more. He knew that if he had ridden out with Ekuman, he
would not have been taken where there was anything worth the seeing. But he meant
to learn in good time about whatever they found. Charmian, who would certainly
have her uses, wanted very much to be the queen of an overlord. Chup's wizards
had heard hints that one of the Satraps here along the coast might soon be
raised to such an eminence. . . .
"This
lot here is a bit fresher than the last," said the warden hopefully,
looking into the cell.
Chup
sniffed. "If no sweeter." The cell was pretty well filled up with ten
or a dozen men who at first glance looked like nothing much; but with only a
quick look you could never be sure. Chup was inescapably interested in fighting
and in fighters, even only in potential. The Master of the Games began to
harangue this lot of wretches: brave lads raise your hands, who will step out
and have a chance for glory, and so forth. If Chup had been in a cell he would
not have believed a word of it for a moment. Neither did those who were in fact
inside; though it stood to reason that any who were real men in there would
seize even the faintest chance to take revenge for their evil fate.
On
impulse, Chup took charge. "Open the door," he ordered. He got a
startled glance from the warden, whose speech he interrupted, but such was the
Satrap's voice and bearing that he did not have to repeat himself.
As the
warden was swinging a segment of the grillwork back, Chup drew out his sword
and set it on the dirty floor. This was not his prized battle-winning weapon,
of course, he would not treat that in such a style. This was a fancier-looking
blade that he wore on dress-up days like this-it was serviceable enough, of
course.
All
were gaping at him. "Now let me borrow this," he said. And he took
the cudgel from the startled warden's belt, tried the grip of it in his hand,
whipped it once or twice through the air. Then he held it down at his side.
He
addressed the sullen, unbelieving faces inside the cell. "You men in
there! Or whatever you are. If there be a man among you, let him come out and
take this up." He shoved with his elegant toe at the bare sword, moving it
a hand's breadth nearer them. "We're at the end of a passage here, and you
can set your back against a wall and hack away at me - these two with me will
give us room, I doubt not. Well?"
No
answer.
"Come,
come, you fear to soil my fine garments? Let me tell you, I raped a dozen of
your sisters this morning, ere I had my breakfast. Look, the sword is real.
D'you think I'd stoop to playing pranks on such as you -well, here's a bantam
with some life in him, if we can't get a man full grown."
Putting
one foot slowly in front of the other, Rolf was coming out of the cell. As soon
as he was out, the warden sprang forward and clanged shut the door.
Whether
it was the power of Ardneh that possessed Rolf now, or only the power of hate,
it left no room in him for fear. Without taking his eyes from Chup's, he
squatted and rose up again, the sword's hilt now gripped tight in his right
hand. The weapon felt wonderfully deadly, longer and heavier than the only
other sword that he had ever held.
The
warden and the Master of the Games retreated; with cautious outrage they peered
around the Satrap at this strange creature, an armed prisoner. At another time
Rolf might have laughed at their expressions. The Master of the Games had one
hand half-raised, almost but not quite daring to pluck at the Lord Chup's
sleeve; and the warden kept muttering, something about calling for a couple of
men with pikes.
Chup's
eyes were locked with Rolf's, a resonance between them. In the tall Satrap's
face there was a life that had not been there before. Without looking around he
answered the blithering behind him: "Oh, go away if you like, and stand
behind your pikemen. Only let me have a few moments' life at least out of this
deadly boring day."
And
Chup was thinking: Mountains of the East! Look how ready this one is to carve
me! See in his face how little he values his own skin at this moment. If he but
knew how to hold that sword, I'd be looking for pikemen myself. Ah, to lead
into battle an army of men who all had something like this one's will to fight!
The
youth was coming forward now, moving slowly at first, convincing himself that
there was no hidden trap laid for him here. In a moment he would lunge, or
hack. Chup waited, poised, holding the cudgel loosely, waist-high, pointing it
horizontally like a dagger. He had grown happy, moved into the true intense
life of physical danger, so much more real than any other part of life. He was
going to have to exert all his powers, to win with the short stick of wood
against the long keen blade and the earnest clumsy hate behind it.
Rolf's
intent to attack showed itself in his face an instant before he lunged, and
Chup was very glad to have the warning; he knew the young could move very fast,
and utter ignorance could wield a sword with deadly unorthodoxy. Dodging back,
Chup made the awkward downcurve of the blade's path miss him by something less
than he in his bravest moments would have planned. Chup counterattacked,
stepping in with his best speed, whacking down with the cudgel against the
blade to keep a backstroke from coming up into his legs or groin, then
dagger-thrusting with the blunt club. He aimed just below the youth's
breastbone; he did not want to do this brave one any permanent damage.
Rolf
never saw the counterthrust coming. He only felt the murderous impact of it,
paralyzing him, knocking out his wind. His hand let go the sword. His knees
betrayed him also, so that he fell slumping down onto the dirty stones, seeing
through a reddish haze, fighting now for nothing greater than to draw a breath.
The
warden and the Master of the Games, in voices loud with relief, clamored their
praise for his Lordship's bravery and skill. His Lordship spat. His toe prodded
Rolf, gently. "You there-you'll have another chance in a few days to draw
some blood." He handed the cudgel back to the warden, and accepted the
sword the man had picked up for him.
"Feed
and exercise him," Chup ordered, nodding at Rolf. Then he surveyed for the
last time the other prisoners, who were now moving restlessly inside their
fetid cage, awake now when it was too late and the door was once more shut upon
them. So Chup had expected, knowing men. "Faugh! Pick out what other ones
you will!" He stalked away.
Rolf
was not put back into the cell, but instead, when he could walk, led to a stair
and so up into full daylight. Then through one small courtyard after another,
amid a warren of walls and sheds and gates. By turning his head to look up at
the keep and its tower, he tried to get his bearings; he was now on the eastern
side of the keep, still of course within the mighty outer walls. And just as
his breath was coming back strong enough to let him walk easily, Rolf saw that
which made him feel that Chup's club had struck again -a small face, framed in
dark hair, in a narrow window high up in the keep.
He
tried to delay to look a moment longer, but the guards dragged him on. Still
out-of-doors, they brought him at last to a cell that stood alone against the
wall of a shed, a stone-walled cell just about big enough for a man to stand up
in and long enough for him to lie down. It was quite windowless, but the door
was an open grillwork of hardwood and iron bars.
Small
as this cell was, it gave him more room than had the crowded one below. And
this one was free of filth, and open to the air. Looking out through the
grillwork of the door into the sunlight, Rolf could not see much more than the
wall and corner of the adjacent shed, and more blank walls a few meters
distant. The keep and its windows were not within his range of vision.
He had
not been sitting long on the straw-littered floor when a warden came, bringing
him a jug of water, and a plate of food surprisingly substantial and clean.
Rolf drank and ate, and tried to keep himself from thinking of anything beyond
the moment's satisfaction.
He was
startled awake from a nervous, twitching doze by the grating of the cell's
lock. One man stood at the opened door, a tough-looking soldier with a tanned,
lined face, not one of the dungeon wardens. This man wore the bronze helmet of
the troops, and under his arm he carried a pair of mock swords, having true
handles but blunt wooden shafts instead of blades.
"All
right, kid, fall out."
Saying
nothing, Rolf got up and went with him. The man led him around a corner into a
small closed yard. Along one wall stout butts of timber had been set firmly in
the ground; they were much hacked and splintered.
The man
held out one of the practice swords to Rolf, hilt first. "Take this arid
come at me. Let's see what you can do." When Rolf did not instantly obey
him his voice shifted effortlessly into a heavy, threatening tone. "Come
on! Or maybe you'd rather go up on the roof instead, and fight the
leather-wings? Up there you won't get no sword to use - you'll be strung up by
your fingers."
Slowly
Rolf took the proffered weapon. Evidently seeing by Rolf's manner that he was
genuinely ignorant and puzzled, the soldier ceased threatening him and
explained: "Kid, you're lucky. You're gonna be put into the arena to
fight. Do a good job and you'll see no more dungeons. How'd you like a chance
to join the army? Have a real man's life?"
"If
I get into the arena with Chup," said Rolf, his voice low, "I'll
carve his guts out if I can. He'll have to kill me. So either way I won't be in
your army after that."
The
soldier rubbed his jaw. "The Lord Chup," he said.
"He
picked me out. He said I'd have another chance at him, in a few days."
"Yeah.
Yeah, well, he's like that. A real man, a real fighter, admires anybody who'll
put up a scrap."
As much
as he hated the invaders, Rolf had to believe in the honesty of the man who had
just beaten him, wooden stick against sword. He had been granted clean air and
water and good food, and now, it seemed, one to teach him swording. He was
being given a real chance, if a small one, to strike back before he was
destroyed. "All right, kid, make up your mind." Rolf smiled, looking
down at the wooden sword in his hand. Maybe he could strike back more than once.
He lunged forward suddenly and struck, aiming with his best intent to hit the
other's face.
The old
soldier's weapon slid easily up into place to block the blow. He returned
Rolf's bitter smile. "That's it, hit first and hit hard when you can. Now let
me show you how to hold a sword."
IX
Messages
"We
must strike first, and strike hard." Thomas spoke in a low, heavy voice,
knowing their truth and at the same time knowing the grim risks that they
implied.
Around
him in the huge lean-to were assembled such leaders of the Free Folk as had
been able to respond in time to his summons to a council. Olanthe sat at his
left hand, and Loford at his right. The bird Strijeef had a place in the
circle, sitting sideways and with his unwounded wing raised to shield his eyes
from the firelight.
Around
the island the night noises of the swamp rose and fell. Thomas went on:
"When Ekuman has the Elephant, and has made himself its master-then it
will be too late for us to attack or de'fend, even if we could raise ten
thousand men. Is this not true?"
Loford
nodded his great head at once. Others in the circle added their agreement. None
could deny what had been said.
Thomas
went on: "If we are daring enough, we may let Ekuman dig away the mountain
first, then strike to take the treasure from him. But even that moment lies
only a few days in the future."
"The
very day of the wedding," said someone.
"Very
likely," Thomas agreed.
Another
man, the leader of a band from the delta region, shook his head. "You want
to attack him on his very doorstep. How many men can we raise in a few days,
and march there with any secrecy? Hardly more than two hundred, I think!"
There
was some discussion. No one could really dispute that the figure of two hundred
must be approximately correct.
"Ekuman
will have the Elephant-diggings guarded heavily," the man from the delta
predicted. "He must have a thousand men available, in and around the
Castle."
"Still,
do you see any alternative to attacking?" Thomas asked him. Then Thomas
looked around the fire-lit circle, questioning each person with his eyes. None
had anything to suggest. Loford's visions, and those of the Old One before him,
had convinced them all that the Elephant was the key on which the future
rested.
"Then,
since we must attack, it only remains to determine how. Don't forget that we
now have new powers of magic on our side. The Thunderstone - we've already
discussed some plans for that. And we'll find a way to put the Stone of Freedom
to work, too. There are plenty of prisoners needing to be freed. One of them,
especially, would be important to us now."
"The
boy who was in the cave," said Olanthe.
Thomas
nodded.
Mewick
spoke up; with the gray still painted in his hair he looked like some grave
tribal elder. "I think the soldiers who had him knew nothing of his
importance, of where he had been. On his clothes was much mud, so likely they
took him at the riverbank. And they had tied him most casually behind a beast,
and they were in no hurry. Also Rolf was smart, he looked at me but once. If he
stays smart I think they will just be using him as an ordinary slave."
Thomas
added: "The birds are watching for Rolf in the work parties that go out of
the Castle at night. There are some now." He hesitated. "Of course we
can't be sure he really learned anything about the Elephant."
"He
nodded to me," said Mewick sadly. "How could he talk? What other
signal could he give? So I think that the nod means something."
Olanthe
said: "It might have meant only that he saw you."
"Maybe."
"Well."
With a gesture Thomas put the problem of Rolf aside. "With more knowledge
of the Elephant or without it, we still must get the thing out of Eku-man's
hands, or else overthrow him before he can put it to use. Now consider that our
friend Ekuman is not stupid, nor are his chief officers. They know that we must
act."
"All
the more hopeless then," said the pessimistic delta-man.
"Not
at all," returned Thomas firmly. He looked round the circle and saw faces
steady in their support. "For one thing, we'll arrange diversions. Draw
troops from the Castle if we can, at least keep any more from being sent there.
For another, we'll come at Ekuman in a way he doesn't expect."
Bending,
he scratched on the bare earth beside the fire a rough map of the Broken Lands.
"Here, and here, are the likely places for us to cross the river, to get
near the Castle for an attack. Ekuman will be strengthening the night patrol in
those places. But we'll avoid them."
"How?"
"It'll
mean a long hike, but we can do it. Go farther south, cross the Dolles in your
country, the delta. Move in small groups, mostly at night of course. Get across
the mountains there in the south. Reassemble, somewhere on the desert . .
." Thomas's voice slowed. He felt a new idea taking shape.
Olanthe
seemed to be reading his thoughts. "That's not far from the Oasis."
Thomas
faced her. "Olanthe, how many of the Oasis farmers would be willing to
join us, against the odds that we'll be facing?"
"How
many? Every one of them!" Her face had lighted. "Two hundred and a
few more, men and boys. And some of the women will come too. If you once get
the invaders off my people's necks, they'll go to the Castle and fight, they'll
follow you to the Black Mountains if you like. They'll fight with their
pitchforks and reaping-hooks!"
"They'll
have swords and shields and arrows for the picking-up, if we can hit the Oasis
garrison the way they should be hit!" It was a heady thing for Thomas to
see, the hope coming into the faces of these strong people who now depended so
much on his words.
The
objector from the delta was ready and willing to act as an anchor on Thomas's
soaring dreams. "Aye, suppose we do attack the Oasis at night! Suppose we
win! Then, what, next day, when the leath-erwings come out from the Castle and
see what's happened? We're out there, in the midst of the desert; we'll not get
back to the swamp or the mountains before Ekuman's cavalry has gobbled us
up." His voice became sarcastic. "Or maybe you think we can raid the
Oasis and wipe out the garrison, and march away from it again, all in one
night?" The man snorted his scorn. "It would've been done already if
it was so simple."
"We've
got new powers now, remember?" Thomas pointed again to the Thunderstone,
in a new pouch at Olanthe's side. "It will bring not only lightning, but
sheltering clouds and rain as well. And I mean for us to use every power that
it has!"
On his
first night within the Castle walls Rolf in his great exhaustion could do
nothing but sleep. In the morning he was well fed, and again at noon. And in
both morning and afternoon the old soldier came to take him to the practice
yard, where they spent an hour or two each time. In the afternoon they
practiced with real shields as well as the mock-swords, and Rolf was given a
gladiator's barbut-helm to accustom himself to wearing.
His
hands were callused by farm work, and he had thought his arms well toughened
too. But this new unfamiliar weight of weaponry seemed to discover new muscles
and set them aching. His tutor drilled him mainly in endless repetitions of
simple lunge and parry, retreat and counterstroke. It was work that soon grew
dull; and for all Rolf's sullen urge to hurt his enemies, he could not manage to
hit this man while the old soldier corrected Rolf's technique by jabbing and
thwacking him in the ribs, seemingly at will.
As if
Rolf's lessons were something semi-secret, the practice sessions were ended
whenever other soldiers came to the yard to carve at the timber butts, or spar
against one another. Rolf felt some curiosity at this, but there were more
demanding burdens on his mind. Escape was much in his thoughts, now that he was
nourished and had rested. But the high walls were all around, and only his
thoughts could leap them.
Looking
up from the practice-yard from time to time during the day, Rolf marked the
growing preparations for the approaching wedding. Flowers and gay banners were
being brought by the wagonload into the Castle, where they were at once made
grotesque by their surroundings. At the direction of the Master of the Games,
these were displayed on walls and parapets and railings. Rolf wondered if the
bleaching human bones hanging beside the high reptile-roosts would be bedecked with
flowers as well.
And
somewhere not far from his cell, lively music was being rehearsed throughout
the day. The Castle was preparing to work at being joyful, but Rolf could see
no joy in any face, as he had seen during the preparation of farmers' weddings.
Here even the Master of the Games had a prisoner's countenance.
On his
second night in his privileged cell, Rolf saw the labor-gangs returning just
after sunset from their work, being driven stumbling and staggering back to the
dungeons from which they had been routed in the early morning. There was
rockdust and sand on them tonight, not river-mud - he knew by this that most of
them had been working on the north side of the pass, lifting off the mountain
from Elephant's resting place.
Leaning
against the cell wall beside his door, Rolf listened as two of the overseers
trudged past wearily. One said that today the digging had uncovered the corner
of a door, but there was days' work yet remaining. Aye, said the other. Not
until after the wedding would they be done.
The
voices faded. Rolf threw himself down on his bed of straw. The mount of Ardneh
was almost freed -the Elephant, that belonged more to Rolf than to any other.
Even his coming duel with Chup faded to secondary importance in his thoughts.
During
this night a second shift of slaves went out from the dungeons to labor, a
column of soldiers at their side, marching as sullenly as they. The courtyards
were ablaze with torches through most of the night. Workers and messengers kept
coming and going, and even the singing practice went on, so the business of the
digging seemed all mixed with that of the wedding. Rolf could sleep but little
with the noise and the light. And he was worried again, for his life no longer
seemed valueless. He must not die, just fora chance of scratching Chup -not
when the Free Folk might be facing slaughter for want of knowledge of the
Elephant, knowledge that Rolf alone could give them.
When
morning came and he was taken as usual from his cell to go to the barracks
latrine, Rolf noticed more than one tiny burnt-out stub of torch amid the
night's casual litter on the paving stones. The guard who was escorting him
today had taken on either too much work or too much wine, or both, last night,
so that his eyes were closed as much as they were open. Coming back, Rolf
contrived to stoop and fiddle with his sandal-straps. When the door of his cell
swung shut on him again, he had a little charcoal-stick closed safe within his
sweating hand.
Again
he was given water and good food. And again, the old soldier came to take him
to practice. Rolf had contrived to hide his piece of charcoal inside a seam of
his shirt. And the impulse that had prompted him to pick it up had begun to
grow in his mind into something of a scheme.
Today
his tutor brought swords, though dull of edge and blunt of point. During the
practice Rolf's mind was kept too busy to elaborate on schemes. He was
beginning to appreciate the truth of Mewick's warning -that the martial arts
were not to be learned in a week. Just as he thought his sword arm had finally
developed some cunning, his teacher's weapon would thump against his ribs once
more.
But
during the break at noon, and when he was locked once more into his cell at
nightfall, he was free to think. The idea had already occurred to him that the
birds must certainly come reconnoitering at night, probably every night, above
the Castle. He saw that the defensive cords and nets were always carefully
spread on the high places after the reptiles had come thronging back at sunset.
But there was nothing to stop the birds from passing over, higher still. There
would always be some scrap of information that they might gain, using their
sharp eyes and their wits. Now, if he could only display some sort of message
for them to read. . . .
That
night within the Castle walls was quieter than the last; it seemed that the
attempt to work a double shift in clearing Elephant's hiding place had been
abandoned. Maybe there were not enough slaves still driveable. Tonight there
was no prodigality of torches in the courtyards, and Rolf's cell was
unobserved, save by the sentry who passed by a few meters away, at reasonably
predictable intervals. Rolf had realized that no one could see the roof of his
cell. The adjacent shed kept it from being seen from the height of the keep.
Turning
his comparatively new shirt inside out gave him a nearly white surface for a
slate. After pondering for a while on how to get the most information into the
fewest words possible, he set down: I RODE ELE. IN CAVE
And
then he was stuck for a way to convey what should be said of the power that he
had seen and sensed. Finally all he could add was: SAVE IT FROM EKUMAN ROLF
He
thickened and darkened the letters with double strokes of his writing-stick,
and worked them into the fabric with fingers and spit. He rolled up the garment
and unrolled it again; his message seemed to have a fair degree of permanence.
Now he
had only to display it on his cell's flat roof, spread out straight and unwrinkled
enough for a bird to read. After a little thought he reached out through the
bars at the bottom of his door and gathered in some traces of the recent
construction that lay there, small stones and little chunks of dried mortar.
Choosing from these several that seemed of proper size, he made shift to attach
them as weights to the lower edge of the shirt, loosening threads from the
garment to tie them on. It took some time to make them all secure, but of hours
he had plenty.
He
rolled up the shirt then like a scroll, and made several practice openings of
it, snapping it out to unroll quickly on the floor. One of the weights came
loose and had to be retied, but he saw no reason why the scheme should not be
successful.
Meanwhile
he had been counting silently, roughly timing the passages of the sentry. Now
Rolf waited until the man had passed once more, then went to the door. He
thrust his rolled-up shirt out through the high bars, then held it by the
shoulders and unrolled it with a backward snap. He heard the little stones
strike with tiny clacks on the flat roof above his head.
Leaving
the shirt spread out -as he hoped-upon the roof, he went to huddle in the
cell's darkest corner. So grimly was he forbidding himself to indulge in any
hope that when there came another tiny clack on the roof he jumped to his feet,
convinced that the sound must somehow mean that his signal had been discovered
by the enemy. But no outcry followed. There came no rush of raging men with
torches.
He
realized gradually that the tap on the roof had been like the sound of a tiny
pebble, dropped from a great height.
The
sentry was nearly due again. Rolf made himself lie quiet on the straw until the
man had shuffled past. And no sooner had the guard vanished than another pebble
came, this one bouncing on the pavement before his cell, rising to ping faintly
from a bar of the grillwork; Rolf could not see it but there was no doubt at
all about the sound. He jumped to the door, reached out and up to grab his
shirt and sweep it from side to side, waving it across~the roof. Then he pulled
the garment quickly into the cell, tore off the stones and threw them away. He
rubbed and crumpled his message into an unreadable smudge and put the shirt on
again.
He had
living and watchful friends. He was not forgotten, not entirely alone. He
pulled the shirt around him tightly. Only then did he realize that his sudden
shivering was not due to cold or fear, but to a triumph that must be kept in
silence.
On the
next day Rolf practiced his swording with a will, winning some mild praise from
his tutor. On the following night Rolf made no attempt to signal again-it was
very dangerous, and he had nothing new to say-but he lay wide awake, listening,
until the hour when the exchange of signals had taken place on the previous
night.
Click.
Click. Click. Evenly matched and spaced, three tiny impacts on his roof. He sat
upright with a jerk, then waited, propped on one elbow in the straw. Did the
bird expect him to reply? He went to the door and put his arm out and waved it
slowly back and forth, once, twice, thrice. Then he lay awake listening and
wondering for a long time, but no further signal came from above.
X
Fight
For The Oasis
Lying
sprawled near the top of the gentle dune, peering over its crest, Thomas could
see the dark island-like mass of the Oasis of the Two Stones spread before him
in the moonlight, its nearest boundary less than a hundred meters away. The
night made the outlines of the great circle of fertile land uncertain, and gave
it a half-magical look. Still, since Olanthe had schooled him in the matter, he
could pick out where the different areas of the settlement were.
Most of
the Oasis' area was in the wide outer ring of cultivated fields. The invaders,
Olanthe said, had at first wanted to fence in the whole fertile circle, but
fence-building materials were hard to come by here in the desert, and they had
concentrated on finishing their inner works.
On one
side of the central area of the Oasis all the farmers' dwellings,
semi-permanent structures of wooden frames and stretched hides, had been moved
together, crowded close to one another, and a strong fence built around them.
In this compound the people of the Oasis could be confined every night at
sunset. And by night as well as by day strong mounted and foot patrols of
Castle-soldiers roamed the fields and paths around the perimeter of the watered
land.
Stretched
out on the dune with Thomas, and on the dunes immediately to east and west,
were the two hundred men and women of his attacking force, resting now in
silence from the hard march that had brought themouthere from the mountains.
Olanthe lay at his left side, and on his right was Mewick, face darkened with
earth for the night attack until it looked like the visage of some carven demon
of melancholy.
Beyond
Mewick, Loford lay, the faint wheeze of his breathing carrying in the stillness
to Thomas's ears. Olanthe's hair blew in the night breeze, touching Thomas on
the cheek. She was leaning toward him to whisper, and stretching out an arm to
point. There, she was showing him, in the Oasis' central area, lay the
defensive compound of the enemy. That was where the bulk of them must be taken
by surprise tonight and slaughtered. Two corners of its high palisade were
marked now by the distant sparks of torches. Olanthe had explained earlier that
the gate of it usually stood open, though of course there would be a guard.
Thomas
knew there were a score of birds over the Oasis now, invisible to human or reptilian
eyes. They were marking for him the positions of the enemy patrols, and once
the attack began it would be the birds' job to prevent the escape of a single
foe, on wing or foot. For the Castle to learn of this attack tonight, or even
tomorrow, would probably mean disaster; the Free Folk meant to rest in the
Oasis for a day and a night before beginning the march that would take them
straight into the decisive battle for the Elephant. Tonight's fight could be
decisive only if the Free Folk lost.
"Pass
the word again," Thomas whispered now, repeating the message both to left
and right. "No burning." Any great fire would surely be seen by the
watch on the battlements of the distant Castle; then morning would surely bring
reptiles, to investigate; and after reptiles would come the cavalry in force.
Ekuman would need no Elephant to win a battle fought by day and in the open.
Loford
was crawling toward Thomas now. A few moments ago the Big One had gone back
down the dune, and now was coming up again, between Thomas and Mewick. The
wizard moved, Thomas thought, with all the stealth of a foundered plow-beast;
but even he could not make a great deal of noise in soft sand, so this time it
did not matter.
"I
have been trying this and that," Loford rumbled softly, collapsing with a
grunt to lie beside him at full length. "But things are just not favorable
for magic. Too many swords are out, I suppose."
"Not
even an elemental?" Thomas wanted all the help that he could get, and he
knew that Loford had a knack for elementals.
Loford
shook his head. "I might draw up a good one from the desert. But not at
night. The desert is day. Sun, and heat, and a withering wind throwing a blast
of sand -aye, I might fetch up something to please you! But not at night."
The wizard sounded guilty and defensive.
Thomas
hit his shoulder gently. "I wasn't really counting on your powers tonight.
We made need that sand-elemental more, to screen us when we're crossing the
desert toward the Castle day after tomorrow. In case the Thunderstone doesn't
draw enough rain for us to hide in." r
"I
am thinking about that march; tossing the Stone ahead of us to keep drawing
rain, and dodging thunderbolts. It should be as adventurous as some battles.
And you want an elemental to keep us company too. Ho!"
"Sh!"
hissed Mewick.
In a
very low whisper Thomas added: "And I am thinking that we will fight no
more swamp-battles. One way or the other."
The
shadow of a bird came drifting down in ghostly silence to stand just below
Thomas on the dune. Wings proudly spread, it reported on just how many enemy
patrols were out, and where. Thomas hurriedly made decisions, and passed orders
to his squad leaders down the line. One squad he detailed to positions along
the western rim of the Oasis, to be ready to intercept any of the enemy who
might try to flee toward the Castle.
"And
we are ready in the air, Thomas," the bird assured him. "If the
reptiles dare to arise, not one of them will escape."
Orders
acknowledged, the long rank of human figures began to break up, drifting away
in silent clusters, half-visible under the Moon. "Go now," said
Thomas to the bird, "and bring me word as soon as our squads are in
position of the far side of the Oasis." The separate attacks on enemy
patrols must be made as nearly simultaneous as possible, and at the same time
the entrance to the inner compound should be seized.
With a
sweep of wings the courier drifted up and away. Now, if anything had been
forgotten, it was too late to mend. Thomas thought to himself that being a
leader gave one advantage anyway: there was no time for a man to worry much
about his own skin.
His
eyes met Olanthe's in the moonlight, and they looked at each other for a time.
Neither felt need to speak.
The
bird was back before he had really started to expect it. "They are ready
on the far side, Thomas. And along the western edge."
"So.
Then we are ready too." He drew a deep breath and looked at the remnant of
his force that was still near enough for him to see. "And we attack."
With a
wave of his arm he motioned forward the dozen who were to accompany him closely
into the fight, to try to seize the inner compound's gate. Another squad of the
same size, led by Mewick, would be following closely, hoping to be able to rush
through the gate and kill sleeping invaders in their barracks.
The
outer boundary of the Oasis was marked by a ditch that, according to Olanthe,
served to keep the desert from drifting in. Crossing it now, she whispered to
Thomas: "Nearly dry. We must use the Stone for rain while we are
here."
Once
past this outer ditch, Thomas led his squad between rows of knee-high plants
toward the Oasis' center. He motioned his people to spread out, and at first
set the pace across the level ground at a crouching run. When they had covered
a few hundred meters he slowed to a walk, and a little while later dropped down
to crawl between the rows of plants. There would be a patrol of eight
foot-soldiers not far ahead. Thomas's and Mewick's squads were supposed to sneak
past this patrol, leaving it to be ambushed by other Free Folk a little farther
on.
Thomas
saw the patrol, walking in slow single file on a course at right angles to his
own. The moon turned the bronze helms into ghosts' heads. He stopped crawling,
and around him his squad melted into the soil and the night.
The
enemy passed. Then their leader took an unexpected turn. Raising his head a few
centimeters, Thomas saw them now heading straight for where Mewick's squad had
gone to earth. Only let it be silent, Thomas thought, when an encounter
appeared inevitable.
The
soldiers' leader stopped, making a startled, turning movement. Around him and
his men, Mewick's people rose up like dark and silent demons. They had the
advantages of numbers, twelve to eight, and of surprise, and it was no wonder
that they cut down the Castle-men without loss to themselves. Still, silence
had been too much to expect, and a pair of screams went drifting in the night.
Thomas
stood up tensely, looking toward the center of the Oasis, now less than half a
kilometer distant. Olanthe's hand was on his arm. "That may not alarm the
central compound," she said softly. "They may think only that some
fugitives are being chased through the fields, or that birds are harassing a
patrol. That sometimes happens."
"There
may be noise from the other patrols at any moment. We'd better hurry."
Thomas waved his own squad forward. He motioned Mewick to follow closely, and
got an acknowledging wave.
Thomas's
short-sword rode in a scabbard strapped against his leg. He saw Olanthe
loosening a long knife in its sheath at her hip as they walked.
Now the
Oasis' central area grew close enough for details to be visible. There was the
barrier of sharpened stakes, forming a prison compound where the Oasis-folk
were penned at night. Thomas could see clay silos, barns, and storage bins.
And, straight ahead, the invaders' defensive palisade, wherein the torches
still burned. The gate was open. No trees were to be seen; Olanthe had said
they had all gone to make the stockade. No humans or reptiles were in sight.
"Let
the two of us go first," Thomas whispered when his squad had gathered
round him. Then he took Olanthe by the hand and walked with her along the dark
path that led almost straight from where they were to the open gate of the
palisade. Now he could see the arm and part of the uniform of a soldier who
seemed to be lounging just inside the gate. The hope was that the first few
soldiers who saw Thomas and Olanthe would take them for nothing more dangerous
than a young couple trying to sneak in after curfew.
On the
right side of the path ran the barricade enclosing the houses of the farm folk,
and on the left side were tall storage bins. From behind one of these a soldier
stepped out suddenly to bar their way.
He
showed a pleased grin at their starts of surprise. "Looking for a hole
under the fence somewhere? I hope your frolicking half the night was worth it,
because - " He peered more closely at Olanthe's hand. "What've you
got there?"
From
somewhere out in the fields came a yell of fear, agony weakened and purified by
distance. The soldier saw Olanthe's long knife, and his mouth was forming for
an echoing yell as he started to draw his sword; he meant to step back, but
Thomas's blade was already between his ribs.
Thomas
heard two dozen feet come shuffle-pounding speedily on the path behind him as
he sprinted for the palisade gate. A pair of sentries came into view, alarmed
-too late. They had time to yell, but no time more.
The
gate taken, Thomas cast one look backward. Mewick's squad was coming on the
run, only a few meters down the path. Then he put Olanthe aside with one arm
and turned and ran on into the compound, sprinting for the open doorway of the
nearest barracks. On the right as he faced inward from the gate he saw stables
along the palisade, and then the barracks, a long low timber building big
enough for nearly a hundred men. On the left side of the compound were similar
stables and barracks, and on the side opposite the gate another long low
building that Thomas knew housed the officers and served as headquarters. All
the center of the compound was bare sandy earth, pounded flat by marching feet.
Before the headquarters building a flagpole held a limp banner of Ekuman's
black and bronze. And in the very center of the parade-ground, upon a sort of
cruciform gibbet, there was a man bound living -a naked man with the wounds of
whipping striped across his body, who raised his gray head now to stare at
Thomas. Thomas had no time now for a close look at the victim; his running
strides were carrying him on toward the barracks' open door.
A man
came stepping out of this doorway, half-naked and half-awake, buckling on a
sword. He stumbled to a halt, eyes and mouth widening at the sight of Thomas,
charging, huge, black all over for the night attack.
Thomas
aimed for the middle of the body, drove his short sword in nearly to the hilt,
shoved the dead man back into the barracks and went in after him. Right at his
back his raiders poured after him through the narrow door, all bellowing now to
raise up terror and panic. Before him, only a few of the enemy as yet had
weapons in their hands. Thomas was no master swordsman, and he knew it. So he
used the advantages he did have, his strength and size, for all that they were
worth. With two hammering strokes he beat down his next opponent's guard, and
with the next stroke cut his arm off near the elbow.
In a
moment the raiders controlled the door, and the weapon-rack that stood beside
it, from which Thomas grabbed himself a shield; in a few moments more what was
going on could no longer be called a fight. Castle-men were killed in their
hammocks, stabbed crawling in corners, died while playing dead, were
slaughtered like scrambling, squealing meat-beasts in a pen.
The
killing was still unfinished when Thomas scrambled over the slippery floor back
to the door again. By now more than a score of Free Folk were inside the
compound, and in front of the other barracks a fierce fight raged. Mewick was
there, thrusting with a long dagger, swinging a war-hatchet that looked like
some peasants' tool save for its swordlike basket-hilt.
Even
with one barracks cleaned out, the Free Folk inside the stockade were still
outnumbered. Yelling, Thomas led his own squad charging to Mewick's aid.
The men
in the second barracks had been given just a few more moments to rouse
themselves than the men in the first barracks had enjoyed, and that made a
great difference. These men were just starting to pour out and fight, but when
Thomas charged they began retreating into the barracks again, probably not
realizing in the confusion that the advantage of numbers was still theirs.
Arrows began to come singing out of the slits in the barracks' timber wall. The
barracks was a solid structure, built right against the strong high palisade.
"Remember,
no burning!" Thomas shouted. He could see two of his men down already with
arrows in them. But welcome reinforcements were now charging in at the
palisade's gate, Free Folk who had evidently finished their ambush of one of
the outer patrols.
Olanthe
popped up from somewhere to stand at Thomas's side. "Keep down!" he
barked, gripping her protectively. He reached into her pack and took out the
Thunderstone, and rolled it toward the barracks. The battered metal case
bounced to a stop just at a corner of the low building.
It
would take some little time for the storm to develop. Meanwhile, Thomas
disposed some men to discourage those inside the barracks from sallying; that
done, he turned the greater part of his attention to the headquarters building.
He saw that Mewick had already led men onto the roof of it, where they were
fighting with some bronze-helmets who had climbed up from inside. Others were
trading spearthrusts and missiles at the doors and windows.
Yet
another squad of Free Folk came pouring into the compound now, and with them
the 'first of the farmers to rise in arms-pitchforks and reaping-hooks, as
predicted, and a raging joyous fury. Thomas ran to meet these, and led them to
the headquarters building.
On the
headquarters roof, guards and officers and orderlies in bronze helmets were
holding off the Free Folk with pike and sword and mace, protecting one corner
of the palisade. There one of their number was waving torches to drive off
birds, while another tried to pull the protective net away from a
reptile-roost; they meant to get a courier away to Ekuman.
The
soldier waving torches went down, struck by a pitchfork hurled up from the
ground. Thomas skipped quickly over the shingles to kick the flaming brands off
the roof before they could set fire to it. The man struggling with the net at
last succeeded in getting it out of the reptiles' way-but not one of them
ventured out of the doorway of the roost. The night belonged to the birds, and
well the reptiles knew it.
Thunder
grumbled overhead. Suddenly there was no one but Free Folk left standing on the
roof, though others were still lying there. Blood slicked the shingles
underfoot and trickled in the rain-gutters. Someone had taken up a captured
pike and was starting to try to prod the reptiles out of their little house.
Birds were landing at the doorway, their soft voices vibrant, urging those
within who had eaten birds' eggs not to be shy now, but come out and welcome
their guests come to return the call.
Men
down on the ground at the entrance to the headquarters building were calling
for Thomas. He swung over the edge of the roof and dropped down to discover
that some of Mewick's squad thought they had nabbed the garrison commander.
They shoved forward a gray-haired fellow with a thin ropy neck. They had caught
him in a store-room, putting on a private soldier's uniform.
Rain
pattered down, then drummed. Lightning was marching closer. In one sudden white
opening of the sky, Thomas looked up and saw Strijeef, old wound still bandaged
on one wing, eyes mad and glaring, emerging from a reptile-roost. Leathery
eggshell clung to the talons of his upraised foot. His beak and his feathers
were stained with purplish blood.
"See
to the other roost!" Thomas shouted up. Then he dragged the gray-haired
prisoner to Olanthe, and some of the other Oasis-folk, to make absolutely sure
of who he was. Olanthe was out in the center of the parade-ground, in range of
arrows from the still-resistingbarracks. A couple of farmers were standing by
with captured shields, ready to deflect any shafts that came at those working
to take the old man down from his scaffold. Olanthe was weeping, oblivious of
arrows; Thomas realized that the man on the cross must be her father.
The
victim was just being lowered when the Thunderstone got the lightning it was
calling for. The bolt followed the corner of the barracks from eaves to ground,
opening the structure like a great egg carefully topped at table. The rain,
pouring now, prevented any fire from catching. Thomas ran to join his men
entering the breach, but his leadership was not needed. His force swept in
through the riven wall and completed the night's work without further loss to
themselves.
And so
ended the battle for the Oasis. Olanthe's father and the other wounded freedom
fighters were carried out of the invaders' compound to be cared for in the
farmers' homes. From the farmers' compound, a prison no longer, voices began to
rise, men and women and children singing in the gladness of their deliverance.
At a
touch on his shoulder Thomas turned, to see Loford standing there, grinning
hugely; on the upper part of the wizard's big right arm a small wound was
bleeding.
"How
was the fighting?" Thomas asked.
"Oh,
very good! Oh, excellent! I tell you I was once facing two of them -but I am
come to remind you, this time the Thunderstone is yours to pick up."
"That's
right." Thomas, grinning, thinking how he would torment Loford by never
asking him how he had got his glorious wound, trotted over to the shattered
barracks and picked up the graven case from a puddle.
While
he was there a bird came down to him, bringing the good report that not a
single enemy had escaped the slaughter. Several members of the patrols ambushed
in the fields had tried to get away, to reach the Castle, when they saw that
the whole Oasis was under attack. All but one of these had been cut down by
Thomas's men left along the Oasis' western boundary for the purpose. The one
man who had got past them, mounted, had been dragged bloodily from his saddle
while at full gallop, by three of the Silent People who had overtaken and
fastened on him from above. And now even the terrified beast he had been riding
was caught and being brought back to the stables.
Though
the fighting was over, no one who was not wounded could be allowed to rest.
There was too much to be done before dawn. The wounded must be moved out of
sight and cared for, the dead must be buried and then all traces of their
graves effaced. Any couriers from the Castle must not be allowed to suspect
what had happened -not until they had landed, or at least descended within
certain arrow-range.
The
wall of the riven barracks was hastily propped up in place, and the gaps mended
as well as possible. At dawn the farmers would go to their fields in the usual
numbers to do their ordinary tasks. Men of the Free Folk would put on uniforms
of bronze and black for incoming reptiles to see, and would march or ride or
stand on watch. The mess of shattered eggs and purplish reptile blood was
scraped and scrubbed from the outer porches of the roosts.
"One
thing more," said Olanthe. And she nodded at the empty gibbet in the
center of the parade-ground, from which her father had been taken almost too
late to save his life. In her voice was a hardness that Thomas had not heard
there before.
"A
dead man will do," Thomas said. "A gray-haired one." He tried to
remember some corpse among those now being buried that would be a fair match
for Olanthe's father; it was a hopeless effort. He turned to look over the
handful of prisoners who were still alive, awaiting some questioning; there
hung the long disheveled locks of the garrison commander.
Thomas
nodded at him, and the men who had the prisoners in charge immediately caught
his meaning. Grinning, they pulled the waxen-faced officer forward. "We'll
mount him for you, Chief! And we'll see to it that his hide's decorated
properly first!"
That
was exactly right. That was the best thing to do. But Thomas turned away. He
saw Mewick, sad-faced as ever, turning also. But Mewick was not the one who
bore responsibility. Thomas made himself turn back and watch, and listen to the
whipping. He was surprised at the effort it took him -as if he had never seen
blood before. Olanthe was watching, with a look of remote satisfaction. But
Thomas was afraid. He feared the urgings and the delights of power, that he
could feel stirring within himself like the pangs of some glamorous sickness.
The
whipping of the garrison commander was useless. All through the next day, while
he hung dead on the cross, no couriers from the Castle came. The Free Folk, and
the Oasis farmers who were going to march with them, half-rested through the
day, and then relaxed more completely on the following night.
On that
night the birds brought word that they had learned Rolf's whereabouts in the
Castle, and repeated his message to Thomas. They had tried to alert him that
the attack was coming in three nights. If Rolf was ever taken out of doors
after dark they would try to put the Prisoner's Stone into his hands.
XI
I Am
Ardneh
Three
pebbles on Rolf's cell roof one night, and at the same hour on the next night,
two. He waved back twice.
On the
morning after that, Rolf for the first time was given a genuine keen-edged
sword and, with this weapon he spent the morning lunging and hacking at the
timber butts. His tutor stood by criticizing, flanked by a pair of pikemen who held
their long weapons at the ready all the time that Rolf was truly armed.
In the
afternoon Rolf and his tutor were alone again, once more dueling with the
dulled and blunt-tipped blades. And during this session the tutor's parries
were in several instances too low, and Rolf managed to poke him in the belly or
hack him bloodlessly on the arm. Rolf drew small satisfaction from this, being
thoroughly suspicious that the soldier was letting him win to build his
confidence. If the tutor had but known it, the two pike-men in the morning had
gone a long way to accomplish that.
That
night there came the signal of a single pebble, which Rolf answered with one
wave. Three, two, one, the count had gone, from night to night.
On the
morning of the following day, Rolf knew, the wedding would take place. In the
afternoon he would face Chup in the arena. Certainly it was neither of these
things that the Free Folk were signaling to tell him-therefore something else
of great importance was coining, tomorrow or tomorrow night.
He
meant to be alive to see it.
He was
awakened early on the wedding-day by loud shouts, and by music that sounded
like the accompaniment of some bawdy dance. He thought again that today's
festivities could not be much like those of the simple pledge-weddings he had
seen and attended. On those occasions the company maintained at least an effort
at solemnity until the middle of the day, until vows had been exchanged and
perhaps some amateur wizard of the countryside had tried to put a spell of
happiness upon the rings. After that the dancing and the drinking started, and
the games, and whatever feasting the people could afford. . . .
The day
wore on. Rolf was given a fresh surcoat of cheap black cloth to put on over his
own clothes. There was no sword practice, no sight of his instructor. He was
fed as usual and escorted to the privy. About the courtyards there were men in
liveries that Rolf had not seen before-in each the color black was matched with
one other, red or green or white or gray. It was true, then, that wedding
guests were here from all the Satrapies nearby.
In the
later afternoon the Master of the Games came with two wardens to Rolf's cell,
and he was hurried out of it. First to the privy once more -he supposed so
their Lordships should not be disgusted if fear overcame him utterly in the
arena. And then he was led under the keep, to a small window-less chamber with
an overhead of oddly slanting timbers. Through the cracks in this ceiling, and
around a closed dooropposite the one they entered by, sunlight filtered in.
Feet tramped overhead, the sound of laughter came from very near above, and
Rolf realized that he was already under the seats ringing the arena. His
soldier-tutor had given him some description of the place.
A
bronze helm and a shield and sword were waiting for him. While the Master of
the Games hurried off on some other errand, Rolf's guards handed him the first
of two of these items at once. They eyed him critically while he took the
shield on his arm and set the barbut on his head; he supposed they wanted to
see whether he was likely to collapse with fear.
From
against the wall they swung out a cunning sort of cagework, meant to hold him
against the door leading to the arena. Only after he was thus restrained did
they put the naked sword into his hand. Some signal came to them almost at once
when that was done, and one man hauled on a chain to make the door in front of
Rolf fly open, while the other took up a spear to urge him, if need be, out
onto the sand.
The
spear was not needed. Rolf's legs carried him out into the glare of the low
sun. Through the T of his helmet's opening he had a glimpse of a ring of faces
above him, gay colors, movement; he was greeted with a burst of brutal noise.
He stood at one end of a sandy oval, some twenty meters long and
proportionately wide, surrounded by a high smooth unscalable wall.
There
came another roar of applause, and Rolf saw the tall, black-clad figure of his
opponent stalking toward him, coming from the opposite end of the flat little
world in which the two of them were now alone. A red mask painted on the front
of a black barbut-helm concealed Chup's face. Holding sword and shield ready,
he came straight forward; in his gait there was a swaying movement that Rolf
could interpret only as some intended mockery.
Rolf
put out of his mind everything but: strike flrst, and strike hard. His knees
that had been quivering now bore him forward steadily.
His
enemy was taller, and longer of reach, and so had the privilege of striking
first; an option he chose to exercise. The straight overhand cut seemed a
mockery also, for it was slower than some that Rolf had parried from his
tutor's blade. Rolf caught the downstroke on his shield, and perhaps he
shouted-he had thought earlier that when this moment came he should shout
something, so the evil ones who watched would know that he was dying for the
cause of freedom.
Later,
he did not know whether he had cried out anything at all at this moment. He
knew only that he deflected the clumsy downstroke with his shield, as he had
been taught to do, and thrust straight in to kill.
His
point slid so easily through the black cloth and between his opponent's ribs
that for a moment Rolf did not believe in his success. He retreated a step,
thinking only: What trick is this?
But the
man in black was not shamming. A spurting stain of red spread down his front.
His arms sagged with his weapons in them, and with what seemed infinite
weariness he went down upon his knees. Then, turning sideways, he toppled out
full length upon the sand.
Victory
still seemed unreal to Rolf. The gay throng encircling him above the wall were
cheering, a sound was made even more incredible by the groans that mingled with
it -not laments of rage or shock, but whines of mere disappointment, the sounds
of watchers cheated by the sudden ending of a show.
Taking
off his helmet, Rolf looked up. Chup sat there, in the first bank of seats,
looking down at Rolf, smiling lightly and applauding. Beside Chup was his
golden bride; even now Rolf noticed that Char-mian was looking across the arena
and up, with expectancy in her face.
Rolf
turned and looked down again at the figure on the sand. He scarcely noticed
when soldiers came to take his weapon away; he was watching two dungeon-wardens
approach the fallen man. One of them cautiously kicked away the dropped sword
while the other turned the body on its back and pulled off the demon-painted
barbut. The face revealed was young, and quite unknown to Rolf.
One of
the wardens had begun to raise a heavy maul, to give the quietus. His motion
was stopped on the backstroke by a scream -a woman's shriek so sudden and so
terrible that it sent reptiles cawing up in startlement from their high perches
on the overlooking keep.
And
Rolf knew whom he had stabbed; he knew when he looked up and saw that the
screaming girl was Sarah.
The
Satrap Ekuman, twisting around in his cushioned seat of honor under a
bronze-black awning was looking at Sarah also. Plainly the girl was screeching
the name of the man who had just fallen in the oddly unequal bout. Something
more than a coincidence, thought Ekuman. With a look he ordered the Master of
the Harem to be quick about quieting the girl, getting the nuisance of her
shrieks and her contorted face out of the presence of the guests. And then he
faced forward again, looking across the arena to where his daughter sat beside
her bridegroom. It had become almost a reflex for Ekuman to suspect his
daughter, whenever some nasty internal intrigue threatened the peace if not the
very security of his household. And the expression she was wearing now, a look
of slight aristocratic puzzlement at the disturbance, was quite too good for
him to believe in it for a moment.
So.
The
Satrap was not, of course, concerned about the bereavement of a harem slave.
Nor, really, about the fixing of a gladiatorial contest, though that was an
annoyance. What bit him was the discovery that an intrigue of any kind could be
accomplished, in his own Castle and without his knowledge, by one who was
departing, who tomorrow would presumably have no power here at all. It meant
that there were people in his establishment, in positions of responsibility,
whose first loyalty was to his daughter today and would be so tomorrow, when
she would be Lady in a rival house, when there would be things of infinitely
greater moment at stake.
He
would impress his guests. He would find out, today, who those folk were, and
today he would be rid of them.
Already
he was leaning forward, with an outstretched hand staying the wardens in the
arena from disposing of the fallen man, who might be saved for questioning.
Garl, Master of the Troops, having seen from his Lord's expression that
something was amiss, was already at his side. Ekuman issued quick orders that
both gladiators, and those who had had them in charge, should be brought before
him at once. "In my Presence Chamber."
Turning
his head, Ekuman said to the Master of the Games, "See that some other
entertainment is set before my guests, and then do you attend me also." He
shot his glance across the arena, and raised his voice from its confidential
level: "My dear daughter and my son, please come with me."
But as
Ekuman arose he had to delay, for now the Master of the Reptiles was pressing
toward him along the aisle before the lowest tier of seats, creating a fresh
wave of puzzled comment among the guests. The Reptile Master's face showed
clearly that he thought his errand urgent. In his hands he held a reptile courier's
pouch, that had some bulky weight inside.
"Bring
it along," Ekuman told him, and strode along the passage that opened for
him between courtiers, heading for the keep. He noticed clouds coming with
portentous suddenness over the lowering sun, and behind him he heard the Master
of the Games call out, "Lords and ladies, I pray you come inside! The
weather conspires with other disturbances against our celebration here. My Lord
Ekuman bids you make merry in his hall, where he will join you when he
can!"
Once
inside the keep, Ekuman drew the Master of the Reptiles aside.
The
Master of the Reptiles whispered, "My Lord, this pouch was most likely
sent toward us from the Oasis, for it was found in the desert. It was sent some
days ago, for the fallen courier's body was decayed when one of my scouts
discovered it during this last hour. The courier may well have fallen in one of
those untimely rainstorms that have raged over the desert for the past few
days."
"What's
in it?"
"There
must have been a message, Lord, but - see? -the pouch's lock is broken, from
storm orfall, and the desert wind has left no paper. Only this." The
Reptile Master let the torn pouch fall away; his hands remained holding up a
weighty case of metal, the size of two clenched fists. It looked as if it had
come through fire and battle both.
Ekuman
took the thing. The graven markings tickled his stroking thumbs with power; he
knew strong magic when he felt it in his hands. "You did well to bring
this straight to me."
Problems
were encircling him like armed men, attacking all at once. He would just have
to fight them all off as best he could, dealing a stroke here and another
there, till he could pin one down and settle it; it was a common predicament
for a ruler.
"Summon
Elslood to the Presence Chamber too," Ekuman ordered a soldierwho was
standing by. The man saluted and ran off. Ekuman let two more soldiers pass
him, bearing between them the fallen gladiator on a litter. Then he walked
himself in the same direction. Passing a narrow window, he marked how sudden a
gloom had fallen outside. The Master of the Games had been right to summon the
guests into the hall.
Rolf
had been willing enough to be disarmed; at the moment he wanted never to touch
a sword again. He stood there in the arena, not knowing whether he wished to
live or die. Only once since Nils had fallen had Sarah looked in Rolf's
direction, and that look had stabbed him like a blade.
At
least Nils still lived -whatever his life might be worth. A pair of robed men
came to minister to Nils and supervise his being carried off. Rolf was soon
prodded on to follow. Under a suddenly threatening sky, all the gaily appareled
spectators were also starting to file into the keep.
Rolf
was marched indoors and upstairs. Gradually he began to understand that
something about his fight with Nils was perturbing the great folk of the
Castle; the faces of his guards were concerned about something more important
than avoiding a rainstorm.
An
officer came to search Rolf, then preceded him and his escort through a large
and richly furnished hall, filling up now with the spectators from the arena.
They stared at Rolf as he passed and whispered curiously, while the Master of
the Games called to them, trying to rouse interest in his jugglers . Servants
were putting torches in wall sconces, against the sudden onslaught of the
night.
One
more flight of steps, then a wait in a rich antechamber. Then Rolf was brought
into a large circular room, the lower level of the squat tower that crowned the
keep. Against one wall was Ekuman, enthroned on a great chair. In flanking
chairs sat Chup, and golden Charmian, haughty as a statue. At Ekuman's back the
curving wall was hung with many trophies, of war and of the chase, and among
these were some Old World things -Rolf thought he could recognize them as such,
seeing their precise smooth workmanship, like that of the far-seeing glasses
and the Elephant.
Nervous
attendants milled about. On the floor of inlaid wood before Ekuman was set the
stretcher with Nils on it, the robed men bending over him to stanch the flow of
blood. And standing before Ekuman was the soldier who had taught Rolf his
swordplay, at attention now, quivering with a rigidity of discipline. And there
was Sarah, between two soldiers who gripped her arms to keep her from
collapsing or going to her lover on his pallet.
Rolf
had only a moment to look at these others, as he was hurried forward to be
confronted by the Satrap himself. Ekuman's baleful eye swung round on him, and
the two men who held Rolf's arms forced him to kneel.
The
Satrap's voice struck him all the more impressively for seeming mild. "You
fought well today, sirrah. What would you have by way of reward?"
"I
would have -only what I thought I had. The chance to fight against the one I
thought was wearing that devil-painted helmet!" Rolf did not look at
Sarah, but he could hope that she had heard him.
"And
whom did you think you were fighting?" Ekuman asked him calmly.
Rolf
turned his head to look at Chup.
It was
a moment before the warrior-lord understood just what the prisoner meant. Then
Chup sat up straight in his chair. "Me? You clod of dung! You thought that
I had arrayed myself in helm and shield to descend and fight a formal duel with
you ?"
Thinking
back, Rolf realized that it had been only his own foolish assumption, that Chup
would fight him. Others had used his foolishness to lead him on, to make him
murder Nils to give them sport.
"Clod
of dung?" mused Ekuman. "Yes, a peasant, by all signs -but that
stroke was well put that felled the other. Young master, where were you taught
to use a sword?"
Intrigue
was foreign to Rolf's experience, but he could feel very plainly the mutual
distrust and malice of all the evil folk around him. He could sense divisions
arraying each of them against the others. If he had known what lie would be
most like to set them on to mutual destruction, he would have tried to tell it.
As matters stood, he instinctively chose the truth as his weapon.
"All
that I know of swordplay," he said clearly, "I was taught here in the
Castle." And he realized the truth had scored, somehow; if Charmian's eyes
could kill he would have died in that moment.
"Taught
by whom?" asked Ekuman reasonably.
"By
this one." Rolf leveled a pointing arm at the old soldier. The man did not
look at Rolf. Behind his stoic front he seemed to quiver neither more nor less
than before.
Lightning
came, not far away. An easy ripping crackle at the start, and then a giant tore
the sky in two from top to bottom, letting through a momentary blaze that
seemed to come from some furnace-glare beyond. The light was strong on
Charmian's face, as she raised her eyes with an expression of relief. She was
looking over Rolf's shoulder. Rolf turned his own head for a moment; a tall
gray figure, wizard if there ever was one, was standing now within the door.
"Face
the Satrap!" A guard's fist struck Rolf's face; Rolf turned back. Somehow
an afterimage of the gray wizard's hollow eyes came with him, superimposing
itself on Ekuman's face.
"And
you were well fed?" Ekuman asked, as if all that moved him was some mild
concern for Rolf's welfare.
"I
was."
One of
the robed men by the stretcher turned up his face, and Rolf saw with fascinated
horror that a creature that was a toad and something more than a toad crouched
half-hidden on the wizard's shoulder, under his cloak. "Lord, I am sure
now, this man who lost was starved and weakened. Deprived of rest. The signs
are very plain."
After
that Rolf could-hear nothing more for a few moments. In the very abyss of his
fear and hate he came near feeling pity for people grown so pettily malignant,
to play such games with helpless slaves. But he had believed them -that he
would have a chance at Chup -he had wanted to believe. He felt himself swaying
on his knees. Just now he could not have turned to face Sarah to save his life
- his life?
No,
that was not worth turning his head to save. If only Nils had killed him,
instead!
When he
could think again, when his self-disgust was turning wholly outward against
those who had so tricked and used him, he saw that his tutor was being made now
to kneel at Rolf's side. The man spoke at last, in a muttering voice.
"Mercy, Lord." But he did not raise his eyes to look at Ekuman.
"Tell
me, my loyal sergeant-who gave the orders for this method of training the two
gladiators?"
In
answer the old soldier gasped. His head twisted around, eyes staring, as if he
wanted to see something invisible that had fastened on him from behind. In the
next moment he was toppling forward from his knees, much as Nils had done in
the arena. But this man was smitten by no blade, only stiffening and straining
in some sort of fit, gone foaming and speechless.
Ekuman
was on his feet, barking angry orders. The man with the toad-creature watched
the fit, then raised his head frowning as he who had been in the rear of the
chamber came forward at a majestic pace, tall and gray.
Ekuman
held out to this one a blackened case of metal, and said, "Elslood. Tell
me quickly what you can make of this."
Frowning,
the wizard Elslood took the thing, weighed it in his hand, muttered over it for
a moment, then raised the curved lid, while some around shrank back. He stared
at the lump of blackened stone that lay inside. "I can tell you nothing
quickly, Lord, save that there is some real power here."
"That
much I knew. Put the thing in some safe place, then, and attend me here. I mean
to get to the bottom of this game that was played in the arena today."
Elslood
shut the case with a snap. He looked down once -as if indifferently -at the
fallen soldier, who was still writhing feebly on the floor while others tried
to minister to him. Elslood looked at Rolf, and again, stronger than before,
the image of his eyes burned brilliant and gigantic in Rolf's mind. Then he
handed the case to the man with the toad, at the same time indicating the far
side of the chamber with a motion of his head. The man with the toad-creature
accepted the case and started across the chamber with it. On the far side was
ah arras which might hide a closet or a separate apartment.
Through
the window nearest him, Rolf heard rain roar suddenly upon the flat
roof-terrace just outside. Servants had just finished lighting torches, and the
flames smoked fitfully. Rolf had the sensation that the sky, like some great
flat coffin-lid, was pressing down upon the tower.
"Now,
sirrah!" Ekuman was speaking to him again. But this time the Satrap's
voice seemed to be coming and going, issuing from behind a barrier and then
emerging once more, echoing through an immense distance. Rolf did not seem to
be able to answer. The image of Elslood's eyes, growing and swelling, remained
like some malignant growth within his head, clouding thought and vision alike.
The tall gray wizard was standing nearby, but Rolf dared not look up at him
again.
"Answer
me, sirrah!" Ekuman was almost shouting. "Good answers now will save
some pains when you are taken down below!"
Whether
it was the boldness of utter despair that now settled on Rolf or whether some
outside power came to his aid, he managed to put away both the terror that
Ekuman wanted to fasten on him and the imposed vision of the wizard's eyes that
would compel him to be silent. The Satrap's face grew clear before Rolf and he
stood up from his knees.
Ekuman's
voice was clear and ordinary once more, coming with the drumming of the rain
through a heavy silence. "Tell me, master swordsman, whose agent are
you?"
Beyond
all fear now, Rolf smiled. "I? I am Ardneh -"
The
night pressing on the Castle was destroyed. The light that rent it was as
sudden as that which had blazed out of Elephant's side, and a thousand times, a
million times, as bright. The concussion that came with it was beyond all
sound.
Rolf
was aware only that something had hit him with force enough to knock him down,
nay, turn him inside out as well. Other people had been hit also, for a voice
was screaming, over and over. No, it was more than one voice. Some of the women's
voices had turned guttural, and there were masculine ones gone high and
childish.
By some
means that Rolf did not understand at first, the window nearest him had just
been widened, so that rain drove in on him where he lay on the floor amid loose
stones and broken wood. The noises of human agony went on. Could that be Sarah
screaming, Chup stabbing her with his punishing cudgel?
When
Rolf raised his head a ball of lightning was still adrift in the middle of the
room. He watched it dancing about there, lightly and hesitantly, as if it
looked to see whether any chance for destruction had been missed, before it
skipped to the wall and vanished up a chimney.
A path
of ruin had been plowed straight across the center of the room. From the
blasted window nearest Rolf to the flaming arras of the distant alcove, human
bodies and furniture had been treated like the nestings of mice turned up by a
furrowing plow. The wooden floor was marked with a blackened path, smoking and
smoldering. The incoming rain hissed on this scar where it was near Rolf's
head, but could not reach it elsewhere.
The
smoke oozing up from the floor was forming a thick cloud in the higher air, so
Rolf did not at once attempt to stand. Crawling would serve, for the moment.
Where was Sarah? She was gone, like his sister and his parents. On hands and
knees he moved dazedly over wreckage, seeing without emotion the twitching dead
and the struggling injured, hearing the lip-licking crackle of the hungry
bright young flames.
Not
finding Sarah, he went on dazedly following the black burning furrow of the
lightning-plow. At the end of the path he came to Zarfs roasted body; Zarf
smelled of cooked meat now. In death his face no longer ordinary, and the dead
thing at his shoulder was no longer a toad, but an odd terrible little creature
like a bearded human baby. And here was a monstrous spider, sizzled crisp; and
none of these were stranger than other things that were strewn across the
floor, amid tumbled shelves and fallen, burning draperies.
Not
having found Sarah, Rolf turned back again. He saw now that there were new
people in the room, moving capably about, and he got himself to his feet. More
he could not do. Now soldiers and servants were pouring into the chamber, from
the stair and from the roof-terrace.
And
Ekuman himself was on his feet, His rich garments were torn, his face begrimed,
but the vigor of his movements showed that he had taken no serious hurt. In his
hands he now held one of the Old World things that Rolf had earlier noticed on
the wall behind the throne -one of a pair of red cylinders, whose mate still
hung there on a strap. At one end of the cylinder was a black nozzle which
Ekuman aimed at the burning floor. With his other hand he gripped a trigger
that reminded Rolf of some of the controls inside the Elephant.
From
the black nozzle there shot out a white rope that looked hardly more
substantial than smoke, but remained coherent and opague and was heavy enough
to sink to the floor. There it expanded. Like some magic pudding the whiteness
spread itself across the burning floor, flame and smoking wood vanishing
beneath it. The wounded lying on the floorbrought their heads above the white
blanket to gasp for air-but they need struggle and cry no longer for fear of being
burned. The fire was quickly being put out.
There
was Sarah, beside Nils' stretcher, holding up his head above the whiteness. The
sight of her alive was joy to Rolf, even though a soldier had her in charge,
and even though two more of them seized him as he took his first step toward
her.
Ekuman
worked on, a diligent laborer. From the seemingly inexhaustible device he held
there spread out a white carpet to cover all the fire. His soldiers and his
servants took heart from the sight of their Lord standing calmly unharmed in
the midst of it. Soon, at his orders, the wounded were being lifted up, the
damage assessed, order reestablished.
Only
one voice went keening on in mindless fear, the voice of one who had not been
hurt. Rolf saw Chup draw back his hand and coldly slap his smudge-faced wife.
The one blow brought her to a silence of astonishment, utter and open-mouthed.
Now
there were only the purposeful noises of workers in the chamber. The fire was
dead; Ekuman shut off his foam-thrower and set it down. Nils was still alive,
and the tall wizard Elslood seemed unhurt.
Out on
the terrace the rain was trailing off to nothing, but daylight was not
returned. The sun, Rolf thought, must be already down.
It was
not light that burst in next at the exploded window. It was a patch of
darkness, darkness not black, but gray-green scale. The reptile flapped to a
halt in the midst of the white floor, cawing out to Ekuman:
"My
Lawrd! M'Lawwrd! The enemy attacks, acraaws the pass!"
XII
To Ride
The Elephant
Rolf
lunged and twisted in the soldiers' grip, trying to see outside. Peering
through a narrow north window into the deep dusk, he managed to see only a few
distant sparks, fires or torches, before he was wrenched away.
"Take
this one back to his cell," an officer was ordering. "Keep him alone
until the Lord Ekuman has time to question him again."
Rolf's
guards hustled him downstairs. Several times they paused, making way for
messengers dashing up or down. Rolf could see nothing but elation among the
soldiers at the news that the Free Folk were attacking in force. The Castle-men
had no doubt that they could win a battle in the open, even at night.
Each
time he passed a window Rolf tried futilely to get a look at what was going on
outside. Three, two, one -so the count had gone, aiming at tonight. The signals
must have been meant to tell him of something that involved him more directly
than the attack across the pass. Something would be expected of him. And now he
was going back to his cell, where his friends would expect him to be.
Extra
torches had been lighted in the courtyards, which were filled with a confusion
of hurrying people and animals. Three, two, one, the time had come, and he was
still alive to see it. Rolf was at a peak of alertness, and his ears at once
caught the high clear hooting that drifted down to him from above. He did not
look up, for on the instant a small object struck the paving near his feet and
bounced up right before him. Tied to the missile was a note, a paper-at least a
white tail of some kind.
Rolf
caught the stone on its first bounce, thinking meanwhile that the bird was mad
to drop a message to him in this way. His guards' hands grabbed at him, then
unaccountably slipped away as the stone came firmly into his grasp. He twisted
free, hoping to gain a moment to discover what words were worth getting him
killed in order that he might read them.
"Put
that down!" a guard bawled, and followed this urging with a string of
demons' names, directed at his mate who for some reason had come blundering
awkwardly into him. Rolf skipped away farther, and got the paper open, but
before he could try to read it the two men were coming at him, hands
outstretched. Rolf raised the rock, on the point of trying to brain one of them
with it, but in that instant a door opened in the wall just at his back. The
door was left ajar by the soldier who came running through it on some urgent
errand; as if he did not see them, he ran right in the way of the two coming after
Rolf.
Seizing
the opportunity, Rolf dodged through the door. It slammed shut of itself behind
him, then creaked with the weight of his shouting pursuers. He was in another
courtyard, this one nearly filled with soldiers just forming up for roll call. There
were no more open doors in sight. Rolf darted past a gaping officer and then,
since there was nowhere else to run, went dodging through the ranks, looking
frantically for some way out. Men stared at him, some cursed, some laughed.
"Seize
that man!"
"He's
greased!"
"Ensorceled!"
"What's
up here? Seize that man!"
"It's
some slave, kill him and have done."
"No,
that's one of those the Satrap wants to question! Take him alive!"
Holding
up his arms to shield his face, smarting from the slapping hands that could not
hold him, Rolf emerged from the gauntlet -on the wrong side, he saw now. In his
confusion he had turned back toward the keep. Aware now that some magic was
protecting him from capture, he turned again.
The
company of soldiers had turned into a mob, shouting, roaring, floundering into
one another's way. Rolf slipped past and through them. Their fingers lashed him
like so many branches, powerless to grab. The disgusted officer, even as he
bellowed to his men to form a ring, stepped aside himself, as if absentmindedly
letting Rolf run by.
A low
wall loomed ahead, the side of a one-story shed. Rolf sprang atop a barrel
sitting near the wall, and from there leaped again without pausing. The springy
wood of the barrelhead seemed to add unnaturally to his momentum. Scarcely did
his hands need to touch the eaves before his feet were on the gentle slope of
the roof; he bounded on across it, not slowing for an instant. The Stone was
tingling in his fingers. A present from Loford; he should have understood that
at once. '
Between
him and the Castle's mighty outer wall was one last courtyard, and at this
courtyard's farther end the postern gate -a narrow door, now closed, barred
heavily, and guarded on the inside by a pair of sentries. These looked up in
astonishment as Rolf came leaping lightly from the low roof, bounced to his
feet and raced toward them. He was trusting utterly in the power of the magic
that had been given him. As he ran he heard voices raised behind him crying, "Ho,
guards! Stop that fugitive! Kill him if you must but stop him!"
One of
the sentries began to draw his sword. Rolf came running on, holding the Stone
before him in two hands, as if he charged the gate behind a battering-ram.
Indeed, the effect seemed much the same. When Rolf was still five running
strides inside the gate, the giant bar that held it shut went flying, spinning
high into the air. In the same instant, with a booming sound, the door itself
flung wide. The sentries cringed away and it took them an instant to recover.
As Rolf's strides carried him through the gate the corner of his eye showed him
a sword-stroke coming; he felt only the merest touch, below one shoulder blade,
and then he was free, flying safe into the enveloping dark.
The descending
slope outside the Castle walls soon gentled beneath Rolf's feet. The stars were
coming out now, and he very quickly had his bearings. He was on the east side
of the Castle. He would have to circle to his left, giving the walls a wide
berth, to come to the north side of the pass and the Elephant-cave. Looking
that way now, he saw fewer torches than he had seen earlier from the Castle
window. Shouting, terrible and vague, drifted to him from that direction. Rolf
began to trot, listening each moment for another sound-but the voice of
Elephant had not been reawakened yet, for all that he could hear.
Almost
at once he was forced to slow down again to a cautious walk. Guarded human
voices were audible, not far ahead. As Rolf's eyes adjusted to the night, and
the starry sky grew brighter with the clouds' dispersal, he could see human
figures, vague and distant shadows, moving in the same general direction as he.
He could not see whether they were friends or enemies. Probably the whole
valley of the pass was crawling with moving troops belonging to both sides.
"Roolf!"
This time the hooting cry was soft, quivering as if with delight, and very
near, just above his head. "Well done, well flown, oh heavy egg!"
He
looked up at the dark hovering shape.
"Strijeef?"
"Yes,
yes, it is me. Hurry on, hurry! More to your right. Is Ekuman dead?"
"Not
when I saw him last. The lightning missed him, though it did his friends no
good. Where's Thomas? Strijeef, you must guide me to the Elephant."
"I
have come to guide you there. Run, the way ahead is clear just now! Thomas is
busy fighting. He asks if you can wake the Elephant and ride him into
battle."
"Tell
him yes, yes, yes, if I can get into the cave. And get the Elephant out. Is
anyone in there now? Is there fighting?"
"Nooo.
The fighting has been in front of the big doors; they are still closed. The
Stone you carry will help you thrust them open from the inside. Ekuman would
trust none of his people to enter the cave without him; so I have been able to
fix a rope in the place you carved to hold one. When we get there I will let it
down for you to climb."
Several
times Strijeef had him detour around enemy troops, or waij for them to pass. In
the intervals when it was safe to talk Rolf could move swiftly, while Strijeef
told him much of what had.happened; how Feathertip had been killed and himself
wounded, helping Thomas, and Rolf therefore left to himself in the cave. How
the Thunderstone had been found, and used to cover the Free Folk's passage across
the desert today; and when they were hidden at the side of a mountain, how it
had been returned, in a captured pouch, to the body of the reptile that had
fallen with it, and that body uncovered again for Ekuman's scouts to find.
"And
this Stone you dropped to me, Bird. What's this note tied to it? Do you know I
was nearly killed trying to get it open to read it?"
"Whoo!"
Strijeef thought that was funny. "The note just tells you what the Stone
is; you found that out for yourself. Hoo! it was fun to watch the way you flew,
over a roof and through a wall!"
By this
time Rolf had crossed the road at the bottom of the pass, and now the northern
slope was steepening under his feet. He passed a nearly-burned-out signal
torch, still casting brightness on the sand in a little circle which included
the dead hand of the soldier who had held it. Rolf would have stopped to grope
around the dead man for weapons, but Strijeef chided him to hurry. "The
enemy is still holding in front of the big doors. The fighting there has
stopped right now and our men have pulled back a little. I'll guide you around
them all."
They
went on up the northern slope. Once more Rolf had to stop and wait, crouching
in silence, listening to a file of the enemy go past him, moving west to east
across the slope. When the last sound of them had died away, the hovering bird
plucked at Rolf's shirt with a silent claw, and he arose and followed Strijeef
on up the hill. Now he recognized the silhouette of the familiar towers of rock
against the sky. Now around him in the darkness there rose the pitiful loud
moaning of the wounded.
"How
has the fighting gone?" Rolf dared to whisper, once when the bird's wing
came near enough to brush his face.
"Not
too bad, not too good. The Castle-men have no eyes to see for them in the dark,
but still they have the greater numbers. Quiet, now."
Strijeef
led Rolf by one of the eastern crevices into the complex of tumbled rocks. Rolf
groped his way, climbing over boulders and squeezing between them. At last he
felt the canyon's familiar sandy floor beneath his feet, and then the jagged
rocks that he knew were rightbelowthe mouth of the high cave. Strijeef went
rising silently ahead of him, and a moment later the climbing rope came hissing
and uncoiling down the cliff to touch Rolf's face.
He gave
the rope a hard precautionary tug, then went up swiftly. From the wound on his
back there was a light tugging pain, too small to be worrisome. Once having
gained the high cave -with Strijeef fluttering nervously just outside, still
urging him on -he quickly pulled up the rope. Leaving the anchor-stick in the
notch, he crawled through the blackness to the chimney and let the rope down
again. On the descent into the lower cave there was no room for the bird to
guide him, but he could easily feel his way. Soon he could lay first his hand
and then his forehead against the cool solidity of Elephant's flank.
At that
moment all exhaustion seemed to drop away; and only as his weariness left him
did he realize how great it had become. Now it seemed that some of Elephant's
age-old power came flowing into him, the strength of some fantastic metal army
descending to his muscles and his hands. His hands, moving caressingly rather
than groping over Elephant's cool side, quickly found the recessed steps and
grips. Before he tugged open the circular door, he remembered to close his
dark-adjusted eyes, and to warn Strijeef to do the same.
The
expected shock of light from within came redly through his eyelids. He climbed
inside and tugged the door tightly shut behind him, squinting to make sure the
massive latch was caught. With an odd feeling of homecoming he made his way to
the seat that he had occupied before, meanwhile gradually getting his eyes
opened. The familiar whisper of air was moving around him. His hands at once
began their half-remembered task of goading Elephant up out of his slumber.
Blinking
sleepy panel-lights at Rolf, Elephant uttered his first groan. This wakening
was not so shuddering and agonized as his last had been -Rolf supposed Elephant
had not had time to sink age-deep in sleep again. The CHECKLIST symbols lighted
reassuringly, and once more Rolf began the ritual of wiping out the colored
dots. The vision-ring descended as before to make a circle around his head.
Through it the cave grew visible around him, and Strijeef flying in the cave in
anxious circles. The bird's eyes were open wide, black fathomless pupils
dilated as Rolf had never before been able to see them; every feather of the
bird's spread wings, and the bandage on one wing, were plain. Elephant's
night-seeing was evidently as good as any bird's; if Rolf could once burst from
the cave, he would need no guidance to find the enemy.
Dot by
dot CHECKLIST vanished. This time the process went much faster than before.
Elephant's un-breathing voice roared strong and sure. Strijeef said the sound
of that voice had led the enemy to the cave. Well, let them hear it now. Let it
shake the ground beneath their feet, all across the valley. Let it vibrate in
the dungeons of the Castle, and quiver in the bones of those who stood
commanding in the proud tower above!
Suddenly
the green tracery of light showed on the two big levers, standing one on each
side of Rolf's chair. He reached inside his shirt, to touch again the Stone of
Freedom where he had it tucked away. And then he gripped the levers and gently
pulled.
Elephant
backed up, grumbling, turning at Rolf's direction to aim head-on at the doors
that must be opened. Strijeef's flying circle in the air blurred with the speed
of his excitement. Rolf shoved both levers hard forward.
His
huge mount shouted out, as if in rage and charged like a raging beast. Rolf
seemed to feel the Stone he carried twitch inside his shirt. Before Elephant
had touched the big doors they were opening, jerking sideways like cloth
curtains before the invisible influence of the Stone. Elephant's impatient
shoulders caught them even as they parted, and Rolf heard the metal barrier
give way, like paper tearing noisily.
The
boulders that Ekuman's slaves had not yet been able to remove slowed Elephant
as he went tilting out upon the open slope. But they could not stop him; they
slid or rolled or bounded, making way.
Startlingly
plain, the Castle was suddenly in front of Rolf. And visible were both armies
in the field, spread across the valley of the pass in groping files and squads
and ambushes. All of them were still now, waiting for the outcome of this
moment, hearing the mighty unseen crashing and bursting out of Elephant,
knowing what it was but not what it might mean. Elephant's buried voice had
warned them all a little distance from the doors, but still some, both friend
and foe, were near enough for Rolf to see their wonderment and fear. All their
faces, blind with darkness, were turned straining toward him.
Rolf
kept his two drive levers pushed well forward. Bellowing out his rage across
the valley, Elephant charged down the slope, rapidly picking up speed. Rolf had
selected his first target -a company of enemy cavalry. They were just starting
to walk their mounts upslope from the bottom of the pass, coming too late to
reinforce their mates in the fighting near the cave.
Rolf
steered to hit their file head-on. He jounced and bounced with his mount's
increasingfcpeed but kept his seat. Hearing Elephant's approach if still unable
to see it, the company mounted. But in another moment their animals were
uncontrollable, they panicked and fled before the earthshaker hurtling at them
through the night.
Those
who galloped to one side or the other escaped Elephant, but those who fled
straight back could not run fast enough. Beasts and riders alike went down
under the wide, swift-racing treads. Rolf looked back, but only once.
The
cavalry company scattered or destroyed, Rolf crossed the highway. Seeing no
more enemies before him, he pulled back on his left-hand lever, guiding
Elephant through a thundering, jolting turn that brought him back onto the
road. He followed the road westward, passing below the Castle. Now the enemy in
the field seemed no more than scattered ants. As targets they were unworthy of
his wrath, as long as the anthill itself was still standing, arrogant as ever.
He
thought of turning Elephant straight uphill, charging at the Castle wall by the
shortest route. But despite himself he was dissuaded by remembering the awesome
thickness of those high, gray walls, the hugeness of the slabs of stone that
formed their base. In his concentration of fury and joy, he scarcely noticed
excited birds come sailing round him and depart again. No, he would take the
Castle at its weakest point. He would ride the highway into the village, and
turn onto the road that led up to the gate through which he had once been
dragged behind an animal.
Let the
teeth of that portcullis bite down upon him now!
Thomas
stood halfway down the northern slope of the pass, straining his eyes to see
through the night, and heard the mighty voice and tread of Elephant go past.
"Where's
he going now?" Thomas demanded of a bird who hovered near. "Tell him
to wait, till I can talk with him!" Tonight, naturally, the Silent People
were Thomas's eyes and communications system. Thanks to them, he held in his
mind a picture of the battlefield very nearly as complete as Rolf's view through
the vision-ring. To Thomas, accustomed to thinking in tactical terms, it was
obvious that Elephant's first charge had outflanked the enemy in the field,
cutting them off from the Castle and completing their demoralization, begun by
the night itself. The Elephant with its demonstrated night-vision, speed, and
invulnerable strength, seemed quite capable of mopping up the enemy, completing
their scattering, sending the survivors fleeing in exhaustion and panic into
the river or the desert to be hunted down later by Thomas's own rested men. . .
.
But
Rolf was simply driving along the road.
Strijeef
came dropping out of the sky, crying, "We cannot speak to him! Elephant
seems to have no ears, though its eyes must be as good as mine!"
Thomas
demanded, "Where's he going? It sounds like he's in the village now."
"He
is." Strijeef rose higher, looked again, cried out, "He turns with
the road! He's going up toward the Castle!"
After
thinking for a moment, Thomas ordered, "Thenyou and the otherbirds gather
all ourpeople to me, here, as nearly as you can. If Rolf can't hear us-well, he
who can't take orders must be the leader, if he fights."
Rolf
was not yet expert at guiding Elephant through sharp turns; though he passed
through the village at a moderate speed, a brush of Elephant's flank still
tumbled one deserted-looking house. He saw no people tumbling with the house;
the village seemed already depopulated. He was soon out of it, on the road that
climbed upward to the Castle. The great gate at the road's end was open, a
company of fleeing foot soldiers pouring into it; the last man was barely in
before it was pushed shuti Now the bars as thick as tree trunks would be
dropping into place to hold it fast. Let them work at making their defenses all
secure. Yes, let them think that they were safe.
With
the drive levers only half-forward, Elephant came up the ascending road at the
pace of a trotting man. The Castle walls grew. Even now, Rolf felt a shadow of
his old awe at their size. Now the defensive towers that flanked the great gate
seemed to be leaning almost over his head, their height reaching the blind spot
that the vision-ring left directly above.
Still,
as he halted a little distance from the gate, he could see that there were men
atop the towers. Arrows and slung rocks began to spray down over him. Elephant
did not notice such things; Rolf could scarcely hear them. He urged Elephant
forward, thinking to request admittance, and the men above began to pour some
sort of liquid fire; Elephant minded it no more than rain.
There
was no room on the small level space before the Castle to build up headlong
speed. Still, at Elephant's first knocking, the iron teeth of the portcullis
bent in like so many straws, and the great gate itself sagged in with timbers
cracked and splintered. Elephant was stopped from pushing through not by the
gate's strength but only by its narrowness; the broad bulk of Rolf's mount was
caught and held by the towers on either side.
The
burning liquid from above came pouring in an orange glow across Elephant's
eyes, then dribbled harmlessly away, leaving Rolf's view as good as ever. Rolf
pulled his levers back, backing Elephant up. He wondered briefly that the gate
should be able to resist him, with the Prisoner's Stone still in his pocket.
But it occurred to him that he was a prisoner no longer; he was trying to break
in, not out. Delicately he worked his levers, turning Elephant slightly to the
right, aiming him head-on at the tower on that side. He charged again.
The massive
tower stopped Elephant, and sent Rolf sliding unsuspecting forward in his seat.
His forehead struck against the inner surface of the vision-ring. He was
half-stunned for a moment, then roused to a fury of frustrated anger. Growling
and muttering, he hauled back the levers. Elephant, quite unhurt, responded;
when they had backed up Rolf saw with satisfaction that several of the great
stones in the tower's base had been shifted and loosened. The battered gate was
now leaning more crookedly than before, and its timbers were beginning to burn
from spatterings of liquid fire.
Again
Rolf charged, hurling Elephant's brute power against the strength of the
gigantic masonry.
This
time he braced his legs as strongly as he could against the lower part of the
panel before him, setting himself to meet the impact. More stones caved in,
like teeth before a club. Working in a cold rage, Rolf again and again drew
Elephant back, and again and again rammed him forward. Elephant did not tire or
weaken. Parapet-stones began to tumble, from atop the shaken tower, and now
fell jumbled with contorted men and bundles of unshot arrows and a spilling
cauldron of the liquid fire. Ekuman, where are you? Hide in a bigger tower than
this, or burrow into your deepest dungeon, if you will. Ardneh has come to find
you out!
The
impact of the next charge burst in the gate completely, sending burning timbers
bounding and spinning with seeming slowness across the deserted yard. But still
the towers stood, narrowing the gap enough to keep Elephant from passing
through.
Elephant's
last charge at the damaged tower did not come to a sudden stop. Instead it
lurched on through a long satisfying yielding grinding thunder of collapse.
Elephant's eyes were covered for a time -first by rebounding blocks of stone,
and after that by a fog of dust so thick that no bird or machine might see
through it. Covering his ears with hands and arms, Rolf bent over in his seat,
hearing the tower come falling on his head.
His
progress having ground at last to a halt, Elephant stood tilted somewhat on one
side, his belly-voice droning on imperturbably. Rolf had just regained a firm
seat in his chair, and was reaching for the drive levers, when he was surprised
to feel a new current of air come swirling around him. The draft brought with
it outside noises and the smell of rock-dust. He turned to look back at the
door and saw with utter astonishment that it was open. A warrior stood there.
His garments and his helm and shield were black and red; he held his sword out
in a half-extended arm, so that the point was scarce a meter from Rolf's heart.
The warrior's face was hidden in a barbut helm, black with a demon-mask
outlined on it in red; Rolf had not a moment's doubt that this was Chup.
Even
Chup, entering the Elephant for the first time, must pause for an instant in
sheer awe and bewilderment. And in that instant Rolf slid from his chair on the
side away from the sword.
The
sword came flicking quickly after him. But the Stone of Freedom was still inside
Rolf's pocket, and even now it opened a way out for him. A panel whose
existence he had never guessed swung open in the floor beside him. A head-first
dive into the dark space thus revealed took him into a cramped place surrounded
by strange heavy machinery. Even as the panel closed itself over his head, the
surface on which he was crouching parted, made way for him to exit. He wiggled
out, straight through a solid slab of armor thicker than a man; the metal
sealed itself perfectly again behind him.
He was
sprawled on one of the stones of the fallen tower, lying half under Elephant's
tilted body. Dust still hung thick and choking in the air. There was some light
to see by, from wood amid the ruins caught ablaze by the spilled fire.
Here,
Elephant's voice was deafeningly loud; but as Rolf slid out from under the
tilted bulk he could hear shouts in the middle distance. He rose to a crouch,
looking this way and that for some kind of weapon; Chup would be on him at any
moment. At least there were no other soldiers in sight; Chup's degree of
courage seemed unique among the defenders of the Castle.
No,
here was one Castle-man who had stuck bravely to his post -or else had simply
been too slow in taking flight. He was under some rocks, now. His protruding
hand still clutched a sword; Rolf bent to take it and found that he must pry
the spasmed fingers loose.
He had
just got the weapon for himself when Chup came into sight around Elephant's
forequar-ters, stepping over wreckage. The warrior chief had evidently given up
trying to follow Rolf's magical exit and had backed out of Elephant through the
ordinary door. Rolf had no time now to puzzle over how Chup had opened that
door in the first place.
"There
you are, young one!" Chup's voice sounded almost jovial, but he moved
carefully as he came toward Rolf. Even Chup was wary of one who had mastered
the Elephant's power. "My infant gladiator-a precocious wizard also, it
seems. Come now, you have fought well, you have fought like a giant, but you
have lost. Give me the spell, the rein, the whip, whatever it is you use to
bridle this monster to your will."
Rolf
wasted no breath on words, only bent and picked up a rock with his left hand,
meanwhile holding his borrowed sword ready in his right. Now some of the
shouting voices were coming very close, sounding from just outside the ruined
gap where the gate had been, the gap now half-blocked by the tilted Elephant.
Chup
was staying between Elephant and Rolf. Rolf retreated a little deeper into the
courtyard, to get his feet on flat ground rather than the rubble of the tower.
Chup
was going to tolerate no stalling; he came at Rolf steadily and quickly. There
would be no getting away; the light wound on Rolf's back reminded him that the
Prisoner's Stone gave no protection against a blade. Rolf threw his rock as
best he could left-handed, and lunged straight in behind it with his point. He
saw the rock bounce from Chup's raised shield, and then Rolfs sword was knocked
from his grip by a short parry of such violence that it numbed his hand. Chup
came charging like a human Elephant, and down Rolf went. He knew his life was
spared only because his secret must be learned; Chup's demon-masked figure
towered over him, Chup's swordpoint rested at Rolf's beltline.
"Now
give the secret of this Elephant to me! Or I will slowly - "
The
screech of a battle-cry warned Chup, sent him spinning around only just in time
as Mewick came leaping at him. Mewick was carrying no shield but matched the
short sword in his right hand with a basket-hilled hatchet in his left.
Rolf
managed to roll away. He saw Chup somehow weathering the first assault, giving
a little ground, then standing and fighting back. Sword and shield, sword and
hatchet, rang together in a blur of speed, separated briefly, clashed again on
a higher level of violence.
Now
there were more of the Free Folk coming in around Elephant's bulk, through the
gap that had been the gateway. And bronze-helmeted soldiers from within the
Castle were rallying to meet them. Amid the confusion Rolf crawled over the
littered earth, trying to get back to Elephant, whose belly-voice droned on
beneath the growing clamor of the fight. But he found bronze helmets always in
his way. He couldn't fight his way through to Elephant without a weapon. Where
was the sword Chup had knocked from his hand? It seemed that he could never
manage to keep a sword.
Dodging
and jumping to keep himself alive, Rolf worked his way around the fringe of the
melee to a point from which he could see that Elephant's door still hung
invitingly open. He tried to shout to some of the Free Folk to enter it, but
the din of battle drowned his voice. And none of them had ever even seen
Elephant before -small wonder if they did not rush to climb into the noisy cave
of its inside.
Rolf at
last managed to grab another weapon from another fallen soldier's hand. But
then, as for fighting his way through, he had all that he could do to defend
himself against the nearest of the soldier's mates. This opponent had nothing
like Chup's power and skill, but he was still less of a novice with the sword
than Rolf. Rolf found himself being forced farther from the breached wall and
the Elephant.
His
duel reached no clean conclusion; he and his opponent were swept apart by the
confused, headlong retreat of the soldiers to an inner courtyard. Knocked to
the ground again, Rolf played dead while the throng stampeded over him. He had
a moment in which to wonder if all battles were as mad and stupidly desperate
as this one. When the rush had stopped and he raised his head he found that his
friends were in possession of the field around him.
All was
not well, though. The last of the Free Folk to come pelting through the ruined
gateway were not charging forward, but rather in retreat. Right on their heels
there sounded trumpet calls, and a thunder of arriving hooves-cavalry, and in
substantial force.
The
first few of the riders entered the courtyard, but their mounts stumbled in the
ruins of the tower, and shied from the Elephant and from the burning timbers
that lay about. Thomas rallied his men to hold back the cavalry at the gate.
The enemy dismounted, and with leveled lances held the breach from their side
-held the Elephant too, though none of them would touch it. The hundred
fighters who had rushed in with Thomas were now effectively trapped inside the
Castle. Cheers echoed back and forth, between Ekuman's men at the gate and
their mates atop the keep.
The
thicket of lances defending Elephant looked impenetrable. "Toward the
keep, then!" Thomas shouted, making a quick decision. Before Rolf could
reach his side to argue, the Free Folk were charging deeper into the Castle,
and Rolf could do nothing but join them. His sword remained unblooded, for the
charge met little resistance until it had swept the warren of walls and sheds
up to the forbidding mass of the keep itself. At that point the Free Folk met
doors as strong as the outer gate had been, closed and barred against them. And
missiles began to drop on them from above.
This
courtyard held many carts and other objects under which men might shelter. Rolf
had just scrambled under a cart, panting, when a big man with a sword in hand
came crashing down beside him. Turning, Rolf recognized Thomas.
Laboring
for breath like Rolf, Thomas demanded, "The Elephant's wrecked?
Crippled?"
"No
. . ."
"No?
Then what demon possessed you that you left it?"
"The
demon Chup. He got the door open -I don't know how-"
Thomas
groaned. "Never mind how. But the enemy can use the Elephant, then? It'll
obey them if they dare to try?"
"It
might." Rolf started trying to explain the controls.
"All
right, all right. Then we must just get you back into it. Take good care of
your life until we do. What's that? The birds! There's a distraction for us, if
we can use it!"
A
mighty polyphonic shrieking had burst up from the high places of the Castle.
The defensive system of nets and cords, probably weakened by the fall of the
tower beside the gate, was now under heavy assault by birds, who seemed to be
carrying some edged weapons for the work. Sections of severed net came sagging
and dangling into the courtyards, brushing Thomas's men as he led them out in
another charge against the outer gate.
There
was too much fire there for the birds to be of help. And in the light of
burning timbers the backs of the Free Folk were exposed to the missiles that
now hailed more thickly from the roof of the keep. And the dismounted lancers'
long weapons, pointed as thick as hedgethorns into the yard, still formed a
wall proof against sword and mace and farmer's pitchfork. "Back! Back
inside!" Thomas bawled out.
Once
more they scrambled panting into the relative shelter of the inner court. Now
Thomas cried out, "Find a timber! We must breakin the door of the
keep!" And at last the desperation was plain in his voice. This door would
sturdily resist the biggest ram that men might lift; and the missiles would
keep coming down from above; and, given time, Ekuman could summon more
reinforcements.
Rolf
felt the weight of the Prisoner's Stone, still inside his shirt. It was no help
in breaking in a door . . .
There
came a sudden flash of understanding. Rolf seized Thomas by the sleeve, at the
same time holding up the Stone of Freedom. "It was this that opened the
door for Chup, when I was in the Elephant! No doors will hold, that guard
whoever holds this Stone!"
Thomas
stared at him blankly for just a moment, then understood. He raised his arm and
signaled urgently, calling down a bird.
XIII
The
Morning Twilight
Scowling,
intent on his labors, Elslood stood at a table flanked by torches, at the side
of the lightning-blasted Presence Chamber opposite the empty throne. The floor
around him was still strewn with stones from the riven window, with clots and
patches of the durable fire-extinguishing foam, and other debris of the
afternoon's disaster, a corpse or two included. But the bodies of Zarf and
Zarf's familiar had been removed; a wizard's corpse was still a thing of power,
liable to disrupt another man's magic.
Here in
his own place, where his closet had once been covered by rich hangings and
protected by a spider, Elslood had set up his worktable and reestablished a
measure of order. Gesturing and reciting now over the diagrams and objects he
had disposed upon the tabletop, Elslood foresaw that his labor was likely to be
futile. The subtler arts were hard to use against an enemy in the field, when
swords were out and blood a-spilling. Elementals were sometimes employable in
such situations, of course -his industrious opponent Loford had quite a knack
for raising them, though he was hardly Elslood's match in other ways. But no
one could raise an elemental from the worked stones of the Castle, nor from the
man-trampled patch of earth the Castle stood on.
On the
table was a flat-sided crystal, which had been darkening steadily as Elslood
worked. He could not bring the darkness to fruition, could not summon out of it
the dread power that he wanted-but the crystal in its present state did act
prosaically as a mirror. The mirror distracted Elslood with its reflection of a
tableau set on the far side of the chamber, not far from Ekuman's empty throne.
Soldiers were constantly coming and going through the room on various errands,
but always one of them stood guard there, over the litter holding the prisoner
who today had fallen in the arena. And always the dark-haired girl was there,
keeping her gentler watch.
Elslood
knew that even battle and invasion had not made Ekuman forget the warning of
the day's intrigue. Ekuman never forgot. And when Ekuman had won the night's
battle, as it seemed now that he would, he would take up the investigation as
before.
Elslood
had effectively silenced the sergeant by inflicting fits of madness. And the
mysterious youth who had called himself Ardneh had escaped. The one on the
litter, though, might still give testimony that would ultimately involve
Elslood. Certainly the one on the litter should be silenced. But there was the
soldier on guard, and the dark-haired harem-girl presenting a greater if
unconscious obstacle. Her devotion radiated like a torch to keep the dark arts
of madness at a distance. Still it should be possible to do something, to
finish off one who was so gravely hurt. . . .
So it happened
that Elslood, distracted from his duty to his Lord, was looking behind him
through the crystal's mirror, and in one flat surface of it saw a winged shape
enter at the blasted window. At first he thought it was a reptile; then he
heard the sharp, loud hoot. He spun around, in time to see the great bird's
taloned foot fling into the room an object that looked insanely like an egg.
The thing skittered and bounded a short distance over the burned floor,
straight to the girl beside the litter. She leaned across the litter and caught
it; more, it seemed to keep it from hitting her beloved, than for any other
reason.
The
bird was already gone from the window. The girl, standing up like a frightened
awkward doe, took a step backward with the unknown object clutched against her
breast. She did not want the thing. Elslood saw in her face that she wanted
only to get rid of it, to hide it, to get back again unnoticed to her job of
nursing.
The
soldier standing guard had yelled at the bird, which was gone again before he
could do more. Now he grabbed at the girl. Though she made no attempt to flee,
his hands only slid from her arms and clothing as he grabbed again and again,
so he seemed to be attempting some sort of frantic caress. Frightened at
running into magic, the soldier jumped back just as Elslood came stalking up.
He did
not try to restrain the girl. She did not want to flee, not without her man.
The birds had blundered, this time, trying to rescue the wrong prisoner.
Towering over the terrified girl, Elslood did nothing but extend his open hand,
palm up.
She
gave the Stone to him. At that moment a great crash and a burst of wild yelling
mounted up from somewhere at the base of the keep. The shock, first of
suspicion and then of understanding, hit Elslood's mind, as the girl dropped
back on her knees beside the litter. Elslood's skilled fingers swept hastily
over the blurred and ancient carvings on the thing that she had given him:
"... neither by spell nor by chain, neither by moat nor by cliff, can the
holder of this Stone be confined. Not lock nor key nor bar can bind him in. Now
powerless be all doors and sentries, all watchers and all walls;that are set to
guard him round about. ..."
Elslood
stood for a moment staring blankly at nothing, then on his face there grew a
twisted smile: So, Loford. I was too contemptuous of you, and you have won
after all.
Out on
the roof terrace Ekuman was bellowing in bewildered rage, and on the stairs
below the clamor of a panicked retreat already mounted closer. There were not
enough soldiers left in the keep to hold it, with the great doors they had
relied upon suddenly burst open.
The
thought of Charmian brought all of Elslood's energy back. Ignoring Ekuman's
shouts, ignoring everything else, the tall gray wizard ran from the Presence
Chamber to the stair. On legs as springy as a youth's he bounded down one
flight, passing visiting Satraps who were reeling upward in retreat, grim-faced
and bloody in their battle-harness.
Elslood
left the stair on the level of the keep just below the roof-terrace. He raced
down a corridor that was thick with the smell of dying flowers, and burst
without ceremony into Charmian's exquisitely decorated rooms. From the corridor
he had heard women already screaming within.
The
uproar ceased abruptly on his entrance. The enemy was not here yet; it was only
some hair-pulling fight. During the fighting all the Ladies of the visiting
Satraps had been gathered here for safety, here amid the mocking gaiety of
massed flowers, in the rooms that were to have been tonight a bridal suite. And
some of the Ladies and Charmian had fought. She raised her head now in the
midst of an ugly wrestling group of them, her own face as near to ugliness as
everit had been in Elslood's eyes. Her long hair had just been pulled into a
painful disarray, her face was swollen with her tears and rage -none of these
things did Elslood wholly see. For he saw that his Princess was, for whatever
reason, overjoyed to see him.
"Change
them!" she shrieked at him. "Blast these bitches with your spells,
wither them into hags and crones - "
Elslood
had no time to be subservient or soothing. He raised his voice, overriding hers
even as his hands held out the Stone of Freedom to her.
"My
Lady, take this! The ruler's doom, but the blessing of the fugitive. As you
pass from power to wretchedness, its constant effect will change from harm to
help. It is all that I can give you now."
Her
face softened with fright at his tone. She took the Stone obediently. " 'Wretchedness'?
Then we have lost?"
He had
heard her voice sound just like that when she was ten years old. While the
other women cowered away from him in terror, he took Charmian by the wrist and
led her out of the suite. He knew where Ekuman's secret passage of escape
began, and how that passage ran, dark and windowless beneath the other stair
all through the Castle's wall, to emerge from under ground only when it was
kilometers out in the eastern desert. And he knew of the secret cache at the
tunnel's end, the water and food and weapons laid by for just such a time as
this.
Ekuman
was waiting for them on the first curve of the stair above the Presence
Chamber, near the entrance to the secret way.
"So,"
the Satrap said, and not another word, at first. But the golden child-woman and
the towering gray man both stood mute and quivering before him.
Charmian
broke the silence. "Father?" she pleaded in her frightened child's
voice. And when Ekuman, who was staring at Elslood, did not move his eyes or speak,
she pulled her hand free of Elslood's grasp and darted forward, past her
father, on up the stair and around its curve and out of sight.
"I
thought it was you who had betrayed me," said Ekuman. His eyes locked
Elslood's. His face was granite. "When the soldier fell in his strangling
fit, I thought so. Yet I delayed, wanting to make sure." The Satrap shook
his head in wonderment. "You may have destroyed me -for nothing. For an
infatuation."
Elslood
had long schooled himself, not to bear fear, but to avoid it. So it struck him
now as a sudden overburdening weight would hit the muscles of a man grown slack
and soft with long neglect of exercise. Looking now at Ekuman, he could see his
own certain fate, and he felt the great fear rushing up like vomit from his
middle to his head. It could not be that this thing was really going to be done
to him, no, not now; there was always one more cranny of escape. . . .
In a
defensive reflex Elslood began the casting of a spell of his own, but he could
not finish it. Great as his powers were, they were helpless against those that
Ekuman had been given, for this one purpose, by Som the Dead in the Black
Mountains. Still Elslood could not comprehend that this was really happening.
Unbelievingly he watched as the Satrap's hand made the gesture of power, he
listened as Ekuman's voice uttered the one necessary word.
The
Elslood's vision left him -for a while. He still remained conscious. It seemed
to him that he could feel the water gushing from every pore of his body, the
bulk that made him tall and strong rushing away in liquid and in steam to leave
him infant-sized. His brain knew that it shrank, keeping in close proportion
with his every other organ. More horrible yet, he knew even as it happened that
his mind was shrinking with his brain. The intellect wais aware, step by step,
of its own maiming.
His
senses were disorganized then, but they came quickly back to him, to his
new-shaped body muffled under the heap of human clothes collapsed upon the
floor. The thing that regained sense had forgotten what magic was, and even
speech. But its memory still held, and knew that it would always hold, the
knowledge that once it had been man.
Ekuman
kicked at the creature and it flopped away from him in terror, struggling to
master its new webbed feet. It croaked and bounded and hopped away, as if it
would flee its very self. The Satrap wasted no more thought on it, for the
sounds of violence on the stair below were drawing nearer.
He spun
around and followed the way his daughter had taken, into the secret passage. He
took care that the door was tight shut behind him. Charmian's footsteps had
already gone ahead out of hearing in the darkness. Ekuman followed, needing no
light. But he was scarcely thinking of Charmian. He was not heading for the
desert, no, not yet. There was a chance yet of his saving all.
His
mind was still fixed on the Elephant. He had been watching from atop the keep
when the fearless Chup entered the Elephant and drove out the youth. Then he
had watched it standing open, riderless, watched balanced between rage and
satisfaction when he realized that none of his men who could reach it dared to
enter.
Ekuman
would dare anything now. His secret passage had another door, hard by the
ruined gate where Elephant sat.
When
someone's hands inside the keep took up the Prisoner's Stone, and its power
burst in the great door of the keep, Rolf was one of the first of the Free Folk
to enter. In the lower halls of the keep he used his sword -as inconclusively
as before. But there were stronger fighters at Rolf's sides. The enemy was
rapidly pushed back, cut down, being taken by surprise, being outnumbered now
in the stronghold where they had thought themselves finally secure.
Rolf
joined others then in pressing up the stairway, fighting now against the last
desperate defense of the visiting Satraps and their bodyguards. Chup was not
among them. Rolf had not seen Chup, nor Mewick either, since the two of them
had begun their duel in the outer court.
When
resistance had failed completely, Rolf, who knew the lay of the land better
than anyone else, led the advance into the upper level of the keep. Sword in
hand, he was the first of the Free Folk to enter the Presence Chamber, the room
from which he had been taken under guard only a few hours earlier. His knees
quivered with his relief when he saw that Sarah was alive and unhurt. She was
still where Rolf had seen her last, kneeling beside Nils's stretcher-as if all
the time between had found her immune to danger and had flowed around her.
She
raised her eyes joyfully at the entrance of the Free Folk-but when she
recognized Rolf under the blood and grime that masked his face, her eyes turned
cold. Nils still breathed; he turned drained but living eyes to his rescuers as
they entered.
Thomas
swept his glance around the chamber, then faced Sarah. "Did you see which
way our gracious Lord Ekuman retired?"
She
could only shake her head, no. The Free Folk spread out, searching. Some went
out onto the roof-terrace. Others poked among the hangings on the wall and
tested corpses with their blades.
Rolf
chose to follow the stairs that went up to the top-most level of the tower.
Only a few steps up, a bundle of clothing lay. He lifted the upper garment with
his sword. It was a long gray robe. It caught at his memory, but for the moment
he could not remember who. . . .
A small
circlet woven of the sun fell from the robe and dropped upon the stair just at
his feet. It flashed across his mind how cold and deadly Sarah's eyes had been
just now, looking at him. Her hair was dark, not at all like this. It was Sarah
that he loved, so why should he bend swiftly and pick up this yellow charm?
The
circlet was soft and flawless and intricately knotted, and he thought he could
feel power in it. But why should he quickly put it into the inner pocket of his
shirt?
Thomas
came up beside him then, and together they went on up the stair. When they saw
the richness of the furnishings in the apartment at the top they felt certain,
it was Ekuman's. But the Satrap was not there. In a small anteroom two harem
girls were cowering; they screamed in terror when Rolf and Thomas came bursting
in on them.
"Where
is he?" Thomas demanded, but the girls could only shake their heads in
fear. Rolf noticed that one of them had red hair, the other brown. It seemed
there had been only one girl in the Castle, perhaps in all the land, with hair
of the particular golden -
Outside
there burst up a roaring cheer, drawing Rolf and Thomas to a window. On the
roof-terrace there were torches enough to show them how Ekuman's banner of
black and bronze was being hauled down, torn to ribbons, spat and stamped upon.
The
sight was witnessed by others, the last of Ekuman's troops to hold a portion of
the field. These were the lancers, still huddled together around the Elephant.
The fall of the tower, attested by the tearing down of the flag, was enough for
them. They abandoned their wounded, and some of them their weapons, and they
turned and fled.
Here
high in the tower the windows were broader and shallower than those in the
lower walls. Here Thomas could lean out and strike his fist upon the sill.
"Fewer of 'em than we thought! We might have got to the Elephant with one
more push. Well, it's ours now-"
The
fire that had started with the breaching of the gate was still spreading slowly
among the sheds just inside the outer Castle wall; so there was firelight
enough in the courtyard to let Rolf and Thomas see the sudden lifting of a
paving stone from below. A man's head and shoulders rose out of the ground,
followed by the rest of a tall spare body. The man turned his head this way and
that, then sprinted for the Elephant.
"It's
Ekuman!" Even at this distance, Rolf knew he could not be mistaken.
Thomas
was shouting something incoherent. Ekuman's figure seemed to grow tiny as it
raced beside the Elephant's bulk. The Satrap found the hand-grips, climbed,
scrambled through the light-circle of the open doorway, reached back to pull
the door's round slab closed behind him. He was only just in time -a farmer
broke his pitchfork hurling it at the door, and another came running up quickly
to beat on the door uselessly with an axe. But Ekuman was now established where
no man might pluck him out; and Rolf knew how ready were the reins for the
Satrap's hands, or anyone's, to take them up.
Rolf
was running down the stair already, Thomas at his side demanding, "Will
the Elephant obey him?"
"I
learned very quickly how to give Elephant orders. And now it is already
awake."
On
impulse Rolf turned aside from the stair at the level of the Presence Chamber.
He came to a halt in the middle of the huge, once-splendid room. Across the
floor the path of the thunderbolt, was etched black, zig-zagging slightly
through patches of persistent foam. . . .
With a
bound Rolf was standing on the throne, reaching to take down from the wall the
twin of the red cylinder that Ekuman had used in putting out the fire. It was
not heavy.
Thomas
was still right at his side. "Will that thing stop the Elephant? I doubt
if the Thunderstone itself could do so."
"Nothing
that I know can stop the Elephant." Rolf spoke with conviction. "It
can batter down this keep, I think, if the driver's arms don't get too tired to
work the levers back and forth. But I may be able to blind the Elephant for a
little while. Maybe long enough for our people to get to some high mountain, or
else back to the swamps."
Rolf
had thrown down his sword. As he started down the stairs he was already
slinging the red cylinder across his back by the leather strap that had been
made to hold it on the wall.
Once
sealed inside the Elephant, Ekuman could slow down, think, and be cautious.
There must be dismay and uproar among the rebels outside who had seen him
enter, but here there was no sound but the grumbling drone of the mysterious
power under his feet, and his own heavy breathing. With steady hands he
approached and then touched the strange lights around him, so bright and yet so
cool. His nerves felt very good, now that there was nothing left for him to
lose.
He soon
noticed that someone had recently been sitting in the central chair, cracking
and flattening the ancient cushions. He knew who had occupied this seat more
powerful than a throne -he had been watching from the roof-terrace when Chup
forced Rolf out of the Elephant. He had recognized the same youth, outwardly no
more than a peasant, who had been involved in Charmian's petty intrigue - and
who, during questioning, had suddenly risen from his knees and looked Ekuman
fearlessly in the eye. "I am Ardneh," the boy had said, and then it
was as if he had thrown the thunderbolt with his right hand.
But the
Satrap Ekuman had survived the bolt, as he had so far survived all of Ardneh's
blows. And now the throne of Elephant's power was Ekuman's. Whether Ardneh was
only a symbol or something more, Ekuman meant to crush him yet.
He let
his weight down, gingerly, into the chair where Rolf had sat. Nothing happened
but the rising of a small cloud of dust, prosaic and somehow reassuring. Now he
could perceive the vision-ring, and marveled at it.
And
now, cautiously but steadily, he reached to touch the drive levers. They were
the obvious places for a man sitting here to put his hands.
Rolf ran
out through the open doorway of the deep, jumping over bodies and debris. He
was just in time to see Elephant make its first slow tentative movements under
the control of its new master. He dodged through the ravaged courtyard, trying
to keep the red cylinder as much as possible behind him, so that Ekuman might
not see it and know what Rolf intended. Whether Ekuman saw Rolf coming or not,
Elephant gave a sudden grinding lurch and freed itself of the ruins of the
tower, then with a mumbling roar went backing out of the breach it had created
in the wall.
Elephant
vanished from Rolf's sight, but the noise of Elephant receded only a little
way; and when he had run up to the debris of the fallen tower he saw the huge
vague armored shape standing motionless a little way ahead, as if waiting for
him, on the road that curved down toward the village.
Rolf
knew that the new driver could not yet have much sureness of control. He ran
straight toward the Elephant, and Ekuman made it roar and lurch toward him. He
waited until the mighty circling treads were almost upon him, until they were
shaking the ground violently under his feet; then he sprang out of the way and
turned and ran in at Elephant's flank.
Before
the metal beast could pass him, Rolf's hands and feet had found the tiny inset
steps and he was climbing toward its head. Ekuman made a sudden turn off the
road and onto the rougher slope. The move came very near throwing Rolf off, but
he clung on grimly, the red cylinder dragging on his back. He leaned his weight
outward on the door handle when he reached it, but of course Ekuman had latched
the door inside -and Ekuman had no Prisoner's Stone with him to betray him now.
When
Ekuman reversed his turn, Rolf was able to shift his grip, and with a desperate
upward lunge to seize one of the rods projecting from the front of Elephant's
head. In another moment he was able to pull himself up onto that head. Sitting
on the topmost hump, he contrived to grip the projecting rods with his legs, so
that his arms were free to bring around the red cylinder from his back. He
gripped the black snout of it and aimed it as he had seen the Satrap do, and
the fingers of his right hand found the trigger. He played the jet from the
nozzle over the tiny insect-eyes that were spaced around Elephant's head. The
foam as it went splattering away was the color of nothingness in the dead light
of pre-dawn morning.
The
stuff would not cling to Elephant's eyes as Rolf had hoped it would. The metal
and unbreakable glass were very smooth, and with Elephant's jouncing motion and
the wind of his rush the foam fell quickly away. Still, Elephant's eyes were
covered as long as Rolf kept playing the jet on them. Ekuman would not be able
to see where he was going, let alone hunt down running targets; Rolf
remembered, from his own time in the saddle, how dust, and falling stones, and
liquid fire, had each momentarily blinded Elephant.
Ekuman,
who could do nothing else till he had thrown Rolf off, kept Elephant stopping,
starting, turning, going down the long slope toward the bottom of the pass. The
red cylinder kept on spewing foam at a tremendous rate. Rolf swept the nozzle
in a circle, trying to keep foam covering the eyes in the back of Elephant's
head as well as those in the front. When he took a moment to lift his own eyes,
he could see numbers of Free Folk scattering and streaming away from the
Castle. He was giving them a chance to fight again someday -to fight against a
Satrap who rode the Elephant, and the forces that such a man could rally to
him.
But
Rolf had no time now to lament the bitter future. Elephant's turning, twisting
run down into the pass continued, with maneuvers that grew more violent as
Ekuman gained a better feel of the controls. Several times Rolf was nearly
thrown off, had to drop the nozzle of his foam-thrower and use both hands to
save himself. But each time he recovered in a moment, and once more covered
Ekuman's eyes.
Ekuman
suddenly abandoned his weaving tactics, and turned for a straight run west. He
must have had a few moments of clear vision, enough to give him some idea of
directions, but still he chose a course that would soon bring him through the
outskirts of the village and ultimately to the river. Was the Satrap grown so
desperate to rid himself of Rolf that he would risk the miring of his heavy
mount in mud and water? Why?
The red
cylinder gushed on as if it could never empty itself. Now in the first
forelightening of dawn the foam covering the great hump of Elephant's head was
white, a white hood spreading and streaming continuously down to hide the eyes.
And now Rolf noticed a curious thing; at one small spot, right at the back of
Elephant's head, the foam instead of being blown away was rushing inward -as if
Elephant's nose was there, and he continually, inhaled. And Rolf then
remembered the circulation of fresh air inside with the door shut tight.
He
twisted around as well as he could on his difficult, bouncing perch, aiming his
jet of foam to keep that gasping nostril covered, even if he must let the eyes
in front begin to see again.
Rushing
at full speed now down the western slope, Elephant raised its bellowing voice
to its loudest roar. Though its eyes were now uncovered it still weaved like a
blinded beast. Rolf was bounced back and forward and up and down, bruising his
lean bones. He clung on, somehow, and kept his foam-nozzle aimed at the little
orifice that sucked so greedily for air. When he looked back he saw that
Elephant, like some sickened animal, was now leaving a continuous trail of
dropping. A line of foam was dribbling like dung from somewhere under its
belly.
The
riverside village was just ahead. Trees rushed by. Rolf bent, clinging
desperately to the rods on Elephant's head, as great branches whipped past just
above him. Other trunks were flattened like grass before Elephant's charge. A
low retaining wall was trampled under the treads.
The
scrape of Elephant's rushing flanks dragged down the walls of houses. There
seemed now to be no hand at all upon the reins.
Rolf saw
then that the last steep plunge into the river was unavoidable, and that it was
certain to throw him off. Just as Elephant tilted down the bank, he leaped
clear. He jumped forward and to one side, as high and wide as he could, hoping
for deep water where he came down. The red cylinder was still with him, held by
its strap going around his body. His feet were just touching down on the calm
surface of the Dolles as the great sheet of Elephant's oceanic splash began to
rise behind him.
The
sound of Elephant's plunge roared at him while he was underwater. The cylinder
was now light enough to float and his treading water brought him easily to the
surface. It seemed that the whole riverbed was still rocking, sloshing water
like a hand-held basin, with the force of Elephant's dive.
Elephant,
half submerged, had come to a struggling, straining halt. Its forequarters were
evidently forced against some underwater rock, some firm fixed .bone of earth.
The endless driving treads still spun, like tail-swallowing snakes, flinging up
gobs of mud and hurling ribbons of water, digging Elephant deeper into the
bottom of the river.
Exhausted,
Rolf struggled back toward the shore. In thigh-deep water he took a stand, and
set to work again with his red cylinder. Until the cylinder at last ran empty,
he kept the narrow gasping throat of Elephant filled with foam.
Not
that breathing foam seemed to do metallic Elephant any harm. His voice was
still as loud, its treads still spun as rapidly as ever. Rolf, though, was thinking
of the inside of the cabin. In there, now, all the cool lights would be glowing
still, glowing faintly through the solid insubstantial whiteness that was
filling all the space there was, filling eye and ear and nose and lung. . . .
When
the cylinder was emptied Rolf dropped it from his deadened arms and let it
drift away. He had only just strength enough left to get himself ashore. Once
ashore he lay in the mud, hardly able to lift his head at the sound of running
feet. He knew his friends as they came in sight. Down the long trail of foam
and through the shattered village they had followed him, though Elephant's mad
descent had left them far behind. They were gathering around Rolf now in the
morning twilight, lifting him up and crying out the triumph that he was too
weak to shout.
It was
about noon on that day when Elephant suddenly died - or once more fell asleep.
At any rate the droning voice coughed once or twice and ceased, and with it
ceased the endless mindless working of the treads. Instantly the gentle river
healed over its torn surface, leaving only one ripple-scar bent around the
motionless metal hulk. Those who were standing guard first backed away, then
crept closer. But still the round door that they were watching never opened.
When
Rolf woke up, near sunset, they told him about Elephant. Rolf was up in the
Castle when he awoke. He vaguely remembered being helped back up the hill by
men only just less weary than he was; he did not even remember lying down to
sleep.
There
was other news. The troops who had been coming to Ekuman's reinforcement from
outposts scattered throughout the Broken Lands had turned and fled when they
saw the Castle lost, and heard from their scouts that the Satrap himself was
dead. All of Ekuman's high commanders were fled or fallen. More important, not
one of the visiting Satraps had escaped; so with today's one blow, all the
powers of the East here along the seaboard had been shaken. And here in the
Broken Lands, farmers and villagers had seen victory in a sky that was for the
first time in years empty of reptiles; and the people were hunting the remnants
of Ekuman's army or driving them on into the eastern desert.
After
enjoying a meal from what had been meant as Ekuman's festive table, Rolf
mounted to the Castle's battlements to take a turn as lookout. The high roofs
and walls had been cleaned of the last reptile's corpse, and the last bleaching
bones of the reptiles' victims had been removed for burial. Now on all the
roosts were birds, beginning to stir with the sunset; Rolf could pick out
Strijeef, stretching his bandaged wing.
Rolf
turned in all directions, looking out over the battlements. It seemed to him
odd that the new air of freedom should be invisible over distant swamps and
farms, villages and roads, the pass, the desert, the Oasis of the Two Stones.
The
Thunderstone was safe, though the Prisoner's Stone had not yet been found. Nor
had Char-mian.
Looking
from the roof-terrace into what had been the Presence Chamber, Rolf could see
that Sarah was still there. There were many wounded now for her and the other
women to tend; but still she spent as much time as she could beside one pallet.
Nils still lived. And Mewick still lived, and even walked a bit, though he bore
five or six wounds and had been drenched in his own blood.
And
Chup survived - or half of him, at least. He lay on one of the pallets that had
been set in rows in the Presence Chamber. Most of the time he kept his arms
raised to cover his face. His legs and all below his waist were dead,
unmovable, since Mewick's hatchet had at last come looping around his guard and
bitten at his spine.
Sarah's
eyes would not meet Rolf's. He turned away and looked down into the courtyards.
Thomas, his broad shouldered figure tirelessly erect, was down there directing
the building of a temporary barrier across the breach that Elephant had made in
the outer Castle wall. If some surviving band of the enemy should think to take
surprise revenge, they would not take the leader of the Free Folk unaware.
Though
Thomas was ceaselessly giving orders, still he did not hesitate to stoop and
lift a timber himself. A girl Rolf did not know, wearing a wide Oasis farmer's
hat, was staying close to Thomas's side. And there was yellow-haired Manka,
stewing food in a huge caldron -and there stood Loford, displaying a bright
bandage around the upper girth of his right arm.
Rolf
had a bandage too, over the wound on his back. A dozen smaller hurts all
throbbed and nagged. But these discomforts were no burden now; other things,
more lasting, had happened to him.
He
still had no clue to what had happened to his sister Lisa; he no longer had a
real hope that he would ever learn her fate.
His
fingers kept straying to the inner pocket of his shirt, to touch the knot of
golden hair concealed there. He would speak of the charm to Loford-yes, when he
had a chance.
Alone
on the battlements Rolf stood the day's last lookout, gazing levelly across the
desert. The mountains of the East were black even now, with the rays of the
setting sun thrown full upon them.
BOOK
TWO
THE
BLACK MOUNTAINS
I
Tall
Broken Man
The
great demon came to Chup in the middle of an autumn night of howling wind. It
came in the midst of a torrent of air, whose vortices rose seemingly within a
single gasp or howl of attaining life; it came with a blast that shook thup's
hovel of a shelter, pitched against the inside of the Castle wall. Lying
sleepless with the nagging of his ever-painful wound, for many nights, Chup had
heard time and again the screaming passage of things that from their sound were
on the verge of becoming elemen-tals of the air. So it was that he paid little
heed to the demon's first shaking of his lean-to.
But
soon the shaking grew more violent. A prolonged pounding against one end of his
little shelter bounced its crooked boards against the wall of enormous stones.
Raising his upper body on his elbows, Chup looked down the length of his
paralyzed legs in the direction of the sound. And he saw, like smoke flowing
through the crevices of his patchwork dwelling, the demon coming in.
Involuntarily
he stiffened. The thing from the East would have been his ally, in his days of
power; what business it might have with him now he did not know. And even a
strong man, thinking demons were his allies-even such a man, when a demon came
to him at midnight, and at hardly more than arm's length distance, might know
himself strong indeed if he resisted the urge to run, or to cover his eyes and
flatten himself on the ground.
As for
being able to run, Mewick's battle-hatchet had seen to that. And as for
covering his eyes -well, he was still Chup. Raised on his elbows, he kept his
gaze fixed steadily upon the smoky image coalescing in the close space before
him. Outside the wind moaned softly, relieved of bearing that which had come in
to Chup. Rain began to spatter on the lean-to.
Inside
the hovel, space changed and distance grew as the face of the demon began to
take its shape. Chup could scarcely make out on it anything like a human
feature, and yet he knew it was a face. As it became a little more distinct
there grew in Chup the fear that he might understand what he was looking at,
that at last he might perceive the features rightly and that when he did they
would be too horrible to see.
Nothing
but demons could shake him like this. Now his eyes demanded, if not closing, at
least to be allowed to slide out of focus. With a sigh he at last let them do
so.
Only
then, as if it had waited for that token yielding, did the demon speak. Its
voice was a skeletal hand, searching furtively through dead leaves: "Lord
Chup."
The
power tapped by this pronouncing of his name made its image plainer in his
sight. With a shudder he gave up trying to face down the thing, and let himself
sprawl back on his rude bed, a fore arm flung over his eyes. "I am Chup.
But Lord no longer."
"But
Lord again, mayhap."The dry leaves rustled, stirred by finger-bones.
"Your unclaimed bride, the Lady Charmian, does send you greeting now
through me."
"A
greeting -from where?"
"From
her place of power and safety in the Black Mountains."
Of
course, the demon could be lying. It could have come merely to torment a
cripple, like some nasty child on a romp; sometimes no meanness was too small
for them to bother with. But no, on second thought. It would not have come so
lightly to this castle now, filled as the place was with an army of wizards and
warriors of the West; even demons had to heed some dangers. It was here, then,
on important business.
Without
lifting his arm from his eyes, Chup asked: "What does my Lady want of me
now?"
The
image of the demon's face began to form inexorably inside Chup's eyelids, under
his forearm that could not keep it out. Moving what did not seem to be a mouth,
it said: "She wishes to share with you, as with one worthy of her, her
present power and glory and delight."
Now
whether he opened his eyes or shut them, the demon's face, like some hideous
afterimage, remained the same. "Power?" Suddenly shaking-angry, Chup
raised his head and glared. "Power is mine, you say?" His enemies had
not heard a groan or a complaint from him in half a year, but now the fullness
of his bitterness burst out. "Then show me that I have just the power to
move my legs -can you do that?"
Below
the monstrous face the darkness worked. There appeared a pair of hands, roughly
manlike but deformed and huge. They were visible in the light that sprang out
when a cover was removed from an object held in one of them. It was a large,
thick goblet or bowl, dark itself but holding a bursting warmth of multicolored
light. That glow ate away the darkness, and seemed to half-obliterate the
demon's image, and yet it did not dazzle when Chup looked directly at it.
The
demon's free hand reached for Chup. He uttered an involuntary grunt, but did
not feel the repulsive contact he expected. There was only an impersonal force
that spun his body halfway round. Now he lay face down, with his dead feet
still pointed at the demon. On his back, right in the old unhealthy wound where
Mewick's hatchet had bitten at his spine, Chup now felt a cold touch as of icy
water. A moment later there followed something, some kind of shock, that might
have been pain of terrible intensity but was ended so quickly that even the
timidest man could scarcely have cried out.
When
that clean shock had passed, Chup realized that it had burned away the nagging
gnawing that had lived in the wound almost since it was made. Before he could
think beyond that point, the next change came, a dazzling tingling down the
great nerves of both thighs. Automatically he tried to move his legs. Still
they would not stir; it was long months since those wasted, shrunken muscles
had contracted, save for painful and uncontrollable twitchings. But even now he
felt those muscles try.
With
his arms he turned himself again upon his back. The demon, withdrawn slightly,
was recapping the vessel from which it seemed to have poured his healing.
Warmth and light vanished. Chup again faced only a distorted presence, dim in
darkness. The only sounds in the hovel were those of rain and autumn wind, and
Chup's lonely, ragged breathing that now gradually grew steadier.
"Is
this a true healing?" he asked at length. And then: "Why have you
done it?"
"A
true healing, sent toyou byyourbride, thatyou may come to her."
"Oh?
Why, then, she is very gracious." Chup could feel the coursing life down
to his toes; he tried them, but they were still too stiff to move. He did not
dare accept this miracle as true; not yet. "She is full of unexpected
kindness. Come, messenger, I am no child. This is some prank. Or -what does she
need me for?"
With
the speed of a blow, the demon-face came looming over him. He was Chup-but he
was no more than human. He could not, with all his will, keep from turning his
head away and lifting up an arm as if to ward a blow. His stomach, that had
never troubled him before a fight, now knotted in spasm.
His
eyes clenched uselessly upon the demon-image looking through their lids.
Unhurriedly,
the voice of dry leaves scraped at him. "I am not to be mocked, lord
though you were, and lord you are to be. Not to be called 'messenger' in
insolence. Much less shall you scorn those who sent me here."
Those?
Of course, Charmian herself was no magician, to have the ordering of demons.
She would again have charmed a wizard or two into helping her, with whatever
scheme she played at ... The demon would not let him think. He was to be
punished for his disrespect. He had the sensation that the demon was starting
to peel away the outer layers of his mind, with no more effort or concern than
a man toying with an insect. They could change men. If it kept on it would turn
him into something far less than a cripple. Unless they really needed him -he
cried out. He could not think. He was Chup, but he could not stand against an
avalanche.
"You
are not to be mocked," he whispered, through clenched teeth. "Nor are
your masters to be scorned."
The
effortless onslaught faded. When he was master of his eyes again, there was
nothing to be seen but the bearable dim face.
The
demon then began impersonally to tell him why he was needed. "Among the
forces of the West now gathering in this castle, there is a peasant youth named
Rolf, born here in the Broken Lands."
There
could have been more than one fitting that description, but Chup had no doubt
who was meant. "I know him. Short and dark. Tough and wiry."
"That
is his appearance. With him he now carries, always and everywhere, a thing that
must be taken from him. It must be brought to the Lady Charmian -and to no one
else -in the Black Mountains, and soon. When the youth goes into battle, what
we seek may be destroyed or lost. Here the power of the West is too strong for
me or any other to take the thing by force; stealth must be used."
"What
is it?"
"A
small thing in size. A knot woven from a woman's yellow hair. A charm of the
kind that men and women use when they seek from one another what some of them
call love."
Yellow
hair. Charmian's own? He waited for the demon to go on.
It
rasped: "Tomorrow your legs will bear your weight, and soon they will be
strong enough for battle. You are required to get this charm before the Western
army marches - "
"They
may move any day!"
"-and
bring it to your Lady. Men in her service will be patrolling in the desert, a
few kilometers to the east, watching for you. Beyond that you must expect no
further help." The hugeness of the demon's face was growing less; Chup saw
how far the space beneath his slanting roof had stretched, now it was coming
back.
The dry
voice too was fading. "I will not come to you here again. Except to punish
you for failure." And then the face and voice were gone, the hovel it had
occupied was ordinary. The wind outside went howling loud again. Chup lay
without moving until it had become an ordinary sound, burdened with no more
than the rain.
The
rain and clouds delayed first entry of the morning's light into the long and
crowded barrack-room. When Rolf woke all was still in darkness, round him the
familiar jumble of packs, equipment, weapons, and bunks and hammocks with their
load of snoring bodies.
He who
had roused him, without touch or word, stood at the foot of Rolfs bunk, a tall
and bulky figure in the gloom.
"Loford?
What - " And then Rolf guessed what had brought the wizard to him.
"My sister? Is there something?"
"There
may be. Come." Loford turned away. Rolf was into his clothes and had
caught him up before Loford reached the door.
The
wizard turned to a stair, and as they climbed the rising turns of stone toward
the Castle roof, he explained in a low voice: "My brother has arrived. He
is speaking much of technology and how we may be able to use it. Of course I
mentioned your experience, and your handiness along that line, and he was
interested. I told him also how I have tried with my poor spells to learn what
happened to your sister. Beside my brother I am a backwoods dabbler. Certain
powers that I never could have commanded, he has called up and set to work.
Understand, the answer we get may be incomplete, or . . ."
"Or
may not be one I want to hear." They were starting up the last steep
stair, leading to the battlemented roof of what had been Ekuman's private
tower. "Still I thankyou. It will not be your fault if the news is
bad."
Emerging
on the roof, Rolf pulled his jacket tighter against the dying drift of rain,
and through habit, without thinking, made sure that something in an inner
pocket was safe. Mist hung like wet garments round the tower, and no sentry had
been posted here in this hour before the dawn. Near one battlement a tripod
supported a brazier in which glowed a green, unearthly-looking fire. Besides
the fire a motionless figure in wizard's robes stood looking out away from the
Castle, into the rainy night.
Loford
raised one finger to his lips, gave Rolf a warning glance, then led him
forward. The green fire flared up once, the waiting figure turned, tall and
spare. Hood and shadow concealed the face of Loford's brother. His fingers
moved as if he tested some invisible quality of the air. Arrayed on the paved
roof around him, Rolf now saw, were some of the things that good m'agicians
used: the fruits and flowers of autumn, what looked like water and milk in
little jars, small heaps of earth and sand, plain wooden twigs, some bent, some
straight. The green unsteady light had changed them all, but they looked
innocent and simple still.
The
hooded figure beckoned, with a turning of its head, and Rolf went to stand
beside it, still keeping silence as he had been signed to do. Now, looking out
across the battlement into the east wind and its drifting rain, he saw the
clouds and tendrils of lethargic mist speed faster past him. In a moment it
seemed to Rolf that he stood on the prow of a racing ship of stone, driving
into a gale. A vase holding flowers was blown in from the parapet, to land at
Rolf's feet with a tiny smash.
Rolf
put out his hands to grip the stone before him. The man beside him raised a
long arm, pointing nearly dead ahead. Just at that point the driving mist flew
faster still, became a gray smooth blur that was not mist, and then tore
soundlessly from top to bottom. Rolf peered into the opening, leaned into it,
and then for him the wind and rain were gone. A vision engulfed him while it
seemed that he hung bodiless in space.
A
forest clearing, that he had never thought to see again. A house of thatch and
poles, simple and small, the garden, the familiar path, fowl in a pen beside
the house. The vision was utterly silent, but it held life and movement, sun
and shadow shifting with a breeze. Then in the shaded doorway a dim figure
moved, one hand with a gesture that Rolf had seen ten thousand times wiping
itself on his mother's familiar ragged apron.
Rolf
cried out then, as in a nightmare, knowing and enduring the worst before it
happened. And someone, disembodied too or at least invisible, was gripping his
arms, speaking with Loford's kind whisper in his ear: "It is all written!
All unchangeable! They cannot see or hear you. You can only watch, and
learn."
His
mother had shaded her eyes, looking out; then she stiffened with alarm, hurried
inside, and shut the useless door. Rolf did not know how he could keep
watching. But he had no choice. He must learn Lisa's fate. And he must learn
who they were, the ones who came. Soldiers of the East, of course. But Rolf
wanted their faces and their names.
In the
foreground of the vision now the first of them appeared, a mounted trooper
wearing black and bronze, his back to Rolf. Behind him came another and
another, the beginning of a line. There were six of them in all. Their mouths
were wide, with soundless shouts or laughter, their weapons were held ready.
And now the door was opening, Rolf's mother standing there again.
A time
came presently when Rolf could no longer look. He shut his eyes and floated in
a void, but could not flee the thought of what was happening. At length there
came what must be Loford's hand, large and unseen, to clamp his chin and shake
his head gently, trying to force him now to see.
The hut
had already been contemptuously kicked to bits. The bodies of his mother and
father were hidden in its small ruin, for the son to find when he came running
home. Here was Lisa, twelve years old, long hair still neatly bound up in
peasant style but her garments torn and smeared, her face as pale and blank as
death, hoisted awkwardly up before a soldier's saddle. Wiping blades and
straightening clothing, the marauders were almost ready to leave. He who
carried Lisa must be their officer, for he alone wore half-armor, and he rode
the tallest steed. Now as he turned his mount out of the yard toward the road,
he showed Rolf his youthful, unlined, and harmless-looking face. There was a
soft, proud, almost pouting look about the mouth.
If she
were seriously injured, dying, they would not have bothered carrying her off.
"... alive?" So choked was his throat, Rolf had to try twice before
he could speak intelligibly. "Is she alive now? Will I find her?"
Loford,
at a little distance, murmured something, and Rolf understood that his question
was being passed on. Then Loford brought back an answer, which he whispered to
Rolf slowly, like one who did not understand the message he conveyed: "She
lives. You must get help from the tall broken man."
"What?
Who?" This time there was no reply. Rolf drifted, bodiless and alone.
"Then what of those who took her?" he demanded. "There were six.
How many of them still breathe?"
The
vision changed. Rolf now beheld a portion of a simple, unpaved road, running
through green, wooded land. Rolf recognized the spot as one near where his home
had been.
A
trooper in black and bronze came riding into Rolf's field of view. Gone were
his cheeks and eyes and nose, and his jaws of weathered bone gaped wide,
showing missing teeth. What might have been dried leather clung in fragments to
his skull and to his skeleton's hands. Rolf understood that he was answered
regarding this man's fate.
The
second mounted trooper hove intb view. He grinned, for he too was a skeleton,
although it seemed he had good grounds for peevishness. Straight before him
there extended the long handle of a farmer's pitchfork, long tines vanishing in
his tunic's front, and coming out his back as fine, sharp points. Rolf had one
third his answer now.
The
third wore flesh upon his bones, and breathed, but only in a vision could
anyone so wasted sit on a beast and ride. His scalp was marked by an old wound,
his eyes rolled vacantly. The fourth man came, a handless skeleton: had he
survived his maiming, and fled with other of Ekuman's people to the East,
thereto discover no one could be bothered feeding him? The fifth man rode past
jauntily, a hatchet buried in his fleshless skull. The overthrow of Eastern power
in the Broken Lands had taken heavy toll.
The
tallest beast came last, with Lisa still carried unconscious before the saddle.
She lived-but Rolf saw with a shock that she was changed. Her body looked the
same, and her ragged garments and her dark-brown, bound up hair. But her face
had been transformed, from its familiar homeliness to beauty that awoke an echo
from Rolf's dreams and made him catch his breath. This was the girl whom he had
called his sister, yet it was not. He called her name out, once, and then fell
silent, marveling.
Her
captor, too, was live and whole. His full-fleshed image with its proud, bored
face watched indifferently the ghastly capering before him of his slaughtered
men.
"Does
he live, then?" Rolf demanded of the air.
He will
be slain and he will live, he thought the answer came.
"Loford?"
The vision was suddenly spinning before Rolf like a reflection in a whirlpool.
He staggered, drew in a deep breath, and found himself firmly in his own body
once more, standing on the solid Castle stone. Loford and Loford's brother were
close beside him, and the light of day had come, to make the green fire ghostly
dim. The last torn ribbons of the fog were swirling far above them now, borne
by what seemed no more than a natural wind.
A
wizard's or a statue's face, that of Loford's brother, lined but somehow
ageless, loomed over Rolf. "Call me Gray," the statue said. "You
will understand I cannot casually use my real name. How is it with you?"
"With
me? How would it be? Did you not see?" Then Rolf felt Loford's grip upon
his arm, and fought to calm himself. "I am sorry. I give you thanks, and
ask your pardon, Gray."
"I
grant it," Gray said solemnly.
Rolf
turned from one of the wizards to the other.
"She
lives, then. But where? Tell me, could he still have her with him? The one who
took her?"
"I
do not know," said Gray. "You heard the only guide that we were given
to further information: 'get help from the tall broken man.' I expect that will
prove decipherable to you. I am not sure what powers we reached today, but at
least they were not definitely evil, and I would tend to trust them. Though
they were strange ... it seemed to me I spoke with one who held the lightning
in his hands . . ."
A
little later, Rolf stood on the tower alone save for the sentry who had come
with day to scan the desert. While he was deep in thought, gazing out over the
complex crowded courtyards of the castle, Rolf saw a familiar figure by the
newly rebuilt main gate in the outer wall, dragging crippled legs out of a
beggar's lean-to.
A
broken man, who once was tall.
When it
had become apparent that Chup was not going to die, he had been placed under
close guard by the new masters of the land. Thomas and other leaders of the
West had come many times to question him. Chup had told them nothing. They had
not tried to force answers from him; new to revolution and to power, they
probably were not sure what questions needed answers, nor what information Chup
was likely to possess. Probably he could not have told them much of any use. He
knew little of Somthe Dead, of Zapranoth the Demon-Lord, and of the Beast-Lord
Draffut, the powers of the Black Mountains, two hundred kilometers distant
across the desert. They were the powers that the folk of the Broken Lands and
the other newly freed satrapies must fear, and must eventually defeat if they
were to retain their freedom. Unlike most others of his rank in the Eastern
hierarchy, Chup had never formally pledged himself to the East, never passed through
the dark and little-known ordeals and ceremonies. He had never visited the
Black Mountains.
A few
of the Free Folk, as the successful Western rebels in the Broken Lands did
sometimes call themselves, had perhaps been willing to show some mercy to a
fallen enemy, at least to one who had never been known to dabble in pointless
cruelty himself. Perhaps for that reason Chup's life had been spared. Chup
himself thought it more likely that after the physicians and the wizards had
looked many times at the ill-healing wound on his back, had jabbed pins and
burning sticks at his useless unfeeling withering legs, and had decided that no
herb nor surgeon's knife nor wizard's spell could ever mend what Mewick's
flashing hatchet-blade had severed, then the Free Folk of the West were quite
content for him to live. Existence as a cripple among enemies might well be
thought a punishment worse than death.
So they
let him go, or rather one day they dragged him out of the cell in which he had
been guarded. Explaining nothing to him, they simply dragged him out and walked
away. When he was left alone, he used his hands to drag himself on. When he got
as far as the great new gate where the road came in through the massive outer
wall, he could see the empty distances the road ran to, and found no point in
trying to crawl on.
When
Chup had been sitting for half a day beside the gate, preparing himself to
starve, there came one he had never seen before, an old man, to leave beside
him a chipped cup with some water in it. Having set this down as if he were
doing something shameful, and hardly looking at Chup, the old man walked
quickly on.
Thinking
it highly unlikely that anyone would trouble to poison him in his present
state, Chup drank. Somewhat later, a passing wagoneer, perhaps a stranger,
looked down from his high seat, perhaps saw only a beggar instead of a fallen
enemy, and tossed Chup a half-gnawed bone.
Chup
propped his torso erect against the castle wall and chewed. He had never been
too finicky about his food when in the field. Turning his head to the right, he
could squint across two hundred kilometers of desert to a horizon darkened by
the Black Mountains. Even if he could somehow get there, the East that he had
served had little use for the crippled and the failed. That was of course quite
right and realistic, fitting with the way the world was made. Where else? A few
kilometers to the west was the sea, to north and south, as here, his former
enemies were in power.
The
village just below the Castle was in ruins from the fighting, but people were
already moving back and rebuilding. The road here promised to be a busy one. It
seemed that if he must try to live on handouts he was not too likely to reach a
better place than this.
By the
night of that first day he had gathered scraps of wood and had begun to build
his lean-to near the gate.
On the
morning after the demon's visit, Chup had life back in his legs. Before
emerging from his shelter he had tested them, gritting his teeth and laughing
with the glorious pain of freely coursing blood and thawing muscles. Whatever
the source of the healing magic, it was extremely powerful. He could bend each
knee slightly, and move all his toes. His fingers told him that the wound upon
his back had shriveled to a scar, as smoothly healed as any of his other
battlemarks.
Now he
must earn what the East had given him. He knew them too well to think for a
moment that the demon's parting threat of punishment for failure had been an
idle one.
Emerging
at the usual hour from his shelter, he took care to give no slightest sign that
anything of moment had occurred during the night. The light drizzle was fading
as he dragged himself to his usual station at one side of the great gate, which
had just been opened for the morning. As usual, he held in his lap his beggar's
bowl, chipped pottery salvaged from a dump. His pride was too great to be
destroyed by taking alms; it had been easier because he had never been forced
to really beg. The weather had been good, and food plentiful throughout the
summer. People came to look at him, a lord humbled, a villain punished, a
terrible fighter beaten. People whom he never asked or thanked put in his bowl
small coins orbits of food. There were no other beggars at the gate, and not many
in the land. Western soldiers maimed in the fighting were still being cared for
as heroes, and the others of the East, of less importance than Chup, had
evidently been slain to the last man.
Sometimes
people came to gloat, silently or loudly, at his downfall. He did not look at
them or listen. They were no great bother. The world was like that. But he was
not going to give them the satisfaction of dying, starving, or even showing
discomfort, if he could help it.
Often
it was the soldiers, even those who had fought against him, who gave him food
and drink. When they spoke to him civilly he answered them in the same way.
Daily he dragged himself to get water at their barracks well.
This
morning, Chup had hardly taken his place beside the gate, when he saw the youth
Rolf pacing across the outer courtyard toward him. Rolf stepped quickly but
deliberately, frowning at the puddles, evidently on serious business. Yes, he
was coming straight toward Chup. The two of them had not spoken since Chup was
a Lord and the other a weaponless rebel. This visit today could not be
coincidence; the demon must have somehow arranged it. Chup's chance was coming
sooner than he had dared to hope.
Rolf
wasted no time in preliminaries. "It may be you can tell me something that
I want to know," he began. "About a matter that is not likely to mean
anything to you, one way or the other. Of course I'll be willing to give you
something, within reason, in return for information."
Not for
the first time, Chup found himself somewhat taken with this youth, who came
neither bullying the cripple nor trying to be sly. "My wants these days
are few. I have food, and little need of anything else. What could you give
me?"
"I
expect you'll be able to think of something."
Chup
almost smiled. "Suppose I did. What must I tell you in return?"
"I
want to find-my sister." Speaking rapidly, saying nothing of his sources
of information, Rolf described briefly the time and circumstances of Lisa's
vanishing, her appearance, and that of the proud-faced officer.
Chup
scowled. The tale awoke real memories, a little hazy though they were. Better
and better, he would not have to invent. "What makes you think that I can
tell you anything?"
"I
have good reason."
Grunting
in a way that might mean anything or nothing, Chup stared past Rolf again as if
he had forgotten him. He must not seem eager to do business.
The
silence stretched until Rolf broke it impatiently. "Why should you not
help me? I think you no longer have any great love for anyone in the East -
" He broke off suddenly, like one aware of blundering. Then went on, in a
slower voice. "Your bride is there, I know. I didn't -I didn't mean to say
anything about her."
Here
was a peculiar near-apology. Chup looked up. Rolf had lost the aspect of a
determined, bitter man. He had become an awkward boy, speaking of a lady in the
manner of one who cherished secret thoughts of her.
Rolf
stumbled on. "I mean, she-the Lady Charmian -couldn't be harmed in any way
by what you tell me of my sister or her kidnapper." One of Rolfs big hands
rose, perhaps unconsciously, to touch his jacket, as if for reassurance that
something carried in an inner pocket was safe. "I know you were her
husband," he blurted awkwardly, and then ran out of words. He stared at
Chup with what seemed a mixture of anxiety, hatred, and despair.
"I
am her husband," Chup corrected drily.
Rolf
came near blushing, or did blush; it was hard to tell, with his dark skin.
"You are. Of course."
Though
Chup preferred the sword, he could use cleverness. "I am so in name only,
of course. You came breaking in the Castle gates before Charmian and I could do
more than drink from the same winecup."
Rolf
looked somewhat relieved, and utterly distracted now, despite himself, from
whatever his original business with Chup had been. He sat down facing Chup. He
wanted, needed, to ask Chup something more, but it took much hesitation before
he could get it out.
"Was
she really ... I mean, there have always been bad things said about the Lady
Charmian, things I can't believe . . ."
Chup
had to conceal amusement, a problem he had not faced in quite a while. He
managed, though. "You mean, was she as evil as they say?" Chup looked
very sober. "You can't believe all that you hear, young one. Things were
very dangerous for her in the Castle." Though not as dangerous as they
were for others, living with her. "She had to pretend to be something
different than what she truly was; and she learned to dissemble very
well." Rolf was nodding, and seemed relieved; it amused Chup to have
answered him with perfect truth.
"So
I have thought," said Rolf. "She seemed so ..."
"Beautiful."
"Yes.
So she could not have been like her father and the others."
Of
course, Chup thought, suddenly understanding the boy's monumentally innocent
stupidity about the Lady Charmian. He was befuddled by the love-charm that he
carried; the same that Chup would have to carry, later. However, time enough
then to cross that bridge . . .
Rolf
was saying, more calmly: "Nor were you, I think, as bad as Ekuman and the
others. I knowyou were a satrap of the East, oppressing people. But you were
not as vile as most of them."
"The
most gracious compliment I have enjoyed in some time." Chup rubbed a
flea-bitten shoulder against the cool, damp stone of the sunless wall. The
moment seemed favorable for getting down to business. "So, you would like
me to tell you where your sister may be found. I can't."
Much of
Rolf's original businesslike manner returned. "But you know
something?"
"Something
that you'll want to hear."
"Which
is?"
"And,
since you are in earnest, I will tell you what I want in return."
"All
right, let's hear that first."
Chup
let his voice fall into a grim monotone. "If I can help it, I do not want
to die like this, rotting by centimeters. Give me a rusty knifeblade, so I can
at least feel like an armed man, and take me out into the desert and leave me
there. The great birds are gone south on their migration, but some other
creature will find me and oblige me with a finish fight. Or let thirst kill me,
or a mirage-plant. But I am loath to beg myself to death before my
enemies." It came out quite convincingly, he thought. Yesterday, there
would have been more truth in it than fiction.
Rolf
frowned. "Why must it be the desert, if you can't bear to live? Why not
here?"
"No.
Dying here would be a giving in, to you who've made a beggar of me. Out there
I'll have gotten away from you."
So long
did Rolf sit silent, pondering, that Chup felt sure the bait was taken.
However, the fish was not yet caught. Chup volunteered: "If you want to
make sure of my finish, bring along a pair of swords. I think the chances would
now be somewhat in your favor. I'll tell you what I can about your sister
before we fight."
If Rolf
was outraged by this challenge from a cripple, he did not show it. Once away
from the subject of Charmian, he was adult again. Again he was silent for a
time, watching Chup closely. Then he said: "I'll take you to the desert. If
you lie to me about my sister, or try any other sort of foolishness, I won't
leave you in the desert, dead or living. Instead I'll drag you back here, dead
or living, to be displayed beside this gate."
Chup,
keeping his face impassive, shifted his gaze into the distance. In a moment
Rolf grunted, got to his feet, and strode away.
II
Duel
In
midafternoon Rolf came back, leading a load-beast. The look of the animal
suggested it might be a reject from the Castle stable that could not be expected
to give useful service in the coming campaign. Slung on it were several
containers that might hold food and water. Rolf had also armed himself, but not
with two swords. A serviceable sword and a long, keen knife hung from separate
belts cinched round his waist.
The
time since morning had tested Chup's patience to the limit. First, of course,
because he was not sure his fish was wholly caught. Secondly, the urge to move
his legs had become almost overwhelming. Under his ragged trousers their muscles
were far looser, and even seemed thicker, than they had been yesterday. The
ache and tingle of returning life had turned into an itch for movement.
Rolf
said nothing but halted his feeble-looking animal just beside Chup. Then he
came to catch Chup under the armpits, and with wiry strength heave his
half-wasted frame erect. The gate sentries turned their heads to watch, as did
some passersby. But no one seemed to care if Chup departed. He was a prisoner
no more, only a beggar.
Once
standing, Chup gripped the saddle with his strong hands and raised himself,
while Rolf guided his dangling legs into the stirrups. Rolf asked: "Are
you going to be able to hang on, there? I wouldn't want you to fall and split
your head. Not just yet."
"I
can manage." Chup had forgotten how high riding raised a man. Rolf took
the loadbeast by the bridle, and they were off, down the sloping switchback
road that led first to the village and then the world.
Rolf
walked with long strides beside the load-beast's head: a position that let him
keep the corner of one eye on Chup. Chup, for his part, breathed deeply with
the joy of seeing the Castle gradually recede behind him, and the greater joy
of surreptitiously testing his legs in the stirrups and feeling them respond.
Before
they reached the village, Rolf turned off the road. He led the animal down a
slope of wasteland to the beginning of the desert. The autumn day had cleared,
and had grown almost hot. Ahead of them, gently rolling flatness shimmered with
mirage. Sparsely marked with vegetation, it stretched on to the horizon, where
towered the Black Mountains, jagged and enigmatic. Rolf had chosen the only
direction which led quickly to solitude, and was heading straight east from the
Castle.
Men in
the service of the Lady Charmian were to be patrolling in the desert. That
might or might not mean some help for Chup. He could not count on any.
Neither
Chup nor Rolf spoke again until the Castle had fallen nine or ten kilometers
behind them. At this distance it plainly overlooked them still, from its perch
on the low flank of a mountain pass. But the eastward of this point where they
now were, the lay of the land was such that a man going east could take
advantage of declivities and brush, and perhaps never see the Castle or be seen
from it again.
Here
Rolf stopped the beast, and, still warily holding its bridle, turned to Chup.
"Tell me what you know."
"And
after that?"
Touching
a water bag slung on the animal, Rolf said: "This I'll leave with you, and
the knife. The beast goes back with me, of course. You won't be able to get
anywhere, or to stay alive out here for very long, but that's what you asked
for."
Chup
was curious. "How do you plan to judge whether or not what I tell you is
the truth?"
"You
have no cause to seek revenge on me in particular." Rolf paused. "And
I don't think you lie just for the sake of lying; do harm just for the sake of
doing it. Also, I already know, on good authority, a few things more than what
I've told you about what happened to my sister. Whatever you tell me should
match with that."
Chup
nodded several times. He had intended anyway to tell Rolf the truth; he could
almost regret that Rolf would not live long enough to benefit.
"The
name of the man you want is Tarlenot," Chup said. "He served as an
escort commander and a courier between the Black Mountains and outlying
satrapies. He may still; whether he still is alive I have no idea."
"What
did he look like?"
"His
face, as you described it. I've heard that women found him handsome, and I
think he shared their view. He was young, strong, of middling height. An
uncommonly good fighter, so I've heard."
"And
when did you see him last?" Rolf might have had his questions on a written
list.
"I
can tell you that exactly enough." Chup turned his face to the north,
remembering. "It was on the last night of my journey southward from my own
satrapy, coming here to the Broken Lands to take my charming bride.
"I
came on river barge down the Dolles, escorted by two hundred armed men.
Tarlenot, with five or six, going northward, met us on the last day before we
reached the Castle. He and his troop, being so few in unfriendly country, were
glad to spend the night in our encampment."
"Who
or what was he escorting then?" Rolf, listening eagerly, leaned forward.
But he was not near enough, as yet, for Chup to lunge at him.
"He
was escorting no one. Perhaps he carried messages. Anyway, he had with him one
captive girl who might have been your sister. As nearly as I can recall, she
must have been about twelve years old. Dark-haired, I think. Ugly. Whether she
had any closer resemblance to yourself I can't remember."
"True,
she was not pretty," Rolf said eagerly. He shook his head. "Nor was
she my blood relative. What happened then?"
"I
had other things to think about. I remember Tarlenot, if I am not mistaken,
saying something about selling her, in the north. There was a tavernkeeper up
there at a caravanserai - " Chup stopped, caught by a sudden thought.
"Why, it comes back, now. On that night I dreamt, and it was most odd. I
thought I wakened, while all the men in the encampment, even the sentries, lay
sleeping all around me. Tarlenot rose up from his blankets, but I could see his
eyes were closed and he was still asleep."
"What
happened then?" Rolf was utterly intent, but none the less alert. And
still no closer.
Chup
thought he might better have kept quiet about the dream. It must sound like
some devious lie or stalling tactic. But now he had begun it.
"I
dreamt there came one from outside the firelight, taller than a man and dressed
in full dark armor that hid his face and all his body. A great Lord, certainly,
but whether of East or West I could not say. The earth seemed to sink down
beneath his feet, as stretched cloth would yield to the weight of a walking
man. He stood before the sleeping, standing Tarlenot, and stretched out his
hand toward - yes, toward where the girl must have been lying.
"And
the dark Lord said: 'What you have there is mine, and you will dispose of it as
I wish.' Those were his words, or very like them. And Tarlenot bowed, like one
accepting orders, though his eyes remained closed in sleep.
"Then
all became confused, as in dreams it often does, you know? When I awoke it was
morning. The sentries were alert, as they must have been all through the night.
The girl was still asleep, and smiling. That recalled to me my dream, but then
I forgot it again in the press of the day's business." The dream had been
very vivid, and the way he had forgotten and then remembered it was odd. Quite
likely it had some magical importance. But what?
Chup
asked: "The girl was not blood relative, you say? Who was she?"
"I
call her my sister; I thought of her that way." Seeing how intently Chup
leaned forward, gripping the saddle, Rolf went on. "She was about six
years old when she came to us, the year I was eleven. The armies of the East
had not yet reached here, but they were in the country to the south, and people
fleeing north sometimes passed along our road. We thought Lisa must have come
from some such group passing through. My parents and I woke up one spring
morning to find her standing naked in our farmyard, crying. She could remember
nothing, not her name or how she'd got there. She could hardly talk. But she
had been well fed and cared for up till then; my mother marveled that she had
not a bruise or scratch."
"You
took her in?" Chup would find out all he could from the young fool. Before
he should come close enough ...
"Of
course. I told you, that was before the East had come upon us; we had food in
plenty. We named her Lisa, for my true sister, that had died as a baby."
Rolf scowled, running thin on patience. "Why are you questioning me? Tell
me what happened to her."
Chup
shook his head. "I told you, what happened to her finally I do not know.
Except for this: when we separated in the morning, Tarlenot spoke no more of
going north and selling his captive, but of going east to the Black
Mountains." Weary of talking, Chup reached for the waterbag and got a
drink.
After
probing Chup with his gaze for a time, Rolf nodded, "I think, if you were
making up a lie, you would make one that was more satisfying and
believable." And yet Rolf hesitated. "Come, if this tale just now was
a lie, tell me. The water and the knife will still be yours. And freedom,
whatever it may be worth to you out here."
"No
lie. I've done my part of the bargain, told you all I know." Chup gripped
his left leg with his hands and pulled it free of the stirrup, and then the
right. He made them dangle lifelessly. "Come, get me down. Another moment
or two, and this animal will fall beneath my weight."
"Swing
yourself off with your arms," said Rolf. "I'll hold its head."
Chup,
had he been honestly trying, might not have been able to manage getting off
without using his legs. Whichever side he lurched toward, one of his limp legs
hooked over the saddle, while the other dangled awkwardly in such a position
that it was likely to be broken under him if he just let go and fell. Even a
man seeking to be left alone in the desert to die would not like to start his
ordeal with a broken ankle. The beast grew restive, while Rolf held its head.
At last
Rolf muttered impatiently: "I'll lift you down." Still holding the
bridle with one hand, he stepped to the side of the animal opposite from where
Chup was clinging at the moment. He freed Chup's leg so it would slide easily
over the animal's back. Then, bridle still in hand, he moved back around the
loadbeast's head.
He found
Chup standing free.
Rolf's
moment of surprise was time enough for Chup to half-lunge, half-fall, upon his
victim. Chup learned in that first moment that his legs were still far from
their full strength. They could do little more than hold him up.
But
they had served him well enough for a moment, and that moment was enough.
Rolf's hand had moved quickly, but still he had hesitated fractionally between
drawing sword and dagger, and by the time his choice had settled on the shorter
blade it was too late. Chup's hand was there to grip Rolf's wrist and argue for
the weapon. Grappling as he fell, Chup dragged the other down upon the sand.
The
youth had wiry strength, and two good legs. He writhed and kicked and
struggled. But already Lord Chup had the grip he wanted, on Rolf's dagger arm.
Rolf's tough arm muscles strained and quivered, fighting for his life; the Lord
Chup's brutal power, methodical and patient, wore them down.
The
captured arm began to bend. It was near the breaking point before its hand
would open and give the dagger up. Chup caught the weapon up, reversed; he did
not want to kill Rolf until he had made absolutely sure the charm was still
with him. If it was not, Rolf would have to tell him where it was. He clubbed
Rolf along the skull with the butt of the knife, and Rolf went limp.
Inside
Rolfs jacket, in an inner pocket buttoned shut and holding nothing else, Chup
found the charm. No sooner had his fingers touched it than he snatched them
back. When he took it, would it work on him as it seemed to have on this young
clod? Turn him misty-eyed and doting over the treacherous woman whom he had wed
for nothing but political reasons?
Only
briefly did he hesitate. If he would be a Lord once more, he had no choice but
to take the charm into his possession and carry it to the East.
The
loadbeast, decrepit and lethargic as it was, had run off a few strides and was
still stirring restlessly. Chup called to it in a soothing voice. Then he
muttered the three brief defensive spells that sometimes seemed to work for him
-he was a poor magician -and drew the coil of hair out of Rolfs pocket.
It was
an intricately woven circlet of startling gold, large enough to fit around a
man's wrist. Chup had no immediate feeling of power in it, but obviously it was
no mere trinket; it was not dull or crumpled, though an oaf had kept it in his
pocket perhaps for half a year, and had probably given it much secret fondling.
Chup
did not doubt for a moment that it was Charmian's hair. It brought her beauty
sharply to his mind, and he stood up, swaying on his reborn legs, gazing at the
charm. Aye, his unclaimed bride was beautiful. Whatever else was said of her,
no one argued that. Charmian's was the beauty, made real, that lonely men
imagined in their daydreams. He recalled now the ceremonies of their wedding.
There had followed half a year of death, for him. But now he was a man again .
. .
Eventually
he took note of Rolfs stirrings at his feet, and tucked the charm into a pocket
in his own rags, and bent to put an end to his victim. On Chup's still-unsteady
legs it was a slow bending. Before he could complete it, one of his victim's
feet was hooked behind his right ankle, and the other came pushing neatly at
the front of Chup's right knee. The warrior-lord had no more chance of
remaining upright than a chopped-through tree.
When he
landed on his back he lay still briefly, raging at his own foolishness while he
pretended to be stunned. Pretending did no good, for the peasant was not fool
enough to jump on him. Instead, Rolf was crawling and scrambling away,
dazed-looking, but also plainly full of life. Chup struggled erect, and tried
to hurry in pursuit. But instead of lunging and pouncing he could only stumble
on his traitorous legs and fall again.
Quickly
he was up once more, holding his captured dagger. But Rolf too was now on his
feet, sword drawn and pointed more or less steadily at Chup's midsection.
Something
he had almost forgotten began to grow in Chup: his old happiness of combat.
"At least," he observed, "you have learned how to hold a blade
since last we fought."
Rolf
was not minded to talk or even listen. His face showed how he, too, raged at
himself for carelessness. He lunged forward, thrusting. To Chup, his own
response seemed horribly slow and rusty; but still his hand had not forgotten
what to do. It came up of itself, bringing the knife in an economical curve to
meet the sword. The long steel sang, shooting two centimeters wide of Chup's
ribs. Then quickly the sword slid back, to make a looping swing and cut. Chup
saw it was coming downward toward his legs. They had no nimbleness to save
themselves. He let himself drop forward, reaching down with his short blade to
parry the stroke as best he could. He caught the sword blade in the angle
between hilt and blade of his dagger, caught it and tried to pin it to the
ground. But Rolf wrenched the sword away again. Rolf feinted twice before he
struck again, but there was not much skill in his pretense, so Chup had time to
get back on his feet, parrying the real cut even as he rose. '
Chup
saw as they circled that the loadbeast was moving steadily away. No help for
that. His eyes were locked on Rolf's, and both of them were breathing harshly.
So it went on for a little time, with nothing said. Rolf would advance and
strike, or sometimes only feint. Chup parried, and faked attacking in his turn.
With his short blade he could not very well attack a sword, held by a
determined foe. If Chup had had his strong legs he could have tried and might
have won -skipping back when the sword cut at him, driving forward then at the
precisely proper instant for striking. Without perfectly dependable legs it
would be suicide.
A
first-rate swordsman in Rolf's place would have driven in on Chup, trying to
stay just at the distance where the sword could strike but the dagger could
not, pounding one stroke upon another until at last the shorter blade must miss
a parry. Though Rolf was dangerous with a sword, he was far from masterly. Chup
watched and judged him critically. Rolf was evidently determined he was not
going to be tricked again into rushing to too close quarters with the Lord
Chup. So he stood just a fraction of a meter too far away before he struck; and
he failed to press his attacks. Against his efforts the knife in Chup's hand
could, with a minimum of luck, stand like a wall of armor.
At last
Rolf drew back a further step, and dropped his sword point slightly. Perhaps he
hoped to provoke Chup into something rash.
But
Chup only dropped his own arms to his sides and stood there resting, panting
honestly. His legs were stronger than when the fight had started, as if
exercise were an aid to the demon's magic. But in the joy of fighting, with
health and strength and freedom come again, he had no great wish to kill.
He
said: "Youngster, come with me to the East. Follow and serve me, and I
will make you a warrior. Yes, and a leader of warriors. You may never be a
great one with the sword, but you have the guts, and if you live long enough
you may absorb a little knowledge."
The
murderous determination frozen in the young face did not thaw for an instant.
Instead, Rolf closed again, and struck, once, twice, three times, with greater
violence than usual. The blades rang, rang, rang. Ah, Chup thought, it was too
bad, a good man wasted as an enemy. Chup would have to kill him.
If he
could. The desert this near the castle must be patrolled. Should a squad of
Western cavalry appear, that would be all for the Lord Chup and his with
Jarmer: "Yes, I have it, and it is not your job to ask for proofs of
anything, but to escort me. Now the sooneryou provide me with a mount, the
sooner we will be where all of us want to go."
There
was a murmuring of voices. Chup vanished from Rolf's view, to reappear a moment
later, mounted. "Well, captain, are there any more problems I must solve
before we can be off? A Western army lies within that fortress, and if they've
eyes they've seen your dust by now."
But
still the captain tarried, exchanging glances with his wizard. Then he spoke to
Chup once more, in the tones of one who knew not whether to be angry or
obsequious. "Had you no companion on your way out here from that castle?
My wise man here says his crystal indicates - "
"No
companion that I mean to tarry for. That ancient loadbeast, mirages, and a
skulking predator or two." Unhurriedly, but ending all delay, Chup turned
his new mount to the east and dug his heels in.
The
captain shrugged, then motioned with his arm. The wizard put away his jiggling
piece of light. The sound of hooves rose loudly for a moment, then rapidly
declined, with the settling of the light dust they had raised.
Almost
unbelieving, Rolf watched and listened to them go. When the last sound had
faded he pulled himself out of the sand and looked. The riders' plume of dust
was already distant in the east from which the night was soon to come. Turning
back to face the castle, he saw that some sentinel had -too late-given the
alarm. A heavy stream of beasts and men, a mounted reconnaissance-in-force,
flowed from the main gate toward the desert.
Rolf
stood there numbly waiting for them. He had been given back hope for his
sister's life, but robbed of something whose importance he had not understood
until it was taken from him . . . though in truth his feelings were more relief
than loss, as if an aching tooth had been pulled. His hand returned again and
again to the empty pocket. His head ached from the robber's blow.
Ask
help of the tall broken man. Why had Gray's powers told him that?
III
Valkyrie
On the
first night of the long flight into the east there had been only brief pauses
to rest. During the following day their toiling across the enormous waste of
land seemed to bring the Black Mountains no closer. Jarmer during daylight
slowed down the pace somewhat, pausing for long rests with posted sentinels.
Chup at each stop slept deeply, lying with his golden treasure beneath his
body, where none could reach it without waking him. When he awoke he ate and
drank voraciously, till those of the black-clad soldiers who had been ordered
to share provisions with him grumbled -not too loudly. His legs grew stronger
steadily. They were not yet what legs should be, to serve the Lord Chup
properly, but he could stand and move on them without expecting to fall down.
The
second morning of the journey, the sun was very high before it came in sight;
the Black Mountains of the East were tall before them now, casting their mighty
shadows many kilometers out upon the desert. Clouds draped their distant
summits. Seen from this near, they were no longer black, nor particularly
forbidding. What had given them the hue of midnight from a distance, Chup saw
now to be the myriad evergreen trees that clothed the middle slopes like blue-green
twisted moss.
The
troop now traveled upon a long, slow rise of land by which the desert
approached the cliffs. The chain of peaks ran far on either flank to north and
south, and curved ambiguously from sight in both directions, so Chup was hard
put to guess how far the range might stretch.
Straight
ahead was one of the higher-looking peaks, sheer cliffs rising to its waist.
Now from somewhere on the tableland above the cliffs it disgorged a dozen or so
flying reptiles. Down to inspect the mounted troop they flew, on laboring slow
wings; the air here must be high and thin for them, and the season of their
hibernation was approaching.
Looking
more closely at the cliffs as he rode ahead, Chup saw that they were not after
all a perfect barrier. To them and into them a road went climbing, switchback
after switchback. Toward that road and half-hidden pass Jarmer was leading his
men. And indeed the frayed-out start -or ending-of that climbing road seemed to
be appearing now, beneath the riding-beasts' hurrying hooves.
Chup
was observing all these matters with alert eyes and mind, but with only half
his thought. A good part of his attention was focused inward, upon a vision
that had grown in his mind's eye through the two long nights and single day upon
the desert.
Charmian.
The weight of the knot of his wife's hair, swinging in his pocket as the wind
and motion of the ride swung his light and ragged garments, seemed to strike
like molten gold against his ribs. He remembered everything about her, and
there was not a thing that made her less desirable. He was the Lord Chup again,
and she was his.
The
gradually steepening slope slowed down the tired riding-beasts. The road they
traveled, empty of all other traffic, veered abruptly away from the cliffs,
then toward them again, on the first winding of the steep part of its ascent.
The cliff tops must be a kilometer above their heads.
Chup
drank again from the borrowed waterskin he had slung before his saddle. His
thirst was mar-velous; the water must be going, he thought, to fill out his
recovering legs. Their muscles still seemed to be thickening by the hour,
though the speed of recovery was not what it had been at first. He stood up in
his stirrups now, and squeezed the barrel of the beast beneath him with his
knees. The skin on his legs ached and itched, stretching to hold the new live
flesh.
On the
next switchback the road climbed past a slender, ancient watchtower, unmanned
on this road where scouting reptiles perched and the defenders above held such
advantage of position. In Chup's mind the slender tower was an evoking symbol
of the slenderness of his bride. Again, with another turning of the road, the
riders passed shabby, dull-eyed serfs at labor in a terraced hillside field.
Among them were a few girls and women young enough to look young though they
labored for the East; but Chup's eyes passed quickly over them, only searching
for one who was not there, who could not be.
Oh, he
knew what she was like. He remembered everything, not just the incredible
beauty. But what she was like no longer seemed to matter.
It was
a long and arduous climb, up through the narrow pass. As soon as they had
reached the top, men dismounted wearily, and animals slumped to their knees to
rest. They faced a nearly horizontal tableland, rugged and cracked by many
crevices. Across this wound the road they had been following, and at its other
side, two or three hundred meters distant, sprawled the low-walled citadel of
Som the Dead. Several gates stood open in the outer rampart of gray stone. It
did not look particularly formidable as a defense. There was no need for it to
be; a few earthworks, now unmanned, stood right at the head of the pass where
Chup and his escort had stopped. It needed no shrewd military eye, looking back
and down from here, to see that a few men here could stop an army.
Beyond
the citadel, the mountain went on up, to lose its head at last within a
clinging scarf of cloud.
This
mountain, unlike most of those surrounding, was but little forested. Above the
citadel, the rock itself grew black. The more Chup looked up at that slope, the
better he perceived how odd it was. On that dark, dead surface-was it perhaps
metal, instead of rock?-there were a few tiny, even blacker spots, that might be
windows or the entrances of caves. No paths or steps led to them. They might be
reptile nests, but why so high above the citadel, already at an altitude where
the leatherwings had hard work to fly?
Jarmer
was standing beside him now, looking forward as if half-expecting some signal
from the citadel. Chup turned to him and asked: "I suppose that Som the
Dead dwells there above the fort, where all the signs of life are gone?"
Jarmer
looked at him oddly for a moment, then laughed. "By the demons! No. Not
Som, nor demons either. Quite the opposite. That's where the Beast-Lord Draffut
dwells -you may meet him one day, if you're lucky." Then worry replaced
amusement. "I hope you're what you claim to be, and what you bring is
genuine. You seem quite ignorant ..."
"Just
bring me to my lady. Where is she?"
Shortly
they were mounting up again. Jarmer turned away from the largest gate, and
chose a path that followed close beneath the wall, round to the south flank of
the citadel. There a small gate was open, just wide enough for the troop to
enter in a single, weary file. They dismounted in a stableyard, giving their
animals into the care of quick-moving, dull-eyed serfs.
Scarcely
had Chup got his feet upon the ground when there came hurrying to him a man
with the indefinable air of the wizard about him. He gave this impression more
powerfully by far than the one who had accompanied the patrol, though the
newcomer had no iridescent robes and no familiar on his shoulder. He was slight
of build, with a totally bald head that kept tilting from side to side on his
lean, corded neck, as if he wished to view from two angles everything he saw.
This
man caught Chup's ragged sleeve, and in a rapid low voice demanded: "You
have it with you?"
"That
depends on what you mean. Where is the Lady Charmian?"
The man
did something like a dance step in his impatience. "The charm, the
charm!" he urged, with voice held low. "It's safe to speak. Trust me!
I am working for her."
"Then
you can take me to her. Lead on."
The man
seemed torn between his annoyance and satisfaction at Chup's caution.
"Follow me," he said at last, and turned and led the way.
A
series of gates were opened for them, first by black-garbed soldiers, then by
serfs. With each barrier they passed, the aspect of their surroundings grew
milder. Now Chup followed the wizard along pleasant paths of flagstones and of
gravel, across terraces and gardens bright with autumn flowers and fragrant
with their scent. They passed a gardener, a bent-leg cripple with a face like
death, pulling himself along the path upon a little cart, his implements before
him.
The
last barrier they came to was a tall thorny hedge. Chup followed the bald
wizard through a gateless opening. They came upon a garden patio, built out
from a low stone building, or from one wing of it; Chup could not see how far
the house extended. Here was the grass thicker and better cared for than
before, and the flowers, between a pair of elegant marble fountains, brighter
and more numerous.
By now
the sun come round the mountain's bulk. It made a flare of gold of Charmian's
hair, as she rose from a divan to greet her husband. Her gown was gold, with
small fine trimmings of dead black. Her grace of movement was in itself enough
for him to know her by.
Her
beauty filled his eyes and nearly blinded him. "My lady!" His voice
was hoarse and dry. Then he remembered, and regretted, that he stood before her
in the rags and filth of half a year of beggary.
"My
husband!" she called out, in tones an echo of his own. Mingled with the
tinkling of the fountains, it was her voice as he had dreamed of it, through
all the lonely nights . . . but no, he had not dreamed of her. Why not? He
frowned.
"My
husband. Chup." The very sunlight was not brighter nor more joyful than
her voice, and in her eyes he read what all men want to see. Her arms reached
out, ignoring all his filth.
He had
taken three steps toward her when his feet were pulled out from under him and a
rough gravel path came up to strike him in the face. He heard a shriek of
laughter and from the corner of his eye saw a dwarfish figure spring up and
flee away from a concealing bush beside the path, trailing howls of glee.
The
unthinking speed in his arms had slapped out his hands in time to break his
fall and save his chin and nose. Gaping up now at his bride he saw her beauty
gone-not taken away, or faded, but shattered in her face like some smashed
image in a mirror. It was, as usual, rage that contorted her face so. How well
he knew that look. And how could he have forgotten it?
She
glared at him as he regained his feet. She screamed out her shrewish filth and
hate -how often he had heard it, in the brief days he had known her before
their marriage ceremony. He had not been the target, then, of course; she would
not then have dared.
Now why
was she screaming all this abuse at him? It neither hurt nor angered him. He
had no intention of striking her or shouting back. She was his bride,
infinitely beautiful and desirable, and he would have her and she must not be
hurt. Yes, yes, all that was settled. It was simply that this side of her
character was annoying.
She was
screeching at him. " -Filth! Carrion! Did you ever doubt I would repay you
triply for it?"
"For
what?" he asked deliberately.
A vein
of anger stood out in her lineless forehead. For a moment she could not speak.
Then, in a choking voice, not unlike a reptile's caw: "For striking
me!" A tiny drop of spittle came far enough to strike his cheek, the touch
of it a warm and lovely blessing.
"I
struck you?" Why, that was mad, ridiculous. How could she think -but wait.
Wait. Ah, yes. He remembered.
He
nodded. "You were hysterical when I did that, "he said, absently
trying to brush the dust from his rags. "I did it for your good, actually.
I only slapped you with my open hand, not very hard. You were hysterical, much
as you are now."
At that
she cried out with new volume and alarm. She backed away toward a doorway that
led into the building. From a gap between hedges there came running three men
in servants' drab clothes. One of them was quite large. Together they ran to
make a wide barrier between him and his lady.
"Take
him away," she ordered the servants in a soft and venomous voice,
regaining most of her composure. "We will amuse ourselves with him -
later." She turned quickly to the bald wizard, who was still hovering
near. "Hann. You have made sure he has it with him, have you not?"
Hann
tilted his head. "I have not yet had that opportunity, my lady."
"I
have it," Chup interrupted them. "Your lady, wizard? No, she's mine,
and I have come to claim her." He stepped forward, and saw with some
surprise that the three fools in his way stood fast. They saw only his dirt and
rags, and perhaps they had seen him fall when he was tripped.
He
scorned to draw his knife for such as these. He heeled an ugly nose up with his
left hand, and swung his fist into the stretched-up throat; one man down. He
grabbed a reaching hand by its extended thumb, and broke bone with one
wrenching snap. He had only one opponent left. This third and largest fellow
had got behind Chup in the meantime, and got him in a clumsy grip. But now,
with his fellows yelping and thrashing about in helplessness, the lout realized
he was alone, and froze.
"I
am the Lord Chup, knave; let go." He said it quietly, standing still, and
he had the feeling that the man would have done so if he had not feared
Charmian more than Chup. Instead the big slave cried out hoarsely, and tried to
lift Chup and throw him. They swayed and staggered together for a moment before
Chup could shift his hips aside and snap a fist behind him, low enough for best
effect.
Now he
was free to turn once more to claim his lady. She once more howled for help.
The wizard Hann hauled out a short sword from under his cloak -evidently
feeling his magic had turned unreliable with the onset of violence -and threw
himself between Chup and his bride. But Hann was not the equal of the last
swordsman Chup had faced, and Chup was stronger now than then. Hann dropped his
good long blade and fell down screaming, when he felt the knife caress his arm.
This
time, however, Charmian did not resume her noise-making, nor did she try to
flee. Instead she stood with bright eyes smiling past Chup's shoulder. He heard
a foot crunch gravel behind him on the path.
It was
Tarlenot who stood there. He had already drawn his sword, at sight of the lawn
littered with writhing, groaning men. His eyes lighted unpleasantly in
recognition as Chup turned round to face him. Tarlenot was not a tall man, but
powerful and long of arm. His short pink tunic showed bare legs as muscular as
Chup's had been in his days of full strength. Around his thick neck was clasped
a thin collar of some dark, plain metal, a strangely poor-looking thing for one
to wear who was otherwise garbed luxuriously. Tarlenot's face was haughty now,
more so than Chup remembered; the countenance of a pouty child grown big and
muscular; his fair hair fell with a slight curl round his ears. He nodded his
head lightly in recognition to Chup, and gave him a little smile. But he made
no move to sheathe his sword.
"Tarlenot,"
said Charmian's ethereal and tender whisper. "Make this one a gardener for
us."
Chup
bent and picked up the sword dropped by the wizard Hann, who still sat moaning,
bleeding lightly, on the flagstones. The sword seemed stout enough, though its
twisted fancy hilt was not much to Chup's liking. It did feel better than it
looked.
"That
is no gardener's tool," Tarlenot observed. "And here we do not need
another lord."
Charmian
giggled quietly. "Tarlenot, his legs have grown too straight. Bend his
knees for him. We will get him a little cart, and he will tend our
flowers."
Chup
sighed faintly and moved a step farther from his lady. It was hard, when the
woman you were devoted to might stick a knife between your ribs. She was his
bride, and the only woman he wanted, but there would be no trusting her.
"Tarlenot,"
he called, waiting while the other made up his mind. "One questioned me
about you. Only a few days ago."
"Oh?
In what connection?" The mind had been made up. "First, though,
wouldyou rather I only cut your tendons, or took your legs clean off? They say
that useless limbs are worse than none at all. You should know, is it so?"
"He
was one who meant to do things to you that you would not like." Chup
stepped slowly and easily forward. "Now he will never have his
chance." His legs were working very well, but he could have wished to give
them their first real test in practice. He raised his blade as he advanced, and
Tarlenot's sword came up in a motion quite gentle and controlled, and with a
careful metal touch the duel was joined.
With
the first preliminary touches and feints Chup knew that he had met a formidable
enemy, and one cautious enough not to be deceived by Chup's scarecrow
appearance into taking the scarecrow lightly. And when Chup had to make a
really quick hard parry for the first time, he realized there was no great
endurance left in his own body, long underfed, but newly healed, and just
finished with a long ride.
Tarlenot
was fresh and vigorous. Had it not been for the residual effect of the healing
elixir -fading now, though the good work it had done remained-Chup might have
been quickly beaten. His muscles were left aching and quivering by two or three
exchanges at full power and speed.
They
circled slowly on the gravel path and flagstones, and felt for cautious footing
amid the flowers between the tinkling fountains. Chup as he turned saw Charmian
pass within his range of vision; he saw her with a gesture stay her other
attendants, now running up, from any interference. He saw how bright her eyes
were, and the expectant parting of her perfect lips. She would take the winner,
but only to use him and discard him when it was to her advantage or merely
suited her whim. Chup knew that, if Tarlenot perhaps did not. But she was
Chup's . . .
And
then in front of her face came Tarlenot's. "Let me see,"
saidTarlenot, "if I can hit the old wound on your spine, within a finger's
breadth. How was it done? Like this?" And he attacked.
Chup
parried desperately, and riposted; his weary arm thrust wide. "Not like
that, no," he said. "But with some skill." Demons and blood, but
he was tired.
And
Tarlenot knew it. He was now carefully making sure that Chup's tremulous
near-exhaustion was no sham. Now that Tarlenot had measured Chup's reach and
something of his style, he began to push the fight harder. Harder, till he
himself began to puff.
Now
Chup gave ground steadily as they circled. Sheer desperation kept him going,
now. He might back into a corner ... he saw before him the gardener on his
cart, with lifeless eyes . . .
No, he
was the Lord Chup, and he would win or die. And just then Tarlenot's sword came
flicking in a little faster than before. Chup saw the danger but his weary,
tardy arm could not make the parry quite in time, and he felt the hot bite of
the wound along his side.
With
that hurt there came before Chup all the blackness of the past half year, all
of it seemingly alive before him in the person of his foe. The hurt was rage,
the rage was fuel, the only hope and power he had left. He let his fury drive
him forward, striking fast and hard, stroke after stroke -and then he staggered,
halting. He feigned a final exhaustion before his ultimate reserve of energy
was quite gone. Tarlenot, with triumph too early on his face, came thrusting in
as Chup had thought he would. Chup parried that thrust and spent his final
strength in one last blow, straight overhand, cleaving downward at the angle of
his enemy's shoulder and neck.
The
sword touched glancingly the blackish metal collar, and then bit down through
garments, flesh, and bone. He saw Tarlenot's eyes bulge out, and the red
fountain leaping from the wound. Clear down to the breastbone Chup's sword
smote, and Tarlenot was driven to his knees, and then fell backward dead, his
arms flung wide.
Chup
found the strength to set his foot upon the ruined tunic that had once been
silken pink, and wrench to get his swordblade free. He staggered back, then and
got his back against a wall. He leaned there choking while the world grew gray
and dim before him with the throbbing of his heart, as if it were his own blood
puddling up the walk.
But he
was not bleeding much. His searching fingers told him that the cut along his
side had parted little more than skin.
Charmian
. . . but she was gone. That was all right. Let her play any game she wanted,
but he was going to have her now. As soon as he had rested for a bit. A sound
made him turn. A small mob of lackeys were goggling timidly at him from a
distance. The odd sound did not emanate from them. From where, then?
Straight
up. A flying reptile had emerged from one of the windowlike openings that
marked the mountain's dead black upper slope. It was winging down toward where
Chup stood-but not on reptile's wings, he realized. Its rounded, headless body,
dead and rigid, considerably bulkier than a man, hung beneath a speed-blur such
as the wings of hummingbirds drew in the air. But this blur was a ,thin,
horizontal disc, a spinning, not a vibration up and down. The noise it made,
growing now into a whining roar, was like no sound of life that Chup had ever
heard. The thing came rushing, almost falling, down toward the garden.
Chup
pushed himself away from the wall. He had seen something of the magic that the
Old World had called technology (though never a machine that flew), and knew
the hopelessness of fighting with a sword against machines. He moved toward the
doorway beside Charmian's empty divan; the flying thing looked too big to get
in there. But before Chup reached the door, the wizard Hann was coming out to
meet him, not as a foe but welcoming, with a flushed maidservant skipping beside
him awkwardly, trying to finish tying a bandage on Hann's arm.
"The
Lady Charmian sends you greetings ..." Then Hann noticed the flying
machine's approach, and Chup's attention to it. "No, no, Lord Chup, do not
concern yourself; it is not a fighting device. Put up your sword. Come in! The
Lady Charmian greets you, as I said, and expresses her apologies for all of
this unfortunate . . . she will soon receive you. You have the golden charm
with you, I trust? She begs you, let her maidens tend you now. When you are
rested and refreshed . . ."
Chup
was not really listening as he went on with Hann inside the door. Anyway the
machine was not coming to Chup. Instead it descended close beside the corpse of
Tarlenot. Just above the ground, the flyer hovered, while the shining whirl of
speed on top roared down a blast of air that pressed down bushes, kicked up
dust, and rippled grass. Along the headless metal body there stood symbols,
meaningless to Chup:
VALKYRIE
MARK V 718TH FIELD HOSPITAL BATTALION
In another
moment the rounded metal body opened six secret holes, three on a side, and
from them came extending hidden legs, sliding jointed things like insects'
feelers grown monstrously large. These reached for Tarlenot and probed him, one
delicate leg-tip clinging to the dull metal collar beside the great leaking
leer of his wound. Then suddenly and effortlessly the flying thing gathered up
Tarlenot's dead weight with its slender legs, drew it up and swallowed it into
a coffin-sized cavity that gaped suddenly in the metal belly and as suddenly
closed again. The six legs retracted and the Old World thing shot upward once
again, roaring a louder noise and blasting the garden with a greater rush of
air. It raced up toward the place whence it had come. Turned insect-sized
again, it vanished into one of the windows where, according to Jarmer, the
Beast-Lord Draffut dwelt.
Chup
had stepped outside again, and remained gaping upward until prompted by Hann's
diplomatic voice. "When you have rested and refreshed yourself, Lord Chup,
and dressed in finer garments, your lady waits to see you."
Lowering
his eyes, Chup saw six serving girls approaching. All were young but ugly; his
lady preferred her servants so, he knew, to heighten by contrast her own
beauty. Carrying towels and garments and what might be jars of ointment, the
girls advanced very slowly, looking almost too frightened to put one foot
before another. Chup nodded. He would have to relax his guard sometime. "I
would put down this sword that I have won, but I seem to have no
scabbard."
Hann
hastened to amend this lack, unburdening his own waist, wincing when he moved
his wounded arm. "Here, take all. Indeed I think I am well rid of it. Let
the shoemaker stick to his last."
When he
had wiped and sheathed his sword, Chup let the servants of Charmian lead him
along a short path into another garden, and from that into another wing of the
same low, sprawling building that Charmian had entered. He could not yet see
its full extent; perhaps all of Som's court lived in its separate apartments.
In a luxurious room the servants stripped away Chup's filthy rags, and tended
the light cut along his side with what seemed ordinary ointments, not the
demon's cure. The girls' fear of him abated rapidly, and by the time they had
immersed him in hot water in a sunken marble tub, they were talking almost
freely back and forth among themselves. After serving Charmian, he thought, any
other master must be a relaxation and a pleasure.
He hung
the love-charm of springy golden hair upon the twisty hilt of his captured
sword, and set both close beside him as he soaked and washed and soaked again.
He was too weary to give the least thought to his attendants as females. Amid
their nervous chatter, though, he caught their names:
Portia,
with the blackest skin and hair that he had ever seen, and a bad scar on her
face; Kath, blond and buxom, with eyes that looked in different ways; Lisa,
shortest and youngest, nothing quite right about her looks; Lucia, shaped well
enough except for her huge mouth and teeth; Samantha and Karen, looking like
sisters or even twins, with sallow skins, pimples, and stringy hair bound up in
the same peasant style as that of the other girls.
When
Portia and Kath had finished scrubbing his back, Lisa and Lucia poured on rinse
water, and Samantha and Karen held a towel.
When he
had been clothed in rich garments, Karen and Lucia fed him soup and meat and
wine. Between mouthfuls he touched the golden charm, safe now in an inner
pocket of his tunic of soft black. He only tasted the wine, for already sleep
hung like weighty armor on his eyelids. "Where is my Lady?" he
demanded. "Is she coming here, or must I go to her?"
There
was a moment's hesitation before Kath, with noticeable reluctance, answered:
"If my Lord permits, I will go and see if she is ready to receive
you." At this the other girls relaxed perceptibly.
His
weariness was great, and he reclined on a soft couch. Though he had much to
think about, his eyes kept closing of themselves. "Keep talking," he
ordered the five girls. "You there, do you sing?" And Lisa sang, and
Karen fetched out an instrument with strings. The music that they made was
soft.
"You
sing quite well and easily," Chup said, "for one who serves the Lady
Charmian. How long have you been her servant?"
The
girl paused in her song. "For half a year, my Lord, since I was brought to
the Black Mountains."
"And
what were you before?"
She
hesitated. "I do not know. Forgive me, Lord, my head was hurt, my memory
is gone."
"Sing
on."
And
then he was waking, with a start, the golden charm clenched in his hand inside
his pocket. It seemed that no long time had passed, for the sun still shone
outside, and the young girls still made their soft music.
His
tiredness was like the hands of enemies gripping all his limbs, but he could
not rest until he had made sure of her, at the very least seen her once again.
He arose and walked out of the building, into the garden under the upper
mountain's looming bulk. On legs that pained but could not rest, he paced the
paths and lawns, emptied now of men and cleaned of signs of violence. He
entered the building where she had gone in. In a narrow passage he caught a
whiff of perfume that woke old memories clamoring, and at a little distance
heard Charmian's well-remembered laugh. He put aside a drapery.
Some
distance inside a vast and elegantly female room, Charmian sat on an elaborate
couch. She was facing Chup expectantly, though his coming had been soundless.
The man who sat there with her, facing her, had fair hair that fell with a
slight curl around his ears. His long, strong arms emerged from the short
sleeves of a lounging suit of black and pink. As this man arose, turning toward
Chup the wary, pouting eyes of Tarlenot, Chup could do nothing but stand frozen
in the doorway, marking well the scar, wide and long but neatly healed, that
ran down from the joining of neck and shoulder to vanish on the hairy chest
-ran down from just below the metal collar that bore a little shiny spot left
by a sword.
IV
Djinn
of Technology
The
army of the West lay camped for the night, a day's march to the northeast of
the Castle. Around them the plain was no longer a true desert, but a gentle sea
of sparse grass, now drying and dying before the approaching winter. Once long
ago the flocks of peacetime had grazed here.
Thomas
now had with him more than four thousand soldiers, all holding in common a hard
hatred of the East. The ranks of his own fighters of the Broken Lands had been
greatly swollen by volunteers from Mewick's country and others in the south,
from the offshore islands, and from the north, whence came warriors who wrapped
themselves in unknown furs and made strange music from the horns of unknown
beasts.
In the
early evening the camp murmured, with the feeding of the army and the digging
of temporary defenses for the night, with the hundred matters of organization
and repair that must be tended to before the second day's march. Inside
Thomas's big tent were crowded the score of leaders he had called into a
meeting.
The
first matter that Thomas raised with them was the golden charm, and its sudden
departure to the East. That the charm was magic of great power was obvious to
all, and none blamed Rolf for having fallen so deeply under its influence that
he had not spoken of it during the long months since he had found it, while it
forced him to cherish secret thoughts of a woman he would otherwise have hated.
Still he was downcast and somewhat ashamed as he sat at one side of the circle
in the tent. Thomas, Gray, and a few others were at one end of the long test,
their chairs around three sides of a plain table, the fourth side being open to
the wide circle of onlookers who made themselves comfortable upon the matting of
the floor. Thomas sat at the center of the table looking up at Gray who was on
his feet and holding forth.
"Some
of you know, but some do not," Gray was saying, "that I and other
wizards of the West have for some years spent most of ourtime in a desperate
search for the life of Zapranoth, the Demon-Lord in the Black Mountains."
There
was a faint murmur round the tent. Rolf felt a little better, seeing how many
of the others' faces mirrored his own ignorance of what the higher wizards did.
"It
now seems possible," continued Gray, "that I stood next to the life
of Zapranoth where I had scarcely thought to look for it: inside the walls of
that strong Castle we left yesterday. It is possible -I think not likely -that
the Demon-Lord's life was hidden in that twist of hair."
Eyes
turned to Rolf, enough of them so that he felt he had to speak. "I had no
thought or feeling of any demon near me, before or after the charm was taken
from me."
Gray
had paused to survey his audience. Now he said: "A number of you are still
looking at me blankly, or frowning suspiciously at that young man. I am
convinced that a short lecture on the ways of demons is in order." Having
received a nod of agreement from Thomas, he went on. "The ordinary layman,
soldier or not, has little hard knowledge of magic, though it almost daily
influences his life. And to him the ways of demons are as unaccountable as
those of earthquakes.
"I
must make sure you understand me when I speak of our search for the life of
Zapranoth. Now that we are on the march and can hope that spies have been left
behind us, I can speak somewhat more freely. If you understand it may be that
you can help, and if you help we may still succeed, and if we succeed in
slaying the Demon-Lord of the Black Mountains it will count for more than would
grinding the walls of Som's citadel to powder. Depend on that.
"Now.
When I speak of finding a demon's life, I do not mean his active presence but
his essence, secret and vulnerable -what the Old World seems to have called the
soul. A demon's soul is separable in space from his personality. It is
invisible, impalpable, and of vital importance, for only through it can he be
destroyed. To keep his soul safe, he may hide it in any innocent thing: a
flower, a tree, a human's hair, a rock, the foam of the sea, aspiderweb. He may
keep it far away from him, where his enemies will not think to look for it, or
near at hand where he will more easily know when it is threatened, and take
steps in its defense. What is it?"
One of
the fur-garbed Northmen got to his feet. "Is not Som the Dead the viceroy
of the East, in the Black Mountains? And the Demon-Lord only his subordinate?
Well, then. It would seem to me Zap-ranoth's life must be in Som's
control."
Gray
shook his head. "We think not. Those who rule the Empire of the East would
not care to give any underling as much power as Som would have if Zapranoth
were absolutely at his mercy. Therefore they have given Som only a lesser power
of punishment over the Demon-Lord; so the two of them are constrained to eye
each other jealously. It is a common pattern in the organization of the
East."
Thomas
and other senior leaders nodded. The man from the north sat down, and one from
the south, from Mewick's country, asked: "If you wizards are baffled,
trying to get at Zapranoth, how are we supposed to help?"
"How?
First, understand the great importance of our search. Then, if our campaigning
takes you among strangers, friendly or neutral-seeming, say nothing of this
matter, but listen carefully for any hint that there is information to be had.
We will pay for it. We make no broadcast offers of reward, or half the fools
and swindlers in the world would come to clog our path and waste our time, with
spies and agents of the East among them. The chance that you will hear any clue
is doubtless very small; but we must take every chance that we can get. Our
search is desperate."
Gray
took his seat, and Thomas rose. "Any more questions on our magic? Then
let's go on to something else." He looked round as if gauging the temper
of his hearers before continuing. "Though we are a real army now, it will
be plain to all of you that our numbers are insufficient to storm any citadel
as strong as Som's. You must know also that I have sent far afield, to every
source of Western strength we are aware of, looking for help. You have been
asking yourselves, and me, who may be sending troops to help us and where we
are to meet them. The answer is: no troops are coming, or very few. We go on
this campaign with no more men than we have now. Yet we are attacking the Black
Mountains."
Thomas
paused there, with every eye fixed on him intently. There was no murmur in the
tent, but rather a deep hush; somewhere in the camp outside a blacksmith was
shouting coarse imprecations at an animal.
He went
on. "After, we make a feint to the north and perhaps a few skirmishes
there with Som's outlying garrisons. In the Black Mountains is his power
rooted, and only there can it be destroyed."
Someone
urged: "Wait for the spring, then, for the birds' help! We cannot scale
Som's cliffs against him. The birds could lift rope ladders for us, scout, bear
messages, drop rocks upon the enemy, and use their talons, too!"
Thomas
shook his head inflexibly and the murmur of approval that had started up died
down. "We thought once that the Silent People might have stayed; we would
have tried to warm them through the winter; but it is written in their
bone-marrow, it seems, that they must fly south each autumn. There was nothing
we or they could do about it. However, if the birds of the West will be absent
from this campaign, at least the reptiles of the East will be sluggish and
thick-blooded. And it is all very well to say, wait for spring, for the Silent
People to fly north again. But so might Som be stronger then. And what of this
human army we have gathered here and now? Shall we sit on our tails for another
half year, hoping for improvement in our luck?"
That
got something of the response Thomas must have hoped for. Folding his arms
before him once again, he went on in a mildervoice. "As forgetting at Som
in his citadel, we think that we have found a way. Gray?"
Once
more the wizard arose, and spoke. As the plan he was proposing became clear,
they cast looks at one another across the circle, with slowly lengthening
faces. When the wizard paused, there were no questions. Probably, Rolf thought,
because the only ones that came to mind were bluntly insulting about Gray's
sincerity or sanity.
"As
I said before, we are now on the march, away from prying eyes. Now the time has
come to test what I propose, and if the test succeeds, to practice it. It will
not be a usable technique till it is given considerable practice."
The
stunned silence continued. Thomas dismissed the meeting, and while the others
were filing out, called Rolf to one side where he stood with Gray. "Rolf.
You have more experience with technology than anyone else we know of in our
army. Gray will need an assistant in the project he just spoke of. I think you could
do a good job of helping him."
Rolf
grunted. "I don't know much, really."
"You
have a knack." Thomas clapped both their shoulders, and said to Gray:
"Take him, if you will, as your helper for the first experiment."
Then Thomas turned quickly away, answering voices that were already calling him
to see about some other business.
Gray
and Rolf were left confronting each other in what was apparently a mutual lack
of confidence. "Tell me, young one," the tall wizard said at last,
"what do you know about the djinn?"
"Much
like demons, are they not?"
Gray's
gaze grew harder. "Mayyou never be called upon to suffer in proportion to
your ignorance of the world! Djinn are no more like demons than men are like
the talking reptiles."
Continuing
to talk Gray led Rolf from the tent. "Demons are, without exception, of
the East. But the djinn are rather like elementals, neither good nor evil in
themselves, and a human may call on them without being corrupted or consumed
thereby."
"I
see." Rolf nodded, not seeing much. "But what has this to do with
technology, and the scheme you were proposing?" They were walking now
through the uneven rows of tents, Gray heading for the outskirts of the camp.
"Just
this. The djinn I plan to call upon for help is unique, so far as I know, among
his kind. He is a technologist, a builder and designer, I think superior in
those fields to any human who has lived since the Old World. Now help me with
some preparations, if you will."
It
seemed to Rolf that he had little choice. Besides, the djinn as Gray described
him was certainly intriguing.
They
had got past the tents now, to a place near the camp's edge, not far from the
latrines. It was a clear, open area perhaps fifty meters across, badly
illuminated by a couple of torches on poles stuck in the ground. Rolf had
earlier heard casual speculation that the place was being kept reserved for
some magical purpose. Near its center was tethered a sullen-looking loadbeast
wearing panniers that were bulky but did not seem heavy. From these Rolf and
the wizard gathered bags and parcels which Gray opened on the sand. From them
in turn he took small objects which, Rolf again helping as directed, he set out
on the ground in a regular and careful pattern. The things looked to Rolf for
the most part like toys for some carpenter's child: there were miniature
hammers, wooden wheels, a tiny saw, small brace and bit, and other little
tools.
"Rolf,
once you rode upon an Old World vehicle that moved across the land without a
beast to pull it; you learned its secrets of control, and rode it into
battle."
"That
is so." Rolf had finished laying out his portion of the pattern.
"Had
you ever any indication that it might fly?"
"No,
Gray." His answer was emphatic. "It was of metal, and heavier than a
big house, and it had no sign of wings."
Gray
shrugged. "Well, certainly they had many machines that did not fly; but
they had some that did. And some of them still do, I think, though that does
not concern us at this moment. What I proposed in meeting just now was not as
mad as some thought. Machines can fly, and I intend that we shall use them to
assault the cliffs of the Black Mountains." Squinting at the arrangement
of toy tools on the ground, Gray grunted with satisfaction, and began to draw
with his staff (it occurred to Rolf that he had not noticed any staff in Gray's
hands until just now) a diagram of straight lines surrounding the symbolic
tools. "The djinn that I will summon up will build for us a vehicle which
we will then operate ourselves. I think its pilotage will not be too difficult,
for intelligent men who have a little nerve and imagination."
Gray
stood his staff beside him on the ground; there it remained, as if it had taken
root. He rummaged in the beast's panniers again, and produced a paper that he
unrolled and showed to Rolf.
"I
have made this sketch from drawings left by the ancients of some of their
simpler flying machines. Other types they made as well, that were heavier than
air, and winged like birds, but the technology of those remains somewhat beyond
my grasp; and what I cannot understand, I cannot order the djinn to build.
However, the type that I have shown here should suit us well."
Rolf
studied the sketch. It showed, apparently in midair, a rimmed platform or
shallow basket, supported at each of its four corners by a cluster of lines,
the lines in turn reaching tautly upward to four great globes above. A mast
rose from the center of the platform; small sails bellied, and pennants
fluttered, showing the direction of the breeze. Inside the basket, four men
rode.
"These
globes from which the flying craft depended were made of some elastic
fabric" Gray explained. "Sometimes filling them with hot air was
enough to make them rise."
Rolf
considered silently. Was Gray mad? But wait -hot air did rush up the chimney.
"But
with the djinn to labor for us, we shall do far better. Our globes will be made
of thin metal, much stronger and safer, and in them there will be
nothing."
"Nothing?"
Rolf tried to make the question sound intelligent.
Gray
studied him, and sighed. Perhaps he wondered if he should request a more
intelligent aide. "Consider: Why does a ship, or any chunk of wood, float
on the water?"
"Because
-because it is lighter than water. Too light to sink."
"Ah.
Very true." Gray smiled, and tapped the paper with his finger. "Now,
when all the air has been exhausted from these metal spheres -experiments have
already shown me that air indeed has weight-when the weight of this whole
apparatus is thus made less than the weight of an equal volume of air, what
will this flying craft do?"
"It
will weigh less than air?" Yes, it all sounded mad; but Rolf despite
himself felt some enthusiasm grawing for this mad scheme. Wild as Gray's ideas
were, they somehow began to feel right in Rolf's mind.
Gray
spoke more rapidly, pleased that someone could halfway understand him.
"Air is very light, true. But nothingness is lighter still. I tell you,
the ancients made the idea work. Are you ready to try it with me, young
technologist? I will need quick hands to help me and a quick mind, too,
perhaps; Thomas tells me you have both, and I believe him. Of courseyou will
help, you are ordered to. But are you really with me in this enterprise?"
Rolf
took the time to give the question honest thought. "I am."
Gray
nodded. With a flourish, then, he beckoned to his balancing staff-that sprang
lightly through the air into his hand. "Be silent for a moment now, while
I evoke the djinn. He is an odd creature, even of his kind, irascible and not
well-meaning. But he must labor for us, though he cares nothing for East or
West, or for any mdn or demon."
The
calling-up was accomplished with quick confidence. After making a few
controlled gestures over the array of toy tools and drawn lines, Gray uttered
in a low rapid voice words that Rolf could not quite hear. Fire appeared in the
air before the wizard, with a belching of soot and acrid smoke, and accompanied
by a sound of rapid pounding, as by unseen, crude and heavy implements. The
voice of the djinn rolled forth, sounding one moment like splintering wood, the
next like clashing metal. "I come as bidden, master. What is your
command?"
Gray
unrolled his sketch and held it forth toward the flaming image of the djinn,
meanwhile intoning:
"I
first let be created four such great hollow spheres such as you see represented
here - "
The
djinn's voice hammered, interrupting. "You let be? That means you do not
hinder?"
Asperity
was in Gray's voice. "It means that I command! I order you to do it, and
be quick! The specifications for the globes are as follows . . ."
The
djinn did not dispute him further, but maintained its sooty glow in silence,
evidently listening. A moment after Gray had finished detailing his order,
there appeared from nowhere four crude blocks of metal, each half as big as a
man. In another moment the blocks were glowing hot. At once there arose a
mighty screeching, and a banging as of invisible hammers.
The few
soldiers who had been standing in the middle distance, watching, were being
joined momentarily by ever-growing numbers of their fellows, drawn by the
prospect of seeing something spectacularly unusual in the way of magic. The
camp had doubtless heard by now several versions of what had happened at the
meeting in Thomas's tent. Rolf, for his part, backed up a few paces, and
considered putting his fingers in his ears to dull the noise. The blocks of
metal glowed incandescent and expanded under the powerful working of the djinn.
They stretched out and up into enormous sheets of fiery metal, which then began
to curve themselves, perfectly and surely, into spheres.
When
the spheres, each the size of a small house, were almost completely closed, the
djinn left them to cool on the sand. Meanwhile he received from Gray the
specifications for the platform of the flying device, and for the ropes and
sails and their attachments.
"So
I let it be done!" Gray.concluded.
The
djinn began to work again, extruding from its smoke long coils of twine. And as
it worked, it grumbled. "Just so you understand that it is I am gathering
all the stuffs and doing all the work that you are letting. It does not come
from nothingness, you know."
"Nothingness,"
said Gray sharply, "is what I want inside the spheres-when the craft is
finished, we are aboard, and all's in readiness for flight. Then will I give
you the order to empty them and seal them."
The
djinn emitted a burst of noise somewhat like the working of a broken sawmill.
It took Rolf a little time to understand that this was laughter.
"Nothingness! You do not know what you are ordering-beg pardon, what you
are letting, master."
"Contrary
dolt!" A vein now stood upon Gray's forehead. Rolf made a prudent mental
note that the wizard was not notably long on patience. Gray went on: "By
nothingness I mean a lack of air, a vacuum, nullity; such as you yourself will
soon become if you irritate me too sorely!"
The
djinn evidently did not regard the threat as idle, for the work did pick up
speed, and for the time being at least there were no further grumblings. What
seemed to be a multitude of invisible hands spun twine into stout ropes, and
fastened ropes to the basket as it was fabricated. It was of a size to hold
three or four people without crowding, with a waist-high rim all round, woven
of tough, flexible withes, and seemingly very light. Each corner of the square
basket was secured with several ropes to one of the great metal spheres. Their
overshadowing bulks creaked as they cooled, and all but hid the basket from
observation. At Gray's direction, a central mast was now stepped in, and sails
and pennants made and stowed folded in the bottom of the basket. Water and
provisions, from more commonplace sources, went in also.
Full
night had come when Gray was satisfied that all was in readiness for flight. He
himself was the first to step into the basket, with a somewhat cautious
scissoring of his long legs. "Now master Rolf, if you will." And
Rolf, feeling almost evenly balanced between eagerness and reluctance, hopped
nimbly aboard.
Thomas
and several others had drawn near, to wish the voyagers well and to observe at
close range whatever might happen next. When the last word of encouragement had
been called in between the surrounding metal globes, Gray gestured for silence.
Facing the smoky glow of the djinn's image, he swept his pointing hand to one
after another of the four spheres as he cried out: "Now, let there be
exhausted from them all the air and other vapors, and let them then be sealed
shut!"
A
quartet of hissing noises suddenly surrounded the basket, issuing from the four
orifices left in the spheres. Rolf felt his hair stirred by one of the jets of
air. Tensely he gripped the basket's railing, waiting for the first surge of
flight.
And
almost at once the four enormous globes did stir themselves. But not to rise.
Instead, as their hissings began to be drowned out by ringings and portentous
metal groans, they rolled from side to side on the sand, they lurched and
crumpled and deformed themselves. The sphere in front of Rolf seemed to be
struck by some giant and invisible mace; it sounded a deafening clang as it
drew into itself a vast dent that bent its surface to its center. Then all four
spheres, in a great blacksmith's uproar of tortured metal, were shrivelling and
flattening like so many fruit-husks thrown into a fire. As their obscuring
bulks shrank down, Rolf sawThomas and others tumbling away with as little
thought of dignity or face as they would have shown before an enemy ambush that
caught them unarmed. Rolf had one leg over the basket rim again, and would have
fled himself, but one direction looked as perilous as another. Meanwhile the
basket stayed firmly seated on the sand, only swaying with Gray's vociferous
anger. The wizard spouted words at a tremendous rate, while Rolf dodged this
way and that to avoid his gesturing arms.
Silence
returned as suddenly as it had fled. The metal spheres, now reduced to
shrunken, twisted wads of scrap, were still. Gray's speech faltered and ran
down, and for the moment silence was complete. There quickly ensued a murmur of
laughter from part of the watching army, a murmur that dissolved before it
could grow too large, when Gray swept his glare around him like a weapon. The
dim masses of people beyond the torchlight began to scatter and drift off; a
number of them, once they had got some distance away, seemed compelled to utter
muted whooping noises.
Thomas
and others, drawing near once more, spitting dust and brushing it from their clothes,
did not seem much amused. But none of them daredyet say anything to Gray.
Gray
drew in a big breath, and shouted one more outburst at the djinn. Its flaming,
fuming scroll flared on apparently unperturbed.
"Oh
great master," it answered in its clattering voice, "such a curse as
you have just delivered would pain me like the grip of Zapranoth -if I were in
fact such a disobedient traitor as you say I am. But, as things are, I feel no
ill effects. I have followed your instructions to the letter."
"Ahhg!
Technology!" Gray flung down his arms. He climbed out of the basket, in
his excitement of disgust catching his foot on the rim and nearly falling.
Lowering his voice, he said to those nearby: "It speaks the truth.
Technology! How can any man who means to keep his sanity go far in such an
art?"
Rolf,
having got out of the basket too, was thinking. Hesitantly he asked: "Can
I put questions to this djinn?"
"Why
not?" Gray snapped, as if answering only with the easiest thing to say.
Rolf
turned to address the fiery image. "You, there. What made the balls
crumple up like that?"
There
was a brief silence, as if the djinn were assessing its new questioner. Then
with a clatterthe answer came: "Little master, they crumpled because the
air was taken out of them."
"Why?"
"Why
not? The outside air pushed in with all its weight, and there was only thin
metal to resist it."
Gray
had spoken of his experiments, showing that air had weight. The wizard looked
uncomfortable, but with a sharp motion of his head he signed Rolf to go on with
his questioning.
Rolf
considered. It seemed to him that Gray's theory was basically correct: a
machine made lighter than air should rise in air, as wood rose in water; and
air most certainly had weight. But obviously there were traps and dangers
awaiting the technologist.
Rolf
asked Gray: "Must it speak the truth to us?"
"Yes."
Gray sighed. "But not the whole truth; that's the catch. Go on, go on, ask
it more. Perhaps you have a better head for this than I."
Rolf
took thought, tried to put from his mind the fact that everyone present was
watching and listening to him, and faced the djinn again. "Suppose you
make the walls of the globes thicker and stronger. That should keep them from
being crushed when you take out the air."
"You
are right," said the djinn immediately. "Shall I rebuild them
so?"
"And
would they still be light enough, when emptied, to lift us and the basket with
them?"
There
was a short delay. "No." This time Rolf thought he detected
disappointment.
He
folded his arms, and took a few short paces to and fro. "Tell me, djinn,
what did the folk of the Old World do when they wished to fly?"
"They
made a flying machine, and rode in it. I myself was born with the New World, of
course, and never saw them. But so I have been told, and so I truly
believe."
"How
did they make these flying machines?"
"Describe
a way, and I will tell you if it is right or wrong."
Rolf
looked at Gray, who shook his head and told him: "I cannot compel it to
greater helpfulness. The djinn must give us what it knows of the truth, in
answer to our questions, but if it wishes to begrudging it can yield only a
small fragment at a time."
Rolf
nodded, accepting the rules of the game, which he found more and more
fascinating. "Djinn. Were these flying devices lighter than the air?"
"Some
of them."
"Had
they lifting spheres, as big as these were?"
"Sometimes."
"Yet
their spheres were not crushed."
"That
is true."
The
audience was silent. The time of half a dozen breaths had passed before Rolf
chose his next question. "Were their lifting spheres empty?"
"No."
The monosyllable had a forced, reluctant sound.
"They
were filled, then, with something lighter than the air?"
"They
were."
It was
midnight before Rolf had extracted from the djinn what seemed to be the last
necessary bit of information, and Gray could issue new orders: " - that
the new spheres be made of fabric such as you have described, airtight and
capable of stretching; and that they be filled, by this lighter-than-air gas
that will not burn, to the point where they will lift the basket with us in
it."
Shortly
before dawn, having managed a few hours' sleep in the meantime, Gray and Rolf
were once more in the basket, attended by an audience much smaller and less
hopeful-looking than that of the previous evening. Once more Gray gave orders
to the djinn. The new balloons, that had replaced the crumpled metal spheres,
rose from the sands as they inflated, then tugged boldly at their strong
tethers, pulling them taut. The basket creaked and moved, and Rolf beheld the
desert floor go dropping silently from beneath his feet.
The few
who watched the launching cheered and waved. The camp was already astir with
preparations for the day's march, and now a wider cheer went up to greet the
swift-ascending flyer. Looking down upon an earth much darker than the
lightening sky, Rolf saw his comrades' breakfast fires shrink steadily. The
airborne flying machine was drifting slowly but steadily to the north. Gray was
issuing sharp orders, planned beforehand, to the djinn, whose smoky image
drifted without weight or apparent effort beside the basket. There came a hiss
as flying gas was vented from the bags. Their giant shapes were spheres no
longerbut pressed together above the mast by their own bulging.
The
hissing continued, as Gray had ordered, until their ascent had been stopped, or
so the djinn informed them. Rolf could not say from one moment to the next that
they were really on the same level, and he would have been hard put to judge
exactly how high they were. The fires of the camp were now a scattering of
sparks at some distance to the south, and the last people Rolf had seen there
had been shrunken to the stature of small insects. Not that he was worried
about their height. The tight grip he had taken on the rim of the basket when
it lifted, was now loosening. Enjoyment was winning out steadily over fright.
Gray,
too, seemed pleased. After exchanging with Rolf opinions that all was going
well, he resumed giving orders to the djinn, for the attachment of rigging to
the mast, and the readying of sails.
The
wizard called out jovially: "Rolf, have you ever steered a sailing
ship?"
"No.
Though I have lived my whole life near enough to the sea."
"It
matters not, I have experience. Once we get up a sail, I'll show you how to
tack against the wind.
We'd
best not fly by daylight, there may be reptiles scouting."
Things
did not immediately go right with the rigging. Rolf was called upon to hold
lines, tie knots, and pull. A sail soon rose upon the mast, but then hung in
utter limpness. Gray, scowling again, hauled this way and that on lines and
cloth, but the sail would not so much as flutter. He hoisted a pennant, but it
too drooped like chain mail. Clenching his fists, Gray muttered: "Is this
some countering magic? I sense none. Yet there was a breeze before we lifted
from the ground."
"There
is one yet," said Rolf, nodding to the ever-shrinking pattern of the
camp's cookfires, dimming now with the approach of dawn. "Or what is
carrying us northward?" But he could not feel a breath of moving air upon
his face.
Gray
took one look back at the camp, and called the djinn to question. "Why
does the wind not belly out my sail?"
"Name
a reason, and I will say if it be true." The clatter of the djinn's voice
became something like a cackle.
Gray
sputtered.
Rolf
asked: "Djinn. Are we becalmed because our whole craft is already moving
with the wind, like part of it? Instead of the wind pushing past us?"
"It
is so."
Angrily
Gray flared up. "There were sails drawn in the Old World pictures - "
Then a thought struck him silent; after a moment he grumbled: "Of course,
those drawings may have been sheer fancy; they did that sometimes. But they did
have real airships. How then did they steer them? Rolf, question it some more.
And I will think, meanwhile."
Rolf
tried not to think of how fast they might be drifting, and how high.
"Djinn, tell me. Did the ancients ever use sails?"
Clatter,
cackle. "Not to fly."
"Did
they use paddles to propel their airships?"
"Never."
"Rudders
to steer them?"
There
was a reluctant-seeming pause. "Yes."
"Yes?"
Rolf pounced without a second thought. "Then fetch us such a rudder, here,
at once!"
The air
around them seemed to sigh, as with a giant's effort, or perhaps the
satisfaction of a djinn. Then arrived the rudder, here and at once indeed; it
was a wall of metal, curving, monstrous, overgrown, wedged between balloon and
basket so that it bent the mast and stretched the ropes and all but crushed the
occupants. Shaped roughly like a door for some great archway, the rudder was a
good twelve meters long. Its longest, straightest edge, turned downward now,
was nearly a meter thick; coming out of the flatness of this edge were festoons
of cabling and the ends of metal pipes.
The
balloon sank horrendously under the huge load. Gray, bent double under the slab
whose main weight was fortunately carried by the basket's rim, cried out an
order. In an instant the great mass was gone. The airship leaped up again, Gray
stood, and Rolf recovered himself from the position into which he had been
forced, almost entirely out of the basket.
There
was silence for a little while, except for gasps and wheezings. When Gray spoke
at last, his voice was icily detached. "In magic, hasty words are
ill-advised. So I learned long ago."
"I
will not utter any more of them. Believe me."
"Well.
I have blundered too, this night. Let us learn from our mistakes and then
forget them, if we can."
"Gray,
may I ask the djinn a cautious question?"
"Ask
him what you will. Our troubles seem to stem from giving him orders."
Turning
to the unperturbed scroll of smoke, Rolf asked: "Did the Old Worlders ever
use such a rudder as you brought to us to steer a flying craft like this one,
lighter than the air and with no means of making headway through the air?"
He was imagining himself in a boat, drifting with a current; and he saw clearly
in his mind that the rudder in the boat was useless, for there was no streaming
of water around it.
"No."
The monosyllabic answer seemed all innocence.
Gray
asked: "Did they ever steer craft like this at all?"
"No."
The two
humans exchanged a weary look. Gray said: "I had better give orders for
the gradual deflation of the bags, so that we drift no farther. It will take
our men a while to reach us as it is."
"I
see no danger in that order," Rolf approved cautiously. As gas began to
hiss from the bags again, he turned to the east, where now the sun lanced at
him from above the distant range of black. There was one peak that seemed to
tower above the rest, its head lost in a wreath of cloud that looked much
higher still than the balloon.
Gray
seemed to know where he was looking. "There lies the citadel of Som the
Dead. On those cliffs -can you see them?-that rise up halfway on the highest
mount. There's where we must somehow land part of our army."
And
somewhere there, thought Rolf, my sister maybe still alive. "We will find
away," he said. With his hand he struck the basket rim. "We will make
this work."
"Here
comes the ground," said Gray.
The
landing was a tumble, but it broke no bones.
V
Som's
Hoard
Chup
stood frozen in the doorway, watching as the man whom he had killed stood up,
fresh and healthy as when their duel had started. Tarlenot, starlted by Chup's
entrance, turned and got up quickly. But when he saw Chup's paralysis of
astonishment, he relaxed enough to offer him a slight bow and a mocking smile.
Charmian,
who had looked up as if expecting Chup, said calmly: "Leave us now, good
Tarlenot."
Tarlenot,
with the air of one who had completed his visit anyway, bowed once more, this
time to her. "I shall. As you know, I must soon give up this happy collar
for a while, and take to the road again. Of course I mean to see you again
before I set out - "
She
waved him off. "If not, you shall when you return. Go now."
He
frowned briefly at her, decided not to argue, and gave Chup one more look of
amusement. Then Tarlenot withdrew, going out through a doorway at the long
chamber's other end.
Charmian
now turned herself completely toward Chup, and at the sight of him began to
giggle. In a moment she was rolling over on her couch, quite gracefully, in her
mirth. And she laughed with a loud clear peal, like some innocent teasing girl.
Chup
moved unsteadily toward her. Still looking after Tarlenot, he said: "My
blade went this far down in him. This far. I saw him die."
She
still laughed merrily. "My hero, Chup! But you are so astonished. It is
worth all the vexation, just to see you so."
For his
part, Chup was very far from laughter. "What powers of sorcery do you have
here? What do battles mean, and warriors' lives, when dead men jump up
grinning?"
Her
mirth quieted. She began to eye Chup as if with sympathy. "It was not
sorcery, dear Chup, but his Guardsman's collar that saved him."
"No
collar stopped my blade, I cut down to his heart. I know death when I see it."
"Dear
fool! I did not mean that at all. Of course you cut him down. He died. You beat
and killed him, as I knew you would. But then he was restored by the Lord
Draffut."
"There
is no way of restoring ..." Chup's voice trailed off.
She
nodded, following his thought. "Yes my Lord. As it was doneforyou, by the
fluid of the Lake of Life. Since you do not wear the collar of Som's Guard, I
had to risk the Beast-Lord's great displeasure by having the fluid stolen for
you-by one of the demons he so hates. But I would face greaterrisks than that,
to have you with me." Her face and voice were innocent and proud.
"Come, sit beside me here. Have you the little trinket with you, that was
woven of my hair?"
He
walked to the soft couch, and sat down beside his unclaimed bride. From his
pocket he brought out the golden charm, clenched in his hand.
"No,
keep it for me, my good Lord, until I tell you how it must be used. Keep it and
guard it well. With no one else will it be so safe." Charmian took his
hand, but only to press his fingers tighter around the knot of yellow hair.
He put
the thing back in his pocket. Still foremost in his thought was the
resurrection he had witnessed. "So, Tarlenot will be magically healed,
whenever and however he is slain?"
"If
he falls here, in sight of Som's citadel and with his collar on. Didyou not
hear him say just now that he will leave his Guardsman's collar here when he
goes out as a courier again? The valkyries will not fly more than a kilometer
or two from the citadel."
"The
what?"
"The
valkyries, the flying machines of the Old World, that take the fallen Guardsmen
up to Draffut to be healed. They get but little practice now."
"What
is this Guard of Som's?"
"An
elite corps of men he thinks reliable." She had released his hand and was
talking in a businesslike way. "They number about five hundred; there are
no more collars than that."
He
observed: "You have not yet managed to get one of these protective collars
for yourself."
"I
will depend upon my strong Lord Chup for protection; we will see that you have
a collar, of course, as soon as possible."
"You
have been depending on the strong Lord Tarlenot till now, I gather. Well, I
will wait and catch him with his collar off."
Charmian
laughed again, this time even more delightedly, and curled up amid her silks.
"That messenger? Why, you are joking, lord. You must know I am only using
him, and to make him really useful I must lead him on. My only true thoughts
are for you."
Grimly
and thoughtfully, he said: "I remember that you do not have true
thoughts."
Now she
was hurt. Her eyes looked this way and that, then sought him piteously and
fluttered. One who did not know her as he did might easily have been convinced.
He knew her, and was not fooled; but she was still his bride, and all-important
to him. He frowned, wondering why he did not wonder. There must be a reason,
and he ought to have remembered it, but somehow it eluded him.
"My
every thought has been for you," his all-important bride was pouting.
"True, when you arrived today I pretended to be angry -surely you could
not have been deceived by that? I wanted Tarlenot to fight you, so you would
put him in his place. You must have understood that! Could he ever have beaten
you, even on the sickest day you've ever had?"
"Why,
yes, he could, and handily." She avoided his reaching hand and jumped to
her feet. "How can you dare to think that I have ever meant you harm? If
you will be rude enough to ask for proof of my intentions, I can only point out
that here you are, restored to life and health and power. And who is
responsible for your restoration, if not I?"
"Very
well, you saved me. But for your own reasons. You wanted this." Again he
pulled the charm out of his pocket. Looking down at the soft, shiny thing
resting so lightly in his open hand, he could remember vaguely that he had felt
misgivings about picking it up for the first time, but he could not remember
why. He asked: "What do you want it for?"
"Put
it away, please." When he had done that, Charmian sat down again and took
his hand between hers. "I want to use it. To make you Viceroy in the Black
Mountains, in Som's place."
He
grunted in surprise, beyond mere disbelief.
"Be
at ease, my lord," she reassured him. "The wizard Hann, who is with
us in this enterprise, has made this apartment proof against Som's spies."
"
I came in quite unnoticed."
"Not
by me. I wanted you to enter, my good lord." Her small hands pressed his
fingers tenderly. "Ah, but it is good to have you sitting with me once
again. You will be Lord of High Lords here, with Zapranoth and Draffut as your
vassals and only the distant Emperor himself above; and I will be your consort,
proud beside you."
He made
another boorish noise.
Unruffled,
she pressed his arm. "Chup, do you doubt that I would like to be the lady
of a viceroy?"
"I
don't doubt that."
Her
nails spurred his forearm. "And do you think that I would want some lesser
man than you beside me, one who could not hold such a prize when we had won it,
or try for something higher still. By all the demons, you underrate me if you
do!"
Viceroy,
Lord of High Lords . . . armies numbering tens of thousands under his command .
. .beside him, Charmian, looking as she did now. He could no longer wholly
doubt what she was saying. "Has Viceroy Som no need of you, to hold his
place and help him try for something higher still?"
Her
eyes flashed anger, mixed with determination. "I want a living man, not
dead . . . but you are right, my lord, Som is the key. We must dispose of
him." She said it easily. "He gave me shelter when my father fell,
thinking I would be useful to him one day; I convinced him you would be useful
too. He does not know that you have brought the means of his downfall."
Chup's
manner was still scornful. "And what are we to do with Som the Dead? How
shall we topple him?"
Her
eyes, that had gone to feast upon some distant vision, came back to his
unwaveringly. "The circlet woven of my hair must go into his private
treasure hoard, unknown to him. Only thus can he be made vulnerable to -certain
magic that we shall use against him."
"He
must have protection against such charms."
"Of
course. But Hann says that the one you carry is of unequalled power."
Chup
said: "You speak much of this wizard Hann, and what he says. What does he
gain, by helping you?"
Charmian
pouted. "I see I must soothe down your pointless jealousy again. Hann
wants only vengeance, for some punishment that Som inflicted on him long ago. I
know that Hann gives no impression of great skill at magic, yet he is stronger
in his way than Elslood was, or Zarf-"
"Then
why can he not make a stronger charm than Elslood wrought?" He thought he
could feel it in his pocket, like a circle of heavy fire.
She shook
her head impatiently. "I do not understand it perfectly, but it seems that
Elslood, wanting me to care for him, stole some of my hair and wove the charm.
But he tapped some power greater than he understood, the charm only made him
dote all the more on me. Never mind. We need not struggle with these
technicalities of magic. All that you need worry about, my lord, is getting the
charmed circlet woven of my hair into Som's private treasure hoard."
"How?"
"I
have already gone far in learning ways and making plans for that. But the
execution of the plan requires someone like yourself, my lord; and who is there
but you?"
"How?"
His voice was still heavy with his skepticism.
She
seemed about to tell him, but first she recounted once more the joys of being
viceroy. Her soft voice wore him down, so that he passed the midpoint between
doubting and belief; all things were possible, when his bride whispered that
they were.
Now she
was telling him what he must do: "Now hear me, my lord. Three things must
fall together ere we strike. First, the human guards who watch the outer
entrance to the treasure vault must be those we have suborned. Second -are you
listening?-the new breed of centipedes in the second room must not yet have
hatched. Thirdly, the word for quieting the demons in the inner vault must be
the one we know . . ."
Demons
again. He ceased to listen. He was wearying quickly of all these endless words,
even if they came from her, when she herself was here. Shaking his head to
break the spell of words, he reached for her.
"My
lord, wait. Hear me. This is vital - "
But he
would not wait, nor hear her any longer, and with a small sigh of vexation she
let him have his way.
On the
next day, when he had truly rested, there came to him officers of Som's Guard,
who wished to question Chup about the military situation in the West. Chup
related the rumors common in the Broken Lands, for what they might be worth. He
told the officers what he had observed of troop movements, from his beggar's post,
and of other matters bearing on the military, the conditions of roads and
livestock in the Broken Lands, the feelings and prosperity of the populace, the
state of the harvest. He could give the Guardsmen little comfort, except as
regarding the relative smallness of Thomas's force. Thomas would need great
reinforcement before he could attempt an attack upon this citadel.
Chup
was soon sitting at ease with the officers, military men like himself. He was
now dressed like them in a uniform of black, except that he had as yet no rank,
and of course no Guardsman's collar. In the course of exchanging soldiers' talk
he asked about the collars. He could not imagine how it would feel to enter a
fight with the knowledge that you could be glued together again if you were
hacked apart; would it be a spur or a hindrance to the most effective action?
Would a man who wearied let himself be killed to gain a rest?
One of
the officers shook his head, and raised one finger. It ended in a tiny abnormal
loop of flesh, instead of a fingernail. "The healing's not that safe or
certain. Things sometimes go wrong, up in Lord Draffut's house. A man who's
badly mangled going in may well come out too crooked to walk straight.
And
those who've been too long lifeless when the valkyries pick 'em up may never
again be smarter than little animals."
The
other officer nodded his scarred head. "Still," he said, "I
think none of us are likely to turn in our collars."
"See
much fighting here?" Chup asked.
"Not
since we came here, and Draffut handed out his collars; he was here first, you
know, before the East or West. . . We do grow somewhat stale, those of us who
stay inside these mountains. Nothing but a peasant uprising from time to time.
But we practice. We'll handle this Thomas if he comes."
Chup
was invited to visit the officers' club on a lower level of the citadel, where
wine and gambling and fresh peasant girls were available. He got up and
strolled with the two men to sample the wine; as for the dice and the women, he
had no money at the moment, and could not imagine himself wanting any woman but
one.
Walking
the main, buried corridors of the citadel, Chup took note of the fighting men
he saw. He supposed the garrison might number a thousand if all were mobilized;
but the five hundred elite Guardsmen should be easily able to hold the natural
defenses of the place against Thomas's four thousand or so. A few of the
Guardsmen were grotesquely misshapen with old scars, of wounds no man could
ordinarily survive, though they were active still; this confirmed what the
officer had said about the uncertainty of being healed.
Chup
had other things to watch for on his walk to the officers' club and back again,
through rooms and passages carved from the mountain's rock. In one large
chamber, decorated with some ancient artisan's frieze of unknown men and
creatures, he spotted without paying it any obvious attention the entrance to
the passage that Charmian had told him to watch for. It was an unmarked tunnel
leading downward and yet farther into the mountain. It was this way that, by
many turns and branches she had described, would lead him to Som's own treasure
hoard.
Again
and again during the next two days she repeated her instructions to him; by
then he had ceased to doubt her word on anything at all. And then she awoke him
in the night, to tell him that the time had come, the three requirements had
fallen together. Tomorrow he must try to reach the treasure vault of Som.
He
strode into the high, frieze-corniced room with the air of a man upon some
important errand, as indeed he was. The room was an intersection of two
corridors, and held people passing continually to and fro. No one paid
attention as Chup turned aside into the downward way that led toward the
treasure; it led to other things as well, and was not guarded here.
Chup
walked unarmed with any blade or club; he must not kill today, must leave no
traces of his passage. For weapons, he carried Charmian's knowledge of Som's
secrets, gathered he knew not how, but trust her to manage that, in a world of
men; and his own boldness, and speed of mind and body; and three words of
magic; and a pocketful of dried fruit, innocent to the eye and taste. Hann had
demonstrated that a human might eat of it without effect.
A few
people passed Chup, coming toward him through the tunnel he descended. Then the
way branched, once and again, and now there were no other walkers. The branch
that Chup had been taught to follow was a narrow way, and it went on without
another intersection for some distance. Now and then it broke out of its walls
into a large cave, where it formed a suspended walkway across chasms whose
depths were lost in darkness. Sunlight filtered down into the big caves through
hidden openings somewhere high above. Along the buried parts of the way, a few
cheap lampstands cast some illumination. There were no signs, nor any evidence
that any goal of much importance lay in this direction.
So far,
all was as Charmian had foretold. And now, here, just as she had said, the path
bridged a wider crevasse than usual, and then branched once more. The right
way, she had told him, led up into the viceroy's private quarters. The left
side, narrower, was the one that Chup must take.
Now at
last there were posted warning signs. Chup had no doubt of what they meant,
though he did not stop to try to puzzle out the letters. He also ignored
another, blunter, warning: a bundle of mummied hands that were no doubt
supposed to be those of would-be trespassers hung like a cluster of dried
vegetables above the way. He moved his head slightly as he walked beneath, not
wanting the dead fingers to brush his hair. His pulse went quicker. If he were
stopped and questioned now, it would be hard to say convincingly that he had
seen no warning.
A final
abrupt turn, and Chup's path came to an end against a massive, unmarked door.
This too he found as Charmian had described it: so strongly built that a ram
would be needed to break it down. Having no sword hilt to rap out a signal
with, Chup put his knuckles to the job. The door resounded no more than would a
massive tree stump, but someone must have been listening for the little noise,
for it was answered quickly. A dim face peeked out at Chup through a small
grill. A sliding of bars and rattle of chains, and the great door moved inward
just enough for him to enter.
He
stepped into a barren, rock-walled chamber about ten meters square. The two men
in Guardsmen's collars standing watch had been given no chairs or other
furniture to lure them into relaxation. Directly across from the door where
Chup had entered, a ladder five or six meters long stood leaning against the
wall; beside the ladder was the room's only visible aperture besides the door,
a narrow hole that led down into darkness. Thick candles in wall sconces lit
the guardroom adequately.
One of
the men who greeted Chup was hardly more than half a man in size, his legs
being grotesquely short. The other guard was of ordinary stature, and sound of
limb, but his face was the strangest Chup had ever seen on living man, a wall
of scars from which one live eye gleamed like something trapped. According to
Charmian, these men had been enlisted in her cause by promises of better
healing when she came to power. The two of them closed up and chained and
barred the great door tight as soon as Chup was through it; and then they
looked at Chup expectantly, but saying nothing.
He had
wasted no time either, but had crossed the chamber to look down into the hole.
He could see nothing in the darkness there. "Where's the beast?" he
asked. "I mean, in which part of its room?"
The
scarred man made a nervous sound. "Hard to say. You've got some means of
putting it to sleep?"
"Of
course. But I'd like to know just where to toss the bait."
They
came and stoodbeside him at the hole, peering down and listening, muttering to
each other, trying to locate the beast. They were nervous for his welfare. If
his attempt miscarried down below, their complicity in it would be discovered
when Chup - alive or dead -was found. It seemed a long time before the dwarfed
man raised a hand for Chup's attention, and pointed to a quarter of the room
below. Bending over the pit, straining his ears, Chup thought he could barely
hear a dry patter that must be made by the beast's multitude of feet.
"There,
there, yes," the scarred man whispered. "It'll be behind you as you
go down the ladder."
They
got ready for him the long ladder -Chup saw now that it was really an extremely
slim and elegant stair, complete with handrail, fit for Som to use when he went
down to count his gold -and now they slid the ladder down.
Chup
went down facing the ladder, about one third of its length, before he tossed
his first piece of dried fruit. He heard the hundred feet shiver before he saw
the rail-thin, cat-quick body; he could not tell for sure whether the bait had
been taken. Hann had said that two pieces swallowed should afford Chup time
enough to complete his mission. He let his eyes become somewhat more accustomed
to the gloom before he tossed a second bait, and he saw this one snapped up by
the first pair of delicate legs, flicked up into the tiny, harmless mouth. A
moment only passed before the beast shivered, twitched extravagantly, and began
to curl its body. Its hundred legs in disarray, it slid down springily to the
floor, showing Chup as it bent the hundred branching slivers of its whiplike
tail.
Chup
cautiously went down the rest of the ladder. The centipede remained completely
quiet. He left the ladder and paced toward the door that led to the next lower
level; and now the dryness of fear was growing in his throat. Behind him he
heard the ladder being drawn up; so it had been planned, in case some officer
should come while he was down below.
There
was a bloated bulk of darkness that he only just avoided stepping on, when it
made a feeble movement in his path. He had been told of this also. It had been
a man, and was still alive, nourishing the larvae of the centipede inside
itself. Perhaps its hands would someday join the thieves' bundle over the
tunneled walk; perhaps it had in fact once been a would-be thief.
In the
faint light from below he could make out the way to the next lower level: an
ordinary doorway led to a simple solid stair of stone, narrow and curving but quite
open. What was below had no desire nor occasion to come up, and the centipede
would be too frightened to go down.
Chup
went down, armed with the three words of magic Hann had taught him. They
weighed now like swallowed arrows in his throat, syllables not fit for ordinary
men to bear. Chup went down the curving stair, and before him the increasing
light carried a hint of the color of gold.
As he
had been instructed, Chup counted the turnings of the stair, and stopped on
what should be the last, before the source of light ahead could come into his
view. There he drew in his breath, and said, clearly and loudly, pausing after
each word, the three words of the incantation.
With
the first word, there fell a silence in the air, where before he had only
thought the air was silent; there had been a certain quiet murmuring that he
was not aware of until it ceased.
With
the second word, the light in the room below was dimmed, and the air became
fresh and ordinary, where before he had only thought that it was so; and time
began to make itself felt, so that Chup perceived the age in all the slimy
stones that built the vault surrounding him.
The
third word of the incantation seemed to hang forever on his tongue, but when he
had said it, time flowed on once more as it should. The golden light before him
grew as bright as ever; a certain rippling watery reflection in it had been
stopped so it was steady, where before he had only thought that it was so.
With
that Chup went on down, walking into Som's treasure room through its sole
entrance. The vaulted chamber was round and high, perhaps twenty meters across.
The golden light came from the center of it, seemingly from the treasure
itself. It lay in careless-looking heaps, for the most part brilliant yellow
metal, coins and jewelry, bars and foldings of gold leaf; here and there the
piles were studded with the sharper glint of silver or the brighter flash of
gems.
The
treasure was still sealed from Chup by a last encircling fence, of what seemed
fragile metal wands. He had no need to cross that barrier or worry about it.
Instead he looked up at once to the upper vaulting of the high chamber. By the
light of the ensorceled treasure, he saw that up there the seven guardian
demons hung, where Hann's three words had sent them, like malformed bats in
fine gray gossamer robes. They were head down, with arms or forelegs -it was
hard to specify -that hung below their heads. Several of the dangling limbs
hung nearly to the level of Chup's head, so elongated were the demons' shapes.
One had a gray blur of a talon run like a fishhook through the hide of small
furry beast, a living toy that struggled and squeaked incessantly to be free,
and very slowly dripped red blood. As Chup watched the demons, they began to
drone, like humans newly fallen asleep who start to snore.
With a
shudder he pulled his gaze down and stepped forward. He stood staring for just
a moment in awe at the accumulated wealth before him. He thought he had seen
riches before, and owned some too. But he had known only handfuls compared to
this.
The
moment of distraction passed; what drove him had far more power over him than
greed. Taking now from his pocket the golden circlet of Char-mian's hair
-infinitely brighter in his eyes than any hoard of metal -he held it up before
him in both hands. He was reluctant ever to let it go. But after all it was the
woman he wanted, not her token. It was for the sake of their future life
together that he must give away the charm; for no other reason could he have
parted with it now.
He
tossed it from him, over the innocent-looking fence of fragile rods, toward the
piled-up wealth. As it passed from his fingers it seemed to draw from him a
greater spark than ever man might get by rubbing cloth and amber; and with this
spark, invisible for all its power, Charmian's image in his mind was smashed
and shattered as in a broken mirror.
Under
the blow, Chup lurched forward two steps, hands outstretched and groping. Like
one aroused from sleep-walking he blinked and cried out incoherently. His case
was all the worse for his remembering all the nightmare that had brought him
here; nightmare magic, that had made him trust his bride . . .
Tightly
he squeezed shut his eyes, forgetting for the moment even the dreaming,
droning, blinded demons over his head as he tried to call back Charmian's face.
He visualized her now as beautiful as ever. But now, freed of the potent charm,
he recognized her beauty as nothing but a mask worn by an enemy.
He
stood gazing dazedly through the fragile-seeming fence of wands. The gold
circlet had vanished, lost in the dazzle of the yellow metal stacked and strewn
there . . . and now that he was freed of it, he did not want it back. Nor her.
She would be with Tarlenot now, or Hann, or someone else. And Chup realized
that he no longer minded that.
The
thought broke in upon him that she must have known he would be freed by tossing
away the charm. Or did she think he was still bound to her and blinded by the
simple magic of her attraction, like the other men she used? No, he never had
been enthralled by her before he picked up the charm. She must have known that
he would, at this point, be set free.
To do
what? Where did his best interests lie? Was he now committed irrevocably to
helping her against Som?
Remembering
now her face and voice over the last few days, he concluded that she still
hated him for not being manageable without magic, especially for once slapping
her to put an end to a mindless hysteria of noise. Was she done with using him
now, and was her revenge already set?
At best
his time of safety here was passing quickly. Cautiously he turned to leave the
treasure chamber.
Above
his head the little furry animal still writhed and squeaked, impaled upon the
demon's dangling talon. Chup put up a hand in passing to rob the demon of its
toy; he tossed the small beast ahead of him up the curving stair. There it
might find a crevice in which to die in peace. The curses of three thousand
wizards on all demons! He could not slay them, but he would take the chance to
rob one of a toy. When he had climbed round the first turn of the ascending
stair he paused, and uttered in reverse order Hann's three words. The light
changed subtly, down below, and no longer was there perfect silence.
When he
had climbed to the darkened level of the centipede, he was glad that he had
wasted no more time below, for already the beast was stirring. It was not
moving yet, but trying to rise, its feet a-scratching on the pavement in the
darkness. He waited briefly, to give his eyes a better chance to see.
Now
that he had thought a little, it seemed to him that he would have no more
usefulness to Char-mian. No longer bewitched, he could do nothing for her that
someone more manageable-Tarlenot - could not do almost as well. She hated Chup,
he felt quite sure of that, and she was not the girl to leave her hate
unsatisfied.
He
could see the dim shape of the centipede now, lying on its side, curling and
uncurling like a slow snake swimming in the dark. Its feet scraped but were not
yet ready to support it. Chup moved in the utmost silence, stepping toward the
place where they must let down the ladder for him . . . here? Would this be
where Charmian meant for him to die?
The
more he thought, the likelier it appeared. This whole scheme could have been
accomplished in a different way. Hann could have given the two deformed guards
dried fruit, and magic words. They could have taken the circlet in and thrown
it on the pile as easily as Chup. Except in that case Chup would have been left
above ground, live and active, and with his own will back again.
Holding
his breath, he listened for any sound above. They must be standing silent and
listening too. Suppose he called up for the ladder and they lowered it. When
he, unarmed, climbed to the top, the two Guardsmen would be there, one on each
side, with weapons drawn ... or suppose they did not lower the ladder, but
laughed at him. They could have some means to grapple his body and hoist it up,
after the centipede had struck him. Either way, once he was dead, put him down
a crevice somewhere. He would vanish, or seem to be the victim of an accident
or some chance quarrel or casual assassination -only there would be nothing to
connect him with the treasure vault.
Behind
Chup now, the sounds of the centipede grew louder. Looking back, it saw it was
now managing to drag itself along the floor. It moved in his direction.
And
close above him now he heard the faint sound of a sandal-scrape, and the intake
of a nervous breath. "Where is he?" came a Guard's low whisper.
"If the demons took him after all, they're certain to report him. Then
we're through!"
Chup's
eyes had now adapted well enough for him to see the beast in some detail. Thin
as an arm its body was, though longer than a man, about as long as the
many-weaponed tail that flicked and twitched behind it. A man with good arms
might easily break the beast's thin neck, it seemed. Except that as soon as he
tried to get a grip that tail would come snapping like a whip in the gloom,
impossible to block or dodge . . . the clustered poison-spines grew longer than
fingers on that tail. How could a man fight such a thing barehanded?
Why,
thus, and so. And he would have a fighting chance, if it was dazed and slow.
The cold calculation of tactics led Chup on into the outline of a larger plan.
He trusted what his instinct told him, in a fight; the reasons came clear
later, if he took the time to think them out.
The
animal was trying now to stand, was on the verge of success. Chup drew a deep
breath and moved into action. He scraped his sandals on the paving, making
hurried footsteps, and in a low clear voice he called out: "Let down the
ladder."
From up
above, the laughter came.
The
centipede was still sliding toward Chup, with a whispery scraping of its feet
and body on the stones. Moving more quietly than the dazed beast, Chup circled
to its rear and closed in. He grabbed in the neardarkness with his unprotected
hand for the tail, and caught it, just under the cluster of poison-spines at
the tip. He set his foot against what might be called the creature's rump and
shoved it down and pinned it when it would have tried to rise. Holding the tail
straight was easy enough, but the multitude of slender legs had strength in
numbers, resilient power surprising for their size. He was in for a struggle as
soon as the drug had worn off completely, the more so as he must not kill this
beast. The fighter's intuition on which he relied had grapsed that point at
once, though he had not thought it through with conscious 'logic: he must keep
for himself the option of making Charmian's plan succeed or fail. To leave this
animal dead would mean alerting Som and the plot's eventual discovery.
Up
above, the Guardsmen's low voices were cheering on the beast.
"Put
down the ladder, quick, by all the demons!" Chup cried out. Out of sight
of those above, he was now sitting on the body of the beast to hold it down.
His right hand was still vising the tail, his left hand feeling for the neck.
"Fight
it out, oh great Lord Chup!" called down a voice. "What's wrong, did
you forget your sword?"
He
answered with a wordless cry of rage, as he shifted his grip upon the creature
just slightly and stood up, lifting it across his shoulders. The weight was
quite surprising for the size, it must be half as heavy as a man.
"That
sounded like it did for him."
"It
must have. Wait a moment, though."
The
hundred legs remained in agitation, pounding softly, coldly, at Chup's head. He
moved with his hideous burden, carefully keeping out of direct sight of the men
above, stepping soundlessly.
One of
the hidden voices said: "Toss down a bait. We've waited long enough. It
got him, or he'd still be running."
Said
the other, doubtfully: "He might have gone back down to the vault."
"Dimwit!
The words won't work twice in one night, remember? Hann told us that. No man'll
run to a wakeful demon, not even if a hundred-legger's chasing him. Throw a
bait, we don't know when an inspector's going to come."
"All
right, all right. Where's the beast? I'll toss one before his nose."
Chup
twisted his burden off his shoulder and lowered it carefully in straining arms,
just enough to let the little feet make scratching sounds upon the floor.
"There,
there, hear it?" Chup heard the tiny spat of Hann's dried fruit, landing a
meter or so before him. He waited, counting slowly to ten, his captive's body
prisoned now under his left arm, its deadly tail still clamped safely by his
tireless sword hand. Then he pressed the hundred legs down on the pavement once
again, and this time let the writhing sides make contact too, to make the
sounds of staggering and collapse.
"It
took the bait. Go down."
"You
go down, if you're in such a hurry. Wait till it falls, I say."
Chup
lifted the animal again, and moved silently to a new position.
"It's
quiet now. Go down and haul out the mighty Lord Chup."
"We
had it settled, you were going down!"
"You're
the stronger, as you always brag. So now be quick about it."
A snarl
of fear and anger.
"Quick!
What if an inspector conies?"
It was
the dwarf who eventually prevailed; the tall scarred man came down the ladder,
slowly and hesitantly, frowning into the shadows where he thought Chup and the
beast must both be lying. He had his sword drawn, and he spun round quickly
when he heard Chup's soft step behind him. Then he screamed and jumped away and
fell when he saw what weapon Chup was brandishing.
Without
hesitation Chup turned and charged up the ladder, the writhing beast held above
him and in front of him. He saw the dwarf's face, peering down incredulously,
then tumbling backward out of sight in terror.
The
dwarf was far too late in trying to draw his stubby sword. Chup by that time
had reached the ladder's top, pitched the animal back down the hole, and was
reaching for the little man. The dwarf's thick sword arm, caught, was twisted
till the weapon clattered to the floor, then he himself was flung away across
the room.
"Hold
back!" Chup barked out, with his back against the door. "I mean no
killing here, no val-kyries buzzing down the tunnel to haul you out and bring
investigators. Now hold back!"
The
disarmed dwarf was sitting, scowling, where he had been tossed, and gave no
impression of any eagerness to attack. Nor did the tall, scarred man, who,
having beaten the maltreated centipede to the ladder on one lap or another of
what must have been a lively race, now halted at the ladder's top. The tall one
was armed, but so now was Chup, who had scooped up the dwarf's sword; and what
Chup had just accomplished without a blade must have augmented his reputation
considerably in the present company.
The men
held back. Chup nodded, and reached behind him with one hand to slide back the
massive bolts that sealed the door. "The scheme you were enlisted forgoes
forward, and if you play your parts I will see to it that you are
rewarded." As you deserve, he thought. He went on speaking, with his field
commander's voice: "The plan goes on, but now I am in charge, and not
those who first bribed you and instructed you. Remember that. Raise that
ladder."
The
tall man hesitated briefly, then jumped to obey, sheathing first his sword. The
dwarf was snuffling now like some schoolboy caught in an escapade.
Chup
demanded: "What were you to do next? What signal were you to give her,
that I am dead?"
The
tall one said: "Your . . .your body, lord. To be left where it would be
found; as if some feral centipede had . . . there are some in these caverns. To
make your death look accidental."
"I
see." Chup could now take time to think. "Maintain your guard here as
if nothing had happened. If an inspector comes, say nothing. I left no traces
down below. I will be back, or will send word, to tell you what to do."
Now he could see the logic and the details of his plan, and he was grinning as
he went out and shut the door.
VI
Be as I
am
The
corpse's face had been shattered into unrec-ognizability, as if by a long fall
onto rock, and the appearance of the rest of the body suggested that it had
been nibbled by some kind of scavenger; reptiles, perhaps. The soldiers who had
brought the body to Charmian-led by two officers who were not of her small
group of plotters -stood by watching stolidly, as she attempted to make the
requested identification.
She
looked long at what had been the face, and at the heavy limbs that had once
been powerful. They did not seem to have anything to do with Chup, but in their
present state they might be his as well as not. Charmian was not squeamish
about death -in others -and put out a hand and turned the ruined head. The
build and hair color of the dead man were Chup's, and the tattered black
uniform might be. She could see no marks of weapons on the body.
Haifa
day after Chup had set out upon his mission for her, she had sent word to Som's
chamberlain inquiring whether her husband had been detained on any business.
Word came back that nothing was known of his whereabouts. Haifa day after that,
the search was begun in earnest. Now another day later, this. Events were
proceeding as she had planned.
"Where
was this man found?" she asked.
"Wedged
in a deep crevice, lady, in one of the deep caves. He might have fallen from a
bridge."The officer's voice was neutral. "Canyou make an
identification?"
"Not
with certainty." She lifted her eyes calmly; no one high in the councils
of the East would be expected to show much grief for the loss of any other.
"But yes, I think this is the body of my husband. Tell the Viceroy Som
that I am grateful for his help in searching. And if it was no accident that
killed the Lord Chup, then those who did it are as much Som's enemies as
mine."
The
officers bowed.
And
half a day after they and their men had gone, wheeling their gruesome charge
upon a cart, other messengers came from Som, more cheerfully garbed and with
far merrier words to speak -it was a summons for her, to appear before the
viceroy, but it came couched in the welcome form of gracious invitation.
Soon
after those emissaries also had departed, leaving her time for preparation, the
wizard Hann sat watching Charmian. They were in a central room of her elaborate
suite. Hann sat a-straddle of a delicate chair turned back to front, his sharp
chin resting broodingly upon his wiry, somehow unwizardly forearms, crossed
upon the chair's high back.
The
clothes that Charmian was to wear, close-fitting garments of raven black, hung
thin and shimmering beside a screen. She herself, swathed in a white robe and
soft towels and newly emerged from her bath, sat primping before an array of
mirrors. She would make an imperious motion of her finger or her head, or
merely with her eyes, and Karen or Kath would jump to adjust the angle of a
mirror or lamp, or Lisa or Portia would fetch a different comb or brush, jar or
phial, most of which their lady considered and rejected. Samantha was upon some
errand for Charmian, and Lucia had earlier been judged guilty of some gross
error and was not here; there was blood drying on the small silvery whip that
lay at one end of the long dressing table. Charmian's face, utterly intent on
appraising itself in all its multiple reflections, was for the time devoid of
youth and softness, was ageless as ice and equally as hard.
Hann,
observing her thus disarmed and charmless, was able to appraise her with
something of the feeling he had when watching another magician pull off a
perilous feat; professional respect.
He need
never have worried about her nerves, he told himself. This girl-woman had matured
considerably in the half year since she had come here as a frightened refugee.
From the start she had been enormously ambitious; now she could be cold and
capable, self-controlled. She probably could command an army, given a tactical
adviser and mouthpiece to pass on orders -a man like Tarlenot. And she would
have the nerve and ruthlessness to manage the other powers that were the
viceroy's, even the power called Zapranoth -given the aid of a wizard of great
skill, Hann.
The
rulers of the Empireof the East would not care if Som were overthrown by one of
his subordinates; that would mean only that a more capable servant had replaced
a less. And now it did seem that Som's hand was faltering. (Only in the back of
Hann's mind the question waited: why had the body been so mutilated, impossible
to certainly identify? Well, why not? The Dwarf and Scarface swore that they
had put the Lord Chup down a crevice as planned. And there were little
scavenger beasts, that strayed out from the dungeons where they bred . . . )
Charmian
was dismissing her attendants. As soon as the last of them had left the room
she turned to Hann a questioning look. Hann, understanding, quickly made use of
the best developed of his powers to quickly scan the suite and its environs. In
this branch of magic he thought that he was unexcelled. The voices of invisible
powers, inhuman and abject and faithful, muttered their reports to him,
speaking close and softly so none but he could hear.
"Speak
safely," he said to Charmian. "No one is listening but me."
Fingering
a tiny perfume bottle, she asked: "How did our viceroy and master acquire
his name?"
Hann
was perplexed. "Som?"
"Who
else, my learned fool? Why is he called 'The Dead'?"
He
sprang up from his chair, aghast. "You don't know that?"
A light
danced in Charmian's eyes. Looking at Hann in her mirrors, she was quite
relaxed, save for her fingers on the little phial. "You know that I have
met Som only twice, both times briefly. I realize of course that the purpose of
his name must be to frighten those who hear it. But in what sense is it
true?"
"In
a very real sense!" Alarmed at her ignorance, Hann tilted his head from
side to side in agitation.
"In
a real sense, then. But tell me more." Charmian's voice was soothing and
deliberate, her eyes tranquil.
Hann
absorbed some of hercalm, turned his chair around, and sat down properly.
"Well. Som does not age at all. He is immune alike to poison and disease,
if what I hear is true." The wizard frowned. "He has reached some
balance, struck some bargain with death. I admit I do not know how."
Charmian
appeared to disbelieve. "You speak as if death were some man, or
demon."
Hann,
who had been to the center of the Empire of the East, said nothing for a
moment. He had tied his fortune to this girl, and now her inexperience and
rashness were beginning to frighten him. There was not time to teach her much.
"I know what I know," he said at last.
She
inquired, calmly enough: "And what else do you know of Som?"
"Well.
I have never seen him enter battle. But it is said on good authority that any
man who raises a weapon against Som finds himself smitten in that very moment
with the same wound that he is trying to inflict."
On
hearing this, Charmian's many mirror faces marred their foreheads with
thoughtful frowns. "Then when I have put my ring of magic through Som's
nose, and led him from his throne, how are we to do away with him? If no weapon
can kill him . . ."
"There
may be one."
"Ah."
"Though
what the weapon is, I do not know. Nor does Som himself know, I believe."
Through the powers that served him Hann had recently heard of recent threats to
Som, by some mysterious power of the West, threats implying that the one
effective weapon was known and would be used when the time came. "I do not
know, but I could quickly learn, if I was given all the tools and wealth I
needed for my work."
"When
I am consort of a new viceroy, you shall have all you need and more. Now what
else must I know of Som before I go to him?"
Hann
went on worriedly:"There is sometimes the smell of death upon him; though
when he is inclined to deal mildly with those around him, he covers up his
stink with perfumes.
"And
-I warn you. When you see him at close range and from the corner of your eye,
you are liable to see not a man's face but a noseless skull. Can you smile and
coo at that and not show your disgust?"
Once
more she appeared to be concentrating completely on her reflection, adding a
final something to her lips. "I? You do not know me, Hann."
"No!
I admit that I do not." He jumped to his feet again and began to pace.
"Oh, I know that you are able. But also that you are very young, and from
the hinterlands. Inexperienced and untraveled in the world."
Her
mirrors all laughed at him in light and easy confidence.
Annoyed,
and worried all the more, he pressed on: "I know, back in your father's
little satrapy, men were ruining themselves to win your favor. Some here, also
. . . but remember that not everyone here will be so easily manipulated."
She
gave no sign that she had heard.
He
raised his voice. "Do you suppose you have enthralled and bedazzled me? I
am your full partner in this enterprise, my lady. It is magic that is drawing
Som to you; see that you do not forget it."
"You
do not know me," Charmian repeated softly. And with that she pushed away
her clutter of towels and jars and phials and turned to him from her mirrors.
The room seemed brighter, suddenly. Even clothed as she was, in the loose
concealing robe . . .
"Never
have I seen . . ." said Hann, in a new, distracted voice; and after the
four words fell silent, marveling.
She
laughed, and stood up, with a single swaying of her hips.
Hann
said in a blurred voice: "Wait, do not go just yet."
Her
lips swelled in a pretended pout. "Ah, do not tempt me so, sly wizard. For
you know how weak I am, how subject to your every trifling spell and whim. Only
the knowledge that I must go, for the sake of your own welfare, enables me to
tear myself away." And with that she laughed again, and vanished behind
the screens where her attendants were, and Hann was left with no more than the
memory of a vision.
By the
time she had finished dressing and set out, the time of her appointment was
near at hand, but she did not hurry; the audience chamber was not far off. On
her walk deep into the citadel she was bowed on and escorted by a series of the
viceroy's attendants, some of whom were human. Others were more beastlike or
more magical than men, and had shapes not commonly encountered away from the
Black Mountains. Charmian no longer marveled at them, like a backwoods girl;
twice before she had walked this way.
At her
first audience with Som, nearly half a year ago, the viceroy had told her
simply and briefly that it suited his purposes to grant her asylum. At her
second audience she had stood silent and apparently unnoticed amid a number of
other courtiers as Som announced to them the opening of a new campaign to
recover the lost seaboard satrapies, and particularly to crush the arch-rebel
Thomas of the Broken Lands; little or nothing had been heard of the campaign
since then. On neither occasion had Som shown her any more interest than he
might have bestowed upon an article of furniture. She had soon learned from the
gossip of the other courtiers that he was dead indeed regarding the pleasures
of the body.
Or so
they all thought; what would they say today?
Looking
into Som's great audience hall from just outside the door, she was vaguely
disappointed to see that it was almost empty. Then as she was bidden enter by
the chamberlain she saw that the viceroy had just finished talking with a pair
of military men, who were now walking backward from his presence, bowing,
noisily rolling up their scrolls of maps. Som was frowning after them. Charmian
could not discern any change since her last audience in the man who sat upon
the ebony throne. Som was a man to all appearances of middle size and middle
age, rather plainly dressed except for a richly jeweled golden chain around his
neck. He was rather sparely built, and his aspect at first glance was not
unpleasant, save perhaps for his rather sunken eyes.
The
soldiers backed past Charmian and she heard them stumbling and colliding with
each other at the doorway as they left; but the viceroy's aspect softened as
his eyes refocused on her.
The
chamberlain effaced himself, and Charmian was alone with her High Lord in the
great room where a thousand might have gathered-alone save for a few Guardsmen,
heavily armed and standing motionless as statues, and for a pair of squat
inhuman guardians-she could not tell at once if they were beasts or demons
-that flanked his throne at a little distance on each side.
Som
beckoned to her, with a gesture whose slightness she found enviable: that of
one who knows he has complete attention. With humility in every move, her eyes
downcast, steps quick but modest, she walked toward him. When still at a humble
distance, she stopped, and made obeisance deeply, with all the grace at her
command.
All was
silent in the vast hall. When she thought it time to raise her eyes to the
ebony throne, Som was gazing down at her, solemnly, with the stillness of a
statue or a snake. Then like a snake he moved, with a sudden flowing gesture.
In his dry, strong voice he said: "Charmian, my daughter-I have come to
think ofyou as in some sense a relative of mine-you have lately begun to assume
importance in my plans."
She
dipped her eyes briefly and raised them again; so might a girl perform the gesture
who had but lately begun to practice it before her mirror. A perfect imitation
of innocence would never be convincing, here. "I hope these thoughts of me
are in some measure pleasing to my High Lord Viceroy."
"Come
closer. Yes, stand there." And when he had gazed upon her from closer
range for a little while, Som asked: "Is it then your wish to please me as
a woman? It is long since any have done that."
"I
would please my High Lord Som in any way he might desire." There was
perfume in the hall, of high quality certainly but stronger than the delicate
scent she had put on herself.
"Come
closer still."
She did
so, and sank on one knee before him so close that he might have reached out a
hand and touched her face. But he did not. For just a moment her nostrils
caught a whiff of something else beneath the perfume; as if perhaps a small
animal had crawled beneath the viceroy's throne and died.
"My
daughter?"
"If
you will have me so, my High Lord Som."
"Or
should I say 'sister' to you, Charmian?"
"As
you will have it, lord." Waiting for the next move of the game with her
eyes cast down submissively, she saw (not looking directly at him) that Som had
no nose, and that his sunken eyes were black and empty holes.
"My
woman, then; we'll settle it at that. Give me your hand, golden one. In all my
treasure hoard I have not such gold as you have in your hair. Do you know
that?"
The
statement gave her a bad moment of suspicion. But when she looked straight at
her lord again, she saw an ordinary man's face, smiling thinly and nodding.
However, she could not hear him breathe. And his hand, when she touched it,
felt like meat that had been kept somewhat too long in the kitchen of a palace.
Her hand did not for a moment tense, or herface change. She would take the
fastest, surest way to power, though it meant embracing dead meat, and waking
in the morning beside a noseless skull on a fine pillow.
In his
dry voice, lowered now, he, asked her: "What do you mark about me?"
Truthfully
and without hesitation she replied: "That you do not wear the collar of
the Guard, High Lord." It was a sign that Hann had mentioned, meaning that
Som enjoyed some protection better than the valkyries.
The
viceroy smiled. "And do you know why I wear it not?"
Impulsively
she answered: "Because you are mightier than death."
He gave
a silent, shaking grimace that was his laughter. He said: "You are
thinking that it is because I am already dead. Butyet I rule, and crush my
enemies, and have my joys. Dead? I have
become death, rather. No weapon, no disease, not even time, has terrors for me
now."
She
only vaguely understood him, and she could not think what to reply. Instead of
speaking; she bowed her head and once more pressed to her lips the sticky
tissue of his hand.
The
viceroy said: "And all that is mine, my golden one, I have decided to
share with you."
With
unconcealed joy Charmian rose in response to the viceroy's tug on her hand.
Som's dead hands pulled her to him, and she kissed him on the lips, or where
lips should have been and seemed to be. "As your willing slave forever,
gracious lord!"
Holding
her at arms' length now, and smiling in great pleasure, he said:
"Therefore you will become death too."
These
last words of his seemed to stay circling like birds in Charmian's awareness,
uncertain whether or not they meant to land. When at last they came fully home
to her, her new triumph shattered like glass. Not yet did her distress show in
her face or voice; her surface was her strength, where terror would reach only
when it had already conquered all within.
She
only asked, like a girl expressing sweet wonderment at a reward too great:
"I shall become as you are, lord?"
"Even
so," he assured her happily, patting her hand between his, with faint
sticking sounds. "Ah, I could almost regret that such goldenness must
perish at its peak, like the beauty of a blossom plucked; but so it must be,
for the woman who shares my endless life and power."
With a
shock of terror as sharp as the pain of blade or fire, she caught herself
barely in time from trying to pull her hands away from his. In the back of her
mind she was aware that other presences, human she thought, were coming into
the audience chamber. But she could pay them no attention now.
She
must express her joyful acceptance of Som's offer, without the least appearance
of hesitation. But moment by moment her understanding of his meaning grew more
certain and her fear grew more intense. Never for an instant had she expected
this. She would rather die a thousand times, a million times, than become as he
was. She could smile without a tremor at his dead face, she could embrace it
warmly if she must. But to see the like of it in her mirror was unimaginable,
was fear more pure than she had ever known.
No
longer knowing whether she could conceal her horror, faint with the dizziness
of it, she whispered: "When?"
"Why,
now. Is anything the matter?"
"My
High Lord - " Charmian could scarcely see. Would not some crevice open in
the earth to swallow her? "It is only that I would preserve my beauty for
you. That you may continue to enjoy it."
He made
a gesture of impatience. "As I said, it is annoying that your appearance
must be so much changed. But never mind. It is only mortal men who find those
superficialities of great importance. What draws me to you is primarily your
inner essence, so like my own -now, there is something wrong. What is it? Is
the process causing you discomfort?"
"The
process, my High . . .now? It happens to me now?" She was only half-aware
of losing control, of pulling free from him and moving back a step.
He
peered at her in evident astonishment. "Why, yes. I am impatient. Once
having decided that you should rule beside me, I had the magicians begin the
process of your transformation as soon as you entered the chamber. Already the
change is far advanced - "
There
was a rushing passage of the world, and screaming. Vaguely Charmian realized it
was herself who screamed, and that the sound of pounding steps on wood and
stone came from her own running feet. She had no longer any plan, no thought
except to flee the death that moved and spoke and would engulf her with its own
decay. A tall shape loomed before her, very near; she had run into it and
rebounded before she saw it was a man, and knew his face.
The
living face of Chup.
Still
mad with panic, she tried to run around Chup, but he caught her by the arm. She
had never seen his face so hard, not even on that day so long ago when he had
slapped her. Now his voice came as if ground out between two stones: "Does
it surprise you, Queen of Death, to see that I am still alive?"
Then
Charmian understood what Chup's presence here must mean, that all her plotting
had been discovered, her hopes destroyed. Her fear was so extreme she could not
move or speak; she sank down in a faint before attendants came to carry her
from the chamber.
Som,
relaxed now upon his throne, spent a little time in the enjoyment of his almost
silent, grimacing laughter. Chup waited, standing motionlessly at attention,
until the viceroy had composed himself and beckoned him to come nearer.
"My
good Chup, all your warnings to me have been borne out by investigation. The
wizard Hann has been arrested. The circlet of the lady's hair has been found
where you left it, in my treasure vault, with no trace visible of how you put
it there. Needless to say, my security measures will be extensively revised.
Fortunately, I am less susceptible to love-charms than these unhappy plotters
thought; so it was shrewd of you to cast your lot with me."
Chup
bowed slightly.
Som
went on."Unhappily, the man Tarlenot has departed on a courier's mission,
on Empire business; it maybe difficult to get him in our grasp again. But he
left behind him his Guardsman' collar, which shall be yours, along with some
substantial military rank."
For the
first time since entering, Chup allowed himself to smile. "That's how I'd
choose to serve, my High Lord Som. I am a fighter, with little taste for these
intrigues."
"And
you shall have your command." The viceroy paused. "Of course there is
one matter first-your pledging to the East."
Ah,
said Chup to himself, without surprise. I might have known.
Som
continued: "When you were a satrap in our service, unlike others of your
rank, you never came here to make a formal pledge. That has always seemed to us
rather odd."
There
was no satisfying the powers of the East. Always the certainty of great success
was one more step away. Chup said, rather wearily: "I have been six months
a crippled beggar."
"You
were a satrap, free to come, for a much longer time than that." Som's
voice was no longer so relaxed. "Before you lost your satrapy."
There
was no good answer Chup could give. As a satrap, he had certainly been busy
fighting, and he had told himself that he served his masters betterin that way
than by partaking in mysterious rituals. But they had never seen it exactly
that way.
Now Som
was looking at him from his sunken eyes, and Chup thought that he could smell
the death. The viceroy said: "This pledging is more important than you
seem to realize. There are many who ask to bind themselves completely to the
East, to share in its inner powers, and are not allowed to do so."
As a
soldier long accustomed to orders and the ways of giving them, Chup understood
that there was now but one thing for him to say. "I ask to be allowed to
make my pledge, High Lord. As soon as possible."
"Excellent!"
Som took from around his own neck a richly jeweled chain, which he tossed
carelessly to Chup. "As a mark of my good favor, and the beginning of your
fortune."
"Thanks,
many thanks, High Lord."
"Your
face says there is something else you want."
"If
I may retain for the time being the lodgings of that treacherous woman. And her
servants, those who had no part in her plotting."
Som
assented with a nod. The chamberlain was evidently signalling him that other
business pressed, for he dismissed Chup with a few quick words. After backing
deferentially from the chamber, Chup hung the chain of Som's favor around his
neck, and made his way to what had been Charmian's apartment. With the chain
around his neck, he was now saluted by soldiers of the common ranks. People of
more standing, some of whom had not deigned to notice him before, now nodded or
eyed him with respect and calculation.
When he
reached the apartment he found it swarming with men and women in black, each of
whom bore a skull insignia upon his sleeve. In the past Chup had noticed only a
few of these uniforms and had not thought of their significance. They were
searching Charmian's rooms, thoroughly, leaving casual wreckage in the process.
Chup did not attempt to interfere until he found their leader, whose sleeve
bore a much larger skull. This woman, though she maintained an air of
arrogance, was like everyone else impressed with the chain that hung about
Chup's neck. In answer to Chup's question, she led him to a service passage in
the rear of the apartment. There waited Karen, Lisa, Lucia, Portia, Samantha, and
Kath, chained together and huddled against the wall.
Chup
said: "You may release them, on my word. I am to occupy these rooms, and I
will require a good staff, familiar with the place, to restore order from this
mess that you have made."
"They
have not been questioned yet," the leader of the skulls said, finality in
her voice.
"I
am somewhat aware of how the plotting went, and who was involved, as our Lord
Som can tell you. These were innocent. But they will be here when you want them
for your questions."
It took
a little more argument, but Chup did not lack stubbornness and pride, and there
was Som's favor hanging down upon his chest. When the searchers in black at
length departed, the six girls, unchained, were left behind. When they were alone
with him the six of them came slowly to surround Chup. They said nothing, did
nothing but gaze at him.
He bore
this silent, disturbing scrutiny only briefly before issuing curt orders for
them to get to work. The shortest, Lisa, turned away at once and started in; he
had to bark commands, and kick a couple of the others, to get them moving
properly. Then he walked out into the garden, turning ideas over in his mind.
On the
next day Som's chamberlain came to Chup, and led him down into the mountain.
Through devious and guarded tunnels they passed, until the tunnel they were in
broke out into the side of a huge and roughly vertical shaft. This chimney had
the look of a natural formation; it was about ten meters wide here, at a level
well below the citadel. It seemed to widen gradually as it curved upward
through the rock. Sunlight came reflecting down through it, from what must be
an opening at the unseen top, beyond a curve. A precarious ledge winding round
the inside of the shaft, made a narrow pathway going up and down. At the level
where Chup and the chamberlain now stood, this ledge widened, and from it
several cells had been dug back into the rock, and fitted with heavy doors.
Only
one of these doors was not closed. Gesturing at it, the chamberlain, as if
imparting necessary information, said: "In there lies she who was the Lady
Charmian."
When
Chup had nodded his understanding of this fact, if not of its importance, the
chamberlain said quite solemnly: "Come." And started down the rough
helix of a path that wound both up and down the chimney.
Chup
followed. The two of them were quite alone on all the path, as far as Chup
could see, peering down a long drop. From below, round a lower curve in the
gradually narrowing chimney, in regions where the daylight scarcely reached,
there came up a roseate glow. "Where are we going?" Chup asked the
silent figure ahead of him.
The
chamberlain glanced back, with evident surprise. "Below us dwells the High
Lord Zapranoth, master of all demons in the domain of Som the Dead!"
Chup's
feet, that had been slowing down, now stopped completely. "What business
have we visiting the Demon-Lord?"
"Why,
I thought you understood, good Chup. It is the business of pledging. Today I
will explain how your initiation is to be accomplished. I must take you nearly
to the bottom, to make sure you are familiar with the ground."
Chup
drew a deep breath. He might have known they'd put demons into this, the one
peril that could make him sweat from only thinking of it. "Tell me now,
what is the test to be?"
He
listened, frowning, while the chamberlain told him. On the surface of it, it
sounded easier than Chup had expected. He'd have to face Zapranoth, but not for
long and not in any kind of contest.
But
there was something -wrong -about it.
Still
scowling, Chup asked: "Is there not some mistake in this? I am to serve
Som as a fighting man."
"I
assure you there is no mistake. You will not suffer at the hands of the High
Lord Zapranoth if you do properly what you are sent to do."
"I
don't mean that."
The
chamberlain looked at him blankly. "What, then?"
Chup
struggled to find words. But he could not make it clear in his own mind what
was bothering him. "The whole business is not to my liking. I think there
must be some mistake."
"Indeed?
Not to your liking?" The chamberlain's haughty glare could have withered
many a man.
"No,
it is not. Indeed. Something is wrong with this scheme. Why am I to do
this?"
"Because
it is required of you, if you wish to participate fully in the powers of the
East."
"If
you cannot give me any more definite reason, let us go back to Som, and I will
question him."
It cost
Chup some further argument, and the nearly incredulous displeasure of the
chamberlain, but at last he was led upward again, and admitted to see Som once
more.
This
time he found the viceroy apparently quite alone, in a small chamber below the
audience hall. In spite of half a dozen torches on the walls, the place seemed
dim and cold. It was a clammy room, nearly empty of furniture except for the
plain chair Som was sitting in, and the small plain table before him. On that
table there stood upright mirrors, and at the focus of the mirrors a candle
guttered, topped with a wavering tongue of darkness instead of flame, casting
all around it an aura of night instead of luminance. Som's face turned toward
the candle was all but invisible, and what little Chup could see of it looked
less human than before.
In
answer to the silent interrogation of that face turned toward him, Chup came to
attention. In a clear voice he said: "High Lord Som, I have taken and
given orders enough to understand that orders must be followed. But when I
think an order is mistaken, then it is my duty to question it, if there is
time. I question the usefulness of this initiation, in the form I am told it is
to follow."
Som the
Dead was silent for a little time, as if such an objection were outside his
experience, and he had no idea how to deal with it. But when he answered, his
dry voice was hard to read. "What is it you dislike about the
pledging?"
"Excuse
me, High Lord Som. That I dislike it is beside the point. I can carry out
orders that I find unpleasant. But this ... I see no benefit in this, for you,
for me, for anyone." That sounded weak. "Excuse me if I speak
clumsily, I am no courtier . . . That's just it, High Lord. I am a fighter.
What can a thing like this prove of my ability?"
Som's
voice did not change; his face remained unreadable. "Exactly what did my
chamberlain tell you was required of you?"
"I
am to take the woman Charmian from her cell. Tell her that I'm helping her
escape. Then I am to lead her down into the pit, where dwells our High Lord
Zapranoth, There I am to give her to the demon, to be devoured
-possessed-whatever Zapranoth may do with human folk."
The
answer was quick and cold. "The chamberlain spoke our will correctly,
then. That is what we require of you, Lord Chup."
A good
soldier, if he had ever got himself in this deep, would know that this was the
moment to salute, turn and leave. Chup knew it; yet he lingered. The hollows of
darkness that were Som's eyes remained aimed at him steadily. Then Som said:
"The strong magic of a love-charm once bound you to that woman, but my magicians
tell me you are free of that. What are your feelings for her now?"
In a
flash of relief Chup understood, or thought he did. "Demons! I'm sorry,
lord. Do you mean, have I affection for her? Hah! That's what you're
testing." He almost laughed. "If you want me to feed her to the
demons, well and good. I'll drag her to the pit and toss her in, and sing about
my work!"
"In
that case, what is your objection?" Som's voice was still cold and hard,
but reasonable.
"I
... High Lord, what good will it do to test my skill in lying and intrigue? To
see if she believes me when I promise to help her? You'll have other men in
your service far more cunning in such matters than I am. But you'll have few or
none who'll fight like me."
"The
test seems useless to you, then."
"Yes,
sir."
"Does
a good soldier argue all orders that seem to him useless? Or, as you said
before, only those that seem mistaken?"
Silence
stretched out following the question. Chup's stubborn dissatisfaction remained,
but his will was wavering. The more he tried to pin down what was bothering him
and put it into words, the more foolish his objections seemed. What harm could
he suffer, in obediently carrying out this test, that could compare with all he
stood to gain from it? Yet, encouraged by Som's seeming patience, he made an
effort and tried once more to speak his inner feelings.
"This
thing that you would have me do is small, and mean ..." Then try as he
might he could not form his shapeless revulsion any further. He made a weak and
futile gesture and fell silent. Despite the clamminess of the chamber, sweat
was trickling down his ribs. Now his coming here to argue seemed a hideous
blunder. It wasn't that he cared what happened to her . . . the face of Som was
growing hard to look at. And there were no perfumes here . . . but Chup was
long used to the air of battlefields.
The
viceroy shifted in his seat, and lo, was very manlike once again. The dark
flame had burned down to only a spark of night. "My loyal Chup. As you
say, your talents are not those of a courtier; but they are considerable.
Therefore will I not punish you for this insolent questioning; therefore will I
condescend this once to explanation.
"The
test you do not like is given you because you do not like it, because you have
shown reluctance to do things that you think of as 'small and mean'. To pledge
yourself formally to the East is no meaningless ritual. In your case it will
mean changing yourself, importantly, and I realize full well it can be very
difficult. It is to do violence to your old self, in the name of that which you
are going to become."
Time
was stretching on in the odd little room. Like a man dreaming or entranced,
Chup asked: "What am I going to become?"
"A
great lord with the full powers of the East to call upon. The master of all
that you have ever craved."
"But.
How shall I change myself? To what?"
"To
become as I am. No, no, not dead and leathery; I was playing with the woman
when I told her she would be so. That is given only to me, here in the Black
Mountains. I mean you shall become as I am in your mind and inward self. Now
will you take the test?"
"My
lord, I will."
"You
are obedient." Som leaned closer, looking intently from his sunken eyes.
"But in your case I wish for more than that. Loyal Chup, if you still had
some affection for the woman, then merely to throw her to the demons might well
suffice for your initiation. But as things are, it is not the woman, it is
something else, within yourself, you must destroy ere you are ours
completely."
Som
rose from his chair. He was not tall, but he seemed to tower above Chup as he
leanedyet closer, with his smell of old death. "You must be for once not
brave, but cowardly. Small and mean, as you describe it. It will be difficult only
once. You must learn to cause pain, for the sake of nothingbut causing pain.
Only thus will you be bound to us entirely.
Only
thus will there be opened for you the inner secrets of power and the inner
doors of wealth. And how can I give command of my Guard to one who is not bound
to me and to the East?"
"The
Guard ..."
"Yes.
The present Guard commander's aged and scarred well past his peak of
usefulness. And you know Thomas of the Broken Lands, who is planning to assail
us here, you know him and how he thinks and fights."
Not
only an officer, but once again the commander of an army in the field . . .
"My High Lord, I will do it! I hesitate no more!"
When
Chup had gone, the viceroy returned to brooding on his other problems. What
power was it, almost equal to his own, that dwelt in the circlet of gold hair
and almost awoke in him the old desires of life?
His
wizards would find out, in time.
In all
their divinations lately, a threatening sign, the name of Ardneh, loomed up
from the West. A name, with nothing real as yet attached to it. But it was in
that sign, they said, that the Broken Lands and other satrapies along the
seacoast had been lost ...
VII
We Are
Facing Zapranoth
Thomas
had been right about the reptiles, Rolf was thinking now, as he trudged up a
small hillock to where his commander stood looking upward at the black,
night-shrouded cliffs. Rolf's breath steamed in the air before his face. The
onset of winter's chill, more noticeable at this altitude than it had been near
the seashore, had kept the reptiles close to their roosts, had prevented their
scouting out the army of the West during the days as it lay hiding in a hundred
fragments. Night by night they had crept closer to Som's citadel.
Rolf
reached the spot where Thomas stood, alone for once, his head tipped back.
There seemed little to be seen, gazing upward, except the stars above the
cliffs, whose tops seemed but little below the twinkling sparks.
"I
think it's going to work," Rolf reported. He had recently been given his
first command, a work party to set in order and inspect the balloon-craft that
the djinn produced. All through this night the technology-djinn had labored at
Gray's direction, making airships. Loford and the other wizards had concentrated
on preventing the army's discovery by demon or diviner dwelling on the cliffs
above.
Gray
had now learned to manage the djinn successfully, Rolf reported. At the foot of
the cliffs were twenty balloons tugging gently at their mooring ropes, each of
the twenty capable of carrying five armed humans. The balloons were to ascend
connected in pairs by stout lines, and longer cords would fasten each pair to
the ones behind it and ahead, so the hundred riders would find themselves
together at the top.
"Once
we begin it, it had better work," said Thomas, nodding, when Rolf had
finished detailing his report. Thomas himself was one of the hundred ascending
by balloon to seize a foothold on the cliffs. Rolf was going up, to order the
maneuvering and landing of balloons, and Gray, as wizard and technologist both.
The other ninety-seven had been hand-picked from the fiercest warriors. At
first Thomas had contemplated lifting his whole army in an aerial assault. But
testing and maneuvering, by night and day, on various smaller cliffs between
here and the Broken Lands, had dissuaded him. The number of things that could
go wrong had proven almost limitless, and the time available for practicing was
not. In maneuvers, the stunt had been worked successfully with as many as
fifteen balloons. He had decided to risk twenty to seize the upper ending of
the pass.
Thomas
now had nothing more to say. Rolf, who had known him from his earliest days of
leadership -not so long ago-wanted to offer more encouragement, but hesitated
to interrupt what might be a necessary pause for thought. The pause was not
long before Thomas turned suddenly and strode off down the hill. Rolf hurried
after.
Most of
Thomas's other officers were waiting for him, in a body, and he strode in among
them briskly. "All here who are supposed to be? Once more: our flares will
burn with a green fire, to signal you to start to climb the pass. We'll sound
horns at the same time, as we've rehearsed. Once you get the word, by sound or
light or both, that we've seized the top of the pass, come up as if a hundred
demons were behind you."
"Instead
of waiting for us at the top, aye!" There were sounds of nervous laughter.
Gray's
tall figure loomed up. In one hand he raised what appeared to be an ordinary
satchel. "The demons at Som's command number far fewer than a hundred. And
I have the lives of two of the strongest of them in here."
"Zapranoth?
Zapranoth's life?" The murmured question came from several at once.
Gray,
perhaps irritated, raised his voice slightly. "These are the lives of
Yiggul, and of Kion. I have had them in my possession for some time, though for
the sake of secrecy I have said nothing about them until now. And I have let
them live, so I can destroy them when Som has called them up, thrown them into
battle, and is depending on them. I am sure many of you know their names: they
are both formidable powers."
There
was silence.
Gray
lowered his satchel. "You will see me blow them away like clouds of mist,
before they have had time to do us the least harm."
"Not
Zapranoth's life," one low-voiced listener said.
"No!"
Gray snapped. "His life eludes us still. But these two are the strongest
of the other demons. With these two gone, my brother and I can beat off the
smaller fry like insects. We will not need the lesser demons' lives to drive
them off."
There
was no comment.
Gray
went on, a little louder still: "Then, with all the others gone, we will
be free to deal with him. Myself, Loford, the other stout wizards here. Zapranoth
is mighty, well, so are we. We will hold off him or any other power, until your
swords have won the day."
"And
that we will do," Thomas put in with great firmness. "Any questions?
Remember what you've been told about the valkyries. Let's move, the light is
coming." He gripped hands all round with his officers, and led the way
toward the moored balloons.
Rolf
trotted to take his place in the basket of the leading balloon. He felt weak in
the knees, as usual before a fight, but he knew that it would pass. It crossed
his mind as he and Gray were boarding their separate balloons that he had never
seen the wizard sleep. If Gray felt any fatigue from his nightlong supervision
of the djinn, he did not show it. Gray was compelling the djinn to accompany
his balloon, and had even forced it somehow to dim the intensity of its fiery
image; Rolf could see it like a floating patch of campfire embers in the shadow
of the great hulking gasbag of Gray's balloon, some thirty meters distant.
Tests had shown that the lifting gas provided by the djinn would not burn, but
the problem of arrow-proofing the bags had not been entirely solved. They were
protected to some extent by draped sheets of chain-mail whose rings were
lighter than metal, made, as were the bags themselves, of something that the
djinn called plastic.
Rolf
had argued at some length for using to the full the tremendous powers of the
djinn, delaying the campaign as long as necessary to exercise its abilities and
try out the results; it seemed to him that in a few months enough Old World
arms, armor, and techniques might be acquired and understood to give the army
an overwhelming advantage against the East.
But
Gray had vetoed such a plan. "For two reasons. First, not all Old World
devices will work now as neatly and reliably as they did in the Old World. This
is true in particular of certain advanced weapons. I do not fully understand
why this should be; but I have my means of knowledge, and it is so."
"We
could experiment - "
"With
devices far more perilous than balloons? No, I do not think that we are ready.
The second reason, and perhaps the stronger"-here Gray paused for a
moment, looking round as if to make sure that he was not overheard -"is
the chance that our djinn will perish in this battle. We are facing Zapranoth,
and such a blow is far from impossible.
It
would leave us without help in operating and maintaining our Old World weapons.
No. Better that we fight with means we understand, depending on no one but
ourselves."
Waiting
now in the basket for the signal to ascend, Rolf grinned nervously at the
impassive Mewick at his side. "Mewick, will you one day teach me to use
weapons? "he asked in a low voice. It was something of an old joke between
them, for Rolf at least. Mewick shook his head at Rolf in faint reproach and
let his expression deepen into gloom.
The
first balloons were loaded; the crews who were to do the launching were moving
about briskly and capably in the gloom. Rolf did not see when Thomas gave the
final signal for the attack, but those who were required to see did so. Two men
standing by the mooring ropes each tugged and released a knot, and Rolf beheld
the dim cliffside, ten meters from his face, begin abruptly to slide down in
silence. Gray's balloon kept pace, its basket rocking gently, the dim fire of
the image of the djinn suspended near it. The line connecting Rolf's balloon to
Gray's drew gently taut, then slackened again. The longer lines, that the next
craft were to follow up, were paid out from their reels outside the baskets.
The
edge of sky that Rolf could see past the bottom of his balloon was now
brightening with a hint of dawn. Higher the two baskets swung, moving in the
perfect silence of a dream, emerging now from the deeper shadows at the base of
the cliffs, so that the rocky walls before them rapidly grew more distinct.
Turning for a moment to the west, Rolf could see the plains and desert,
night-bound still, stretching far into vague, retreating darkness. His
homeland, and the ocean, would be visible from here by day. But there was no
time now to think of that.
Up and
up . . .
Rolf's
drawn sword snapped up in his hand to guard position, as the utter quiet was
shattered by the strident cawing of a reptile. The creature had been dozing on
the cliff face, a pebble's toss from the balloons, and it had wakened to see
the strange shapes soaring past. Sluggish with chill, wings laboring, it came
out in a dark, slow explosion from the rocks, and fled them upward strainingly.
Mewick and others who had their arrows nocked were quick to draw and loose at
it, and it was hit but not brought down. Clamoring all the louder, it flew on
up above the great gasbags and out of sight.
From
somewhere farther up there came a slow-voiced, cawing answer, and then another,
higher yet. Then there was silence once more, until it almost seemed that the
citadel might have returned to sleep.
Up and
up. The men hanging in the baskets, straining to see and hear, had little to
say to one another. Rolf found himself gripping the wicker rim, inside the
quilted armor-padding, trying to lift the craft into a faster climb. He could
see Gray murmuring to the djinn.
Rolf
was expecting that at any moment they would top the cliff, but they had not
done so before there came sure proof that the enemy had awakened. It was a
small squadron of reptiles on reconnaissance. Their cawing and snarling was
heard above, and then the soft thumps of their bodies striking atop the
gasbags. The craft continued to rise steadily. The mail of plastic links had
proven too tough for reptilian teeth and claws, and their bodies were not
weighty enough to hold down the balloons.
When
the reptiles flew down below the bags to find the baskets, arrows and slung
stones bit at them accurately. They screamed and raged and fled; some fell,
transfixed by shafts, turned into weights with fluttering fringes dropping
through the brightening sky.
Now
came the first sign that Som's fighting men were reacting to the attack. Rolf
saw black-trimmed uniforms running on ledges on the cliffs. A slung stone
thunked on the padding-armor right in front of him, and he crouched lower. A
fur-clad Northman in Rolf's basket loosed an arrow in reply, and on the cliff
face a man dropped, toppled and slid on the steep slope, trying to cling to it
with the shaft in him, plowing up a little avalanche.
Rolf
knew they could not have much farther to ascend, but still the top came as a
surprise. The cliff face fell back abruptly into a tableland, rough and split
by many crevices, but essentially flat. At the rear of this horizontal reach,
Som's low-walled citadel sprawled, backed by the next leap upward of the
mountain. Across the little distance that separated his balloon from Gray's,
Rolf heard the wizard barking orders to the djinn. The two balloons, each
trailing a long spider-filament of line, slowed and stopped their ascent just
above the rim of the cliff. Just here, almost beneath Rolf now, the narrow pass
delivered the road it had caught up on the plain below.
Modest earthworks
on one side of the debouching road defended the pass against a climbing army,
and in fact formed the only real defense short of the citadel's own walls.
These works manned by half a hundred men might easily hold the road, it seemed,
against Thomas's four thousand, so great was their advantage of position. Ten
or twelve men were in the trenches now, pulling on black helmets and gaping
confusedly at the balloons. Their fortification offered no protection against
attackers dropping from the sky.
Gray
was smoothly ordering the operations of the djinn. Gas hissed from the bag
above Rolf's head; the basket he was riding skimmed rock, just in from the
cliffs edge. He pitched out a metal grapple on a line, and leaped right after
it. The balloon bobbed up with the removal of his weight; for a moment he stood
there alone, the sole invader of Som's stronghold. But in the moment it took
him to catch the grapple and fix it in one of the many crevices in the rock,
Mewick was standing beside him, short sword and battle-hatchet at the ready.
Then with thudding sandals others were landing, at their right and left. Gray
swung from his bobbing basket, agile as a youth. Across ten meters of empty
ground the ten invaders faced the unfortified rear of the strong point that
looked so indomitably down the pass; ten black-helmed Guardsmen, more or less,
stared back as if uncertain they were real.
Excepting
Rolf and Gray, the aerial troops had been hand-picked for guts and viciousness,
and those proved first in fighting skill had been selected for the first
balloons. The struggle for the earthwork began without an order, in the space
of one short breath, and it was over in the time one might draw a long breath
and release a sigh; only one fighter of the West had been cut down. Rolf sprang
forward with the rest, but all the enemy were slaughtered before he had a
chance to strike a blow. Still gripping his unmarred sword he turned to Gray;
the towering wizard with a motion of his arm was already sending out the signal
of green fire, bright as a small sun in the morning sky, leaping and shining in
the air above the pass.
Rolf
turned and cried out: "Sound the horn!" A Northman, blood from a
scalp wound running in his eyes, had the twisting beast-horn already at his
lips; he gave a nod, and winded it with all his might.
Sheathing
his weapon, Rolf ran back to his balloons, made them secure with double
grapples, and deciding where the second pair should land. He was none too soon,
for they were close below and rising rapidly. When they arrived, he helped to
land them, pulling on the thin ropes that the first balloons had trailed, while
theirfierce passengers leaped out and set themselves to hold the pass and
landing place. Rolf stayed at the landing place, seeing that the new balloons
were tied down, and looking for the next. When he glanced toward the citadel,
he heard alarms and signals there, and saw folk running on the wails, and
reptiles in a sluggish swarm above them. The main gates had been open, and
still were; at any moment a force must sally out to push the Westerners from
the cliff. Rolf looked the other way, down the road that became a twisty ribbon
marking the bottom of the pass, but the army of the West was still invisible.
It would be hours before their legs could bring them to this height.
In the
earthworks, men had already methodically separated the slaughtered Guardsmen's
heads from their bodies, gathered the freed collars and thrown them down the
cliff; the valkyries, coming down from the high mountain, hovered and sniffed
but could find no one to save. Rolf and the others, taught by Gray to expect
the flying things, still stared at them, Rolf with particular fascination.
"Demons!"
someone called out. It was not an expletive, but a warning.
Faces
turned to Gray. He had already seen the disturbances in the air a little way
from the citadel, hanging low, more like the roiling of heat above fires than
like rainclouds. Opening his satchel, he pulled out of it a flowery little
vine, wrapped as if for sustenance around a piece of damp and maggoty wood. In
Gray's other hand was a silvery-gleaming knife.
As the
two presences drifted nearer in the lower air, sweeping reptiles in a timid
swarm before them. Gray brought the blade near the tender, innocent green tendrils
of the vine. He muttered a few words in a low voice-and cut.
Silver
flashed in the sky above the citadel, like a reflection or mirage of an
enormous axe. The blow that struck one of the demons came in utter silence, but
was irresistable nonetheless; its image in the air split in two spinning
halves. Gray scarcely looked up; his hands, those of a gardener, kept at their
work, severing and plucking leaf from stem, slicing, splitting, and demolishing
the vine. Gray breathed upon the rotten wood, and green flame sprouted from it.
In unburned hands he held it up, watching the clean flame devour the clinging
fragments of the petals, leaves and stems. "Yiggul," he said with
feeling, "trouble our fair world no more." And he chanted verses in a
language Rolf did not know.
Fire
burned now in the sky as well consuming the scattered pieces of the demon. Its
companion paused in his advance, but then came drifting on again.
"Now,
Kion, let us say farewell to you." Gray reached into his satchel once
more.
The
roiling disturbance in the air, the size of a small house, shook for a moment
as if with fear or rage, then came toward Gray like a hurled missile. Some of
the men around the wizard threw up their arms or ducked their heads; others,
just as uselessly, raised shield and blade. Gray shot forth his arm, and the
object he had pulled from his satchel-it looked like some trinket of cheap
metal -was held above the chunk of burning wood. The hurtling demon was
transformed into a ball of glowing heat. Rolf heard, more in his mind than in
his ears, a scream of pain beyond anything he had yet heard upon a field of
war. Kion's course was bent from what he had intended. He struck the earth far
from the Western men, spattering flames and rock about his point of impact,
where he left a molten scar; he bounded up again, twisting and spinning like an
unguided firework, and all the while the scream went on unbreathingly, and
Gray's unburning hand continued to hold the bauble in the fire. The metal of
it, tin or lead mayhap, melted in beautiful silvery drops that fell into the
flame and there unnaturally disappeared. And as the bauble melted, so
diminished the fireball that had been the mighty demon Kion, flashing madly
from one part of the sky to another until it vanished in a final streak of
brilliancy.
Gray
pressed his hand down on the fiercely burning wood, and it went out like a
candle. "What are these others here?" Gray asked in a low voice.
"Do they propose to try our strength, after what we have just done?"
Rolf saw that there were indeed a scattering of other disturbances in the air,
man-sized waverings visible to him only now when the larger two were gone. He
heard, or felt, the thrummings of their power. Alone, he might have fallen down
or fled before the least of them. Standing here with Gray and Loford, now, he
found he minded these minor demons no more than so many sweat-bees or
mosquitoes. And now as if they had heard Gray's challenge, and chose not to
accept it, the swarm of them began to disappear. Rolf could not have said just
how; one moment the air above the citadel was thick with them, then they were
fewer, and soon they were no more.
"So,
then, masters of the Black Mountains," mused Gray, still in the same low
tone of conversation, that you would not think was audible ten meters off. He
stood straight, dusting his hands absently against one another. "So. Do
you mean then to let our differences be settled by the sword? In the name of my
bold companions here I challenge you: march out and try with blades to pry us
from this rock!"
Rolf
heard no answer from the citadel, only a shouting from behind him, where more
balloons were ready to discharge their fighting men. He ran back to take charge
of the docking. Thomas, in a gleaming barbut-helm, was arriving in the ninth
pair of airships, a position he had hoped would allow him to oversee both ends
of the operation.
When
Rolf turned back toward the citadel he could see through the open gates that
men were marshalling inside as if to sally out in strength. Confusion had been
replaced by the appearance of purpose.
"Som
is on the battlement," said someone. "See, there. I think he wears a
crown of gold."
Rolf
shivered. The day was chill. Winter was near at hand, and this place was high.
"If
he takes the field," warned Loford, "do not strike at him, but only
ward his blows. The wound you would inflict on Som the Dead is likely to become
your own to bear."
Gray,
too was shivering, calling for a cloak.
Why
should the sun seem dimmer, when there were no clouds? And Rolf had a feeling
in his guts like that of being lost, alone, at night amid a host of enemies . .
. and now, why should he think there mighy be something wrong with the
mountain, that it might crumble and collapse beneath his feet? Loford, Thomas,
all of them, were beginning to look at one another with dread.
Gray
said softly: "Zapranoth is coming."
VIII
Chup's
Pledging
Chup
nodded once to the expectant-looking jailor-who stood near the door of
Charmian's cell. The man responded with a facial contortion that might
represent a smile, and took two steps backward to a spot well shaded from the
feeble glimmerings of dawn now probing down the demons' chimney. There he let
himself down carefully and lay still. Only his feet remained clearly visible,
like those of a man laid low by stealthy violence.
At the
cell door, Chup paused a moment to try to seating of his new sword in its
sheath, and give a loosening shake to the nerve-tight muscles of his shoulders.
He thought in wonder that if he were plotting a real escape for Charmian,
instead of this safe pledging trickery, he would not be quite as tense as this.
The
heavy bar grated as he raised it from the cell door, and he reminded himself to
strive more realistically for silence. Cautiously he turned in the lock the key
he had been given. The massive door swung outward at his pull. Chup's shadow
fell before him into the uncleanness of the cell. There Charmian huddled on the
floor, wearing the same black clothing of her audience with Som, shimmering
garments, slit revealingly, foolish now as rags would have been at the
Emperor's court.
When
she recognized Chup, the sharp terror in Charmian's face turned dull; she had
evidently expected visitors even more menacing than he.
He
stepped back from the doorway and said in a low voice: "Come out, and
quickly." When she did not move at once he added: "I'm going to try
to free you."
The
words sounded so utterly false in his own ears that it seemed impossible that
clever Charmian could believe them for a moment. But she stood up and came
toward him, though hesitantly at first. Her blond hair hung disheveled,
half-concealing her face. Without a word she came out of the cell, and stood
against the wall, her face averted, while Chup played the game of dragging the
shamming guard into the cell and barring up the door again. Then at a motion of
Chup's head she followed close behind him as he set foot upon the downward
path.
They
had gone down perhaps two hundred paces, when Charmian in a small voice broke
the silence: "Where are we going?"
He
answered, without turning. "We must go down, in order to get out."
Her
footsteps behind him stopped. "But down there is where the demons nest.
There is no way out, down there."
Startled,
he too stopped, and turned. "How do you know? Have you come this way
before?"
She
seemed surprised by the question. "No. No, how could I have?" Still
she was not looking directly at him.
"Then
follow me," he growled, and started down again. After a moment her soft
footfalls followed. She must believe his masquerade, or she would be screaming
at him or pleading. But the evidence of success brought him no satisfaction.
Pretending
to be cautious and alert, looking this way and that, pausing now and then as if
to listen, he led her down toward the pit. He felt weary and awkward as if he
had been fighting to the point of physical exhaustion. It will mean changing
yourself, Som had said, you must do violence to your old self. Yet what Chup
was supposed to do was basically quite simple, and on the surface there was
nothing in it difficult for a bold man. He was to bring her down (by fair words
and promises, not by force -that had been emphasized) to the Demon-Lord's
chamber at the bottom of this hole. There where she expected a door to freedom
he was to give her to the demon. And then he was to run away. If he did not run
away, and briskly, the chamberlain had warned him, Zapranoth in his demonic
humor might nip him too.
His
pledging was a task for one who giggled and ran away, and Chup now liked it
less than ever. He did not see how he could succeed, how Charmian could fail
from one moment to the next to guess the truth. Well, let her. But no, she
still followed him obediently. He realized suddenly how desperate she must have
been, how ready to grasp at any hope.
His
pretended alertness suddenly became real. From below, where all had been
ominous silence, there arose now a murmuring strange sound which he did not at
once identify but which he did not like.
The
first whisper of it froze Charmian in her tracks behind him.
"Demons!" she whimpered, in a voice of certainty and resignation.
Chup
had been assured there would be no interference, no distractions, while they
were going down. He took a step back, fighting his own fear of demons, trying
to think. Thinking was not easy; the sound grew rapidly louder, and at the same
time more plainly wrong. It put Chup in mind of the gasping of some
unimaginable animal; it made him think of a terrible wind sent blowing through
the solid earth.
Now
there was light below, a pinkish glow, as well as sound. Chup could make no
plan. As if seeking each other's humanity, by instinct he and Charmian put
their arms around each other and crouched down on the narrow path. The sound
was almost deafening now, a climbing clamor flying upward from the pit. With it
came the aura of sickness that accompanied demonic power, an aura stronger than
Chup had ever felt before. The brightening roseate light seemed to drive back the
feebly growing glimmerings of the sun. He clenched his eyes shut, held his
breath -and the rush, as of a multitude of beings, passed by them and was gone.
"Demons,"
Charmian whimpered once more. "Yes. . . oh, it seems that I remember them,
rushing by me in this place. But how?"
"What
do you remember? Have you been down this pit?" he rasped at her. He
wondered if she was planning some deception. But she only shook her head, and
continued to avert her face.
He
pulled her to her feet and led her down the curving path once more. What else
could he do? Daylight enough came trickling from above to show the way. They
came to a doorway, but when Chup peered in there was nothing but an alcove, no
way out. No way out . . . but he must go on to pass his pledging, to reach the
power of the inner circles of the East.
What
else could he do? Down and down they went, though very slowly now.
Soon it
began again, the noise far down below them, climbing fast.
"It
is Zapranoth," said Charmian.
This
time a bass quaver, that told of madness rampant in the foundation of the
world; this time the whole world shuddered and sickened with the coming up, and
the light it cast before was blue and horrible.
Charmian
began to scream: "Lord Z -"
Chup
grabbed her, stifling her mouth beneath his palm, and cast himself and her once
more down upon the narrow curving ledge, this time at full length, with both
their faces turned toward the wall of rock. With a twisting and a stretching of
the universe, with impacts of great footfalls smiting air and rock, the
blaring, glaring Lord of Demons trampled past them. If they were seen, they
were ignored, as two ants might have been.
Chup
did not see the demon. His eyes had shut themselves, and at the moment of the
demon's closest presence all his bones seemed turned to jelly. This must be
Zapranoth. Against this, no use to think of showing bravery; compared to this,
the demons rising earlier had been small. And the demon who, days ago, had
entered his beggar's hovel to heal and threaten him -that one had been a nasty
child making faces, nothing more.
When
the world was still and sane and tolerable once more, he raised his head,
gripped Charmian by the hair, and turned her face toward him. "How did you
know that it was him? From far away, when first he started up?"
She
looked convincingly bewildered. "I don't know . . . my Lord Chup, I do not
know. By his sound? But how could I ever have heard him, met him, and forgotten
it? You are right, I knew" at once that it was he. But I don't know how I
knew."
Chup
got slowly to his feet. There was one small comfort: the game he was to play
could not proceed until the Demon-Lord came back from whatever unforseen errand
had called him out. Chup would have to find some means of stalling until then.
But at the moment he could think of no plausible excuse for staying where they
were. Slowlyheled Charmian downward once again.
They
had gone but two more turns around the gradually narrowing chimney when there
came a different and more human sound, from far above. It was faint, but to
Chup's ears unmistakable-the cry and clash of men at war. Chup listened,
knowing now what had called the demons forth. No one in the citadel had thought
it possible for Thomas to make a direct assault; well, it was not the first
time he had been underestimated.
So the
wait for Zapranoth might take some time, though it seemed likely that he
ultimately would return triumphant. It was hard to imagine that Thomas could
raise a power equal to the Demon Lord, even if he could get his army up the
pass. Chup grinned the way he did when he felt pain. He led Charmian on down
until they came to another doorway opening into another blind alcove. There he
took her by the arm and pulled her in.
"What
is it?" she whispered, terrified anew.
"Nothing.
Just that we must wait a bit."
He
expected her to ask him why, and wondered how he could answer. But she only
stood there with her eyes downcast, face half-hidden by her hair. Surely this
behavior was a pose, part of some plan she was evolving. He had seen her
terrified before, but never meek and silent.
Considering
what to do next, he sat down with his back against the wall, watching the
entrance to their alcove. Almost timidly, she slid down beside him. In her new,
small voice she said: "Lord Chup, when I was in the cell, I hoped it would
beyou who came for me."
He
grunted. "Why?"
"Oh,
not that you would come to help me, I didn't dare hope that. Even now . . . but
I knew that if you came to take revenge, you would be quick and clean about it.
Not like Som, not like any of the others."
He
grunted again. Suddenly anxious to know what it would feel like now, freed of
all enchantments, he pulled her near, so that their mouths and bodies were
crushed together. She gasped and tensed, as if surprised -and then responded,
with all her skill and much more willingness than ever before.
And he
discovered that to him, the touch of her meant nothing. It was no more than
hugging some huge breathing doll. He let her go.
To his
surprise, she clung to him, weeping. He had never seen this act before;
puzzled, he waited to learn its point.
Between
her sobs she choked out: "You-you find me then -not too much
changed?"
"Changed?"
Then he remembered certain things, that made her puzzling behavior
understandable. "No. No, you are not changed at all. Our mighty viceroy
was lying about the destruction of your beauty. You look as good as ever,
except for a little dirt." For the first time in days Chup could hear his
own voice as an easy, natural thing.
Charmian
stared at him for a moment and dared to believe him. Her sobs changed abruptly
into cries of joy and relief. "Oh, Chup, you are my lord -high and only
Lord." She choked on fragments of strange laughter.
Feelings
Chup had not known were his came fastening on him now like mad familiars. He
could not sort them out or put them down. He groaned aloud, jumped up, and
pulled Charmian to her feet. He seized her shoulders, gripping them until it
seemed that bones might crunch, while she gasped uncom-prehendingly. Then,
still holding her with his left hand, he drew back his right and swung it,
open-palmed but with all his rage. "That, for betraying me, for using me,
for trying to have me killed!"
The
blow stretched her out flat, and silenced all her cries. A little time passed
before she stirred and groaned and sat up, for once ungracefully. Her hair no
longer hid her face. Blood dripped from her mouth and there was a lump already
swelling on her cheek. She finally could ask him, in the most dazed and tiniest
of voices: "Why now? Why hit me now?"
"Why,
better later than never. I take my revenge my own way, as you said. Not like
Som, nor any of the others here." Gripping his sword hilt, he looked out
of the alcove, up and down the spiral path. Let them come against him now, he
was Chup, his own man, and so he meant to die.
When he
saw no understanding in her dazed face, he went on: "Shake your head and
get it clear. I was not to lead you out of this foul place. I was to play the
court jester for Som and Zapranoth; thus should I prove my fitness to join the
elite of the East. They will not have a free man's service. They must have
pledgings, and grovelings, and for all I know, kiss-ings of their hinder parts
as well. Then will they open to their tested slave the secrets of power and the
doors of wealth. So they say. Liars. Gigglers at cripples, and pullers of wings
from flies. I know not if Som stinks of death -or only
loadbeast-drop-pings!"
He felt
better for that lengthy speech, and better still for the action that had just
preceded it. Now there ensued a silence, while his breathing slowed and
Charmian's grew steadier, and she ceased to moan.
And now
once more he heard, from far above, the clash and cry of many men at arms.
Charmian,
her voice now nearly normal, asked: "Is that Thomas's assault we hear? The
one our generals thought could not be made?"
Chup
grunted.
"They
of the West bear me great hatred," Charmian said. "But if I've any
choice I'll go to them instead of Som."
"You'd
be wise, if you could do so. They in the West are living men, and many would
fall down swooning at a flutter of your eyelids. What is it now?"
Some
thought or memory had brought a look of new surprise into her face. "Chup.
I have never been down into this cave before-and yet I think I have. Things as
they happen seem familiar. The winding path, these alcoves. The sounds the
demons make in passing, and the feelings that they bring -the wretched feelings
most of all." She shivered. "But how can I have known them, and not
remember plainly?"
His
thought was practical. "If you have been in this cavern, or seen it in
some vision, then remember a way out of it, that we can use."
She
gave him a long, probing look, with something in it of her old haughtiness. Her
bruised face did somewhat spoil the effect. "Have you finished now with
taking your revenge on me?"
"I
have more important things to think of. Getting out of here, now that I've
spoiled my pledging. Yes, I'll help you out if you'll help me. But turn
treacherous again, and I'll kick you down the pit at once."
She
nodded soberly. "Then I'll help you all I can, for I know what to expect
from Som. What must we do?"
"You
ask me? I thought you might recall an exit from this hole. And quickly. While
the battle's fierce, we're probably forgotten."
Doubtfully
and anxiously she stared at him. "I think-whether it is memory or a vision
that I have -I think that there is no way out forus below." Her voice grew
dreamy. "At the bottom of this chimney there are only huge blind chambers
in the blackened rock. And strange lights, and the demons roaring past. I would
have run back, screaming, but my father gripped my - " She broke off with
a little cry, her blue eyes widening.
"Your
father led you down here? Ekuman?" Chup did not bother trying to
understand that; if it was part of some new and elaborate deception, he could
not see its point. He prompted: "How did you get out? If there's no way
below, we must go up again. Where does the top of this shaft break out of the
mountain?"
She had
to make an effort to recall herself, to answer him. "I don't know. I don't
think that I was ever at the top of this chimney. It seems to me we entered and
left it at the level of the cells . . .Chup, why would my father bring me
here?"
Not
answering, Chup led her out of the alcove, and started on the long ascent, at a
good pace. Little was said between them until they drew near the level of the
cells again. Here Chup proceeded cautiously, but there was still no one else in
sight. The cell that had been Charmian's was once more unbarred and open. Every
available man must have been mobilized to fight; but how long that situation
might last was impossible to guess.
He
gripped Charmian's arm. "You sayyou entered and left the shaft here.
Remember a way out of the citidel that we can use."
"I
. . . " She rubbed her head wearily. "I can remember no such way. We
should go on to the top. There must be some exit there, to sunlight if not
freedom."
Chup
went up quickly. The sounds of combat were noticeably louder here.
Still
they met no one. The chimney straightened to show them the gray-blue sky, over
a mouth ringed by ragged outcroppings of rock. The path seemed to go right up
to the mouth and out to unbarred freedom.
Chup
and Charmian had only one more circuit of the chimney to climb, to its outlet
barely ten meters above them, when there appeared there against the sky the
head of a man in Guardsman's helm and collar, looking down. Before Chup could
react, the man had seen them. He called out something, as if to others behind
him, and withdrew from sight.
"Perhaps
I should go first," suggested Charmian, in a whisper.
"I
think so." He would rather not try to fight his way up this narrow path,
against unknown odds. "I'll walk a step behindyou, as your aide." The
men above could not be certain of Chup's and Charmian's current power and
status, not even if they knew she was a prisoner last night. So things went in
the intrigue-ridden courts of the East.
Charmian
ran combing fingers through her hair, put on a smile, and took the lead. With
Chup following impassively they marched another half-turn up the chimney, which
brought them into plain view of the pathway's narrow exit at the top, and of
the men who guarded it. These were looking down with, to say the least,
considerable suspicion. There were eight or ten of the Guard in view, and Chup
noted with inward discouragement that they included pikemen and archers.
Anger
in her voice, Charmian called up: "You there, officer! Why do you stare in
insolence? Bring cool water to me! We have slipped and fallen and nearly killed
ourselves upon your miserable path!" There must be an explanation of her
soiled garments, and of Chup's anger marked upon her cheek and lip.
The
faces of the soldiers turned from hard suspicion to noncommittal blankness. On
Chup's breast the chain that Som had given him still swung, massive and golden,
and he made sure it could be seen, at the same time he favored the officer with
his best haughty and impatient stare.
The
Guards officer-a lieutenant -softened considerably from his first hard pose. He
could not keep his new perplexity from showing. "My lady Charmian. I had
heard that you -" He shifted his stance. "That is, you or no one else
is to be allowed to pass this way, according to the orders I have been
given."
"The
lady wanted a good look at the fighting," Chup said, guiding her forward
with a touch. From the way some of the soldiers kept glancing over their
shoulders he guessed that the action was in plain sight from where they stood.
The
lieutenant protested. "Lord, why did you not watch from the battlement
instead?" But he made no attempt to block their way. Instead he turned to
one of his men, ordering: "Here, find some water for the lady."
Charmian
and Chup had now come right up to the top of the path, and stood among the
soldiers. They had emerged in the midst of the broken plain, roughly halfway
between the citadel and the sudden drop-off of the cliffs. Looking out over a
breastwork of piled rocks, they had a good view of the fighting, perhaps three
hundred meters distant. The fight was not at the moment being carried on with
blades, but it was none the less a deadly struggle. Holding the roadhead at the
pass were some fourscore men of the West, Chup saw, along with the balloons
that must have surprised the defenders. The Guard, or most of it, was drawn up
on the plain in battle ranks, but only waiting now.
Above
the ground between the battle lines, drifting, like some foul cloud of smoke,
was Zapranoth. The power of the Demon-Lord was being turned away from Chup, but
still he thought he felt its backlash here, and looked away toward the citadel.
Small figures were on the parapet; he thought he could see Som. Above the fort,
a single valkgrie droned toward its lofty home.
Charmian
finished her thirsty drinking from a canteen handed to her by an awkward
soldier. "Oh, captain," she now smiled, dabbing prettily at her sore
lips, "I had heard you were a man of gallantry, and I believed it true,
and I have climbed that horrible path to reachyou. I wish to see the ending of
the battle close at hand, not stand with all the timid females behind a wall.
Surely if I go out a little way, a little closer, I will still be safe, with
you and all these stalwart men of yours at hand?"
"I
... " The lieutenant floundered, trying to be firm. It was so easy for
her. Chup marveled in silence, shaking his head slightly while he took his turn
at the canteen. Distant Guardsmen chanted a war cry, and somewhere a reptile
cawed.
Charmian
was going on. "We do not mean that you should leave your post. The Lord
Chup will go with me, but a little way out upon the plain here . . . I will
tell you the truth, there is a wager involved, and I feel I must reward you if
you can help me win it."
The
lieutenant had no more chance than if Chup had come upon him here unarmed and
alone. In the space of half a dozen more breaths Charmian was being helped over
the barricade of stones, her es-cortinglord beside her. As they walked out upon
the empty, crevice-riven field that stretched away toward the fighting, he
heard the reptile again, cawing somewhere behind them; and this time he thought
he could make out a word or two within its noise. Chup took his bride by the
arm, as if to steady her on the hazardous ground, and she heeded the silent
increase of his fingers' pressure. They walked faster. With a stride and a
stride and another stride, the barricade, the soldiers, and the power of the
East fell meter by meter behind them. Not that the way in front was clear.
"...
escaaaaped!" came the raw reptile cry, much louder now. "Rewaaards
for their bodies, double reward for them alive! Trraaitor, Chup of the Northern
Provinces! Prisoner escaped, Charrrmian of the Broken Lands!"
Chup
ran, dodging with every second or third stride to spoil the archers' aim.
Charmian, close behind him, screamed as if they had caught her already. Now
ahead of him there loomed across his way a chasm, one of the splits that ran in
deeply from the mountain's edge. It was too wide at this point for even a
desperate man to try a jump. The farther Chup ran the more treacherously uneven
grew the footing, and he dropped to all fours to scramble over it, even as an
arrow sang past his ear. From the officer's bawled orders not far behind, he
knew that close pursuit was right at hand. The reptile now shrieked in triumph
right above him. Charmian cried out her panic with each breath, but her cries
stayed right at Chup's heels.
He
reached the edge of the deep crevice. To follow along it on this footing of
broken, tilting rocks would be a slow and tortuous process, and the pursuit
could not fail to catch up to easy arrow range at once. To jump across the
chasm was impossible. To attempt to scramble down its nearly vertical side
would have seemed at any other time like madness, but now Chup unhesitatingly
began to slide and grab. Better a quick fall than the demon-pits below the
citadel. But all was not lost yet: on a slope this steep there must be
overhangs, to offer some protection against missiles from above; and Chup could
see now that at a distant bottom the crevice ran out in a dry watercourse and
got away from Som.
Chup
swung from handholds, danced and bounded, leaping down the slope. Another arrow
twirred past him, going almost straight down, and after it the hurtling blur of
a slung rock. He started falling, slid and grabbed in desperation, and got his
feet upon a ledge that was not much wider than his soles. A moment later he was
clutched by Charmian sliding down beside him and almost pulled into the abyss.
To his left the ledge all but vanished, then widened into what looked like
opportunity, a sizable flat spot under a large overhang. With Charmian still clutching
at his garments, he lunged that way. Somehow the two of them scrambled to that
spot of comparative safety, on footholds that would have been suicidal if
attempted with cold calculation.
They
were sheltered from missiles on a flat space big enough to sprawl on
carelessly, while they gasped forbreath. Somewhere, ten or twenty meters above
them but out of sight, the lieutenant was bawling out a confusion of new
orders.
The
reptile found them almost instantly. It hovered over the chasm on deft and leathery
wings, screaming its loathing and alarm, carefully staying out farther than a
sword might sweep. Charmian with a wide swing of her arm threw out a fist-sized
rock; through luck or skill it caught a wing. The beast screamed and fell away,
struggling in pain to stay in the air.
But it
had already screamed out their location to the men above.
Chup
stood up and drew his sword and waited for the men to come. From the renewed
sounds of battle farther off, he soon picked out a closer sound, the scraping
and sliding of sandalled feet on rock, too desperately concerned with footholds
to be furtive.
"Both
sides!" Charmian cried out. A man was sliding down toward them on each
side of their almost cavelike shelter. But each attacker had to think first of
his own footing. Chup put the first one over easily before the man could do
more than wave his arms for balance, then turned quickly enough to catch the
other still at a disadvantage. This one, going over, dropped his sword and
managed to catch himself by his hands. Only his fingers showed, clinging
stubbornly to the ledge, until Charmian, screaming, pounded and shattered them
with a rock.
Chup
sat down once more resting while he could. As Charmian knelt beside him, he
said: "They'll have a hard time getting at us here. So they may just wait
us out." He leaned out for a quick glance at the slope below them, it was
worse than that above. "I don't suppose you got out by this route the last
time you were here."
"I
-don't know." Somewhat to Chup's surprise, she lost herself again for a
time in silent thought. "I was only a child then. Twelve years old,
perhaps. My father led us - " Her face turned up, wide-eyed with another
shock of memory. "My sister and I. My sister. Carlotta. I have not thought
of her from that day till this. Carlotta. I had forgotten that she ever
lived!"
"So.
But how did you get out? Not down this cliff somehow?"
"Wait.
Let me think. How very strange, so many memories wiped out . . . she was six
years younger than I. Now it comes back. My father took us both down the long
spiral path. Into the demon chambers at the bottom. There ... he pushed us both
forward, so we fell, and he turned and ran away. I saw his flying robes, while
Carlotta lay beside me, crying. Ah, yes. That would have, been my father's
initiation, his pledging to the East. Ah, yes, I understand it now."
"What happened?"
Almost
calmly now, Charmian stared into the depth of time. "We lay there,
frightened. And before we could get up, he came for us."
"He?"
"Lord
Zapranoth. For his initiation, our father, had to give us to the
Demon-Lord." Charmian's eyes now turned on Chup, but still her mind was in
the past. "Lord Zapranoth reached for us, and I jumped to my feet and took
Carlotta and pushed her in front of me, and I cried out: 'Take her! I am yours
already. Already I serve the East'!" Charmian giggled, a pearly ripple of
pure music, yet it made Chup draw back slightly. "I cried: 'Now take
Carlotta as my pledging!' And Zapranoth stayed his hand, that had been reaching
for us." Charmian's merriment faded suddenly. "And then he ...
laughed. That was a thing most horrible to hear. Then he put out his hand
again, and stroked my h -"
Breaking
off with a little shriek, Charmian clutched at the golden hair, that hung
disheveled before her eyes, as if it were some alien creature settled on her
head. Then she recovered herself somewhat, brushed back her hair and let it go.
"Yes, Zapranoth stroked my hair. And later, when Elslood tried to make a
love-charm from it - " She stopped.
"All
Elslood's magic was confounded and reversed," Chup finished. "And he
and every man who carried the charm was drawn to you by it. But never mind that
now." He put out his hand slowly, not quite far enough to touch the gold
that he had handled with rough carelessness not long ago. He said: "Do you
suppose, that on that day -the Demon-Lord-might have left his life in
this?"
The
thought was no surprise to Charmian. "No, Chup. No. Hann examined my hair
closely, when we were planning how best to use the charm, trying to find the
source of its unusual power. Hann would have found a demon's life if it were
there. We could have made the Demon-Lord our servant." She smiletl.
"No, Zapranoth would not have been fool enough to give his life into my
keeping. He understood me far too well. When he had touched my hair, he said to
me: 'Go freely from this cave, and serve the East. It has great need of such as
you.' Yes. Now all the memories come back. My father was much amazed when I
caught up with him. Much amazed to see me, and not entirely pleased. Oh, he
looked back hopefully enough to see if my sister had also been released. She
was the one he favored, truly cared for. But her the demon kept.
"And
I think my father also was made to forget what happened here; at least he never
spoke of it, or of Carlotta-Chup, what is it?"
He had
got to his feet as if to face the enemy again, but he did not raise his weapon,
only stared down fixedly at Charmian. Without taking his eyes from her he
sheathed his sword and gripped her hands and pulled her to her feet. She
twisted as if expecting another blow. But he only held her fast, demanding:
"Tell me this. What was his aspect, when you saw him then?"
"Whose?"
"Zapranoth's."
Chup's voice was not much louder than a whisper. "What did he look like
then, what form did he take?" His eyes still bored relentlessly at her.
"Why,
the form of a tall man, a giant, in dark armor. It matters little what form a
demon takes. I knew him today, even at a distance, because the feeling he
brought with him, the sickness, was the same - "
"Yes,
yes!" He let her go. Caught by a powerful thought, he turned away, then
turned right back. "You said that your sister was six years old, when the
demon took her?"
"I
don't know. About that, yes."
"And
was she fair of face?"
"Some
thought so. Yes."
"That
could be changed-a small thing for the Demon-Lord," he murmured, staring
past her into space. "What was the season of the year?"
"Chup,
I-what does it matter now?"
"I
tell you it does matter now!" He glared at Charmian again.
She
closed her eyes and lined her perfect forehead with a frown. "It must have
been six years ago. I think -no, it was in spring. Six and a halfyears ago, to
this very season. I do not think I can calculate it any more closely - "
"Enough!"
Chup slapped his hands together, rough triumph in his face and voice. "It
must be so. It must be. The young fool said she came to them in
springtime."
"What
are you babbling of?" Charmain's temper edged her voice. "How can
this help us now?"
"I
don't knowyet. What happened to your sister?"
Before
Chup could finish the question there came a faint sound behind him and he had
turned, sword drawn and ready. But the shape that dropped now to the narrow
ledge was only a small brown furry creature, half the length of a sword from
head to tail.
"Chupchupchupchup."
Stretched as if in supplication on the ground, just outside of thrusting range,
it opened a harmless-looking, flat-toothed mouth to make a noise between
repeated gasps and hiccups. It took Chup a moment to understand this was a
repetition of his name.
"Chupchupchup,
the High Lord Draffut bids you come." The creature's speech was almost one
long word, like something memorized and all but meaningless to the speaker. A
beast as small as this one could not have much intelligence.
"I
should come to the Lord Draffut?" Chup demanded. "Where? How?"
"Chup
come, Chup come. Tell man Chup, now he is hunted, the High Lord Draffut bids
him come to sanc-tu-ar-y. Haste and tell man Chupchupchup."
"How
am I to come to him? Where? Show me the way."
As if
to show Chup how, the little four-footed animal spun around and bounded off,
going up the side of the cliff again with ease, darting between rocks where a
man could not easily have thrust an arm. Chup took one step, and then could
only stare after it, hoping it might realize he could not follow.
He
turned to Charmian. "How doyou reckon that? If it's a trap, the bait's
being kept safely out of reach, so distant I can't grab for it."
She
shook her head, and seemed both envious and mystified. "It seems that you
are genuinely offered sanctuary. I've heard that the small animals run the
Beast-Lord's errands now and then. Does Draffut know you as an enemy of demons?
That might account for it."
Before
he could reply there came again the whis-pery slide of men trying to get at
them from both sides. Perhaps they had seen the little messenger run past, and
feared their prey was plotting an escape. As before, Chup smote the foe upon
his right before the man could get his weapons up. This time the man on the
left side was impeded by Charmian's falling at his feet. She had ducked for
safety and lost her footing, and now she was clutching at her enemy's ankles
while he was forced to concentrate on Chup. Much good his concentration did him
with his feet immobilized; Chup's swordpoint tore him open and he toppled.
Charmian let go his ankles quickly as his weight cleared the edge.
Chup
spun back purposefully to the man he had struck down upon his right. It was the
lieutenant of the Guards whom they had duped into letting them pass; he now had
dropped his weapons and clung with blood-slippery, failing fingers to the rock.
Chup cautiously pulled him in from the brink and cut his throat. Charmian
watched, at first without understanding, as Chup continued cutting through the
neck, gorily separating head from body.
When
the collar of seamless-looking Old World metal was free, he wiped it clean on
the lieutenant's uniform and held it up. With two motions of his foot he sent
the headless body into the abyss.
By now
she understood, or thought she did. Anger was in her voice, perhaps from envy
or from fear of being left alone. "You are a fool. The valkyrie will take
no unhurt man to the Lord Draffut. And none who does not wear the collar
properly around his neck."
"You
are not entirely right in that, my lady. I have talked with the soldiers. The
valkyries will take a man whose collar is off. Provided he is so wounded that
his head is severed from his trunk."
Now her
face showed that she fully understood his plan. Her anger grew. "Not every
dead man is brought to Lord Draffut's domain in time to be restored, nor heals
properly."
"Nor
has a personal invitation from the High Lord Draffut. Listen, lady, I think you
will not be worse off if I go. If more soldiers scramble down here, you may do
as well with your eyelashes and sweet voice as I would with a sword. As things
stand now, you can't get out of here."
That
was true; now she was listening.
He
pressed on. "Your situation may be greatly helped if I can go. What I was
saying when the animal came is more important now than ever. What happened to
your sister?"
"The
Lord of Demons took her, as I said. Devoured her, I suppose."
"You
saw the tall black man do that?"
"I
... no. He laid his hand upon her, and her screams were quieted. I did not
linger to see more."
With a
quick movement Chup reversed his sword, and held the pommel of it out to Charmian.
"Take this."
She
stood in hesitation.
Chup
said: "If the Beast-Lord hates demons, as you say, I had better go to him,
and quickly."
"Why?"
"To
tell him where to find the life of Zapranoth. Now take this and cut off my
head."
Holding
out the sword and waiting, Chup felt content. True, she might murder him for
good, or his plan might fail for other reasons. But since he had turned his
back on Som and on the East, he felt like his own man again, and that feeling
was enough; perhaps it was all that a man like him should try to get from life.
He
fought on now to win, to live, because that was his nature. But he was tired,
and saw no future beyond this battle. Death in itself had never been a terror
for him. If it came now-well, he was tired. Half a year of paralytic near-death
he had endured, out of sheer pride, unwillingness to give in. Then, when as if
by miracle, his strength and freedom had been returned to him, he had come near
throwing them away again, to serve the East -and why? What power or treasure
could they offer that was worth the price they asked?
"Strike
off my head," he said to Charmian. "A valkyrie must be coming for
this collar by now; there'd be one already here if they weren't having a busy
day."
She was
still hesitating, fearing, hoping, thinking, desperately deciding what course
was best for her own welfare. She reached out and took the sword, then asked
him: "Where is the demon's life concealed?"
"Lady,
I would not trust you with my beheading, save that you must see how it is in
your own interest for me to reach Draffut with what I know. If we can kill or
threaten Zapranoth, and tip the battle to the West, then you may sit here
safely until Som is no longer dangerous. Unless, of course, you would
ratherbear the message; in which case I must cut off your -no. I thought
not."
He
turned and knelt down slowly, face toward the cliff. Charmian was at his right,
holding the long blade point down on the ground. He said: "Now, about this
little surgery I need ... I suppose a single stroke would be too much to ask
for. But more than two orthree should notbe needed, the blade is heavy and
quite sharp." Without turning to see her face, he added: "You are
most beautiful, and most desirable by far, of all the women I have ever
known."
From
the corner of his eye he saw Charmian losing her hesitation, gathering resolve,
straightening her thin wrists in a tight two-handed grip to lift the weapon's
weight. Chup studied the details of the rock wall straight before him.
He had
knelt down facing this way so that his head would not roll over-Enough of that.
He was Chup. He would not even close his eyes.
On its
way, the sword sang thinly. His muscles cried for the signal to roll away, his
nerves screamed that there was still time to dodge. His ruling mind held his
neck stretched and motionless.
IX
Before
the Citadel
Out
near the middle of the tableland that divided the forces of the East and West,
in a part of the rough plateau that was shattered and split into a dozen
peninsulas divided by abyssal crevices, the High Lord Zapranoth came bursting
up into the morning air like some foul pall of smoke, from a huge
chimney-opening in the ground. Rolf, turning from his work of grappling down
great gasbags, looked up at Zapranoth and saw that which made him squint his
eyes half shut and turn away -though he could not have said what it was about
the smoke that was so terrible. Looking around him, he could see that only
Gray, and Loford who now stood beside his brother, were able to face the demon
with their heads raised and eyes wide open. They were standing in the rear of
the invaders' little line, near Rolf and the balloons. The smoky image of the
technology-djinn was fluttering and darting to and fro above the gasbags, like
some frantic bird confined in an invisible cage.
Now
Gray raised both his arms. Before the face of Zapranoth there appeared a haze
or reflection of light gray, a screen as insubstantial as a rainbow, but as
persistent. It stood steadily before the demon as he drifted gently nearer. Now
it was possible for the soldiers of the West to look toward him-and toward the
citadel, through whose open gate the Guard and its auxiliaries were pouring
out, quick-march. Arrows began to fly both ways across the field. When the
defenders of the citadel had finished a quick and practiced deployment in four
ranks, Rolf estimated there might be nearly a thousand of them. He was too busy
to give much time to pondering the odds, for the last balloons were landing now
and he and his assistants had all they could do with work and dodging arrows.
Each wore on his left arm a light shield woven of green limber branches; such
shields were thought capable of squeezing and stopping piercing shafts that
could bite through a coat of mail.
"Sound
the trumpet once more!" Thomas now ordered with a shout. The Northman with
the horn, his head now bandaged, turned back to face the pass -its thread of
road still empty -and once more blasted out the signal.
This
time there came an answering horn, though it sounded dishearteningly far away.
"There
is our army coining, friends!" Thomas shouted in a great voice.
"Let's see if we can do the job before they get here!"
As if
the distant horn had been a signal for them too, the Guard swayed now in
formation to the shouting of its officers, and as one man stepped forward to
attack. At a range of a hundred and fifty meters there came from their rear
ranks a volley of arrows.
Rolf
and those around him, finished at last with tying down balloons, took up their
weapons and moved into their places for the fight. Some, holding shields,
raised them to protect Gray and Loford. The two wizards still were standing
motionless, and gazing steadfastly upon the ominous but also nearly motionless
bulk of Zapranoth, high in the air above the middle of the field. Loford was
swaying slightly on his feet; there was no other overt sign as yet of the
struggle of invisible powers that had been joined.
The
horn from down below, within the pass, now sounded once more, noticeably
closer; and again as if its signal had been meant for them, the Guard of Som
the Dead began to run and came on in a yelling charge.
The
broken ground delayed them unequally, so that their lines were bent. Rolf, with
bow in hand and arrows laid out before him on the ground, knelt in the middle
of a line of archers. He took little time to aim, but loosed into the oncoming
swarm of men in black, nocked and drew and loosed again. The air was thick with
dust and missiles, and his targets moved confusingly, so it was difficult to
tell what damage his own shots were doing. Certainly the ranks of black were
thinning as they came. A steady droning sprang up in the air above, as the
valkyries whirred industriously, in madly methodical calm they dipped into the
fury of the fight below to lift the fallen warriors of Som and take them to the
high place of Lord Draffut. Some machines flew through the image of the
Demon-Lord, with no awareness shown on either side. It was as if each were
unreal to the other, and only humans must know and deal with both.
There
was no thought of saving arrows; if this attack was not stopped there would be
no need to worry about the next. The man next to Rolf went down, killed by a
flung stone. Others were falling in the Western ranks, but those thin lines did
not pull back. Behind them was the cliff edge, or defeat and death retreating
down the pass. They braced themselves instead, and readied pike and battle-axe
and sword.
By now
some of the enemy were come so close to Rolf that he could hear them gasping as
they ran, and see the hair on hands that lifted swords to strike. Rolf threw
his bowbehind him and rose up in a crouch, shield on arm and sword in hand.
An
Eastern officer, marked by the plume upon his helmet, came running past in
front of Rolf, with great arm-wavings urging his men on. Rolf leaped forward to
get in striking range, but was checked by another Guardsman charging at him.
This foe was running blindly, already berserk with battle, his eyes seemed to
look unseeing through Rolf even as he swung a mace. Rolf dodged back, then
stepped in -not as neatly as the nimblest warriors could, but well enough to
avoid this weapon, only half-controllable. Rolf cut his sword into the
Guardsman's running legs, felt shin bones splinter, saw the man go plowing
forward on his face.
One of
the Northmen on Rolf's left started his own countercharge, striding into the
foe, making a desert round him with a great two-handed blade. Those of the
enemy who did not fall back before this giant tried to spread around him and
get at him from the sides. Rolf hung back a step until he had outflanked the
liveliest of these flankers, then lunged in for the kill. The man was more than
half armored, but Rolf's sword point found a soft place in between the hipbone
and the ribs. As that man fell, another came, but this one straight at Rolf.
This new opponent was the better swordsman, but Rolf would not yield an inch.
He warded one stroke after another, somehow, until the Northman's long sword on
its backswing wounded his enemy from behind. The odds were more than evened,
and the foe went staggering back until the ranks of black had hidden him.
Then
all at once there were no more of the enemy menacing, but only the retreating
horde of their black backs.
"What?
What is it?" Rolf demanded. Mewick had come from somewhere and had taken
him by the arm.
"-bind
it up," Mewick was saying.
"What?"
All the world, for Rolf, was still quivering with the shock of battle. He could
not feel nor hear nor think of anything else.
"You
are hurt. See, here. Not bad, but we must bind it up."
"Ah."
Looking down, Rolf saw a small gash on the upper part of his left arm. He could
not feel the slightest pain. His shield woven of green limber withes, that had
been on his left arm, was all but gone now, hacked to bits. He could not recall
now which of his enemies had dealt these blows, nor how he had avoided being
killed by them.
The
soldiers on both sides were reforming lines, just out of easy arrow range, and
binding wounds. And while the valkyries went droning on, without rest or
hesitation, some men of the West hurried, at Thomas' orders, to behead the
enemy who had fallen among them, gather their metal collars and throw them over
the cliff. This was the only way they had discovered to prevent their foemen's
restoration. No blow from any weapon that a man could wield could stay a
valkyrie from gathering up a fallen man; the Westerners learned this quickly,
and then saved their breath and effort and the edges of their blades. They only
grumbled and dodged the vicious, blurring rotors that smashed the pikemen's
weapons down and broke their fingers when they tried to interfere.
One of
Mewick's countrymen was calling: "Look - our boys in sight now, at the
bottom of the pass. Look!"
Men
turned and gathered, looking down the pass. Rolf joined them, his arm now
bandaged and his mind a little clearer. He felt no great emotion at the sight
of reinforcements coming.
"They're
running now that they're in sight," said someone. "But it seems
they've been all day about it."
"Only
a few in sight yet, with light weapons. The mass of 'em are still far
down."
There
was short time to celebrate, even had there been greater inclination. The Guard
was fast reforming. Their ranks were still impressively superior in size to
those of the invaders, whose small force seemed to Rolf's eye to have been
drastically diminished. He started to count how many were still on their feet,
and then decided he would rather not.
Now
once again the Demon-Lord was drifting slowly closer, his image rolling like a
troubled cloud. The screen of protective magic that Gray had thrown up before
Zapranoth yielded to the demon's pressure but stayed squarely in his path.
Neither
Loford nor Gray had ducked or dodged or moved a hand to save themselves as yet.
Around them tall protective shields had been held up, by the minor wizards who
had abandoned any thought of dueling Zapranoth themselves. More than one had
fallen, by stone or arrow, of these men protecting Gray and Loford. Neither one
of the two strong wizards had been struck by any material weapon, but anyone
looking at their faces now might think that both were wounded.
A
darkness like the dying of the sun fell round the two tall magicians now. It
was the shadow cast by Zapranoth as he loomed nearer. And now, for the first
time on this field, his voice came booming forth: "Are these the wizards
of the West who seek to murder me? Ho, Gray, where is my life? Will you pull it
out now from your little satchel?" Still the thin gray screen before him
held, but now it flared and flickered raggedly, and still he slowly pressed it
back.
"Come
now," boomed Zapranoth, "favor me with an answer, mighty magician.
Admit me to your august company. Let me speak to you. Let me touch you, if only
timidly."
At that
Loford gave a weak cry and toppled, senseless, and would have struck the ground
headlong if some standing near him had not caught him first.
Now
Gray stood alone against the pressure of the dark shape above. He cried out
too, and swayed, but did not fall. Instead he straightened himself with some
reserve of inner strength, and with his arms flung wide set his fingers moving
in a pattern as intricate as that a musician makes upon a keyboard. There
sprang up gusts of wind as sudden and violent as the firing of catapults, so
men who stood near Gray were thrown to the ground, and dust and pebbles were
blasted into the air, in savage streams that crisscrossed through the heart of
Zapranoth before they lost velocity and fell in a rain of dirt into the citadel
three hundred meters distant.
The
image of the demon did not waver in the least. But these howling shafts of wind
were only the forerunners, the scouts and skirmishers, of the tremendous power
that Gray in his extremity had set in motion; Rolf saw this, glancing behind
him over the cliff edge to the west. There where the sky some moments earlier
had been azure and calm, there now advanced a line of clouds, roiling and
galloping at a pace far faster than a bird could fly. These clouds, confined to
a thin flat plane a little above the level of the citadel, converged like
charging cavalry upon the waiting, looming bulk of Zapranoth.
An
air-elemental, thought Rolf, with awe and fear and hope commingled; he would
have shouted it aloud, but no one could have heard him through the screaming
wind.
The
violence of that wind was concentrated at the level of the Demon-Lord, well
above the field where humans walked and fought. Men found that they could stand
and swing their weapons though they staggered with the heavier gusts. And now
the Guard came charging on again. Rolf put on his arm a shield taken from a
fallen Easterner, gripped his sword hard, and waited in the line. While over
their heads a torrent of air and cloud-forms thundered from the west to beat
like surf upon the image of the demon, men lowered their eyes and worked to
injure one another with their blades, like ants at war on some tumultuous
wave-pounded beach.
The
earlier fight had seemed to Rolf quite short. This one was endless, and several
times he despaired of coming through alive. Mewick, howling like the wind,
fought this time on Rolf's right hand, and saved him more than once. Somehow he
was not even wounded in this attack, which failed as the first one had.
While
the warriors fought, the violence of the wind gradually abated; and even as the
black-clad host fell back once more in dissarray, the weightless bulk of
Zapranoth again came pressing forward.
"Gray!"
Thomas, stumbling on a wounded leg, came forcing his way through to the
wizard's side. "Hang on, our men are coming!" Even now the first
gasping and exhausted troops of the climbing Western army were nearing the top
of the pass; the bulk of that army, on its thousands of laboring legs, was now
in sight though far below.
Gray
slowly, with the movement of an old, old man, turned his head to Thomas. In
Gray's face, that seemed to be aging by the moment, there was at first no hint
of understanding.
Thomas
raised his voice. "You, and you, support him on his feet. Gray, do not
fail us now. What can we do?"
The
answer came feebly, as from the lips of a dying man: "You had better win
with the sword, and quickly. I will hold the demon off till my last breath . .
. that is not far away."
Thomas
looked round to see that the vanguard of his main army was just arriving at the
top of the pass, brave men too exhausted for the moment by their running climb
to do anything but sit and gasp for air, and squint up doubtfully at the
looming shape of Zapranoth. The winds had driven the demon some distance from
the field; whether they had inflicted pain or injury upon him no one could tell
save Gray, perhaps. Of the screen of white magic Gray had earlier thrown up,
there were only traces left, flickering and flaring like the last flames of a
dying fire.
Rolf
found it was no longer bearable to look straight at the Demon-Lord.
"One
man run down," Thomas was ordering, pointing down the pass to the
approaching reinforcements. "Tell any with the least skill in magic to
push on before the other, and hurry!" He turned his helmet's T-shaped
opening toward Rolf. "Ready the balloons for the attack upon the citadel
itself! We must not sit here waiting for the demon to set the course of
battle."
Rolf
sheathed his sword and turned and ran shouting to rally his crew to the
balloons. At his direction men put down weapons, eased off armor, took up tools
and ropes. The technology-djinn, still constrained by the spells that Gray had
put upon it, obeyed Rolf's orders when he called them out.
When he
could look up from his work again, Rolf saw that the Guard of Som had been
reformed once more on the plain. The ranks of black were not greatly smaller
than they had been at the start of the day's carnage; Guard replacements were
trotting out from the citadel wearing torn and bloodstained garments in which
they had already been slain once today. But the Guard had missed its chance to
push the stubborn West from its small foothold on the height; the trickle of
reinforcement up the pass had thickened steadily. Soon it would become a flow
of hundreds and of thousands.
There
were wizards of diverse but minor skills ascending with the army; each of these
as he arrived was hurried to the side of Gray, who still was conscious, though
standing only with the help of strong men on each side. But one by one these
lesser magicians fell away, nearly as fast as they arrived and sought to
relieve Gray of some part of the invisible power of Zapranoth. Some crumpled
soundlessly. Some leaped and fell, groaning as if struck by arrows. One man
tore with his nails at his flesh, screamed wildly, and before he could be
stopped, leaped from the precipice.
Rolf
took it all in with a glance. "We are ready!" he shouted to Thomas.
"Then
fill your baskets with good men, and fly! We will be with you there."
Most of
the survivors of the original assault force, being the type of men they were,
had already boarded for the next attack. The wind seemed right. But Zapranoth
was coming, rushing now toward them like a toppling wall. Rolf, in the act of
boarding his balloon, looked up and cried out at the sight. With the majesty
and darkness of a thundercloud great Zapranoth now passed above them; it was as
if the skirts of his robe spilled madness and dragged lightning. Two of the
balloons burst thunderously, even as the djinn in its invisible cage became a
blur of terror. Above the djinn there lowered a drifting fringe of cloud, that
in the winking of an eye became a closing pair of massive jaws. With the
devouring of the djinn, Gray cried out in despair and pain, and his head rolled
loosely on his neck.
Men
were running, falling, waving weapons in the air. In the confusion Rolf lost
sight of Thomas, who had not yet given the last order to cast off. But there
was no doubt what must be done; the balloons were ready, a little wind still
held. Even without the djinn they could rise up and drop again upon the
citadel.
"Cast
off!" Rolf shouted left and right; ropes were let go, and his flotilla
rose and flew. The demon that had just passed by now turned, but did not strike
at the balloons; perhaps Gray was not yet wholly overcome. As the craft passed
over the formation of the Guard, stones and arrows made a thick buzzing swarm
around them. Shafts pierced every gasbag, though the padded baskets shielded
the men inside. But their flight was not intended to be far.
Lowering
again, they reached the citadel's low wall, and for the most part cleared it.
Along the top of the wall, behind its parapet, one lean man in black came
running toward the invaders as if to fight them all, while others ran away -by
his behavior Rolf knew Som the Dead. But in another moment Som was left behind.
Inside
the walls, the silent flyers skimmed above a different world, one that was
still ordered, peaceful, pleasant to the eye. Trees, hedges, and the rooftops
of low sprawling buildings skimmed the basket bottoms. There fled before them
women in rich silks and furs, and a few servants in drab dress.
Only
one person besides Som remained to watch them boldly. One young servant girl
who had mounted a low roof gazed at the balloons, and past them at the battle.
Rolf passed near enough to get a good look at her face.
It was
his sister Lisa.
X
Lake of
Life
There
was a steady swell of sound, a moaning endless tone so long prolonged in his
strange loneliness that Chup could not imagine or remember when he had begun to
hear it; and this odd swelling was a light as well, of which he could not
remember his first sight, so bright he did not need his eyes to see it, but not
too bright for eyes in spite of that.
And it
was a touch, a pressure, of an intensity to make it unendurable if it had been
felt in one place or even many, but it bore in all directions on every fiber,
inward and outward, so all the infinity of opposing pressures balanced and
there was no pain. Chup lived encompassed in this swelling thing like a fish
within the sea, immersed and saturated and supported by inexhaustible sound,
pressure, light, odor, taste, heat of fire and cold of ice, all balanced to a
point of nothingness and adding up to everything.
So he
lived, without remembering how he had come to be so living, remembering only
the soft and singing promise of the sword. He did not waken, for he had not
slept. Then: I am Chup, he thought. This is what the beheaded see.
What
had jogged him into thinking was the feel of someone prosaically pulling on his
hair. He did not open his eyes now, for they were already open. He could see
light and soft pleasant colors, flowing downward. Up he rose, pulled by his
hair, until he broke with a slow splash of glory back into the world of air, in
which his senses once more functioned separately.
He was
in a cave. He could not at once be certain of its size, but he thought it was
enormous. The overhead curve of its roof was too smoothly rounded to be
natural. The upper part of the cave was filled with light, though its rounded
sides and top were dark; the lower part, up to what was perhaps the middle, was
filled with the glowing fluid from which Chup had just been lifted, an enclosed
lake of restless energy. Chup knew now that he had reached his goal, what he
had heard the soldiers call the Lake of Life.
Like
some gigantic bear reared on two legs, immersed to his middle in the lake,
there stood the shaggy figure of a beast. His fur was radiant, of many colors
or of none, as if of the same substance as the lake. Chup could not see the
creature's face as yet, because he could not turn or lift his head. Chup's head
swung like a pendulum, neckless and bodiless, from what must be this great
beast's grip on his long hair.
He
could, however, move his eyes. Where his body should have been below his chin
there was nothing to be seen except receding strings of droplets, not gore, but
drops of multicolored glory from the lake. Falling dripping from his neck
stump, out of sight beneath his chin, the droplets splashed and merged into the
glowing lake whence they had come. Chup understood now that he, his head, had
been immersed and saturated in the lake, and that had been enough to restore
life, with no least sense of shock or pain.
The
grip upon his hair now turned his pendulum-head around, and now he saw the High
Lord Draffut's face. It was a countenance of enormous ugliness and power, more
beast than human certainly, but gentle in repose. And now Chup saw that in his
other hand the Beast-Lord held like a doll the nude and headless body of a man.
Like a child washing a doll he held the body down, continually dipping and
washing it in the Lake of Life. With the splashing and the motion the
brilliance of the liquid intensified into soft explosions of color, modulating
in waves of light the steady gentle lumination of the air inside the cave.
And
now, in his enormous shaggy hand, very like a human hand in shape but far more
powerful and beautiful, the High Lord Draffut raised the headless thing and
like a craftsman turned it for his own inspection. Like that of one newborn, or
newly slain, the muscular body writhed and floundered uncontrolled. On its skin
Chup could count his old scars, like a history of his life. He marked the
jaggedness of the neck stump, where Charmian had hacked and sliced
unskillfully. From its severed veins the elixir of the lake came pumping out
like blood, and tinged with blood.
The
hand that held Chup's head up by its hair now shifted its grip slightly.
Turning his eyes down once again, he beheld his own headless, livingbody being
brought up close beneath his head. Its hands grasped clumsily, like a baby's,
at Draffut's fur when they could feel it. Closer the raw neck stump came, till
Chup could hear the fountaining of its blood vessels. And closer yet, until
there came a pressure underneath his chin -
His
head had not been breathing, nor felt any need to breathe; now there came a
choking feeling, but it entailed no pain. It ended as the first rush of
lung-drawn air caught coldly in his mouth and throat. Then with a sharp tingle
came the feelings of his body, awareness of his fingers clutched in fur, of his
feet kicking in the air, of the gentle pressure of the great hand closed around
his ribs.
That
hand now bore him down, to immerse him completely in the lake once more. Once
he was below the surface, his breathing stopped again, not by any choking or
impediment but simply because it was not needed there. A man plunged into
clearest, purest water would not call for a cup of muddy scum to drink; so it
was that his lungs made no demand for air. Then in two hands Chup was lifted
out, to be held high before an ugly, gentle face that watched him steadily.
"I
came - " Chup began to speak with a shout, before he realized there was no
need for loudness. The lake gave the impression of filling all the cave with
waterfall-voices, as sweet as demons' noise was foul, but yet in fact a whisper
might be heard.
"I
came as quickly as I could, Lord Draffut," he said more normally. "I
thank you for my life."
"You
are welcome to what help I have to give. It is long since any thanked me for
it."The voice of Draffut, deep and deliberate, was fit for a giant. His
hands turned Chup like a naked babe undergoing a midwife's last inspection.
Then Draffut set him, still dripping with the lake, upon a ledge that-Chup now
saw -ran all the way around the cavern. This ledge, and the huge cave's walls
and curving roof, were of some substance dark and solid as the goblet in which
the demon had brought him his healing draught long days ago. The ledge was at a
level but little higher than the surface of the lake. Seeing at a distance was
difficult in the cavern's glowing air, but at its farthest point from Chup the
ledge seemed wider, like a beach, and there were other figures moving on it,
perhaps of other beasts who tended other men.
The
Beast-Lord said: "I cannot command the val-kyries, or I would have sent
them for you. If I could choose what men I help, I would help first those who
fight against the demons."
Chup
opened his mouth to answer. But now that he was no longer bathed in the fluid
of life, a great weakness came over him, and he could only lean back against
the wall and feebly nod.
"Rest,"
said Draffut. "You will grow stronger quickly, here. Then we will talk. I
would give all men sanctuary, and heal them, but I cannot. . . I sent for you
because you are the first man in the Black Mountains in many years who has
cared for a fellow creature's suffering. A small beast brought me the news that
you had saved it from a demon."
For a
moment Chup could not remember, but then it came to him: in the cavern of Som's
treasure hoard. Still he was too feeble to do more than nod.
He
tried again to study the figures moving in the cavern's farthest reaches, but
could not see them clearly, so vibrant was the air with light and life. The
ledge Chup rested on was of a dull and utter black, but covered tightly with a
film as thin and bright as sunlight, a glowing, transparent skin formed of the
fluid of the lake. The film was never still. At one spot there would begin a
thickening in the film, a thickening that swelled and pulsed, rose up and broke
away, becoming a living separation that went winging like a butterfly. And from
some other place there would spring a similar fragment, perhaps bigger than the
first, big enough to be a bird, flying up and sagging as its wings melted, but
not dying or collapsing, only putting out new wings of some different and more
complex shape and flying on to collide in the singing, luminous air with the
butterfly, the two of them clinging together and trembling, seeming on the
verge of growing into something still bigger and more wonderful; but then
diving deliberately together and melting back into the gracefully swirling body
of the lake, with their plunge splashing up droplets that fell again into the
patterned film that glided shining and without ceasing over the black substance
of the ledge.
Feeling
some returning strength, Chup raised one hand to touch his neck. Running his
fingers all the way around, he followed the scar, thin, jagged, and painless,
of his death wound. Once more he tried to talk.
"Lord
Draffut, is the battle over?"
Draffut
turned his head toward the far end of the Lake. "My machines are still
working without pause. The battle goes on. From what I have heard from beasts and
men, the foul demon is likely to prevail, though if the issue were left to
swords alone, the West would win."
"Then
there is little time for us to act." Chup tried to rise, but felt no
stronger than the splashing butterflies of light.
"Your
healing is not finished. Wait, you soon will be strong enough to stand. What do
you mean, we must act?"
"We
must act against the one you call 'foul demon'-if you are as much the demons'
enemy as you claim, and I have heard."
Draffut
lifted his great forearms high, then let them down, like falling trees, with a
huge splash. "Demons! They are the only living things that I would kill,
if I could. They devour men's lives, and waste their bodies. For no need of
their own, but out of sheer malignity, they steal the healing fluid from my
lake, and taunt me when I rage and cannot come to grips with them."
Chup
was now able to sit straighter on the ledge, and his voice had grown stronger.
"You would kill Zapranoth?"
"Him
soonest of them all! Of all the demons that I know, he has done human beings
the greatest harm."
"I
know where he has hidden his life."
All was
silent, except for the sweet seashell roaring of the lake. Draffut, standing
absolutely still, looked down steadily at Chup for so long that Chup began to
wonder if a trance had come upon him.
Then
Draffut spoke at last. "Here in the citadel? Where we can reach it?"
"Here
in the citadel he hid it, where he could keep his eye upon it every day. Where
we can reach it if we are strong and fierce enough."
The
Beast-Lord's hands, knotted into barrel-sized fists, rose dripping from the
lake. "Fierce? I can be fierce enough for anything, against obstacles that
do not live, or against demons, or even against beasts if there is need. I
cannot injure men. Not even -when it must be done."
"I
can, and will again." With a great effort Chup rose up, swaying, to his
feet. "Som and his demon-loving crew ... as soon as I can hold a sword
again. Lord Draffut, the human Lords of the East are more like demons than like
men." Lifting a weak arm, Chup pointed to the distant beachlike place,
where people were being cared for by tall inhuman figures. "Who are
those?"
"Those?
My machines. At least they were machines, when I was young. We all have changed
since then, working in this cave, in constant contact with the Lake of Life.
Now they are alive."
Chup
had no time for marveling at that. "I mean those being healed. If you
would fight the demons, fight the men who help them. Turn against the East.
Order your machines, beasts, whatever they are, to stop healing Som's troops
now."
At
that, Lord Draffut's eyes blazed down upon him. "I have never seen Som,
let alone acknowledged him as lord, and I care nothing for him. Men come and go
around my lake, and use it. I remain. Long before there was an East or West, I
lived. From the days of the Old World I have healed human wounds. Weapons were
different then, but wounds were much the same, and men change not at ail-though
to me they then were gods."
Were
what? Chup wondered, fleetingly; he had not heard that word before.
Draffut
spoke on, as if relieving himself of thoughts and words too long pent up.
"I was not in the Old World as you see me now. Then I could not think. I
was much smaller, and ran behind human beings on four legs. But I could love
them, and I did, and I must love them still. Turn against the East,you say? I
am no part of that abomination! I was here before Som came-long before-and I
mean to be here when he has gone. I walked here when the healing lake was made,
by men who thought their war would be the last. When they went mad and ran
away, I was locked in, with the machines. I -grew. And when new tribes of
humanity came, I was ready to lend them the collars, and the valkyries' help,
that they might be healed when they fought. And - after them -came others -
"
The
High Lord Draffut slowed his angry speech. "Enough of that. Where is the
life of Zapranoth?"
Chup
told him, things that he had heard and seen, and how the pieces seemed to fall
together. The telling was quickly finished, but Chup was standing straight
before he'd finished; he felt his strength increasing by the moment. "The
girl's name is the same, you see. Lisa. Though I would wager that her face and
memory have been changed. And she has been here just half a year."
Draffut
pondered but a moment more. "Then come, Lord Chup, and I will give you
arms. If there are men I cannot frighten from our path, then you will fight
them. If what you say is true, no other obstacle can keep me from the life of
Zapranoth. Come! Swim!" And Draffut turned and swam away, cleaving the
lake with stretching overhand strokes. Chup dove in and followed, faster than
he had ever splashed through water.
XI
Knife
of Fire
Rolf's
balloon skimmed lower, dragged against tall shrubbery, and scraped free, but
then continued sinking. In the quiet he could hear the gas escaping from a
dozen arrow punctures in the bag. Mewick pointed silently at the next hedge
ahead of them; this one they would not clear.
Rolf
swung up to the basket's rim, and leaped in the instant before they struck the
hedge. He hit the ground with sword already drawn-but there were no opponents
yet in sight.
In all
directions, other balloons were coming down, seeding armed desperate fighters
throughout the inner courts and buildings of Som's citadel. But some balloons
had missed the walls, or were still going up. Lacking the djinn's help, or
guiding ropes to follow, there was no pattern in the landing. Mewick was to
assume leadership of the five man squad in Rolf's balloon, once they had
landed. But Mewick, like the rest, now stood perplexed for a moment beside the
hedge; it was hard to see which was the best way to move to join up most
effectively with other elements of the assaulting force. And from this garden
they could see no vulnerable target where Som might be hurt with a quick
attack.
Only
Rolf had glimpsed a goal, and he turned toward it when it seemed as likely a
direction to take as any other. He ran toward the place where he had seen his
sister, Mewick and the others pounding after him, across empty lawns and over
deserted terraces.
The
girl was still on the roof. Her face was turned away, toward the battlefield,
where like the smoke of burning villages the Demon-Lord hung in the air.
"Lisa!"
She
looked round when he shouted, and he knew he had not been mistaken. But there
was no recognition in her eyes when they met his, only confusion and alarm.
Rolf
started toward her, but then stopped as a squad of men in black appeared,
coming in single file round the corner of the building where she was.
He
called out once more: "Lisa, try to come this way!" But there was no
way for her to manage that right now. The Eastern squad was coming on to block
the way. They were only auxiliaries, without the collars of the Guard, and
armed with a varied selection of old weapons, but they were eight to face Rolf
and his four companions. The eight soon proved to lack the willingness for
battle of the five; one of their number they left behind, bleeding his life out
in a flowerbed, and others, fleeing, clutched at wounds and yelled and left red
trails.
Rolf
tried to get another look at Lisa on her roof. But there was no time. Beyond a
tall hedge and a wall of masonry, some thirty meters distant, a huge collapsing
gasbag showed where another Western squad had landed. These now seemed heavily
beset, to judge by the shouts and noises there. Another force in black, ten or
twelve men maybe, could be glimpsed through hedges as they hurried in that
direction.
Drops
of gore flew from Mewick's hatchet as he motioned for a charge. "That
way!" And they were off.
The
shortest route to this new fight, lay over a decorative stone wall, head high.
Rolf sheathed his sword to hurl himself up at full speed and with two hands
free to grab. He drew again even as he lunged onward from his crouch atop the
wall, and as he leaped struck downward with full force, to kill a Guardsman
from behind. They were in a walled-in garden, with more than a score of men
contending in a wild melee. Rolf landed awkwardly, off balance, but bounced up
into a crouch at once, just in time to parry a hard blow that nearly knocked
his sword away.
Above
the garden the huge gasbag, draped with its plastic mail, was steadily
collapsing, threatening to make a temporary peace by smothering the fight. But
yet there was room to wield weapons. The five beleaguered crewmen of this
balloon welcomed with shouts the arrival of Mewick and his squad, and doubled
their own strokes. But this time the enemy were Guardsmen, and more numerous
than the squad of auxiliaries had been.
The
fight was savage and protracted. The West could gain no advantage until the
crew of a third balloon had managed to reach the scene, and fell upon the
Guardsmen's flank. When at last the Guard retreated, there were but nine men of
the West still on their feet, and several of these were weak with wounds. Rolf,
bearing only the one light wound suffered earlier, helped others with their
bandages. He then began to hack off fallen Guardsmen's heads, but Mewick
stopped him.
"We
must move on, and find some heart or brain within this citadel where we can
strike; let dead men be."
One of
the Northmen had got up into a tree to look around. "More of our fellows
over there! Let's link with them!"
Over
the wall again they went, to where another dozen or fifteen Westerners had
joined together, and were setting fires. Mewick was quick to argue with the
leader of these men that what they were doing had little purpose, that some
vital target must be found. To make his point he gestured toward the
battlefield outside the citadel. There the High Lord Zapranoth remained
immobile above the Western force; and what the demon might be doing to the men
who swarmed like ants beneath his feet was not something that Rolf cared to
think about.
But the
leader of the vandalizing crew, gestured to the clouds of smoke his men were
causing to go up; these, he shouted, were bound to have an effect when they
were seen.
And he was
right. A hundred black-clad soldiers ormore, diverted from the fight outside,
came pouring back into the citadel. Som dared not let his fortress and its
contents fall.
This
Eastern counterattack came with a volley of arrows, then a charge. Rolf once
more caught sight of Som himself, entering the fight in person in defense of
what might be his own sprawling manor. The Lord of the Black Mountains, gaunt
and hollow-eyed, wearing no shield or armor, shouting orders, came striding at
the head of his own troops, swinging a two-handed sword. A Western cross-bowman
atop a wall let fly a bolt at Som. Rolf saw the missile blur halfway to its
black-clad target, spin neatly in midair, then fly back with the same speed it
had been fired. It tore a hole clear through the bowman's throat.
After
that, there were few weapons raised at Som, though he ran straight at the
Western line. Hack and thrust as he might, hoping to provoke a counter, those
of the West who came within his reach restricted themselves to parrying and
dodging his blows. Fortunately he was no great swordsman, and could do little
damage to such a line as faced him now, shields at the ready. Once his sword
was knocked out of his hands. He grabbed it up again, his face a mask of rage,
and leaped once more to the attack. This time the Western line divided just in
front of him; Mewick had quickly hatched a scheme to cut off Som and capture
him, by a ring of shields pressed round him till he could be immobilized and
disarmed. But the opening appeared too neatly before Som, or perhaps some magic
warned him; he fell back into the shelter of his own ranks, and thenceforward
was content to let them do his fighting. They came on sturdily enough.
Once
more, for a time, the fighting was without letup. Then there came another small
body of Western troops, fighting their way into the mass, bettering the odds
just when it seemed they were about to worsen too severely. The forces
separated briefly, the West dragging back their wounded where they had the
chance. Rolf, looking again for Lisa, saw that she had remained at her vantage
point on the roof. Perhaps she felt safer up there. Looking beyond her, he saw
the sign of defeat still in the sky -the brooding shape of Zapranoth.
One of
the party who had just joined them had thrown himself down, exhausted, and was
answering questions about the progress of the battle outside. Rolf realized
that this man and his group had just come from there, had somehow managed to
fight their way over the citadel's wall or through its gate.
"
- but it does not go well. The old man withstands the demon still, how I do not
know. Surely he cannot live much longer. Then Zapranoth will have us all.
Already half our army has gone mad. They throw away their weapons, chew on
rocks . . . still we have numbers on our side, and we might win, if it were not
for Zapranoth. None can withstand the demon. None ..."
His
voice fell silent. The men around were looking at him no longer, but up toward
the mountain.
Rolf
craned his neck. There, on the high, barren, unclimbable slope, amid the doors
where valkyries shuttled in and out, a new door had been opened. It looked as
if an outer layer of rock had been cracked away as the door, of heavy dull
black stuff, had been swung out. Framed in the opening, there stood what seemed
to be the figure of a man, but having a beast's head, and garbed in fur as
radiant as fire. From inside the mountain, behind this figure, there streamed
out a coruscating light that made Rolf think of molten metal.
And now
he saw that the figure could not be human, for there was a real man beside him;
smaller than an infant by comparison, but armed with a bright needle of a
sword, and clothed in black like some lord of the East.
"Lord
Draffut!" cried out someone in the Eastern force.
"Who
will heal us if he should fall?" another called.
Other
shouts of astonishment came from the Guard. They, like their enemies facing
them, were lowering their weapons momentarily and looking up to marvel.
Lord
Draffut bent, picked up the man beside him in one hand, and held him cradled in
one arm. Then striding down the slope Lord Draffut came, walking boldly on two
legs where it seemed no man could have climbed. It was as if he walked in snow
or gravel, instead of solid stone; for at his touch, rock melted, not with heat
but as if quickening briefly into crawling life, to quiet again when he had
passed.
Though
the Lord Draffut carried no weapon but one armed man, his attitude and pace
were those of one who came on eagerly to enter battle. Yet from the ranks of
the East there came no cheers. All men still watched in blank surprise, half of
them with weapons dragging in the dirt. Som himself was peering up as if he
could not credit what was happening before his eyes.
Draffut's
great strides quickly brought him close to the citadel. Then he had entered it,
sliding down the last near-vertical face of rock that served as its rear wall.
Behind him stretched a line of tracks left in the dead solidity of the
mountain.
The men
of the West who were inside the citadel contracted their defensive line now,
and gripped their weapons tightly; there was no place for them to run. Then
gradually they understood that Draffut and his rider were not coming straight
toward them-not quite. The tiny-looking man in black raised his bare sword and
pointed, and the striding lord he rode accomodatingly made a slight correction
in his course. The rider's black garments, it could now be seen, were trimmed
with such a motley of other colors as should belong to no proper Eastern
uniform.
Rolf
was perhaps the first to recognize this man in black-and-motley garb, and no
doubt the first to understand that Chup was pointing straight at Lisa on her
rooftop. The girl had turned to face Chup; and in the lower sky beyond her, the
weightless bulk of Zapranoth was turning too, like a tower of smoke caught in a
shifting wind.
The
Guardsmen, as Draffut approached their ranks, began shifting to and fro
uncertainly, not knowing what the Beast-Lord meant to do, still unable to
imagine what had called him forth. Draffut majestically ignored them; they
scampered from his path, and like a moving siege-tower, he passed through where
their ranks had been.
Lisa on
her rooftop sprang to her feet, but made no move toward Draffut or away. Her
building was not occupied at the moment by either East or West, but the Eastern
forces were the closer to it. Draffut after he had passed them paused briefly
to set down Chup, who stood with his sword in hand and glaring at the Guard.
Draffut himself strode on toward the girl. Taller than the roof he reached
toward, he stretched out one mighty arm toward her-
And
recoiled. Beneath Rolf's feet the ground leaped like a drumhead, beaten by the
shock that had made the Lord of Beasts go staggering back.
Between
the girl upon her building, and the High Lord Draffut, there now stood one who
was the tall-est of the three. Seemingly sprung from nowhere, this figure was
covered in dark armor, even to segmented gauntlets and closed visor. In the reflections
of this metal armor, silent lightnings seemed to come and go. The world around
this Dark Lord seemed askew to Rolf, and Rolf had the impression that under the
Dark Lord's feet the rocks had stretched, like taut canvas bearing weights.
And in
the instant of his appearance, the cloud-image of Zapranoth, that had for so
long loomed above the battlefield in domination, had vanished from the sky.
Now,
scattered all across the plateau, inside the citadel and out of it, bodies of
fighting men let weapons rest, and held their breaths, waiting for they knew
not what. Only the valkyries above still droned on imperturbably, taking up the
slain and mangled and returning to find more.
Had
there been listeners a kilometer away, the High Lord Draffut's voice would no
doubt have reached them plainly when he spoke. "Lord of Demons, drinker of
men's lives! I hear no taunting from you now. You must maintain a solid form if
you will try to stop what I intend to do today -a solid form that I can grasp."
The voice
of Zapranoth, even louder than Draf-fut's voice, began before the other had
ceased. "Foul upstart beast-cub, calling yourself lord! Lord of vermin!
Lord of cripples! Though it may be that I cannot end your life, you will soon
wish that it had ended yesterday."
The two
blurred toward each other.
Rolf
did not truly see them come together, for there flashed out from their contact
a moment of blind blackness to engulf him. The men around Rolf were all blinded
too, if he could judge by the multitudinous outcry that sprang up. Even as the
men were blinded, came the shock; Rolf once more felt it in the mountain
underneath his feet, and this time in the air around him, too, more like a blow
than like a noise.
He fell
and blindly clutched the earth. When vision came back, it was to showmen of
East and West all crawling, seeking refuge, intermingled for the moment without
fighting, as predator and prey seek safety from a flood upon a floating log,
and keep a truce.
Rolf
tried to rise, to get away, but before he could regain his feet there sounded
in the voice of Zap-ranoth an awesome bellow of rage. With this cry the
mountain lurched beneath Rolf, and its surface split like a torn garment. A
fine crevice, nowhere wider than a man's body, ran faster than the eye might
follow it across the walls and gardens and terraces of the citadel; in one
direction it shattered the outer, battlemented wall, revealing the field before
the citadel, where the army of the West had been stopped and where most of its
soldiers still lay stunned; in the other direction the flying split raced up
through the upper mountain, defining hidden faults by making them its path. The
splitting ceased before it reached the domain of the Lord Draffut. Up there the
coruscating light still flooded from an open giant's doorway, and through their
smaller passages the valkyries still flew in and out.
Now
when he looked back at them Rolf saw the two mighty fighters plain. The Lord of
Beasts was biting down upon the armored shoulder of the Lord in Black.
Draffut's drawn-back lips revealed enormous fangs, and these were sunken in.
Rolf saw that wherever Draffut touched the black armor, it moved and flowed and
yielded to the resistless life that poured from him. Around the demon's waist
his huge beast-forearms, bright with glowing fur, were locked like mortised
logs to hold and crush.
And yet
the being in black seemed mightier. For all the Dark Lord showed of pain, he
might have felt nothing from the bite that seemed to pierce his armor. With his
own great arms Zapranoth strove to loosen the hold about his waist. He tested
out one counter-grip and then another, working without haste or hesitation. At
last he got both his dark-metaled hands clamped to his satisfaction upon one
arm of glowing fur. If the metal of his gauntlets ran and dripped with life, he
did not heed. Now Zapranoth's enormous shoulders tilted, and he strained.
Slowly-very slowly -he began to win.
Rolf
cried out, and bit his lip, and tried to move. Some power would not let him take
a step toward the fight. He threw his sword at Zapranoth; the spinning blade
vanished in midair.
Slowly
-ever so slowly -Zapranoth was breaking the grip about his waist. When that was
done, maintaining his own grip on Draffut's arm, he bent it farther. Draffut's
jaws did not relax their bite, but through them came the muffled outcry of a
titan's pain.
Rolf
yelled again, and hurled a rock, and picked up another, larger one. Somehow his
frenzied rage enabled him to run forward. Caring nothing now for his own fate,
he tried to strike the demon with a rock. Turning in their struggle, the giants
brushed him aside unnoticed. He felt an impact, and his body soaring. The
ground flying up to meet him was the last part of the battle that he knew.
Chup,
like all other mortal men, had been knocked down by the repeated rolling of the
earth. He had continued to keep in sight the ugly young girl who clung to the
swaying rooftop, her bright eyes fixed now on the giants' struggle. Then the
opening crevice had split the mountain between Chup and the object of his
attention. Even while the earth was still heaving like a ship's deck, Chup
gathered his resolve and crossed the narrow chasm with a lunge, nearly falling
into it though it was scarcely wider than his body.
Behind
him he heard Draffut's muffled cry of agony, as his arm was mangled in the
demon's grip. Chup did not look round. He ran on toward the building where Lisa
was. Now it was so close that the roof and the girl on it were out of his field
of vision.
"Will
you still nurse at my shoulder, beast?" It was the roaring voice of
Zapranoth. "I have no milk to yield! Bah! If I tore your arms off, no
doubt you would nuzzle at me still." A brief pause. "But I can see a
way to cause you greater pain than that, vile animal. All you care for is your
Lake of Life. Now look! See what I do!"
Chup
did not look, but jumped to grab the roof. His fingers slid on marble and he
fell; when he hit the ground again, he did look back. Despite the untroubled
speeches of the demon, his right arm in its armor was now hanging almost
motionless, below the unrelenting pressure of Draffut's fangs. But Zapranoth's
left arm was free, and with a barrel-sized armored fist he now smote down into
the split that climbed the mountain. Twice he struck, a third time and a
fourth. With each blow the mountain shook and rumbled; with each rumbling the
crack widened by a little and lengthened generously. Draffut, his limbs
broken-looking, his fur now dulled and matting, seemed helpless to do anything
but cling to the demon with his jaws.
With
the last blow of the demon's fist, the lengthening crevice broke into the
doorway from which Draffut had come down; and with that the rumbling of the
tortured mountain ended, in a sound as of a great clear bell. For a moment all
was still. Then through the broken, distant doorway the Lake of Life came
spurting, a flood of fiery radiance, leaping, pouring down, dazzling even in
full sun.
At the
draining of the lake, there came from Draffut's tight-clamped jaws a howl more
terrible than anything that Chup had ever heard. Beneath the loose fur of the
Beast-Lord's neck, his muscles bulged, as if he tried to tear the demon's
shoulder off. Now Zapranoth, too, let out a wordless cry. Struggling as
savagely as ever, the two of them rolled away, while both armies fled in panic
from their path. Meanwhile the lake came down the mountain in a thin but
violent stream, sliding into crevices and up from them again, leaving in its
pathway rock that knew the taste of life and moved, before it sank as if
reluctantly into being not-alive again.
At this
latest shuddering of the earth, the building before Chup, like many others in
the citadel, collapsed. The walls bulged out and crumbled almost gently, the
roof caved inward with a noise that was not loud amid the greater thunders of
the mountain. Chup stayed on all fours, crawling forward into the fresh ruin.
He quickly found the girl, covered with dust from the masonry that had
collapsed beneath her, but showing no sign of any great hurt. Sprawled on her
belly on a mound of stones, she drew in gasps of air as if readying a scream. A
place on her forehead bled a trickle, and she stared dazedly at Chup and past
him.
A
burning brazier inside the structure had been crushed, and Chup poked together
its spilled coals, lighted no doubt when this day had been a peacefully chilly
autumn morning. He fed in splinters from a broken beam until he had a hardy
little fire. When the girl looked at him with some understanding, and began to
sob, he asked: "Remember me, young Lisa?"
She
only sobbed on. She moved a little, but she was still dazed.
"Don't
be afraid. This will not hurt you much." He tried to hide the dagger from
her with his arm as he moved it toward her head. There seemed to be no doubt
where the exact place of hiding was. The dark brown mass of Lisa's hair was
bound up carefully, like the hair of ten thousand other peasant girls across
the countryside.
This
was the girl who had appeared, seemingly from nowhere, at the house of Rolf's
parents, at the same time that Charmian's sister had been left with the Lord of
Demons. Rolf's people were obscure farmers, then seemingly remote and safe from
wars and magic. No one searching for a hidden thing of power would have had reason
to search them.
But six
years passed, and war came there. By accident Tarlenot carried off the girl as
he had taken others. Whatever rough disposal he might have made of her, her
hair would not have been so tidily cared for. In a dream or vision the Dark
Lord came, and worked hypnotically; and Tarlenot forgot his own designs, and
took the girl right to the citadel. There were no more safe farms; Zapranoth
would hide his life where he could see it, and be quick in its defense. So Lisa
had been taken to serve a sister who did not know her because both of their
minds had been altered by the demon, and because the appearance of the younger
girl had probably been changed as well . . .
She
closed her eyes and moaned when Chup set his dagger's edge to the tough cord by
which her hair was bound. When the cord parted, a feeling like the shock of
combat ran up the daggerto his hand. It was the first hard evidence that he was
right. Lord Draffut, he implored in silence, clamp down your bite and hold the
demon occupied. Hold him but a little longer.
The
dagger Draffut had given Chup was virginally sharp; he held it like a razor,
and severed the first long strands. The girl came out of her daze, then, to
scream and try to fight, and he reversed his grip on the dagger and clubbed her
quiet with the hilt.
He
dragged her limp form closer to his little fire, and laid the first of the cut
hair carefully beside the flame. With proper shaving gear, or at least water,
the business would have gone more smoothly. But Chup had little inclination and
no time to be squeamish; beads of blood came upwelling from the scalp as he
shaved rapidly and thoroughly. The girl moaned, but did not move.
Chup
noticed first a strange, deep silence all around him. But he did not look round.
Then, somewhere nearby, there spoke the voice of Zapranoth, in all its power
and majesty: "Little man. What do you think that you are doing
there?"
Chup's
hands began to shake, but without looking up or pausing he forced them to shave
another swath. He could sense the power of Zapranoth above him, descending onto
him -the full power of Zapranoth, whose mere passing in the cave had turned his
bones to jelly. Chup sensed also that as long as he kept his full attention on
his task, he could balance on a perilous point above annihilation.
"What
you are doing is a nuisance to me. Cease it at once, and I will see to it that
your death is quick and clean."
Once
pause, at this stage of his work, and he would never work again, nor fight nor
play nor love. Chup knew it by some inner warning: do not stop, look, turn.
Hands that had mangled the Lord of Beasts would close upon his merely human
flesh. Though Chup's own hands threatened to disobey him, he made them shave
more hair and set it by the fire.
"Put
down your knife and walk away." Zap-ranoth's voice now was not loud so
much as it was overwhelming. It seemed impossible that anyone could say -or
even think or hope-a word in contradiction. Chup felt his concentration
slipping. In a moment he would answer, he would turn, he would face Zapranoth
and die.
"Powers
of the West!" he cried aloud. "Come to my help!" His hands
meanwhile kept at their work.
"I
am the only power who can reachyou now, and what you are doing arouses my
displeasure. Put down your knife and walk away. I repeat, you shall have a
clean death if you do -clean, and far in the future, after a long and pleasant
life"
Lisa-Carlotta'
face was changing, as the last of her hair was taken off. The ugly proportions
of her nose and jaw and forehead flowed and melted into shapes of beauty, as
some pressure that had steadily deformed them was removed. She whimpered, in a
new and lighter voice. In spite of her dirt and her raw, oozing scalp, Chup
thought he could see Charmian's sister in the unconscious face.
"Put
down your knife," said Zapranoth, "or I devour you. You will join
your whining Beast-Lord in my gut, where both of you can cry forever."
Chup
turned, but just enough to feed a little more wood into the fire, still not
looking up toward the demon. Then between thumb and finger Chup lifted a lock
of Zapranoth's life from the dark brown pile beside the flame. He tried to
think how Western wizards worded their spells, but he could not remember ever
hearing one of them. True, it might not be necessary to say anything at all,
with Zapranoth's life right in his hands. But he suspected that against such an
adversary, all the help that he could get would not be too much.
In his
insistent, overwhelming voice the demon said: "Far from here is a mountain
that I know of, having hidden in it gold in amounts undreamed of even by Som
the Dead. I see now, Chup of the North, that I have greatly underestimated you.
I am prepared to bargain, to avoid the trouble you can cause me."
And
Chup fed the first of Zapranoth's life into the fire, saying: "You will
fall by the flame. The knife of fire is in your head."
The
words were rather good, Chup thought, pleased at his own unexpected power of
invention. From outside there came what might have been an indrawn breath, but
was a sound too deep for human ears to fully register. Then Zapranoth said:
"I am convinced, Lord Chup. From now on we must deal as equals."
Very
good, thought Chup. What to say next?
"Your
ears are cut off."
"I
submit to you, Lord Chup! You are my master, and I will serve no other, so long
as you permit me to survive! As good beginning to my service, let me take you
to the golden mountain that I spoke of. Deeper inside it even than the vault of
gold, lies buried an emerald so great-"
Chup
opened his mouth and found words coming to him. "Opening him with this
knife of fire. Separating flesh - "
The
scream began in the mighty voice of Zapranoth, but ended in the shrilling of a
woman. She cried out then: "Ah, mercy, master! Burn me no more. To you I
must show myself in my true form." And Chup without stopping to think
looked out of his ruined building, and saw a young woman stretched out on the
ground, clothed scantily in her own long hair of fiery red, and in her one body
she was all the women he had everyearned to have, yes, Charmian among them. To
Chup she stretched out her imploring arms. "Ah, spare me, lord!"
He
craved no more the gold and emeralds of the East, but this temptation could
have moved him. Still, he knew better than to heed another lie. He burned more
hair.
"Separating
flesh, piercing hide. I give him to the flames."
The
woman screamed again, and in mid-scream her voice belonged to something else,
surely nothing human, and surely not the powerful Lord of Demons; but yet it
was Zapranoth's. With shaking hands Chup fed more hair into the crackling
flame. He was somehow making up the words he needed, or they were being sent to
him.
"In
the name ofArdneh-"
Where
had that name come from? Where had he heard it, before now?
"In
the name of He-Who-Wields-The-Lightning, Breaker of Citadels, I fetter
Zapranoth. I fetter him with metal. I make his members; So that he cannot
struggle. I force him to vomit what is in his stomach."
Chup
looked outside. The image of the woman was gone, and in its place lay something
huge, that made Chup think of greasy ashes, and of a mound of corpses on a
field of war. The thing was fettered in mighty hoops of shining metal, and the
labored breathing of it sounded like the wind. The greasy ashes stirred and
struggled, made heads and tails and many-jointed limbs, but could not get from
out the binding bands. And now a mouth larger than any of the others appeared,
yawning as if forced open from inside, and from it there tumbled forth all
manner of wretched people and beasts. The people wore the clothes of many
lands, or none at all, and rolled about and lay stunned and crying like newborn
babes, though most of them were grown. Among them were some soldiers of the
West, their weapons still in hand. And there was one huge figure, that Chup
recognized . . .
Tumbling
back to life from what had seemed the bitterest of nightmares, the High Lord
Draffut gave no immediate thought to his own condition, or to the outcome of
the battle, or to anything except the ruin of his lake. Disregarding the ruin
and confusion that surrounded him, he raised his eyes at once to what had been
his high domain. The radiant cascade of the lake had slowed to a mere trickle.
It was draining with the new finality of death.
He
rushed at once to climb the slope behind the citadel. Power remained in him to
melt the rock to life, and make it form holds for his hands and feet; the power
absorbed through ages of his dwelling in and near the lake, that would not let
him die, that healed his bones almost as fast as they were broken. Only this
life-power let him bear the shock when he had mounted to his lake and found it
a drained shell, cracked at the bottom like a broken egg. The dull, black
fabric of its inner lining, the only material the Old World had devised that
could resist the quickening force of pure life-principle-this shell remained,
now for the first time in his memory marked by no shifting patterns or gay
butterflies. The healing machines, their lives already fading, hopped and
struggled feebly, like dying frogs in a drained pond.
Draffut
did not stand long within the broken doorway, gazing at the utter ruin of his
life and purpose. The cries from down the slope came to his ears. Human cries,
from the battlefield, of men in deadly need and fear. He moved to answer them,
without stopping to considerwhat he might be able to do.
Down
the slope again he went, walking at first, then quickening his strides into a
run. Before him like a trodden anthill lay the demolished citadel and its
swarming men. Here and there they were still fighting one another. But there
were no more valkyries in the air.
Close
before Draffut one of them lay motionless, smashed by a fall, rotors bent and
body broken with the violence of its crash. A look through the sprung-open
belly doors showed Draffut that the man inside was cold and dead. Draffut,
raging, picked up the machine, shook it and shouted at it. Where his hands
touched the metal it stirred with faint life; but that was all. Only now did
the magnitude of what had happened come home to the Lord Draffut with full
force. Even if he could somehow repair or vivify this machine, there was
nowhere for it logo, no healing possible for the dead man inside. Nor for any of
the others who now lay upon the field, or who might fall tomorrow.
Far
down the mountainside, near where the great crack in the mountain had shattered
the citadel's outer wall, a bright gleam caught Lord Draffut's eye. It was the
many-colored radiance of the lake, trapped in a small pool in the rocks. At
once he tore the battered flyer apart, pulled out the corpse inside. Cradling
the body tenderly in one arm, he hurried on.
Reaching
the small pool, not much bigger than a bathub, he found that some of the
wounded of both armies had sought it out already, were sprawled beside it
drinking, or splashing the fluid on their wounds. Picking his way carefully
among these injured men, Lord Draffut reached a spot beside the radiant pool.
He dropped into it the dead man he carried, then set himself to disperse
healing to as many as he could.
With
every passing moment, more wounded, mostly Easterners, were crawling and
staggering to the place. A groaning, demanding throng grew rapidly around the
Lord of Beasts. The level of the fluid in the pool sank rapidly as well -rock
could not hold it in for long -and Draffut crouched low beside it, scooping up
healing handfuls which he poured into mouths or onto wounds. The dead man he
had carried here was sitting up and groaning now.
Draffut
splashed a remnant of the lake onto a mangled arm-stump, whose owner shouted
with the ending of his pain; perhaps a new and proper arm would grow. Another
man, his belly opened, came sliding in blood to reach the pool, and Draffut
poured for him an end of agony.
Amid
the general cries of pain, and with his dazed concentration on his task, Lord
Draffut did not notice when a different, heartier voice, raging and commanding,
was raised in the rear of the rapidly growing throng about him.
"-back
to your ranks, malingerers! The enemy still holds the field. You who can walk,
rejoin your units, cowards, or I'll give you wounds . . . Guardsmen! Take up
your arms and fight for me!"
Nor did
Lord Draffut, in his dazed state, fully notice what was happening when this
shouter came raving, scattering wounded Guardsmen from the pool with blows of
the flat of his sword. Draffut was aware only of one more victim reeling toward
him, with sunken eyes and the stink of terrible gangrene. Draffut scooped up
for this one a generous handful, and threw it accurately. From his hand the
fluid of the lake leaped out, a clear and innocent serpent in the air. Only in
that instant did the sunken eyes of the raving, raging man meet those of
Draffut, in a look that the Beast-Lord would long remember; and only in that
instant did Draffut know who this man was.
The
splash of liquid struck. A maddened shout ceased in mid-syllable, a sword
dropped clanging to theground. Then nothing more was heard orseenof Som the
Dead. He and his portion of the Lake of Life had vanished from the world of
men.
"
- with the knife of fire I cut off feet and hands,
Shut
his mouth and his lips - "
The
bellowing of Zapranoth grew louder and more desperate, and at the same time
became more muffled.
"Blunted
his teeth,
Cut his
tongue from his throat.
Thus I
took away his speech,
Blinded
his eyes,
Stopped
his ears,
Cut his
heart from its place."
The
fire swam before Chup's eyes, and the exhaustion of the magician, a feeling new
to him, seemed to weaken his every bone. Once more he begged the powers of the
West to send him words, for it was growing very hard to think. Then summoning
his strength, he shouted:
"
I made him as if he had never been!"
Silence
had fallen all across the riven plateau of the battlefield; in silence the army
of the East had begun to turn to desperate flight or to surrender. Looking
where Zapranoth had been, Chup could see no more metal hoops, no more heap of
greasy ashes, nothing.
But in
his mind still spoke the Demon-Lord: Master. Yet a very little of my life
remains. Save that, and from it all the rest can be remade. My powers can be
restored, to raise for you an army to lead, to build for you your kingdom -
Chup
with great care gathered the last hairs, while beside him Lisa-Carlotta moved
her mistreated head and once more opened her dazed eyes.
"His
name is not any more.
His
children are not.
He
existeth no more.
Nor his
kindred.
He
existeth not, nor his record;
He
existeth not, nor his heir.
His egg
cannot grow.
Nor is
his seed raised.
It is
dead.
And his
spirit, and his shadow, and his magic."
Thus
was the Lord of Demons, Zapranoth, destroyed, and thus did Chup of the North
earn a place in the army of the West. His bride was searched for, especially
where some said they had seen her pass, descending along a new path created by
the splitting of the mountain. But she was not found.
When
the last drops of his lake were gone, the great Beast-Lord Draffut fled to
somewhere where there were no cries of wounded men.
"Lisa?"
Rolf of the Broken Lands had come to speak to the unrecognizable girl who, they
said, had been his sister once.
"Rolf."
She knew him, but her voice was dull. She was inconsolable -not for her own
pain, not for the East's defeat, nor for any of the fallen -save one.
"My
Dark Lord," she said. "My strong protector. He was all I had."
Book
Three
Ardneh's
World
I
Ominor
They
were preparing a man for death by slow impalement, for the amusement of the
Emperor, who sat in meditative silence amid the blooming drowsy richness of his
garden. On the sloping lawn a little below his simple chair, the sharpened
stake had been erected in a space framed by formal plantings of tall flowers,
among which bees buzzed richly. A few meters beyond that the garden ended at a
low sea-wall of stone, and beyond the wall the vast calm lake began. So close
was the wall to where the Emperor John Ominor was waiting that with a little
effort he might have made a jewel -there was no other kind of stone in easy
reach-go splash.
In his
view the lake stretched east to meet the sky, and in that sky there frowned a
lone high thun-derhead, its cloudy base below the watery horizon. Something in
the appearance of the cloud suggested a giant air-elemental, but of course that
could not really be. The demons charged with the defense of the palace would
long since have taken the field against any such intruder, and the sky above
the lake would no longer be innocent and summery.
The man
who was to die-there was supposedly some evidence to link him with a plot
against the Emperor-let out his first unbelieving cry, as the sharpened wood
began to have its way with him. Ominor had not been paying close attention, he
had larger matters on his mind today, but now he uttered a small sound of
satisfaction and leaned back a little in his chair.
The
Emperor of all the East appeared to be neither old nor young (though in fact he
was very old indeed) and was not noticeably thin or fat. His coloring
approximated the human average. His clothes were simply cut, and were for the
most part white, with here and there fine trimmings of deep black. Around his
neck on a transparent chain there hung a sphere of black, the size of a man's
fist, shining as if with oil. It was nowhere pierced by any fastener, but held
to the chain by being enclosed in a light basketwork of silver filaments.
While
listening to his entertainment, John Ominor gazed out across the near-monotony
of the watery plain. Much closer than the thunderhead, but infinitely smaller,
a pair of wings were beating, with gradual enlargement. A courier reptile, who
perhaps embodied the final relay of a message that had started halfway round the
world. This pleasant confirmation of his power crossed the Emperor's mind
vaguely; time enough later to discover if the messenger brought good news or
bad. His gaze dropped to a fishing boat, that sculled past no more than half a
kilometer from shore. His eyes followed a fisherman now, but yet his mind was
elsewhere.
Today
Ardneh was coming to the palace.
By
electronics and witchcraft the Emperor had sought round the whole earth for his
most tenacious enemy. At first the objective of the hunt had been simple: to
find and kill. Then, when it had become apparent that finding Ardneh's life
might be endlessly difficult if not impossible, the searchers' efforts had been
bent toward arranging contact, negotiations.
Of
enemies John Ominor had plenty, both within and without the power structure he
controlled; but Ardneh was unique.
The
noises of the impaled man were wholly animal now, and the Emperor turned to
watch for a few moments. But he could not relax and enjoy himself, as he had
planned to do for a few moments before confronting his visitor. The meeting was
now less than an hour away. And Ardneh was beginning to loom too large.
True
enough, most of the West looked to Prince Duncan of Islandia as their foremost
leader. And Duncan was certainly formidable; he was now maintaining an army on
this very continent, where Ardneh's seaboard territory, the Broken Lands and a
few other contiguous provinces, gave Duncan a strategic base in which to rest
his forces between campaigns. Ominor of course continually planned reoccupation
of the seaboard, but somehow could never quite amass enough troops and demons
and materiel for the job, not while he was distracted and his strength was
drained by a hundred other guerilla conflicts and rebellions around the world.
And Duncan would never remain for long in his coastal stronghold, but pour his
army out again like some uncontainable liquid into the heart of the continent,
where among the vast forests and plains Ominor's generals would fail once again
to bring him to decisive battle.
Not far
from the sea-wall, and from where the Emperor sat, there stood a summerhouse
roofed with dark glass and sided with viny trellises. Glancing toward this
shelter, the Emperor saw that his councilors were beginning to assemble within
it.
Eight
high subordinates had been summoned to attend the confrontation with Ardneh.
All wore fine black garments edged and piped with white, negative images of the
Emperor's own distinctive garb. When he had counted the six men and two women
into the summerhouse, John Ominor rose from his chair and without haste walked
down to join them. The two torturers left off their careful work for a moment
to fall with foreheads to the ground as he passed near. Orninor glanced with
passing amusement at the victim on his stake, boldly upright as if in
insolence, and unlikely to be punished for it.
Inside
the summerhouse, the eight remained with foreheads against the sandy floor
until he had taken the chair at the head of the long table. Then they seated
themselves in order of precedence. He was certainly the most ordinary-looking
of the nine assembled.
There
were no formalities; Ominor simply looked enquiringly at the man who sat at his
right hand. This was his chief wizard, the High Sorcerer of all the East, who
had many names but was at present known simply and conveniently as Wood.
Wood
understood at once what question he was required to answer. He said flatly:
"Ardneh is not a human being." Today Wood himself was wearing his
most human aspect; he appeared old and gnarled, like some ancient tailor with
bowed legs and stringy-muscled arms. He had a big, bent nose, and oddly bulging
eyes that very few folk cared to meet.
"Some
elemental power, then," the Emperor commented. When confirmation of his
statement was not immediately forthcoming, the Emperor added quickly:
"Surely Ardneh is not a beast?" Ominor's speech as usual was loud and
quick, and as usual it was difficult for his hearers to gauge the exact degree
of his impatience.
Wood
answered quickly, daring to look his Emperor in the eye. "My Supreme Lord,
Ardneh is neither man nor woman, and surely he is no beast. He is therefore a
power, but I hesitate to call him elemental. And I think he is not a djinn. He
fits no known category. I must confess that there are things about him I do not
yet understand."
"An
understatement, surely. Keeping in mind this persistent lack of understanding,
what do you propose we do today?"
"That
we proceed as planned, my Supreme Lord." The answer came without noticeable
hesitation. Wood could scarcely have maintained his rank just below the Emperor
without considerable courage, as well as the proper amount of prudence. Around
the table the seven other councilors were waiting, still as carven images.
Abner, High Constable of the East, commander of Ominor's armies, sat straight
backed at Ominor's left hand, a thick muscle bulging in his neck as he looked
with unreadable eyes past the Emperor at Wood. The Emperor was silent, watching
Wood as he might have watched a prisoner on trial. But it was the way he looked
at everyone.
Wood
went on: "If Ardneh is so powerful that we cannot defend ourselves from
him here, at the center of our world ..." With a little shrug he let the
sentence trail off.
For a
few moments no one in the summerhouse spoke. From the middle distance came the
gurgles of the wretch who labored hard at dying on his stake. Then Ominor
lifted his weighty gaze from Wood, and flicked it toward the foot of the table.
"You who labor in the uncommon arts, what can you tell me today that I
have not already heard?"
The
junior of the two technologists present only bowed his head in answer, while
the senior stood up as spokesman, stammering: "V-very little, Supreme
Lord. The electronic direction-finding stations continue in operation, and
sites for two new stations have been established since our last meeting. But
where the life of Ardneh may be hidden, that we still cannot say." Candor,
even about failures, was the least dangerous course to take with Ominor. All
who survived as his top aides had learned this well.
Most of
the others around the table were indicating by their expressions how scornful
they were of such esoteric methods as the two technologists were striving to
employ. Technology was well enough in its place, making wheels for wagon or
chariot, forging swords with hammer, bellows, and anvil. But no one understood
electronics, no, not even the technologists who played with Old World gear.
Ominor
was not so scornful. The Western enemy had more than once used unorthodox
technology with good success.
"Let
me hearwhat the rest ofyou have to say," the Emperor ordered now, sweeping
his eye around the circle. "Can any one of you give me a reason why we
should amend or delay our plan for meeting Ardneh?" None could; they
murmured one by one, bowed, and shook their heads. The Supreme Lord touched
that which hung around his neck, the sphere of blackness on its crystal chain.
"And this is what I had best offer Ardneh as a bribe?"
Again
the councilors murmured, in a consensus of approval. No one knew exactly what
the sphere was, though it was certainly some Old World artifact. Its interior
structure, visible only to wizards and quasimaterial, inhuman powers -and
presumably to its makers as well-was complex and incredibly beautiful. Demons,
djinn, and elementals exposed to the sphere seemed to find it the equivalent of
a giant ruby or emerald in human values.
Facing
back toward his chief wizard, Ominor returned to an earlier theme: "And
what danger will he be to us here, Wood, if he does come?"
"No
danger at all, Supreme Lord. My demons and subordinate magicians at every level
are alert. Some of the supposedly neutral powers who acted as go-betweens in
arranging this meeting are-as you know, Supreme Lord, but some of your
councilors may not -secretly in our service. Ardneh has been too distrustful of
them to let them find out much about him, but they report no indication that he
is planning any attack on us today. Would that he did attempt to strike at us!
To do that he would have to gather his full presence here, not only, so to
speak, send us his eyes and ears and voice and little more. The more powerful
his manifestation, the more he will render himself vulnerable. My demons are
ready, their jaws will close upon him." Behind the wizard Wood, above the
innocent lake, the air shimmered for a moment, and there were visible in it
three pools of shadow, distinct for a moment despite the sun. Then the air
steadied, and all was azure summer once again. Wood went on: "I earnestly
desire that he will try to attack us here today, but I fear he is too
clever."
But
Ominor did not seem satisfied. His manner was that of a probing judge.
"Our potential visitor, whom you say your powers are set to spring upon,
slew the great demon Zapranoth, in the Black Mountains, as easily as a man
might crush a toad. So you have reported to me."
Wood
blinked, and then it almost seemed he smiled. "Zapranoth of the Black
Mountains, Lord? Yes. But do not attach too much importance to that. To the
least of these three powers in the air behind me now-to the least of them,
Zapranoth was vassal. Of demons greater than these three above the lake there
is only -one." Wood's voice dropped on the last word, but still it seemed
to have a special emphasis.
The
plan for a direct confrontation with Ardneh had been Ominor's own idea. A month
ago he had broached it to his council arguing thusly: The power called Ardneh
was certainly a sore annoyance to the East, though (as yet, at least) he could
not be considered a mortal threat. Ardneh seemed to seldom or never appear in
his own form, if he had one. Instead he worked in one human avatar after
another, subtly possessing or influencing men to his own ends, which seemed to
be in general agreement with those of the West, though Western wizards were
thought not to have any certain control over Ardneh. Usually Ardneh worked so
smoothly and carefully that his chosen host or partner seemed to feel that he
was acting on his own. Only the greatest wizards on both sides of the war, and
the high leaders they advised, were fully aware of how much the recent
successes of the West were due to Ardneh.
Growing
impatient of managing any direct attack upon this subtle foe, Ominor had
settled on subversion, laced with treachery, as a logical alternative.
Now in
the garden the cries of the impaled man were weakening rapidly. The torturers
had prudently withdrawn a little distance, to be well out of earshot of the
conference in the summerhouse, and as a consequence the victim seemed likely to
enjoy a relatively rapid death.
Ominor,
as the executioners had judged, was paying no further attention to the
diversion. Having completed his brooding, almost accusatory survey of his
aides, he got to his feet and said: "Then let us bring him. On with
it."
The
conference broke up. The lieutenants of the powerful councilors hastened to
them to receive orders. Soon all the garden back to the ivied palace wall was
cleared of common soldiers, slaves, and everyone else not concerned directly
with the coming confrontation. The torturers before they left were told by Wood
that they might let their victim stay, told by Wood who nodded to himself as he
spoke and thought that he saw opportunity here.
Explaining
his thought to his Lord of Lords, the wizard said: "Ardneh has in the past
once or twice possessed such a victim and acted through him. We shall have him,
if he dares to try that trick today."
Ominor
thought briefly, then nodded his agreement. Followed now by a deferential
train, he left the summerhouse and moved a short distance to where Wood's
assistants were beginning to set the stage for the encounter. This was on a
flat paved place some ten meters square, bordered on one side by the low
balustrade that guarded the sea wall's outer edge, the lake rippling and
chuckling some four or five meters below. The Emperor beheld several of Wood's
most able aides, master wizards themselves in any company but his, on their
knees on the pavement, with chalk and charcoal making most careful diagrams.
Now the
word was sent at once through intermediary powers to Ardneh that he was
expected, under truce, as soon as he could manifest himself.
Some
time passed. "What is going on in the mind of our guest?" the Emperor
asked, breaking a little silence that had fallen on the group. "Is he
having second thoughts about the wisdom of paying us a call?"
Wood
lifted his gnarly hands, let them dangle in front of him as if seeking to dry
them in the breeze. His two little fingers moved slightly, twitching like
insects' antennae. "Supreme Lord, he is near." Wood's bulging eyes,
looking blind now, seeing more than any other eyes present, gazed out across
the lake, "My Emperor, he is approaching. When you can see something near
at hand above the water, speak and he will hear."
Ominor
at first saw only the distant fishing craft, and the towering cloud unchanged.
Then, following a subtle gesture from Wood, he brought his attention closer to
the shore, and noticed a patch of ripples somehow different from all the rest.
At any other time he would probably have taken them for some effect of wind.
But steadily they came closer, not blending like other waves into the general
motions of the water. The Emperor was magician enough to feel it now. A hint of
arrogant immensity. The presence of hostile power, aloof, quiet, waiting. The
ripples, slowing their progress gradually, drifted to within a dozen meters of
the low balustrade. Ominor's accustomed eyes could tell now that above the
ripples there was - something.
In his
loud voice filled with certitude he said: "Hear me, dullard of the West!
It must be plain by now, even to you, that the hour of your complete
destruction cannot be far away. Yet I admit that it lies in your power to cause
me some inconvenience still. And rather than see such abilities as you possess
turned into nothingness, I would bring them into my domain. I am willing that
you should receive some substantial rank in the hierarchy of the East, one that
is probably higher than you dare to expect."
He had
spoken slowly enough for his hearer to have readily interrupted him with an
answer at any of the several places. But there was no answer. The Emperor
glanced at Wood and at his other waiting councilors, but got no help. Whether
Ardneh's silence was born of an attempt to impress them, or of fear, or of some
other cause, there was no clue.
Under
these conditions Ominor had no intention of going on with a long-winded speech.
At the moment he had only one more thing to say: "In token of my sincerity
. . . "And pulling from around his neck the crystal chain with its
impressive burden, he whirled it once around his head and sent it flying out
over the water, spinning in the sun. He watched for the bribe to vanish, into
seeming air or in the grasp of some materialization. But the Emperor was
disappointed; the treasure only splashed and sank, prosaically as a lump of
rock, going quickly out of sight in the deep water.
Where
no more strange ripples moved. The air was empty once again.
Close
by his side, Wood said: "Supreme Lord, the creature is gone. All contact
has been broken."
The
Emperor felt his tension slide away. Through him in a flash there passed
understanding, contempt for his enemy, and elation. "He did not take the prize."
"No.
It lies somewhere in the water there."
The
Emperor jutted out his chin, his teeth bared in a smile. That Ardneh might take
the bribe and then refuse to honor it had been considered; it would have meant
no serious loss. Of course it had been expected that he might refuse with some
contemptuous speech or gesture. But to cut and run, in panic ... it could
scarcely be anything else. The quasimaterial powers were if anything more
concerned than humans were with saving face. Overawed by the Emperor and his
wizards, frightened by the palace guard of monstrous demons . . .
Suddenly
suspicious, Ominor asked Wood: "Do you suppose he smelled the poisoned
bait?" The ebon sphere had been laden with the most subtle and powerful
curses Wood could devise.
"Nay,
great Lord." Wood too was smiling in this moment of success, having proven
his ability to control the greatest of enemies at close quarters.
Turning
away from the balustrade, the Emperor walked deliberately back in the direction
of his palace, massed behind its palisade of trees.
Without
turning or pausing, the Emperor ordered Wood: "Make some suitable plan to
rid us of this creature Ardneh. We know now he can be no mortal threat. Still .
. ."
"Yes,
Lord of Lords." Turning momentarily to a subordinate, Wood said in an
aside: "Use great care in recovering the poison bauble from the water.
Better set a guard, and let it lie awhile. Who so comes into possession of it
in the next hour will need all my skill to keep him healthy."
The
Emperor's train moved on at an easy pace toward the interior of the palace
grounds. There was a feeling of general relief in the air. Ordinary servants
were beginning to reappear, soft gongs were striking a time-signal for
mid-afternoon. Between beds of unusually luxuriant flowers Ominor paused, and
the lawn chair he had been sitting in earlier was instantly unfolded and placed
ready for him.
There
were several business matters to be attended to. All were comparatively minor
things, however, and within half an hour the Emperor was signing the last
required paper, with relief because he felt inexplicably tired. Raising his
eyes, he saw coming from the central parts of the palace an oddly mixed group
of about half a dozen men. A pair of them were high-ranking wizards, two at
least were household stewards, some were members of his personal bodyguard. All
were moving with a sort of reluctant haste toward John Ominor, as if none of
them wanted either to be first with whatever news they bore, or to give any
appearance of delay.
He
stood up and his legs nearly failed him. In his guts there twisted something
like the leaden claw of death. Another poisoning plot uncovered, then. Perhaps
too late, this time. Wood came from somewhere, maybe out of the air, to stand
before him gesturing, and the pangs in his midsection began to ease,
reluctantly.
And now
Ominor saw what those coming from the center of the palace were holding up on
its crystal chain. He heard their disjointed, fearful explanations of how it
had just been cut from the belly of a huge, fresh-caught fish, one marked for
the Emperor's dinner.
Wood's
chief assistants were coming running to join him, to help to combat the deadly
spells they had so recently set in motion. As soon as he felt a little better,
Ominor called to him the High Constable, Abner.
The
soldier towered above his chair. "My Emperor?"
"The
wizards have failed me. There is a mission I want you to undertake. We must
learn, begin to learn, what Ardneh is."
II
Summonings
In
Rolf's dream the demon uttered a deafening warcry and slew the world, cutting
the life from it with one sweep of a great two-handed blade. The blade drew
with it the blackness of oblivion, drew a curving black wall that completed
itself to make a sphere and put an end to all light everywhere. Rolf cried out
in fear, and leaped backwards to save himself, knowing that to save himself was
what he had to do to save the world.
Before
he was fully awake he was on his feet, starting up with sword in hand from
where he had been lying cloak-wrapped in the long grass, stretched out sleeping
on soft earth. Dazedly he realized that his outcry had not been confined to the
world of dreams; his nine comrades in the patrol had been awakened, were
gathering with hasty caution round him in the dark; and others elsewhere might
have heard the yell also.
"I
dreamed, I dreamed, I dreamed," he kept on whispering, till he was sure
the other soldiers understood. They muttered and grumbled and listened in the
night, for the approach of some alerted enemy.
At
last, amid some sour, whispered jokes, Mewick, the patrol commander, ordered as
a precaution that all should mount; they were to move camp by a kilometer or
so. This was quickly accomplished, for here on this vast, grassy plain one spot
was much like another, and there were no tents and little baggage. Then with
the camp re-established, riding-beasts once more picketed and a pair of
sentries posted, Mewick came to where Rolf was sitting and squatted down beside
him.
Neither
spoke for a while. It was a warm and moonless night, with a thick powdering of
stars showing irregularly between smooth-flowing, barely visible clouds. The
insects of early summer racketed in the tall grass.
After a
few moments Rolf whispered: "It was a warning, I believe."
"Of
what?" Mewick's voice was soft, as usual. "Shall I call Loford
here?"
"I
can talk to him now, or in the morning. But there is little I can tell
him." Already the dream was disintegrating in the grip of clumsy waking
memory. "There was danger, and a sense that I must act at once, to save
myself. Not just fear, but a sense that my life was-valuable."
Mewick
nodded, considering. "Talk to Loford in the morning, then. But are you
going to jump up yelling again the next time you go to sleep?"
"Sleep
seems far from me now," Rolf said. "I'll take a turn at
sentry-go."
"No.
You stood your watch. Sleep now. The dawn is not far away."
Rolf
shrugged, and stretched out on the ground, pulling his cloak round him, making
sure that his weapons were in easy reach. He closed his eyes, though he felt
sure that he was not going to get any more sleep . . .
. . .
and this time the demon-monster's sword was coming right at him, with
body-splitting force. His leap and yell were no more under voluntary control
than the gush of blood from a new wound. His waking convulsion left Rolf on his
feet with sword in hand once more, knowing that once more he had put his
comrades all in danger . . .
An
Eastern soldier, real and solid as the grass and earth, was crouching just
three meters off, sword half raised for the easy stroke that would have drained
Rolf's sleeping life into the soil. A dim, tense outline in the deceptive,
grayish predawn light, the man got his blade up in the way of the hard overhand
cut Rolf aimed at him. But the parry was not made with sufficient force, and
the man's face and shoulder erupted blood. He grunted, and could do nothing
else before the next blow came to kill him.
The
others of what happened to be an exceptionally competent Western patrol were
springing up at hair-trigger tension from what could have been no more than
light, uncertain sleep. Tall Chup hewed right and left and the Eastern men he
struck fell back like children knocked aside. And Mewick seemed to be fighting
on both sides of Rolf at once, opponents toppling before his battle-hatchet and
short sword as if it were a dance they had rehearsed. And years of hard
experience had made Rolf a better fighter than most. As soon as he had finished
his first opponent, he turned with methodical swiftness to find another.
A white
flash came inside his skull, a painless, noiseless, stunning blast. With a
moment of intense clarity of thought he knew that he was wounded, and waited
with a certain detachment to find out if he was slain. He felt no agony, no
sickening shock, but still his legs betrayed him and he fell.
Ardneh.
The half-familiar, subtle and inhuman presence was with him suddenly and
reassuringly, more powerfully and personally than ever before, unmistakably the
same as that which had brushed him when he rode the Elephant.
Ardneh,
he thought, do not make me fall, help me to rise. But down he went, to lie on
his face in the deep grass while struggling feet ripped through it all around
him. Rolf could not move, but his mind was clear, and knowledge was sent him
from a voiceless and unseen source. It was Ardneh himself who had wakened him
with warning dreams, to keep him from being slaughtered in his sleep, and
Ardneh also who had just struck Rolf down. He was being kept out of the
fighting, for some purpose he could not yet plainly see.
Something
that was of awesome, overriding importance . . . but right now his field of
vision was cut to a one-eyed view of grasstalks, and his own left hand. He
could feel that his right hand still held his sword, but it was not by any
conscious management of his.
The
fighting and chasing around him seemed to go on endlessly. Time was slow at the
bottom of the tall grass. He was given reassurance, in Ardneh's subtle,
wordless way, that the West was winning the skirmish. Ardneh had many other
demands upon his energy. Rolf was going to be left to himself now to recover,
which should not take him long.
An age
or two had passed before he heard the voices of some of his friends, dourly
cautious, commenting as they found the body of one of their sentries, slain by
stealth. The other sentry had come through all right, it seemed, as had the
animals. Now feet trampled close to Rolf again, surrounded him, and stopped.
Mewick's
soft voice announced it simply: "Rolf is dead."
Hands
turned him over; when his living face appeared under the now-brightening sky,
vbices exclaimed in surprise.
Rapidly,
now that he had been moved, the life flowed back into his limbs. He sat up,
breaking out in a cold sweat. To a flurry of questions, he answered with such
explanation as he could give. He did not understand it very well himself.
Loford,
who was the only wizard present, listened with grave headshakings and then conferred
with Mewick. Then Loford drew from his bag of magical apparatus a thin slab of
wood in two parts, hinged like a folding game board. Loford cleared a little
flat space on the ground and put down his board, and on it he cast straws once,
twice, thrice, to see in which direction the patrol should move next. No
divination was infalliable, of course, but Mewick wanted all the help he could
get in reaching a decision.
With
each cast the indicated direction was the same. Northwest. Mewick, watching
closely, wore a deeper frown than usual. There was, or should be, little that
way but unpopulated wasteland for a thousand kilometers or more.
In
response to an inquiring look from his commander, Loford said succinctly:
"Ardneh." Then he murmured the words of the appropriate spell and
tried again.
Northwest.
"North."
The word came firmly, in the voice of the young seeress, Anita, whose advice
was so often hesitant. Prince Duncan of the Offshore Islands, who had been
leaning forward in expectation of a struggle to catch some mumbled obscurity,
eased back now in his camp chair. Here, many kilometers west of Mewick's
patrol, the dawn was yet no more than a faint promise, and a lamp was lit
inside his tent.
The
girl Anita, mumbler though she usually was, had been proven the most reliable
oracle that Dun-can had yet been able to conscript. With Duncan's chief wizard
Gray now standing at her shoulder, she sat in a chair opposite Duncan's,
herbreathing deep and slow and her eyes fixed somewhere over the Western
commander's shoulder.
"Anita."
Duncan's voice was insistently reasonable. "Why should we march into the
north?" The map of the continent, spread out in his mind's eye, could give
no reason, except possibly to confuse the enemy. Nothing lay to his north but a
thousand kilometers of wasteland. To Duncan it seemed likely that some enemy
power was working through the seeress now despite Gray's precautions, trying to
lead them into a trap.
Anita
answered: "To win the war. More I must not tell you at this time."
The voice was the girl's own, which was unusual for one possessed by a power;
and this sudden cool assumption of authority was startling, whoever the power
might be.
Duncan's
head lifted. "Are you Ardneh?" he asked sharply.
"I
am," said the girl, looking at him with an empress' manner. When herself,
she was too shy to meet his eyes for long.
Behind
the girl's chair, tall Gray turned startled eyes to meet Duncan's, then slowly
nodded: in his opinion it was Ardneh. For the moment Duncan could say nothing.
Ardneh had never made contact with him before, but Duncan had pondered long,
trying to decide what course he should take when the meeting did take place, as
seemed inevitable. He had come to no decision, but now he must; what attitude
should he -and, in effect, the entire human West-take with regard to the being
who called himself Ardneh?
It was
very quiet inside the tent. The army lay, to protect it against discovery by
spying reptiles during the day, within a forest of high-crowned trees. Duncan
could now hear the small creatures that dwelt in the branches above his tent,
beginning their stirrings of the day.
Ardneh
was unique. No wizard of West or East could understand him. He was subtle, but
the power ... In the struggle with Zapranoth, the very mountains had been
cracked. That much Duncan had seen for himself, afterward. It was as if the
obscure Old World quotation were true indeed, that some put into Ardneh's
mouth: I am Ardneh, who rides the Elephant, who wields the lightning, who rends
fortifications as the rushing passage of time consumes cheap cloth . . .
But
could the West take this unidentified power as unquestioned leader, king and
Lord?
Duncan
arose and moved to the doorway of his tent, a moderately tall young man with sunbleached
long hair and a face that worry and weather had made look older than it was.
Moving outside, he ignored, because he was not conscious of it, the salute of
the runner waiting before his tent, who sprang up ready for duty. The camp,
almost soundless and invisible in the pre-dawn dark, stretched unseen before
Duncan.
Now, on
Ardneh's unexplained -wish, order, whateveryou wanted to call it -he was
supposed to swing his whole army north, a move for which there seemed to be no
military justification. No, there could be no thought of making such a move on
trust.
Duncan
spun and re-entered the tent. Facing the girl who was still in trance, he
snapped: "What will happen if I do not move the army as you say?"
Without
hesitation Anita replied: "You will lose the war."
"How
am I to know that you are to be trusted?"
"By
its fruit the tree is known." Duncan grunted. He thought a moment more,
then barked orders to his wizards, directing them to prepare alternate means of
divination. He watched while they roused the girl from trance, and remembered
to say a kind word to her as she was taken out, flustered, shy, and
unremembering. Then he called for and quickly ate a hearty breakfast, meanwhile
hearing reports brought in by birds just in from their night's scouting.
The
daylight was not yet full when Duncan left his tent again to stride out through
the sprawling camp. He passed among rows of quiet tents, and of men and women
sleeping cloak-wrapped on the earth. Some were up and about, readying food for
the morning meal, repairing gear, cleaning, washing, inventorying, sharing out
supplies. Up in the trees, if you looked for them, the returned birds were
visible, brownish gray and shapeless, hiding heads and eyes against the glare
of day.
Now the
rows of tents were left behind. Passing a sentry who informally nodded to him
in recognition, Duncan entered denser forest. Soon he had reached gloomy
thickets through which the eye could scarcely find a pathway. But now as Duncan
continued to step forward one bush or another bent itself aside for him. he
kept unhesitatingly to the path thus indicated. He had come some fifty paces
past the last human sentry before he got a direct look at his pathmaker: a
forest elemental, almost tree-like in appearance, raised great gnarled limbs at
some distance to Duncan's left. It was guiding him in turns and doublings,
supposedly preventing the approach of any unfriendly power.
At
length the parting of a final screen of bushes disclosed before him a wide,
still glade. In the middle of the glade there stood three men, or at any rate
three tall forms, seemingly garbed more in darkness and in light than in any
human-woven cloth. They were his three chief wizards, Duncan knew, but which of
them was which he could not have guessed. The three turned simultaneously to
face the Prince as he stepped out of the bush.
He
could not see their faces clearly and did not try. As had been prearranged, in
a loud voice he demanded: "Ardneh, Ardneh, Ardneh! Who is he? What is he?
Will it be to my advantage to trust his word, to heed his will, to follow where
he leads?"
One
magician threw back his head, cowled and faceless, and replied: "If we do
not trust and heed and follow him, I see the end of the war."
"That
has a hopeful sound."
"The
end of war, the backs of Western men bent hopelessly under the Eastern lash,
their babies slain, their women and their lands despoiled. That is the future I
see if we reject the power called Ardneh now."The faceless speaker bowed
his head.
A second
spoke: "Lord Duncan, if we do trust the power called Ardneh now, I see no
swift end to the war. I cannot see an end at all."
"Bah!
All things in this world have an end. Still, better an augury of uncertainty
than one of doom. What else?"
The second
wizard continued: "I see that fearful things must fall upon our people, if
we heed the call that Ardneh sends today."
He who
had spoken first to Duncan raised his head again at that, and said: "You
do not tell what all of us must see, that fearful things must fall upon us,
soon, whatever the good Prince chooses."
Duncan
put in, impatiently: "It is war, and we all know what that short word
means. Can you add to it aught of fear that we have yet to learn?"
And the
second seer: "This much; I see Ardneh -not clearly, but I know that it is
he - caught in the grip of some power of evil stronger than he is, caught and
dying whilst our army flees from trying to help. This the result if we listen
to him now, accept his leadership. If we do not, I cannot see his death, or
even the appearance of this enemy of incredible strength."
The two
magicians who had so far spoken fell silent now, looking at Duncan, then
turning to follow the direction of his eyes with their own.
The
third wizard, who seemed now to stand the tallest, broke his silence.
"Lord Duncan, it is all true, what both of them have told you. If we
accept the leadership of Ardneh, I see Ardneh ringed about with enemies and
dying, and I see you despairing in retreat. And then . . . that vision ends in
some great violence. If we do not accept and follow Ardneh, the vision is even
clearer, and, at least to me, even more terrible. For in it the West and all it
stands for is no more ..."
"Hold!"
Duncan commanded. "All of you! If by your arts you can see these things,
must not Ardneh be able to see them too?"
The
three conferred together, whispering. Then the first replied: "It would
seem to be not beyond his powers."
"Well,
then, if he is truly on our side . . ."Duncan lost the thread of what he
had meant to say. Perhaps he was distracted by the way the three faceless
wizards were now all turned toward him with a certain new tension in their
postures, as if they had suddenly seen something new and peculiar about him.
It
occurred to him also that he should take more time to think about the patrols
he had routinely scattered in all directions to see what. . . no, especially he
must consider those working far to the north and . . . actually, one patrol in
particular required some thought. One of the men in it was a black-haired
youth, short but strong-looking, named Rolf or something like that. Yes,
perhaps he had heard of this Rolf before -some matter connected with
technology. Ardneh might well now want this Rolf to do something technological
again, since whatever it was before had worked out so well.
As
Duncan thought further he seemed to see deeper into the matter. It came to him,
as a remembered secret that should be shared with few or none, that this new
technological mission forwhich Rolf (and the patrol that included Rolf) should
be diverted would probably involve a certain object black as shiny ebony, a
somehow gem-like thing about the same size as a man's clenched fist. Ardneh had
probably handled a similar thing recently, seen and handled such a thing for
the first time, and in the course of that handling had obtained a clue as to
the existence and whereabouts of this larger and vastly more valuable one, the
true worth of which was not yet appreciated by any human being. It was now in
the possession of some adherent of the East, somewhere in a northern desert
where the patrol of which Rolf was a member, if they were fast enough and lucky
enough, might be in time to intercept. . .
So
smoothly and with such seeming Tightness did this train of thought flow through
Prince Duncan's mind, that only after it had progressed thus far did he awake
to the fact that it was bringing him new knowledge, that it must have its
origin in some mind other than his own.
Ardneh?
he demanded, silently, but with a concentrated urgency of thought that was the
equivalent of a shout. There was no answer, save that the flow of ideas about
the gem-like thing, whose existence he had never before suspected, broke off.
Ardneh,
you cannot manage me that way. I will not be controlled. But even as his
challenging thought went forth he knew that no effort had been made to control
him. He had only been taken partly into Ardneh's confidence.
The air
within the glade had cleared. The wizards once again had faces, and were
pressing round him anxiously.". . . Lord Duncan, Prince,"tall Gray
was repeatedly demanding. When he saw that Duncan was aware of him, he added:
"He came to you directly. Prince, did you not feel his weight?"
"Yes,
yes. Now I have felt him. Listened to him. Whether I believe him is still
another question."
They
pressed him for more information but there was little more that he could tell;
Ardneh was still a mystery. He led the others back to the camp, where he
plunged alone into his tent for a time to argue with himself amid maps,
reports, intelligence estimates. There were strong arguments on both sides, but
already in his heart he was more than half convinced that soon he would be
moving the army north.
III
Banditry
Full summer
had come, and Abner, High Constable of the East, with the dust of hard
journeying upon his clothes, sweltered standing in the small room high under
the sun-beaten roof of the caravanserai. Around him a few quick and silent
servants hurried, nimbly adjusting their movements in the cramped quarters to
the Constable's bulky, careless presence. Dust raised by hasty efforts at
cleaning still hung visible before the small, high windows in the prison-like
walls. The servants were unpacking things and moving the Constable in with
practiced efficiency, while he looked around him with distaste. The place had
looked more inviting from the outside. It would have been better, the Constable
was thinking now, to have camped in the open again; his escort was strong enough
to have nothing to fear from bandits, and there could be no sizable Western
force in the area. But his companion had wanted to spend a night or two
indoors, and to humor her he had agreed.
Of
course he could change his orders and move out again, but he had had a weary
day in the saddle and was not minded to wait longer for his bath and such
pleasures as the evening might afford. So let it be. In the next room of his
little suite, which was of course the least dilapidated of the establishment,
he could hear the buckets of bath-water already being carried in. Standing by a
window and tall enough to peer down from it, he could see in the courtyard
below how the weary loadbeasts of his retinue were being unloaded, watered, and
bedded for the night.
The
south wall of the courtyard below was pierced by a single central gate, the
only way in or out. On the other three sides were buildings, all the same
three-story height. The building the Constable stood in, and the one opposite,
were divided into small apartments and barrack-like chambers, the ground floors
usable interchangeably by animals or by humans of the lower classes. The
building that formed the third side of the enclosure, opposite the gate,
contained a tavern, a brothel, a store, and the small quarters of the Master of
the Station and his few permanent guards. All the buildings had windows only on
their inner sides, facing the central square, and in their outer walls mere
arrow-slits.
Probably
a couple of hundred people were now inside the walls, two-thirds of them in the
Constable's retinue. Nor had they seen another living human during the last two
days. This remote region of the continent seemed to have been forsaken even by
the war. Here and there moved roving bands of outcasts, deserters from East and
West. But as for Duncan, his maneuverings, like Ominor's, were many kilometers
to the south.
The
Emperor of the East had assumed command of his own armies in the field, freeing
his Constable for another mission, that of learning about Ardneh. The magicians
had failed miserably. Abner had the Emperor's trust, as much as anyone could be
said to have it. He was journeying widely in this desolate part of the country
to interview people, mostly Eastern officers, who in the past in one way or another
had had something to do with Ardneh. More such Eastern people were to be found
here than anywhere else, because those who had survived a struggle with
Ardneh-inspired forces tended to be under a cloud of failure, and those whose
failures were deemed mild tended to be assigned to remote places where nothing
important depended on them. Those whose failures were thought grave by Ominor
were seldom in any condition to be interviewed.
Of
course Abner might have summoned to the capital the people he wanted to talk
to, eyewitnesses who had been engaged in the various battles in which Ardneh
was known to have taken a hand. But then they would keep re-working their
stories to put themselves in a more favorable light. He had to convince them
that information was what he wanted, not more scapegoats. Just talking directly
to the High Constable was intimidating enough for most of them.
A few
had other reactions. One of these had engaged the Constable's interest for
reasons that had nothing to do with Ardneh; she had been traveling with him now
for half a month. Two days after he met her he had sent home his other
concubines.
The
stone walls of the caravanserai were thick, but the fit of the massive wooden
doors was far from tight, and now from the apartment next to Abner's there came
plainly the slide and thump of baggage being moved, and the voice of the Lady
Charmian in the shrill tones she used with servants. Abner listened. In the
very ugliness of that voice, which at other times could hold all the female sweetness
in the world, there was a fascination. Even by its incongruity the voice evoked
the unbelievable beauty of her face and body. Truly a most remarkable woman,
even in the eyes of a man who had his pick of what the East and the subjugated
lands could offer. And it was a nice touch that he could blend his business
with his pleasure. Charmian had been at the debacle of the Black Mountains. Not
that she had been able to tell him much of Ardneh.
Abner
squinted against the lowering summer sun in the northwestern sky. Along the
shaded porch of the brothel-tavern, some of its girls were quarreling, and had
reached the stage of pulling hair. At the other side of the courtyard, three
travellers, evidently some kind of traders, were being let in through the massive,
narrow gate.
. . .
yes, the woman was already assuming a ridiculous importance in his life. Not
for the first time, he suspected magic. When he heard the door close behind his
servants and knew he was alone he reached for amulets of great power that hung
around his neck inside his outer garments. With these devices given him by Wood
himself, Abner probed for any indication of a love-charm being worked. But to
his passes and mutterings now no answer came. The woman's magic was no more
than feminine beauty and cleverness. No more? Those were quite enough.
When
Abner had met Charmian she was living with the commander of a small cavalry
post, in a place even more desolate and isolated than this caravanserai-a great
come-down for her. Obviously she saw Abner as a miraculous chance to not only
regain lost ground but leap far ahead of the places she had fallen from. The
lady wanted power and position, and would spare no pains to get them. The
cavalry commander had been unable to hide his chagrin at his loss, when Abner
had invited the lady to accompany him, even as she herself had been openly
overjoyed. Well, someday Ominor might claim her for himself; but neither he nor
Abner would ever be so openly dismayed at the loss of this or any other woman .
. .
Rolf,
Chup, and Loford, having passed the brief scrutiny of the Master of the Station
and been admitted through the gate - no very strict precautions against bandits
were being taken, it seemed, because of the unusually large party of armed men
who lay within the walls tonight-were sent on to find such lodgings as they
might. They had put on clothing suitable for merchants and had counterfeited
the general appearance of such as well as they were able. Their apparent caste
thus achieved might at another time have gained them lodgings in the second or
possibly the uppermost floor of one of the dormitory buildings, but today a
small room on the lower level of servants and stables was the best that they
could do. The Constable's retinue and a party of well-to-do slave dealers had
taken over everything else from the top down.
Even
with some guidance from Ardneh it had taken Mewick and his patrol several weeks
to find Abner's trail. They had been following him closely for four days now,
being too few to attempt an open assault on such a large party. Rolf still felt
the certainty, send wordlessly by Ardneh, that the strange object they were to
seize was in the baggage of Abner or someone traveling with him. Ardneh's
influence had become so convincing that Mewick had turned his patrol in the
desired direction even before orders to do so came by bird-messenger from
Duncan. The orders when they came were explicit, brought by birds who told how
Duncan was starting to turn his whole army north: the seizure of the jewel was
to be attempted at all costs to the patrol.
Abner's
decision to stop at the caravanserai offered at least some prospect of a
chance. Thus, the plan to send three men behind the same walls as the
Constable. The very added security of the walls might induce the enemy to let
down his guard, and make some action possible.
Once in
their ground-floor room, which they had claimed by evicting a miscellany of
beasts of burden into the open courtyard, the three putative merchants had no
difficulty, looking out through their uncloseable window, in picking out the
high narrow windows of the Constable's chambers in the building opposite. It
was certain that he would have taken the poor best that the place could offer;
and Chup and Loford had had enough experience with caravanserais of similar
design to know where the most desirable rooms must be.
After
seeing to their animals, and stowing their meager baggage in the most easily
watched corner of their room, the three of them held converse in voices inaudible
more than an arm's length away.
Chup
mused: "It will not be easy, I think, to get near enough to strike."
Loford
could look the mild tradesman part quite easily, and had been the spokesman at
the gate. He answered now: "It is too early yet to tell. Give them a night
of carousing, and see if by tomorrow they have not begun to be a little slow to
notice things, a little lazy."
Rolf
said: "Also, remember this. Just getting near and striking will not avail
us anything."
Chup
shook his head a centimeter or two in disagreement. "To kill Abner would
be something, a deep wound for the East. Worth taking a chance for, whether or
not we can do the job for which we came."
Rolf,
putting flat authority into his quiet voice, said: "No, to kill Abner is
nothing if we cannot get the stone we want and get away with it. So Ardneh
says." Beyond that he could give his friends no explanation, for Ardneh
had given none to him. Should Rolf be captured and questioned, still he would
be able to say no more. But he spoke with conviction, having faith in Ardneh.
The
other two exchanged a look of age and experience above his head.
"Well," said Chup, "what you say about getting away is suitable
to me. I have no objection to my own survival.'
Loford
put in: "Suitable, and interesting. Sometimes it pays to plan from start
and finish toward the middle. Suppose we have what we came for, and are getting
away-will we absolutely need the animals that we rode in here on?"
"No,"
said Rolf. "Mewick and I discussed that. There are at least three good
spare animals with the patrol. If we can rendezvous with them outside the walls
all should be well."
"And
I," said Chup, "came thinking we might go out over the roof." He
patted his midsection under his loose merchant's garb. "I have some rope
coiled here. That gate seems to be well watched, and not easy to open in a
hurry."
"Let
us suppose," said Rolf, "we are going overthe wall with a rope. What
is next to be considered?"
Chup:
"Since the plump wizard here is going with us, I suppose we must consider
how to strengthen the strands, with a little magic perhaps." Chup was
better suited for this kind of work than any normal man could be; the prospect
of desperate action actually cheered him up. Were it not that some in the West
still mistrusted the sincerity of his conversion, he would have held a high
command. "As he must have done for the backbone of his riding-beast."
Loford
did not seem disconcerted. "Would I could strengthen your wits as easily,
dull swordsman. About getting away . . . Rolf, is it any clearer now, where the
thing must ultimately be taken?"
"Let
me think." Trying to find what Ardneh wanted was like trying to find a
half-forgotten memory of one's own. Glimmerings came, as if grudgingly.
"Farther than we'll be able to ride from here in a single night. More I
cannot see."
Loford:
"What I am getting at is this. Could not a bird take it? As described, the
stone is easily light enough for one to lift."
This
time Rolf had to think longer. At last he shook his head. "No. Rather, it
will be much better if we do not have to do it that way. Better for it to go by
bird than not at all, but. . . it is important also that I go, there is some
job for me to do, at the same place where the stone is needed." He shook
his head again.
Loford
scratched his head. "Then we must try to guard you too, and send you on
unscratched if possible . . . what is it makes your jaw drop, swordsman? Have
you managed a clear thought?"
Chup
stopped his fixed staring at the high windows opposite, gave his head a shake,
and blinked. "It may be that today I rode too long staring into the sun. I
thought I saw -a woman."
"Well?
And why not?" Loford asked reasonably.
Chup
only shook his head again, and went back to observing the apartment where the
High Constable lodged.
Rolf
turned to Loford. "A while ago you said that by tomorrow they may be
growing a little careless. But will they not also be on their way?"
"I
think not." Loford slouched massively on the low windowsill, and with a
slight nod indicated the far side of the courtyard. "A groom has begun
paring at the hooves of several of the loadbeasts we followed today." That
meant no long journey could be contemplated for those animals tomorrow.
"We should have tonight and tomorrow to get ready, and tomorrow night to
strike and run."
They
could not decide on a scheme for getting a closer look at the Constable's
quarters. After a while Rolf said: "One of us at least should go to the
tavern, hear what the soldiers in the Constable's escort have to say."
After a moment he added. "I wish that one of you two would go."
Chup
gave him a quizzical glance. "Do the painted women make you nervous, young
one?"
"No-yes.
Because always in the background there's one who owns them. And that people
should be owned does bother me, though it seems sometimes not to bother the
slaves. I am made nervous in such a way that I want to kill that man."
Chup
emitted a little snort. "Well, I am not likely to tremble with nervousness
in yonder house of joy, nor draw curious glances my way by killing someone.
I'll volunteer to go, and brave whatever hardships duty may put in my
way."
When
Chup had taken off his sword, and strolled away, Lofbrd asked: "There is
something else we are to do?"
"I
think so. Yes. It will be here in the courtyard,- something or someone that I
should watch or wait for." Not long ago, he would have thought the hunch
was purely his; but he was beginning to grow accustomed to Ardneh's subtlety.
Taking
an empty waterbag, Rolf strolled out into the courtyard, leaving Loford to
defend their quarters against sneak thieves or possible late arrivals at the
caravanserai. The scene was generally quiet now. A servant trotted past on some
errand. Animals made plaintive sounds. A few men, apparently herdsmen or
lower-class traders of some kind, peered ruminatively from the windows of the
lower rooms. From what Chup had called the house of joy came a burst of women's
laughter, and then the thumping of a tambourine. Somewhere the slavemaster
would be sitting, his eyes like stone though his mouth laughed or sipped at
wine.
Rolf
went to the well, hauled up cold water from its depths, and drank. He took his
time filling the waterbag. Watching the building in which the Constable was
lodged, he saw a pair of white bare feet descending the uppermost visible
portion of the mostly enclosed stair, bearing above them a shadowy figure that
upon emergence into the brighter courtyard revealed itself to be that of a
servant girl. She was a tall girl, quite young and despite her slenderness
apparently quite strong; over her shoulders rode a yoke holding two large
buckets that would be quite weighty when they were filled. Her hair and dress
were both of undistinguished brown, the former bound up out of the way under a
servant's cap. Her face was hard to judge, its dominant feature at the moment
being a purplish swelling on her cheek that came near to closing her right eye.
At best, Rolf thought, she would be plain, her nose and mouth being somewhat
large though there was prettiness still in the undamaged eye.
Rolf
remained standing near the well while he replaced the stopper in his waterbag.
The girl approached, set down her yoke, and began working at once to get the
buckets filled. The well was equipped with a rope and windlass by which the
wayfarer could lower his own container to the water far below. When the girl
began to haul up the first heavy pail from the depths of the well, Rolf caught
a hint of her exhaustion in the way she leaned against the crank, pausing
momentarily after making a beginning against the weight.
Then he
put his own burden down, and stepped around the well, saying: "I will lift
it."
She
stood straight for a moment, looking directly at him -she was a centimeter or
two taller than he -without any readable expression in her face. Then she
pulled once more on the crank herself.
He put
her aside from the windlass, moving himself so firmly into position to turn the
crank that she had little choice but to stand aside. Only when he had the
filled bucket in his hands did he turn to her again, looking at her carefully
for a moment before he set it down and took up the empty one. "You have
been ill-used, girl," he said then.
"My
mistress insists on being well served," she said steadily, without any
obvious feeling of any kind in her voice. Nothing about her speech suggested
that she was a servant. There were half-familiar accents in it that Rolf could
not quite place at first, until he realized that they reminded him of Duncan's
speech, which he had often heard in camp, the tones of the nobility of the
Off-Shore Islands in the west.
"I
would use you better than she does," he said at once, somewhat surprising
himself. He spoke out of policy, of course, offering a drop of sympathy to the
maltreated servant in hope of getting some information from her in return; but
he meant what he said. And with a faint double shock, two things came to him in
rapid sequence; first, that Ardneh had wanted him to go out into the courtyard
in order to meet this girl; second, that he had a good idea who her mistress
might be, what Lady of the East it was whose servants were more likely than not
at any given time to bear the marks of her displeasure, who employed
plain-faced maids to make her own great beauty glow the more by contrast.
In the
same voice the girl replied: "I doubt that the Lady Charmian would sell
me." This only confirmed Rolfs premonition, but still he came near
dropping the second water-bucket. Demons of all the East! He must warn Chup
before Chup was recognized. But it would hardly do to run away from the girl
just yet, when it seemed she might be starting to communicate.
He set
the bucket down. "I doubt that I would pay the Lady Charmian in any coin
she would willingly accept."
The
girl seemed to look more closely and humanly at him then, but only for a
moment. Saying nothing, she bent to fasten her buckets to the yoke. When she
would have lifted it, however, Rolf stepped in her way again, and with a grunt
took up the double load.
"You
have been kind," she said, still distantly, "but it will be better
for you if you are not seen aiding me. And better for me if I am not seen
receiving kindness from a man."
Rolf
nodded slowly. "What will help you, girl? And what's your name?"
"Catherine,
sir. And thank you, but there is no help forme." The calm in her voice was
no longer as true as it had been. She came to him and her tall body brushed his
as she took the yoke on her own shoulder.
He let
it go, but walked beside her as she moved back toward the stair. "You have
not been long in the Lady's service, have you?"
"Not
long?" She checked herself. "No -days only, not months or years. What
is it to you?" When they reached the bottom of the stairwell they were for
the moment alone out of sight of others, and she paused and looked at him
somewhat more carefully than before.
Rolf
was thinking rapidly. Whether Ardneh was putting his present thoughts into his
mind he did not know; certainly he had no feeling of being controlled.
"You will not live long in her service. No one does. She will kill you, or
crippleyou too badly to be of any-no, wait, I am not speaking to tormentyou. I
said that I would use you better. And I will."
She
turned her face away, then back to him again. Herwhisper was long in coming,
but when it came it had a desperate intensity. "There is no way that I can
get away from her!"
He kept
his own voice low and quick and calm. "And if there were?"
Again
Catherine paused. Then: "If she has sent you to entrap me and torment me,
I do not care. I must take the chance. I say I will go anywhere, do anything,
to get away!"
Now he
must think more swiftly still, but now it seemed no help from Ardneh was
forthcoming. He could not settle on a detailed plan alone. Feet were moving
somewhere above them on the stairs. "Come down again, later. If you can .
. . ?"
"There
will be more water to be fetched. Slops to be carried out."
"Good.
I will meet you, or a friend of mine. He'll call you Catherine, so you know
him. Go up now. Have hope."
She
gave one abrupt nod and turned her face away, and went on up the stair, despite
her burden moving more quickly than she had when coming down.
In the
room where he had left Loford waiting, Rolf saw to his surprise that Chup had
returned already, and was standing against the wall where he could not be seen
from door or window. Rolf had hardly begun to speak when Chup interrupted him
with a gesture. "Yes, I know my beauteous bride is here," he said leaning
cautiously toward the window to glare at the building opposite. "I thought
I saw her, earlier, up there. And then hardly had I gotten into the funhouse
yonder when I saw an Eastern soldier that I used to know -his mind was on other
things, to our good luck, and I can almost pledge he saw me not. He was talking
to some friend about the Lady Charmian, enough to make it plain that she is
here. Around my neck like some evil charm she seems to hang."
"What
did you do? Turn in the doorway and come back?"
"Not
quite, for I was fairly in, and to just spin and run out again might look a
little odd. Stood with my face in a corner, practically, for a while. You might
say that I cut my revelry quite short."
Rolf
went to the window for a good look round, then turned back in. "It seems
you were not recognized, or they'd be after us already. Now, I've some better
news to tell."
He
quickly related to the others his conversation with Catherine. They resumed
their planning, with at least one of them always watching to see if Catherine
came down again.
The
help of Charmian's personal servant should be a great advantage if only they
could hit upon the most effective way of using her. But whether or not the
jewel was in Charmian's possession or with some other member of the Constable's
party was still uncertain; the raiders had to make sure of its location before
they could hatch any detailed plan.
When
darkness fell it became difficult to see the stairway from the window of their
room, and Rolf went out into the courtyard and strolled about, keeping watch.
When Catherine came down again, she was carrying pots to be emptied. Rolf
walked to intercept her at the refuse pits, which lay at an angle of windowless
wall between tavern and stable. It was a dark and noisome place, and for the
moment they had it to themselves.
Her
face looked fearful, but her gaze did not fall away from his. She said:
"If you were joking earlier, tell me now."
"Catherine,
I was not. I will take you with me from this place. But there is something else
that I must take, and I need your help for that."
"Anything."
"It
is probably in your mistress' jewel box, or in the Constable's."
Catherine
did not seem in the least surprised. She had had a little time to think things
over and form her own idea at what Rolf must want. "The Constable has no
strong-box with him, to my knowledge, and I have seen him wear no jewels. I
know where the woman's jewel-case lies, but I have never seen it opened . .
."
The
lid, massive and strong but elegantly lined within, was standing open at that
moment, Charmian having performed the necessary ritual, reciting the three
secret words and using the physical key required. She was choosing her jewelry
for the evening, while one of her two servant girls, quivering a little as
usual, stood by to help with other details.
Considering
the hard times that had recently overtaken her, there was a fair amount of
wealth and beauty arrayed in the form of bright gems amid the soft compartments
of the little chest. In the bottom, looking at odds with everything else, lay a
spherical lump of dark stuff the size of a man's two fists. It was mounted in a
filigree of silver and gold, no part of which pierced the ebon sphere that it
enclosed. As usual, when she looked at it, Charmian frowned; the commander of
the cavalry outpost had given it to her, as the best he had to give. No doubt
most people would think most of the smaller diamonds more valuable, but
Charmian was not so sure; it was quite beautiful in its own different way. But
its size! A giantess three meters tall might have worn it as a fine ornament,
but what was a woman of ordinary stature to do with such a massive jewel?
She had
considered other possibilities, of course. Sensitive to most of the auras of
magic, she could feel nothing of power or danger from the thing, no
life-potential much above that of any other lump of stone of equal size.
There
was a faint sound at her door, the creak of a board under a quiet but heavy
tread. The breathing of the maid became suspended, but Charmian did not turn.
Let him surprise her thus. Let Abner see how many spaces remained to be filled
with wealth inside this one modest treasure-box of hers. While she kept on
looking into the box, readying herself to be surprised, she wondered still what
the black thing was. When someday she had joined the court of Ominor, when
first class wizards were at her service, she would have to have it properly
assayed . . .
Abner's
great hand came delicately stroking her bare shoulder and she gave a little
cry, and start, seemingly as spontaneous as the last time he had
"surprised" her. She was looking round, her eyes innocently and
prettily wide, when his face altered, and his hand on her flesh turned to
stone. Her surprise turned real.
He was
staring into the open jewel box, and his voice was no longer the voice of an
infatuated man, but that of an Eastern Lord. "Where did you get
that?"
Having
seen Catherine back to the foot of the stair, Rolf returned to the room where
Chup and Loford waited. There he passed on to them the information that the
girl had given. Now in the dust of the floor they could sketch the layout of
the rooms in both Charmian's and the Constable's apartments, and the usual
position of the jewel-box in the former. There were other matters to be thought
about as well, what soldiers and servants were likely to be where, and how
doors were fastened and windows barred. There were a few more questions to be
asked of Catherine next time Rolf met with her.
"And
one more thing," Chup added. "Do you really mean to bring the girl
away with us?"
"We
will bring her back to the patrol," said Rolf after a moment. "After
that it will be up to Mewick."
Chup
nodded slowly. "But if we do not get her clean away, we cannot leave her
able to answer questions."
Loford
was standing by gloomily, with nothing to say for the moment. Rolf hesitated,
but only briefly. "Agreed," he murmured with a nod.
After a
moment Chup went on: "Speaking of ladies likely to be thought superfluous,
there is the matter of my bride." He fell silent for a little while,
staring moodily out the window. Somehow it did not seem to him prohibitively
strange to still call Charmian his bride. "I find I do not care if we
leave her alive or dead."
The
others made no response to that. He felt he could not leave it at that.
"Well, I know this is war and not a personal matter . . . I just mean that
I will kill her if it seems the best move to make, though I feel no urge to do
so."
Still
the others remained silent. He himself wondered why he was going on like this
about her. Was he making the point that she meant nothing to him one way or the
other, or only raising doubts about it?
He had
no doubt that she hated him now, that horrible things would happen to him if he
ever fell into her power. Well, she was like that. For a time he had hated her,
too. Now she was no more important than some poisonous insect, to be avoided
or, if the opportunity came, squashed flat.
Rolf
and Loford were looking off into space in separate directions, doubtless
waiting to make sure that Chup had finished what was for him a lengthy speech.
Loford
said at last: "I am glad that your feelings are not involved here."
And Rolf: "We will not go out of our way to kill her, then, if she is not
at hand when we take the jewel. Of course, if she should get a look at us, it
will be better if we do not leave her able to answer questions."
"Of
course," said Chup at once. But still he frowned. It was odd. He could
picture himself killing Charmian, or almost anyone else. But he could not
picture in his mind how she would look when she was dead. Yes, it was odd.
They
went back to refining. From all that Catherine had told them, three expertly
violent men with the advantage of surprise should be able to get into
Charmian's apartment, dispose of the immediate resistance, and get the gem into
their hands. When it came to getting away, though, difficulties multiplied.
Chup
wished aloud: "If only this girl Catherine could steal the gem for us,
bring it out to us."
Loford
shook his head. "From what Rolf tells us, there's not a chance of her
getting into the treasure box. Charmian's not one to be at all careless with
her valuables."
They
talked it over, assuming themselves inside the apartment, the jewel in their
possession. Now there were poundings on the single door, demands to know what
was going on inside.
Chup:
"Maybe no one will notice a few screams and a little commotion. That kind
of thing's no novelty in my Lady's rooms."
"But
suppose they do?"
"Then
... I wonder if the Constable truly dotes on her? I wonder if she could serve
us as a hostage?"
That
idea and others were debated. The discussion went on far into the night, when
it was set aside for rest. The three men took turns at watching throughout the
remainder of the night.
Shortly
before dawn, Loford strolled outside as if to stretch some stiffness from his
limbs. There, as pre-arranged with Mewick, he spelled out the essentials of the
plan they had decided on, using gestures natural to a man who had waked up with
some aching joints. They meant to be coming out from the rooftop tomorrow
night, with the gem in their possession. He hoped that his gestures were being
watched by one of the great birds, circling on hushed wings well above the
walls. If they were lucky, a bird or two had been able to join Mewick's patrol
tonight.
The
remainder of the night passed uneventfully, and so did the greater portion of
the following day. Late in the afternoon Catherine made what would be, if
things went well, her final trip down to the well. This time Rolf did not meet
her, but watched from the concealment of his room as she gave the unobtrusive
signal meaning that nothing had arisen to require a change in plans or a final
consultation. As expected, the Constable's party showed no signs of leaving.
They had been on the road for many days, and men and beasts alike were
doubtless ready for a day of rest.
Night
fell, and in their little ground-floor room three merchants became Western warriors
once more, removing extra weapons and equipment from their packs to be
distributed about their persons, then covered with long travelers' cloaks. Then
there was nothing to do but hold final vigil at the window.
Time
dragged. Chup was just beginning to ask: "Are you sure that she will come
- " when there she came, Catherine emerging from the dark mouth of the
stair opposite, making her way across the ill-lit courtyard. She too had put on
a long cloak, but her feet were still bare. Rolf hoped she was carrying at
least a pair of sandals for the trip; there was no way to be sure when they
would meet Mewick and the others and be able to ride.
The
plan called for her to come to them openly, as if she had been sent to the
three merchants with a message.
"Gentlemen,
you are asked to come," she said in a low voice when she had reached their
open door.
"Asked?"
Rolf echoed. He was not sure for the moment whether Catherine was only playing
her role, orwhetherAbneror Charmian actually wanted to see the
"merchants" about something.
"It
is I who askyou," she said with feeling, looking from one of them to the
other. The hood of her cloak was thrown back, and her brown hair was looser
than it had been. Her eye looked a little puffier, if anything, than yesterday.
"We
are ready for some bargaining, "said Rolf, and stepped forward to the
doorway and took her gently by the elbow, both to reassure her and to keep her
from turning thoughtlessly and starting back at once -the three merchants must
take a little time to ask a question or two, gather their sample wares, see to
their own appearance, before calling on such an eminent lady. Catherine's arm
had a, lifeless sub-missiveness in Rolf's grip; it was a feeling that he had
met before, on touching slaves, slaves who had had reason to take him for an
Eastern master. It came to Rolf that in a sense this girl had now become his
slave, his property, and there was a twinge of forbidden pleasure in the
thought.
The
proper moments for delay soon passed, and the four of them set out across the
courtyard, the three men unhurriedly walking ahead.
"I
could learn nothing more that will be helpful," the girl whispered to
Rolf, from her position close behind him.
"All
right." He tried to sound calm and reassuring. "Do what I say,
without hesitating. We will bring you out."
A
moment more and they were ascending the stairs of the building in which
Charmian and the Constable were lodged. As they passed the open doorway of a
second-floor apartment, through which several junior officers of the East could
be seen gaming around a table, Loford said, as though continuing a
conversation: "... we can procure what your Lady wants, if we have it not
in the goods we carry with us. We stand ready at any hour of the day or night
to serve so illustrious ..." He let his voice fade to a meaningless mumble
as they passed the door and started up the next-to-final flight of stairs. The
uppermost flight, and the doors and landing at its top, were still invisible.
As they turned the corner and started up the final flight the expected sentry
at the top came into view, looking down coldly at them.
"Right
up to the top, your honors, please," said Catherine clearly from just
behind Rolf, and could not keep the strain out of her voice. Behind the sentry
were the two doors she had described to Rolf; the right one would lead to the
Constable's quarters, the left to the Lady Charmian's. From behind the right
door male voices could be heard, in low and serious talk, too muffled for words
to be distinguishable.
The
sentry was Rolf's to cope with, for Chup's greater effectiveness with the sword
might be needed to meet the unexpected at one door or the other, and Loford
might be needed just as suddenly for magical action and was too clumsy in any
case to be trusted with a knifing.
On the
topmost landing the men stood awkwardly, for it was not large, and the
cold-eyed guard refused to give much ground. He was not truly suspicious yet.
Catherine slid among the men to Charmian's door, to tap and call softly. It
seemed Charmian did not like even her maids to take her by surprise. Rolf stood
rigidly waiting until he heard the bar lifted inside the door, then saw the
door open a crack to frame the eye of another servant girl inside; he turned
then, with unhurried smoothness that was practised but still not easy, not for
him, brought a long dagger from under his cloak without any unnecessary
flourishes, and pushed it up firmly beneath the sentry's breastbone.
The
sound life made in going out was not loud, and was covered by the whimpering
little cry of the surprised servant-girl as Chup pushed in the door she had
unlocked, and pushed his way inside, Loford right on his heels. Rolf with his
unarmed hand caught his falling victim around the waist, and half-carried,
half-dragged the dying man along into the apartment. Catherine, still waiting
at the door, pulled it shut and barred it once everyone was inside.
Chup
and Loford were not pausing, but strode on ahead of Rolf across the little
dingy room, toward the one door on its farther side, their heavy soft treads
shaking the floor slightly, setting muted jin-glings sounding amid the feminine
trappings hanging in an open portable wardrobe. The maidservant who had opened
the door was still cowering on the floor where Chup had shoved her, paralyzed
with shock and fright. Rolf let his murdered sentry down, showed the girl the
bloody knife, whispered in her ear: "One squeak and we will cut your
throat," and pushed her into the big wardrobe amid the hanging garments,
where she fell to the floor in what was almost silence. He flashed a look of
reassurance to Catherine, still leaning on the barred door, and turned after
Chup and Loford who were entering the other room.
Some
sound, or instinct, must have warned the Lady Charmian. When her husband and
the men behind him came through the one door of her little bedchamber, she was
standing as if waiting for them. She wore a long, soft lounging garment of some
pink satiny stuff; her feet were bare on a soft, thick black rug that must have
come to this place with her. The incredible golden cascade of her hair hung
well below her waist. Rolf saw her eyes of melting blue, familiar as if he had
last seen them only an hour before, go wide as she recognized Chup.
"Silence
gives life," Chup told her briefly, and went past her to the strongbox,
which was just where Catherine had said that it would be, standing on a low,
crude chest just below the high window with its heavy bars. Chup flicked the
side of the box with his swordpoint, once, hesitantly, felt the muted shock of
guardian powers, and drew quickly back. Loford shouldered past him to bend over
the box, mumbling. Chup moved to where he could watch Charmian and at the same
time look back into the outer room of the apartment, where Catherine still
waited with her back against the door. Rolf, standing in the doorway between
the rooms, could see and feel the mutual hatred pass between her and Charmian.
And now
Charmian's eyes, with a different look, reached for Rolf's eyes, brushed them
once, then fell away, very quickly and shyly. No, her eyes said, it was useless
to try to beguile him. She had been too cruel to him long ago; and that was sad
beyond bearing, because now, looking back, Charmian could see that he was the
one man with whom she might have been happy.
She
said it all with that one glance, no matter that it was all impossible
nonsense. The falsity of it was irrelevant while she was saying it.
Loford
had turned and was extending a massive hand toward the Lady Charmian. "The
key," he said, in almost courtly tones. The strongbox now looked a little
larger, the shape of it was somewhat altered, since the wizard had bent over
it.
"You
are but bandits, then," Charmian said, while her hand made slow searching
motions among the pockets of her robe, as if to find a key. "I warned my
Lord the Constable to give more thought to such.
Now
perforce he will admit that I was right." Rolf understood that she was
bargaining for her life, telling them as well as she could in the hearing of
the servant in the wardrobe, that they would not be named by her as Western
soldiers if they would spare her life.
She
might be able to make almost anything believable. "I would that you were
more than bandits," she went on, speaking now to Chup, with eyes again as
well as words. "I dreamt once that a man had come to carry me away, so
that from that day on I would never have to serve another man but him. And in
that dream - "
"The
key," Chup grated in an ugly voice. "Or I will spoil your lying
face." Charmian knew him. She seemed to collapse before the threat,
shrinking back against the wall.
"The
key is in the bedside table, "she said simply.
Chup
kept his eyes on her until Loford had gone to the chest with the key and come
back holding up the dark round thing in its silver filigree. Rolf had never
seen anything just like it before, but felt Ardneh's certainty that it was the
right thing. Rolf nodded, then added: "Don't forget the rest."
They
had discussed this point beforehand, too. If they were to be taken forbandits
they must not leave a single jewel that they could carry away. Loford went to
scoop up other wealth from the box, and stuff his pockets with it. The black
jewel, meanwhile, he had tossed to Rolf, who put it into a small empty pouch
that waited ready at his belt.
There
came a startling, though quiet, trying of the outer door, followed after a
moment by a rattling and wrenching that made it thud against its hinges. An
indistinct male voice called out, in what might have been anger or alarm. The
absence of the sentry from the stair would certainly awaken Eastern vigilance.
Chup's
eyes were still riveted on Charmian's. In a low voice he demanded: "Is
that the Constable?"
She
gave a little shiver, an involuntary movement that Rolf thought he had seen her
make once before, when men were about to kill each other for her amusement. It
seemed a joyous movement. She said: "It is his way; it sounds like
him."
Rolf
stepped quietly back to Catherine and took her by the arm. "Let me get in
place behind the door," he whispered. "Then open it and let him -
" He broke off there, for outside at least one more .heavy voice had
joined the Constable's, and the tramp of yet other feet was somewhere on the
stair.
Pulling
Catherine by the arm, he hurried to the inner room again. There was only the
one door, and the windows were narrow and heavily barred. It was well they had
made alternate plans. Loford had his sword out and was digging an escape hole
in the flimsy ceiling; in a moment Rolf was working at his side. Dried mud fell
in his face, and lengths of reed and sapling began to dangle brokenly.
The
noise at the door turned into a determined assault. Chup said something that
Rolf could not hear to Charmian. Charmian turned to the door and cried out
loudly: "Stop! These men will kill me if you force your way in. Stop, they
wish to bargain with you!"
The
banging and chopping ceased. "Bargain?" roared a man's deep voice.
"With what? Who are they, what do they want?"
"They
are bandits," Charmian cried weakly. Glancing toward her, Rolf saw that
she had retreated from Chup's sword until her head was pressed against the
wall, but the sword had advanced until it now poised rock-steady a centimeter
from her face. Loss of beauty would be worse than loss of life to her.
There
was a pause outside, as if of disbelief. "Well, wondrous stupid ones, so
it would seem." More feet now on the stair, a platoon gathering hurriedly;
and overhead now, soft footsteps on the roof; it had not taken the Constable
long to order his forces. Now he bellowed, with vast authority: "Ho, in
there! The trap is shut on you; unbar this door!" Chup forced his
erstwhile bride into the big wardrobe where one of her servant-girls was still
cowering in silence. What he said to Charmian at parting Rolf could not hear,
but she went in with quiet alacrity.
Loford
had ceased prying at the ceiling, and sheathed his sword, but stood still
looking upward at the damage while he made the gestures of his magic art. Now
he signed to Rolf to cease work also; Rolf did so. But by Loford's art, the
noises they had made when working went right on without a pause, the subdued
splintering of light wood, the trickling falls of powdery fragments to the
floor were heard, though the hole they had begun in the roof now got no bigger.
Now Rolf attacked the floor with his dagger. He labored to pry up a board;
Catherine dropped to her knees beside him and wrenched with strong sure hands
as soon as he had raised one end enough for her to get a purchase on it. By the
art of Loford, who worked on silently above them, the shriek of yielding nails
was made to come from overhead.
The
Constable's voice renewed its demands for entry.
"Not
so fast!" Chup roared back. "What'll you give us for your woman's
life?" And he thumped with the flat of his sword on the wardrobe, from
which the voice of Charmian hastily called out, serving to demonstrate that she
was still alive.
Rolf
and Catherine by this time had one floorboard completely up. A quick look down
through the gap assured him that the room below was deserted. The soldiers
lodged in it would have been called to duty when the alarm broke out.
The
Constable's overbearing voice called out some threat, and the battering at the door
resumed, more violently than before. The renewed noise from the door, with that
induced by magic overhead, effectively covered the ripping up of another board.
The
whole was big enough now for Rolf, and he was through it in a moment, with
Catherine right behind him. Loford had to tear up yet another plank before the
gap was wide enough to accommodate his bulk; luckily the ceilings were low and
he had not far to fall. Chup was right behind.
Catherine
picked up a bow, and looped over her shoulder a quiver of arrows that had been
left in a corner of the room. With her cloak she might manage to conceal the
weapons, and she pulled up its hood now to hide her face. Rolf was at the door,
peering out through a crack until one set of hurried footsteps had passed their
landing going up, and another down; and then he led the way out onto the stair,
flattening himself against a wall. The Constable's men were gathered on the
stair and landing above, still assaulting the heavy door of the top-floor
apartment.
Rolf,
Catherine, Loford, Chup. In single file on the stair, the four of them glided
swiftly down. At the bottom of the stair, weapons under cloaks, they passed out
swiftly through the doorway into the courtyard where torches flared, disturbed
animals stamped and moved and grunted, and travelers, slaves, grooms, tavern
girls, all milled around, gaping upward with mixed alarm and interest.
The
four moved in a regular walking pace across the courtyard to the stair on the
other side; over there was the only way out. They were about halfway across,
moving deliberately amid people and restless animals, when behind them
Charmian's screams for help were suddenly added to the noise. She must have at
last dared to peer out of the wardrobe, to find herself practically alone amid
unnerving sounds. When the screams came Rolf took Catherine's arm in a hard
grip, but he need not have bothered, for her step remained steady. Without
interference from anyone in the ragged little crowd of gapers, the four reached
the desired doorway and began to mount the stair. This building was less
solidly built than the one they had just come from, though of the same general
plan.
Doors
stood open to their right and left as they ascended, one floor, two, but for
the moment no one was in sight. The rooms had evidently been emptied of
soldiers and onlookers alike by the alarms.
Now
Chup took the lead, and pulled back the hood of his cloak. As they rounded the
last landing going up, the expected sentry appeared at the top of the stair,
the door to the room behind him standing open.
Chup in
his best Eastern-officer voice demanded: "Here, fellow, are any men
loitering in those rooms?" and kept on climbing as he spoke.
"No,
sir! No malingerers here."
"Then
who is that?" Chup barked. He pointed behind the sentry into a dark corner
of an empty room as he came up to the man, bringing a sure blade from beneath
his cloak as the man's head turned.
Now,
the four could go unhurriedly up a ladder from the topmost stair-landing to a
trapdoor that opened on the roof. Rolf, once more in the lead, flattened
himself down as he crawled out into the open night. On the roof across the
court the Eastern men waiting in fruitless ambush were being less cautious, and
he could see them easily in silhouette. All was quiet in that direction now, a
state of affairs that could not last much longer; the Constable would be
finding his trap empty, and would be howling on their trail when he saw the
great hole they had made in the floor.
Chup
had the soft thin coil of rope unwound from his midsection, and nowlay on his
back with his feet against the low parapet, making himself a human anchor to
hold the rope while the others slid down. Rolf went first. The rope was long
enough to reach the ground with a little to spare. As soon as sand was under
his feet, he tugged once on the rope and waited with drawn sword. Catherine
came next, dropping her bow when halfway down but picking it up before she
scrambled to Rolf's side; and then Loford, grunting and mumbling as the rope
burned his sliding fingers. Then came the rope itself, a whispering coil; then
Chup, dropping unaided from rooftop to sand.
IV
Distance
In
single file the four of them marched in silence, save for the soft crunch
underfoot of sand, and the faint whisper of the wind. Now Loford followed Rolf,
and then the girl, with Chup alert to hear pursuers in the rear. They left the
caravanserai kilometers behind, while the stars spun slowly around the one that
marked the Pole. Rolf strode on into the unknown with confidence, though he had
only a hazy idea of what kind of country lay in that direction, and no idea at
all of the goal that Ardneh wanted him finally to reach. No one spoke, except
that once or twice a faint whisper-mutter with the rhythm of magic in it came
forward to Rolf's ears, and soon thereafter arose what might have been
perfectly natural pushes of wind against their faces, wind howling back down
along their trail with strength enough to pull sand over their footprints.
Rolf
now and again looked up, trying to catch sight of wide bird-wings against the
stars. But there were none.
"We
had best get clear of this open sand before morning," Chup growled once,
low-voiced, from the rear. Rolf only grunted in reply. The need was obvious.
Rolf stepped up his pace a little more. Now he could hear Catherine's
breathing. But the girl kept up without faltering.
The
hours of the night turned on. There was no pause for rest. No hint of dawn had
yet appeared in the clear sky when Rolf noticed that the characterof the
country was changing. The gentle dunes grew steeper, and among them there
jutted up hillocks and humps of worn, eroded clay. Grass and bushes, appeared
in a thin scattering, then became noticeably thicker. As the eastern sky began
to brighten subtly, the clay hills came to dominate the land. These turned into
a plateau across which the travelers walked, scrambling frequently through
small ravines that lay across their path, or following those that ran for a
time along it. Some of these narrow ravines were steep enough to have small
overhangs along their sides, and these, when the morning sky began to brighten
up in earnest, afforded some possibility of hiding for the day.
Rolf
chose a place, which was then improved by digging back a little into the clay
bank, the excavated material being carefully scattered where it would not show.
Now, lying on the narrow ledge that they had made, it was possible to see back
for nearly a kilometer in the way that they had come, and for some forty or
fifty meters along the ravine in the other direction. And from this direction,
now, at last, came Mewick and the other members of the patrol; or most of them,
rather. There were five riders, not six, approaching.
The
four who had just lain down in weariness sprang up again. Mewick reined in
below their ledge, saying: "The birds have just now gone to shelter for
the day. We would have caught up with you sooner, but - " He made a
gesture of weariness, dismissing causes pointless to enumerate now. He and his
mount, and the men and animals behind him, looked tired, and some had new
bandages to show. "There is cavalry on your trail, not two kilometers
back. They dared to follow you out by night, and we were not enough for a real
ambush. We only delayed them a little and I lost Latham."
It
registered now with Rolf whose face was missing, whose animal was being led in
the rear with the other spares. The shock of a friend's loss came and was set
aside in the pile of losses that must someday be dealt with somehow. Now Rolf
only asked: "How many of them?" As he spoke he was packing his meager
gear into a roll, getting ready to bundle it onto the back of the best spare
riding-beast.
"Fifty.
Thereabouts," said Mewick wearily. "Through divination or otherwise
they must have some inkling of the importance of what you took; else I think
they would not have come onto your trail at night, no. The Constable is leading
them in person. Has Ardneh any offering of guidance now?"
"Only
that I must go on, with what I carry." Rolf finished tying his bundle onto
the beast and swung himself up into its saddle. His eye fell on Catherine, and
saw in her a desperation made calm only by her great weariness. The mention of
Ardneh had probably meant nothing to her, he realized. Most probably she feared
only one thing more than being with this bandit gang - there was still no
reason for her to think them anything but bandits-and that one thing was being
left behind by them, to be retaken by the East. "Mount up, girl," he
ordered, pointing to another ready animal. "Come with me." Only after
he had spoken did he realize that there was a deeper purpose than compassion,
or any selfish want, behind his words. '
Mewick
raised his eyebrows, then nodded, handing Rolf provisions and a water bag.
"So it must be. We here will do what must be done. Which way does Ardneh
bid you go? We will try to turn the ones who follow aside."
"I
am still heading just a little west of north. I think it will be many days yet
before I reach the goal-whatever it may be."
Mewick
and others raised their hands, murmuring good wishes. Arrangements for future
contact would be left to nighttime and the birds -or to Ardneh, if he should
take a hand overtly. Rolf dug heels into his mount and set off along the ravine
to the north; a glance back showed Catherine riding competently and close
behind him. If, as her accent suggested, she were really of some noble family
in the Offshore Islands, it was natural that she should know how to ride.
The
cleft of the ravine grew shallow, and bent off in the wrong direction. Rolf
heeled his riding-beast to a faster pace as he urged it out onto the flat
surface of a plateau. Steadily they put distance between themselves and the
place behind them where Mewick was trying to arrange an ambush of an enemy
force that outnumbered his by something more than five to one. Rolf knew that
Mewick and his six men would not stand and be wiped out, not if they could help
it. They would strike and retreat and strike again, if they were able. If they
could get through the day, the night would offer better hope. But it was early
morning now . . .
Rolf
and his companion had come about a kilometer across the open plateau, and were
almost in reach of another favorably oriented ravine, offering some chance of
shelter from the sky, when there came drifting from a height the raucous cry
that meant they had been spotted by a reptile.
No use
to gallop now; Rolf held to a steady pace. The reptile was overtaking them on
effortless wings, staying high out of bowshot; directly over their heads, it
marked their position for the pursuers on the ground.
When
Rolf and Catherine topped a slight rise, they could look back and see the
mounted Eastern force, coming now onto the broken plateau, nearing the place
where Mewick and the others must be in wait. It seemed the ambush could be no
surprise, for there were more reptiles, concentrating over something Rolf could
not see -over seven Western soldiers, no doubt. He felt an urge, not courageous
but simply irrational, to turn back and be with them. But that was not to be.
Catherine
drew abreast of him as they rode on. She asked: "Your whole band is
scattering in different directions?" When he did not answer, she asked
him: "What did he call you back there? Ardneh?"
"My
name is Rolf."
"Rolf,
then. There is something I would ask of you."
"Wait."
He urged his mount over a difficult stretch of terrain, then stopped for a
brief halt, to rest the animals for the space of a few breaths and to see by what
route the pursuing cavalry was following. "Now. What was it?"
Catherine
said: "If we are going to be taken by them, kill me first."
It was
only surprising for a moment. "If that time ever comes, I will have other
matters to think about. But cheer up, it has not come yet."
The
enemy riders had turned suddenly away from what seemed their logical course,
and were slowing down. No reason was visible at this distance; but the
concentration of reptiles, somewhat nearer, seemed greatly agitated. The one
who had been flying directly over Rolf and Catherine, evidently assuming that
they could be found again without any trouble on this bright morning, suddenly
darted back to join the others.
"Now!"
Seizing the chance for whatever it might prove to be worth, Rolf turned his
beast off running at a tangent to the course they had been following. He had
begun to alter his true course, a little west of north, as soon as he thought
the leatherwings had spotted them, and now he took it up again. And now, far ahead,
he could already see how the country shaded out of barren badlands and into a
higher and grassier plateau.
The
moments of freedom from reptile observation fled by, and Rolf could make no
profit from them. There was no reasonable place of concealment in sight,
nowhere they could vanish, to be gone when the reptile came back to find them,
as it must. As he rode, Rolf anxiously tried to reach Ardneh's thought, to find
guidance. Nothing helpful came, nothing except the impression of a titanic
weariness: a vague image of a faceless, beleaguered giant, hard pressed by a
thousand enemies. What Rolf was doing was important, and worthy of Ardneh's
help, but no more so than ten or a score of other struggles in which Ardneh was
simultaneously involved. At this moment there could be no help for Rolf, except
the continuing sense of the direction he was to travel.
The
summer day stretched long ahead of them, before the night would bring a
reasonable chance of shelter and of rest. Again there sounded the shouts of men
at war, louder than might have been expected when fifty were facing only seven.
Looking back, Rolf saw a gray maelstrom of wind and dust settling upon, or very
near, the area where the fighting must have been. Loford must have managed to
raise a desert-elemental. The Eastern troops would be powerless to advance as
long as it blasted and blinded them with sand, but the Constable would be sure
to have able magical assistance with him and the elemental might be soon
dispersed. Meanwhile, the reptiles were being driven from the fighting by the
terrific winds; now instead they came on after Rolf and the girl.
Given a
great-enough advantage in numbers, the leatherwings were willing to attack
armed humans and there were a score or more of them now in sight. Rolf asked:
"Can you use that stick of wood you carry?"
Catherine
unslung the bow from her back and groped for an arrow, meanwhile guiding her
mount with her knees. "Once I could shoot with some skill. It has been a
long time since I had the chance."
Rolf
grunted. He was an indifferent archer, but almost certainly he would do better
than she with sword.
The
reptiles circled them at low altitude, a ragged-looking swirl of gray-green
wings and yellow teeth; then, from all points of the compass at once, they
closed. Catherine's first arrow missed, but she had time for a second, and one
of the creatures tumbled heavily into the sand, a clean kill. Then the cawing
cloud engulfed the riders. Rolf swung his blade with brutal energy. The
riding-beasts plunged and screamed when they felt teeth and talons. Again and
again Rolfs sword met resistance, parting leathery hide, stringy flesh, and
light bones. Then suddenly the flock was gone, those who could still fly
whirling at a safe distance to screech their rage, leaving half a dozen dead
and wounded to litter the thirsty sand. Catherine had sheltered under her great
cloak when the enemy came within clawing range, and she was unscratched though
the cloak had been rent in several places. Nor was Rolf injured, but the
animals, shivering and muttering, were each bleeding from several wounds.
Still,
the riding-beasts trudged stolidly on, and this was not the time and place to
stop and tend them if it could be avoided. Rolf was momentarily expecting the
enemy cavalry to come into sight, the elemental had perhaps been dispersed;
though a pall of dust still hanging over the area made it difficult to see what
was going on back there. But no riders appeared. Once again, fainter than
before, Rolf heard the sounds of fighting. Time was being bought for his
escape, at what cost he did not care to think.
The
reptiles continued in their circle. Catherine rode silently at his side,
watching them with her chin up, an arrow nocked and ready in her bow.
The
morning progressed, the reptiles gradually withdrawing farther and at last
breaking their circle and landing, one of their number remaining airborne to
observe Rolf and Catherine from a distance. Rolf called a rest stop, and
devoted it mainly to caring for the animals, whose wounds were bloodier than he
had thought. Insects were buzzing around them already. With Catherine helping
efficiently, he did what he could to clean the wounds, and bandaged those in
places where a bandage could be made secure. Then the two humans walked on for
a while, leading the animals, before remounting.
Considering
the damage the reptiles had suffered in their first attack, Rolf was not
surprised that they forebore to launch another. When about midday they returned
in a menacing cloud, Catherine loosed another arrow at them. They clamored
insults but flew no closer.
Slowly
but steadily the kilometers flowed by beneath the plodding beasts. Twice during
the afternoon Rolf halted to rest and tend the animals as well as possible, and
for long stretches he and Catherine walked. Far behind, there was still dust on
the horizon. He groped for Ardneh's presence once more, and this time received
a feeling of reassurance; help was to be granted, or was being granted now.
What kind of help was not explained, but Rolf felt somewhat easier. He was
further cheered when at last the reptiles screamed their final insults and
began their forced retreat, to the safe roosts they must seek out before the
coming of the night.
Rolf
shortly called a halt. The mounts were swaying and stumbling with fatigue, and
the place they had come to offered grazing as promising as any they were likely
to find. It was a nearly dried-out watercourse, marked along its edges by
abundant grass, a few bushes, and even scattered trees.
The
animals' wounds included several ugly punctures that seemed likely to become
infected. When they had done what they could for the beasts, and eaten a little
themselves, it had grown dark. "Rest," Rolf grunted. Catherine,
looking too tired to answer, collapsed into a silent heap.
He was
too tired himself to try to stay awake when the likelihood of an enemy coming
seemed vanishingly small. He arranged his weapons handily and began to doze off
in the warm night, his back against the curved bank of the dry channel. Vaguely
he wondered about Catherine, how she had come to be a slave, what she would
want... he was too sleepy to think long.
Waking
abruptly to the racketing of insects, he quickly surveyed the night-world about
him before he moved. The starry powder of the Milky Way made a vast diagonal
blaze across the sky. It took a second or two before he saw what had somehow
awakened him. Perched high on the opposite bank of the ravine, a great bird
rested motionless, its feathered bulk cutting a dark pattern from the light of
stars. When Rolf turned his head toward the bird he saw the huge wings open and
reach out, balancing, far wider than a man's spread arms.
Its
voice was musical, and so soft he had to listen carefully to make sure of all
the words. "Rooolf of the Brooken Lands, rest no moore this night. Those
who pursue you are not far away, and they will come on with the first of the
morning light."
Rolf
glanced up at the stars to gauge the time. He had only slept for three or four
hours, but felt considerably refreshed. The riding-beasts, used to birds, were
dozing on their feet where he had picketed them a little distance off. He got
to his feet and began to gather his few belongings. He asked the bird:
"What of my friends who fought to buy me time?"
"The
one whoo spoke to me was a tall, fat wizard," the bird replied. "He
said to tellyooou that Metzgar had fallen, but that the others fared well
enough."
"Ah."
Tall Metzgar, of the long beard, and long stories . . .
"Also
I must tell youuu that more friends, and enemies, are beginning to move into
this country from the south. But all of them are kilometers and kilometers away
as yet. Also, Duncan wants to know what you are doooing now."
"Tell
Duncan I am going on," said Rolf. He shot a quick look at Catherine, but
she gave no sign of having moved since she lay down. He introspected for a
moment, and found something new. "And tell Duncan, and the fat wizard,
that now I must angle more toward the West. I am going to travel an hour or so
and try to hide again before dawn. If the pursuers can be led straight on
north, or east, it will be a considerable help."
The
bird hooted once, assentingly, then rose with a silent effort and disappeared
among the stars, just as Catherine stirred. A moment later she sat up, looking
groggy and bewildered.
"Get
up," he ordered. "We have more distance to cover before the
dawn." She sighed and got to her feet slowly but without complaint. Only
now did he notice that she had evidently not managed to find a pair of sandals.
Well, if the animals held out, it would make little difference.
There
was not much water left in the bag, but the country was no longer desert-dry
and Rolf was not much concerned on that account. The animals seemed strong
enough, but restless, as if their wounds were paining them. Catherine dozed in
the saddle from time to time; Rolf would see her head start to sink forward,
then jerk erect as she caught herself into wakefullness. It was not a good time
for talking; the ears had to be kept free for more important matters.
Before
the sky had begun to pale in the east, they came to another mud-bottomed creek
bed. This was wider than the last one and filled with tall, reedy flowers.
These were full-leaved enough in places to form fairly secure screens against
aerial observation. Rolf made a screen for the animals against the high bank of
the dry creek, under which they were willing enough to lie when he had given
them some water. He and Catherine found dry spots close together at a little
distance from the animals, and after bending a few flower-stalks overhead for
better concealment lay down and promptly slept.
When
Rolf awoke again the sun was full and bright, hurling splinters of its light
between leaves into his face. Insects murmured undisturbed in the full drowse
of summer day. The girl, curled up in her brown servant's dress, face hidden
resting on her rolled-up cloak, still slept. Her back was to Rolf, her
breathing regular, her legs pulled up inside her dress. He noticed that the
bottoms of her bare feet were calloused hard.
He
arose silently and went on a brief scouting expedition, fifty meters or so up
and down the mud-bottomed gully, not getting far from the tall flowers. He
studied the sky with great care but saw no reptiles. He found a place where it
seemed a little digging might reach water. And he stood looking long to the
northwest. There were some trees in that direction, and a great deal of long
grass, but the cover seemed inadequate for an attempt at traveling by day. They
had finally managed to lose the enemy and there was no sense in being spotted
again at once. He tried to weigh in his mind the odds that the Constable would
bring his men this way, find the creek-bed, follow it, and flush them out,
before darkness fell again.
He
could hope that Ardneh would warn him again in time, but he could not be sure.
It seemed to him that he had scores of kilometers yet to travel.
He went
quietly back to Catherine, who had stirred in her sleep, stretched out her legs,
and turned her face up. Now she looked very young. Her face was not pretty, he
thought, even apart from the still-swollen and discolored cheekbone and a few
odd scratches and smears acquired in the last day and night. Her nose was just
off-shape enough to deny her prettiness in any case. And her stretched-out body
now looked a little awkward.
But she
was most certainly a girl. He had not had the leisure until now to consciously
consider her as such.
An
insect whirred close above her face. Waking suddenly, she sat up with a start,
regarded him with bewilderment for a moment, and then sank back, remembering.
"I
have got away from her," she said then, softly, looking all around as if
awakening from some evil dream, and making sure of reality. Then she looked at
Rolf and added: "Your friends have not caught up with us. Are we to meet
them somewhere?"
"Nor
my enemies, either." He regarded her silently for a few moments.
"Your black eye looks better than it did."
Her
gaze dropped as if in sudden shyness. "What will we do now?"
"Eat
some food. Dig a hole in this mud, we'll probably be able to get some drinkable
water. It may take a while, but we'll be here all day with little else to do.
Don't want to travel with the reptiles watching, not once we've lost
them."
She got
up stiffly, brushing back from her eyes long hair that had come unbound.
"Shall I start digging right away?"
"See
about getting a little food ready. I'll dig. The animals are going to need more
water soon."
Rolf
took a long knife and dug for a while in the likeliest-looking place he could
fnd, a sandy area against a bank. At first only soupy muck appeared, but after
some diligence in scooping out the hole and patience in letting it refill, a
supply of usable water was available. After he led the animals to drink, he and
Catherine sat eating dried food and finishing the contents of the waterbag.
She was
not very talkative, he thought. In fact it seemed to him that the silence was
definitely growing awkward, before she suddenly announced: "I am sure that
my family will pay some ransom for me if you were to find a way of returning me
to the Offshore Islands. We are not poor, and our city was never overrun by the
East."
Rolf
munched for a while in thoughtful silence.
The
less he told her now, the better, he decided. She might become separated from
him in some way, and fall again into Eastern hands. He said: "It doesn't
seem likely that I'll be able to take you home. Not very soon."
Eagerly
she edged a little closer to him, again putting back her long brown hair.
"You wouldn't have to take me all the way. If you could show me how I can
reach one of the armies of the West, I would - I would pledge that my family
would reward you."When he was silent her eagerness faded. "I know, it
would mean having to wait for your money. And why should you believe me at
all?"
"I
have heard your accent before. I believe you, about your family. But I have
other business that must be taken care of, that cannot wait."
She
said no more for a while. But after they had led the animals back to deeper
shelter, she said: "I do not know if you are waiting here foryour friends,
or what. I suppose you don't want to tell me."
Rolf
threw himself down in the spot where he had slept, and aftera moment Catherine
sat nearby, next to her rolled-up cloak. She went on: "Maybe you have to
divide your loot with them. I don't know how such things are maifaged among
bandits. But if you are not planning to meet them, or if you have given
"them up for lost, then you might come with me, and join the West. I am
sure that they need sturdy men."
"Hm.
Or even if I wanted to run out on my friends, not split the loot with them at
all, I could do that." He paused, wickedly enjoying her confusion.
"But there are good reasons why I cannot do that. Not right now."
She was
downcast, but persistent. "I understand, you have that great jewel to
profit from. Why should you get mixed up in battles? Maybe you even were once a
Western soldier, and deserted. I know some men become bandits that way. I do
not know or care, I only know that you have helped me more than you can know,
and I want to thank you for it. Since you have done it, for whatever reason,
you might as well have the reward. My father is a burgomaster of Bir-gun, which
asyou may knowis one of the chief cities of the Offshore Islands, a city never
touched by the East and still powerful. Prince Duncan's home is not far from
there, and I am sure that you have heard of him."
"A
friend of yours, no doubt."
"I
have seen him. Not much more than that."
"If
your city was untouched, how did you come to be a slave?"
She
looked off into the distance. "A long story, like many others you must
know. I was traveling away from home, and caught up in an Eastern raid ... I am
sure my kinsmen must be searching for me, and their gratitude will be great
toward anyone who brings me back." Her eyes came back to Rolf. "And
no one in the Islands would think you a thief for having taken some Eastern
jewels at the same time."
Both
were silent for a little while. Then Catherine went on, as if more to herself
than to Rolf: "There is also the man to whom I was pledged in marriage,
but it has been so long . . . more than a year since I was lost. He may well be
married to another by now, or dead, for he was a soldier." She seemed calm
enough about it, as if all that former life were decades behind her instead of
only months; and Rolf understood her; his life too had been broken off in the
same way.
Evidently
encouraged because he was at least tolerating her talk, she asked: "Do you
know anything of how the war is going?"
He
thought a little, and made an answer that any alert bandit should be able to
give. "Duncan keeps an army in the field, keeps the fight going. Ominor
can't seem to drive him off the mainland, or plant him in it either."
A
sparkle shown in Catherine's good eye. "I tell you, the West is going to
win. If they have not been beaten by this time, it never can be done."
"The
same thing might be said about the East," Rolf said drowsily, and closed
his eyes. "I'll think on what you've said. No more of it for now. Try and
get some more sleep. Later in the day the Constable may be coming near, and
we'll need to be alert."
They
spent the remaining daylight hours in their hideaway, resting, watching, trying
to help the animals. The beasts were in pain from their infected wounds, and
one of them was limping noticeably. Rolf glimpsed a reptile in the distant sky,
but he could not tell what business it was about. In the last hour before
sunset he grew restless and impatient, listening intently at every far-off
sound. As soon as it was dark, having eaten again, they set off into the
northwest, leading the animals until the day's stiffness should be worked out
of their muscles.
At the
first rest stop the girl said to him: "Let me ask you bluntly. Do you mean
to keep me with you? What will you do with me?"
"Have
I not used you better than your previous master did? Of course. What are you
worried about? The less you know of my business, the better off you are, I
think."
"I
see that."She spoke softly and reasonably. "It is only that I have
hopes of traveling west, of getting home. I did think of running away from you,
but I do not fear you anymore. And I know nothing of the land here, or where
the armies are."
"Let
me think about it, I say again. Don't worry. You are not getting any farther
from your goal."
For the
remainder of the night Catherine said no more about her hopes and fears, and
had very little to say on any subject. Rolf set a steady pace that covered a
good many kilometers, though now both animals were limping and the humans
walked more than they rode. Toward dawn they came upon a running stream with
tree-lined banks. After drinking their fill, they were searching for some good
cover against the coming hours of daylight, when out of nowhere a great gray
bird came down, first a soundless shadow and then a somehow unreal though solid
presence, big as a man, squatting in the grass before them. Catherine
half-raised one hand, as if to point, then froze.
"Greetings,
Roolf." The bird's voice was as soft and musical as that of the previous
night's messenger, but Rolf thought this was a different bird; most of them
looked much alike to him. The bird went on: "Strijeef of the Feathered
Folk sends his greetings."
"Take
mine to him, good messenger, if you will. What other news?"
"Only
that, to the south of you, humans and powers are gathering still, of the East
and of the West. It seems that both armies may followyooou intooo the
north."
"Are
there any orders for me?"
"Prince
Duncan sends you this word: I am to take what you are carrying, and fly on with
it ahead, if you can tell me where to go with it; if Ardneh does not
object."
Rolf
thoughtfully fingered the pouch wherein the great jewel lay. "No. Tell the
Prince the answer must still be no. If it seems I am about to be taken, then
come to me if you can, and I will give you this. Not otherwise."
The
bird was silent for a bit, then fixed enormous yellow eyes on Catherine.
"I must take a report back on this one whooo travels with you."
"She
does so by Ardneh's will. She is an enemy of the East, that much I am sure
about. And a former neighbor of Duncan's, it would seem. Come, bird, the light
is growing. Rest with us through the day; we can find some good place among
these trees. We will talk. Then tomorrow night you can bear my answers back to
Duncan."
A
little later, when they were securely hidden in a thicket, Rolf looked closely
at the stunned face of Catherine, who had not said a word since the bird came
down. With a rare full smile on his own face, he said: "Welcome. You see
that you have reached the armies of the West."
V
Little
Moment of Revenge
After
speeding Rolf on his way with a final wave, Chup crouched down between Mewick
and Loford on the little sheltered ledge they had scooped out of the side of
the ravine. Looking to the southeast, he could see the Constable's force just
coming into sight a kilometer away. Despite the distance, Chup thought that he
could distinguish Charmian's long golden hair. An illusion, she would have it
bound up for the ride. He told himself he should have killed her when he had
the chance . . .Mewick was plucking at his sleeve, and motioning that it was
time to move. Down in the bottom of the ravine, Chup mounted and followed the
other six men remaining in the party, riding in a single file angling up the
side of the ravine. Mewick was leading them to the northeast, at right angles
to the course that Rolf had chosen.
About a
dozen reptiles were in the sky, Chup noted as they reached the top of the slope
and trotted toward the next ravine. The leatherwings were beginning to
concentrate above the little Western force. Chup caught another glimpse of
Abner's force, advancing steadily, beginning now to come into the broken
country.
The
chances of perpetrating an ambush seemed vanishingly small at the moment. To
Loford, just ahead of him, Chup called: "What's in your bag of tricks,
stout one?"
Mewick
at the head of the file heard him, turned and called: "Let us see what we
can find in our arrow-bags first." And then he led them down one ravine in
a sudden dash toward the enemy column that sent the reptiles speeding ahead to
croak their warnings, and then back up another, smaller, narrower ravine, on a
winding, reversing course that took them out of sight of the reptiles. Mewick
thereupon abruptly called a halt, and with virtuosic gestures bade his men draw
and nock arrows and aim into the air. When the first reptiles came coasting
back over the hilltop close above, to discover what had happened to the
vanished subjects of their surveillance, the ready volley brought down one and
winged another. While the flock was still recoiling in noisy outrage from this
ambush, Mewick led his men on up the winding ravine at a headlong gallop, once
more unobserved by the foe. Following some instinct of his own that seemed as
accurate as aerial observation, he halted again suddenly, dismounted, and
scrambled up a slope to peer through grass at the top. Letting out a hissing
noise of satisfaction, he once more pantomimed his wish for archery, this time
even correcting his men's angle of aim, and then, with an unmistakable slashing
gesture, bidding them loose their arrows blindly. Before the shafts could have
tallen from the sky upon any targets, Mewick was in the saddle again and
leading the retreat. There was a pained outcry from somewhere below.
The
little volley of arrows had fallen scattered among and around the front of the
enemy column, and one of them had drawn blood. More important, it stopped the
enemy's forward progress for the moment, and assured its somewhat slower and
more cautious movement in the future.
Mewick
now led his men toward the north, for the time being making no effort to do
anything but keep between the enemy and the course he wanted them to think that
Rolf was following.
The
morning wore along uneventfully. The two groups of mounted men made their way
steadily northward on parallel courses. Around the line of march the desert
badlands reared up strange barren shapes of rock, among which smaller rocks lay
jumbled and dry ravines lost their way.
Mewick
somehow found a reasonably straight way through. Then suddenly he stopped, staring
intently at the reptiles in the sky. "Demons of all the East!" he
muttered fiercely. "But they are getting away from us. West! We must get
west, and catch up with them!"
Riding
hard, they topped a rise and caught sight of the enemy column moving away to
the northwest, seemingly right on the trail of Rolf who had evidently not
managed to shake the reptiles after all. Abner had maneuvered himself between
the fugitives he was trying to overtake, and the annoying, elusive handful of
men who were trying to delay him.
Mewick
kept his men moving forward briskly. "Wizard?" he asked.
Loford,
riding now in the middle of the file, was letting his mount find its own way,
while his large blue eyes looked into distances that were not of earth or sky,
and his fingers fumbled in a bag he had withdrawn from his pack. His gross body
jiggled unheeded with the rapid ride. He took from the cloth bag a smaller bag
of leather, curiously decorated in many colors, and from that in turn a length
of sandy-colored twine, twisted into many strange knots. He rode on for some
distance, fingering this absently, then suddenly seemed to come to himself, and
with a throat-clearing got the attention of all the others.
"Hum.
As the signs and powers now stand, the only thing of any consequence that I can
manage successfully is to evoke a desert-elemental. But even at best to call
one up will mean some difficulty and danger for us all. At worse-well things
could get quite out of hand."
Mewick
shook his head. "You had best try. Our swords and arrows are too few,
unless we can get between them and Rolf once more."
"I
am wondering," Chup put in, "how strong a wizard they have with them.
Not that our pudgy fellow here is easily overmatched, but the Constable of the
East will surely be well attended in that regard."
"As
to that," said Loford, unperturbed, "we will soon enough find out.
Now let me do my work. No, keep moving. Just a little silence; I can raise an
elemental as well as almost any other man, while I ride on beast-back if need
be."
With
fingers suddenly turned extremely skillful, he tilted the little leather bag so
that there ran from it a thin stream of ordinary-looking sand, falling to be
lost along the trail. Holding the bag in one hand while it slowly continued to
spill, he used his other hand and his teeth to tug at certain places in the
curiously knotted twine. One by one knots fell away and straightened out.
Counting knots as they disappeared, Chup caught his breath. "We'll all be
sandblasted to the bone," he muttered. But he made no real protes't;
heroic measures were called for.
Loford's
art took quick effect. Looking to the northwest, beyond the enemy force, Chup
watched the sandy land seem to shake out its'dunes like wrinkles from a
blanket, rising with the appearance of a single deep ocean swell as far as eye
could see to right and left. Chup, who had seen similar things before, knew it
was not in fact the whole earth lifting up, only surface sand raised by a great
wave of wind, yet involuntarily he tried to brace his feet more firmly in the
stirrups.
Reptiles
chattered and shrieked alarm. From near the head of the distant Eastern mounted
column, one tiny mounted figure detached itself, spurring with seeming
confidence toward the oncoming wall of sand that here and there took on vague
shapes of hands and jaws. It would be the Constable's wizard. The tiny
man-figure raised its arms, and Chup heard Loford grunt as if he had received a
blow. The stout magician turned his animal aside, slid awkwardly from the
saddle, and sank down on one knee, eyes squinted shut, while his comrades
reined to a halt around him.
"Ah,
Ardneh," Loford groaned, "Ardneh, help! He means to turn what I have
raised against us."
The
galloping Eastern wizard seemed to be under no such strain as Loford suffered.
Riding easily, he moved his outstretched arms forward and down toward the
oncoming elemental; Chup, watching, had the impression of a tremendous
quelling, quieting force. But it might almost have been the useless gesture of
a child. The wavefront of wind and wind-blown earth poured on remorselessly and
struck. For a moment or two there remained a tiny isle of calm, around the
mounted Eastern magician, not much wider than his arms could stretch, in which
air fell quiet and lifeless before his coun-terspell. But then he and his
defended island vanished; the elemental rolled on unimpeded, reaching out
monstrous half-living paws of sand and air for Abner and his fifty men.
With a
cry of relief, Loford staggered to his feet. Then the elemental's peripheral
winds and dust were beating on the Western men. Chup felt the sting and lash of
sand, and the air was a sudden shriek around his ears. The bright sun, and his
friends, were suddenly gone, concealed within the desert as it walked. When
things cleared for a moment, he glimpsed the dense core of the elemental
squatting some hundreds of meters to the northwest, right where Abner's force
had been. Abner's force was still there, from the look of things. Out of the
solid-looking clouds of raging sand came Eastern men individually, riding,
staggering, crawling; and here and there fled blinded and demented animals.
This elemental would not kill, at least not quickly and not often, but it would
surely disable any human fighting force it settled on.
Chup
cried out: "Ah, for a score of men to charge them now!" But to charge
and fight in the heart of the storm would be to put oneself under the same
disadvantage as the enemy, and he knew full well the impulse had to be
restrained. Mewick instead used the time gained to best advantage by getting
his few men once more between Rolf and the disorganized foe. The reptiles, hit
harder than any land creatures by the elemental's blasts, were swept from the
sky for the time being, and Mewick found a place against the steep side of a
sheer jutting rock, where his men might hope to remain unobserved should the
reptiles manage to come back, and from which they might sally out to sting the
Constable again if and when he came on in pursuit of Rolf.
Chup
huddled with the others between sheltering rocks, muffling his face with his
cloak against the sand. Once more Loford groaned. "Now they too are
getting help from greater powers," he muttered.
The
wind died suddenly, rose again, then came and went in fitful gusts. Squinting
into the sky above the enemy, Chup could see that the Eastern wizard had at
last been able to call upon some effective force. The elemental was broken into
a multitude of smaller whirlwinds, each of which raised a cloud of sand and
dust, but which taken all together lacked the purpose and power that the single
great creature had possessed. He could see, too, that Loford had not abandoned
the struggle. The numerous whirlwinds danced around a common center, and seemed
to be striving continually to reunite.
"The
wind is no longer so bad we cannot walk or ride," Mewick shouted to his
men, making himself heard above the shrieking air. "Let us see if we can
strike another blow!"
Abner
had lost two men to the elemental, one blinded permanently by sand, the other
left crazed and unable to do more than whimper to himself. It was midday before
he had his forces properly marshalled again, the hopelessly wounded disposed of
and their riding-beasts and other useful property distributed among the well.
The wind was now no worse than a bearable storm. He considered dividing his
force, feeling reasonably confident that there was no superior enemy body
anywhere near, but decided against it when his wizard assured him that the
winds must continue to decline.
The
Constable cast a final look at his assembled force (the woman Charmian, dressed
like a soldier and muffled against sand like the others, smiled bravely and
admiringly at him; well, he couldn't have left her at the caravanserai, there
was no telling when he'd be able to go back) and got it moving forward again.
Scarcely had they gone a kilometer, however, when there came a few more arrows
down upon them, from a hilltop close ahead. One more man was hit. At the
Constable's order forty cavalry charged the hill with leveled lances, but its
top was now deserted, and behind it several ravines offered concealment for a
small force and the possibility of further ambushes. The Constable's horn
sounded a recall.
Again
they moved on to the northwest. The first reptile able to return to the column,
between disabling wind-blasts, reported flatter, grassier country ahead, into
which the two fleeing Westerners were making steady progress, while the seven
others remained between the fleeing two and Abner. The Constable consulted his
weary wizard, who confirmed him in his opinion that the two more distant
fugitives had the huge important gem with them. The Constable ground his teeth
and profaned the names of demons in his anger. He felt by no means certain of
getting back the gem. Though the long hours of a summer afternoon still lay
ahead, the sun had by now definitely passed its highest point.
There
now arrived a reptile-courier from the Emperor of the East himself, who was
with his main armies in the field a good many kilometers to the south. The
courier bore an answer to the Constable's urgent dispatch of the early morning,
informing the court that an object had been stolen similar to, but even larger
than, that which had been used in the unsuccessful attempt to neutralize
Ardneh. The answer from Ominor now was that the object was certainly of great
importance, and the Constable must take personal command of the attempt to get
it back. Also that he must conduct his search to the northwest -divination at
the highest level gave assurance that the thing was being taken in that
direction. Also, that reinforcements were being sent as quickly as possible to
the Constable's aid. The first of these, a flight of a hundred additional
reptiles, began to arrive shortly after the courier.
The
West, too, Abner thought sourly, would doubtless be throwing in reinforcements,
and there would come a hundred more birds to harass him through the night. As
the reptiles came in, he sent them to scour the country far ahead, to try to
discover where the fugitives were heading.
Half an
hour's steady forward progress followed, before one of the scouting reptiles
came screaming that the small Western force was drawing up in a line on a
hilltop directly in their line of march.
"Seven
men? I wish they would make such a stand."
When he
had got a little closer and could better see the hill, he realized the Western
maneuver was not so foolish as it had sounded. The slope was very wide from
left to right, and too steep for mounted men to charge up it at any speed in
the loose sand. Once more they would take casualties from arrows and find the
foe gone when they reached the top. But to go clear around the hill would let
the enemy succeed in delaying them, without paying anything for the privilege .
. . Abner quickly decided to spread his men out and charge the hill. He would
accept two or three casualties to inflict one; he would be delayed little if at
all; and there was always the chance the fools would stand and fight.
The skirmish
went about as he had expected, except that the Western arrows came down a
little more thickly than he had hoped, so Abner left four men upon the slope.
And when the crest was reached, the foe was gone, except for one who lay in the
sand with the shaft of an Eastern arrow protruding from his head.
At any
rate the country from here on was definitely flatter; the harassing enemy would
have to remain at a greater distance. He could see the six riders on a distant
rise, as if beckoning him to follow. Above them (at a safe altitude) many
reptiles were cawing loudly and circling in the sky; but his wizard motioned in
a slightly different direction, and in that way Abner directed his troops.
The
hours of light remaining were still long, but inexorably growing shorter. Some
of the reptiles sent to scout far ahead of the two fugitives began to return,
saying they could find no settlements, no buildings, nothing that looked as if
it might be the fugitives' goal. Grass grew tall and thick in that land, the
reptiles reported, and trees in ever-increasing numbers. There were many places
where the two-legged beasts could go to earth once darkness had fallen, and
finding them again in the morning might not be easy. How far ahead were the
fugitives now? Several kilometers. It was hard to say exactly; the reptiles'
horizontal-distance sense, like that of the birds, was poor.
Abner
moved his troops at a hard pace, though both men and animals were weary. He had
the feeling he was gaining. No more hills obtruded themselves to give the six
skirmishers another place to make a stand. They kept half a kilometer ahead of
Abner in the open country, and seemed for the time being powerless to do more.
Just
when it seemed that the day was going reasonably well after all, there sprang
up another wind from dead ahead, erecting another wall of dust whose sudden
creation bespoke the working of more Western magic. But this wind brought
little pain to sore Eastern faces; it was far weaker (or perhaps more subtle)
than the desert-elemental had been. This had been born in the sea of grass that
lay ahead, beyond the desert. It did not blind and abrade with particles or
threaten to kill with heat.
Abner's
wizard was hard at work in his saddle once more, gesturing with a talisman of
some kind in each hand. Whether he was having any success was hard to judge;
the wind appeared about the same, able to do no obvious harm. The Constable
tried to recall the characteristics of prairie-elementals, which he assumed
this was. He seemed to remember that bleakness and tangled grass and natural
wind were three components, but there was something else too, something he
could not quite remember. His schooling in this branch of magic had been
sketchy, and was now far in the past.
They
had left the desert behind them, and were struggling through the first of the
grasslands, when he remembered the most pertinent characteristic of
prairie-elementals: distance itself.
His
eyes told him what was happening, now that he thought to look closely for it.
Beneath the feet of his riding-beast, and those of the other animals in his
troop, the grassy land was elongating in the direction of their travel, like an
optical illusion in reverse. Three steps forward were required to cover the
real distance normally contained in two.
With a
shout the Constable called his magician to his side, dragged the wretch from
his saddle, and beat him half a dozen vicious blows with the flat of his sword.
"Blunderer! Traitor! Could you not tell me what was happening? Or are you
too thick-witted to be aware of it yourself?" He yearned to strike with
the working edge of the blade, but was not ready to leave himself effectively
wizardless in the face of the enemy.
"Ah,
mercy, Lord!" the beaten wizard cried. "There be powers against me
here such as I have never faced before."
Charmian
had ridden forward from her place near the rear of the little column, and
seeing that the Constable glanced at her but did not at once order her back,
was emboldened to take part. To the unhappy wizard she said savagely: "One
fat lout from the provinces opposes you, a man I have met before and know to be
nearly devoid of skill, compared to what my Lord Constable's wizard should
possess. My Lord Constable is ill-served indeed."
"I
tell you I am blameless," the magician cried. He had fallen on his knees
before the mounted Constable, while behind them the column halted.
"Who
has defeated you? What mighty power?" the Constable demanded. "If you
cannot tell me even that much, why should I not take you for a traitor, or an
imbecile incompetent?"
"I
know not what or who!" The magician's eyes were wild. "I knew not
even that I was being beaten, until your mighty Lordship struck at me, as-as
indeed I must be grateful for, that I was not slain out of hand."
Charmian's
expression had changed as she listened, and now she put out a hand to Abner.
"Wait, my good Lord, if it please you. There may be something to what this
man says. There is one among our enemies who is subtle and powerful enough to confound
most wizards in this way."
"So."
Abner's rage was quickly transformed into calculation. He knew by now that
Charmian was intelligent, or rather that she could be when it suited her; and
she had come close to Ardneh in the past. "What more can you tell me on
this point?"
She
looked at Abner with an apparent anxiety to please. "Little enough right
now, my Lord. Let me talk with this fellow for a while, as we go on, and it may
be I can learn something worth your hearing."
"So
be it." With a savage gesture Abner got the stalled column moving
again-two-thirds speed was better than none-and then, grimacing, he got paper
from his saddlebag and reluctantly prepared to send a message asking Wood for
help.
Charmian
now had perfect reason for riding next to the wizard, and holding with him a
lengthy whispered conversation of which no one else could hear a word.
"So,
fellow," she began, in a tone remote and commanding. "I have saved
you from the punishment your clumsiness merits. If you wish me to remain your
friend, there is a simple thing you can do for me in return."
He
looked at her with fear and calculation. "I am eternally in your debt,
fair lady. What is there I can possibly do for you?"
"It
might seem unimportant to my Lord the Constable, and I have not bothered him
with it. But it is a meaningful matter to me." She began to explain.
She had
not said much before the wizard was shaking his head, and holding up a finger
to stop her speech. "No, no. If it were possible to cast a spell and bring
down some disabling woe on those two fleeing from us, I would have done so long
ere this. It was one of the first things the Constable asked of me, before
taking the field in pursuit of them. But it cannot be done so simply.
Conditions are not right in many ways - "
"I
care little or nothing about harming the man," Charmian broke in. "It
is the girl, Catherine, who betrayed me." Her voice dropped lower still,
hate tightening it like some rack-rope in a dungeon. "It was she who got
them to manhandle me. I saw her smirking, gloating, overherlittle moment of
revenge . . . well, I mean to have the last laugh over her. I must and I will.
Find me a way to give me my revenge upon that girl, and I will reward you
well." She shifted her body in the saddle and saw his eyes go wandering
over her, as if they had no choice but to do so when she willed it. "But
fail to do so, and I will tell the Constable that which will bring his full
wrath back upon you; it hangs balanced over your head already, and needs but a
gentle touch to bring it down. I will say that it was not Ardneh at all who
defeated you, but some trivial power."
"It
was Ardneh, or his equal. It must have been."
Charmian
did not appear to have heard.
The
magician -he was using no name at all at present, a procedure not unheard of
among those of his calling - rode on in silence for a little time, sizing up
with sidelong looks the woman who rode beside him, taking her measure in more
ways than one. "No, no," he said again. "From here there is no
way that I can visit on this fleeing servant girl the tortures that you have in
mind. We have no hair of hers, or nail clippings, or even anything she owned
-hey? I thought not. Even a comparatively mild curse would take -no, there is
no way."
But Charmian
was quick to catch him up. "Would take what?"
The
nameless magician evidently regretted starting to say whatever it was that he
had left unfinished. How could he have made such a clumsy slip?
"Disagreeable
fool, you are going to have to tell me sooner or later."
Imagine
a vast buried sea of power, into which a man might hope to sink a secret well,
not in safety, but still with reasonable hope of not being caught in a
disaster, because he and a few others had managed to do it successfully a few
times in the past. The Nameless One pondered briefly and fatalistically the
secret syllables of a Name forbidden to be spoken. Wood knew that name, and
Ominor of course, and four or five others in the highest councils of the East.
It was seldom even alluded to -the Nameless One had heard Wood do so only once,
on the day of Ardneh's visit to the capital.
Charmian
prodded him: "It would seem to be a worthless power, or whatever it is, if
it cannot be used." And again: "Remember, I meant what I said, both
my promise and my threat."
The
Nameless One believed her. "All right, then. We will see. I will try what
can be tried."
Throughout
the remainder of the day, the Constable gained upon his prey, but not enough.
As sunset came, the wind abated and the prairie-elemental died; but the night
belonged to the West, and Abner reluctantly gave orders to make camp and set a
vigilant guard.
VI
Ardneh
Rolf
was saying: "You told me yourself that your Offshore man is likely wedded
by now to someone else. What does it matter, then, if you should come and sit
by me?
It was
morning again, the second since theirflight had begun. The bird had gone into
hiding for the day in a nearby tree, where he-or she, Rolf was not sure-was now
practically invisible. Since talking with the bird, Catherine and Rolf had
slept a little, and had drunk their fill of fresh running water.
She
looked at him now with what was almost a smile. "Is it some military
matter you wish to discuss?" Catherine had been kneeling on the stream's
grassy bank trying to see her face in the water below. The swelling on her
cheekbone had gone down, but the discoloration was if anything worse than
before, mottling from purple into green.
"Well.
. ." He spread his hands. "We could begin with military secrets. You
are at least four meters away, and to shout them across such a space would put
them in danger of being overheard by the enemy." He looked up and around
him with a great show of wariness. Catherine almost laughed.
They
were in a little grove cut through by the stream. Looking out of the shade of
the trees Rolf could see in all directions, fields and gentle hills of grass
dotted here and there with other copses or single trees. It might be the patchy
remnants of a receding forest or the struggling outposts of a new one.
Rolf
sat with his back against a fallen trunk, facing across the stream, which was
here only six or eight meters wide, and very shallow. With his right hand he
patted the smooth grass beside him, indicating to Catherine where she was
invited to sit.
She had
given up trying to study her face in the water, but asyet she came no closer.
"I do not know, sir, whether I should. Still, I suppose you are now my
commanding officer, and if I flout your orders I am liable to find myself in
some military court."
A cloud
of irritation passed over his face. "No, don't joke about that. Giving
orders, I mean." She sat back with her feet tucked under her, looking at
him steadily. "I mean, I have seen people I knew executed by military
courts. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to squelch a joke. You must have had few
chances for them, since . . .when were you taken by the East?"
"A
lifetime ago." No longer close to laughing, she got up slowly, and with
her hands rubbed her bare arms as if she were peeling, scraping, something off.
"But let's not talk about that now. I wish this stream were deep enough to
swim and soak in it." Her servant's dress was stained, as were Rolf's
clothes, with travel and hard usage, and her bound-up brown hair was dull with
dust. But she looked less tired by far than she had before their flight.
"We
could look for a deeper place," he said. "I would enjoy a swim
myself, I think." He felt a little pulse begin, inside his head.
"Leave
these trees, in daylight?"
"I
meant tonight. At dusk."
She
came nearerthen, though not quite as near as his patting hand had indicated,
and sat down. Her eyes flicked at him, unreadably; at nineteen he had long
since given up trying to understand women.
He
said: "I should never have mentioned that man you were to wed."
"No.
I am thinking only of the girl I was, and how I have been changed. How when I
was young I flirted and laughed and teased."
"When
you were young? What are you now, about seventeen?"
"Two
years ago I was fifteen, I think. But now I am no longer young."
"So,
you are really such an old woman." Now his voice was growing more soft and
tender. "Then you must be a fit companion for an old man like myself.
" And somehow he had traversed the little distance that had been between
them, and his fingers had begun a gentle stroking of her bare arm, up to the
coarse slave's-cloth at the shoulder.
Her
look seemed to say to him that his behavior was far from being unendurable;
that, perhaps, if it went on a little longer it might begin to give her
pleasure. His arm would have needed less encouragement than that to start
unhurriedly going around her. It had always seemed to Rolf something of a
wonder how this hard and angular limb of his always managed to adapt itself so
neatly and exactly to the soft job of girl-holding. This one was certainly a
soft girl now, regardless of how lean and strong she had appeared only a little
while ago. Now in response to a firm pressure of his fingers on her cheek (safely
below the blackened eye) her face turned round to his more fully. He found her
lips.
Her
smooth face rubbed willingly under his straggly beard. Time passed, then seemed
about to be forgotten. Now he would kiss tenderly the swelling on her
cheekbone, before he began a line of kisses moving down her throat.
Now,
what was this upon her skin?
What
had happened -
What -
With an
outcry Rolf sprang to his feet and backed away, stumbling and almost falling in
his haste. He grabbed up his sword and half-drew it from its sheath before he
was aware of doing so, and when he became aware he scarce knew whether to
finish pulling out the blade or push it back.
Before
him now, and lately enfolded most tenderly in his arms, was one of the most
hideous human shapes it had ever been his ill fortune to behold. What had been
Catherine's healthy young face had altered while he kissed it to the visage of
a withered, snaggle-toothed, misshapen crone. Even where he now stood, some
meters distant, he thought he could still taste the pestilent breath. Under
stiff, dirt-colored hair, tied up just as the young girl's had been, were the
face and neck of an unrecognizable old woman, skin wrinkled as a rag, dotted
with warts and here and there a whisker. The strong smooth arms that Rolf had
felt about his neck were shrunken now to quivers of loose skin in which bones
slid like crooked arrows. The breathing that had moved young breasts against
him now had altered to a scraping wheeze, coming from a body as shapeless as
the dress that covered it.
The old
woman staggered to her feet, groping before her with fingers gnarled like
roots. Her features worked, but her face was so distorted by age and disease
that Rolf could not for a moment guess whether it was terror, anger, or laughter
that moved her now.
Moving
like some crippled sleepwalker, she tottered toward him on the brink of the
grassy bank. "Rolf?" she cawed out the one word, in something like a
reptile's voice, and then her figure seemed to blur, and down she fell on hands
and knees.
Later
he could not estimate how long he had stood there, rubbing his eyes, trying to
see the figure before him clearly once again. In time he discovered that the
blurring was not in his eyes, but in the female shape before them. Then all at
once she was as she had been before he took her in his arms; healthy and young,
the purplish-green bruise upon her cheek, vital brown hair struggling to escape
the tie that bound it up. It was Catherine on her hands and knees, her face
convulsed in terror. "Rolf?" she cried out once again, this time in
her own voice, and he threw down his sword and fell on his knees beside her.
She
covered her face with her hands, until he pulled them away gently. Her whisper
was still terrified: "How do you see me now?"
He put
out a hand to caress her, but sudden suspicion made him draw it back. "As
a girl. As you were when we first met."
"Thank
all the powers of the West. Then she could not make it permanent . . . why do
you still look at me so? What do you see?"
Shaken,
he blurted clumsily: "I see a girl. But how do I know which is your true
shape, this one or the other? What kind of magic is this?"
"What
kind of magic? Hers, the evil woman's . . . she has found some way to do this
foul thing to me. I know it." Now the first immensity of Catherine's
terror was gone, but tears were standing in her eyes. "I heard it from her
and others, that never in my life should I escape her. The Lady Demon,
Charmian."
Gazing
at the young form before him, Rolf suddenly could no longer believe that it
might be a lie, the product of some Eastern enchantment. Catherine had none of
Charmian's glamor; her youth and health was marked with human awkwardness and
imperfection. She was too complete and varied to be unreal. He said,
reassuringly: "There are Western wizards who can deal with any
spell."
"Hold
me," she whispered, and he took her in his arms again. For a while he
comforted, he soothed, and all was well. Once more he kissed the bruised
cheekbone, which this time did not change. And then, as his caresses ceased to
be meant as comforting, he saw the first sagging wrinkle appear upon her cheek.
This
time he did not retreat so rapidly or so far, but still he let her go. This
time he watched the progress of the cycle with compassion, as Catherine passed
through decrepit ugliness and back to youth again. Then they were silent for a
little while, looking at each other like grave children.
"It
is when I embrace you as a man with a woman that it happens," he said at last.
And she nodded, but made no other move. A long time passed before she spoke at
all.
Near
sundown, as Rolf awoke from a fitful sleep and began to prepare for another
night of travel, he saw a great swarm of reptiles taking shelter for the night
in a grove about a kilometer to the southeast. Rolf could see no Eastern ground
forces, but they must be near; the reptiles would need at least a few human
defenders to survive the night if they were discovered by the Feathered Folk.
With
the first true darkness, the bird awoke, and came to perch briefly on Rolf's
hospitably leveled forearm, settling with a surprising spread of soft,
balancing wings; it weighed no more than a small child. Pointing south with his
free hand, Rolf said: "It is good we did not rest in that grove instead,
for there the trees have just filled up with leather."
"Hooo!
Then I must go quickly and gather my people here."
"I
have some words for you to carry to Duncan, also. Some Eastern magic has been
worked upon us." While Catherine stood by listening, he told the bird in
brief what had happened.
"Carry
word also," Catherine added, "that our riding-beasts are failing. One
is too far gone to be ridden, I think, and the other not much better."
Rolf
went to inspect the animals himself, but had to agree that Catherine was right.
The bird took thought, and then offered: "Let them gooo free. I will send
birds tonight to ride and goad them far from here, so if the East should find
them tomorrow they will be misled."
The few
belongings they had, weapons and cloaks and a small store of food, made no
great burden. With compact bundles on their backs, Rolf and Catherine waved
goodby to the bird and stepped off once more to the northwest, at first
following the stream closely. There would be no looking for bathing-spots
tonight, not with the enemy only a kilometer away. He and Catherine managed to
cover about fifteen kilometers before dawn. During the night they saw no more
birds; probably all who could fly had been mustered for an attack on the
roosting reptile horde.
There
was no difficulty on the next morning -or on the next, after another uneventful
night of walking -about finding places in which to hide. The country through
which they traveled was gradually becoming more thickly wooded, though still
the long grass was dominant. The land also grew hillier, and was threaded at
frequent intervals with small streams which ended any remaining concern about
finding water. Catherine got her bath at last, in privacy.
"You
can take a little walk now, Rolf. I'll catch up when I'm through."
"What's
the matter? Hey, why pull away?''
She
looked at him steadily and pulled away even a little farther. "How can you
ask that?"
"Well,
but the curse may have expired by this time."
"Or
it may have grown more powerful. I'll not risk it again. It was easy enough for
you, you didn't have to feel your own body . . . changing. Don't try to touch
me."
And he
had to admit, with an unwilling sigh, that she was right.
Several
more nights of travel passed without notable incident. Nightly a bird came to
them, bringing news of how the rival armies had maneuvered the day before.
Duncan, the birds reported, was receiving from his wizards ever-stronger omens
of the importance of Ardneh to the West, and of Rolf's mission for Ardneh. The
Prince had dispatched a cavalry force to overtake Rolf and act as his escort to
wherever Ardneh wanted him to go. But the Western cavalry detailed for the job
had been intercepted by strong Eastern patrols, who were also converging upon
the area, and forced to fight. John Ominor was now thought to have taken direct
command of the main Eastern army in the field, though if so he was careful to
stay hidden in his tent at night, out of sight of birds.
On
another night, one of drizzling rain, Rolf and Catherine came to a stream wider
than any they had met so far. Squinting into the murky dark, Rolf found he
could not tell if the far bank was thirty meters distant or three hundred. At
the moment no bird was with them to act as guide. The river flowed roughly to
the north, but as soon as Rolf began to follow its bank in that direction a
sudden hard feeling of wrongness, almost a sickness, came over him. When he
stopped, the malaise subsided, only to return full force when he would have
gone on again. Catherine felt nothing, but he could scarcely walk. Only when he
reversed himself and followed the stream south did the sensation leave him. His
puzzlement ended a hundred meters upstream, where what he first took to be a
very odd-shaped stone in his path revealed itself on examination to be one end
of a large metal object, almost completely buried.
Since
Ardneh had apparently led them to it, he and Catherine set to work with knife
and hatchet to dig the thing out of the hardened earth. They had not got far
before they realized they were uncovering a small boat, made of Old World
metal, uncor-rupted by whatever ages it had lain under the ground. In an hour
or so they had the craft dug out; it proved to be practically undamaged and
perfectly usable, of a handy size for two passengers. Oars or paddles there
were none, but a little groping in the dark turned up a couple of branches
suitable for poles if the water were not too deep. Rolf took it for granted
that his proper course was still to the north, downstream. They loaded their
little gear into the boat and put out into the river, finding it fairly swift
and shallow. Before dawn they had made, while resting their feet, several more
kilometers toward their still unknown goal.
That
day they spent mostly in the boat, tied up to the shore under a sheltering
overhang of bushes. For the first time in days Rolf spotted a reptile; but the
enemy was cruising deep in the remote southern sky, and there was no reason to
think it had seen them. Toward evening Rolf took a couple of fish with a
whittled spear, and at sunset Catherine cooked them over a small fire. The food
in their packs was beginning to run low.
That
night, drifting north again over moonlit water, Rolf felt the conviction begin
to grow in him that he was nearing the end of his journey.
The
river wound its way north among the grassy hills of a land that seemed utterly
empty of intelligent life. Near the end of their second night on the water they
drifted past the mouth of a tributary creek, and Rolf obeying a sudden powerful
impulse turned the boat into it. Poling the boat upstream was difficult, and
the creek soon became so shallow that the boat scraped bottom frequently. Rolf
and Catherine emptied it of their belongings and let it drift free, back to the
larger stream that would carry it away from their path.
By now
it was light enough for reptiles to be out, but Rolf decided to push on. Brush
growing along the watercourse offered some concealment, and he had the sense
that some conclusion was imminent, the feeling that it would not greatly matter
if some reptile saw them now. Suspiciously he tried to analyze this feeling,
and decided that it came from Ardneh and was to be trusted.
The
water offered a path in which they would leave no trail. They waded on up the
stream, which was only four or five meters wide here and not much more than
ankle-deep.
"Why
should the water be so cold?" Catherine asked him. Rolf frowned, realizing
that she was right; the land was deep in summer, and such a little stream did
not have depths to hold a chill. Unless it was the outflow of some deep lake .
. .
A final
meandering of the stream between its gentle banks brought them round a little
hill, and he understood. The creek vanished unexpectedly into a hillside hole,
a tunnel-mouth with a ledge at one side just above the water level.
He
stood with Catherine before the tunnel-mouth for a little time, and then said:
"This is where we are to go."He felt her shiver beside him; chill air
emerging from some underground depth, flowed almost imperceptibly around them,
and their breaths steamed despite the growing radiance of the rising sun.
"Come," he said, and loosened his sword in its scabbard and moved
forward. Here the water narrowed and deepened quickly and he climbed out of it
to take the dry ledge that emerged from the hillside beside the stream.
Clay
and dank limestone folded them about, and as they proceeded the tunnel
gradually grew darker. It was far too regular to be natural, and marks showed
of the hand tools that had shaped its surface.
"A
mine," said Catherine. "I have never been in one before."
"Nor
I. But you are right, it must be a mine." Perhaps, Rolf thought, diggers
after some useful metal had by accident run into an underground vein of water,
and had dug this channel for it to keep their works from being flooded. That
must have been long ago, for the creek bed outside looked as old as any other
on the prairie.
The
passage curved, but not into the blinding darkness that Rolf had expected.
Ahead, it was joined by a vertical shaft, letting in the light of day from what
must be a hilltop some meters overhead. Looking up through the rough shaft when
he reached it, Rolf beheld a small circle of blue sky, fringed with stirring
grass.
"Look,"
urged Catherine, pointing downward. Half-embedded in the undisturbed clay
beneath theirfeet were rusted lumps of metal that must once have been tools.
Rolf
started to say something, then fell silent. He waited, listening, then moved
silently to look back down the passage in the direction they had come. It might
have been a drop of water that he had heard, falling from the wet stone and
clay of the tunnel's roof. After a moment he shook his head, returned to where
Catherine stood with a nocked arrow in her bow, and beckoned her to follow him.
Their journey's end was near, but they had not reached it yet.
"What
are we do to here?" she whispered at his back, but he did not know and did
not answer. Beyond the vertical shaft, the horizontal one continued, into truly
growing darkness.
Going
slowly to let his eyes adjust to deepening gloom, Rolf edged forward, his feet
just above the steady murmur of the stream. Here was where the stream gushed
into the tunnel, from an indistinguishable crevice at one side. Not a dozen
meters farther on, with the floor of the tunnel now completely dry, the miners'
ancient work abruptly broke off. More crumbling tools lay, as if dropped while
in use, against the tunnel's deepest face, and high in that face a hole
remained, leading to a deeper darkness. The ancient diggers might have broken
through, but had not entered whatever chamber lay beyond, for the hole was not
big enough . . .
The
aperture flamed abruptly, with cold, clear light. Catherine let out a little
cry and raised her bow. Rolf started, but in the next moment felt relief. He
knew Old World illumination when he saw it, hard and bright and steadier than
any flame. He had seen it before, and then as now Ardneh had been his guide.
He
reassured Catherine, and together they peered into the hole. It opened into a
simple room about five meters square, with gray smooth walls and flat panels in
the ceiling from which the cold light flowed tirelessly. A closed door stood in
the opposite wall.
Groping
among the fallen miners' tools, Rolf found the head of a pickaxe that was not
too corroded to be effective, and with it he worked at enlarging the hole the
miners had abandoned. Maybe the Old World lights had flashed for them as well,
and they had chosen to drop their tools and run, not coming back.
Catherine
worked at his side, clearing away lumps of rock and clay and smooth gray
paneling as he broke them loose. The hole was soon enlarged enough for them to
squeeze through. The floor was of the same gray stuff as the walls. Scattered
on the floor and on a few shelves along one wall were a number of
metallic-looking boxes, neatly marked with words in a language neither Rolf nor
Catherine could read. The room and its contents were vastly better-preserved
than the less ancient miners' tools had been, but even here Time had begun to
have his way. From one spot on the ceiling a waxy-looking icicle depended, and
Rolf on touching it found that it was rock, with a slow drop of ground
watergather-ing on its tip, and a small rocky stalagmite building on the floor
beneath. He shivered suddenly in the chill cave air, with a sudden sense of
what time might mean.
The
door leading out of the room tried to stay shut when he twisted at its handle
and shoved against it with a shoulder, but then it yielded with a sudden rasp.
The passage beyond the door was revealed abruptly as its ceiling panels sprang
to glowing life.
"Come,"
said Rolf, as Catherine hung back again. "I tell you it is all right. This
is where we are to be."
They
moved on through the new passage in the direction that seemed right to Rolf,
passing through other corridors and chambers. The sound of the stream in the
tunnel was lost somewhere behind them. In time they reached a room where the
air was warm and their breath no longer steamed.
Time
had hardly entered here as yet. There were many metal cabinets and racks,
seeming perfectly preserved, filled with equipment Rolf could not begin to
guess the purpose of, but which yet gave him an impression of a high degree of
organization.
On the
most prominent panel at one end of the room stood bold symbols that he could
not read, but which he recognized as having the look of certain Old World
writings that he had seen before:
AUTOMATIC
RESTORATION DIRECTOR-NATIONAL EXECUTIVE HEADQUARTERS
"Rolf."
The
voice was pleasant, masculine but not heavily so. It came from somewhere in the
cabinetry behind the lettering. Rolf did not even start at the sound, but only
raised his eyes; he knew at once that it was Ardneh calling him. Catherine had
almost literally jumped with surprise, and now stood poised as if to flee; but
she waited with her eyes on Rolf.
Rolf
said: "Ardneh?", half expecting a figure to materialize. But there
were only the metallic-looking cabinets, from one of which the voice of Ardneh
issued again.
"Do
not fear me, Catherine. Do not fear, Rolf; for years you and I have known each
other, dimly, but in trust."
"I
do not fear you, Ardneh, no," said Rolf. He held out a hand, and Catherine
came slowly to his side. "You can show yourself, Ardneh, and we will not
be afraid."
"I
have no flesh to showyou, Rolf. Nor am I of pure energy, like an elemental or a
djinn. But I am of the West, and I need your help."
"That
is why we are here." Rolf paused. "Are you then like Elephant that I
once knew, some war machine of the Old World? But no, you have life and
thought, where Elephant was mindless as a sword."
"You
are partly right," said Ardneh's voice. "I am, or was, what you call
a machine, and made by men of the Old World. But I was not made to fight a war,
I was made to restore a peace. And for a long time I have, as you say, had life
and thought."
Rolf
turned around. "Where are you, then?"
"All
around you. Each shelf and cabinet contains some part of me. As you see, I
depend heavily on Old World technology, and it is because of your natural
talent in such matters that I chose you and brought you here. The object you
have brought me is important, but your own presence, Rolf and Catherine, is
equally so."
Rolf
put his hand on the pouch he carried. Ardneh said: "Bring what you call
the gem along the path I will now show you. There is a test that must be made
before my plans go further."
The
lights in the room dimmed abruptly, but brightened beyond a doorway, in one
external corridor. As Rolf and Catherine entered this corridor and followed it,
the brightening of the lights moved on ahead of them, from one ceiling panel to
another. After many winding passages, interspersed here and there with
descending stairs, they: entered another room, larger than that where Ardneh
had first spoken and crowded with a number of strange devices. Into one of
these, a simple-looking crystalline case surrounded by a number of heavy metal
rings, Ardneh told Rolf to drop the gem.
"And
now leave this room," said Ardneh's voice, this time from a wall.
"The test had better be made without human beings present." Leaving
the chamberwith Catherine, Rolf noticed doors as thick as castle walls, sliding
from concealment to seal the passage behind them. Once more the overhead light
danced on, leading them back to the room in which Ardneh had first spoken.
"Sit
down, if you wish," Ardneh said when they were there again; and they
seated themselves on the floor. "There is much I must tell you, for it is
going to be necessary for you to tell others the truth about me; more than I
dare now explain in the world outside these chambers, but which must be
explained before many more days have passed.
"I
was built by war-planners of the Old World, as part of a system of defense. But
not as a destructive device. My oldest purpose is to defend mankind, and so I
am of the West today, though there was no East or West when I was built. My
basic nature is peaceful, so it has taken me long to develop weapons of my own
to enter battle. The object you have brought me will add to the physical
strength I can exert, if the test I am now conducting has a favorable result.
More of that later.
"My
builders meant their defense system to save the world, and in a sense it did.
But they called on powers they did not fully understand and could not wholly
control, and in saving the world they changed it, so drastically that their
civilization could not survive. This was the great Change of which humans still
speak, and it divided the Old World from the new.
"As
I will showyou soon, the world was changed by another machine, or rather by a
part of me that has long since done its work and been dismantled. The part of
me that still exists, was created to end the Change when the time was ripe. The
builders did not really expect that the changes in the world wrought by their
defenses would be so great that I would be needed, but they doubted and feared
enough to make me and to put the powers of restoration under my control if they
should be needed. They thought that fifty thousand years must pass before the
proper time for restoration came. But only now has it arrived. The odds for the
survival of mankind, if the restoration is accomplished in this year, in this
month, are better than they have been at any time since the Change, or are
likely to be in the estimable future."
Rolf
asked: "And when this restoration you speak of is made, will it destroy
the East?"
"I
hope it will."
"Then
let us restore the Old World, if you think that we of the West can live in
it."
Ardneh
seemed to ignore his advice, and Rolf had the uncomfortable feeling that he had
been talking of things he knew nothing about.
Silently
the overhead lights once more began their dance, leading them back to the room
wherein they had left the mysterious gem. The heavy doors had reopened, and
Rolf and Catherine entered to stare at the case in which they had left the ebon
sphere. The sphere had been replaced by, or transformed into, a pearly,
weightless-looking ball of light of about the same size. Looking at it, Rolf
had the impression of effortless, tremendous power.
"It
is what I thought it was," Ardneh's voice explained. "And my plans
can now go forward."
"What?"
Catherine whispered, staring in fascination.
"What
atechnologist of the Old World would have called the magnetohydrodynamic core
of a hydrogen-fusion power lamp. From it I can draw renewed power, which is
very important. Also important is what it shows. The fact that I have been able
to change it from a gem back into what it was in the Old World, is a sure proof
that the Change is weakening; that the restoration can be made."
Rolf
sighed. "Ardneh, there is still much of this we do not understand. And you
say it is necessary that we do so."
"Again,
follow the lights. Watch and listen for a little while and then there will be
time for food and rest."
This
time they were led alongyet another branching of the passageways, and to a
still lower level. With every minute the buried complex housing Ardneh was
revealed as larger, and there was no reason to think they had seen it all as
yet.
In a
room that must have been far below the level of the outside ground, but where
the air was fresh and dry and comfortably warm, were couches covered in some
leather-like substance that creaked and crackled with age when Rolf and
Catherine lay down, but did not crumble. Above each couch and pointed at its
head were clustered metal rods, suspended from somewhere in the obscurity above
the lights.
The
lights dimmed. "Now you will sleep," said Ardneh. And so it was.
To Rolf
there soon came a dream, so clear and methodical a dream that he knew it was
not natural. Although he knew he was dreaming, he did not waken. He was
drifting, no more than a disembodied viewpoint, watching people who he somehow
knew were of the Old World. They were strangely dressed, and spoke to one
another in a tongue unknown to Rolf, as they went about tasks that he at first
found completely incomprehensible. Then he saw that they were pouring lakes
into buried caverns, lakes not of water but seemingly of sparkling, coruscating
liquid light.
Ardneh's
voice, also bodiless, said: "Rolf, those lakes were one attempt to prevent
the Old World from destroying itself, by strengthening the powers of life. I
was another attempt."
"I
know what those lakes of life were like, Ardneh, for I saw one spilled in the
Black Mountains. Is there one that Duncan can make use of, to restore his men fallen
in battle?"
"I
think there are no more such lakes left in the whole world, Rolf. Watch, now.
This dream that you see is something made by some leaders of the Old World, to
show other folk of that time how well they were to be protected against war."
And
Rolf, in the strange embrace of the bed which he no longer felt, settled
himself to watch the dream. With only partial comprehension, despite Ardneh's
occasionally interjected words of explanation, he watched as in scene after
scene strangely-uniformed men and women built, armed, tested and concealed long
finned cylinders, which Ardneh explained were rocket-driven missiles. Missiles
were carried in strange craft moving hidden under the seas, were secreted in
underground silos, were hung soaring in patient readiness so high above the
ground that great earth itself became nothing but a ball. Small missiles
intended to destroy large missiles were made in great numbers also, and one
scene showed racks of these defensive weapons that swung out quickly from an
artificial hillside.
Next,
interspersed with views of men and women laboring at tasks even harder to
understand, Rolf watched workers assembling the multitudinous cabinets of
Ardneh in his cave. Or at least in some deep shelter. Rolf could not really
recognize the uninhabited shelter in which he knew his sleeping body lay. Nor
did the countryside around the site in the Old World much resemble that of
Rolf's time, except that there were very few people in either.
"What
are those things, Ardneh?"
"They
are called heat-exchangers. They are sunk deep into the earth and draw power
from it. Through the ages when all atomic devices were inoperative, I drew
power from the heat-exchangers, and I draw it still. And now, Rolf, Catherine,
behold the last days of the Old World, and its changing. First, what those who
made me foresaw might happen; next, what actually did happen, as I later pieced
it together."
Now the
dream unrolling before Rolf with vivid precision no longer showed perfectly
lifelike people and events, but instead what seemed to be a series of drawings
that moved and spoke in close imitation of life. They were marvelous drawings,
such as no artist known to Rolf could have fashioned. But they were lifeless
nonetheless.
Rolf
saw in this bloodless world of moving drawings how the huge missiles were fired
in sudden salvos, taking flight from their many places of concealment. In
swarms and clouds they leaped up high, ranged around the globe of earth, and
fell again. As theirblunt heads detached and multiplied themselves,
down-curving toward their targets, the small missiles sprang up to meet them,
shooting like darts from hidden defensive nests. When an offensive missile
passed in killing range of a defender, a blast seared the upper air, and both
were gone.
But the
attack was too heavy; destructive devices from halfway around the world were
falling upon the helpless-looking cities of Ardneh's builders. Only seconds
remained before disaster. At once, the Ardneh portrayed in the moving drawings
was shown fully alerted. To him-to it, rather, there was no sign that this
Ardneh was intended to be, or thought to be, alive-was passed control of the
ultimate defense.
With
the help of Ardneh and the Old World dream machine Rolf was able to comprehend
that this defense was in the nature of an experiment, involving the use
offerees that must engulf the entire planet once they were unleashed, that were
feared by some to be irreversible. They were newly-discovered forces that had
never been tested and would not be tested now if destruction were not certain
otherwise. The ultimate defense against atomic attack worked by robbing certain
types of energy from certain atomic and subatomic configurations of matter,
making the fusion or fission of nuclei enormously less likely.
A quick
flicker in the drawings showed a subtle wave of change spreading out from the
Ardneh-machine's emplacement, passing over the threatened cities of the
homeland moments before the enemy's missiles struck within them. No murderous
blasts erupted; the impacting warheads did no more damage than so many
catapulted rocks.
What
had happened to the enemy country was not apparent; but suddenly things at home
were tranquil once again. A stylized drawing-man reached to touch one of Ardneh's
control panels, and with the neatness of a folding parasol the protective
change that Ardneh had thrown out was folded up, withdrawn, undone.
"So
much for the plan," said Ardneh's voice, in present time. "And now
behold what truly happened, at the changing of the world."
The
visionary narrative of attack and defense began over again, with little change
at first in the substance of the story. Again the offensive missiles came from
around the world, launched in greater numbers and with more deceptive aids than
could be dealt with by the conventional defense of short-range countermissiles.
The Ardneh-machine was alerted in the first minutes of the great war, while the
enemy attack was still no more than a network of trajectories in space, perceived
and plotted by the defenders. While destruction was still minutes away, the
counterattack was launched; whether Ardneh succeeded or failed, it seemed that
the enemy must die.
Now
disaster was only seconds away from most of the major cities of the land. The
part of Ardneh that had been built to change the world was empowered to act,
and it functioned as it had been made to do. It laid hold upon the matter
within itself and pulled its energies into a new shape, beginning a Change that
spread through the substance of the earth like cracks through shattering glass.
Around wave-front of Change sprang out with the speed of light from Ardneh's
buried site. But the setting in motion of the ultimate defense had taken a few
seconds longer than anticipated. One enemy missile fell just before the
wave-front reached it and exploded with full force beside a populous city,
ending uncountable lives in the blinking of an eye. Other intercontinental
weapons, falling like hail a few seconds later, failed to explode.
Meanwhile,
on the other side of the world, surprise; the enemy was employing the same kind
of an ultimate defense. But theirs was not controlled by any device as
sophisticated as Ardneh, and their simpler mechanisms were never to become
alive. This Rolf understood as in a dream, knowing it was so without knowing
how he knew. But the enemy defenses also worked. A wave of Change springing
from the other side of the world met that generated by Ardneh, and the fabric
of the planet was altered more powerfully than anyone had expected.
Those
few missiles that fell before the Change exploded, and the vast number that
fell afterward were rendered practically harmless. One missile, however, to
which Rolf's attention was now silently directed, was caught precisely in mid-explosion
by the wavefront emanating from Ardneh. The fireball, the blooming nuclear
blast, had just been born and it was not extinguished but neither did it follow
the normal course of the explosions that had preceded it. It did not fade, but
changed in shape, ran through a spectrum of colors and back again, and writhed
up toward the sky as if with agonizing effort. Rolf knew that he was watching a
kind of birth, and one of terrible importance.
With
the passing of the wave of Change, Ardneh himself immediately began his first
stirrings toward life, as did many other formerly inert components of the
world.
But
neither Ardneh nor any of the others accepted life as savagely, exultantly, as
this.
VII
Orcus
That
writhing into a furious life, begun amid a violence beyond the capability of
any human being to understand, was the earliest memory of the being who would
later be named Orcus, later called Lord of Lords and Emperor of all the East.
His earliest memory was recorded thousands of years before John Ominor was
born, thousands of years before humanity lay divided into the two camps called
East and West.
For a
few thousand years after his violent birth, the being who would later be known
as Orcus wandered in the desert places of the earth, avoiding humans, avoiding
distraction as much as possible while he groped his way toward full sentience.
Child of the awesome old technology and the mar-velous new magic that had begun
with the Change, his substance was only partially subject to the laws of
matter.
There
were others more or less like him now in the world, though none so terrible of
birth or power. Quickly men began to forget their technology, maimed as it was
by the Change; almost from the moment of the Change they were speaking of the
Old World and the New, and taking up the newly opened possibilities of magic to
help them finish their aborted war. Since the Change it could scarcely be said
that anything was lifeless; powers that before had been only potentialities now
responded readily to the wish, the incantation, were motivated and controlled
by the dream-like logic of the wizard's world.
Humans
grew aware of the existence of the being who would be Orcus, and in their
dogged search for magical power they tried to devise means to control him.
These efforts were annoying to him, in his growing self-awareness; to avoid
them, when they became persistent, he wandered away from earth. Half-immune to
the laws of physics and chemistry as the Old World had known them, he drifted
without sustenance and almost without effort outward to the moon, where what
had been human colonies were now dead and deserted, casualties of war and the
failure of technology. Above the cratered surface Orcus drifted, watching,
beginning to think, as the strange bubble-houses that had sheltered the humans
decayed and burst in silence. All around, soft-looking mountains two thousand
thousand times as old as humankind looked down, unchanging and indifferent.
Orcus
was beginning to think, and to feel sharp emotions, and to be intensely aware
of the world and of himself. He began also to fear the empty 'moon, and the
soft deep beyond, that by its immensity made him feel that he was shrinking
steadily. Slowly through the solar winds of space he turned, willing himself to
begin the long drift back to earth. He realized now that there, and perhaps
nowhere else, he was a giant.
Now as
he approached the earth again he saw humanity clearly, and began to understand
and loathe them. A new generation of sorcerers had developed in his absence,
men and women of greater magical skill and greater arrogance. These became
aware of the demon who would be Orcus, and when they glimpsed his power they
tried with fear and greed to summon him and master him. But their nets of magic
burst and tore around him as he moved.
Long
and slow and difficult was the groping of the demon to his full sentience and
identity. Despite his hatred of the wizards' race his own development followed
the same general direction as theirs, under requirements imposed by the mental
potentialities of the home planet they shared. The ways of Orcus' thought were
not unlike those of the men he hated, not when compared to others that he had
dimly sensed in the great deeps beyond the frightening moon. (Never would he
leave earth's air again.)
Orcus
moved over the earth and looked at the life upon it, with a hate and pointless
envy that no man or woman could match. In himself he was the East, before the
East had come to be. Men were building new civilizations now; most of the Old
World and its technology lay buried and forgotten (unknown to men and demons,
Ardneh too was now living, thinking, waiting.) And he who would be Orcus became
aware now of others who were somewhat like himself, though smaller. These were
demons and pro-todemons born from sunlike fires as he had been, but from
comparatively minor acts of violence crossed by the wave of change. None of
these others could begin to match his strength, and he cowed them when he met
them, never questioning his own urge to dominate. Two other demons, who might
in time have grown great enough to challenge him successfully, he met
separately and slew. His struggle with one of these lasted for nearly a
thousand years, and nearly depopulated one of the earth's smaller continents of
human and animal life, before he-who-would-be-Orcus managed to reach and snuff
out the hidden life of his opponent.
Shortly
after that age-long struggle he received his name. When he had made himself
undisputed king of the demonic powers of the world, and therefore the chief
enemy of most of the human race, magicians began to call him Orcus, after some
demon-lord of ancient Old World legend. (Had there in fact been Old World
demons, too? And was this Changing from whence he came nothing new, after all,
beneath the ancient moon? The questions occurred to Orcus, but he made no
attempt to answer them. He really did not care, one way or the other.)
Not
only evil powers had been brought into objective reality by the Change. From
earth and sea and sky there welled into existence other forms of inhuman but
intelligent life. The Change that had damped the energies of nuclear fire had
at the same time freed the energies of life. The nameless force that lay behind
both kinds of energy could not, ultimately, be repressed; that which was
inherent in every atom could not be destroyed.
Gradually
the elemental powers of earth and sea and air came to be looked on as allies by
that portion of humanity who chose the West, again,st the men and women who had
elected to associate themselves with demons, and who with the demons had formed
that society of essential selfishness called the East. How the name of East and
West had come to be used rather than, say, North and South, or Red and Green,
was no longer remembered in Rolf's day. Nor would such a question ever have had
any significance for Orcus.
Dominating
the other quasimaterial powers of the East, and leading them in slowly
intensifying war against the West, Orcus the Demon-Patriarch sought slaves and
allies among the beasts of the planet as well as among the men. A race of
intelligent flying reptiles had evolved in the mere thousands of years that had
passed since the Change, so life-rich had the substance of the world become.
These reptiles became close allies of the demonic powers, just as a species of
huge, intelligent, nocturnal birds, the reptiles' natural enemies, came into
being and joined the West.
Still,
humanity was at the heart of the struggle. Only humans were capable of dealing
with both beasts and spirits on their own terms. People had largely deserted
the technology that had enabled them to Change the world. But before their
forget-fulness could become complete, the pressure of the new war made them try
to recall and rebuild what they had lost. Thus it was that the technology of
the Old World had never entirely died.
Orcus
grasped how vitally important human beings were to the struggle, but when he
began to train and organize his human slave-allies he underestimated their true
potential. There was among the first generation of his recruits a man so
consistently successful in his assigned tasks, and at the same time so
apparently common and predictable in his motives (therefore as trustworthy as
anyone in the East could be) that Orcus promoted him time and again. The human
did well in each succeeding job, and accomplished each without giving the
appearance of more ambition than a human being (in Orcus' view) should have.
Eventually the man was given command not only of other humans, but of lesser
demons as well. So John Ominor advanced, using skillfully the centuries of
extra life with which his demon-master was pleased to reward him.
Perhaps
Orcus, who had never fully understood men, never understood himself either. He
may have come gradually to think himself omnipotent, and so grew careless.
Whatever the explanation! without a hint of warning, he was tricked and
overthrown by the man Ominor. John Ominor, with the men and demons he had
suborned to aid him, cast down the demon-emperor Orcus and bound him in
perpetual slumber. Orcus was not slain, could not be slain, because his life
could not be found. Nor could he be made to reveal where it was. It was as if
he did not know. The victorious new lords of the East were puzzled; the circumstances
of Orcus' birth, that would have explained much, were unknown to them.
As was
the existence of Ardneh.
Still
the war against the West went on, as bitter as ever, and now more slowly, for
Orcus' power was sorely missed by the East. But to awaken him enough to use him
properly would be very dangerous. He was kept bound with certain other
untrustworthy powers, under the world, in darkness and tormented sleep. The
fitful flashes of consciousness that came amid his dreams he spent constructing
scenarios of revenge.
Riding
a griffin-like, demonic steed that galloped in midair across the demon-haunted
night, the gnarled sorcerer known as Wood flew northwest among the clouds. He
had been Ominor's accomplice in the overthrow of Orcus, and he was Ominor's
chief wizard still. He and his mount had risen from the vast encampment of the
army of the East, and he was flying to seek out the Constable's small force
where it was resting in its frustrated pursuit of Rolf of the Broken Lands.
Wood's
mount flew faster than any beast or man could travel or ever had, unless it
were some Old World master of the technologies of speed. The tall clouds of a
midsummer storm glowed with muffled lightning to right and left as Wood flashed
between them. The demon-beast, whose shaggy back he rested on, ran silently on
air. Its griffin's hooked-beak eagle-head bobbed and swayed at the end of the
long neck, along which feather and scale commingled. Its wings spread and
sailed, seemingly no more than banners or balances as it ran on wind and
nothingness with driving, pounding legs. This steed would carry no other human
not even Ominor himself.
In the
flicker of lightning, Wood's face was grim. Out here in the northern hinterland
something was going very dangerously wrong. When the Constable had sent his
first appeal for magical help of the highest order it had seemed likely he was
trying to cover up some blunder made by his own wizard, or by himself. But now
in Wood's own auguries the ominous portents had grown too grave and numerous to
ignore. Some of the very highest powers of the West must be fighting hard to
foil Abner's efforts in this obscure place.
Now
already the demon-griffin's course was slanting down, angling steeply toward
the gently rolling land dimly visible below. The prairie came clearer now,
where the scudding cloud-shadows let the moonlight fall. Down the griffin flew
toward one particular grove on the tree-sprinkled expanse, a grove where
torches burned, protecting huddled reptiles against marauding birds. The
arrival of Wood and his demon-steed under those trees opened all the reptiles'
eyes and made of them glittering beads in the flaring torchlight. With a
mixture of wariness and relief Abner's handful of human soldiers watched Wood
dismount.
With a single,
secret word Wood hobbled his baleful mount. Leaving it standing in the middle
of the camp, he strode toward the door of the tent where the Constable's banner
hung limply from a staff. Before the magician reached the tent Abner emerged
from it, looking weary and on guard, to greet him with the gestures appropriate
for welcoming an equal.
Entering
the large tent, Wood caught just a glimpse of loveliness, of a golden,
impossibly graceful body rising hastily from a couch and vanishing behind a
hanging partition of rich silk, trailing unbelievable blond hair. He had to
think that the timing was deliberate, that he was meant to see what he had
seen.
Wood
was not noticeably perturbed. Without further preamble, he demanded of Abner:
"What is delaying matters here?"
Abner
spread his massive hands. "Western magic. Why else should I call upon you?
The so-called magician you have furnished me seems utterly unable to cope with
what is being done to us."
His
suspicions confirmed, Wood nodded gravely and closed his eyes. He let himself
be thoroughly aware of the thin tent-floor just beneath his feet, of v the
grass pressed down under that, of tree-branches not very far overhead (and of
the golden woman somewhere nearby, getting dressed; had she been distracting
Abner from business? most men's effectiveness would have been impaired with her
around), and of the soldiers and the sleepy reptiles and of his own most savage
mount outside. Wood was adapting, submerging himself into the psychic climate
of the place, letting its energy patterns inform his mind. At first, nothing
seemed much out of the ordinary. But he persisted, and, in a little while,
sighed and opened his eyes.
"Ardneh
has taken the field against you," he said then to the Constable. "He
is exceedingly subtle, and it is little wonder that your wizard has been
unaware of what is setting all his work at naught. I could perhaps have been
deceived myself had I not met Ardneh the day we summoned him to our capital. I
will always know him now."
Abner
nodded slowly. "Then what do you advise? Does it make any sense for me to
press on with forty men against him?"
"You
must press on, with what ever men you have, and gather more as fast as you can
bring them here. Our whole future is turning on what is going to happen,
somewhere not far from here to the northwest."
"And
Ardneh? Can you clear him from my path?"
"I
can," Wood said brusquely, "with the powers I shall soon invoke to
help me with the job. Within a day or two, if not tonight . . . I mean to make
a trial of it tonight."
He made
a short gesture of farewell and strode out of the tent. When he had swung
himself astride his steed, Wood cast about him by his arts until he was able to
sense the location of the two fugitive humans whose capture had so far been
beyond the powers of the East. They were resting now, it appeared, not many
kilometers distant.
"One
of them labors under some kind of minor curse," Wood commented, to the
Nameless One, who had appeared from somewhere and was now standing motionless a
little distance off. "Your doing, I suppose?"
"I.
. .yes, great Lord." The Nameless One bowed as if in modesty.
Wood
nodded, not troubling to find out the details. It was remarkable that the man
had been able to accomplish even that much against the opposition that he faced
here. "Well done. But now restrain yourself to a defensive posture for a
time."
"As
you will, Lord."
Wood
dug heels into the cold flanks of his riding-demon, and into the ear that it
unfolded for him, he whispered the needful word. With a roar of sound they
rocketed into the air. Once above the treetops, he again turned his mount's
massive, sharp-beaked head into the north. This time he was content to fly at
low altitude, and he did not urge the griffin to anything like full speed. He
meant to test the strength of Ardneh to the full this night, and to destroy it
if he could, without undergoing a desperate risk himself. But there was no
great hurry about it; he did not expect to be able to take Ardneh by surprise.
To Wood, the something-dut-of-the-ordinary that was Ardneh was coming clearer
now, bit by bit in tantalizing glimpses like the one he had had of Abner's
concubine. Subtle hints of splendid powers, and of a beauty that could not,
unless it were a lie or under some evil bond, could not be any part of the
Empire of the East.
After
watching Wood's violent departure, Abner started to mouth an informal curse,
thought better of it (Wood would never be so foolish as to try to kick Abner in
the shins), and instead walked a quick tour of inspection around the perimeter
of his little camp. Satisfied that his sentries were properly alert, his
reptiles well guarded by burning torches, and that no other business needed his
attention at the moment, he went back to his tent.
She had
returned to the couch. Amid disordered draperies she stretched out in a pose
half sleepy and half sensual, like some fine catlike beast. Her eyes were
nearly closed, but there was a tremor of candlelight along the length of their
golden lashes, and Abner knew she was looking at him, as he brought down his
palm to snuff the candle out.
Now for
a little while the Constable forgot the world outside his tent. Soon, however,
there came some sounds of movement at its door, hesitant and tentative sounds,
but threatening unwelcome interruption. He could picture the Nameless One
there, or some of his officers shifting their feet, listening to ascertain if
anything urgent was going on inside. They were bearing news but were uncertain
of its importance. They thought the Constable should be told, but were afraid
of his anger if they bothered him at the wrong time for something that turned
out to be trivial. Would they go away? No, at any moment now they would work up
the nerve to stop their exchange of silent gestures with the sentry and call
out to be admitted.
He got
up and without bothering to dress went to the door, and in displeased tones
demanded: "What is it, what do you want?"
The
darkness was greater in the tent than just outside, and even as Abner spoke he
saw there was no sentry, only a figure taller than the Nameless One or any of
his officers, tall as Abner himself. Abner was alerted before his answer came,
was already moving back to where his sword hung in its scabbard on the tent's
central pole.
"My
wife," the tall stranger said, matter-of-factly, and drove in a
sword-thrust that no man could have seen coming, much less avoided, in that
poor light. But neither could the stranger see Abner well, and the blade did no
more than slice tent-cloth and splinter innocent wood.
Abner
had his own sword in his hand by now, and his lungs were filling for the bellow
that would rouse the camp, when other screams shattered the night outside.
"Rally to me!" roared out the Constable, and cut at the dim figure of
his adversary, missing as his attacker had.
Now the
man was inside the tent, and suddenly the darkness was no longer deep. Some
neighboring tent had burst up into flames, almost explosively, and sent a tawny
flaring light into the Constable's. The noise outside had mounted up as well,
sounds not only of fighting but of panic, and at the moment that augured ill
for the Eastern cause. Abner's place was outside, but his way was barred. His
second thrust at his foe was parried with impressive speed and strength; the
man blocking the doorway was certainly not going to be readily brushed aside.
The enemy cut savagely back at Abner's legs, a blow that might have taken one
off clean if it had landed; Abner dismissed a half-formed idea of turning and
cutting his way out through the tent wall, to reach and lead his men. The first
moment he turned his back upon this enemy would be the last he lived.
"Chairmian,"
Abner called softly, in a moment's lull after the next violent passage of arms.
The next words he meant to say were strike at him from behind, but before he
could utter them, something made him aware of the treacherous blow coming at
the rear of his own skull, something hard and heavy swung by thin girlish arms.
Abner started to turn and block the blow, realized that the sword would get him
if he did, and tried to throw himself on the floor and roll from between his
enemies, knowing even as he did so that he was too late. And he wondered, even
as the sword came butchering between his ribs, how he had ever thought that the
East, whose essence was treachery, could ever stand.
Speeding
at treetop level to the north, Wood dreamed briefly of glory. If he could
return to the Emperor with the jewel in his possession and the crushing of
Ardneh to his personal credit, certain key members of the Emperor's council
might be persuaded that Wood would be a more effective Emperor than Ominor . .
.
The
taste of that thought was delightful, but it was a sweetness forbidden until
the coming battle with Ardneh had been won.
It was
an easy matter for Wood to cast his vision ahead to where the two fugitives
rested. They were in some kind of cave, and the protection of Ardneh could be
sensed around them. Wood could see how to reach them. It turned out, however,
that reaching them was another matter. No sooner had he turned his mount
directly toward the fugitives than a wind sprang up in his face. The wind
quickly rose to a shrieking intensity, and Wood realized at once that its
energies were more than strictly physical. It buffeted the griffin-demon and
tried to turn him back. Wood dug in his heels. His mount snorted flame and
continued to make headway. Then came a gust of superb violence. The demon-steed
was halted in his airborne gallop, shot flying upward like a windborne leaf,
sent skidding and pawing along a scudding firmament of clouds. The psychic
energies that were the stuff of wizardry came forth from Ardneh's stronghold in
a torrent to match that of the driving air.
Even
under the spur of Wood's threats and incantations, his steed could make no
headway, and soon he was forced to let it turn and ride before the blast. Most
onlookers would have thought his situation precarious indeed, but Wood was not
greatly perturbed. He had expected more subtlety on Ardneh's part than this.
The wind was driving him back momentarily, but it should not be too difficult
to cope with.
Muttering
words that seemed to be torn uncompleted from his lips by the twisting wind,
Wood called powers to his aid. From odd places on the earth and under it he
called up a motley horde of demon auxiliaries, the strongest force he could
assemble in one time and place at a few moments' notice. Ardneh must fall
before this group should he dare to try to stand and fight them. If Ardneh
would not fight he must retreat, and yield the two he was protecting.
The
wind had slowly died as Wood had ceased to challenge it. Now, when his
ill-favored troop of demons was fully assembled, grimacing and cackling like
gigantic reptiles as they circled Wood on various shapes of wings amid the
flying murk, he reined his mount in a wide circle and once more charged into
the north.
The
shell of demonic forces now surrounding Wood and his mount kept out the wind at
first, when Ardneh tried to force them back again. Like some Old World missile
the knot of Eastern power that Wood had formed around himself pushed its way
through the blast. But the wind now rose to a new height of violence, and black
clouds hurtling through it struck like fists upon the demons' shell. And now
from Ardneh's striking fists there lanced out bolts of lightning. Like the
wind, the li'ghtning was deeply charged with energies beyond the physical
range, and each bolt was well aimed. Some flew at the demons surrounding Wood,
and some were meant for him. His utmost mental agility was needed to detect the
bolts that were to be aimed at him while they were still in the process of
formation, and to defuse them, drain their power before they flew, when they
would be too fast for any mortal man to stop.
Some of
Wood's host of conscripted warriors were fast enough to parry lightning
directed at themselves. Nor could they be slain by it, for all their lives were
safely hidden elsewhere. But Ardneh's hail of darts came thick and fast upon
them now, painful, damaging, red-hot, impossible to stand against.
The
demons' shell of force was pierced and broken, and once more Wood's powerful
mount was gripped by Ardneh's wind-blast and hurled back. The griffin was flung
twenty kilometers downwind before the hurricane abated enough for Wood to once
more summon his demonic outriders around him. Whipped and half-stunned they
came, moun-tainously cringing, shrinking their physical volumes as much as they
could in order to make less conspicuous targets for his expected wrath. With
words of terrible power Wood lashed them forward, northward, once again. This
time he himself remained riding his griffin in a slow circle in this area of
greater safety; trying to think, trying to probe ahead and understand.
By his
arts he saw his demons driving north, beyond the clouds of driving mist that
lay between. To meet them now came Ardneh's lightning, this time a single
swordblade, flickering, walking along the energy spectrum through all the bands
where demons had their half-material existence.
Yet
again Wood's troops were thrown back, in fear and agony; and now at last they
had found the enemy more terrible than Wood, and however he cursed and
threatened they would not go into the north again. He sharpened his
incantations yet more, wreaked suffering upon his quivering vassals, and
banished them to hidden dungeons till they should be useful once again. Now,
however, he was calm in all his curses and punishings. He no longer raged. He
saw now that a little more effort from his demons would not have helped; they
were simply not strong enough to stand against Ardneh.
How
could Wood have so grievously underestimated his enemy's strength? Had Ardneh
somehow managed a tremendous accession of power recently?
It was
not simply that Ardneh was powerful enough to defeat them. Most shattering was
the realization that the devastating defense had not even occupied Ardneh's
full attention. While watching the last defeat of his demon-troop, Wood for the
first time had managed -or had been permitted -to perceive the extent of
Ardneh's world-wide activities. It was a frightening disclosure. Ardneh could
not have possessed such strength for long, Wood realized, or the East would
have lost the war some time ago instead of now thinking itself on the verge of
victory.
In the
form Wood's vision took, Ardneh appeared in the guise of a tall, powerful man,
striding through a pack of curs that swirled snapping and growling vainly
around his legs. The dog named Wood received no more attention and effort than
was necessary in order to beat him off; meanwhile Ardneh's chief attention was
directed somewhere else, somewhere Wood's dream-perception could not follow.
Lies,
Wood told himself, and felt somewhat relieved; lies. Propaganda, put into his
mind to intimidate and weaken him. But he had no evidence that it was lies. And
if such a trick could be worked on him, and he could not tell it was a
trick", he might well be facing an enemy who could destroy him. -in the
nick of time he realized that Ardneh was coming at him for the kill -
His
host had been dispersed. He turned and fled, the lightning-bolts pursuing him
downwind. Wood lived through it, although his demon-steed was struck so
violently it lost the power of flight. All of Wood's arts that remained useful
to him now barely availed to save his life, to let him tumble from his falling
mount into rain-sodden bushes, amid a scene of wild storm and waving branches.
Bruised and shaken and winded, but not seriously hurt, he realized that Ardneh
had departed, and that he himself was within a kilometer or two of the camp
where he had left the Constable.
Limping
and cursing his way through the marshy grass and rain, Wood knew that the
ultimate powers available to the East would have to be invoked.
VIII
They
Open Doors, They Take Down Bars
Wood,
stumbling on scratched and weary legs toward the Constable's camp, rehearsing
in his mind what he might say to make his arrival there appear less inglorious,
was within a hundred meters of his goal when he heard the surprise attack led
by Chup burst out ahead of him.
After
the first shock, Wood was not really surprised. The night belonged to the West,
and it was not the first time an Eastern position thought secure had been taken
unawares. He paused, trying to determine what was going on ahead. The enemy
force seemed quite small. Ardneh was nowhere near. Wood had no functional
demons to call on at the moment, but still, after his moment's assessment of
the situation, he pressed on at a hurried walk. His personal anger was aroused,
instead of the rest and food and drink he had been looking forward to, here was
only another fight. But his rage was cold and eager. The smart of his defeat by
Ardneh would be eased by victory here; instead of appearing humbled before the
Constable, he would come in as a savior. There were fires ahead, and screams of
panic. The East was not doing very well at the moment.
It was
for good reason that Wood was accounted the greatest wizard of the East. When
swords were out and blood was spilled, it was difficult for any magician to
raise an effective spell-the Nameless One even now lay bleeding out his life
ahead, Wood's extra senses told him-but Wood's arts were still powerful, even
now when his best powers had been scattered and his most potent energies
exhausted. He still had one vital advantage, that of surprise, fully as
important for the magician as for the soldier. . . .
On legs
that no longer felt tired and injured, Wood approached the camp, where shadowy
figures ran and fought before the burning tents. It took him a moment to make
sure that there was no Western wizard among the attackers who might be capable
of serious opposition to Wood's spells. The fat one who had earlier, with
Ardneh's help, overcome the efforts of the Nameless One was there, but that
meant nothing to Wood, as Ardneh himself was still absent from the scene.
Standing
in the shadows of a tree near the edge of the burning camp, a vantage point
from which he could see without readily being seen, Wood pronounced one lengthy
word and began to make small gestures with one hand. The fat Western wizard was
the first to fall, whirling round almost gracefully, elaborate talismans
spilling from his hands like so much trash, before he tumbled like a
chopped-through tree. One after another, as they came into Wood's view, the
other men of the Western raiding party fell, backs arching, twisting in
convulsions. There seemed to be less than a dozen of them in all, even fewer
than Wood had thought at first. They could do nothing against Wood because he
gave them no time to find him with their blades. One of their leaders came
closest. A tall man, he emerged from the Constable's tent with bloodied sword
held high. Seeing Wood, or somehow sensing his position, the Westerner charged
like a maddened beast. But though his long strides brought him so close that
Wood had to dodge back at the last moment from the killing blade, it was the
Westerner who fell.
He was
the last, except for one or two who might have managed to run away; in his
depleted and exhausted state Wood did not care to make the effort to be sure of
that. All the others lay on the earth, their convulsions quieting as Wood led
them smoothly into ensorceled slumber. Those he had felled were still alive,
and he had a good reason for keeping them so.
The
surviving Eastern soldiers who had survived were gathering in the center of the
camp once more. Wood called to a junior officer and charged him with seeing to
it that the prisoners were gathered together and kept alive until they should
be needed. But no sooner had Wood finished giving these orders than he looked
up to see that the golden girl he had earlier glimpsed in Abner's tent had
emerged from some hiding place or other clad now in a silken robe, and was
raising a dagger over one of the prone Westerners.
"Forebear,
girl!" Wood called out. "We have far weightier business than your
grievance against this wretch, whatever it may be. Where is the
Constable?"
The
golden woman threw down her dagger and turned to Wood. Now she was the picture
of submission. "Alas, my lord Wood, the Constable is dead. At the last
minute, when the enemy had already entered the camp, he saw the danger and met
it bravely. He did what he could, but it was not enough."
Wood
nodded, unsurprised, then looked around and raised his voice. "Where is
the senior surviving officer, then?"
When
that man had made himself known, Wood questioned him: "Have you enough
able troops to defend this site until the dawn? There can hardly be a dozen
live Westerners within ten kilometers of us at the moment. I will be available
to help in an emergency, but not for keeping watch. There is another task upon
which I must concentrate. I want to know if I can safely relax my vigilance to
do so."
"Aye,
aye, my Lord, I think so. We have at least twenty men still on their feet.
These Westerners can move soft as demons. Our sentries had their throats cut -
"
"That
should keep their successors awake, at least for a few hours. Now I am going to
set to work, and you must detail two men to fetch and carry for me. That you
may cooperate intelligently with me, I will give you some explanation." He
paused; the woman was watching him, round-eyed, and some of the soldiers were
gawking dazedly. Wood took the officer by the arm and led him to one side; and
he made his own image change in the eyes of the gawk-ers, to something that was
not fit to look upon, and they hastened about their business. Then to the
officer Wood said: "I have tonight met Ardneh face to face, and have found
his strength grown awesome. I can only guess at how he has managed to augment
his powers; now they are enough to tip the scales of the entire war against the
East."
The
officer was sweating, evidently wishing he was a private simply taking orders
once again. Wood went on: "It will be necessary to call up some special
reserves. I am referring to a group of demons who have for one reason or
another been put into confinement, in a place - outside the normal world. They
are dangerous and unruly creatures, and I must impress upon you the necessity
of my being allowed to concentrate in peace while I am working with them."
All
that Wood had said thus far was true. His great untruth had been in leaving out
even the faintest hint of the existence of Orcus, the real object of the work
he was about to do. Not even in his own inner thoughts had Wood allowed himself
to form that name. Not for centuries now.
The
officer wet his lips. "Great Lord, you will understand that I mean you no
disrespect, when I venture the opinion that this project of releasing
imprisoned demons, along with these discoveries regarding our enemy Ardneh,
should be reported to headquarters as soon as possible. To the Emperor
himself."
The
officer was sharper and bolder than he looked. Understanding that the man
wanted to be reassured that there was no intrigue against the 'Emperor in
progress here - or perhaps wanted to be let in on it if there were-Wood
answered patiently. "Send a message to headquarters any time you like. But
I presume no reptile will fly until daylight, and I must begin the evocation
here and now. Tonight. It is not a calling that can be made in an hour, or even
in a day. There are many bars to be let down, sealed doors to be broken, locks
to be opened for which the keys were thrown away. If we are to have help
against Ardneh in time, I must begin now to call upon-the powers that are to
help us. Should the Emperor for some unimaginable reason forbid me to go
through with the calling, I can stop it at any point. Now if you will detail
the men to help me, I must select the first required victim."
The
officer was reassured, and moved away, giving his men such orders as Wood had
requested.
When
Wood came to the Western prisoners, he found them now laid out in a row, all
still unconscious from the effects of his paralyzing spells. The woman was
standing there, once more looking down at one of the still forms. The same one.
It was he who had come near killing Wood. This time her expression indicated
thought, rather than uncaring hate.
It was
Wood's first opportunity for a long, close look at her. "What is your
name, girl?"
"I
am called Charmian, my noble Lord." Her blue eyes were so luminous that
his spell-casting fingers twitched defensively. But it was no more than woman's
inborn witchery she had, as power to bedazzle men. No more? There were numerous
demonic spells not half so powerful. Wood pondered the possible advantages and
drawbacks of sending her on as a gift to Ominor; the Emperor enjoyed alluring
women as much as any ordinary man.
Wood
looked down. "And who is this one at your feet, who makes you frown so
thoughtfully?"
"He
was my husband, Lord," she said, managing to surprise him. She hesitated
briefly before adding: "There is a question I would ask." His
expression gave assent, and she went on: "You are choosing one of these
for a ritual victim? I thought as much ... is the victim's death to be an easy
one or difficult?"
"Tonight's
victim will die easily."
"Then
I beg of you, dread Lord, take some other than this who was my bridegroom once.
I would not have him die a quick and easy death."
Duncan's
camp tonight was nearer to Ardneh, by some kilometers, than it had been the
night before. Duncan each day moved his army north, following his wizards'
advice and his own intuition, and keeping pace with the parallel movement of
the main body of his Eastern foes.
Now in
Duncan's tent, the seeress Anita, in deep trance, was muttering: "... they
open doors to they know not what, they take down bars that were put up when
they were wiser and more frightened." The girl's speech began to trail
off, becoming more disjointed and unintelligible, until at last she could only
cry out in unwonted fear. Duncan, weary from the dull riding and intermittent
fighting of the day, tried to puzzle out what it could mean, but he could not.
Neither could his wizards, who contradicted one another in sharp debate about
the girl: whether to waken her or send her deeper into trance, whether what she
said tonight had any useful meaning. At last she was taken out. Duncan and his
councilors continued meeting through the night. There was no communication from
Ardneh.
The
blood of the first sacrifice was warm and fresh on Wood's hands, and in his
throat the words of power flowed like song, controlled, in harmony with the
images formed in his mind by his practiced imagination. Energy flowed through
him, from him. Shortly after starting the evocation he had felt a pang of
worry, on realizing just how tired he was. This was not a task to be begun when
weary; mistakes might be punished terribly. But now it was all going well
enough.
It was
a task that required a full mastery of magic, but he was equal to it. More than
equal. In his imagination he was now descending worn stone steps, through a
dark and narrow passage, going to visit the dungeon under the world. Other
demons were confined there as well as Orcus, and Wood meant to release them in
passing. They were not really dangerous - not to Wood. Now he could hear them,
feel them, smell them, moving in some imagined cell just off his passageway. A
pack of ethereal wolves, jostling one another for the chance at taking on
reality once more. They knew their jailer was coming, and perhaps they knew he
meant to let them out.
To Wood
these were not much; they were cattle he penned up or loosed, no matter how
monstrous and powerful they might loom in the sight of lesser men. To handle
them he needed no protracted ceremonies, no human sacrifices; he could bring
them up into the world tonight, without consulting the Emperor, and he meant to
do so. It was only the Other, whose name Wood had been avoiding even in his
thoughts, that made him worry now. It was the process of releasing Orcus, of
course keeping hold enough on him to put him down again when the West had been
defeated, that called for supreme wizardry and offerings of lives.
Now the
first victim had been offered, and down in the deepest dungeon cell the chained
One had begun to stir and tremble in his painful sleep. When those stirrings
became evident to Wood, their magnitude restored his memory regarding what
Orcus was truly like. Suddenly he now longer saw the gathering of the other
outcast demons as a wolf-pack, even as a herd of unruly cattle, but as no more
than a nest of squealing, snapping rats. Neither they or Wood had changed of
course. It was only the comparison with Orcus.
Wood
slowed his imagined descent of the stone steps. The bottom was near.
Surprisingly, Orcus was not only stirring, not only beginning to awaken, he was
already straining and struggling to be free. He radiated an incredible power
and purpose. Impossible, of course, that his effort should succeed. Wood was
still the jailer, armed and comfortable and with the stair behind him open for
his ascent. He stood now at the ultimate cell door, looking down through bars
and gratings at the wretch in chains, the giant cramped and bound. But the
rousing of Orcus had begun too successfully, was proceeding a little too rapidly.
To maintain the proper margin of safety, steps should be taken to slow things
down.
The
bloodied ritual knife still in his hand, the corpse of the first sacrifice
still warm at his feet, Wood swayed a little with his weariness, swayed and
frowned and changed the text that he was chanting, altered the shape of the
dungeon whose symbol-structure was held so carefully in his mind . . .
Like a
snake uncoiling from the uttermost depths beneath the world, the power Orcus
came striking up at him. Through symbols and matter alike the shockwave
traveled, launched by the half-conscious Demon-Lord, trying in blind fury to
strike back at his tormentors. At the first impact of the shockwave, Wood cried
out. He had a moment in which to realize that in his weariness he had
mispronounced a word of his long chant, before he fell down senseless.
Even
with Wood unconscious, the One who had struck him still could not escape his
dungeon. The walls and bonds of magic were still too many and too strong. Orcus
could not force his way back into the world of men, or even awaken fully from
his sleep. But the hords of lesser demons that Wood had been about to herd back
into the world were now able to force the passage for themselves. They lost no
time in doing so.
Charmian
crouched motionless as the vile rabble of the demons began to appear in the
torchlit night before her. One after another their hulking, obscure shapes
blurred into the world, and almost at once vanished again for other parts of
it. Wood when he awoke, or some other magician of comparable stature, could
round them up again, and no doubt would; but they were not going to stand still
and wait for it.
Charmian
had good reason to be afraid. That she herself was of the East might mean very
little to these ill-disciplined powers. Any one of them, hungry to inflict
pain, or yearning for the taste of some immaterial human essence, might destroy
her on impulse -or, worse, swallow her without destroying. Imagine the emotions
of a spoiled infant, combined with the force of some huge animal or elemental
power, and cleverness above the human average.
To try
to run away might draw attention to herself, but still she was on the brink of
doing so. She was distracted by the realization that the Western prisoners still
alive were now awakening. The light spells Wood had placed on them were
loosened by his unconsciousness. No one had thought to bind them physically, or
perhaps the thought had been that to do so might insult the chief wizard of the
East.
Now
Charmian saw her husband stir. An instant later Chup got to his feet. He was
only a few meters away, and when his eyes fastened on her she did not dare to
run.
He was
a more immediate threat than any of the demons, who so far had ignored her as
they came into sight and vanished again. She took a step nearer to him, and
with hands clasped beseechingly cried out: "Help me, Chup! I've released
you, saved your life. You must get me away from here!"
Chup
continued looking at her. She read cold rage into his fixed stare, and then
realized that it was only blank. Now his forehead wrinkled. With men screaming
and demons flickering in the background, he gave the impression of a man with
all the time in the world, trying to understand some interesting problem. Now
she noted that the other surviving Westerners were wandering around wit-lessly;
their minds must be still half-imprisoned by Wood's spells.
Now she
drew back from Chup again, but he moved with her, studying her face as if he
sought some answer there. She feared to turn and run lest some predator's
instinct make him chase her and attack. "Come, Chup! I beg of you. Save
me! Help me get away!" The Constable was dead, Wood fallen, and demons
seemed to rule the world. There was nowhere else for Charmian to turn. She
pleaded, tugged at Chup's unyielding arm, and at last in her desperation
slapped his face. This last made him frown at her most villainously, though he
gave no sign of retaliation. The frown frightened Charmian, and she hastened to
soothe him with strokings and soft words. His face smoothed and he looked
content once again, while above him and Charmian the insubstantial horrors of
demons came and went, casting light of purple and gold and green, and leaving
waves of sickness in the air.
An
Eastern soldier, probably maddened by some passing demon's touch, came bounding
at them. Chairmian saw his contorted face and his uplifted sword. She turned to
try to run, but slipped and fell. As the man leaped toward her, Chup caught him
by one arm, seemed to wave him in midair as if he were a banner, and threw him
sprawling on his face, so heavily that he did not rise.
Recovering,
Charmian crawled to pick up the sword the man had dropped. Murmuring
"Come, My Lord Chup, come with me. We will help each other," she held
it out toward Chup, whose hand closed on the pommel as naturally as a mouth
might close on food. Taking hold of his other hand, big and hard, docile and
trusting, Charmian led him out away from the remains of smoldering tents and
torches, away from the passing pyrotechnic demons, out into the summer night.
Other humans could be heard running and crying out around them in the dark, but
no one paid them any heed.
IX
Ardneh's
Life
"Wolf
tracks, if I've ever seen them" Rolf announced. It was mid-morning on the
day after their arrival at Ardneh's base. They had camped overnight wrapped in
their cloaks in a small, ancient dormitory, where the plumbing still worked but
the ancient furnishings had otherwise crumbled long ago. Ardneh, still busy
integrating into his own complex being the strange artifact that had been their
gift, had not yet explained to them in any detail what their chief tasks here
were to be. But he had asked them to make a short reconnaissance round the old
mine entrance, to see if there were any signs of their having been followed.
When this request puzzled them, Ardneh explained: "It is here, inside my
own physical structure, that my powers are in some ways most limited." And
there came to Rolf, with seeming naturalness, the mental image of a hand trying
to bandage itself.
Now he
stood with Catherine at the mouth of the ancient adit. A thunderstorm had come
and gone during the night, unheard by them inside, leaving fresh mud where the
small stream's banks had been dry dirt. The splayed prints in the mud were
those of large and heavy animals. "Only natural beasts of some kind, we
can hope," Rolf added now.
"Look."
Catherine was pointing at the hard rock ledge a couple of meters in from the
entrance. Rolf crouched beside her. The faint smear of mud on rock was not yet
quite dry. His eyes could not really make it into a large paw-print. But
something, or someone, had left it there within the last few hours.
"Are
there wolves that serve the East?" Catherine asked.
"I
have heard stories of such, but never seen them. Ardneh will know."
"We
were to scout outside; I suppose we had better not retreat at the mere sight of
a track."
Rolf
agreed, and they proceeded cautiously. But, once away from the mud at the
adit's entrance, they could discover no evidence of enemies or large beasts.
New rivulets, still gurgling with rainwater, entered the stream at several
points, and a hundred meters downstream from Ardneh's cave it was now much
deeper than it had been, overtopping its normal banks to comb long grass with
its current.
After
following the stream that far they scouted in a circle centered on the entrance
to the cave. They climbed the hill, crawling cautiously round its grassy top to
observe a peaceful summer world in all directions. From there the circle
brought them back to the stream and its swift pools. Catherine knelt to scan
the bank closely; her thighs showed white before her skirt fell back demurely
into place.
The
little glade felt utterly secure, isolated from friend and foe alike. A thought
that Rolf had banished came leaping back, with power irresistible: Maybe the
curse has ended now -
Two
minutes later, feeling numb with fury, he was turning away from Catherine,
picking up his just-dropped scabbard from the grass. The sword came out into
his right hand, and with it he hacked murderously at the Lady Charmian's image,
projected by his rage on a small tree. He was leaving marks to show enemy
scouts that someone had been here. All right, then, he was leaving marks.
"I
am changed again," came Catherine's wearily steady voice from behind him.
"Changed and dressed."
Walking
behind her, on their silent way back to the cave, he thought that even her
normal, youthful shape was after all far from lovely. Those bare legs moving
ahead of him were not curved in the way that a man's dreams told him a girl's
legs should be curved. Too thin and wiry. My Lady Charmian chooses ugly
servants, always - And Rolf felt sullen, mean, and ugly too.
Wood
woke with a start, and instantly sprang to his feet. The movement came in a
burst of fear-born energy that drained away as quickly as it had come, and left
him tottering. He stood swaying in the cheerful sunlight, amid unfamiliar grass
and trees, unable to recall how he had come to be here.
Gradually,
in bits and pieces, it came back: the error made in weariness, the jolting
punishment from Orcus. But that had been during the night, and it was late
morning now. Or might it even be early afternoon -
With a
shock Wood beheld that the grass where he had lain still remained pressed down,
showing the outline of his body. Within the outline it was even yellowed,
beginning to die from lack of sun.
How
many days had he been lying there? Within the outline of withered grass, beetles
were scurrying to find new shade. But though he must have been motionless as a
corpse, apparently no living thing had come closer than that to molesting him.
A magician of Wood's power was not completely unprotected even when
unconscious.
Now he
looked cautiously about. The only other humans remaining in the grove had made
food for scavengers already. He faced no immediate threat.
Wood
spewed out words of power, barking commands and questions into the air, which
soon crackled with invisible presences. His first orders were for food and
drink-he was ravenous and thirsty now, as well as stiff in every muscle and
joint. Next he demanded information.
What he
learned was, for the most part, reassuring. The horde of rogue demons had
scattered around the world, which was an annoyance, but no more -obviously
Orcus had not escaped. Quickly Wood set in motion the processes necessary to
bring the others back under his control. Then, clumsy and aching, he set out on
foot across tree-dotted grassland in the direction where, as his invisible
informants now assured him, Ominor's army was presently encamped.
With no
better means of travel than his old legs, the journey was slow. But the kind of
steed he had once ridden was not readily replaceable, and he was saving his
powers now for essentials. After an hour, however, the hiking grew oppressively
difficult. He took thought, noted that the light breeze was at his back, and
nodded to himself with satisfaction. With a few words he changed his shape into
that of a wind-rolled, rootless weed, a feat he could manage with no great
expenditure of energy.
In this
guise he traveled faster than before, and by late afternoon had come within
sight of his goal. Resuming his usual shape, he now made himself completely invisible,
a condition hard to maintain for more than a brief time. In this way he passed
sentries and minor wizards alike without being detected, until he stood inside
the pavilion of the Emperor himself. Wood was surprised-though not enormously
so-to discover the woman Charmian standing before Ominor. She was simply
dressed now, and shy-looking, with downcast eyes. There were a few other people
about.
The
dialogue between the Emperor and Charmian was interesting to Wood, as it
somewhat concerned him; but the first time John Ominor's eyes flicked his way
they seemed for just a moment to rest directly on Wood, and after that Wood
could no longer completely convince himself that his invisibility was proof
against the Emperor's gaze. A fear that he could not master began to grow in
Wood, and with a faint shudder he retreated, passing out through the pavilion
walls as a demon might, or smoke; and once outside he looked for a suitable
place nearby where he might let himself be seeable again.
To
Charmian, John Ominorwas saying, in his customary loud, half-angry tone;
"You still seem surprised at the sight of me, girl. What did you think I
would be like?"
"That
you would be impressive, Lord. As indeed you are."
The
Emperor half smiled, and enjoyed looking at Charmian a little longer before
answering her. "As indeed I am not, you mean. Not loathesome or
demonic-looking. Or even particularly handsome." Though as usual the
Emperor gave the impression of impatience, yet he was in no hurry to conclude
the conversation."! have heard of you, most memorable lady," he went
on. "Attempted to attach yourself to Som the Dead, in the Black Mountains;
yes, and nearly thawed him back to life, didn't you? I can well believe it ...
though that man always seemed quite inhuman to me. Whereas I am an ordinary man
in all but power. The powers I was born with, and those I have since
accumulated -rather greater than those of Som. Or anyone else. Charmian, you
will find my desires much more ordinary than those of many other men whom you
have tried to please; that is not to say that I am easily satisfied."
"My
Emperor, I wish only that I may someday be granted the privilege of trying to
satisfy your every - "
"To
take whatever I want. To punish all my overt enemies, and to maintain fear in
all who are too frightened of me to be my enemies at the moment-what more is
the East but this?"
Charmian,
in silence, made deep obeisance toward the carved chair in which the Emperor
sat.
Ominor
said: "Before you attempt more energetic ways of contributing to my
happiness, answer me a question or two; repeat to me how you and the man came
to be out there where you were found by my patrol. What went wrong with Abner,
and what has become of my chief wizard?" There came a hoarse scream from
somewhere not far away, probably from another chamber of the elaborate tent.
"They are still asking the same questions of the man who was with you, but
it seems he is as witless as he looked. He does nothing but yelp. You may be
our only witness, so try to remember things in a little more detail. Exactly
where is Wood?"
"My
dread Lord, I will do the best I can." Char-mian had already told of
Abner's fate and Wood's, leaving out of course her attack on the Constable from
behind. She began to repeat the story now, adding such detail as she could
remember; still she could not say exactly where it had all happened. She had
wandered for two days with the dazed Chup before the Eastern patrol found them.
She had no more information about Wood to give the Emperor, who was listening
carefully.
Now and
then another mindless outcry drifted in from Chup. In a moment of private
thought it occurred to Charmian how enjoyable it would be to watch Chup's slow
destruction, but then in the next moment she realized that she would miss him
when he was no more. She recalled feeling a certain joy mixed with her fear on
recognizing him as the man forcing his way into her rooms at the caravanserai,
and again in the Constable's tent. Of course Chup might have killed her either time
if she had crossed him; but this man here, on whose favor she was counting,
might well kill her someday for amusement.
John
Ominor asked her: "When this group of demons, as you put it, came pouring
out into the world, was there any one among them notably larger or more
impressive than the rest?" He seemed to think the question very important.
"I
think not, dread Lord, if you can accept the opinion of one not well acquainted
with demons, or able to view them without fear."
"No,
of course not," Ominor mused, as if to himself, "we would have
known." His eye fixed Charmian once more. "And the man with you? He
is of the West, you say, and yet you seem to have known him previously?"
There
was no telling how much the Emperor might already know, and Charmian now boldly
gave the truth. "He was once of the East, my Lord, and he was once my
husband. A deserter and a turncoat. I cannot believe his present madness is a
sham; but be that as it may, I would be pleased to see his suffering as well as
hear it."
Ominor
grunted and flicked a glance back over his shoulder. Apparently the signal was
relayed and heeded for presently the dismal outcries ceased. A moment more, and
two black-garbed torturers came in bringing with them Chup, bound to an iron
frame on wheels. He was stripped and bleeding here and there, where patches of
skin were missing; but he was not the mangled object Charmian had imagined. His
head turned to and fro, eyes glaring wildly.
Another
pair of men had come in, wizards to judge by their dress. Ominor now turned to
them. "Try some gentler means of restoring his memory. It could be
important. If he knows aught of what was befallen Wood - "
There
came a hail from outside the pavilion. A stir at the entrance, and then Wood
himself appeared there. He hurried forward, scarcely glancing at Charmian, made
obeisance, and quickly rose. "A word with you, at once, my Lord."
Ominor
arose promptly and led the way out of the chamber, motioning Wood to come
along. Charmian was left to contemplate her husband, now being treated kindly,
with a mixture of anger and relief that she did not fully understand.
Ominor
and Wood confronted one another within an inner chamber of black silk, a tent
within a tent, guarded round by most dependable powers of secrecy, and filled
with a darkness that sometimes could press upon the eye like glaring light.
Wood
got to business at once. "Supreme Lord, I can rouse that man that they are
working on out there; it is one of my spells that still oppresses him. Has he
any information of importance?"
"Not
since you are here. Where were you?"
"Mobilizing
reserve forces, my lord Emperor. We shall soon have urgent need of them."
"And
you were struck down in the process? So the woman told me, but I doubted . . .
what, who, were you trying to call up?"
There
was a pause. Wood began to answer indirectly. "My Lord, shortly before
that I faced Ardneh, and I was weakened thereby. Ardneh is now mightier than we
have ever suspected he might become. He may be as strong as -one other, whom we
both know of, whose name I have not mentioned - "
Ominor
stood up. "Are you really leading where I think you are? Was that the
purpose of the ceremony you had begun?" The secret tent muted sound, but
still the anger in his voice was terrible. "Of course; who else could have
struck you down like that?"
"Lord
Emperor, hear me out, if you would save the East! I tell you I have faced
Ardneh and I know! We must arouse the One whose name should not be said, to
fight for us. Or else we perish."
"Arouse
him,you say? Not simply tap his power?"
"Yes."
Wood swallowed. "Awaken him enough to send him into battle. Keep reins
upon his senses and his will, and send him back below when he has served."
There
was again a little silence before Ominor said: "You think it will be
possible to release the one you speak of, then bottle him again like so much
wine?"
"It
is a risk that must be taken, supreme Lord."
"You
really believe you can do that?" The Emperor's loud crude voice made it sound
as if Wood's sanity rather than his ability, was in question.
"Lord,
Ardneh had exhausted me before the Other struck me down. Nor could he even then
escape our bondage, as you see. Before beginning again I will rest myself, and
make thorough preparation. Next time I will have help - "
"Of
course!" Ominor clapped his hands, as if blessed with a sudden happy
thought. "To help you we must call upon those same three powers that
hovered above the lake, and warded harm from our imperial person, the day that
we invited Ardneh to our palace -ah, it seems so long ago. Yes, call them, let
them clamp shut their jaws upon all who threaten us, as you swore they were
eager to do."
Wood
hung his head, taking care to indicate nothing but total submission. Ardneh had
already driven those three demons from the field, in the cur-pack with the
others, as Ominor must understand. Just now was not the time for Wood to say
anything more at all.
Having
made his point and inspired what he thought to be sufficient fear, the Emperor
was ready to talk business. "Wood, despite the recent record of your
failures, I find myself listening to this new plan of yours. But I am not yet
convinced. I know, better than you or anyone else, the dangers of what you
propose. Do not take another step along that road unless I bid you do so.
However." Wood's eyes lifted. "However, if what you tell me of Ardneh
is true, we may have to take the most desperate steps, and quickly. So rest
now, and prepare yourself-are there any preliminary steps remaining?"
Wood
was eager once again. "One more sacrifice, great Lord. I need not promise
it will be far more carefully conducted than the last. That is all, and the One
we speak of will be reachable for quick summoning, or for quickly being
reburied as deep as ever."
There
was a silent pause. "Go and do it," said Ominor then abruptly. He
stood up, ripped open with his hand the little tent of blackness, and strode
out.
Returning
to his private quarters, the Emperor was soon visited by one of his chiefs of
technology, and by his Master of the Beasts, who came in lupine form. For once,
both brought good news. In recent days the technologists' Old World devices had
detected a steady increase in electromagnetic activity in a certain small area
to the north. It seemed to be precisely where the Beast Master's
half-intelligent scouts now reported the scent of two humans, male and female,
entering a strange cave. From the same direction had come the winds that had
defeated Wood and scattered his demonic horde. In that direction, also, was
Duncan's army tending, as if something were there that the Prince wanted to
defend.
I have
found Ardneh's life. Ominor did not say the words aloud. But he dismissed his
aides and stood alone for some time, looking at the map. Then he summoned his
field commanders and demanded from them a faster movement to the north. Such
beasts as were already near the objective were to try what could be
accomplished by a prompt attack.
X
Beast-War
"Ardneh,
how long will we be here?" Rolf sat on a chest of Old World tools. His
hands were playing nervously with a gripping, twisting device of silvery metal.
Catherine, on the other side of the room, lay curled up on the floor as if she
hoped to sleep. Not many words had passed between the two of them since their
return from the scouting expedition. On hearing their report of paw-prints,
Ardneh had urged that at least one of them remain awake and alert at all times;
they could not depend upon his being able to warn them of danger, here in his
own blind interior.
Ardneh's
answer to his question now took Rolf by surprise. "The number of days is
not now
determin-able.
But almost certainly it will not be as long as a month. By then the outcome of
the war will have been decided."
Across
the room, Catherine's head came up, her face turned in Rolf's direction.
Rolf
opened his mouth, closed it, tried again. "It will be over? "was all
that he could find to say at last.
"The
next major battle will decide the war," Ardneh replied matter-of-factly.
"And it will be fought here, within the month, though the war will not end
entirely for another year or two."
"Ardneh
. . .fought here?"
"Around
me and over me. I must bring the strongest of the enemy to me, and break them
here, if they are to be broken at all. And Duncan must come with his army, to
be ready to strike again when I have done my utmost."
Catherine
asked: "And what are Rolf and I to do?"
"There
will be much. Physical repairs and rearrangements to be made, things I cannot
do for myself, enough work to keep two humans busy until the issue is decided.
Rolf has great natural skill in technology; also he is familiar enough with me
not to be greatly awed by my presence. Therefore I decided that he should be
the one to bring me the heart of the power lamp."
Catherine
put out a slender hand, to touch a giant piece of hardware. "I have no
great skill with things like these."
"More
than you know," Ardneh's voice assured her. "You will be of help with
the machinery. But your chief value to my plan, the reason I brought you here,
lies elsewhere, in the future. I see it dimly, but cannot explain. You have
powers that you know not of. Powers of life, that build the world."
"Magic?
No, I cannot . . ."
"Not
magic. Not un-magic, either. All. Reality."
Her
eyes turned to Rolf, as if beseeching him for help. It was a moment of openness
between them, such as they had not shared since rejoining Ardneh. But though
Rolfs heart went out to that look, he had no other help to give.
Ardneh
gave them no time to brood any more, but announced that the integration of the
power source that they had brought was now complete. He led them now to other
rooms and began to show them some of the tasks they must accomplish. There were
interlocking nests of metal and glass to be opened, disassembled, moved, put
together again in new configurations. There were long cables, like multi-headed
snakes, to be unpacked, tested, and installed. The outward shapes of the
machinery were not very complex, but still some practice time was necessary.
Rolf's fingers soon got the feel of what was wanted; Catherine, less in tune
with technical matters, increasingly limited her help to unpacking, fetching,
and carrying, taking up tools only when necessary.
That
night in the ruined dormitory, sleep would not come to Rolf. He tossed about
for a while, looking again and again at the motionless, cloak-covered form on
the far side of the room. Finally he sat up. "Ardneh."
It
seemed a long time before an answer came. "What is it?"
"Catherine
is under a spell of the Lady Char-mian's." The figure on the far side of
the room was still apparently asleep. "If you could counteract it, both of
us would be grateful."
This
time the pause was longer still. Then the voice above Rolf said: "I am
aware of the spell. To counteract it would be difficult, because of the source
of power that was tapped to make it. And to counteract it does not seem
essential."
"Our
lives here would be much easier if-"
Calm,
inflexible, Ardneh's voice overrode his. "At this moment many lives in the
West are more difficult than yours. And there are greater dangers to you than
this discomfort that you speak of. I am too busy to even discuss the matter
now. Another may help you where I cannot."
Another?
Who? But there would be no use in trying to ask; Rolf could feel that Ardneh's
presence had departed. Despite himself, despite his awareness of the legless,
armless, dying who were far worse off, he half-willingly nursed a sullen anger.
Catherine
was still asleep - or still wanted him to think she was. He tried once more to
get to sleep himself, but it was hopeless. Getting up, he groped his way
through dark but now partially familiar corridors, to the chill cave air of the
tunnel and at last to the warmth of summer night outside. For a time he stood
cautiously just inside the tunnel mouth, his ears sorting out the natural
activities of the prairie night as he heard them through the murmur of the
stream. Then he climbed the little hill above the entrance to the cave, and sat
in the grass to contemplate the stars.
"Whooo,
Roolf."
The
great bird was almost within reach of his hand before his eyes could find it in
the night. "Strijeef! It's good to see you again. How are you? What
news?"
The
bird spoke briefly of reptiles recently slain, and personal perils avoided; and
then of the march of great armies, how both East and West were converging on
this northern land. "Each day the great battle that is to come grows
nearer. All in Duncan's army speak of it."
"So
says Ardneh, also. Have you a message for me from Duncan?"
From
his courier's pouch Strijeef's nimble talons brought out a small roll of paper,
which he tossed to Rolf with a flirt of his murderous beak. "Yoouuu are promoted
to captain, and the woman Gathering is formally enrolled as warrant officer.
And there is one more bit of news, that I bring of my oown sight. Large
four-legged beasts are coming here, loong before either army. A pack of beasts
I doo not know, and they will be here before daylight."
It had
rained during the night, and in the dismal morning the west prairie smelled
more of autumn than of summer. The army of the East was striking camp,
preparing for another day of northward march. From the earliest light Charmian
had been outside her tent, keeping an alert eye on the tent where Wood had
rested. And now at last she saw him emerge from it, wearing a soft, rich robe.
Once
more a circular space, set apart from other camp activities, had been made ready
for the chief wizard's intended work. In the middle of that space Chup had been
left waiting through the night, still bound to his iron frame, and guarded by
two soldiers.
Wood
had paused, just outside his tent, in conference with other wizards. Charmian
took the opportunity to approach the waiting victim. Grabbing Chup's long hair,
she turned his face around to hers. He snarled, but there was no recognition in
the scarcely-human sound. His eyes were those of a trapped beast.
Once
she had yearned to tear those eyes out with her nails. Now she had the chance
to do so. But somehow the desire had fled.
Wood
was approaching now, followed by two assistants, as silent and somber as their
master. At a flicker of the chief wizard's eyes toward her, Charmian darted out
of the circle. Just past its edge, she paused, alone and watching as before.
As soon
as a few preliminaries were out of the way, Wood came closer to the victim on
his iron frame. The wizard raised and spread his empty hands. For this sacrifice
he must use nothing so direct as a knife. Subtle and bloodless must be the
draining of this victim's life. Its energies were needed as solvents and
lubricants, to melt the seals and oil the hinges of the dungeon door through
which Orcus must eventually pass if it was finally decided to free him. Wood
began to work now with his most subtle arts, to extract the energies of Chup's
life without the use of material weapons. Proceeding slowly and carefully, Wood
ignored, or at least he did not stop to savor, the reactions of the victim
whose mind must be made clear so he could understand what was happening to him.
The essential oil of despair must be added to those of fear and pain. Chup,
regaining his wits at last, strained at his iron bonds, and looked up with a
new and understanding horror at the man who was beginning to kill him.
Wood
had killed in ritual so often than now it seemed no more important to him than
the cracking of an egg. While his voice chanted, and his hands gestured, his
mind held steady to the useful working image. Once more in imagination he had
descended to the nethermost dungeon. Now he stood there like an artisan, a
workman lubricating a lock, an intricate tremendous lock that held a massive
door, a door securely sealed and barred, whose key had been put so far away
that it had been forgotten. Another terrible ceremony would be needed for the
recovery of that key, but that was for another day.
On the
other side of the door, Wood knew, the monster moved (aye, he could feel and
hear it through the door), the utter beast, a slouching, slimy and wall-bulging
weight, that slid against the door, and turned within its tiny cell and padded
on along the tiny circle it must walk. It was fully awakened now. He felt its
foul breath issuing . . . enough. When he envisioned demons breathing, more
than enough. The workman's image was the one that he must keep in mind. He must
oil the unopenable hinges, and the lock, and make them ready to be used. Now,
twist and squeeze the oily rag (whose name was Chup) to get the solvent and the
lubricant. Probe deeply now into the lock and clear the sealing force from all
the parts . . .
Incredibly,
the workman's hand upon the door was seized, by something from the other side.
Wood's hand went dead as ice. A numbing shock flew all along his arm. He tried
to step back from the door, to pull away. When that effort failed he sought to
tear his mind out of the image at once, terrible though the dangers were in
doing so. But still his hand was held. He could only gape in horrified
disbelief as the monster, having been somehow granted some kind of fingerhold
within the lock, proceeded to make good use of it, applying his full strength.
The
lock went smash at once, the crossbars on the door were splintering. The weight
against the other side leaned harder and the bars broke off. Slowly, leisurely
almost, the door swung on its hinges opening . . . with an effort inspired by
ultimate terror, Wood broke away, returning to his body in the world of men.
Charmian,
still watching her husband's face intently, was the first person outside the
wizards' ring to understand that something was going hideously wrong. She saw
Chup's face change once more, a new kind of calm replacing the understanding
fear, and she thought that he was on the point of death. For mixed reasons, she
felt a pang of disappointment, and was unconsciously drawing herself up to
express her feelings in some gesture when she saw that which converted her
movement into the start of a retreat.
Suddenly
she saw that Chup's right hand, showing not even a tremor, moving with
deliberate sure-ness, had pulled itself free of its restraint (had those straps
ever been iron, that now Jay twisted like torn cloth?) and was moving to take
hold of the thicker iron band across his chest. The hand found its grip, and
quivered once. With a ringing snap the chest-band burst, sending a fragment of
metal singing like a missile past Charmian's head. Not that Chup's actions had
anything to do with her; his eyes, with their new and terrible calm, were fixed
on Wood.
Wood,
his eyes meeting that gaze, stood frozen for a long moment, his practiced hands
for once contorted awkwardly. Similarly his two assistants were transfixed, one
with arms outthrust as if to ward off a lunge by Chup, the other bent forward
ludicrously, as if with stomach-ache. Every detail of the tableau seemed in
that moment to be carved of stone.
Then
Wood's hands shot forward, fingers clenched, thumbs pointing, aimed like some
boy's hands holding a strange and imaginary weapon in play. Toward Chup's
rising figure, garbed in the rude, stained robe of a sacrifice, there leaped
out from Wood's hands a soundless scimitar-curve of multicolored light. It
flashed from the wizard across nearly the entire space that separated him from
Chup. But the last half-meter of space remained inviolate.
The
counterblow Charmian could not see directly, only its effect. To her, watching
in a timeless moment of terror, it seemed that Wood's face stayed where it was,
a malignant frozen mask, while behind it and below it his head and body were
shattered into bloodless clods and dust. Then the face disintegrated into
flying dust. Simultaneously Wood's two aides were flung aside like rags. The
blow that had struck the wizards went in a soundless shock through air and
earth. Charmian fell to her knees. In the aftermath she heard the men of the
army yelling and running away.
The
body that had been Chup's stood tall and seemingly unscathed, turning to and
fro to look and listen. Charmian saw that the camp a little distance off was
full of tumbled tents and running men. Black-garbed wizards came running
nearer, then turned and fled, or stood and trembled helplessly, when he who had
been Chup looked at them. No trace of Wood was left, and the two who had been
helping him were rolled-up rag-bundles on the ground. Charmian was the only
living perspn within fifty meters of Chup's terrible eyes, and now they turned
to her.
Still
on her knees, she now stretched forth her arms. "Ardneh." Her voice
was quavering, almost inaudible, even to herself. "Ardneh, mercy -a
thousand thanks and mercies are your due, for having slain that man who held me
as his slave."
The
eyes that had been Chup's held her only a moment longer, then moved back to scan
the turmoil in the camp. Suddenly a voice more terrible than Chup's boomed from
the throat that had been his: "Hear me, humans, vermin of the earth! I,
the Emperor Orcus, have come to reclaim my throne, and to put all the world
beneath my feet. Know and believe this, and hold yourselves in readiness to
obey. Your fates depend upon how faithfully you serve me in the battle soon to
come against the West. For now, farewell."
Only
Charmian was near enough to see what happened next. The body that had been Chup's
was racked by a prolonged shuddering, making the departure of the possessing
power effectively visible. Suddenly it was once more her husbnad who stood
before her.
Chup
drew a deep breath, like a man returning from an underwater plunge. There was wonder
in his eyes, but not bewilderment; he had evidently been conscious of all that
happened while Orcus used his body to escape.
Chup's
gaze came to rest on Charmian. She gave a low, choked cry, got to her feet and
tried to flee, but before she could take a step Chup's hard hand clamped her
arm.
"We
are going to leave," said Chup in a quiet rasp. "I think no one will
try to stop the Emperor Orcus as he walks away."
"My
own true Lord," said Charmian, with something like a sob. "I know
what you must think of me; I do not care, now that I see you whole and free
again.
"Move
out,"he said, preoccupied with looking for pursuit. Thousands of distant
eyes were on him, but no one in the shaken army of the East was offering to
come closer. "Try to raise an alarm and I will break your spine before
they get me."
Thus
they walked away.
When
Orcus first came fully awake within his more-than-physical dungeon his first
clear thought was that someone or something was helping him, reaching to give
him unforced and willing aid. Powerful abilities besides his own were laboring
to set him free, dispersing the fogs and webs of enchantment that had kept him
more than half asleep, letting into his cell a light of almost blinding
clarity. Never before had Orcus been given free and willing help, and the
motives of his helper now loomed as a mystery. But he had no time now for
asking questions, no time for anything but the giant effort he must make to win
his freedom.
The
magical images in which Orcus saw the event were jumbled, not as clear as
Wood's dungeon door and lock. But Orcus saw the way that he must take. The man
who was being drained and used by Wood became for Orcus first a handgrip, a
fragment of real life thrust near him in his prison of chaos. And then the
human fragment became a lifeboat bobbing and tossing on a mad sea. Made able to
think and move again by some unknown source of outside help, Orcus possessed
the man and used him, poured his own demonic bulk into the little matrix of the
human brain, and by this fulcrum levered his own titanic energies back into the
world of men.
After
that it was the work of a moment or two to release his borrowed body from its
physical bonds, that he might more readily use it if he chose. It was only the
work of another moment to strike Wood down. After that, a quick survey of the
immediate situation, and the human body provided a convenient voice for the
Demon-Emperor to use in announcing his return to the assembled human army of
the East.
Even as
he spoke, his thoughts and perceptions raced ahead. He felt some regret at
slaying Wood so quickly. Age-long revenge on those who had betrayed him was
desirable, and Wood must have been among them, as surely as the arch-traitor
must have been Ominor. But meanwhile, Orcus saw and understood why Ominor had
dared to think of bringing him back into the world. The danger from the West
was presently very great. Without Orcus the East would not be strong enough to
meet it. And if the West prevailed, the intriguers of the East would find that
they had nothing to steal from one another.
At the
heart of the danger from the West there loomed a power new to Orcus; new and
strange, and stronger than any that he had ever faced before. Whether the
strength of this new enemy was greater than his own he could not immediately
determine, but he had the impression that the force of this enemy was still
waxing. The enemy had a name, Ardneh. The name was unhidden, arrogantly
revealed-make what magical use of it you like, malign powers of the East.
Ardneh glowed, in the spectra of several energies, with deadly enmity for Orcus
and all his works. All these things Orcus perceived within moments after
re-entering the world of men, while still looking through the eyes of the man
who was to have been sacrificed.
With
his chief enemy waxing stronger, there was no point in delaying the struggle
that must come. Casting aside the man he had possessed, Orcus mounted in a
silent invisible rush into the upper air. From there, he swept the great curve
of earth with his multitude of senses. He saw the dispositions of the main
armies of both East and West, and he saw something more, that all but caused
him to disregard those armies. Some kilometers north of the spot from which he
had arisen, he sensed a series of chambers under the ground, and a
concentration of life that moved and pulsed therein. Despite the distance, and
the magical defenses that ringed it all about, to Orcus the nature of the place
was plain, and the identity of the life within it. Above that place the
Demon-Emperor flew slowly, and then toward it he went falling like an
avalanche.
Inside
one of the caves of Ardneh, Rolf saw the lights go dim. At the same moment came
a heightening in intensity of the ubiquitous hum of technological power,
usually so low that he was doubtful of hearing it at all.
"Ardneh?"
There
was no immediate answer, no feeling of Ardneh's presence.
Going
toward the outer room where he had seen Catherine working a few minutes before
-it seemed there were always more cables to be connected, more devices unpacked
or moved -Rolf met her coming, wide-eyed, to look for him.
There
was unconcealed fright in her voice. "Rolf, it has gone dark outside. The
sun is gone."
He felt
his own heart lurch, but tried to appear calm. "Not the sun. If it's dark,
it must be something . . ."
Ardneh
interrupted, speaking from above them and seemingly from all around them,
louder than they had ever heard him before. "The days of the decisive
battle have begun. Orcus, emperor of demons, has found me and is attacking. Do
not let the darkness outside worry you. It is local, and is part of my
defense."
"Ardneh,
what can we - "
"Go
to Room Three at once, and stand by to reconnect the generators there."
When
they had been working for a little time in the chamber that Ardneh had taught
them to call Room Three, he interrupted his detailed technical orders to inform
them: "I have repulsed the first attack of Orcus. He will make further
efforts, but our struggle is not likely to be decided now, until the armies of
men have come to join it. Meanwhile there are more changes in equipment to be
made."
During
the remainder of the day Rolf and Catherine were kept at work. Now and again
the earth shook around their armored, buried rooms. The walls yielded a little
and swayed with the moving of the earth, but were not crushed or broken. Rolf
discovered that another of the outer rooms had been sealed off by heavy sliding
doors.
Late in
the day, Ardneh gradually ceased to issue orders. The sense of his presence
became remote, while the demonic aura of his unimaginable opponent, that the
humans had begun to sense, disappeared completely. Catherine and Rolf sat,
waiting and resting amid their tools.
After a
while, Catherine asked: "What will you do, Rolf, when the war is
over?"
"Over?"
From time to time he had enjoyed vague thoughts of victory celebrations, and
once or twice he had meditated on some vengeance against the East. But such
things still seemed as far away as ever.
Catherine
added: "Ardneh has told us it will almost certainly be over very soon.
Remember?"
"Of
course." He tried to visualize what victory would be like; the other
possibility was hardly to be contemplated. "I can't really remember what
things were like before the war; at least, not before the East came to occupy
us. I was only a child then."
"You
were telling me yesterday about your family, and how the seacoast looked near
where you lived. In the Broken Lands."
Rolf
was silent for a time. "I can't see myself just going back to farm the
land my parents held. No, I'll do something else. Some new work in technology,
maybe. I don't know where. Will you be with me then? When all the curses of the
East are dead?" He hadn't meant to come out with the words so bluntly, but
now that they were out he had no wish to call them back.
Catherine
looked at him, and began to give her answer with luminous eyes, and then her
eyes looked past him. Rolf spun round barely in time to meet the soft-footed
rush of the first wolf.
After
struggling for a full day against Ardneh, Orcus broke off the fight temporarily
and withdrew into the upper atmosphere meaning to recharge his depleted
energies while he restudied the situation.
During
the struggle he had learned several things about his opponent. For one thing,
Ardneh was certainly formidable. For another, it was virtually certain that
Ardneh would never pursue him. Orcus was definitely the more mobile, while
Ardneh perhaps had an advantage in strength, as long as he was content merely
to defend the little plot of land wherein his life was buried.
Brooding
as he rested kilometers above that land, Orcus pondered the inky cloud of
Ardneh's defensive energies. To penetrate that concentrated block would
probably prove more than even the Emperor of Demons could accomplish without
help.
Lying
atop the atmosphere, Orcus spread himself thin as a blanket, absorbing energy
from the sun and from incoming cosmic particles. When he had recharged his
strength somewhat he summoned up a minor demon to be his messenger. This one he
sent to find Ominor, and convey to the man Orcus's blunt orders. Ominor was to
bring his human army north with all possible speed, encircle Ardneh, and do all
that massed human strength could achieve in the way of digging him out of his
defenses. While this effort was in progress, Orcus would renew his own assault.
The Western army might well try to intervene, but it could not long sustain a
pitched battle against Ominor, and no other kind of battle could now save
Ardneh from destruction. '
A
crushing victory for the East was near. After it, Orcus planned to enjoy
agelong revenge against John Ominor.
The
first wolf had gone down with Catherine's arrow through its body, but not
before Rolfs left forearm had been severely bitten. The two of them were
fleeing now, feet pounding in the darkened corridors, behind them the howls of
a pursuing pack. The humans cried for help as they ran; Ardneh closed doors
against their pursuers were possible, but evidently could do no more. And the
doors that could be closed were too few to effectively cut off the chase,
though they afforded a temporarily life-saving delay.
"To
the tunnel," Rolf gasped. It was the narrowest place that he could think
of. "We maybe able to hold them there."
On the
narrow stone ledge beside the stream, with his back to daylight, he was ready
with his sword for the first red-eyed howler's spring, and caught it on his
point. Others came splashing in the stream beside him. Catherine hit one with a
shaft, but before she could draw again a furry body had knocked her down.
Rolf
threw himself into the water, his blade dividing fur and bone. Catherine fought
with a knife drawn from her belt. Standing together in the bloodied water it
seemed for a moment that they might hold . . .
Sunlight
was darkened behind them. A bulk of fur that nearly filled the tunnel had
entered it on all fours.
Rolf's
swordblade had wedged in a wolf's skull and he strained desperately to wrench
it free. Meanwhile the claws of the mountainous new beast were reaching for him
from behind . . .
Not
claws. The hand of an orange-furred giant closed round his ribs. He was lifted,
swept backward, tossed into sunlight to land in mud and water with a great
splash. He had just time to catch a breath before Catherine came flying to land
almost in his arms. He pulled her head above water and she gasped for air.
Now,
where was his sword - ?
What
seemed like long minutes were necessary to locate the weapon, stuck in the bottom
mud. But it was not needed sooner. Seeing into the shadowed tunnel from
sunlight was effectively impossible, but sounds came plainly out: wolf-howls
that keened in agony, and what sounded like words, muttered in a basso voice.
There came out broken lupine bodies, drifting. Rolf had his sword back in his
hand before a single live wolf emerged at last, in a dead frantic yelping run.
He cut at and missed the speeding form, and listened to the sounds of its
flight diminish in the distance.
Now
something else was stirring in the tunnel mouth. A giant's hand, covered with
orange fur, and somewhere he had once seen the like before . . .
"Lord
Draffut," Rolf choked out, and sat down on the stream's bank, with
suddenly trembling knees. "We give you welcome."
Catherine
marveled greatly, and her awe increased when Draffut laid hold gently of Rolf's
mangled arm and raw, torn flesh became half-healed scar tissue at his touch.
"My
healing powers are not what they once were," the Beast-Lord rumbled.
"Yet what I can give to humans I still give."
"Lord
Draffut, we thank you."
"Ardneh
has called me, and I have listened." With his great hands he touched and
began the healing of their smaller wounds as well. Then, with Catherine's two
hands held in one of his, he paused, looking down into her eyes as an adult
might regard an infant. "I sense another matter of pain, that has been
visited upon you. The work of healing that has already been begun, also."
-j
"We
thank you again."
"No,
you have begun it yourselves."
Rolf,
feeling childlike in size and wisdom, exchanged looks with Catherine. "I
do not understand."
"Rolf.
Have you not now bound yourself to Catherine, so that her life is to you as
your own, and more than your own?"
Rolf
still looked at her. "I have."
"Catherine,
are you so bound to Rolf?"
"I
am bound."
"Then
from this day let your bodies be as one; no curse of the East can have power to
separate you any more, whatever harm may otherwise be done to you."
The
Lord Draffut very shortly took his leave, saying that many humans a little to
the south were in great need of him, and soon there would be even more.
Ardneh's mental presence meanwhile came fitfully to Rolf, with information.
"We
are to rest now," he announced. "Inside."
He and
Catherine were asleep, limbs twined on a spread cloak, when Ardneh's next
speech broke an hours-long silence. "Rolf. Catherine. Get up, gather
weapons and food. It is time for you to leave me."
Still
half-sleeping, they arose in silence and began to dress. Almost immediately
Ardneh spoke again: "You are to bear my last message to Duncan, and
through him to all the West."
Rolf
came fully awake at last. "Last message?"
"The
eastern army has arrived, and is encircling me. I will be destroyed in a matter
of hours."
Catherine
ceased packing food into a bag and turned stunned eyes to Rolf, who groped for
words but could not speak. Ardneh continued: "After you have memorized the
message, you will follow the passage on the right just outside this room. You
will find a door newly opened, leading to a tunnel that will bring you beyond
the Eastern army."
Rolf
found his tongue. "Catherine can take your message out, Ardneh. I will
stay on and fight with you. You still need help. And -and it cannot be hopeless
yet! I can help you devise some new -"
"No."
The imperturbable calm of Ardneh's voice only made the meaning of his words the
more unreal. "The next full scale attack of Orcus will destroy me, and it
is not many hours away. And both of you must carry my message. We must make
sure that it gets through. I no longer have any other means of communication
with Duncan. You must impress upon him the importance of my final message,
which is this: he will soon face the choice of either saving his army by
retreat, or taking a grave risk of its destruction by trying to save me. He
must choose to save the men. They can and will fight again tomorrow. I am
finished now. I must serve as I was meant to serve."
"I
... Ardneh, is there no other way?"
"You
can no longer give me meaningful help in any other way. I have given you your
orders now. I will repeat the message several times before you leave me."
"You
will not need to repeat the message, I understand it." Rolf exchanged
helpless glances with Catherine. "If those are the orders you insist upon,
we must obey them. But ..."
Catherine
broke in, shouting angrily at the ceiling. "Ardneh, it is not right foryou
to be so calm. No human being could be so, in your place. With human beings,
there is always a chance. Duncan and our men can beat theirs in a pitched
battle, if they must. I feel it!"
"No."
Rolf
cried: "Ardneh, do not surrender!"
"I
will not, but Orcus with Ominor's army will be strong enough to overcome me.
Now tell this to Duncan also, and spread it throughout the West: in the future,
men must not make gods of finite beings like myself."
"Gods,"
Rolf repeated vacantly. He had heard the word before, but it seemed to have no
connection with what was happening now. "Ardneh, tell us what to do if you
are killed."
"Bearmymessages
to Duncan. Then live andfight for your humanity. And tell the army not to look
back on its retreat. That is important too."
Rolf
went on arguing and pleading for a time, though Ardneh no longer answered. Then
Catherine, tears standing in her eyes, was thrusting a pack at him, and his
sword, and was pulling him by the arm. At first Rolf moved dazedly, allowing
himself to be led like some stunned prisoner. But when they had reached the new
door and passed into the outer tunnel Ardneh had mentioned, he put Catherine
gently behind him and took the lead.
The new
passage was crude and narrow, rough-walled, so dark that they must grope their
way. From somewhere behind came the sliding closing of a heavy door. Now
Ardneh's presence was very nearly gone from Rolfs perception.
After a
hundred meters or so, the passage widened; and shortly its walls were no longer
rock, but hardened earth. Yet it continued to twist on a long subterranean
course. At last the slope they walked began gradually to tend upward, and there
came to them warmer air, with the subtle smells of vegetation.
Their
eyes strained ahead for light, but there was none, not even the tenuous
sky-glow of a cloudy night. "We must be still within the blackness,"
Rolf whispered softly.
The
walls of the tunnel grew further apart, then abruptly fell away altogether.
Rolf could not tell how Ardneh had arranged the opening, or prevented the enemy
from getting into it. But there was no doubt that Ardneh's messengers had
reached open air; Rolf felt a tuft of grass now brush against his leg.
Ardneh
had said that the tunnel would bring them above ground behind the Eastern
lines, outside the noose that Ominor had drawn around Ardneh's emplacement.
Under Orcus's orders, the Eastern army had evidently dared to enter Ardneh's
zone of darkness; Rolf and Catherine could now hear the mutter and murmur of a
great number of men working some distance away, the crunching and scraping of
innumerable digging tools. The noise came from somewhere behind them as they
faced away from the tunnel mouth from which they had just emerged.
Reaching
behind him to hold Catherine's left hand in his own, Rolf led on, away from the
sounds of digging. The darkness at first remained absolute. Soon he paused; at
a few score meters' distance there came the sound of men in a column tramping
past. The marchers were led by a chanting wizard, who bore aloft a kind of
witchlight that illuminated a few square meters of the land that Ardneh had
interdicted from all light; at Rolf's distance, no more than a blurred blue
spark was visible. After the wizard passed, came the sound of feet in route
step, an occasional chink of tools or weapons, and a hushed fragment or two of
Eastern talk. Weapons ready, Catherine and Rolf stood motionless until the
spark had faded to invisibility and the column was out of earshot.
Moving
on, they soon found the ground sloping downward again beneath their feet. Now
Rolf put each foot forward with, extra caution.
At last
one of his feet found water.
"The
river," Catherine whispered in his ear.
"It
must be." But, he thought, the river wound around Ardneh, so to find it
was little help in judging directions. Anyway, compass directions in themselves
would be useless until he knew where Duncan was.
"Let
us try to wade it," he whispered. If it came to swimming they might face
the question of leaving their heavy metal weapons behind. Easing his way into
the water, Rolf made sure to note immediately the direction of the current; if
they should get to floundering and swimming in midstream, it wouldn't do to get
turned around and come out unknowingly on the bank from which they had gone in.
Good
fortune attended the crossing, however, through water nowhere more than waist
deep. On the new bank, the grass was thicker, and the earth seemed flatter,
less disturbed. When they had advanced a hundred meters beyond the riverbank,
the sounds of tramping, working men were no longer audible. The normal summer
sounds of bird and insect were absent too. Silence seemed complete.
Rolf,
still leading, stopped so abruptly that Catherine stepped on his heel. Suddenly
there had become visible to him the glimmering beginning of bright sunlight, a
tentative vision caught first with one eye only, like something manufactured by
the sight-starved nerves inside his head. But when they had moved forward a few
more steps, there appeared a splintered, fragmented scene of daylit grass and
sky.
Before
emerging from Ardneh's night, Rolf called a halt to rest and wait for the
setting of the sun. He and Catherine remained where they were until the dimming
of the light ahead showed that natural darkness was falling. Then they moved
out from under the mountain-sized shadow beneath which Ardneh hid; they had not
gone a hundred meters under the open sky before a bird came drifting down on
silent wings to greet them.
XI
World
Without Ardneh
"We
have messages for Duncan, from Ardneh," Rolf told the bird at once.
"Can you guide us to him, quickly?"
"Whoo.
It will take yoouu half the night to reach his camp. I had better bear your
words."
"The
army is still so far? Ardneh needs his help."
"They
were closer this morning, before the day's fighting began. Tonight Duncan
retreats. Some of us Feathered Folk were sent to watch for youuu."
Rolf
drew a deep breath. "Yes, you had better bear Ardneh's words. We will
follow as quickly as we can." Rolf repeated Ardneh's injunctions, word for
word as closely as he was able. "And now, which way does Duncan's army
lie?"
The
bird rose briefly out of sight, then dropped back to earth and pointed with one
wing. "There, only a little way, and youu will meet the ground patrol whoo
cared for me through the day. I will tell them first that yoouu are here, then
carry Ardneh's messages on."
With
that the bird was gone. Rolf was relieved to make contact with the foot patrol
of eight men after only another hundred meters' cautious advance. From them, he
and Catherine soon learned that Duncan's efforts to break the Eastern ring
round Ardneh's redoubt had been fierce but unsuccessful.
"I
think you had better take us straight to Dun-can," Rolf told the patrol's
leader. "We can give him more information than you are likely to gain,
stumbling about here without your bird."
The
officer was opening his mouth to answer when the night around them erupted with
the clash and yells of ambush. The clutch of sudden terror was no less sharp
for being an old acquaintance. Rolf drew and crouched low, trying to see the
enemy outlined against the sky. Men rushed and struggled around him, and for
the moment he could not distinguish foe from unfamiliar friend, and he did not
strike.
Amid
the grunting and shouting there came a single high-pitched scream, from what
direction he could not be sure. He called out Catherine's name. The only answer
came from death, singing to his right and left in invisible blades. Rolf threw
himself down, rolled away in the grass, and battle-noise swept past him.
The
pounding and scurrying of feet dwindled into silence. Suddenly, inexplicably as
could happen in a night action, he found himself apparently alone. Cautiously
he rose into a crouch, probing the silent night with all his senses. In the
middle distance faint moonlight shone on a crawling form that might be
Catherine's, half-hidden in tall grass. Rolf moved in that direction, stepping
slowly at first, then with a short rush when the form seemed to waver and
vanish in the light of the deceptive moon.
At the
spot where he thought the figure had been, he called Catherine's name again,
softly, several times, but there came not so much as a rustle of grass in
response. He searched in a small circle, but there was no trace of anyone.
Rolf
realized that with every passing moment the chance of finding her here grew
more remote. If she was still alive, she must be moving on ahead of him toward
Duncan, in the direction the patrol had started to take before the ambush. In
that direction Rolf's duty also urged him. He took his bearings by the stars
and at last moved on alone. Somewhere off to his left, men brawled with steel
again and then were silent. Rolf kept his weapon ready and held to his course.
Throughout
the rest of the night he maintained a steady progress. Once he came upon a bird
lying in the moonlight, dead since the day before most likely, the great wings
broken and torn, probably by reptile claws, and the wide eyesockets emptied.
Rolf could not tell if it was a bird he knew; it might have been Strijeef for
all that he could tell.
At dawn
Rolf could see, but not identify, groups of people in the distance, in several
directions. He took cover; fortunately the grass here was tall enough to hide
him as he crawled. Well behind him now, Ardneh's dome of darkness, impervious
to sun, still bulked high against the clear sky. Rolf saw numbers of reptiles
in the distance, but all appeared to be occupied with matters of more moment
than his solitary passage. When a rise of ground shielded him from the distant
people, he stood and walked again.
Near
the middle of the morning he knew a great, heart-numbing shock as he came upon
Catherine lying dead in bloody rags. But when he turned the body over he saw it
was that of some long-haired Western boy of slender build. Quivering in all his
limbs, Rolf had to sit down. But at once renewed hope began to grow. Perhaps
she was somewhere just ahead of him, or close behind. They might find each
other even before they reached the Western army.
Around
noon Rolf had to make a long detour to get round a large Eastern foot patrol.
He hoped Catherine had retained her waterbottle. Most of his own was gone by
now. The sun beat down into tall windless grass. Only now and then came the
ghost of a breeze, cooling his face.
Shortly
after he got past the Eastern patrol Rolf came in sight of what he took to be
Duncan's rear-guard. In another hour of cautious pursuit he had gained enough
ground to be sure; the long, thick, twisting column of the retreat was plainly
in sight now, going up a gradual rise of land toward the southwest. The retreat
was still heading directly away from Ardneh's shadow-dome, which was now many
kilometers distant across the tree-dotted sea of grass.
When he
came in hailing distance of the mounted men who brought up the army's rear, he
was assured that Duncan himself was only a short distance ahead. Alternately
walking and trotting, moving up along the column, Rolf could see the special
bitter weariness of defeat in every face. It had been defeat, but not disaster;
the army was basically intact. Men had retained their weapons, the wounded were
being borne efficiently along on animals and in litters.
Duncan
was riding alone, in battle-stained clothing, a little apart from his chief
officers. When Rolf came trotting at his stirrup, Duncan looked down, at first
with weary curiosity, then with delayed recognition and sudden new interest.
"Hail,
Duncan." With a minimum of preamble, Rolf passed on Ardneh's last
admonitions, as nearly word for word as he could manage to do.
"Yes,
the bird came through with your message. I thank you for all that you have
done."A new thought seemed to strike Duncan. "What happened to the
girl who was with you there?"
"I
had hoped to find her here, sir."
Duncan
looked sharply back over his shoulder, made a little motion of his head, and a
pair of men among those riding a little distance to the rear kicked their
mounts into a faster pace that brought them up to Duncan. These two men were
well dressed, and though armed they somehow did not look like soldiers. A few
words that Rolf did not catch passed between them and Duncan, and then they
dismounted, let Duncan ride on ahead, and came to walk beside Rolf, leading
their animals. Meanwhile Duncan was engaged in some traveling discussion by some
of his high officers.
The two
well-dressed men introduced themselves to Rolf. "We are kinsmen of
Catherine's," one explained, "and have come all the way from the
Offshore Islands in search of her. At first we heard she was enslaved, and
meant to try to ransom her; then were rejoiced to hear how she had escaped,
with some Western soldiers, at some remote caravanserai. Now we hear that you
are one of those soldiers, and that you have seen her lately. We entreat you,
tell us whatever more you can."
Rolf
nodded slowly, looking the men over. Both looked young, elegant, tough.
"There is little enough to add." He turned away momentarily to look
out over the surrounding grassy plain. Other stragglers like himself were still
coming in, catching up with the army, but none of those in sight at the moment
was a woman. Turning back, he asked: "To which one of you was she
betrothed?"
"Neither,
"said one. They exchanged glances with each other. "We are both blood
relatives. That one would not come."
Rolf
felt his heart leap up; he could not convince himself that Catherine was really
lying but there somewhere dead. He spoke then in a more friendly way to the
Islanders', telling them what he could that might afford them some hope. He
omitted the business of Charmian's curse.
The
others in turn searched him carefully with their eyes, no doubt trying to
ascertain what had been his exact relationship with their kinswoman. They had
him repeat parts of his story-where and when he had seen her last, how was her
general health. Then, after offering courteous thanks, they mounted again and
dropped back toward the rear of the column.
Now far
back in that direction, directly above the shadow-shroud of Ardneh's beseiged
redoubt, there came a silken ripple in the empty sky. Rolf felt a faint tilting
of the world with a sensation like the beginning of nausea. In the sky there
was a slash of purple hanging -imperial color, color also of injury, pain,
obscenity, agony, like tissue swollen with blood, like the first brushstroke of
some evil artist who meant to paint over all the smiling day. Orcus, coming
again to the attack, slowly manifesting him-.self above his stubborn enemy.
The
sight made no immediate difference, in the pace of the Western army's stoic
march. Some officer-yes, it was an old friend of Rolf's, Thomas of the Broken
Lands-riding beside Duncan, began vehementaly to push the suggestion that the
army fall back on and attempt to hold the natural citadel of the Black
Mountains.
Duncan
shook his head briefly. "Not against such power as drove us from the field
yesterday. You were there. With one hand, or so it seemed, the king-devil
yonder in the air nullified all that my best wizards tried to do against him;
and with the other hand, so to speak, he did the same for Ardneh, and wore him
down. While with the sword-well, we tried. I will not throw my army away. As
many of our men fell as of the East, and as they outnumber us to begin with, I
see no profit in that game. As for the citadel, you took it once, when superior
magic was on our side. Could they not take it back, when their king-demon leads
them?"
The two
Offshore men, who had dropped back, were spurring forward now, passing Rolf and
Dun-can.
Thomas
was saying: "Then we'll split up into small bands again. We'll start the
war over from the beginning, if need be."
Far in
the rear a thread of dust was rising from what must be another column of
Eastern troops, entering the base of the mountainous shadow with which Ardneh
had covered himself. Above the shadow, and bulking just about as large, a cloud
of imperial purple disfigured the sky. It drew the eye and sickened the stomach
like the first sight of death. One could grow accustomed to the sight of death,
though; never to this. Rolf was awed despite himself when he began to realize
the full immensity of Orcus. Ardneh's shadow was now so far away it would have
been out of sight over the horizon, but for the gentle saucer-shape of the
plain between. And the formless, purplish thing in the air above Ardneh looked
as big as an egg held at arms' length. No single being could be that huge, Rolf
told himself; but so it was.
Duncan,
nodding wearily, was saying something in reply to Thomas's last remark.
Whatever was being said, Rolf did not hear it, because now he was looking far
ahead and watching Catherine's kinsmen spurring faster and faster forward along
the slow column of the weary army. And now there was a brown-haired girl-figure
running to them. The men were reining their animals to a dusty halt, leaping to
the ground, embracing her.
Now the
column was falling behind Rolf as he ran, all the dusty silent faces of it
turning, each to watch him briefly as he came abreast and drew ahead. Her arm
was pointing off to the right of the line of march. Thence I found my way, she
must be explaining to her kinsmen. And now at last her face turned in Rolf's
direction, and now she too began to run.
They
stopped an arm's length short of touching. "You are alive, alive,"
Catherine kept saying, over and over, with her face contorted as if in tearful
anger. Then she and Rolf seized each other.
After a
little he noticed that the two Offshore men were standing nearby. The joy of
finding Catherine was still in their faces, but now they were looking at Rolf
even more closely than before. He must have exchanged some words with them, but
later he had no clear memory of what they were.
"Ardneh's
shadow is gone," said someone walking in the column near them, looking
back.
Another
said: "And the demon is descending on him for the kill.
Orcus
and Ardneh, who today dwelt together again in their own place of intense and
private violence, spoke to each other with great freedom and intimacy now,-so
closely were they grappled on all the levels of energy, so entwined were they
in all the dimensions of space that they could find. While each strained to end
the other's life, no other creature could hear what passed between them, but
between them understanding flowed.
Orcus
said (though not in human words): "Now it is finally proven and
acknowledged between us that I have become stronger than you. My army of human
slaves digs into your roots, and all your forces weaken as I myself descend to
quench your life. In a moment more my will must prevail over yours, and it is
my will that you be as nothingness, as if you had never been."
And
Ardneh (in the same inhuman way of speech) replied: "So be it. I am
willing to reach the end of life, for today all my tasks are ended too."
Orcus
would not be distracted. "Die."
"I
die, and at the moment of my death let go the Change that I have held upon the
world. It is my will that the nuclear energies flow again; that you, hell-bomb
creature, be as you were when my change first came upon you."
Only in
that moment did Orcus understand who Ardneh was and what Ardneh's death would
mean. In that same moment Orcus reversed the trend of all his magics, of all
the evil spells around the world that drew from him; only in this manner might
he reverse the fate that Ardneh had prepared. As a man dragged to the edge of a
precipice will throw away all his treasures and his weapons, to grab with every
finger for some saving hold, so did the Demon-Emperor now abandon all the
threads of Eastern wizadry, leaving them to tangle, break, and recoil as they
might. Now he bent all his energies to stay Ardneh from the brink of doom,
seeing, at last, that the two of them were flying toward it bound together.
Now it
was Ardneh who strained toward the brink of extinction, bent on ending his own
weakened life. The momentum of the struggle tending in that direction was too
great for Orcus to stop it now. Orcus felt that his own reversed efforts were
failing, and knew such terror as he could know.
Twenty
kilometers from where the struggle between Orcus and Ardneh was reaching its
climax, Charmian raised her head, startled by the sudden disappearance of the
dome of darkness. Chup, walking beside her, also turned his head to watch.
Since
escaping from Ominor's camp, Chup had been searching for Duncan's, but had had
great difficulty keeping away from Eastern forces. Charmian had stayed with
him, not knowing if she dared try to get away, or even if she wanted to. Would
she be any safer with Ominor himself? Now, it seemed, the Empire of the East
belonged to one who was immune to any human woman's charms.
In the
distant sky, above where the dome of darkness had vanished, the cloud of silken
purple sickness that was Orcus was contracting now, concentrating, falling,
taking a shape like that of bird or reptile to plunge majestically upon some
victim.
Chup
turned back sharply to say something to Charmian, and froze when he caught
sight of her again.
Really
she had felt nothing, no pain, no change. It was only the expression on Chup's
face that terrified her, waking the worst of her old nightmares, making it come
true by day.
"What
are you goggling at?" she shrilled at him. "What, what?" She
heard her own voice crack most strangely.
Chup
would not say anything in answer. Neither would he stop staring.
She
screamed croakingly at him again, and put her hand to her throat. When she saw
it, her own hand, she let her aged crone's scream sound once more. And now,
across her back, the crippling pain of stiffened age was undeniable. She cried
out again, on and on and on. Only dimly was she aware that Chup was near her,
reaching out.
To the
Emperor John Ominor, astride his battle-stallion near the place where the
border of darkness had been, and where now broad daylight fell on the massed
thousands of his digging army, and on the hundred parts of Ardneh they had
already uprooted, there flew at this moment a minor demonic power who served
him as bodyguard and personal sentry. It clamored a rapid warning: "Take
flight! There is some trick, some trap! Orcus fights now for nothing but his
own survival!"
Ominor's
first thought was that this message itself was a trick. But he could not see
how taking flight might harm him. After the merest moment's delay, he
pronounced a word that was unknown even to Wood, and that had remained unsaid
for millenia. With the last syllable still on his lips the Emperor vanished
from his saddle with a thunderclap of sound that made even the war-stallion
bolt. At the same moment, and with another crash of noise, Ominor reappeared
upon a small hill some ten kilometers away. He staggered briefly with the
sudden change from a riding to a standing posture, then found a solid footing
in the grass. Looking around him at the place of temporary refuge that he had
chosen in the moment before his flight, it seemed to him that he had chosen
well. He was quite alone, and he could see plainly what was happening around
Ardneh, while being himself remote from any imaginable danger.
He
peered back toward his army, and the ravaged plain in which its multitude was
digging, and into which the purple form of Orcus had descended, to be absorbed
like water in the earth. Nothing untoward seemed to be happening. But he would
wait here a little to make sure. He could return to his army in a moment if
necessary.
. . .
suppose now that Ardneh were the winner. Assuming that most of the Eastern army
could be salvaged, the Emperor Ominor (he did not yet concede that he had been
deposed) saw certain advantages in such an outcome. A triumphant Orcus would be
hard to cheat of his revenge, though Ominor still had a trick or two to play
toward that end. At worst, whichever titanic power survived seemed likely to be
weakened by the struggle. That Orcus and Ardneh should kill each other off was
doubtless too much to wish for . . .
Thy
wish is granted, said Ardneh softly in his mind.
Before
John Ominor the world became pure light, the last light that he ever saw.
Ten
kilometers farther from Ardneh and Orcus than Ominor had been, in the moment of
the acid light that etched and ate the world, Rolf thought: Ardneh warned us
not to look back; he must have meant literally that.
The
light from behind them threw their long shadows ahead, shadows that were dark
even in the teeth of the lowering sun. To keep Catherine's eyes turned forward,
away from that terrible light, Rolf slid his arm around her neck. A thousand
faces ahead of him were turning, to squint with astonishment and pain into the
glare, then turning away again to shield their eyes. Within the distance of a few
steps the army had shuffled to a halt.
On the
exposed skin on the backs of Rolf's arms and legs, the heat grew swiftly to the
point of pain, and then as swiftly dwindled. At the same time the great light
dimmed, leaving mere daylight that seemed like darkness by comparison. Now,
where Ardneh's darkness had once been, and Orcus's sickening glow, a mighty
fireball was crumbling in upon itself like some vast ember, becoming a sphere
of brown, scorched smoke.
And now
came the swiftest shockwave of the blast, racing through the earth, rolling
beneath Rolf's feet and Catherine's. The earth smote up at them as if in anger,
and the long column of the army staggered on its thousands of legs. Rolf saw
grass dancing, in a new, windless way. Then came the soundwave with its
deafening shock, and after that a blast of wind that knocked the army down.
Sterile wind, cleaned and burned free of all energies of life, but howling like
a demon anyway, and hurling dirt clouds like an elemental.
Scarcely
were people able to stand up before the wind hit them from the opposite
direction and knocked them down again. An avalanche of air was rushing back
toward the blasted center where now around and below the crumpling fireball an
airy mountain of smoke and powdered earth began to bloom. In all this furious
movement there was no smallest sign of life.
Now in
Rolfs mind there was nothing left of Ardneh, except in memory. Nor could he
detect the psychic weight of Orcus any longer. Above the place where they had
struggled, the mountainous column of smoke and dust turned ever blacker as it
rose rapidly into the sky, curling and roiling into a mushroom at its peak.
From every quarter inrushing winds bore tribute of more dust to build the pyre
of Ardneh and Orcus higher still toward the upper air.
The
army of the West was on its feet again, watching, in stunned silence. Finally
Duncan, with some difficulty controlling his frightened mount, began talking
out loud to himself: "Ominor's army. There, and then gone. Like that. And
the Demon-Emperor, too. I'm magician enough to feel the certainty of that
death. Annihilation. And Ardneh. Ardneh. Gone." The roar of the explosion
seemed to persist, though now it was more in the mind and ringing ears than in
the air. Kilometers away across the prairie, small scattered groups of refugees
were coming into view, looking like ants beneath the titanic blast-cloud.
Staggering, walking or running without evidence of purpose, human figures were
moving like maddened insects across the scorched and wasted land.
Nearby,
a human voice let out a roar. Rising in his stirrups, Duncan marveled: "Is
that what's left of Ominor's reserve - ? Why no, sweet demons Us that all that
remains of the army of the East?"
He
wheeled his mount, and began to call out orders to his captains. Up and down
the column, men and women came to life, and began to change the army's posture
from retreat into a halt for rest and food, and preparation for new action
soon.
Ever
and again the people of the army paused in their work to watch the awesome
cloud. At the height it had now attained, beyond that of any mountain ever
seen, a wind was beginning to tear it away toward the desolate north. The
ant-Uke Eastern survivors, or some of them at least, were moving closer across
the plain, unknowing or uncaring that they approached the army of the West.
Duncan ordered out squads of cavalry, to seek out any enemy units large or
coherent enough to pose a possible threat. Among the stragglers coming in on
one flank was a tall figure that Rolf thought he recognized; he began to walk
toward it, Catherine coming with him. Behind them, Duncan was shouting
exultantly: "Wizards, will you read me your grim portents now? All your
worst have been fulfilled today, and yet we stand in triumph! The East lies
broken-backed before us, and ere autumn turns to winter we will be in their
capital!"
"Chup!"
Rolf reached to grip the tall man by the hand. "I see you were again too
tough to die!"
Chup
looked back at him strangely at first, not saying anything.
Rolf
nodded to a slight, muffled figure that he had gradually become aware of
standing in attendance at Chup's side. It appeared to be a female servant,
burdened with a few bits of baggage, and wrapped in a blanket that concealed
even her face. "Who's this?" he asked.
Catherine,
bolder here than when she had last faced Chup, was moved to demand of him:
"Is she some prize you've won at war? Did you not give up holding slaves
when you joined the West?"
"A
prize, maybe," said Chup. "But not of war." Unmoved, unreadable,
he looked at Rolf and Catherine in turn. The crack of a smile appeared in his
face, a new crevice in old rock. "This is my wife."
Rolf
stared. Two strands of golden hair escaped the dingy blanket where it was drawn
close around the figure's face.
"Oh,
I'll answer for her behavior now. She has been. . .persuaded, as I once was, to
join the West. When I've had a chance to explain the situation to a court, I
doubt they'll want to visit any further punishment upon her. What has happened
seems too . . . fitting ... as it stands."
Behind
them, in a group of the army's leaders, Gray's voice was orating: "Good
Prince, if there is anything impossible to men, it is going back to what has
once been changed. True, the Old World energies of nuclear power are once more
with us, like outlandish demons that only technologists can control. But the
energies of magic remain in force, still much stronger than they were in the
days of Ardneh's origin. The world we live in from this day hence is a blend of
Old and New, and so is doubly new. True, most of the evil spells that were in
force yesterday are now nullified as a consequence of the defeat of Orcus.
Others have been reversed . . ."
"It
seems," Chup was saying, "that a certain evil spell that this one
laid upon a former serving-maid was, like many another curse, turned back upon
its maker when the great demon fell. My lady here will quickly turn into a hag,
unless she receives the proper treatment once or twice a day." Again Chup
smiled. "Before entering this camp I encountered and questioned a certain
pudgy wizard that I know. I am informed by magical authority that no man's
stroking but my own is going to preserve my lady's comeliness. Doubtless
because I am the only man in East or West who has ever thought or felt any more
for her than . . . well."
Chup
suddenly put out a hand, to stroke the cheek inside the blanket. And Catherine,
watching, was startled by the movement's gentleness.