1
This
book is an Ace Science Fiction original edition,
and has
never been previously published.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
An Ace
Science Fiction Book/published by arrangement with
the
author
PRINTING
HISTORY
Ace
Science Fiction edition/December 1985
All
rights reserved.
Copyright
© 1985 by Christopher Stasheff
Cover
art by Stephen Hickman
This
book may not be reproduced in whole or in part,
by
mimeograph or any other means, without permission.
For
information address: The Berkley Publishing Group,
200
Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016.
ISBN:
0-441-87340-5
Ace
Science Fiction Books are published by The Berkley Publishing Group,
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Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016.
PRINTED
IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
For some
time now, I've been getting worried about the
steadily
increasing number of hopeful historians on this Isle
of
Gramarye. There weren't any when I came here—none
that I
was aware of, anyway. Then Brother Chillde started
keeping
his chronicles, and, first thing I knew. there were
five
more just like him. Not that this is all bad, of course—
Gramarye'II
be much better off if it has an accurate record
of its
history. What bothers me is that each one of these
young
Thucydideses is conveniently forgetting all the events
that
make his own side look bad, and definitely overdoing
it more
than a bit, about the happenings that make his side
look
good. I'm mostly thinking of the Church here, of course,
but not
exclusively—for example, I know of one young
warlock
who's taken to keeping a diary, and a country lord's
younger
son who's piling up an impressive number of jour-
nals.
So, in an effort to set the record straight, I'm going
to set
down my version of what happened. Not that it' II be
any
more objective, of course; it'll at least be biased in a
diff-
"
'Tis my place, Delia!"
"Nay,
Geoffrey, thou knowest 'tis not! This end of the
shelf
is mine, for the keeping of my dolls!"
"
'Tis not! I've kept my castle there these several weeks!"
2
Christopher Stasheff
Rod
threw down his quill in exasperation. After three
weeks
of trying, he'd finally managed to get started on his
history
of Gramarye—and the kids had to choose this mo-
ment to
break into a quarrel! He glared down at the page...
And saw
the huge blot the quill had made.
Exasperation
boiled up into anger, and he surged out of
his
chair. "Delia! Geoff! Of all the idiotic things to be
arguing
about! Gwen, can't you..."
"Nay,
I cannot!" cried a harried voice from the kitchen.
"Else
thou'lt have naught but char for thy.... Oh!" Some-
thing
struck with a jangling clatter, and Rod's wife fairly
shrieked
in frustration. "Magnus! How oft must I forbid
thee
the kitchen whiles I do cook!"
"Children!"
Rod shouted, stamping into the playroom.
"Why'd
I ever have 'em?"
"Di'nit,
Papa." Three-year-old Gregory peeked over the
top of
an armchair. "Mama did."
"Yeah,
sure, and I was just an innocent bystander.
Geoffrey!
Cordelia! Stop it!"
He
waded into a litter of half-formed clay sculptures,
toys,
and pieces of bark twisted together with twigs and bits
of
straw that served some fathomless and probably heathen
purpose
known only to those below the age of thirteen.
"What
a mess!" It was like that every day, of course. "Do
you
realize this room was absolutely spotless when you
woke up
this morning?"
The
children looked up, startled, and Cordelia objected,
"But
that was four hours ago. Papa."
"Yeah,
and you must've really worked hard to make a
mess
like this in so short a time as that!" Rod stepped down
hard—into
a puddle of ocher paint. His foot skidded out
from
under him; he hung suspended for a split second, arms
thrashing
like the wings of a dodo trying to fly; then his
back
slammed down to the floor, paralyzing his diaphragm.
For an
instant of panic, he fought for breath, while Cordelia
and
Geoffrey huddled back against the wall in fright.
Then
Rod's breath hissed in and bounced back out in a
howl of
rage. "You little pigs! Can't you even clean up after
yourselves!"
The
children shrank back, wide-eyed.
Rod
struggled to his feet, red-faced. "Throwing garbage
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 3
on the
floor, fighting over a stupid piece of shelf space—
and to
top it off, you had the gall to talk back!"
"We
didn't... We..."
"You
just did it again!" Rod levelled an accusing fore-
finger.
"Whatever you do, don't contradict me! If I say you
did it,
you did it! And don't you dare try to say you didn't!"
He
towered over them, a mountain of wrath. "Naughty,
stupid,
asinine brats!"
The
children hugged each other, eyes huge and fright-
ened.
Rod's
hand swept up for a backhanded slap.
With a
crack like a pistol shot, big brother Magnus ap-
peared
in front of Cordelia and Geoffrey, arms outspread to
cover
them. "Papa! They didn't mean to! They..."
"Don't
try to tell me what they were doing!" Rod shouted.
The
eleven-year-old flinched, but stood up resolutely
against
his father's rage—and that made it worse.
"How
dare you defy me! You insolent little..."
"Rod!"
Gwen darted into the room, wiping her hands on
her
apron. "What dost thou?"
Rod
whirled, forefinger stabbing at her. "Don't you even
try to
speak in their defense! If you'd just make your children
toe the
line, this wouldn't happen! But, oh no, you've got
to let
them do whatever they want, and just scold them, and
that's
only when their behavior's really atrocious!"
Gwen's
head snapped back, stung. "Assuredly, thou'rt
scarce
mindful of what thou sayest! 'Tis ever thou who dost
plead
leniency, when I do wish to punish..."
"Sure,
when!" Rod glared, striding toward her. "But for
the
thousand and one things they do that deserve spanking,
and you
let them off with a scold? Use your head, woman—
if you
can!" His gaze swept her from head to toe, and his
lip
lifted in a sneer.
Gwen's
eyes flared anger. "'Ware, husband! Even to
thine
anger, there doth be a boundary!"
"Boundaries!
Limits! That's all you ever talk about!" Rod
shouted.
'"Do this! Do that! You can't do this! You can't
do
that!' Marriage is just one big set of limits! Will you
ever..."
"Peace!"
Magnus darted between them, holding out a
palm
toward each. "I prithee!" His face was white; he was
Christopher
Stasheff
4 oniioiu^nu. _.__
trembling.
"Mother! Father! I beg thee!"
Rod
snarled, swinging his hand up again.
Magnus
stiffened; his jaw set.
Rod
swung, with his full weight behind it...
... And
shot through the air, slamming back against the
wall.
He
rolled to his feet and stood up slowly, face drained
of
color, rigid and trembling. "I told you never to use your
'witch
powers' on me," he grated, "and I told you why!"
He
straightened to his full height, feeling the rage swell
within
him.
Geoffrey
and Cordelia scurried to hide behind Owen's
skirts.
She gathered Magnus to her, but he kept his face
toward
his father, terror in his eyes, trembling, but deter-
mined
to protect.
Rod
stared at them, all united against him, ready to pick
him up
with their magic and hurl him into his grave. His
eyes
narrowed, pinning them with his glare; then his eyes
lost
focus as he reached down inside himself—deep down,
reaching
across an abyss—to the psi powers that had lain
so long
dormant, but which had been awakened by the
projective
telepathy of Lord Kem, in another universe, one
in
which magic worked. His powers weren't as readily ac-
cessible
as his family's; he couldn't work magic just by
willing
it, as easily as thinking, but once he'd drawn them
up, his
were at least as great as theirs. He called those
powers
up now, feeling their strength build within him.
"Mother,"
came Magnus's voice, across a huge void,
"we
must..."
"Nay!"
Gwen said fiercely. "He is thy father, whom thou
dost
love—when this fit's not on him."
What
did that mean! The powers paused in their build-
ing...
A
smaller figure entered his blurred field of vision, to
the
side and a little in front of the family group, gazing up
at him,
head tilted to the side—three-year-old Gregory.
"Daddy
is'n' there," he stated.
That
hit Rod like a bucketful of cold water; the complete,
calm,
sanity of the child's tone—so open, so reasonable—
and the
totally alien quality of the words. His eyes focused
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 5
in a
stare at his youngest son, and fear hollowed his vitals—
fear,
and a different anger under it; anger at the futurians
who had
kidnapped him and the rest of his family away
from
this child while Gregory was still a baby. The deser-
tion,
Rod feared, had totally warped the boy's personality,
making
him quiet, indrawn, brooding, and sometimes, even
weird.
His gaze welded to Gregory's face, his fear for Gregory
burying
his anger at the rest of the family; it ebbed, and
was
gone.
"Who's
not there?" he whispered.
"Lord
Kem," Gregory answered, "that Daddy like thee,
in that
Faerie Gramarye thou'st talk of."
Rod
stared at him.
Then he
stepped closer to the boy. Magnus took a step
toward
Gregory, too, but Rod waved him away impatiently.
He
dropped to one knee, staring into the three-year-old's
eyes.
"No... no. Lord Kem isn't anywhere—except, maybe,
in his
own universe, that Faerie Gramarye. But why should
you
think he was?"
Gregory
cocked his head to the other side. "But didst
thou
not, but now, reach out to touch his mind with thine
own, to
draw upon his powers?"
Rod
just gazed at the boy, his face blank.
"Gregory!"
Gwen cried in anguish, and she took a step
toward
him, then drew back for Rod still knelt staring at
the
child, his face blank.
Then he
looked up at Gwen, with an irritated frown.
"What
am I—a bear? Or a wolf?" He raked the children
with
his glare. "Some kind of wild animal?"
They
stared back at him, eyes huge, huddled together.
His
face emptied again. "You think I am. You really
think I
am, don't you?"
They
stared back, wordlessly, eyes locked on him.
He held
still, rigid.
Then he
swung up to his feet, turning on his heel, and
strode
to the door.
Cordelia
darted after him, but Gwen reached out and
caught
her arm.
Rod
paced out into the bleakness of a day veiled by
clouds.
A chill wind struck at him, but he didn't notice.
6 Christopher Stasheff
• •
•
Rod
finally came to a halt at the top of a hill, a mile
from
home. He stood, staring down at the broad plain below,
not
really seeing it. Finally, he sank down to sit on the dry
grass.
His thoughts had slowed in their turmoil as he walked;
now,
gradually, they sank away, leaving a blank in his mind.
Into
that, a niggling doubt crept. Softly, he asked, "What
happened,
Fess?"
The
robot-horse answered, though he was a mile away
in the
stable. Rod heard him through the earphone embedded
in his
mastoid process, behind his ear. "You lost your tem-
per,
Rod."
Rod's
mouth twitched with impatience. The robot's horse
body
might be a distance away in the stable, but the old
family
retainer could see into him as well as if they were
only a
foot apart. "Yes, I do realize that much." The mi-
crophone
embedded in his maxillary, just above the teeth,
picked
up his words and transmitted them to Pess. "But it
was
more than simple anger, wasn't it?"
"It
was rage," Fess agreed. "Full, thorough, open wrath,
without
any restraints or inhibitions."
After a
moment. Rod asked, "What would have happened
if my
family hadn't been able to defend themselves so well?"
Fess
was silent. Then he said, slowly, "I would hope that
your
inborn gentleness and sense of honor would have pro-
tected
them adequately. Rod."
"Yes,"
Rod muttered. "I would hope so, too."
And he
sat, alone in his guilt and self-contempt, in si-
lence.
Even the wind passed him by.
Quite
some while later, cloth rustled beside him. He gave
no sign
of having heard, but his body tensed. He waited,
but
only silence filled the spaces of the minutes.
Finally,
Rod spoke. "I did it again."
"Thou
didst," Gwen answered gently. Her voice didn't
blame—but
it didn't console, either.
Something
stirred within Rod. It might have risen as
anger,
but that was burned out of him, now. "Been doing
that a
lot lately, haven't I?"
Gwen
was silent a moment. Then she said, "A score of
times,
mayhap, in the last twelvemonth."
Rod
nodded, "And a dozen times last year, and half-a-
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 7
dozen
the year before—and two of those were at the Abbott,
when he
tried his schism."
"And
a third with the monster which rose from the fens..."
Rod
shrugged irritably. "Don't make excuses for me. It
still
comes down to my losing my temper with you and the
kids,
more than with anyone else—and for the last three
months,
I've been blowing up about every two weeks, haven't
I?"
Gwen
hesitated. Then she answered, "None so badly as
this,
my lord."
"No,
it never has been quite as bad as this, has it? But
every
time, it gets a little worse."
Her
answer was very low. "Thou hast offered hurt to us
aforetime...."
"Yes,
but I've never actually tried it have I?" Rod shud-
dered
at the memory and buried his head in his hands. "First,
I just
threw things. Then I started throwing them without
using
my hands. Today, I would've thrown Magnus—if
Gregory
hadn't interrupted in time." He looked up at her,
scowling.
"Where in Heaven's name did you get that boy,
anyway?"
That
brought a hint of smile. "I did think we had, may-
hap,
borne him back from Tir Chlis, my lord."
"Ah,
yes!" Rod stared out over the plain again. "Tir
Chlis,
that wonderful, magical land of faeries and sorcerers,
and—Lord
Kem."
"Even
so," Gwen said softly.
"My
other self," Rod said bitterly, "my analog in an
alternate
universe—with magical powers unparalleled, and
a
temper to match."
"Thou
weit alike in many ways," Gwen agreed, "but
temper
was not among them."
"No,
and witch powers weren't either—but I learned
how to
'borrow' his wizardry, and it unlocked my own
powers,
powers that I'd been hiding from myself."
"When
thou didst let his rage fill thee," Gwen reminded
gently.
"Which
seems to have also unlocked my own capacity
for
wrath; it wiped out the inhibitions I'd built up against
it."
"Still—there
were other inhibitions that thou didst leam
8 Christopher Stasheff
to lay
aside, also." Gwen touched his hand, hesitantly.
Rod
didn't respond. "Was it worth it? Okay, so I had
been
psionically invisible; nobody could read my mind.
Wasn't
that better than this rage?"
"I
could almost say the sharing of our minds was worth
the
price of thy bouts of fury," Gwen said slowly, "save
that..."
Rod
waited.
"Thy
thoughts grow dim again, my lord."
Rod
only sat, head bowed.
Then he
looked up. "I'm beginning to hide myself away
from
you again?"
"Hast
thou not felt it?"
He
stared into her eyes; then he nodded. "Is that any
surprise?
When I can't trust myself not to explode into
wrath?
When I'm beginning to feel as though I'm some sort
of
subhuman beast? Sheer shame, woman!"
"Thou
art worthy of me, my lord." Her voice was soft,
but
firm, and so was her hand. "Thou art worthy of me,
and of
thy children. I' truth, we are fortunate to have thee."
Her
voice shook. "Oh, we are blessed!"
"Thanks."
He gave her hand a pat. "It's good to hear.
... Now
convince me."
"Nay,"
she murmured, "that I cannot do, an thou'lt not
credit
what I say."
"Or
even what you do." Rod bowed his head, and his
hand
tightened on hers. "Be patient, dear. Be patient."
And
they sat alone in the wind, not looking at each other,
two
people very much in love but very much separated,
clinging
to a thin strand that still held them joined, poised
over
the drop that fell away to fallow lands below.
Magnus
turned away from the window with a huge sigh
of
relief. "They come—and their hands are clasped."
"Let
me see, let me see!" The other three children shot
to the
window, heads jammed together, noses on the pane.
"They
do not regard one another," Cordelia said du-
biously.
"Yet
their hands are clasped," Magnus reminded.
"And,"
Cordelia added, troubled, "their thoughts are
dark."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 9
"Yet
their hands are elapsed. And if their thoughts are
dark,
they are also calm."
"And
not all apart," Gregory added.
"Not
all—not quite," Cordelia agreed, but with the full,
frank
skepticism of an eight-year-old.
"Come
away, children," a deep voice bade them, "and
do not
leap upon them when they enter, for I misdoubt me
an
they'd have much patience now with thy clasping and
thy
pulling."
The
children turned away from the window, to a foot
and a
half of elf, broad-shouldered, brown-skinned, and
pug-nosed,
in a forester's tunic and hose, wearing a pointed
cap
with a rolled brim and a feather. "Geoffrey," he warned.
The
six-year-old pulled himself away from the window
with a
look of disgust. "I did but gaze upon them, Robin."
"Indeed—and
I know that thou'rt anxious. Yet I bethink
me that
thy parents have need of some bit more of room
than
thou'rt wont to accord them."
Cordelia
flounced down onto a three-legged stool. "But
Papa was
so angered. Puck!"
"As
thou hast told me." The elf's mouth tightened at the
comers.
"Yet thou dost know withal, that he doth love thee."
"I
do not doubt it...." But Cordelia frowned.
Puck
sighed and dropped down cross-legged beside her.
"Thou
couldst scarce do otherwise, if he did truly become
as
enraged as thou didst tell." He turned his head, taking
in all
four children with one gaze. "Gentles, do not repre-
hend;
if you pardon, he will mend."
They
didn't look convinced.
"Else
the Puck a liar call!" the elf cried stoutly.
The
door opened, and the children leaped to their feet.
They
started to back away, but Puck murmured, "Softly,"
and
they held their ground—warily.
But
their father didn't look like an ogre as he came in
the door—just
a tall, dark, lean, saturnine man with a
rough-hewn
face, no longer young; and he seemed dim next
to the
red-haired beauty beside him, who fairly glowed,
making
the question of youth irrelevant. Still, if the children
had
ever stopped to think about it, they would have remarked
how
well their parents looked together.
They
did not, of course; they saw only that their father's
10
Christopher Stasheff
face
had mellowed to its usual careworn warmth, and leaped
to hug
him in relief. "Papa!" Magnus cried, and "Daddy!"
Geoffrey
piped; Cordelia only clung to his arm and sobbed,
while
Gregory hugged the other arm, and looked up gravely.
"Daddy,
thou hast come back again."
Rod
looked into the sober gaze of his youngest, and
somehow
suspected that the child wasn't just talking about
his
coming through the door.
"Oh,
Papa," Cordelia sniffled, "I do like thee so much
better
when thou'rt Papa, than when thou'rt Lord Kern!"
Rod
felt a chill along his spine, but he clasped her shoul-
der and
pressed her against his hip. "I don't blame you,
dear.
I'm sure his children feel the same way." He looked
up over
the children's heads, at Puck. "Thanks, Robin."
"Now,
there's a fair word!" Puck grinned. "Yet I mis-
doubt
me an thou wilt have more such; for there's one who
doth
attend thee." He jerked his head toward the kitchen.
"A
messenger?" Rod looked up, frowning. "Waiting in-
side
the house?... Toby!"
A
dapper gentleman in his mid-twenties came into the
room,
running a finger over a neatly trimmed mustache.
Hose
clung to well-turned calves, and his doublet was re-
splendent
with embroidery. "Hail, Lord Warlock!"
Gwen's
face blossomed with a smile, and even Rod had
to
fight a grin, faking a groan. "Hail, harbinger! What's the
disaster?"
"Nay,
for once, the King doth summon thee whiles it's
yet a
minor matter."
"Minor."
The single word was loaded with skepticism.
Rod
turned to Gwen. "Why does that worry me more than
his
saying, 'Emergency?'"
"
'Tis naught but experience," Gwen assured him. "Shall
I
'company thee?"
"I'd
appreciate it," Rod sighed. "If it's a 'minor' matter,
that
means social amenities first—and you know how
Catharine
and I don't get along."
"Indeed
I do." Gwen looked quite pleased with herself.
Catharine
the Queen may have spread her net for Rod, but
it was
Gwen who had caught him.
Not
that Catharine had done badly, of course. King Tuan
Loguire
had spent his youth as Gramarye's most eligible
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 11
bachelor—and
it must be admitted that Rod had been a
very
unknown quantity.
Still
was, in some ways. Why else would Gwendylon,
most
powerful witch in circulation, continue to be interested
in him?
Rod
looked up at Puck. "Would you mind. Merry
Wanderer?"
The elf
sighed and spread his arms. "What is time to an
immortal?
Nay, go about the King's business!"
"Thanks,
sprite." Rod turned back to Gwen. "Your broom,
or
mine?"
Gwen
bent over the hanging cradle swathed in yards of
cloth-of-gold,
and her face softened into a tender smile.
"Oh,
he is dear!"
Queen
Catharine beamed down at the baby. She was a
slender
blonde with large blue eyes and a very small chin.
"I
thank thee for thy praise... I am proud."
"As
thou shouldst be." Gwen straightened, looking up
at her
husband with a misty gaze.
Rod
looked around, hoping she was gazing at someone
else.
On second thought, maybe not....
Catharine
raised a finger to her lips and moved slightly
toward
the door. Rod and Gwen followed, leaving the child
to its
nanny, two chambermaids, and two guards.
Another
two stood on either side of the outer doorway,
under
the eagle eye of the proud father. One reached out to
close
the door softly behind them. Rod looked up at King
Tuan,
and nodded. "No worries about the succession now."
"Aye."
Gwen beamed. "Two princes are a great bless-
ing."
"Well
I can think of a few kings who would've argued
with
that." Rod smiled, amused. "Still, I must admit they're
outnumbered
by the kings who've been glad of the support
of
their younger brothers."
"As
I trust our Alain shall be." Tuan turned away. "Come,
let us
pass into the solar." He paced down the hall and into
another
chamber with a wall of clerestory windows. Rod
followed,
with the two ladies chattering behind him. He
reminded
himself that he and Gwen were being signally
honored;
none of the royal couple's other subjects had ever
12
Christopher Stasheff THE WARLOCK ENRAGED 13
been
invited into their majesties' private apartments.
On the
other hand, if Gwen had been the kind to brag,
they
might not have been invited in, either.
And, of
course, there was old Duke Loguire. But that
was
different; he came under the alias of "Grandpa." And
Brom
O'Brien; but the Lord Privy Councillor would, of
course,
have access to the privy chambers.
On the
other hand. Rod tried not to be too conscious of
the
honor. After all, he had known Tuan when the young
King
was an outlaw; exiled for courting Catharine; and
hiding
out in the worst part of town, as King of the Beggars—
and
unwitting party to the forming of a civil war. "As long
as they
grow up friends," he reminded Tuan, "or as much
as two
brothers can."
"Aye—and
if their friendship doth endure." A shadow
crossed
Tuan's face, and Rod guessed he was remembering
his own
elder brother, Anselm, who had rebelled against
their
father, and against Queen Catharine.
"Then
must we take great care to ensure their friendship."
Catharine
hooked her arm through Tuan's. "Yet I misdoubt
me, my
lord, an our guests did come to speak of children
only."
"I'm
sure it's a more pleasant subject than whatever he
had in
mind," Rod said quickly.
"And
'twould have been cause enow, I do assure thee,"
Gwen
added.
Catharine
answered with a silvery laugh. "For thou and
I,
mayhap—but I misdoubt me an 'twould interest our hus-
bands
overlong."
"Do
not judge us so harshly," Tuan protested. "Yet I must
own
that there are matters of policy to be discussed." He
sighed,
and turned away to a desk that stood beneath the
broad
windows, with a map beside it on a floor stand.
"Come,
Lord Warlock—let us take up less pleasant mat-
ters."
Rod
came over, rather reassured; Tuan certainly didn't
seem to
feel any urgency.
The
young King tapped the map, on the Duchy of
Romanov.
"Here lies our mutual interest of the hour."
"Well,
as long as it's only an hour. What's our bear of
a Duke
up to?"
'"Tis
not His Grace," Tuan said slowly.
Rod
perked up; this was becoming more interesting;
"Something
original would be welcome. Frankly, I've been
getting
a bit bored with the petty rebellions of your twelve
great
lords."
"Art
thou so? I assure thee," Tuan said grimly, "I have
never
found them tedious."
"What
is it, then? One of his petty barons gathering arms
and
men?"
"I
would it were; of that, I've some experience. This,
though,
is a matter of another sort; for the rumors speak of
foul
magics."
"Rumors?"
Rod looked up from the map. "Not reports
from
agents?"
"I
have some spies in the North," Tuan acknowledged,
"yet
they only speak of these same rumors, not of events
which
they themselves have witnessed."
Rod
frowned. "Haven't any of them tried to track the
rumor
to its source?"
Tuan
shrugged. "None of those who've sent word. Yet
I've
several who have sent me no reports, and mine em-
issaries
cannot find them."
"Not
a good sign." Rod's frown darkened. "They might
have
ridden off to check, and been taken."
"Or
worse," Tuan agreed, "for the rumors speak of a
malignant
magus, a dark and brooding power, who doth
send
his minions everywhere throughout the North Country."
"Worrisome,
but not a problem—as long as all they do
is spy.
I take it they don't."
"Not
if rumor speaks truly. These minions, look you, are
sorcerers
in their own right; and with the power they own,
added
to that which they gather from their sorcerer-lord,
they
defeat the local knights ere they can even come to
battle.
Then the sorcerers enthrall the knights, with their
wives
and children, too, and take up lordship over all the
serfs
and peasants of that district."
"Not
too good a deal for the knights and their families,"
Rod
mused, "but probably not much of a difference, to the
serfs
and peasants. After all, they're used to taking orders—
what
difference does it make who's giving them?"
"Great
difference, if the first master was gentle, and the
14 Christopher Stasheff
second
was harsh," Tuan retorted. His face was grim. "And
reports
speak of actions more than harsh, from these new
masters.
These sorcerers are evil."
"And,
of course, the peasants can't do much, against
magic."
Rod frowned. "Not much chance of fighting back."
Tuan
shuddered. "Perish the thought! For peasants must
never
resist orders, but only obey them, as is their divinely
appointed
role."
What
made Rod's blood run cold was that Tuan didn't
say it
grimly or primly, or pompously, or with the pious air
of
self-justification. No, he said it very matter-of-factly, as
though
it were as much a part of the world as rocks and
trees
and running water, and no one could even think of
debating
it. How could you argue about the existence of a
rock?
Especially if it had fallen on your toe...
That
was where the real danger lay, of course—not in
the
opinions people held, but in the concepts they knew to
be
true—especially when they weren't.
Rod
shook off the mood. "So the chief sorcerer has been
knocking
off the local lordlings and taking over their hold-
ings.
How far has his power spread?"
"Rumor
speaks of several baronets who have fallen 'neath
his
sway," Tuan said, brooding, "and even Duke Romanov,
himself."
"Romanov?"
Rod stared, appalled. "One of the twelve
great
lords? How could he fall, without word of it reaching
us?"
"I
could accomplish it—and I am no wizard." Tuan
shrugged.
"'Tis simplicity—close a ring of iron around his
castle
under cover of night, then hurl an army 'gainst his
barbican,
and siege machines against his towers. Invest the
castle,
and trust to thy ring of knights and men-at-arms to
see
that not a soul wins free to bear off word."
Rod
shuddered at Tuan's sangfroid. "But he had a couple
ofesp-
uh, witches, guesting in his tower!"
"More
than 'guesting,' as I hear it," Tuan answered, with
a grim
smile. "They were thoroughly loyal to Milord Duke,
for he
had saved them from the stake and embers. They've
been of
great service tending to the ill and injured and, I
doubt
not, gathering information for him."
Rod frowned.
"They must have been very discreet about
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 15
it. We
make it a practice, in the Royal Coven, not to pry
into
the minds of anyone except your enemies."
"Or
those who might become so," Tuan amended. "Who's
to say
his witches did more? Nay, once Catharine showed
them
the way of it, and thou and thy good wife did aid her
in
forming that band into a battle-weapon, all the lords did
leam,
and followed suit."
"And
Romanov's witches couldn't give him enough ad-
vance
warning?" Rod pursed his lips. "This sorcerer is ef-
fective.
But speaking of mental eavesdropping, that's a way
to
check on the rumors. Did you ask any of the Royal
Witchforce
to try and read Romanov's mind?"
"I
did. They could not find him."
"So."
Rod pursed his lips. "What minds did they hear,
to the
North?"
Tuan
shrugged. "Only what should be. The plowman
followed
his oxen, the milkmaid coaxed her swain—naught
was
there to bring alarm, save that the warlock who listened,
could
not find the minds of any knights or barons."
"How
about vile thoughts, from evil sorcerers?"
Tuan
turned his head slowly from side to side.
"So."
Rod's gaze strayed back to the map. "On the face
of it,
nothing's wrong; it's just that the Duke of Romanov
seems
to have taken a vacation to parts unknown, with all
his
aristocratic retainers."
"Thou
dost see why I do suspect."
Rod
nodded. "Sounds fishy to me, too... not that I can't
understand
why the noble Duke would want to take off for
a
while, though. I've been feeling a bit too much stress
lately,
myself.... Gwen?" He turned, to find Gwen standing
near.
"Been listening?"
"I
have." She smiled. "And I do think thou dost make
a great
coil of naught."
"Well,
I wouldn't exactly say we're making a lot of fuss."
Rod
locked gazes with Tuan. "Where's the weeping and
wailing?
The yelling and hair-tearing?"
'"Tis
even as thou sayest," Tuan turned to Gwen. "I do
not see
great danger here. Lady Gwendylon—only the abuse
of
witch-power, over those who have it not."
"And
witches ganging up on normals," Rod added. "But
that
can all be cured by even more witches—from the good
76 Christopher Stasheff
guys.
After all, we have a vested interest in the public's
opinion
of witches, dear."
"In
truth," Gwen said firmly, "and we cannot have the
folk
afeard that witches will seek to govern by force of
magic,"
"Of
course not," Rod mumured, "especially when every
right-thinking
individual knows it has to be done by force
of arms."
Tuan
frowned. "How didst thou speak?"
"Uh,
nothing." Rod turned to Gwen. "How about it,
dear? A
family vacation, wandering toward the North?"
When
Gwen hesitated, he added, "I don't really think there's
any
danger—at least, none that you and I can't handle
between
us."
"Nay,
surely not," Gwen agreed, but her brow was still
furrowed.
"What,
then? The kids? I really don't think they'll mind."
"Oh,
certes they will not! Yet hast thou considered the
trials
of shepherding our four upon the road?"
"Sure."
Rod frowned. "We did it in Tir Chlis."
"I
know," Gwen sighed. "Well, an thou sayest 'tis for
the
best, my husband, we shall essay it."
2
Rod
turned the key in the lock, pulled it out, set it in Gwen's
palm,
and wrapped her hand around it. "Your office, 0
Lady of
the House." He studied her face for a second and
added
gently, "Don't worry, dear. It'll still be here when
you get
back."
"I
know," she sighed, "yet 'tis never easy to leave it."
"I
know." Rod glanced back at the house. "I'll get half-
way
down the road, and start wondering if I really did put
out the
fire on the hearth."
"And
thou dost, but call it out, and an elf shall bear word
to
me," Brom O'Berin rumbled beside them. "Mere minutes
after
thou hast uttered it, an elf shall spring out of the
ingelnook
to douse thy hearth—if it doth need."
"I
thank thee, Brom," Gwen said softly.
The
dwarf scowled, becoming more gruff. "Nay, have
no fear
for thine house. Elves shall guard it day and night.
Ill
shall fare the man who doth seek to enter."
Rod
shuddered. "I pity the footpad Puck catches! So
come
on, dear—there's nothing to worry about. Here, any-
way.
Time for the road." He grasped her waist, and helped
her
leap to Fess's saddle.
"May
we not fly. Papa?" Cordelia pouted. Her hands
were
clasped behind her back, and a broomstick stuck out
from
behind her shoulder.
17
18 Christopher Stasheff
Rod
smiled, and glanced at Gwen. She nodded, almost
imperceptibly.
He turned back to Cordelia. "As long as you
stay
near your mother and me—yes."
Cordelia
gave a shout of joy and leaped onto her broom.
Her
brothers echoed her, drifting up into the air.
"Move
out. Old Iron," Rod murmured, and the great
black
robot-horse ambled out toward the road. Rod fell into
step
beside him, and turned back to wave to Brom.
"A
holiday!" Geoffrey cried, swooping in front of him.
"'Tis
ages since we had one!"
"Yeah—about
a year." But Rod grinned; he seemed to
feel a
weight lifting off his shoulders. He caught Gwen's
hand
and looked up at her. "Confess it, dear—don't you
feel a
little more free?"
She
smiled down at him, brightening. "I do, my lord—
though
I've brought my lock and bars along."
"And
I, my ball and chain." Rod grinned. "Keep an eye
on the
links, will you?... Magnus! When I said, 'Stay near,'
that
meant altitude, too! Come down here right now!"
The
tinkers strolled into the village, gay and carefree,
smudged
and dirty. Their clothes were patched, and the pots
and
pans hanging from their horse's pack made a horrible
clattering.
"This
is rather demeaning. Rod," Fess murmured. "Ad-
ditionally,
as I have noted, no real tinker family could afford
a
horse."
"Especially
not one fit for a knight. I know," Rod an-
swered.
"I'll just tell them the last stop was a castle, and
the
lord of the demesne paid us in kind."
"Rod,
I think you lack an accurate concept of the financial
worth
of a war-horse in medieval culture."
"Hey—they
had a lot of pots." Rod grinned down at his
own
primitive publicity agents. "Okay, kids, that's enough.
I think
they know we're here."
The
four little Gallowglasses slowed their madcap danc-
ing,
and gave their pots and pans one last clanging whack
with
their wooden spoons. "You spoil all the fun. Papa,"
Cordelia
pouted as she handed him the cookware.
"No,
just most of it. Magnus? Geoff? Turn in your weap-
ons,
boys. Gregory, you, too—ah, a customer!"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 19
"Canst
mend this firkin, fellow?" The housewife was
plump,
rosy-cheeked, and anxious.
Rod
took the little pot and whistled at the sight of the
long,
jagged crack in the cast iron. "How'd you manage
that
kind of break?"
"My
youngest dropped it," the goodwife said impatiently.
"Canst
mend it?"
"Yeah,"
Rod said slowly, "but it'll cost you a ha'penny."
The
woman's face blossomed in a smile. "I have one,
and
'twill be well worth it. Bless thee, fellow!"
Which
sounded a little odd, since "fellow" was a term
of
semicontempt; but Rod blithely took out a hammer and
some
charcoal, laid a small fire, and got busy faking. Magnus
and
Gregory crouched on either side of him, obstensibly
watching.
"This
is the manner of the Grafting of it, Gregory," big
brother
Magnus said softly. "Let thy mind bear watch on
mine.
The metal's made of grains so small thou canst not
see
them..."
"Molecules,"
Rod supplied.
"Aye.
And now I'll make those molecules move so fast
they'll
meld one to another. Yet I must spring them into
motion
so quickly that their heat will not have time to spread
through
the rest of the metal to Papa's hands, the whiles he
doth
press the broken edges together—for we'd not wish
to bum
him."
"Definitely
not," Rod muttered.
Gregory
watched intently.
So did
Rod. He still couldn't quite believe it, as he saw
the
metal spring into cherry-redness all along the crack,
brighten
quickly through orange and yellow to near white-
ness.
Metal flowed.
"Now
quickly, cool it!" Magnus hissed, drops of sweat
standing
out on his brow, "Ere the heat can run to Papa's
hands!"
The
glow faded faster than it had come, for Gregory
frowned
at it, too; this part was simple enough for a three-
year-old.
Simple!
When only witches were supposed to be tele-
kinetic,
not warlocks—and even the best of them could
only
move objects, not molecules.
20
Christopher Stasheff
But
there the pot stood, round and whole! Rod sighed,
and
started tapping it lightly with the hammer, far from
where
the crack had been—just for appearances. "Thanks,
Magnus.
You're a great help."
"Willingly,
Papa." The eldest wiped his brow.
"Papa,"
Gregory piped up, "Thou dost know that elves
do
'company us..."
"Yeah."
Rod grinned. "Nice to know you're not alone."
"Truth.
Yet I've thought to have them ask for word from
their
fellows in the North...."
"Oh?"
Rod tried not to show it, but he was impressed.
Three
years old, and he'd thought of something Tuan and
Rod had
both overlooked. "What did they say?"
"The
goodwives no longer call warnings to the Wee Folk
ere
they empty garbage out upon the ground," Gregory's
eyes
were large in his little face. "They no longer leave
their
bowls of milk for the elves, by their doors. Each house
now
hath cold iron nailed up over its door, whether it be
an
horseshoe or some other form, and hearths go unswept
at
eventide."
Rod
felt a chill and glanced at a nearby tree, but its leaves
were
still. "Well, I guess no housewife there is going to
find
sixpence in her shoe. What are the elves doing about
it?"
"Naught.
There is some spell lies o'er the plowed land
there,
that pushes against all elfin magic. They have turned
away in
anger, and flitted to the forests."
Rod
struck the pot a few more times, in silence.
"Is
this coil in the North so light as thou hast told us,
Papa?"
Gregory finally asked.
Rod
reflected that, for a three-year-old, the kid had one
hell of
a good vocabulary. He put down his hammer and
faced
the child squarely. "There's no real evidence, yet,
that
it's anything major."
"But
the signs..." Magnus murmured.
"Are
not evidence," Rod answered. "Not firm evi-
dence—but
I'm braced. That's why we're travelling in dis-
guise—so
we can pick up any rumors, without letting people
know
we're the High Warlock and Company."
"Thou
dost not wish our presence known, for fear the
evil
folk will hide till we've gone by?" Magnus asked.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 21
"No,
because I don't want to walk into an ambush. Not
that I
expect to, mind—I just don't want to take any chances."
He gave
the pot a last tap and held it up to admire. "You
boys
did a good job."
"We
shall ever do our best, for thee," Magnus responded.
"Papa...
if thou dost gain this firm evidence that thou
speakest
of... What then?"
Rod
shrugged. "Depends. If it's nothing major, we'll fix
whatever's
wrong, and go on to the northern seacoast for a
couple
of weeks of swimming and fishing. You've never
tried
swimming in the ocean, boys. Let me tell you, it's
very
different from the little lake near our house."
"I
shall hope to discover it," Gregory piped. "Papa...
what if
the evidence is of great wrongness?"
"Then
you three boys will turn right around, and take
your
mother and your sister right home," Rod said promptly.
"And
thou... ?"
"I'm
the High Warlock, aren't I?" Rod grinned at them.
"They
gave me the title. I've got to live up to it."
Gregory
and Magnus looked at each other, and locked
gazes.
"I
prithee, my lord, calm your heart," Gwen eyed him
anxiously
as she laid the campfire. " 'Twas not the forester's
fault
that we may not hunt."
"Yeah—but
the way he dragged Magnus in, as though
he were
some kind of criminal!" Rod folded a hand around
his
trembling fist. "He should only know how close he came
to
disaster! Good thing Magnus remembered his disguise."
"
'Twas not the child's self-rule that troubled me." Gwen
shuddered.
"My lord, if thou couldst have but seen thine
own
face...."
"I
know, I know," Rod snapped, turning away. "So it's
not
surprising he reached toward his knife. But so help me,
if he
had touched it..."
"He
would have died," Gwen said simply, "and men-at-
arms
would have caught us on the morrow."
"Oh,
no, they wouldn't," Rod said grimly. "They
wouldn't've
dared touch the High Warlock!"
"Aye—and
all the land would have known we ride north."
She
sighed. "I rejoice thou didst throttle thy temper."
22 Christopher Stasheff
"No,
I didn't, and you know it! If you hadn't butted in
and
taken over, raining thanks and praise on the forester,
as
though you were a waterfall..."
Gwen
shrugged. "'Twas naught but his due. A less kind
man
would have beaten the child, and haled him off to his
knight's
gaol."
Rod
stared, appalled.
Gwen
nodded. "Oh, aye, my lord. And the law allows
it.
Nay, more; for this good warden who did find our son,
might
be censured if his lord did know of his forbearance."
Rod
shuddered. "I'm glad I let him go, then. But, my
lord!
It's not as though the boy'd been trying to bring down
a deer!
All he was after was a rabbit!"
"Even
so, the Forest Laws would say 'twas theft," Gwen
reminded
him. "Every hare and goose—nay, each mouse
and
sparrow—doth belong unto the manor's lord; and to
hunt
them is to steal!"
"But
how do these people live?" Rod cupped an empty
hand.
"We didn't do badly today, for tinkers—we made a
penny
and a half! But we had to spend the penny for a
chicken,
and the half for bread! What would we live on, if
nobody
broke a pot?"
"The
law..." Gwen sighed.
"Well,
it won't, for long." Rod curled the hand into a
fist.
"I'm going to have a few words with Tuan, when we
get
back to Runnymede!"
"Do,"
Gwen said softly, "and thou'lt have proved the
worth
of this journey, even an we find naught wrong i' the
North."
"I'm
afraid that's not very apt to happen." Mollified,
Rod
watched her stare at the kindling. It burst into flame,
and he
sighed, "I'd better see how the kids are coming along
with
their foraging." He stiffened at a sudden thought, star-
ing at
her. "We are allowed to gather berries, aren't we?"
Rod sat
bolt upright with a hissing-in of breath, staring
about
him, wide-eyed.
The
night breathed all around him, hushed. Far away,
crickets
and frogs wove counterpoint that darted harmony
with
the myriad of stars. The land lay deep in peace.
Rod
sagged against the prop of his arm, relieved by
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 23
reality.
Adrenalin ebbed, and his hammering heart began to
slow.
He couldn't even remember the nightmare—only that,
vaguely,
the face was Lord Kem's.
This
had to stop. Somehow, he had to break this spell.
Somebody
moaned; not surprising, the way he felt.
Then he
stiffened, all his attention concentrated on his
ears.
Whoever had moaned, it hadn't been him.
Then,
who...?
The
sound came again, louder and closer. It wasn't a
moan,
really—more of a grinding sound. Not moving. Rod
murmured,
"Pess?"
"Here,
Rod." Being a robot, Fess never slept. In fact,
he
scarcely ever powered down.
"Hear
anything out of the ordinary?"
"Yes,
Rod. The sound is that of rock moving against
rock.
When the frequency of its repetitions is accelerated,
there
is a discernible Doppler shift..."
"Coming,
or going?"
"Coming—and
rather rapidly, I should..."
Trees
at the edge of the meadow trembled, and a huge,
dark
form came into sight. The silhouette was crudely hu-
man.
Rod was
on his feet and darting over to Fess. He yanked
a light
out of the pack, aimed it at the dark form, and pressed
the
tab. "Gwen!"
Gwen
raised her head just as the beam struck the huge
figure.
If it
was female, it was a caricature. If it had breasts, it
also
had shoulders like a fullback's and arms like a gorilla's.
It did
have long fingernails, though—and they glinted dan-
gerously
in the actinic glare. Its face was blue. It flinched
at the
sudden stab of light, lips drawing back in a snarl—
revealing
fangs.
"Black
Annis!" Gwen gasped in horror.
The
monster froze for a moment, startled by the beam—
and Rod
snapped, "Magnus! Cordelia! Wake the babies and
get
into the air!"
The
elder children snapped out of sleep as though they'd
been
jabbed, galvanized by Gwen's mental alarm. Geoffrey
rolled
up, sitting, knuckling his eyes and muttering. "Not
a baby!
Six!" But Gregory just shot straight into the air.
24
Christopher Stasheff
Then
the monster roared, charging, and caught up
Geoffrey
with one roundhouse swipe. He squalled, but in
anger,
not fright, and wrestled his dagger out of its sheath.
But Rod
thundered rage, and the monster rose into the air,
then
slammed down onto its back. Geoffrey jabbed the huge
hand
with his dagger, and Black Annis howled, dropping
him. He
shot into the air, while Rod stalked toward the
horror.
Red haze blurred his vision, obscuring all but Black
Annis
struggling to its feet in the center of his field of view.
The
familiar roaring thundered in his ears, and power thrilled
through
every vein. One thought filled him, only one—to
see the
creature torn to bits.
Behind
him, though, Gwen retreated, keeping her face
toward
the monster, pulling Magnus and Cordelia by their
hands,
along with her.
The
monster floundered to its feet and turned toward
Rod,
its face contorted with hate, claws lifting to pounce;
but
Rod's arm was raising, forefinger stiffened to focus his
powers.
Gwen's
eyes narrowed, and her children squeezed their
eyes
shut.
Black
Annis exploded into a hundred wriggling frag-
ments.
Rod
roared in rage, cheated of his revenge; but Gwen
cried
to her two youngest, "Rise and follow!"
For the
wriggling fragments kept writhing and, as they
fell to
earth, ran leaping away, long-eared and puff-tailed,
fleeing
back toward the wood.
Rod
clamped his jaw and ran after them.
But
Gwen was beside him, pacing him on her broom-
stick,
gripping his arm and calling to him through the blood-
haze.
Distantly through the roaring, he heard her: "My lord,
it was
not real! 'Twas a phantom, made of witch-moss!"
That
stung through; for 'witch-moss' was a fungus pe-
culiar
to this planet, telepathically sensitive. If a projective
esper
thought hard at a lump of it, it would turn into whatever
he or
she was thinking about.
Which
meant there had to be a projective esper around.
Gwen
was tugging at his arm, falling behind. "Softly,
mine
husband! Fall back, and wait! If this monster was
made o'
purpose, 'tis toward the purposer that these conies
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 25
we've
made from it do flee! Yet if that villain doth take
sight
of thee, he'll flee ere we can seize him!"
"I'll
blast him into oxides," Rod muttered, but sense
began
to poke through his battle-madness.
"A
pile of dust cannot tell us what we wish to know!"
Gwen
cried, and, finally, Rod began to slow. The master
who had
made this monster, was nothing; what mattered
was the
one who'd pulled his strings. That was the ogre
who'd
threatened Rod's children. "Black Annis eats ba-
bies,"
he muttered, and the rage began to build again.
"Black
Annis is an old wives' tale!" Gwen's voice
whipped,
and stung through to him. "In Tir Chlis she did
truly
live, mayhap, but not in Gramarye! Here, she's only
crafted
out of witch-moss! Here, 'tis a sorcerer who doth
scorn
babes!"
Rod
halted, trembling, and nodded. "And it's the scor-
cerer
we've got to catch—yes! But to find him, we have
to
question the minion that sent the monster against us!"
His
lips pulled back against his teeth. "That questioning, I
think
I'll enjoy!"
Gwen
shuddered, and implored, "Hold thyself in check,
I
prithee! Knowledge is our goal, not joy in cruelty."
"Just
tell me where he is. Who's spotting?... Oh. The
kids."
He stilled, listening mentally for his children's call—
and
muttering, "Fess, to me. When we need to ride, we'll
need
full speed."
The
great black horse drummed up beside him, just as
Cordelia's
cry came, "Here!"
Rod
leaped astride Fess, and they tore off through the
night.
The robot's radar probed the darkened landscape, and
Fess
hurdled fallen trunks and streams as though he rode a
close-clipped
steeplechase course. Gwen swooped above the
trees;
but Fess broke from cover as she began her downward
strike.
Her
target was a high-walled wagon with a roof. A woman
stood
in its open door, silhouetted by candlelight. She darted
a
glance at Gwen, then whirled, to stare first toward the
north,
and Cordelia, then toward the east, and Gregory, then
toward
Geoffrey, then Magnus. She darted back inside,
slamming
the door; but she reappeared at the driver's seat,
catching
up the reins. Her horses lifted their heads and
26
Christopher Stasheff
turned
out into the meadow, pulling the caravan about...
And she
stared, appalled, at the horde of rabbits who
filled
the meadow—and the great black horse who thun-
dered
up behind them.
Then
both her arms snapped out straight, fingers point-
ing—The
rabbits leaped together, melded, coalesced, me-
tamorphosed—and
a lion, wolf, and bear whirled about, to
turn on
Rod.
He
howled in rage and glee as the blood-haze enfolded
him
again, obscuring all but the monsters. They were re-
lease;
they were justification for lashing out with his power.
He
would blast them; then his path would be clear, to smear
the
woman over the meadow grass.
The
wolf was gaunt, with eyes of fire, impossibly huge.
The
bear, shambling upright, had a human face; and the
lion's
mane was flame, its teeth and claws were steel.
Rod
hauled on the reins and Fess dug in his hooves,
throwing
his weight back, plowing up the meadow in his
halt,
as Rod rose in the stirrups, stiffened arm spearing out.
The
wolf exploded.
Rod's
head pivoted deliberately.
The
lion's mane expanded, flame sweeping out to en-
velop
its body. But the beast didn't seem to notice; it bounded
on
toward Rod, roaring.
Rod's
eyebrows drew down, his brow furrowing.
The
lion's head whipped around in a full turn and whirled
spinning
away. Fess sidestepped, and the body hurtled on
by, to
collapse in a writhing heap.
Rod
pivoted toward the bear, his sword hissing out of
its
sheath; then the beast was on him. A great paw slammed
against
the side of Rod's head. For a moment, he was loose
in
space, the blackness shot with tiny sparks; then the earth
slammed
into his back, and his insides knotted, driving the
breath
out of him. But the blood-haze still filled his sight;
he saw
Fess rearing up to slam forehooves into the bear's
shoulder.
It stumbled, but came on, manlike face contorted
in a
snarl.
Rod
clenched his jaw, waiting for breath, and glared at
his
sword-blade. Flame shot down its tip, billowing outward
as
though it were a blowtorch with a three-foot blast.
The
bear halted, and backed away, snarling.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 27
Rod's
diaphragm unkinked, and he drew a labored breath,
then
thrust himself to his feet, staggering toward the bear.
It
threw itself on him with a roar.
He
swung aside, squinting against pain, glaring at it. It
flared
like magnesium; but it had barely begun its death-
howl
when its fires flickered, guttered, and went out. Where
it had
stood, only ashes sifted to the ground.
Rod
stood alone in the darkness, swaying, as the haze
that
filled him darkened, faded, and retreated back within
him. He
began to realize that a breeze was blowing...
Fire.
He'd
left a burning corpse. The breeze could spread that
flame
over all the meadow, and into the woods.
He
swung toward the remains of the lion—and saw
Gregory
floating near it, ten feet away, staring at the charred
hulk.
Even as Rod watched, bits of it were breaking loose,
and
moving off through the meadow grass. He turned toward
the
bear, and saw Geoffrey turning it into a herd of toy
horses,
which galloped toward the wood.
"We
cannot leave such large masses of witch-moss whole,"
Gwen's
voice said softly behind him, "or the first old aunt,
telling
of a frightful tale, will bring it up unwittingly, in
some
horrible guise."
"No."
The last of the anger ebbed, and remorse rushed
in to
fill its place. Rod spoke roughly to counter it. "Of
course
you couldn't. What happened to the witch?"
"She
fled," Gwen said simply.
Rod
nodded. "You couldn't follow her."
"We
could not leave thee here, to fight unaided." Cordelia
clung
to her mother, watching her father out of huge eyes.
"No."
Rod turned to watch his two youngest dismember
the
remains of what had been horrors. "On the other hand,
if I
hadn't stayed to fight them, you could've just taken
them
apart, and still had time to follow her."
Gwen
didn't answer.
"Where's
Magnus?" Rod sighed.
"He
did follow the witch," Cordelia answered.
Air
blew outward with a bang, and Magnus stood beside
them.
Rod usually found his sons' appearances and disap-
pearances
unnerving, but somehow, now, it seemed remote,
inconsequential.
"She got away?"
28 Christopher Stasheff
Magnus
bowed his head. "She fled into the forest, and
I could
no longer see her from the air."
Rod
nodded. "And it would've been foolish for you to
try to
follow low enough for her to get at you. Of course,
if I'd
been following on Fess, it would've been another
matter."
Nobody
answered.
He
sighed. "How about her thoughts?"
"They
ceased."
Gwen
stared down at Magnus. "Ceased?" She looked
up,
eyes losing focus for a few seconds; then her gaze
cleared,
and she nodded affirmation. " "Tis even as he saith.
But
how... ?"
"Why
not?" Rod shrugged. "I was telephathically invis-
ible
for years, remember? Sooner or later, somebody was
bound
to learn how to do that whenever they wanted."
"My
lord," Gwen said softly, "I think there is more dan-
ger in
these Northern witches, than we had thought."
Rod
nodded. "And, at a guess, they're better mind read-
ers
than we gave them credit for—'cause they certainly
knew we
were coming."
Gwen
was silent, digesting that.
Rod
shrugged, irritably. "Oh, sure, it's possible this one
sorceress
has a hatred for tinkers, especially when they come
in
families—but, somehow, I doubt that. Conjuring up a
Black
Annis for the average wanderer is a bit elaborate,
No,
they've spotted us."
He
straightened his shoulders and clapped his hands. "All
right,
so much for our night's adventure! Everybody back
to
bed."
The
children looked up, appalled.
"Don't
worry, Mommy'11 give you a sleep spell." Gwen's
lullabies
were effective projective telepathy; when she sang,
"Sleep,
my child," they really did.
"My
lord," Gwen said softly, "if they do know of our
presence..."
"We'd
better post sentries. Yes." Rod sat down cross-
legged.
"I'll take first watch. I haven't been sleeping well
lately,
anyway."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 29
When
the night noises prevailed again, and the only
child-sound
was deep and even breathing. Rod said softly,
"They're
being very good about it—but the fact is, I blew
it."
"But
it is distinctly improbable that you could have caught
the
projective, in any event," Fess's voice answered him.
"Banished
her, certainly—possibly even destroyed her,
though
that certainly would have been quite dangerous. But
attempting
to immobilize an esper, without killing her, would
be ten
times more dangerous."
Rod
frowned. "Come to think of it, why didn't she just
hop the
next broomstick?" He had a sudden, vivid vision
of Gwen
in an aerial dogfight, and shuddered.
"Why
leave her caravan, if she did not have to?" Fess
countered.
Rod
winced. "That hurts—that my rage hamstringed
things
so much that she didn't even have to strain to get
away!"
"Still,
that is only a blow to your pride," Fess reminded
him.
"The object was accomplished; the danger was ban-
ished."
"Only
temporarily," Rod growled, "and the next time, it
might
banish us, if I let my rage block off my brain again."
"That
is possible," Fess admitted. "And the danger must
be
considered greater, now that there is reason to believe
the
enemy knows your identities and direction."
"And
can guess our purpose," Rod finished. "Yes, we
can be
sure they'll attack again, and as soon as possible.
...
Fess?"
"Yes,
Rod?"
"Think
it's time yet to send Gwen and the kids home?"
The
robot was silent for a moment; then he answered,
"Analysis
of available data does not indicate a degree of
danger
with which your family, as a unit, cannot cope."
"Thank
Heaven," Rod sighed. "I don't think they'd be
very
easy to send home, just now."
"Your
children have become intrigued."
"Children,
my eye! It's Gwen I'm worried about—her
dander's
up!"
Fess
was silent.
T
30 Christopher Stasheff
Rod
frowned at the lack of response; then his mouth
tightened.
"All right, what am I missing?"
The
robot hesitated, then answered, "I don't think they
trust
you out alone. Rod."
3
"We're
getting pretty close to the Romanov border now,
aren't
we?"
"Aye,
my lord. 'Tis mayhap a day's journey further."
Gwen
was holding up bravely, but she did seem tired.
Rod
frowned. "Look—they know we're coming; there's
no
point in keeping our disguise. Why're we still walking?"
"To
save fright. Papa," Gregory looked down at his fa-
ther,
from his seat on Fess's pack. "If the good peasant folk
see us
flying north, they would surely take alarm."
Rod
stared at his youngest for a moment, then turned to
Gwen.
"How old did you say he was? Three, going on
what?"
But
Gwen frowned suddenly, and held up a hand. "Hist!"
Rod
frowned back. "The same to you."
"Nay,
nay, my lord! 'Tis danger! Good folk come, but
flee
toward us in full terror!"
Rod's
face went neutral. "What's chasing them?"
Gwen
shook her head. "I cannot tell. 'Tis human, for I
sense
the presence—yet there's a blank where minds should
be."
Rod
noted the plural. "All right, let's prepare for the
worst."
He put two fingers to his mouth, and blasted out a
shrill
whistle.
31
32 Christopher Stasheff
Like
tandem firecrackers, Magnus and Geoffrey popped
out of
nowhere, and Cordelia swooped down to hover behind
them.
"Why didst thou not but think for us. Papa?" Magnus
inquired.
"Because
we're up against an enemy that can hear thoughts
farther
than whistles. All right, kids, we've got to set up
an
ambush. I want each of you high up in a tree, doing
your
best imitation of a section of bark. Your mother and
I'll
take the ground. When the enemy shows up, hit 'em
with
everything you've got."
"What
enemy. Papa?"
"Listen
for yourself. Mama says it's human, but nothing
more."
All
four children went glassy-eyed for a moment, then
came
out of their trances with one simultaneous shudder.
"Tis
horrible," Cordelia whispered. "'Tis there, but—'tis
not!"
"You'll
know it when you see it," Rod said grimly, "and
just in
case you don't, I'll think 'Havoc!' as loudly as I
can.
Now, scoot!"
They
disappeared with three pops and a whoosh. Looking
up. Rod
spotted three treetops suddenly swaying against the
wind,
and saw Cordelia soar into a fourth. "Which side of
the
road do you want, dear?"
Gwen
shrugged. "Both sides are alike to me, my lord."
"What
do you think you are, a candidate? Okay, you
disappear
to the east, and I'll fade into the left. I keep trying,
anyway."
Gwen
nodded, and squeezed his hand quickly before she
sped
off the road. Leaves closed behind her. Rod stayed a
moment,
staring north and wondering; then he turned to the
underbrush,
muttering, "Head north about ten yards, Pess."
The
robot sprang into a gallop, and almost immediately
turned
off the road onto Rod's side.
The
leaves closed behind him, and Rod turned to face
the
roadway, peering through foliage. He knelt, and let his
body
settle, breathing in a careful rhythm, watching the dust
settle.
Then,
around the curve of the roadway, they came—a
dozen
dusty peasants with small backpacks and haunted
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
33
faces.
They kept glancing back over their shoulders. The
tallest
of them suddenly called out, jerked to a halt. The
others
hurried back to him, calling over their shoulders to
their
wives, "Go! Flee!" But the women hesitated, glancing
longingly
at the road south, then back at their husbands.
The men
turned their backs and faced north, toward the
enemy,
each holding a quarterstaff at guard position, slant-
wise
across his body. The women stared at them, horrified.
Then,
with a wail, one young wife turned, hugging her
baby,
and hurried away southward. The others stared after
her;
then, one by one, they began to shoo their children
away
down the road.
Then
the men-at-arms strode into sight.
Rod
tensed, thinking, "Ready!" with all his force.
They
wore brown leggings with dark green coats down
to
midthigh, and steel helmets. Each carried a pike, and a
saffron
badge gleamed on every breast. It was definitely a
uniform,
and one Rod had never seen before.
The
soldiers saw the peasants, gave a shout, and charged,
pikes
dropping down level.
Rod
thought the word with all his might, as he muttered
it to
Fess: "Havoc!"
He
couldn't have timed it better. Fess leaped out of the
underbrush
and reared, with a whinnying scream, just as
the
last soldiers passed him. They whirled about, alarmed,
as did
most of their mates—and Rod leaped up on the
roadway
between peasants and soldiers, sword flickering
out to
stab through a shoulder, then leaping back out to dart
at
another footman even as the first screamed, staggering
backward.
Two soldiers in the middle of the band shot into
the air
with howls of terror, and slammed back down onto
their
mates, as a shower of rocks struck steel helmets hard
enough
to stagger soldiers, and send them reeling to the
ground.
Rod
threw himself into a full lunge, skewering a third
soldier's
thigh, as he shouted to the peasants, "Now! Here's
your
chance! Fall on 'em, and beat the hell out of 'em!"
Then a
pike-butt crashed into his chin and he spun back-
ward,
vision darkening and shot through with sparks; but a
roar
filled his ears and, as his sight cleared, he saw the
34
Christopher Stasheff THE WARLOCK ENRAGED 35
peasant
men slamming into the soldiers, staves rising and
falling
with a rhythm of mayhem.
Rod
gasped, and staggered back toward them; there was
no need
for killing!
Then
another thought nudged through: they needed pris-
oners,
for information.
He
blundered in among the peasants, took one quick
glance
at the remains of the melee, and gasped, "Stop!
There's
no need... They don't deserve..."
"Thou
hast not seen what they've done," the peasant next
to him
growled.
"No,
but I intend to find out! Look! They're all down,
and
some of 'em may be dead already! Stand back, and
leave
them to me!"
A rough
hand grasped his shoulder and spun him around.
"I'
truth? And who art thou to command, thou who hast
not
lost blood to these wolves?"
Rod's
eyes narrowed. He straightened slowly, and knocked
the
man's hand away with a sudden chop. It was ridiculous,
and
really shouldn't have made any difference to anybody—
but it
would work; it'd get their cooperation. "I am the High
Warlock,
Rod Gallowglass, and it is due to my magic and
my
family's, that you men stand here victorious, instead of
sprawling
as buzzard's meat!"
He
didn't have to add the threat; the man's eyes widened,
and he
dropped to one knee. "Your pardon. Lord! I... I
had not
meant..."
"No,
of course you didn't. How could you tell, when
I'm
dressed as a tinker?" Rod looked around to find all the
peasants
kneeling. "All right, that's enough! Are you men
or
pawns, that you must kneel? Rise, and bind these animals
for
me!"
"On
the instant, milord!" The peasants leaped to their
feet,
and turned to begin lashing up the soldiers with their
own
belts and garters. Rod caught the belligerent one by
the
shoulder. "How are you called?"
Apprehension
washed his face, and he tugged at his
forelock.
"Grathum, an it please thee, milord."
Rod
shrugged. "Whether or not it pleases you, is a bit
more
important. Grathum, go after the women, and tell them
the
good news, will you?"
The man
stared, realization sinking in. "At once, your
lordship!"
And he sped away.
Rod
surveyed the knot-tying party and, satisfied every-
thing
was well under way with the minimum of vengeful
brutality,
glanced up at the trees and thought. Wonderful,
children!
I'm a very proud daddy!
The
branches waved slightly in answer. Rod could have
bent
his mind to it, and read their thoughts in return; but it
still
involved major effort for him, and he couldn't spare
the
concentration just now. But he turned toward the
underbrush,
and thought. Thanks, dear. It was nice to see
you
throwing somebody else's weight around for a change.
"As
long as 'tis not thine, my lord? Thou art most surely
welcome!"
Rod
looked up, startled—that was her voice, not her
mind.
Gwen came marching up, with the women and chil-
dren
behind her. Grathum hurried on ahead, face one big
apology.
"'Ere I could come unto them, milord, thy wife
had
brought word, and begun their progress back."
She had
obviously run the message on her broomstick;
the
wives were herding their children silently, with covert
glances
at her, and the children were staring wide-eyed.
Rod
turned back to Grathum. "Any more of these apes
likely
to be following you?"
The
peasant shook his head. "Nay, milord—none that
we know
of. There were more bands—but they chased after
others
who fled. Only these followed the high road, when
we who
escaped to it so far as this, were so few."
"'Others
who fled?'" Rod frowned, setting his fists on
his
hips. "Let's try it from the beginning. What happened,
Grathum?
Start back before you knew anything was wrong."
"Before...
?" The peasant stared at him. " 'Tis some
months
agone, milord!"
"We've
got time." Rod nodded toward the north. "Just
in case
you're worried, I've got sentries out."
Grathum
darted quick looks about him, then back at Rod,
fearfully.
Rod found it unpleasant, but right now, it was
useful.
"Several months back," he prompted, "before you
knew
anything was wrong."
"Aye,
milord," Grathum said, with a grimace. He heaved
a sigh,
and began. "Well, then! 'Twas April, and we were
36
Christopher Stasheff
shackling
our oxen to the plows for the planting, and a
fellow
hailed me from the roadway. I misliked his look—
he was
a scrawny wight, with a sly look about him—but
I'd no
reason to say him nay, so I pulled in my ox and
strode
up to the hedge, to have words with him.
'"Whose
land is this?' he did ask me; and I answered,
'Why,
o' course, 'tis the Duke of Romanov's; but my master,
Sir
Ewing, holds it enfeoffed from him.'
"'Nay,'
quoth this wight, ' 'tis not his now, but the Lord
Sorcerer
Alfar's—and I hold it enfeoffed from him.'
"Well!
At this I became angered. 'Nay, assuredly thou
dost
not,' I cried. 'An thou dost speak such treason, no man
would
blame me!' And I drew back my fist, to smite him."
Rod's
mouth tightened. That sort of fit in with his overall
impression
of Grathum's personality. "And what'd he do
about
it?"
"Why!
He was gone ere I could strike—disappeared!
And
appeared again ten feet away, on my side of the fence!
Ah, I
assure thee, then fear did seize my bowels—but I
ran for
him anyway, with a roar of anger. Yet up he drifted
into
the air, hauling a thick wand out from his cloak, and
struck
down at me with it. I made to catch it, but ever did
he seem
to know where I would grasp next, and ever was
his
stick elsewhere; and thus did he batter me about the
head
and shoulders, till I fell down in a swoon. When I
came to
my senses, he stood over me, crowing, 'Rejoice
that I
spared thee, and used only a wooden rod—nor tossed
a ball
of fire at thee, nor conjured a hedgehog into thy
belly!'...
Could he do such, milord?"
"I
doubt it highly," Rod said, with a dry smile. "Go on
with
your story."
Grathum
shrugged. "There's little more to tell of that
broil.
'Be mindful,' quoth he, 'that thou dost serve me now,
not
that sluggard Sir Ewing.' The hot blood rushed to my
face,
to hear my lord so addressed; but he saw it, and struck
me with
the wand again. I did ward the blow, but he was
behind
me on the instant, and struck me from the other
side—and
I could not ward myself, for that the arm that
should
have done it, was beneath me. 'Be mindful,' quoth
he
again, 'and fear not Sir Ewing's retribution; ere the har-
vest
comes, he'll not be by to trouble thee further.' Then
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 37
he
grinned like to a broad saw, and vanished in a crack of
thunder."
Rod
noted that all this junior wizard seemed to have
done,
was teleport and levitate—but he had used them to
give
him an advantage in a fight!
"This
worm of a warlock was fully lacking in honor,"
Gwen
ground out, at his elbow.
"Totally
unethical," Rod agreed, "and, therefore, totally
self-defeating,
in the end. If witches and warlocks went
around
behaving like that, the mobs would be out after them
in an
instant—and how long could they last then?"
"Forever,"
Grathum said promptly, "or so this Lord
Sorcerer
and his sorcery-knights do believe. They fear no
force,
milord, whether it come from peasants or knights."
The
fright in his tone caught at Rod. He frowned. "You
sound
as though you're talking from experience. What hap-
pened?"
Then he lifted his head as he realized what someone
like
Grathum might have done. "You did report this little
incident
to Sir Ewing, didn't you?"
"I
did." Grathum bit his lip. "And I wish that I had not—
though
it would have made little difference, for each and
every
other plowman on Sir Ewing's estates told him like-
wise."
"The
same warlock in each case?"
"Aye;
his name, he said, was Melkanth. And there was
no
report of him, from any other manor; yet each had been
so
visited by a different warlock or witch. Naetheless, 'twas
our Sir
Ewing who did rise up in anger and, with his dozen
men-at-arms,
rode forth to seek out this Melkanth."
Rod
clamped his jaw. "I take it Sir Ewing found him."
Grathum
spread his hands. "We cannot think otherwise;
for he
did not come back. Yet his men-at-arms did; but they
wore
this livery thou seest on those who pursued us." He
jerked
his thumb back over his shoulder at the heap of bound
soldiers.
"Aye, they came back, these men that we'd known
since
childhood; they came back, and told us that Sir Ewing
was no
more, and that we served His Honor Warlock
Melkanth
now."
Rod
stared, and Gwen caught at his arm. That jarred
Rod
back into contact with reality; he cleared his throat,
and
asked, "Anything odd about 'em? The way they looked?"
T
l
i
38
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
39
"Aye."
Grathum tapped next to his eye. '"Twas here,
milord—in
their gazes. Though I could not say to thee what
'twas
that was odd."
"But
it was wrong, whatever it was." Rod nodded.
"What'd
the soldiers do? Stay around to make sure you kept
plowing?"
"Nay;
they but told us we labored for Melkanth now,
and
bade us speak not of this that had happed, not to any
knight
nor lord; yet they did not say we could not speak to
other
peasant folk."
"So
the rumor ran?"
"Aye.
It ran from peasant to peasant, till it had come
closer
by several manors to our lord. Count Novgor."
Rod
kept the frown. "I take it he's vassal to Duke
Romanov."
"Aye,
milord. The Count called up his levies—but scarce
more
than a dozen knights answered his call; for the others
had all
marched forth to battle the warlocks who challenged
them."
"Oh,
really! I take it rumor hadn't run fast enough."
Grathum
shrugged. "I think that it had, milord; but such
news
only angered our good knights, and each marched out
to meet
the warlock who claimed his land, thinking his force
surely
equal to the task."
"But
it wasn't." Rod's lips were thin. "Because they went
out one
knight at a time; but I'll bet each one of them ran
into
this Lord Sorcerer and all his minions, together."
Grathum's
face darkened. "Could it be so?"
Rod
tossed his head impatiently. "You peasants have got
to stop
believing everything you're told, Grathum, and start
trying
to find out a few facts on your own!... Oh, don't
look at
me like that, I'm as sane as you are! What happened
to
Count Novgor and his understrength army?"
Grathum
shook his head. "We know not, milord—for
fear
overtook us, and we saw that, if the sorcerer won, we
would
be enslaved to fell magic, and our wives and bairns
with
us. Nay, then we common folk packed what we could
carry
and sin' that we would not have the chance to fight,
fled
instead, through the pasture lanes to the roadway, and
down
the roadway to the High Road."
"So
you don't know who won?"
"Nay;
but early the next morning, when we'd begun to
march
again, word ran through our numbers—for it was
hundreds
of people on the road by then, milord; we folk of
Sir
Ewing's were not alone in seeing our only chance to
stay
free—and word ran from the folk at the rear of the
troupe,
to us near the van, that green-coated soldiers pur-
sued.
We quickened our pace, but word came, anon, that a
band of
peasants had been caught up by soldiers, and taken
away in
chains. At that word, many folk split away, village
by
village, down side roads toward hiding. But when we
came to
high ground, we looked back, and saw squadrons
of
soldiers breaking off from the main host, to march down
the
side roads; so we turned our faces to the South, and
hurried
with Death speeding our heels—for word reached
those
of us in the van, that the soldiers had begun slaying
those
who fought their capture. Then did we take to a byway
ourselves;
but we hid, with our hands o'er our children's
mouths,
till the soldiers had trooped by, and were gone from
sight;
then back we darted onto the High Road, and down
toward
the South again. Through the night we came, bearing
the wee
ones on litters, hoping that the soldiers would sleep
the
whiles we marched; and thus we came into this morning,
where
thou hast found us."
Rod
looked up at the sky. "Let's see, today... yesterday
... This
would be the third day since the battle."
"Aye,
milord."
"And
you, just this little band of you, are the only ones
who
made it far enough south to cross the border?"
Grathum
spread his hands. "The only ones on the High
Road,
milord. If there be others, we know not of them...
and had
it not been for thee and thy family, we would not
be
here, either." He shuddered. "Our poor Count Novgor!
We can
only pray that he lives."
Air
cracked outward, and Gregory floated at Rod's eye
level,
moored to his shoulder by a chubby hand.
The
peasants stared, and shrank back, muttering in hor-
ror.
"Peace."
Rod held up a hand. "This child helped save
you
from the sorcerer's soldiers." He turned to Gregory,
nettled.
"What is it, son? This wasn't exactly a good time."
"Papa,"
the boy said, eyes huge, "I have listened, and..."
40
Christopher
Stasheff
Rod
shrugged. "Wasn't exactly a private conversation.
What
about it?"
"If
this Count Novgor had won, these soldiers in the
sorcerer's
livery would not have been marching after these
peasant
folk."
The
folk in question gasped, and one woman cried, "But
the
baim can scarcely be weaned!"
Rod
turned to them, unable to resist a proud smirk. "You
should
see him think up excuses not to eat his vegetables.
I'm
afraid he's got a point, though; I wouldn't have any
great
hopes for Count Novgor's victory."
The
peasants sagged visibly.
"But
it should be possible to get a definite answer." Rod
strode
forward.
The
peasants leaped aside.
Rod
stepped up to the bound soldiers. He noticed that
one or
two were struggling against their ties. "They're be-
ginning
to come to. I think they might know who won."
He
reached out to yank a soldier onto his feet, then turned
to the
peasants. "Anybody recognize him?"
The
peasants stared and, one after another, shook their
heads.
Then, suddenly, one woman's finger darted out, to
point
at the soldier on top of the third pile. "But yonder is
Gavin
Arlinson, who followed good Sir Ewing into battle!
How
comes he to fight in the service of his lord's foe?"
"Or
any of them, for that matter? Still, he'll do nicely
as a
representative sample." Rod gave the soldier he was
holding,
a slight push; the man teetered, then fell back down
onto
his comrades. Rod caught him at the last second, of
course,
and lowered him the final inch; then he waded
through
the bound men, to pull Gavin Arlinson onto his
feet.
He slapped the man's face gently, until the eyelids
fluttered;
then he called, "Magnus, the brandy—it's in Fess's
pack."
His
eldest elbowed his way through to his father, holding
up a
flask. Rod took it, noting that nobody seemed to wonder
where
Magnus had come from. He pressed the flask to
Arlinson's
lips and tilted, then yanked it back out quickly.
The
soldier coughed, spraying the immediate area, choked,
then
swallowed. He squinted up at Rod, frowning.
Just
the look of the eyes made Rod shiver. Admittedly,
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 41
the
glassiness of that stare could be due to the head knock
he'd
received; but the unwavering, unblinking coldness was
another
matter.
Rod
pulled his nerve back up and demanded, "What
happened
to Sir Ewing?"
"He
died," the soldier answered, his tone flat. "He died,
as must
any who come up against the might of the Lord
Sorcerer
Alfar."
Rod
heard indignant gasps and muttering behind him,
but he
didn't turn to look. "Tell us the manner of it."
"'Tis
easily said," the soldier answered, with full con-
tempt.
"He and his men marched forth to seek the warlock
Melkanth.
They took the old track through the forest, and
in a
meadow, they met him. But not Melkanth alone—his
brother
warlocks and sister witches, all four together, with
their
venerable Lord, the Sorcerer Alfar. Then did the war-
locks
and witches cause divers monsters to spring out upon
Sir
Ewing and his men, while the witches cast fireballs. A
warlock
appeared hard by Sir Ewing, in midair, to stab
through
his visor and hale him off his mount. Then would
his
soldiers have fled, but the Lord Sorcerer cried out a
summoning,
and all eyes turned toward him. With one glance,
he held
them all. Then did he explain to them who he was,
and why
he had come."
"I'll
bite." Rod gave him a sour smile. "Who is he?"
"A
man bom with Talent, and therefore noble by birth,"
the
soldier answered tightly, "who hath come to free us all
from
the chains in which the twelve Lords, and their lackeys,
do hold
us bound."
"What
chains are these?" Rod demanded. "Why do you
need
freeing?"
The
soldier's mouth twisted with contempt. "The 'why'
of it
matters not; only the fact of enslavement's of import."
"That,
I can agree with—but not quite the way you meant
it."
Rod turned to his wife. "I call it hypnosis—instant
style.
What's your diagnosis?"
"The
same, my lord," she said slowly. "'Tis like to the
Evil
Eye with which we dealt, these ten years gone."
Rod
winced. "Please! Don't remind me how long it's
been."
He submitted to a brief but intense wave of nostalgia,
suddenly
feeling again the days when he and Gwen had
42
Christopher Stasheff THE WARLOCK ENRAGED 43
only
had to worry about one baby warlock. And, of course,
a
thousand or so marauding beastmen....
He
shook off the mood. "Can you do anything about it?"
"Why...
assuredly, my lord." Gwen stepped up to him,
looking
directly into his eyes. "But dost thou not wish to
attempt
it thyself?"
Rod
shook his head, jaw clamped tight. "No, thanks. I
managed
to make it through this skirmish without rousing
my
temper—how, I'm not sure; but I'd just as soon not
tempt
fate. See what you can do with him, will you?"
"Gladly,"
she answered, and turned to stare into the sol-
dier's
eyes.
After a
minute, his lips writhed back from his teeth. Rod
glanced
quickly at the thongs that held his wrists, then down
to his
lashed ankles. His muscles strained against the leather,
and it
cut into his flesh, but there was no sign it might break.
He
looked back up at the soldier's face. It had paled, and
beads
of sweat stood out on his forehead.
Suddenly,
he stiffened, his eyes bulging, and his whole
body
shuddered so violently that it seemed it would fall
apart.
Then he went limp, darting panicked glances about
him,
panting as though he'd run a mile. "How... Who..."
Gwen
pressed her hands over her eyes and turned away.
Rod
looked from her to the soldier and back. Then he
grabbed
Grathum and shoved the soldier into his arms.
"Here!
Hold him up!" He leaped after his wife, and caught
her in
his arms. "It's over, dear. It's not there anymore."
"Nay...
I am well, husband," she muttered into his
doublet.
"Yet that was... distasteful."
"What?
The feel of his mind?"
She
nodded, mute,
"What
was it?" Rod pressed. "The sense of wrongness?
The
twisting of the mind that had hynotized him?"
"Nay—'twas
the lack of it."
"Lack?"
"Aye."
Gwen looked up into his eyes, a furrow between
her
eyebrows. "There was no trace of any other mind within
his, my
lord. Even with the beastmen's Evil Eye, there was
ever
the sense of some other presence behind it—but here,
there
was naught."
Rod
frowned, puzzled. "You mean he was hypnotized
and
brainwashed, but whoever did it was so skillful, he
didn't
even leave a trace?"
Gwen
was still; then she shrugged. "What else could it
be?"
"But
why take the trouble?" Rod mused. "I mean, any
witch
who knows more than the basics, would recognize
that
spell in a moment."
Gwen
shook her head, and pushed away from him. " 'Tis
a
mystery. Leave it for the nonce; there are others who must
be
wakened. Cordelia! Geoffrey, Magnus, Gregory! Hear-
ken to
my thoughts; leam what I do!" And she went to kneel
by the
bound soldiers. Her children gathered about her.
Rod
watched her for a moment, then turned back to
Ariinson,
shaking his head. He looked up into the man's
eyes,
and found them haunted.
The
soldier looked away.
"Don't
blame yourself," Rod said softly. "You were un-
der a
spell; your mind wasn't your own."
The
soldier looked up at him, hungrily.
"It's
nothing but the truth." Rod gazed deeply into the
man's
eyes, as though staring could convince him by itself.
"Tell
me—how much do you remember?"
Ariinson
shuddered. "All of it, milord—Count Novgor's
death,
the first spell laid on us, the march to the castle, the
deepening
of the spell..."
Rod
waited, but the soldier only hung his head, shud-
dering.
"Go on," Rod pressed. "What happened after the
deepening
of the spell?"
Arlinson's
head snapped up, eyes wide. "What more was
there!"
Rod
stared at him a moment, then said slowly, "Nothing.
Nothing
that you could have done anything about, soldier.
Nothing
to trouble your heart." He watched the fear begin
to fade
from the man's eyes, then said, "Let's back it up a
bit.
They—the warlocks, I mean—marched you all to the
castle,
right?"
Ariinson
nodded. "Baron Strogol's castle it had been,
milord."
He shuddered. "Eh, but none would have known
it,
once they'd passed the gate house. 'Twas grown dank
and
sour. The rushes in the hall had not been changed in a
month
at the least, mayhap not since the fall, and each
44
Christopher Stasheff
window
and arrow slit was shuttered, barring the daylight."
Rod
stored it all away, and asked, "What of the Count?"
Arlinson
only shook his head slowly, eyes never leaving
Rod's.
Rod
leaned back on one hip, fingering his dagger. "How
did
they deepen the spell?"
Arlinson
looked away, shivering.
"I
know it's painful to remember," Rod said softly, "but
we
can't fight this sorcerer if we don't know anything about
him.
Try, won't you?"
Arlinson's
gaze snapped back to Rod's. "Dost thou think
thou
canst fight him, then?"
Rod
shrugged impatiently. "Of course we can—but I'd
like to
have a chance of winning, too. Tell me how they
deepened
the spell."
The
soldier only stared at him for a time. Then, slowly,
he
nodded. '"Twas done in this manner: They housed us
in the
dungeon, seest thou, and took us out from our cage,
one
alone each time. When my turn came, they brought me
into a
room that was so dark, I could not tell thee the size
of it.
A lighted candle stood on a table, next to the chair
they
sat me in, and they bade me stare at the flame." His
mouth
twisted. "What else was there?"
Rod
nodded. "So you sat and stared at the flame. Any-
thing
else?"
"Aye;
some unseen musicians played a sort of music I
never
had heard aforetime. 'Twas a sort of a drone, seest
thou,
like unto that of a bagpipe—yet had more the sound
of a
viol. And another unseen beat on a tambour..."
"Tap
it out," Rod said softly.
The
soldier stared, surprised. Then he began to slap his
thigh,
never taking his eyes from Rod's.
Rod
recognized the rhythmn; it was that of a heartbeat.
"What
else?"
"Then
one who sat across from me—but 'twas so dark,
I could
tell his presence only by the sound of his voice—
one
across from me began to speak of weariness, and sleep.
Mine
eyelids began to grow heavy; I remember that they
drooped,
and I fought against drowsiness, yet I gave into
it, finally,
and slept—until now." He glanced down at his
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 45
body,
seeming to see his clothing for the first time. "What
is this
livery?"
"We'll
tell you after you've taken it off," Rod said shortly.
He
slapped the man on the shoulder. "Be brave, soldier.
You'll
need your greatest courage when you find out what's
been
happening while you were, uh... while you 'slept.'"
He
turned to Grathum. "Release him—he's on our side
again."
And he turned back to Gwen, just in time to see
the
children, as a team, wake the last soldier, while Gwen
supervised
closely. "Gently, Magnus, gently—his mind
sleeps.
And Geoffrey, move slowly—nay, pull back! Re-
treat!
If thou dost wake him too quickly, thou'lt risk driving
him
back into the depths of his own mind, in shock of his
waking
so far from his bed."
The
soldier in question blinked painfully, then levered
himself
up on one elbow. He looked down and stared at his
bound
wrists. Then he looked up, wildly—but even as he
began
to struggle up, his eyes lost their wildness. In a few
seconds,
he sank back onto one elbow, breathing deeply.
"Well
done, my daughter," Gwen murmured approvingly.
"Thou
didst soothe him most aptly."
Rod
watched the man growing calmer. Finally, he looked
about
him, wide-eyed. His gaze anchored on Gwen, then
took in
the children—then, slowly, tilted up toward Rod.
"All
are awake now, husband, and ready." Gwen's voice
was
low. "Tell them thy condition, and thy name."
"I
am named Rod Gallowglass, and I am the High Warlock
of this
Isle of Gramarye." Rod tried to match Gwen's pitch
and
tone. "Beside me is my lady, Gwendylon, and my
children.
They have just broken an evil and vile spell that
held
you in thrall." He waited, glancing from face to face,
letting
them take it in and adjust to it. When he thought
they'd
managed, he went on. "You have been 'asleep' for
three
days, and during that time, you have fought as soldiers
in the
army of the Lord Sorcerer, Alfar."
They
stared at him, appalled. Then they all began to fire
questions,
one after another, barking demands, almost howl-
ing in
disbelief.
They
were building toward hysteria. It had to be stopped.
Rod
held up his hands, and bellowed, "Silence!"
46
Christopher Stasheff THE WARLOCK ENRAGED 47
The
soldiers fell silent, as military discipline dug its
hooks
into their synapses. But they were primed, and ready
to
explode, so Rod spoke quickly. "What you did during
those
days was not truly your doing—it was the 'Lord'
Sorcerer's
and his minions. They used your bodies—and
parts
of your minds." He saw the look that washed over the
soldiers'
faces, and agreed, "Yes. It was foul. But remember
that
what you did was their crime, not yours; there is no
fault
of yours in it, and you cannot rightly be blamed for
it."
He saw their foreboding. Well, good—at least they'd
be
braced, when Grathum and his peasants told them what
had
been happening. He glanced from face to face again,
holding
each set of eyes for a moment, then breathed, "But
you can
seek justice."
Every
eye locked onto him.
"You
have pursued these goodfolk, here..." Rod jerked
his
head toward the peasants. "... southward. You have
passed
the border of Romanov, and are come into Earl
Tudor's
land. Wend your way on to the South, now, with
the
folk you did chase—only now, be their protectors."
He saw
resolve firm the soldiers' faces.
Rod
nodded with satisfaction. Southward you go, all in
one
body, to King Tuan at Runny mede. Kneel to him there,
and say
the High Warlock bade you come. Then tell him
your
tale, from beginning to end, even as Gavin Arlinson
has
told it to me. He will hear you, and shelter you—and,
if you
wish it, I doubt not he will take you into his army,
so
that, when he marches North against this tyrant sorcerer,
you may
help in tearing him down."
Rod
glanced from face to face again. He hadn't said
anything
about guilt or expiation, but he could see remorse
turn
into fanaticism in their expressions. He turned to
Grathum.
"We can trust them. Strike off their bonds."
Grathum
eyed him uncertainly, but moved to obey.
Rod
felt a tug at his belt, and looked down.
"Papa,"
said Gregory, "will the guards allow them to
speak
to the King?"
"I'll
have to see if I can get you a job as my memory."
Rod
turned away to fumble in Fess's pack, mumbling, "We
did
bring a stylus and some paper, didn't we?"
"We
did," the robot's voice answered, "but it is at the
bottom,
under the hardtack."
"Well,
of course! I wasn't expecting a booming corre-
spondence
on this jaunt." Rod dug deep, came up with
writing
materials, and wrote out a rather informal note,
asking
that the bearer be allowed to speak with Their
Majesties.
He folded it, tucked the stylus away, and turned
to
Cordelia. "Seal, please."
The
witchlet stared at it, brow puckering in furious con-
centration.
Then she beamed, and nodded.
"All
done?" Rod tested it; the paper was sealed all around
the
edges; molecules from each half of the sheet had wan-
dered
in among the other half's. Rod grinned. "Thanks,
cabbage."
He turned to Grathum, handing him the letter.
"Present
this to the sentry. Not being able to read, he'll call
the
captain of the guard, who'll call for Sir Maris, who'll
probably
allow only two of you to come before Their
Majesties—and
even then, only when you're surrounded
by ten
of the Queen's Own Bodyguard. Don't let them
bother
you—they'll just be decoration." He pursed his lips.
"Though
I wouldn't make any sudden moves, when you're
in the
throne room..."
Grathum
bobbed his head, wide-eyed. "E'en as thou dost
say,
milord." Then he frowned. "But... milord..."
"Go
ahead." Rod waved an expansive gesture.
Grathum
still hesitated, then blurted, "Why dost thou
call
thy lass a 'cabbage?'"
"'Cause
she's got a head on her shoulders," Rod ex-
plained.
"Off with you, now."
4
The
family watched the little company march off southward.
When
they had disappeared into the woodland. Rod turned
back to
his family. "Thank you, children. I was very proud
of
you."
They
blossomed under his praise. Cordelia caught his
hand
and returned, "And / was proud of thee. Papa, that
thou
didst not lose thy temper!"
Rod
fought to keep his smile and said only, "Yes. Well,
every
little improvement counts, doesn't it?"
He
turned to sit on a convenient rock. "We could use a
little
rest, after all that excitement."
"And
food!" Geoffrey plopped himself down on the grass
in
front of Rod. "May I hunt. Papa?"
"No,"
Rod said slowly, "there are those laws against
poaching,
and this tinker disguise still seems to be useful."
"But
it doth not deceive the sorcerer and his coven,"
Magnus
said, folding himself down beside Geoffrey.
"True,
but it does seem to make the folk we encounter
more
willing to talk. Grathum said things to the tinker, that
he was
careful to hold back from the Lord High Warlock."
"Indeed,"
Gwen confirmed. "He was .so overawed that
his
true feelings did not even come into his mind, when he •
knew
thou wert noble."
48
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 49
"Which
I still don't believe," Rod noted, "but he did.
That's
what's important. So we remain a tinker family, on
the
surface."
"Then,
no hunting?" Geoffrey pouted.
"Yes,"
Rod nodded. "No."
"But
we're hungry!" Cordelia complained.
"There
is an answer to that." Gwen opened a bundle and
spread
it out. "Biscuits, cheese, apples—and good spring
water,
which Magnus may fetch."
Magnus
heaved a martyred sigh and went to fetch the
bucket.
"I
know," Rod commiserated. "It's not easy, being the
eldest."
Magnus
set the bucket down in the center of the family
ring
and scowled at it. With a sudden slosh, it filled with
water.
Rod
gazed at it, then lifted his eyes to his eldest. "I take
it you
remembered the last brook we crossed?"
Magnus
nodded, folding himself down cross-legged.
"Though
milk would be better."
"You
may not teleport it out," Rod said sternly. "How
do you
think the poor cow would feel? Besides, it'd take
too
long to cool, after Mama pasteurized it."
"She
could heat it in the cow," Cordelia offered.
"Haven't
we done that poor beast enough meanness al-
ready?"
"Rabbit
would be better," Geoffrey groused.
Gwen
shook her head. "There is not time to roast it. We
must
yet march northward a whiles this day, children."
Geoffrey
sighed, and laid a slice of cheese on a biscuit.
"Will
we cross into Romanov this night. Papa?" Magnus
asked.
"Not
if I can help it. That's one border crossing I want
to make
in daylight."
"There
are surprises enough, under the sun," Gwen
agreed.
"We need not those of the moon, also."
Cordelia
shrugged. "We know the range of witch-powers.
What
new thing could they smite us withal?"
"An
we knew of it," Gwen advised her, "'twould not be
surprise."
50
Christopher Stasheff
"Besides,"
Rod said thoughtfully, "I don't like what your
Mama
said, about that depth-hypnosis not having any feel
of the
mind that did it."
The
children all stared up at him. Magnus voiced for
them.
"What dost thou think it may be. Papa?"
But Rod
shook his head. "There are too many factors
we
don't know about."
"We
do know that the Tyrant Sorcerer is aged," Gregory
piped
up.
The
others stared at him. "What makes thee say so?"
Cordelia
demanded.
"I
heard the soldier speak thus, when he told Papa of the
battle
with Count Novgor."
"Such
as it was." Rod searched his memory, and realized
Gregory
was right. But it was such a slight reference! And
"venerable"
didn't necessarily mean "old." He glanced at
Gwen,
and found her eyes on him. He turned back to Gregory.
"Very
good, son. What else do we know?"
"That
he has gathered other witches and warlocks about
him!"
Cordelia said quickly.
"That
they are younger than he," Magnus added, "for
Grathum
did not mention age when he spoke of the warlock
Melkanth."
"He
did not say Melkanth was young, though," Gregory
objected,
"and neither he nor the soldier said aught of the
other
sorcery folk."
Magnus
clamped his jaw, and reddened. "Other than that
there
were more than a few of them—and enough to defeat
a dozen
armed men!"
"Well,
he did use the plural," Rod temporized, "and
Grathum
and Arlinson both probably would've mentioned
it, if
they'd been old."
Magnus
glanced up at his father gratefully.
"Still..."
Rod glanced at Gregory, whose face was dark-
ening
into obstinacy. "... that is something we've guessed,
not
something we know. We've got to be ready to change
that
opinion in a hurry."
Gregory's
expression lightened.
"We
know there is a crafter of witch-moss among them,"
Gwen
said slowly, "and I would presume 'tis the one we
met
with two nights agone."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 51
"Probably,"
Rod agreed, "and at least one of their witches
is good
enough at telekinesis, to come up with fireballs."
"That
doth take skill," noted Gwen, who could light both
a match
and a bam a mile off.
"And
a projective who can manage a quick hypnotic
trance
that's good enough to hold a dozen demoralized sol-
diers,"
Rod mused. "Presumably, that's the tyrant himself."
"Thou
dost guess. Papa," Gregory reminded.
Rod
grinned. "Good boy! You caught it."
"And
one among them can plan the use of all these
powers,
in such wise as to easily defeat an armed force,"
Geoffrey
said suddenly.
Rod
nodded. "Good point—and easy to miss. What was
their
strategy?"
"To
gobble up first the peasants, then the knights,"
Geoffrey's
eyes glowed. "They began with the small and
built
them into strength, then used them to catch something
larger.
They should therefore attack Duke Romanov and,
after
him, some others of the Great Lords—Hapsburg and
Tudor,
most likely, sin' that they are nearest neighbors. Then
they
might chance attack on the King and Queen, sin' that
they'll
have the Royal Lands encircled—or, if they doubt
their
own strength, they might swallow up Bourbon,
DiMedici,
and Gloucester ere they do essay King Tuan."
The
family was silent, staring at the six-year-old. Rod
reflected
that this was the child who hadn't wanted to leam
how to
read, until Rod had told him the letters were march-
ing.
"That's very good," he said softly, "very good—es-
pecially
since there wasn't much information to go on. And
I did
say strategy, when I really meant tactics."
"Oh!
The winning of that one battle?" Geoffrey shrugged.
"They
sent witch-moss monsters against the armed band,
to busy
them and afright them. Then, the whiles the mon-
sters
held their attention, the other warlocks and witches
rained
blows on them from all sides. 'Twas simple—but
'twas
enow; it did suffice."
"Hm."
Rod looked directly into the boy's eyes. "So you
don't
think much of their tactician?"
"Eh,
I did not say that. Papa! Indeed, he did just as he
should
have—used only as much force as was needed, and
when
and where it was needed. I doubt not, had Count
52
Christopher Stasheff
Novgor
proved stronger than he'd guessed, he'd have had
magical
reserves to call upon." Geoffrey shook his head.
"Nay,
I could not fault him. His battle plan in this skirmish
may
have been, as thou hast said, simple—but he may also
be
quite able to lay out excellent plans for elaborate battles."
He
shrugged. "There is no telling, as yet."
Rod
nodded slowly. "Sounds right. Any idea on the num-
ber of
subordinate warlocks and witches?"
"Four,
at the least—one to craft witch-moss, and direct
her
constructs; one to fly above, and drop rocks; two, at
least,
who did appear and disappear, jumping from place to
place
within the melee, wreaking havoc and confusion. There
may be
a fifth, who threw fireballs; and also a sixth, who
did
cast the trance spell."
"Hypnosis,"
Rod corrected.
"Hip-no-siss."
Geoffrey nodded, with intense concentra-
tion.
"As thou sayest. And, of course, there was the Tyrant-
Sorcerer,
this Alfar; it may have been he who cast the trance
spell,
which would make his lesser warlocks and witches
only
the five."
Rod
nodded. "So. We can be sure there're Alfar, and
four
subordinates—but there may be more." He checked
his
memories of Gavin Arlinson's account, but while he
was
checking, Gregory confirmed, "'Tis even as Geoffrey
doth
say. Word for word, he hath counted them."
Geoffrey
cast him a look of annoyance. "Who did ask
thee,
babe?"
Gregory's
face darkened.
"Children!"
Gwen chided. "Canst thou not allow one
another
each his due share of notice?"
Cordelia
sat up a little straighter, and looked virtuous.
Rod
leaned back on his hands, staring up at the sky.
"Well!
I didn't know we knew all that much! I expected
you
children to help out on the odd jobs—but I didn't expect
this!"
He looked down at his brood, gloating. "But—if
they've
got all that going for them—why did they worry
about
some escaping peasants? Why did they send their
brand-new
army to chase them down?"
"Why,
'tis simply said!" Geoffrey looked up, startled.
"'Twas
done so that they might not bear word to Duke
Hapsburg,
or Earl Tudor—or e'en Their Majesties!"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 53
They
were quiet again, all staring at him.
Geoffrey
looked from face to face. "But—'tis plain! Is't
not?"
"Yes,
now that you've told us," Rod answered. "But
what
bothers me, is—why doesn't Alfar want anyone to
know
what he's doing?"
"Why,
'tis even plainer! He means to conquer the Duke,
and
doth not wish any other Lord to send him aid!"
His
brothers and sister watched him, silent.
Rod
nodded, slowly. "Yes. That's what I was afraid you
were
going to say."
Count
Drulane and his lady rose, and all their folk rose
with
them. At the farthest end from their dais, the family
of
tinkers rose, too—though Gwen had to prod Geoffrey
into
putting down his trencher long enough to remember
his
manners.
"A
good night to you all, then," the Count intoned. "May
your
dreams be pleasant—and may you wake in the mom-
ing."
The
habitual phrase fell rather somberly on their ears,
considering
the tenor of the table conversation. The Count
may
have realized it; certainly, his departure through the
door
behind the dais, with his lady, was a bit brusque.
Gwen
leaned over to Rod and murmured, "Is such fear
born
only of silence?"
Rod
shrugged. "You heard what they said. The peasants
are
used to meeting Romanov peasants at the markets, and
suddenly,
they're not there. And the Count and Countess
are
used to the occasional social call—but there haven't
been
any for two. weeks, and the last one before that brought
rumors
of the Romanov peasants being upset about evil
witches."
"/
would fear," said Magnus, "if such visits stopped so
suddenly."
"Especially
if you had relatives up there," Rod agreed,
"which
most of them seem to. I mean, who else are the
knights'
daughters going to meet and marry?" He clasped
Magnus's
shoulder. "Come on, son. Let's help them clean
up."
"Geoffrey,
now!" Gwen said firmly and the six-year-old
54
Christopher Stasheff
wolfed
the last of his huge slice of bread as he stepped back
from
the table. Then he reached out and caught his wooden
cup
just as Rod and Magnus lifted the board off its trestles
and
turned it sideways, to dump the scraps onto the rushes.
"
'Tis not very cleanly. Papa," Cordelia reminded.
"I
know, dear—but when you're a guest, you do what
your
hosts do. And make no mistake—the Count and
Countess
are being very kind, to let a family of poor tinkers
spend
the night in their castle."
"Especially
sin' that their own smith doth mend their
pots,"
Magnus added, as he turned to carry the board over
to the
wall. Rod followed, and they waited their turn to
drop
their board onto the growing stack.
"It
must be that the witches have done it," the serf in
front
of them was saying to his mate. "When last I saw
Horth—mind
thou, he that is among Sir Orlan's hostlers?—
he did
say an evil warlock had come among the peasants,
demanding
that they pay him each a penny ere Midsummer."
"And
Midsummer hath come, and gone." The other peas-
ant
shook his head. "What greater mischief ha' such war-
locks
brewed, ere now?"
As they
dropped their board, Magnus looked up at Rod.
"Such
words strike greater fear into my breast than doth the
silence
itself. Papa."
"Yes,"
Rod agreed, "because it threatens us, personally.
That's
the real danger, son—and not just to us." He clasped
Magnus
around the shoulder as they went back. "The peas-
ant
reaction. Your mother and I, and Queen Catharine, with
Tuan's
help, were beginning to build up the idea that espers
could
be good guys—but one power-grabber can undo all
that,
and send the peasants out on witch-hunts again." He
broke
off, grinning at the sight of Cordelia and Geoffrey,
struggling
toward him with one of the trestles between them.
"Hold
it, you two! You're just not big enough to handle one
of
those things, yet—with just your hands, anyway!"
Cordelia
dropped her end and glared up at him, fists on
her
hips. "I'm a big lass. Papa!"
"Not
yet, you're not—and you won't be, for at least five
more
years." Under his breath. Rod added. God willing.
"But
you're a real sweetheart, to try and help. Mama needs
you,
though, to help clean a spot for our blankets."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 55
Cordelia
shuddered, and Geoffrey pointed out, "It'd be
more
pleasant outside. Papa."
"We're
after gossip, not comfort." Rod turned him around
and
patted him on his way. "Go help Mama; she needs
someone
to talk a cat into staying near us all night."
Geoffrey
balked.
"Cats
fight rats," Rod reminded.
Geoffrey's
eyes gleamed, and he scurried back toward
Gwen.
Rod
picked up his end of the trestle. "Okay, up!"
Magnus
hoisted his end, and turned toward the wall.
"E'en
an witches could conquer all ofGramarye, Papa, they
could
not hold it—against such peasant fear and hate." He
shrugged.
"We number too few."
"Watch
the personal references." Rod glanced quickly
about,
but none of the peasants were close enough to have
heard.
"Good thing none of them wants to be seen near a
tinker....
No, son, an evil esper, such as this Alfar, could
hold
power—but only by a very harsh, cruel, absolute rule."
Magnus
scowled. "'Tis as bad as witch-hunts."
"Worse,
for my purposes—because it'd stifle any chance
of
democracy on this planet. And I want Gramarye's tele-
paths
to be the communications system for an interstellar
democracy,
some day." Rod straightened, eyes widening.
"So
that's it!"
Magnus
looked up, startled. "What, Papa?"
"Where
the futurians come in—you know, the villains
who
kidnapped us all to Tir Chlis?"
Magnus's
face darkened. "I mind me of them—and of
the
peril they placed us in. But what sign of them is there
in this
coil. Papa? I see naught but an aged wizard, who
hath at
long last struck out in bitterness and sense of being
wronged."
"That's
what they want you to see. Okay, son, up onto
the
stack—heave!" They swung the sawhorse up onto the
top of the
stack, and turned away to go get the other one.
"But
if there's the likelihood of a repressive government
showing
up, there's a high probability of totalitarians from
the
future, being behind it."
Behind
his ear, a methodical voice intoned, "General-
izing
from inadequate data..."
56
Christopher Stasheff
"But
surely that is not enough sign of their presence,"
Magnus
protested, "only the harshness of Alfar's rule!"
"You've
been talking to Fess again," Rod accused. "But
keep
your eyes open, and you'll see more signs of their
hand
behind Alfar. Myself, I've been wondering about what
your
mother said—that there's no trace of a mind, behind
that
'instant' hypnosis spell Alfar used on these soldiers."
Magnus
stared in consternation. "But... Papa... how
could
that..."
"Up
with the trestle," Rod reminded, and they bent to
pick it
up, and started toward the wall again. "Think, son—
what
doesn't? Think, that is. What can do things, but doesn't
think?"
Magnus
was silent as they hoisted the trestle to the top
of the
stack. As they turned away, he guessed, "A machine?"
"You
have been talking to Fess, haven't you?" There was
a
brief, nasty buzz behind his ear. "I'd call that a good
guess."
"But
only a guess," Magnus reminded him.
"Of
course." They strolled up to Gwen where she knelt,
just
finishing spreading their blankets out over the rushes.
"Managed
to banish the vermin, dear?"
"Indeed."
She glanced at him. "Cordelia and I did think
to
gather fresh rushes the whiles we were on our way here,
so
we'll sleep sweetly enow."
Something
about the phrase caught Rod's attention. He
stared
down at the blanket, then lifted his gaze slowly to
look
deeply into Gwen's eyes.
She
tilted her chin up and turned to her sons. "And bear
thy
manners in mind, for we sleep in company, here."
The
children stared at her, then frowned at one another
in
puzzlement, then turned back to her. "Why wouldst thou
think
we might not?" Magnus asked. Geoffrey piped in,
"We're
good boys. Mama!"
"Aye,"
Gwen answered, turning to Rod, "and so must
thou
all be."
In the
middle of the night a low groan began, swelling
in
volume and bouncing back and forth between the stone
walls,
until it filled the whole hall.
Rod
shot bolt upright, panic clamoring up inside him
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 57
jarring
his brain. Rage answered, and struggled against it.
A
bluish white light filled the hall, showing all the serv-
ants
shocked upright, staring in fear and horror. Cordelia
screamed,
burying her face in Rod's midsection, and Gregory
burrowed
into Gwen's skirts.
Magnus
and Geoffrey glared truculently upward, even
as they
backed away against the wall.
Above
them all, the great hall was filled with a throng
of
pale, glowing spectres in antique gowns and ancient
armor,
all blue-white, and translucent.
And
facing the Gallowglass family.
The
male closest to them lifted an arm with the weight
of
centuries, and his voice rolled out, thundering, "Thou!
'Tis
thou who dost disturb our rest, thou and thy get! Name
thyself,
and step forth from thy craven guise!"
Gwen
laid a restraining hand on Rod's arm, but the rage
was
building, and he shrugged her off, incensed that she
should
dare to remonstrate with him. He glared up at the
ghost,
throwing his shoulders back and issuing his words
one by
one. "I am Rodney Lord Gallowglass, High Warlock
ofGramarye!
And who are you, who dares so address me?"
"I
am Arendel, first Count of Drulane!" the ghost bel-
lowed.
"'Tis in my hall thou dost stand! Wherefore hast
thou
come, and why hast thou disturbed my rest—mine,
and all
of my line's! Speak, sirrah! Now!"
The
rage surged higher. "Speak with respect to thy bet-
ters,
feeble ghost! Or from this place I shall banish thee,
to
leave thy wraith wailing in the void between worlds!"
The
ghost stared a moment, with the empty darkness of
its
eyes. Then its face creased, and broke open, and laughter
spilled
out—harsh, mocking laughter, that all the ghosts
echoed,
ringing from one to another, clamoring and sound-
ing
like brazen gongs, until all the Great Hall rang with it,
while
spectral fingers pointed at Rod.
And the
rage built to fill him, striving to master him; but
he held
himself rigid against it and, in a last attempt to
avoid
it, cried, "Fess! To me, now! In the great hall!"
"Why,
then, mannikin, work thy will!" the ghost sneered.
"Hale
me down, and grind me under! Work thy wonders!
Show us
this power thou canst employ, against ghosts!"
Steel
hooves rang on stone, and the great black horse
58
Christopher Stasheff
charged
into the hall, rearing to a halt bare inches from a
peasant
couple, who scrambled away in panic.
Arendel
turned his wrathful gaze on Fess, staring in out-
raged
anger. "What beast is this thou dost summon! Hast
thou no
shred of courtesy within thee, that thou wouldst
bring
thine horse into a lord's hall?"
"Fess,"
Rod bellowed in agony, "What are they?"
"Rrr...
Rrrodd... th-they awwrr..." Suddenly, Fess's
whole
body heaved in one great convulsion, neck whiplash-
ing;
then his head plummeted down to swing between his
fetlocks.
He stood spraddle-legged, each knee locked stiff.
"Seizure,"
Rod snapped. "They're real!"
Arendel
stared in disbelief for a moment; then he threw
back
his head, and his laughter rocked the hall. "Elf-shot!
He
summons his great aid, his model of all that is powerful
and
perfect—and 'tis elf-shot!" And his merriment rolled
forth,
to batter against Rod's ears.
Then
Rod's own natural fury broke loose, his indignation
that
anyone should mock disability, make a joke of the truest
companion
he had known from earliest memory—and that
fury
poured into the building rage to boil it over the dam
of
Rod's willed control. The red haze enveloped him, and
the
icy, insane clarity stilled his thoughts, ringing one clear
idea:
Ghosts could be exorcised. Rod bent his brows, eyes
narrowing,
and a thunderclap exploded through the hall,
crashing
outward from a short, balding man wearing spec-
tacles
and a green chasuble over a white robe. He blinked
about
him, stupefied. "I was ... What... How..."
"Welcome,
Father," Rod breathed, in a voice of dry ice.
The
priest blinked, seeking Rod out with watery eyes.
"But
I was even now saying Matins, in the monastery chapel!
How
came I here?"
"Through
my magic," Rod grated, "in response to the
ill
manners of this churlish dead lord! Exorcise him. Fa-
ther—for
his soul's barred from Heaven whiles he lingers
here!"
The
ghost roared with rage, and his fellows all echoed
him,
with screechings and roarings that made the priest
wince
and cry, '"Tis a foretaste of Hell!"
"Banish
them," Rod cried, "ere they linger to damn them-
selves!"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 59
The
priest's face firmed with resolve. '"Tis even as thou
sayest."
And he held up one palm toward the ghosts while
he
fumbled in a pocket with the other, beginning a sonorous
Latin
prayer.
Lord
Arendel shrieked, and disappeared.
With a
wave of wailing despair, the other ghosts faded.
In the
sudden, soft darkness, Magnus cried, "There!
Against
the eastern wall! Nay, stop her, seize her! Mother,
a
light, I prithee!"
Sudden
light slashed the darkness—a warm, yellow glow
from a
great ball of fire that hung just below the ceiling,
and
Magnus and Geoffrey were diving toward a woman in
a blue,
hooded cloak, who hauled out a broomstick and
leaped
onto it, soaring up through the air to leave them in
a wake
of mocking laughter. Magnus shouted in anger, and
banked
to follow her, but she arrowed straight toward the
window,
which was opened wide to the summer's night.
She
trilled laughter, crying, "Fools! Dost not know the
witches
are everywhere? Thou canst not escape Atfar's power,
nor
hope to end it! Hail the Lord Sorcerer as thy master,
ere he
doth conquer thee—for Alfar shall rule!"
With a
firecracker-pop, Gregory appeared, directly in
front
of her, thrusting a stick toward her face. It burst into
flame
at its tip. The witch shrieked and veered to the side,
plummeting
toward the open door, but Cordelia swirled in
on her
broomstick to cross the witch's path, hurling a
bucketful
of water. The fluid stretched out into a long,
slender
arrow, and splattered into the witch's face. She howled
with
rage and swirled up and around the great hall while
she
dashed the water from her eyes with one swipe of her
hand.
Magnus and Geoffrey shot after her, closing in from
either
side. At the last second, the witch clutched at a great
whorl
of an amulet that hung on her breast, cried, "Hail,
Alfar,"
and disappeared in a clap of thunder.
The
hall was silent and still.
Then a
low moan began, and spread around the outside
of the
chamber. It rolled, building toward a wail.
Magnus
hung in the center of the hall, beneath the great
fireball,
his eyes like steel. Slowly, his mouth stretched
wide.
Gwen's
voice cut like a knife blade. "Nay, Magnus! Such
60
Christopher Stasheff
words
are forbidden thee, for no gentleman may use them!"
For an
instant, shocked stillness fell again. Then one
woman
began to giggle incredulously. Another gave a little
laugh,
but another laughed with her, then another, and an-
other,
and the horror in the hall turned into full-throated
laughter—with
an hysterical edge to it, perhaps, but laugh-
ter
nonetheless.
Then
the Count of Drulane stood on the dais with his
quaking
wife behind him, gazing out about his hall silently.
One by
one, his servants and thralls saw him, and fell
silent.
When
the whole hall was quiet, the Count turned to a
waiting
servant. "Light fires, that we may thank this lady
for her
good services, and be done with her flaming light."
The
servant turned to the task, and others leaped to join
him.
The
Count turned to the priest and said gravely, "I must
thank
thee, reverend Father, for thy good offices."
The
priest bowed. "My office it was, and there was small
need to
thank me."
"Naetheless,
I do. Still, Father, I own to some concern,
for
these were the spirits of mine ancestors. Are their souls
destroyed,
then?"
"Nay,
milord." The priest smiled. "I' troth, I misdoubt
me an a
soul can be annihilated. Yet even an 'twere, 'twould
not be
now; for I saw no need for exorcism. Nay, I merely
did
bless this hall, and pray for the souls of all who have
dwelt
here, that they might find rest—which they did."
"And
I had feared thou wouldst attempt to blast them
with
power of thine own," Gwen said softly to her husband.
"How
is't thou didst think of the clergy?"
But the
rage had ebbed, and Rod was filled with guilt
and
remorse. He shrugged impatiently. "Just an odd fact."
"It
was, i' truth, for thou hast never been greatly pious.
Where
didst thou learn it?"
The
question poked through Rod's miasma; he frowned.
Where
hod he learned that ghosts could be banished by
clergy?
"Common knowledge, isn't it?" He glowered at her.
"Just
came to me, out of the blue."
"Nay,"
said little Gregory, reaching up to catch his hand.
"
'Tis not from the blue..."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 61
"Who
asked you?"
Gregory
flinched away, and self-disgust drowned Rod's
irritation.
He reached out to catch the child around the
shoulders
and jam him against a hip. "Oh, I'm sorry, son!
You
didn't deserve that!"
The
priest was still reassuring the Count. "They have
fled
back to their graves, milord—and, I hope, to their
well-earned
afterlives."
"For
some, that will be a blessing," the Count said non-
comittally.
Rod
looked up from the shame filled ashes of his wrath.
"Shall
I send you home now. Father?"
The
priest looked up, appalled, and the Count said quickly,
"Or,
an thou dost wish it. Father, we can offer thee hos-
pitality
and, when thou art rested, guardsmen and a horse,
to
escort thee south, to thy monastery."
"I
thank thee, milord," the priest said, not managing to
hide
his relief.
The
Count inclined his head. Then, slowly, he turned to
Rod;
and he spoke softly, but his words cut like fire. " 'Twas
ungentlemanly
of thee. Lord Warlock, to come, unan-
nounced
and disguised, into mine household."
Rod met
his gaze, despite the shame that permeated him.
He'd
lost his head in fear and panic, and aimed at the wrong
enemy—and
now, to top it off, the Count was right.
How
dare he be!
It
worked; he summoned up enough indignation to raise
his
chin. "Deeply do I regret the need for such deception,
milord
Count—but need there was."
"What?"
The Count frowned. "Need to wake mine an-
cestors
from their sleep?"
Rod
answered frown for frown. "Be mindful, milord—
that
raising was no work of ours. 'Twas the doing of a vile
wi- uh,
sorceress."
"Aye."
The Count seemed embarrassed. "'Tis even so,
milord;
I had forgot."
"But
the witch would not ha' been here," Geoffrey whis-
pered,
"had we not been."
"Shut
up, kid," Rod muttered.
"I
prithee, judge not all us witches by her," Gwen pleaded.
"There
be only a few such wicked ones. And, as thou hast
62 Christopher Stasheff
seen,
ever will they flee the might of the Royal Coven."
The
peasants didn't seem all that much reassured.
"Make
no mistake," Rod advised. "The Tyrant Sorcerer,
Alfar,
does send his agents out to prepare his conquests—
and, as
you've seen, he has come this far to the South
already."
He turned back to Count Drulane. "That is why
we have
come in disguise—to leam all we can of Alfar's
doings."
The
Count gazed at him for several seconds, then nodded
slowly.
"Aye, I am captain enough to understand the need
of
that."
"I
thank you for your understanding," Rod gave him a
slight
bow. "But we must not trouble your keep further this
night.
The witch has fled, and we have learned all that we
can."
Especially now that our cover's blown. "We will thank
you for
your hospitality, and take our leave."
The
count returned the bow, not quite managing to hide
his
relief.
Rod
smiled, turned, and marched toward the door.
Magnus
blinked, then jumped to follow his father, shoul-
ders
squared and chin high.
The
other children looked about them, startled, then hur-
ried
after Magnus, with Gwen shooing them along.
The
peasants pressed back, making way for them.
Rod
stopped by Fess and reached under the saddle for
the
reset switch. He threw it, and the robot's head came up
slowly.
Rod caught the reins and led the black horse away
with
them.
They
came out into the open air, and Geoffrey heaved a
sigh of
relief.
"Clean!"
Cordelia gasped.
Rod was
silent for two paces; then he nodded. "Yes. You
did
want to sleep outdoors, didn't you?"
"Crickets
be more musical than snores," Magnus assured
him.
"And
if I must needs sleep with animals, I had liefer
they be
large enough to see clearly." Gwen brushed at her
skirts.
"Faugh!"
"No
argument there," Rod assured her. "Come on; we'll
just go
a quarter-mile or so past the gate, and bed down for
the
rest of the night."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 63
They
passed through the gatehouse, across the draw-
bridge,
and out into the night.
After a
few paces. Rod let a sigh explode out. "Now!
Next
time you disagree with me, Gregory, please wait until
we're
alone! Because you never know, I might be right."
"Yes,
Papa," the little boy said, in a little voice.
Rod
frowned. "I don't mean to be hard, son—but there's
a very
good chance that, if that witch hadn't been there to
harry
us, there might've been another one of Alfar's crew,
to try
to spy out the territory and spread rumors that'd worry
the
folk. I mean, all that worried dinner-table talk was
probably
genuine—but it is strangely convenient for Alfar,
isn't
it?"
Gregory
was silent.
To
cover his guilt feelings, Rod turned to Fess, muttering,
"Recovered,
Circuit Rider?"
"Nearly,"
answered the robot's voice. "I had never en-
countered
convincing evidence of the existence of a me-
dium,
before this night."
"Well,
maybe you still haven't," Rod mused.
"Who
hath not what?" Magnus looked up with a frown.
"Oh!
Thou didst speak with Fess." He nodded, satisfied;
the
children had long ago learned that they could not hear
Pess's
thoughts, unless he wanted them to.
"Mayhap
he still hath not what?" Cordelia asked.
"Seen
a medium," Rod explained, "a person who can
talk to
ghosts, or make them appear."
"Oh."
Cordelia nodded. "Thou speakest aright. Papa. He
hath
not."
"Oh,
really? Those ghosts looked genuine, to me."
"They
were not," Magnus assured him. "They had no
greater
thought than a mirror."
Rod
frowned. "Odd simile."
"Yet
'tis apt," Gwen affirmed. "They had no true thoughts
of
their own; they mimicked what was there laid down for
them."
"Laid
down?" Rod still frowned. "By whom?"
"By
the witch," Magnus explained. "She did call up the
memories
laid in the stones, and throw them out to us."
Rod
stared. After a few seconds, he said, "What?"
"Some
witches there be, milord," Gwen explained, "who
64
Christopher Stasheff
can lay
a hand on a ring, and gain the full sense of the
person
who wore it, even to the pattern of his or her thoughts."
Rod
gazed off into space. "Yeah... I think I've heard
of
that. They call it 'psychometery,' don't they?"
Gwen
shrugged. "I know not, my lord; such are the words
of thy
folk, not ours."
'"Tis
all one," Cordelia added.
"Thanks
for the lesson," Rod said sourly. "But how did
you
know about this, Magnus?"
The boy
reddened. "I did not wish to trouble thee. Papa..."
"Oh,
really?" Rod looked the question at Gwen; she
shook
her head. "Didn't want to worry Mama either, I
gather.
Which is fine, until we find out about it. From now
on,
we'll always be worried—that you've discovered a new
way to
use your power, and are trying dangerous experi-
ments
without letting us know."
Magnus
looked up, startled. "I had not meant..."
"I
know. So don't. Worry me, son—that's what I'm here
for."
For a second, he wondered if that was truer than he
knew.
Magnus
sighed. "Well enough, then. I have found thoughts
in
things people have used. Papa."
Rod
nodded. "Let Mama be near next time you experi-
ment
with it, okay? So much for the 'calling up' part. I take
it the
'throwing out' is talking about projective telepathy?"
"By
that," Gwen explained to the children, "he doth mean
a witch
or warlock who can send their thoughts out to folk
who
have not witch power."
"Oh!"
Cordelia nodded. "Such she was. Papa. What she
saw in
her mind, she could make others see, also."
Rod
nodded. "So we weren't seeing real ghosts—just
reflections
of the memories 'recorded' in the rocks of that
hall...
uh, Gwen?"
"Aye,
my lord?"
"Remember
those ghosts we met, way back when, in
Castle
Loguire?"
"Aye,
my lord. Mayhap they were, at first, raised in just
such a
manner."
"Why
the 'at first'?"
"Why,
for that they endured after the witch who raised
them—long
after, by accounts."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 65
"Oh,
yeah." Rod nodded. "That's right—that castle was
supposed
to have been haunted for a century or two, wasn't
it?"
He glared at the sudden gleam in Magnus's eye. "Don't
go
trying any surprise visits. Those ghosts weren't harm-
less."
"Save
for thy father." Gwen couldn't resist it.
Rod
gave her a glower. "That was diplomacy, not nec-
romancy.
And, come to think of it, this witch of Alfar's
wasn't
too bad at persuasion, herself."
"Aye,"
Gwen agreed. "Her words, when we had un-
masked
her, were meant more for Count Drulane and his
folk,
than they were for us."
"Trying
to boil up all the old fears of witches, to boost
their
Reign of Terror," Rod growled. "Never mind what the
peasants
might do to the witches in the rest of the kingdom."
"Nay,
do mind it!" Gregory cried. "For if they take fright,
and are
hurted enough to become bitter and hateful, might
they
not flee to Alfar, and swell his strength?"
Rod
thought about it, then slowly nodded. "I hate to
admit
it, son, but you're right." He turned a somber gaze
on
Gwen, then dropped his gaze to look at his children, one
at a
time.
"What
thoughts dost thou engender, husband?" Gwen
asked
softly.
Rod
lifted his gaze to her again. "This mission has def-
initely
turned dangerous, darling. Time for you and the
children
to go home."
The
night was silent for a moment. Then: " 'Tis not fair!"
Cordelia
cried.
"Only
now doth it gain interest!" Gregory protested.
"Nonetheless..."
Rod began.
"'Tis
the tactics of magic!" Geoffrey cried. "Assuredly,
Papa,
thou'lt not deny me the chance to witness such!"
"You're
apt to get hurt!" Rod snapped. "And preventing
that,
is my main job in life!"
"Then
wither wouldst thou be, without us?" Magnus
demanded,
catching at his sleeve.
"Lonely,"
Rod snapped, "but effective. A lot more ef-
fective
than if I'm worrying about you while I'm in the
middle
of a fight!"
"Yet
thou hast no need to fear for us!" Cordelia cried.
66
Christopher Stasheff
"Send
an army 'gainst us, ere thou dost fear!" Geoffrey
howled.
"Yeah."
Rod's jaw tightened. "You'd just love to have
an army
to box with, wouldn't you? Unfortunately, it just
might
have a stronger arm than you, and..."
"Husband."
Gwen's low voice bored through his building
anger.
"Thou didst say, even now, that thou didst protect
them."
Rod's
head snapped up, indignation flaring. "Are you
implying...
?"
But
Gwen was already talking to the children, rapidly.
"Thy
father has said there is danger in this; and if thou dost
believe
thyselves strong, only think—how wouldst thou
fare if
thou didst confront a grown warlock, at the height
of his
powers, an thou wert alone? If thou hadst been split
away
from thy brothers and sister—how then?"
Geoffrey
started to answer.
Gwen
pressed a hand over his mouth. "Nay, do think
carefully
ere thou dost speak! There is a thrill of pleasure
in it,
aye—but only till thou dost truly fear! Then all of
thy joy
in it doth die a-boming." Her gaze came up to meet
Rod's.
"'Tis even as thy father doth know, for he hath been
in
peril. Nay, if he saith 'tis dangerous, then assuredly the
danger
could strike deepest fear in thee, could kill thee."
The
children stared up at her gravely, thinking they under-
stood.
"Yet,
husband, be mindful." Gwen looked straight into
Rod's
eyes. "The foes Alfar hath sent against us thus far,
have
scarce begun to tax our powers. Were Alfar to send
all his
force against us, 'twould be great danger, aye; but I
misdoubt
me an he would risk more than a moiety of his
force,
when he knoweth not the true depth or breadth of
our
power. Were he to send an army, in truth, we ought
then to
flee; yet if he sends only witches, the High Warlock
and his
family have little to fear."
"Only
enough to make it fun, eh?" Rod managed a harsh
smile.
"I
could not deny it," Gwen admitted. " 'Tis but exercise,
for a
brood such as ours."
"Yes..."
Rod frowned. "He's testing us, isn't he?"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 67
Geoffrey
spun around, wide-eyed. "Papa! Wherefore did
I not
see that?"
"Experience,"
Rod assured him. "But that means the
attacks
will become stronger, until he thinks he knows our
limits.
Then he'll hit us with twice the force he thinks he
needs,
just to make sure."
Geoffrey
had a faraway look in his eyes. "Therefore...
it doth
behoove us to use as little power as we must, to
defeat
them."
Rod
nodded. "Which we haven't exactly been doing, so
far."
"We
may stay then?" Cordelia cried, jumping up and
down.
Rod
fixed them all with a glare.
They
pulled themselves into line, hands clasped in front
of
them, heads bowed a little—but looking up at him.
"Do
I have your absolute promise that you'll all go right
home,
without any argument, the next time I say to?"
"Oh,
yes. Papa, yes!" they cried. "We will flee, we will
fly!"
Cordelia avowed.
"We
wouldn't want to stay, if this sorcerer really were
dangerous.
Papa," Magnus assured him.
"But
you don't believe he could be, eh?" Rod fixed his
eldest
with a glare.
"Well..."
"That's
all right." Rod held up a palm. "I've got your
promises.
It's okay—you're still on board, at least until the
next
attack. And if it's too close to being dangerous, home
you
go!"
"Home,"
they averred.
"Still
don't believe me, eh?" Rod looked up at Gwen.
"How
about you? Promise?"
"I
shall heed thee as strongly as ever I have done, my
lord,"
she said firmly.
"That's
what I was afraid of," Rod sighed. "Well, I sup-
pose
I'll have to be content with that. C'mon kids, let's set
up
camp."
Gwen
threw her head back with a happy sigh. "Ah, 'tis
good to
be aloft again."
68
Christopher Stasheff
"I'm
glad for you." Rod gripped the broomstick tighter
and
swallowed heavily. His idea of flying was inside a nice,
warm
spaceship, with a lounge chair and an autobar. "This
shooting
around on a broomstick is strictly for the birds.
On
second thought, strike that—even the birds wouldn't
touch
it."
"Oh,
certes, they would. Papa." Cordelia shot up along-
side,
matching velocities. A robin sat on the tip of her
broomstick,
chirping cheerily.
Rod
gave the bird a jaundiced glance. "Odd friends you're
making,
up here."
Gregory
shot past them, flipping over onto his back to
look
back and wave bye-bye.
"Show-off,"
Rod growled, but his heart sang at the sight
of a
smile on the face of his sober little son. It was good
to see
him be a child again.
"Regard
thy way," Gwen called after him. Gregory nod-
ded
cheerfully and flipped over onto his tummy again.
Magnus
swung up alongside. "I thank thee. Papa! We
are
free again!"
"Delighted."
Rod tried to mean it. "Might as well, since
Alfar
knows who we really are, anyway."
"Yonder."
Magnus pointed ahead. Rod looked up, and
saw a
line of hills, blued by distance. Magnus informed
him,
"'Tis the Titans' Rampart."
"The
Romanov boundary." Rod felt his stomach suddenly
grow
hollow. "Somehow, I find myself less than eager to
cross
it."
"But
'twill be exciting. Papa!" Geoffrey cried, flying up
on his
port side.
"That's
a kind of excitement I think I can live without.
Besides,
I'm hungry. Darling, what do you say we find a
town
large enough to have an inn, this side of the boundary?"
"I
misdoubt me an they'd welcome folk so poorly dressed
as we,
my lord."
"Yeah,
but they'd let us sit in the innyard, if we buy our
food
with real silver."
"Hot
sausage!" Geoffrey cried.
"Stew!"
Magnus caroled.
"Toasted
cheese!" Cordelia exulted.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 69
"Hungry
children," Gwen sighed. "Well, husband, an
thou
dost wish it."
"Great.
Land us in a nice little copse, about half a mile
out,
will you? Tinkers they might accept in the innyard, but
not if
they use it for a landing strip." He stared ahead
hungrily.
"Terra firma!"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 71
5
As they
came into the town, Cordelia gave a happy little
sigh.
"Tis so nice that the nasty old sorcerer knows we
come
toward him!"
"Oh,
indeed yes," Rod muttered. "This way, he can have
a
wonderful reception all ready for us! Why do you like it,
dear?
Because you can fly?"
"Oh,
aye!"
"I
dislike disguise. Papa," Geoffrey explained.
Rod
gave his son a measuring stare. "Yes, I suppose you
would—even
when you see it's necessary."
"As
'tis, I know," the little boy sighed. "Yet doth it
trouble
me. Papa."
"I
understand." Rod frowned. "What bothers me, is trying
to
figure out how Alfar saw through our disguises."
The
family walked on in brooding silence—for a few
seconds.
Then Gwen said," 'Tis widely known that the High
Warlock
doth have a wife, and four baims—and that one
is a
lass, and the other three lads."
Rod
scowled. "What are you suggesting—that they had
their
illusionist attack every family who came North?" His
gaze
wandered. "Of course, I suppose there aren't that many
families
coming North... and the kids' ages are pretty much
a
matter of public record..."
70
"It
doth seem unlikely," Gwen admitted.
"And
therefore must be seriously considered. But we
would
have heard about it, wouldn't we? Monsters, attack-
ing
families..."
"Not
if the witch and her monsters won out," Geoffrey
pointed
out.
"But
no sooner would they have attacked, than the witch
would
have seen the families had no magical powers!"
Cordelia
protested. "Surely she would then have called off
her
monsters."
Geoffrey's
eyes turned to steel. "She would not—if she
wished
to be certain no word reached the King."
"That
does seem to be their strategy," Rod agreed.
"But—to
kill bairns?" Cordelia gasped.
"They
are not nice people," Rod grated.
The
children were silent for a few minutes, digesting an
unpleasant
realization. Finally, Gregory pointed out, "We
do not
know that. Papa."
"No,
but I wouldn't put it past them. Still, it does seem
a
little extravagant."
"Mayhap
they did post sentries," Geoffrey suggested.
Rod
nodded. "Yes, well, that's the most likely way—
but
what kind of sentries? I mean, we haven't seen any
soldiers
standing around in Alfar's livery. So his sentries
must be
disguised, if he has them. And I suppose they'd
have to
know what we looked like...."
"Eh,
no!" Magnus cried, grabbing Rod's wrist. "They
need
only be..."
"Telepaths!"
Rod knocked his forehead with the heel of
his
hand. "Of course! Just station mind readers on each of
the
main roads—and maybe even out in the pastures, if
you're
the suspicious type—and they'd be almost impos-
sible
to spot! They could be anybody—the farmer who
passes
in his cart, the varlet in the kitchens, the merchant
and his
draymen..."
The
children looked around them, suddenly alert.
"...
and they'd be almost impossible to spot," Rod fin-
ished,
"since all they have to do is sit there, with their minds
wide
open for every stray thought!"
"We
could have masked our minds," Geoffrey mused.
72
Christopher Stasheff
"Yes,
but we didn't." Rod shook his head. "Besides, it's
not as
easy as it sounds. You're all beginning to get pretty
good at
it..." He caught Gwen's glance. "... every time
you're
doing something you don't want Mama and me to
know
about."
The
children exchanged quick, guilty glances.
"Of
course. Mama and I are getting even better at probing
behind
the masks," Rod went on, "so I suppose it's very
good
training for all of us. In fact... that might not be a
bad
idea." He flashed a grin at each of them. "Start poking
around
inside minds here and there, kids."
Instantly,
all four faces turned blank, their eyes losing
focus.
"No,
no! Not now! I mean, if they have been listening
to us,
they'll have heard us, and just wiped their minds and
started
thinking disguise thoughts! You've got to catch them
when
they're not ready, take them by surprise. Listen and
probe
for them whenever you just happen to think of it, at
odd
moments."
"But
will they not always be masked to us. Papa?"
Cordelia
protested.
"Not
when they're trying to listen to your thoughts," Rod
explained.
"They can't do both at the same time—mask
and
listen. You've tried it yourselves—you know."
This
time, the glance the kids exchanged was startled—
and
worried. Just how much did Daddy know, that they
didn't
know he knew?
"Try
to catch them unaware," Rod urged.
The
children sighed philosophically.
"I
know, I know," Rod growled, "this unpredictable
Daddy!
First he tells you to do it, then he tells you not to!
So
balance it—sometimes you do it, and sometimes you
don't."
He looked up. "Gee, that's a nice looking horse,
up
there. I think I'll steal it."
The
children gasped with shock, and looked—and gave
their
father a look of disgust. "Thou canst not steal him,
Papa,"
Gregory said sternly. "He is already thine."
"Makes
it more convenient that way, doesn't it?" Under
his
breath. Rod muttered, "Nice of you to come ahead to
meet
us. Old Iron. How about I ride you, on the next leg
of the
trip?"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 73
"Motion
sickness. Rod?"
But it
was Gwen and Cordelia who rode, at least as far
as the
inn, and the innkeeper was very obliging—once Rod
caught
his attention.
It
wasn't easy. Rod left the family at the door and stepped
inside,
bracing himself for an unpleasant scene. He saw a
tall,
wiry man with a stained apron tied around his waist,
setting
a double handful of mugs on a table and collecting
coppers
from the diners. As he turned away from the table,
his
gaze fell on Rod. "Be off with you," he ordered, but
he
didn't even stop turning. "We've no alms to give." By
the
time he finished the sentence, he was facing the kitchen
again,
and had started walking.
"I've
got money!" Rod called.
The man
kept on walking.
Rod
dodged around him and leaped into his path, shoving
his
purse under the innkeeper's nose and yanking it open.
The man
stopped, frowning. Slowly, his eyes focused on
the
purse.
Rod
shook a few coins out onto his palm. "See? Silver.
The
real thing."
The
innkeeper scowled at the coins as though they were
vermin.
Then his expression lightened to musing, and he
pinched
up one of the coins, held it in front of his nose to
stare
at it as though it were some new variety of bug, then
methodically
set it between his teeth and bit.
Rod
couldn't resist. "Hors d'oeuvres?"
'"Tis
silver." The innkeeper seemed puzzled.
"Genuine,"
Rod agreed.
The man
focused on Rod. "What of it?"
Rod
just stared at him for a second. "We'd like something
to
eat."
"We?"
The innkeeper turned his head from side to side,
inspecting
the walls and comers.
"My
wife and children," Rod explained. "I didn't think
you'd
want us inside."
The
innkeeper thought that one over for a while, then
nodded,
frowning. Rod wondered how the man ever man-
aged to
make a profit. Finally, the innkeeper spoke. "Wise."
He kept
nodding. "Wise." Then he focused on Rod again.
"And
what food dost thou wish?"
74
Christopher Stasheff
"Oh,
we're not choosy. A big bowl of stew, a plateful
of
sausage, a couple of loaves of bread, a pitcher of milk,
and a
pitcher of ale should do us. Oh, and of course, six
empty
bowls. And six spoons."
The
innkeeper nodded judiciously. "Stew, sausage, bread,
milk,
and ale." He turned away, still nodding. "Stew, sau-
sage,
bread, milk, and ale." He headed for the kitchens,
repeating
the formula again and again.
Rod
watched him go, shaking his head. Then he turned
away to
find Gwen and the kids.
He
found them sitting under an old, wide oak tree with
a huge
spread of leaves. "Will they have us, husband?"
Gwen
didn't really sound as though she cared.
"Oh,
yeah." Rod folded a leg under him and sat down
beside
her, leaning back against the trunk. "He was very
obliging,
once he tasted our silver and found out it wasn't
pewter."
"What
troubles thee, then?"
"Frankly,
my dear, he didn't really give a d-" Rod glanced
at the
eager faces around him, and finished, "... dam."
"Assuredly,
Tudor doth lack in gallantry," said a large
man,
walking into the inn with a companion.
"Aye;
it doth pain me to say it, but our noble Earl hath
ever
been clutch-fisted," answered his companion. "This
sorcerer
Alfar, now—all one doth hear of him, doth confirm
his
generosity."
They
passed on into the inn. Rod sat frozen, staring into
space.
Magnus
put it into words for him. "Do they speak against
their
own lord?"
"They
do," Gwen whispered, eyes huge.
"And
in public!" Rod was flabbergasted. "I mean, peas-
ants
have spoken against their rulers before—but never out
in the
open, where a spy might overhear them. For all they
know,
we could be..." He ran out of words.
"Yet
the lord would have to be greatly wicked, for his
own
folk to complain of him!" Cordelia cried. "Could they
break
faith with him so easily?"
"Not
ordinarily," Rod said grimly. "But we didn't come
up here
because things were normal."
A maid
came ambling up to them, bearing a tray of food.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 75
Her
face was smudged, and her apron was greasy—from
the
scullery. Rod guessed. He braced himself for the con-
tempt
he'd grown used to from the peasants, and reminded
himself
that everybody had to have somebody they could
look
down on. Maybe that was what they really needed
tinkers
for.
But the
maid only held the tray down where they could
reach
it, shaking her head and marvelling, "Tinkers! Why
doth
the master spare good food for tinkers?"
Rod
took a plate warily, and sniffed at it. A delighted
grin
spread over his face. "Hey! It is good!"
"May
I?" Magnus sat still, with his hands in his lap. So
did the
other children, but their eyes fairly devoured the
tray.
"Why...
certes." The scullery maid seemed surprised
by
their politeness.
Magnus
seized a bowl. "May I?" Cordelia cried, and the
younger
two chorused, "May I?" after her.
"Certes,"
the wench said, blinking, and three little hands
snatched
at bowls.
Rod
handed the plate to Gwen and lifted down a huge
bowl of
stew, then the pitchers. "Take your cups, children."
Gwen
scooped up the remaining two flagons, and the spoons.
The
kitchen wench straightened, letting one edge of the
tray
fall. A furrow wrinkled between her eyebrows. "Strange
tinkers
ye be."
She was
trying to think. Rod realized—and she'd have
been
trying very hard, if some mental lethargy hadn't pre-
vented
her. "Still wondering why your master is serving us
more
than kitchen scraps?"
Enlightenment
crept over her face. "Aye. That is what
I be
thinking."
"Best
of reasons," Rod assured her. "We paid in silver."
She
lifted her head slowly, mouth opening into a round.
"Oh.
Aye, I see." And she turned away, still nodding, as
she
began to amble back to the kitchen.
"Why
doth she not ask how mere tinkers came by silver
money.
Papa?" Magnus watched her go.
"I
expect she'll think that one up just as she gets to the
kitchen...."
"Why
is she so slow. Papa?" Cordelia seemed concerned.
76
Christopher Stasheff
Rod
shook his head. "Not just her, honey. That's what
the
innkeeper was like, too." He gazed after the scullery
maid,
frowning.
Two men
in brocaded surcoats with grayed temples
strolled
past them toward the inn door. "Nay, but our Earl
doth
seek to rule all our trade," the one protested. "Mark
my
words, ere long he will tell to us which goods we may
not
sell, for that he doth grant patents on them to those
merchants
who toady to him."
"Aye,
and will belike tax the half of our profit," the other
agreed,
but he spoke without heat, almost without caring.
They
passed on into the inn, leaving Rod rigid in their
wake.
"That is the most blatant lie I've heard since I came
here!
Earl Tudor is so laissez-faire-mmded, you'd almost
think
he just doesn't care!"
"Folk
will believe any rumor," Gwen offered.
"Yeah,
but businessmen check them out—and those two
were
merchants. If they stray too far from the facts, they
go
bankrupt."
A
string of donkeys plodded into the innyard, heads
hanging
low, weary from their heavy packs. Their drovers
bawled
the last few orders at them, as the inn's hostlers
strolled
past the Gallowglass family toward the donkeys,
chatting.
"They say the sorcerer Alfar is a fair-minded man."
"Aye,
and generous withal. Those who come under his
sway, I
hear, need never be anxious for food or drink."
The
first shook his head, sadly. "Our Earl Tudor doth
care
little for the poor folk."
"Are
they crazy?" Rod hissed. "Tudor is practically a
welfare
state!"
"'Tis
e'en as thou dost say," the second mused. "Yet at
the
least, our Earl doth not tax his peasants into rags and
naught
for fare but bread and water, as Duke Romanov
doth."
"Oh,
come on, now!" Rod fumed. "Nobody ever claimed
Romanov
was a walking charity—but at least he realizes
the
peasants can't produce if they're starving."
But
Gregory had a faraway look in his eyes. "Papa—I
mislike
the feel of their minds."
Gwen
stopped ladling stew and gazed off into space. She
nodded,
slowly. "There is summat there..." Then her eyes
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 77
widened.
"Husband—it doth press on me, within mine
head!"
Instantly,
the children all gazed off into space.
"Hey!"
Rod barked in alarm. He clapped his hands and
snapped,
"Wake up! If there is something messing with
people's
minds here, it could be dangerous!"
They
all started, blinking, then focused on their father.
'"Tis
as Mama doth say. Papa," Magnus reported. "Some-
thing
doth press upon the minds of all the people here—
and at
ours, too. Only, with us, it cannot enter."
"Then
it knows all it really needs to know about us,
doesn't
it?" Rod growled. He frowned, and shrugged. "On
the
other hand, it already did. Here, I've got to have a feel
of
this."
It
wasn't as easy for him as it was for Gwen and the
kids.
They'd grown up with extrasensory power; they could
read
minds as easily as they listened for birdsongs. But
Rod's
dormant powers had just been unlocked three years
ago. He
had to close his eyes, concentrating on the image
of a blank,
gray wall, letting his thoughts die down, and
cease.
Then, when other people's thoughts had begun to
come
into his mind, he could open his eyes again, and see
while
he mind read.
But he
didn't have to look about him this time. He could
feel it,
before he even heard another person's thoughts.
When he
did, he realized that the thoughts resonated per-
fectly
with the pressure-current. It was a flowing wave,
rocking,
soothing, lulling; but modulated on that lethargic
mental
massage was a feeling of vague unease and suspi-
cion—and
riding within that modulation, as a sort of har-
monic,
was the central conviction that the sorcerer Alfar
could
make all things right.
Rod
opened his eyes, to find his whole family staring at
him—and
for the first time on this trip, fear shadowed the
children's
faces.
Rage
hit, hot and strong. Rod's whole nervous system
flamed
with it, and his hands twitched, aching for the throat
of
whatever it was that had threatened his children.
"Nay,
husband." Gwen reached out and caught his hand.
"We
need thy wisdom now, not thy mayhem."
He
resented her touch; it pushed his anger higher. But
78
Christopher Stasheff
he
heeded her words, and concentrated on the feel of that
beloved
hand, whose caresses had brought him so much of
comfort
and delight. He let it anchor him, remembering
how his
rage had made him do foolhardy things, how his
wrath
had played into the hands of the enemy. He took slow,
deep
breaths, trying to remember that he was really more
dangerous
when he was calm, trying to regain the harmony
of his
emotions. He concentrated on his shoulders, relaxing
them
deliberately, then his back, then his upper arms, then
his
forearms, then his hands. Anger wouldn't help anybody
now;
anger would only destroy—everything but the enemy.
He
shivered as he felt the rage loosen, and drain away; then
he
swallowed, and closed his eyes, nodding. "I'm... all
right,
now. Thanks, darling. Just... be careful about grab-
bing me
when I'm like that, okay?"
"I
will, my lord." She released him, but held his gaze
with
her own.
"Okay."
He took a deep breath, and looked up at the
children.
"You know what hypnosis is."
"Aye,
Papa." They stared at him, round-eyed.
"Well,
that's what we're facing." Rod's lips drew back
into a
thin, tight line. "Somebody's sending out a mental
broadcast
that's putting everybody's conscious minds asleep.
This
whole town is in the early stages of mass hypnosis."
The
children stared, appalled.
Rod
nodded. "Someone, or something, up there, is a
heck of
a lot more powerful a projective telepath, than we've
ever
dreamed of."
"But
it hath not the feel of a person's mind, my lord!"
Gwen
protested. "Oh, aye, the thoughts themselves do—
but
that lulling, that pressure that doth soothe into mind-
lessness—'tis
only power, without a mind to engender it!"
Rod had
a brief, lurid memory of the genetically altered
chimpanzee
he'd had to fight some years ago. Actually, it
was its
power he'd had to fight; the poor beast had no mind
of its
own. The futurians, who were continually trying to
conquer
Gramarye, had just used it as a converter, trans-
forming
minute currents of electricity into psionic power-
blasts
that could stun a whole army. When they'd finally
found
the chimp, it had been one of the ugliest, most obscene
things
he'd ever seen—and one of the most pitiable. Rod
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 79
shuddered,
and looked into his wife's eyes. "I don't know
what it
is—but I don't like the climate. Come on—eat up,
and
let's go."
They
turned back to their food, with relief. But after a
bit,
Cordelia looked up. "Not hungry. Papa."
"I
know the feeling," Rod growled, "but you will be.
Choke
down at least one bowlful, will you?" He turned to
Gwen.
"Let's take the bread and sausage along."
She
nodded, and began to wrap the food in his hand-
kerchief.
Rod
turned back to his children—and frowned. There
was
something wrong, some flaw in their disguise...
Then he
found it. "Don't forget to bicker a little, children.
It's
not normal, to go through a whole lunch without being
naughty."
They
passed the last house at the edge of the village.
Rod
muttered, "Not yet, kids. Another hundred yards; then
we're
safe."
For a
moment, Geoffrey looked as though he were going
to
protest. Then he squared his shoulders like his siblings,
gritted
his teeth, and plowed on for another three hundred
feet.
Then Rod stopped. "Okay. Now!"
With
one voice, the whole family expelled a huge sigh
of
relief. Cordelia began to tremble. "Papa—'tis horrid!"
Gwen
reached to catch her up, but Rod beat her to it.
He
swept the little girl into his arms, stopping her shuddering
with a
bear hug. "I know, I know, baby. But be brave—
there'll
be worse than this, before we're done with Alfar."
Or he's
done with us; the thought fleeted through his mind,
but he
helped it fleet on out; a father whose children could
read
minds couldn't afford defeatist thinking. Talk about
thought
control.... Rod cast an appealing glance over
Cordelia's
shoulder, at Gwen. "Don't you think it's time
for you
folks to go home now?"
Gwen's
chin firmed and lifted. Below her, three smaller
chins
repeated the movement. "Nay, my lord," she said
firmly.
"'Tis eerie, and doth make one's flesh to creep—
yet for
us, there is, as yet, no greater danger than we saw
last
night, and thou mayest yet have need of our magics."
"I
can't deny that last part," Rod sighed, "and I suppose
80
Christopher Stasheff
you're
right—that village may have been nasty, but it wasn't
any
more dangerous than it was last night. Okay—we go
on as a
family."
The
boys broke into broad smiles, and Cordelia sat up
in
Rod's arms and clapped her hands together. Rod set her
down,
set his fists on his hips, and surveyed his children
with a
stem eye. "You do realize what's going on back
there,
don't you?"
They
all nodded, and Magnus said, "Aye, Papa." Geoffrey
explained,
"Alfar doth prepare the town for conquest."
Rod
nodded, his gaze on his second son. "How will he
take
them?"
The boy
shrugged. "In peace. He will march in, and they
will
acclaim him as their friend and master, and bow to
him—and
all of this without a ever a drop of blood shed."
There
was a definite note of admiration in his voice. Rod
shook
his head. "Good analysis—but be careful, son. Don't
start
thinking that ability implies goodness."
"Oh,
nay. Papa! Ne'er could I think so! He is a worthy
enemy—but
that's just to say, he would not be worthy an
he were
not able; but he would not be an enemy were he
not
evil."
Rod
took a deep breath and stilled, with his mouth open,
before
he said, "We-e-e-11... there are enemies who might
not be
really evil—they'd just be trying to get the same
thing
you're trying to get."
But
Geoffrey shook his head firmly. "Nay, Papa. Such
be
rivals, not enemies."
Rod
stilled with his mouth open again. Then he shrugged.
"Okay—as
long as you make the distinction." He took a
deep
breath, looking around at his family. "So. I think we've
got a better
idea, now, about how Alfar works. First he
takes
over most of the population with long-range hypnosis.
Then he
sends his minions in to intimidate anybody who
didn't
hypnotize easily."
"There
be such. Papa?" Cordelia asked in surprise.
Rod nodded.
"Oh, yes, dear. That particular kind of
magic
isn't exactly foolproof; there'll always be a few peo-
ple who
aren't terribly open to letting somebody else take
over
their minds—I hope."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 81
"And
there be those who will not bow to him from fear,
either,"
Geoffrey said stoutly.
"Oh,
yes. And if any of those happen to be knights, or
lords,
and march against him with their men-at-arms—by
the
time they get to Alfar, he'll have most of the soldiers
convinced
they don't want to win."
"Aye.
'Tis the way of it." Geoffrey looked up at his
father
with a glow of pride.
"Thanks,
son." Rod smiled, amused. "Just adding things
up."
Then his smile faded. "But what the heck kind of
projective
telepath does he have, that can reach out over a
hundred
miles to hypnotize a whole village?"
They
set up camp, with trenches for beds and pine boughs
for
mattresses. The kids rolled up in their blankets, and
were
instantly asleep—at. least, as far as Rod could see.
He didn't
trust them. "What child is this who, laid to
rest,
sleeps?" he asked Gwen.
She
gazed off into space for a moment, listening with
her
mind. He decided to try it, himself, so he closed his
eyes
and blanked his mind, envying the ease with which
she did
it. After a few seconds, he began to hear the chil-
dren's
low, excited, mental conversation. He rolled his eyes
up in
exasperation and started to get up—but Gwen caught
his
arm. "Nay, my lord. Let them speak with one another,
I
prithee; 'twill lull them to sleep."
"Well..."
Rod glanced back at her.
"Yet
what will lull us?" she murmured.
He
stared down at her, drinking in her beauty. Her fem-
ininity
hit him with physical force, and he dropped back
down
beside her, one arm spread out in return invitation.
"I'm
sure I'll think of something, dear—but it takes some
creativity,
when the kids are watching."
She
turned her head to the side, watching him out of the
comers
of her eyes. "Their lids are closed."
"But
not their minds." Rod pressed a finger over her lips.
"Hush
up, temptress, or I'll put you back in your teapot."
"And
what wilt thou do with me, once thou hast me
there?"
she purred, nestling up against him.
The
contact sent a current coursing through him. His
82 Christopher
Stasheff
breath
hissed in. "I said a teapot, not a pumpkin shell!"
He
reached out to caress her gently, and it was her turn
to
gasp. He breathed into her ear, "Just wait till they fall
asleep...."
"Beshrew
me! But they have only now waked from sev-
eral
hours' rest!" Gwen gazed up at him forlornly.
"Hmm!"
Rod frowned. "Hadn't thought of that..."
"Aye
di me!" Gwen sighed, snuggling a little closer.
"E'en
so, the comfort of thy presence will aid me greatly,
my
lord."
"Fine—now
that you've made sure / won't sleep!"
"Yet
must not a husbandman be ever vigilant?" she mur-
mured.
"Yeah—waiting
for my chance!" He rested his cheek
against
her head. "Now I know why they call you a witch...."
"Papa-a-a-a!"
Rod
waked instantly; there'd been tears in that little voice.
He
opened his eyes and saw Gregory leaning over him
clutching
his arm, shaking him. "Papa, Papa!" Tears were
running
down the little boy's cheeks. Rod reached up an
arm to
snake around him and pull him down, cradling him
against
his side. The little body stayed stiff, resisting com-
fort.
Rod crooned, "What's the matter, little fella? Bad
dream?"
Gregory
gulped, and nodded.
"What
was it about?"
"Nasty
man," Gregory sniffled.
"Nasty?"
For some reason. Rod was suddenly on his
guard.
"What was he doing?"
"He
did creep upon us." Gregory looked up at his father,
eyes
wide. "Creeping up, to hurl things at us."
Rod
stared into his eyes for a second, then began to pat
his
back gently. "Don't worry about it. Even if the nasty
man did
sneak up on us, your brothers and sister would
gang up
on him before he could do much damage." He
smiled,
and saw a tentative, quivering lift at the comers of
Gregory's
mouth. He tousled the boy's hair and turned to
look at
his wife. He saw a large pair of eyes staring back
at him.
"Kind of thought you'd wake up, if one of the kids
had a
problem."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 83
"I
did hear him," Gwen said softly. "I did see his dream.
And, my
lord..."
Rod couldn't
help feeling that being on his guard was
just
the thing for the occasion. "What's wrong?"
"Gregory's
mind would not conjure up so mild a phan-
tasm,
nor one so threatening."
The
tension was building inside Rod. Anger began to
boil up
under it. Rod tried to hold it down, reminding
himself
that he and Gwen could probably handle any attempt
to hurt
them. But the mere thought that anyone would dare
to
attack his children, to plant nightmares in their sleeping
minds...!
Magnus,
Cordelia, and Geoffrey suddenly sat bolt-upright.
"Papa,"
Cordelia gasped, "what dost thou?"
"Is
it that bad already? I'm trying to hold my temper."
"Thou
dost amazingly." Magnus blinked the sleep out of
his
eyes and leaned closer, on hands and knees, to peer at
his
father. "In truth, thou dost amazingly. I would never
guess
thy rage, to look at thee. Papa, what..."
The
night seemed to thicken a few feet away from the
children.
Something hazy appeared, coalesced, hardened,
and
shot to earth, slamming into the ground a few feet from
Magnus's
hand. His head snapped around; he stared at a
six-inch
rock. Cordelia's gaze was rivetted to it, too, in
horror;
but Geoffrey leaped to his feet. "Ambush!"
The
night thickened again, just over Magnus's head.
Something
hazy appeared...
... and
began to coalesce...
"Heads
up!" Rod dove for his son. His shoulder knocked
Magnus
sprawling, and a foot-thick rock crashed down,
grazing
Rod's hip. He bellowed with pain—and anger at
the
monster who dared attack his children. His full rage cut
loose.
"Ware!"
Magnus cried. The children were already look-
ing up,
as their father had bade them, so they saw the rocks
materializing—two,
three, all plummeting to earth as they
became
real.
"Dodge
ball!" Magnus shouted. Instantly, he and his
brothers
and sister were bounding and bobbing back and
forth,
Cordelia weaving an aerial dance that would've given
a
computer tracker a blown fuse, the boys appearing and
84
Christopher Stasheff
disappearing
here, there, yonder, like signal lights in a storm.
Through
their flickering pavane, Magnus called in sup-
pressed
rage, "Art thou hurted. Papa?"
"Nothing
that a little murder won't cure," Rod yelled
back.
"Children—seek! Discover and destroy!"
The
children seemed to focus more sharply, and stayed
visible
for longer intervals.
Gwen
was on her feet, still, her eyes warily probing the
night
above them.
Then
Geoffrey hopped to his left, just as a small boulder
materialized
right where his chest had been.
Rod
stood rigid with horror. If the boy hadn't happened
to jump
aside, just at that instant... "Somebody's trying to
teleport
rocks into the kids' bodies!"
"'Twould
be instant death." Gwen's face was pale, but
taut
with promised mayhem.
Rod
stood tree-still, his eyes wide open; but the night
blurred
around him into a formless void as his mind opened,
seeking....
Cordelia
seized her broomstick and shot up into the sky.
For a
moment, all three boys disappeared. Then Magnus
reappeared,
far across the meadow, dimly seen in the moon-
light.
He disappeared again just as Geoffrey reappeared ten
feet
away, twenty feet in the air. Air shot outward with a
pistol-crack,
inward with firecracker-pop. The meadow re-
sounded
with reports, like miniature machine gun fire.
Geoffrey
disappeared with a dull boom, and a treetop nearby
swayed
with a bullwhip-crack as Gregory appeared in the
topmost
limbs.
And
stones kept falling, all over the meadow.
"Husband!"
Gwen's voice was taut. "This enemy will
mark
us, too, ere long."
That
jolted Rod. "I suppose so—if he doesn't just pick
on
little kids. Better split up."
Gwen
seized her broomstick and disappeared into the
dark
sky.
That
left Rod feeling like a sitting duck. He supposed
he would
be able to float up into the sky himself, if he just
thought
about it—but he'd never done it, and didn't want
to have
to pay attention to trying to keep himself up while
he was
trying to find and annihilate an enemy. Capture, he
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 85
reminded
himself—capture, if you can.
But he
hoped he'd find he couldn't.
Magnus
appeared ten feet away, shaking his head. "He
doth
cloak his thoughts well. Papa. I cannot..." Suddenly,
his
eyes lost focus. Geoffrey's laugh carolled over the
meadow,
clear and filled with glee. Magnus disappeared
with a
pistol-crack. Rod leaped for Fess's back and shot
across
the meadow, a living missile with a double warhead.
He was
just in time to see Geoffrey and Magnus shoot
up out
of the trees, carrying a young man stretched like a
tug-of-war
rope between them. He struggled and cursed,
kicking
and whiplashing about with his legs and torso, but
the
boys stretched his arms tight, laughing with delight, and
pulling
with far more strength than their little bodies could
account
for.
The
young man shut his mouth, and glared at Magnus.
Foreboding
struck, and Rod sprang from Fess's back in
a
flying tackle.
He
smacked into the young man's legs so hard they
bruised
his shoulder. Above him, the warlock yowled in
pain.
Then it
was daytime, suddenly full noon. The glare stung
Rod's
eyes, and he squinted against it. He could make out
fern
leaves closely packed above, and a huge lizardlike
monstrosity
staring at them from five feet away. Then its
mouth
lolled open in a needle-fanged grin, and it waddled
toward
them with amazing speed. Panic clawed its way up
Rod's
throat, and he almost let go to snatch out his knife—
but the
enemy warlock panicked first.
It was
night again, total night. No, that was moonlight,
wasn't
it? And it showed Rod water, endless waves heaving
below
him. One reached up to slap at his heels, and its
impact
travelled on up to hit his stomach with chilling dread.
He
could just picture himself falling, sinking beneath those
undulating
fluid hills, rising to thrash about in panic, claw-
ing for
land, for wood, for something that floated.... In-
stinctively,
he tightened his hug on the ankles.
Then
sunlight seared his eyes, the sunlight of dawn, and
bitter
cold stabbed his lungs. Beyond the legs he clung to,
the
world spread out below him like a map, an immensity
of
green. Jagged rocks stabbed up, only a few yards below
86
Christopher Stasheff
his
heels. It had to be a mountain peak, somewhere on the
mainland.
Darkness
again, blackness—but not quite total, for
moonlight
filtered through a high, grated window, showing
him
blocks of granite that dripped with moisture, and niter
webbing
the high comers of the cramped chamber. Huge
rusty
staples held iron chains to the walls. A skeleton lounged
in the
fetters at the end of a pair of those chains. Another
held a
thick-bodied man with a bushy black beard. His
brocade
doublet was torn and crusted with dried blood, and
a grimy
bandage wrapped his head. He stared at them in
total
amazement. Then relief flooded his face, and his mouth
opened....
Limbo.
Nothingness. Total void.
There
wasn't any light, but there wasn't any darkness,
either—just
a gray, formless nothingness. Rod felt an in-
stant
conviction that he wasn't seeing with his eyes—es-
pecially
when colors began to twist through the void in
writhing
streaks, and a hiss of white noise murmured in the
distance.
They floated, adrift, and the body in Rod's arms
suddenly
began to writhe and heave again. A nasal voice
cursed,
"Thou vile recreants! I will rend thee, I will tear
thee!
Monstrous, perverse beasts, who..."
Geoffrey
cried out, "Abandon!"
Suddenly
Rod was hugging nothing; the legs were gone.
He
stared blankly at the space where they'd been. Then
panic
surged up within him, and he flailed about, trying to
grasp
something solid, anything, the old primate fear of
falling
skewering his innards.
Then a
small hand caught his, and Geoffrey's voice cried,
"Gregory!
Art there, lad? Hold thou, and pull!"
Gentle
breeze kissed Rod's cheek, and the scents of pine
and
meadow grass filled his head with a sweetness he didn't
remember
them ever having, before. Moonlight showed him
the
meadow where they'd camped, and Gwen darting for-
ward,
to throw her arms about him—and the two boys who
clung
to him. "Oh, my lord! My bairns! Oh, thou naughty
lads,
to throw thyselves into such danger! Praise Heaven
thou'rt
home!"
Cordelia
was hugging Rod's neck hard enough to gag
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 87
him,
head pressed against his and sobbing, "Papa! I feared
we had
lost thee!"
Rod
wrapped his arms around her, grateful to have some-
thing
solid to hold on to. He looked up to see Geoffrey
peeking
at him over Gwen's shoulder. Rod nodded. "I don't
know
how you did it, son—but you did."
6
"'Twas
not so hard as that."
The
blankets were around their shoulders now, and a
small
campfire danced in the center of the family circle.
Cordelia
turned a spit over the fire from time to time, roast-
ing a
slow rabbit for breakfast.
'"Not
so hard?'" Rod frowned at Geoffrey. "How could
it have
been anything but hard? That young villain had to
be one
of the best teleporters in the land! I mean, aside from
you
boys, the only warlock we've got who can teleport
anything
but himself, is old Galen—and nobody ever sees
him!"
"Save
old Agatha," Gwen murmured.
"Nobody
ever sees her either," Rod retorted.
"Save
old Galen," Cordelia reminded him.
"He's
going to need it," Rod agreed. He turned back to
the
boys. "Toby's the best of our young warlocks, and he's
just
beginning to leam how to teleport other objects. He's
almost
thirty, too. So Alfar's sidekick has to be better than
Toby."
"Nay,
not so excellent as that." Magnus shook his head.
"And
he was a very poor marksman."
"For
which, praise Heaven." Rod shuddered. "But he
was too
good at teleporting himself—even over his weight
88
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 89
allowance!
I didn't begin to recognize most of the places
he took
us to!"
"Any
child could do the same," Magnus answered, an-
noyed.
"I
keep telling you, son—don't judge others by yourself.
Why
didn't he just disappear, though?"
"He
could not," Geoffrey grinned. "We could tell where
he
would flee to, and fled there but a fraction of a second
behind
him."
"How
could you tell where he was going?"
"They
held his hands," Gwen reminded. "Thoughts travel
more
readily, by touch."
Magnus
nodded. "We could feel, through his skin, where
he
meant to go next."
Rod
stared at him for a moment, then sat back, shaking
his
head. "Beyond my comprehension. Thoughts can't travel
any
FESSter just by touching—can they?"
"No,"
Fess's voice murmured through the earphone im-
planted
in the bone behind Rod's right ear. "But there would
be less
signal-loss than with a radiated waveform."
Cordelia
sighed, striving for patience with her dullard
father.
"'Tis not that one doth hear faster, Papa—only that
one
doth hear more. With touch, even tinges of thought
speak
clearly."
"I
bow to the guest expert." Rod managed to keep the
fond
amusement out of his tone, giving the words a sour
twist.
Fess
plowed on. "The neurons in the warlock's hand did,
in all
probability, induce the signal directly into the neurons
in the
boys' hands."
"He
couldn't hide his thought-traces from you." Rod
turned
back to Geoffrey. "So you always had just enough
clues
to follow him. But how did you manage to bring me
along?"
Gregory
shook his head, eyes round. "That, Papa, we
cannot
say."
"We
thought thou couldst," Magnus added.
Rod
scowled. "No... can't say that I did. Except that I
was
bound and determined that I wasn't going to let go of
him...."
90 Christopher Stasheff
The
children stared at one another, then at their mother.
"What's
the matter?" Rod demanded. "What am I—a
monster?"
"Nay,
Papa," Cordelia said softly, "thou'rt only a war-
lock—yet
a most puissant one."
"You
mean it was just my determination that took me
wherever
he went?"
Magnus
nodded. "Thy magic followed all else that was
needful."
Rod was
still, gazing at the fire for a few minutes while
he
tried to absorb that. It was unnerving to think that he
was
beginning to be able to work magic the way his wife
and
children did—just by thinking of it. Now he was going
to have
to watch his step, to make sure he didn't do it
accidentally.
He could just hear a casual passerby asking,
"How
do you think the weather's going to be today, Mr.
Warlock?"
"Well, to tell you the truth, I think it's going to
rain...."
and, sploosh! They'd be drenched....
He
shook off the mood, and looked up to find the chil-
dren's
gazes glued to him. They looked worried; he won-
dered
what they'd been up to. "So. Finally, he took us into
a
dungeon."
"'Twas
the sorcerer Alfar's dungeon," Geoffrey ex-
plained,
and Cordelia gasped.
Rod
nodded. "Convenient. If he could just have figured
out
some way to get rid of us, we'd be right there to hand
for the
jailers. But how did he figure he was going to be
able to
keep you there? How could he prevent you from
teleporting
out?"
"I
do not think he had thought that far," Magnus said
slowly.
Rod was
still nodding. "Makes sense. I wouldn't be too
good at
the details, if I was trying to run from the enemy,
but he
was coming right along."
"He
was not attempting that," Geoffrey said, with con-
viction.
"He meant only to take us to a place in which we
would
be unwilling to stay."
Rod
smiled slowly. "Clever kid. Chose a nice one, didn't
he?"
"Aye."
Magnus shivered. "I was well relieved, to be quit
of that
place."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 91
"But
how're you so sure?" Rod asked Geoffrey.
"Because
we tried to hale him out, and he would not
come."
Rod
stared. Then he took a deep breath and said, deli-
cately,
"Little chancey, wasn't it?"
"Nay.
We sought to bring him to Mama."
Gwen's
eyes gleamed. Rod glanced at her, and turned
back to
the boys with a shudder. "That's what put us into
Limbo?"
"Where?"
Magnus frowned. "Oh! Thou dost speak of
the
Void!"
Rod
didn't like the familiarity with which he spoke of
it.
"Been there before, have you?"
Magnus
caught the look, and realized its significance.
"Nay,
not so often..... 'Tis only that..."
"Spells
go awry sometimes. Papa," Geoffrey explained.
"Assuredly
thou must needs realize that."
"That,"
Rod said tightly, "is why you're supposed to wait
till
Mama can supervise."
"She
did, the first time."
"First...
time?"
"Peace,
husband." Gwen touched his arm. "'Tis naught
so
dangerous as that."
"Aye,"
Magnus said quickly. "When thou dost arrive in
that
place that is not a place, thou hast but to think of where
thou
dost wish to be, and lo! Thou art there indeed!"
"I'll
try to remember that," Rod said grimly. He noticed
that
Cordelia was managing to hold her tongue, but she
looked
chartreuse with envy. He caught her hand, and she
squeezed
back. "So," he said to Geoffrey, "how did we
wind up
in Limbo this time?"
"Why,
because we wished to bear him to Mama, and he
did not
wish to go."
"I
don't blame him, when she's in that mood. So you
were
trying to go, and he was trying to stay, so..."
"We
went nowhere." Geoffrey nodded. "I saw, then, that
we
could not win, so I sought safety."
"What
was so tough about it?" Rod frowned. "I thought
you
only needed to think yourselves home!"
"We
did need some aid," Geoffrey admitted, and he
reached
out to clap his three-year-old brother on the shoul-
92 Christopher Stasheff
der.
"This one had followed us with his mind, where e'er
we had
gone. I had but to call out to him, and he helped
pull
us, and showed us the road to home."
"Yes..."
Rod's gaze fastened on his youngest. "He's
had
some experience doing that."
Gregory
looked totally blank.
"Not
that he'd remember it," Rod explained. "He was a
little
young, at the time—eleven months old.
"But!
Here you are, safe at home—praise Heaven!" He
gathered
them all into his arms, and squeezed. They gave
mock
yells of dismay, and Rod relaxed, looking down into
their
faces. "And now—you can go home."
They
let loose a squall that must've waked villagers for
miles
around.
"Nay,
Papa, not so soon!"
"It
was just beginning to be fun!"
"We're
not ready. Papa!"
"Boys
get to do all the fun stuff," Cordelia pouted.
Geoffrey
looked straight into Rod's eyes. "There is no
danger.
Papa."
"No
danger!" Rod exploded. "You have a maverick war-
lock
raining cannonballs on you, and you tell me there's no
danger?
You have a monster magus trying to conjure rock
chunks
into your bodies, and you tell me it's safe? You
have a
felon enchanter, straight from the glass house, throw-
ing
stones at you, and you tell me it's tame?"
"But
we are whole," Magnus spread his hands. "Naught
save a
bruise or two."
"Chance!
Sheer, freakish good fortune! You're just lucky
that
sorcerer was a lousy shot!"
"Yet
we outnumber him. Papa!"
"He
outweighs you! And that's just the human danger!
What's
going to happen the next time you get into a tug-
of-war
with one of those sorcerer interns? You might be
stranded
out in that void with no way to get home!"
"Surely
not, Papa!" Geoffrey protested. '"Tis as I've
said—thou
hast but to think of..."
"Yeah,
if you've got somebody tuned in to act as your
safety
line!"
"But
Gregory..."
"Gregory
might be with you!" Rod bawled.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 93
"Yet
that doth not afright me. Papa," the three-year-old
cried.
"That gray place doth please me! 'Tis comforting,
and..."
"Makes
you feel right at home, does it?" Rod felt a bitter
stab of
guilt. "You should; your mind spent enough time
searching
there, when you were a baby, trying to find out
where
Mama and I had gone."
"An
thou sayest it. Therefore do I know my way. There
is
truly no dange-"
"Now
I say NO!" Rod roared, slamming his fist into the
turf.
Pain shot up his forearm, but his rage shoved it aside.
"What
the hell do you think you're doing, talking back to
your
father!" He snatched Magnus's collar, and yanked the
boy's
face up to his. "Think you're getting'big, do you?
Let me
tell you, you will never be old enough to argue with
me!"
He threw Magnus back, and whirled to catch at
Geoffrey.
The six-year-old ducked aside, automatically
bringing
his arm up to block, managing to knock Rod's arm
aside.
Rod
froze, eyes bulging, staring down at the boy, rigid
as a
board, white with rage, nostrils pinching in.
Geoffrey
flinched away. "Papa—I did not mean..."
"I
know what you meant!" Rod strode forward. "I know
damned
well what you..."
But he
bumped into something, and Gwen's eyes were
looking
directly into his. Her voice bored through his fury,
droning,
demanding, "Come out! I know thee. Rod
Gallowglass,
born Rodney d'Armand. I know thee for my
lover
and husband, and know that thou art there, beneath
this
beastliness that overcomes thee. Come out. Rod
Gallowglass!
Let not this shell of anger overwhelm and
overmaster
thee. Ever hast thou been a caring husband, and
a
gentle father to my children. Thou art of Gramarye, not
Tir
Chlis! Thou art my treasure, and my children thy gems!
Husband,
turn! Come out to me, Rod Gallowglass!"
Rod
stared at her, fury mounting higher, but held by the
truth
of her words. An evil spell... He shuddered, and his
rage
fell into slivers, and ebbed. He sagged, his knees giving
way for
a moment, and stumbled—and Magnus was there
beside
him, shoulder under his father's arm, staring up at
Rod in
fright and concern.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
95
94 Christopher Stasheff ;
Concern
for his father's safety—even after Rod had been
so
cruel! This son could not only forgive—he could even I
run to
help! Remorse charged his anguish, and made him i
harsh.
He recovered his balance and stood, stiffening. "Thank '
you."
But he clasped the boy's shoulder firmly.
Magnus
winced, but stood steadfast.
Rod
held the boy's shoulders with both hands, but his
gaze
held Owen's. "That was foolish, you know. Very risky.
Likely
to get you slugged."
Answering
anger flared in her eyes—flared, and was
smothered.
"'Twas worth the risk, my lord."
He gave
her a brief, tight nod. "Yes. Thank you. Very
much."
He shook his head. "Don't do it again. It won't
work,
again. When it hits me, just.. .go. Anywhere, as
fast as
you can. Just go."
"That,
also, would be foolish," she cried, almost in de-
spair.
"If we do flee, thou wilt pursue—and then thou wilt
not
hear, no matter what appeal I plead."
He
stared at her, immobile.
Finally,
he closed his eyes, clenching his fists so tightly
that
they hurt. He took three slow, deep, even breaths, then
looked
up at her and said, "But you must. Not when I'm
angry—no,
you're right, that would be dangerous." He
forced
himself to say it: "For both of us." It left an astringent
taste
behind. "But now. Now. It's getting too wild up here.
Alfar
and his henchmen aren't playing games. They're too
dangerous.
I'm too dangerous. And if I don't hurt the chil-
dren,
he will."
She
stared at him for a long moment. The children were
very
silent.
Then,
slowly, Gwen said, "An thou dost wish it, my
lord,
we will go. Yet I prithee, think again—for we are
safer
if we are with thee, as thou'lt be. For then can we
ward
one another's backs. Yet if we are apart from thee—
if we
dwell back in Runny mede—then may thine enemies
seek to
strike at thee by hurting us—and thou wilt not be
by us,
to defend."
It was
an excuse. It was a rationalization. It was specious
and
hollow, and Rod knew it.
But he
was scared. He was very scared of what might
happen,
inside him, if he started arguing with her. He was
afraid
for her, afraid for the children....
But he
was also afraid for them if Alfar ever realized
that
none of his henchmen could handle the Gallowglasses
alone.
When he did, he'd probably do the sensible thing—
gang up
on them, all his sorcerers together. And the children
were
powerful espers already, but they were still children.
But he
was more afraid of what might happen to them,
if he
lost his temper again.
Abruptly,
he bowed his head. "All right. Stay."
The
children cheered.
Their
raucous clamor bounced off Rod's ears. He stood
in the
midst of the rain of their sound, swearing under his
breath
that he would not let his temper turn against them
again.
He was
still swearing the next day, inside his head, and
searching
frantically for a way to ensure their safety. Other
than
sending them home—he wasn't going to argue with
them
about that, again. Arguments turned into rages.
"Wilt
thou not ride now, my lord?" Gwen sat up on Fess's
saddle,
with Cordelia in front of her.
Rod
shook his head, mute, and plowed on.
The
children glanced at their mother, then back at him,
and
followed him silently.
Around
the curve ahead of them, a husky peasant and
his
equally husky wife came into view, with five children
trudging
wearily beside them—wearily, even though it was
early
in the morning. The husband pushed a handcart piled
high
with sacks and household belongings.
"More
refugees," Rod grated. "How many is that, Delia?"
"Fourteen,
Papa."
Rod
nodded. "Fourteen in how long?"
"An
hour and a half. Papa," Gregory answered, glancing
at the
sun.
Rod
shook his head. "That's real evil happening up there,
children.
People don't leave their homes for mild likes and
dislikes—not
even for hates. They flee because of fear."
"We
do not fear. Papa," Magnus said stoutly.
"I
know," Rod returned. "That's what worries me."
96 Christopher Stasheff
They
plodded on toward the peasant family. Then Geoffrey
took a
chance and said, "The sorcerer's guards grow care-
less,
Papa."
"Why?"
Rod frowned. "You mean because they let these
people
pass?" He shook his head. "That's not where they're
coming
from. Here, I'll show you." He stepped over to the
side of
the road as the big peasant and his family came up.
The man
looked up at him, surprised, and scowled. Then
weariness
overcame him, and he relaxed, humbling himself
to talk
to someone who was below his station. "Hail, tinker!
Dost
thou travel north, then?"
"Aye,"
Rod answered. "Poor folk must seek their living
where
they can. Why, what moves in the North?"
The
peasant shook his head. "We know only what Rumor
speaks.
We ourselves have not seen it."
Rod
frowned. "So fearsome? What doth Rumor say?"
"That
an evil sorcerer hath risen," the peasant answered.
"He
hath overcome the Sire de Maladroit, the Baron de
Gratecieux,
and even the Count Lagorme."
Rod
stared, incredulous. "Why? Who doth speak so?"
Geoffrey
looked unbelieving, too, at the idea that Alfar's
men
could have 1st someone slip out to bear word.
The big
peasant shrugged wearily. "Rumor flies, tinker—
and
well thou shouldst know it, for 'tis thy tradesmen that
do
carry such tidings, more often than not."
"Is
it that, then?" Rod's eyebrows lifted. "Only that a
cousin
told a neighbor, who told a gossip, who told an uncle,
who
told..."
"Aye,
belike." The big peasant shrugged. "I know only
what my
god-sib Hugh son of Marl told unto me—and that
the
whiles he packed a barrow like to this, and set packs
to the
backs of his wife and sons. 'Whither comes this
word?'
quoth I; and spake he, 'From Piers Thatcher...'"
Rod
interrupted. "Lives he on the Count's estates?"
The
peasant shook his head. "Nay, nor on Gratecieux's, ^
nor on
Maladroit's. Yet he hath a cousin whose god-sib's
nephew
hath a brother-in-law whose cousin hath a niece
who doth
live hard by the good Count's manor—and thus
the
word doth run."
"Is't
so?" Rod glanced back at Geoffrey, then back to
the
peasant, bobbing his head and tugging a forelock. "I
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 97
thank
thee, goodman. We shall wend our way a little farther
north—but
we shall ponder well thy words."
"Do,"
the big peasant advised, "and turn back toward
the
South."
"These
things are not certain," Gwen protested.
"Nay,"
the peasant's wife agreed. "Yet we have heard
this
word again and, aye, again, for all these months of
spring.
First Rumor spoke of the Sire—but then of the
Baron,
and now of the Count. If Rumor doth begin to speak
of the
Duke, belike we'll find we can not flee." She shook
her
head. "Nay, an thou lovest thy little ones, chance not
the
truth of Rumor."
"Mayhap
thou hast the right of it," Gwen said, with a
pensive
frown. "I thank thee—and farewell."
"God
be with thee, goodman." Rod tugged at his forelock
again.
"God
be," the man returned, and took up the handles of
his
cart again.
As the
peasant and his family slogged away toward the
South,
Geoffrey spun toward his father and fairly exploded
in a
hissing whisper. "So easily. Papa! Is all the work of so
many
guards and sentries brought low so easily, by naught
but
gossip?"
"Indeed
it is," Rod answered sourly. "Remember that
when
you command. The fence isn't made, that can stop a
rumor."
Geoffrey
threw up his hands in exasperation. "Then why
mount a
watch at all?"
"Proof."
Rod grimaced. "If none of the lords have proof,
they
won't go to the expense of sending an army northward.
After
all, what did the King himself do, when he heard the
unconfirmed
word? Sent us!"
"All
this, to hold back proof?"
Rod
nodded. "Without that, anybody who wants to be-
lieve
the news is false, can."
"Until
the sorcerer and his minions overun them," the
boy
said darkly.
"Yes,"
Rod agreed, with a bleak smile. "That is the idea,
isn't
it?"
"Papa,"
said Cordelia, "I begin to fear."
"Good."
Rod nodded. "Good."
98
Christopher
Stasheff
Half an
hour later, they saw a small coach in the distance,
hurtling
toward them. As it came closer, they saw that the
horses
were foaming and weary. But the woman who sat
on the
coachman's box flogged them on, with fearful glances
over
her shoulder at the troop of men-at-arms who galloped
after
her on small, tough Northern ponies, and the armored
knight
who thundered at their head on a huge, dark war-
horse
that would have made two of the ponies.
"What
churiishness is this," Gwen cried, "that armed
men
pursue a woman shorn of defense?"
"Don't
blame 'em too hard," Rod snapped. "I don't think
they're
terribly much aware of what they're doing."
"Thou
must needs aid her, my lord!"
"Yes,"
Rod agreed. "It isn't too hard to tell who the bad
guys
are, is it? Especially since we've seen their livery
before.
Ambush stations, kids."
"Magnus
and Gregory, guard the left," Gwen instructed.
"Cordelia
and Geoffrey, do thou ward the right. Flit toward
them,
as far as thou canst." She turned to Rod. "How wouldst
thou
have them fell their foes, husband?"
"One
by one. Unhorse them." Rod felt a warm glow at
her
support.
Delia
caught up her broomstick with a shout of glee.
"How
shall we fell them. Mama?" Geoffrey grinned.
"Throw
rocks at them?"
Gwen
nodded. "Aye—but take thou also thy belts of
rope,
and discover how thou mayst make use of them."
They
all quickly untied the lengths of hemp that were
lashed
about their waists. "Mama," said Magnus, "I think
that I
could make the nails to disappear from the horses'
shoes."
Rod
nodded slow approval. "I pity the poor horses—but
they
shouldn't be damaged. They will stop, though."
"Naught
of these will avail against the knight," Gregory
pointed
out.
Rod
gave him a wolfish grin. "He's mine."
"Begone
from sight now, quickly!" Gwen clapped her
hands.
The
children dodged off the roadside into the underbrush,
and
disappeared.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 99
Gwen
hopped down from Fess's back, and caught her
broomstick
from its sling alongside the saddle. "Wilt thou
need
thine horse, my lord?"
"'Fraid
so, dear. Can you manage without him?"
"Why,
certes." She dimpled, and dropped him a quick
curtsy.
"Godspeed, husband." Then she turned away to dive
into
the underbrush after her children.
Rod
sighed, jamming a foot into the stirrup. "Quite a
woman
I've got there, Fess."
"Sometimes
I wonder if you truly appreciate her. Rod."
"Oh,
I think I do." Rod swung up into the saddle and
pulled
on the reins. "We'd better imitate them. Off the road,
Steel
Stallion."
Fess
trotted off the shoulder and down into the under-
brush.
"What did you have in mind for the knight. Rod?"
"About
120 volts. Got a spare battery?"
Fess's
answer was lost in the racket, as the coach thun-
dered
by them.
Rod
looked up at the mounted squad. "A hundred yards
and
closing. Got some cable?"
"Forward
port compartment. Rod." A small door sprang
open
under Fess's withers.
Rod
reached in and pulled out a length of wire. He drew
out his
dagger and stripped the insulation off in a few quick
strokes.
"Where do I plug it in?"
The
horsehead turned back to look at him. "Simply place
it in
my mouth. Rod. I will route current to it. But are you
certain
this is ethical?"
"Is
the sword he's carrying?" Rod shrugged. "A weapon
is a
weapon, Fess. And this one won't do him any permanent
damage—I
hope. Okay, now!"
They
darted up out of the roadside as the squad pounded
up. Rod
swerved in alongside the knight. The helmet visor
turned
toward him, but the knight raised neither sword nor
shield,
no doubt flabbergasted at seeing a tinker riding up
alongside
him on a horse that would've done credit to a
lord.
Besides, what need was there to defend against a piece
of
rope?
Rod
jabbed the end of the wire at him, and a fat blue
spark
snapped across the gap; then the wire was in contact
with
the armor, and the knight threw up his arms, stiffened.
100 Christopher Stasheff
Rod
lashed out a kick, and the knight crashed off his horse
into
the dust of the road.
Someone
gave a shout of horror, behind him. Rod whirled
Fess
around, then darted off to the side of the road before
the
sergeant could get his thoughts together enough to start
a try
for retribution.
Along
the side of the road, three soldiers lay sprawled,
one
every hundred feet or so. Another four lined the verge
on the
far side. Some of the horses were grazing, very
contentedly,
next to their fallen masters. A few of the others,
obviously
more intelligent, were galloping away into the
distance.
As Rod
watched, a small figure exploded into existence
right
in front of one of the remaining riders. Startled, the
horseman
flinched back, and his mount reared, whinnying.
Geoffrey
lashed out a kick to the man's shoulder, and the
soldier
overbalanced, tipped, and fell. The child slapped
the
horse's rump, and the beast turned to gallop away with
a
whinny.
On the
other side of the road, a length of rope shot flying
through
the air like a winged serpent, and wrapped itself
around
another soldier's neck. He grabbed at it with both
hands,
then suddenly jolted backward, and slammed down
onto
the road, still struggling with the coil. With a gun-
crack,
Magnus appeared beside him, stick in hand. He swung
downward,
and the soldier went limp. The rope uncoiled
and
flew off to look for a new victim. Pocket thunder made
a
boomlet, and Magnus disappeared.
Rod
winced. "Bloodthirsty brood I've got, here."
"They
are only doing as you told them. Rod—and taught
them."
"Maybe
I'd better revise the curriculum."
"Do
not be overly hasty," the robot murmured. "That
soldier
still breathes."
"I
hope it's widespread. Well, back to work." Rod turned
the
horse back onto the road—and saw all the soldiers lying
in the
dust, unconscious. Already, Gwen knelt by the near-
est,
gazing intently at his face. Cordelia arrowed in to land
beside
her, and the boys began to appear, like serial thunder.
"They
work fast, too," Rod muttered. He trotted up be-
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 101
side
the family grouping, and leaned down to touch Magnus
on the
shoulder. The boy's head snapped up in surprise. He
saw his
father, and relaxed, with a sigh of relief.
"You
did wonderfully." Rod beamed with pride. "All of
you.
But keep an eye on the soldiers, son. A few of them
might
come to while you're still trying to overhaul their
minds."
Magnus
nodded, glowing with his father's praise. "I will
ward
them well. Papa."
"Stout
fellow. I should be back before they wake up—
but,
just in case." He straightened up, turning Fess south-
ward.
"Wither
goest thou, Papa?"
"To
tell that lady she can stop panicking." Rod kicked
his
heels against Fess's sides. "Follow that coach."
The
robot-horse sprang into a gallop. "Drumming your
heels
against my sides really serves no purpose, Rod."
"Sure
it does—keeping up appearances. You wouldn't
want
people to know you weren't a real horse, would you?"
"Surely
you cannot be concerned about that with your
own
family. They all know my true nature."
"Yeah,
but I've got to stay in the habit. If I start trying
to
remember who knows about you and who doesn't, I'll
start
making little mistakes, and..."
"I
understand," the robot sighed. "The coach approaches,
Rod."
"Might
be more accurate to say we approach the coach."
"I
was under the impression that you had become a
Gramaryan,
not a grammarian."
Rod
winced. "All right, already! I'll go for the content,
and
stop worrying about the form."
"Then
you would make a very poor critic...."
"Oh,
shut up and head off the coach."
Fess
swerved in front of the coach horses, and the animals
reared,
screaming with fright. The woman hit the brake with
frantic
strength, then lashed out with the whip at Rod.
"Hey!"
He ducked, but too late; the lash cracked against
the
side of his head. The roadway tilted and circled, blurring;
distantly,
he heard the whip crack, again and again. Then
the
world levelled, and he began to see clearly. The familiar
702
Christopher Stasheff
rage
surged up in him. Appalled, he tried to remember her
fear.
The woman stood on the box, brandishing the whip
for one
more try.
Rod held
up a palm. "Whoa! Hold it! I'm on your side!"
He
pointed to his chest. "No uniform. See?"
The
woman hesitated, but anger and fear still held her
eyes
wide.
Rod was
working hard to stifle a huge flood of anger of
his
own; his head ached abominably. "You wouldn't hit a
poor,
wandering tinker, would you?"
"Aye,
if he threatened me or mine." But sanity began to
return
to the woman's eyes. "And why would a poor tinker
stop a
noble Lady, if not to harm her?"
"To
tell you, you can stop running!" Rod cried. "We
knocked
out your enemies!"
The
woman stood frozen, but hope flared in her eyes.
Rod
pointed back along the road. "Take a look, if you
doubt
me!"
She
darted a quick glance back up the road, then glanced
again.
She turned back to him, joy beginning to flower in
her
face. Then her knees gave way, and she collapsed onto
the
box. "Praise Heaven! But how didst thou..."
"I
had a little help," Rod explained.
She was
instantly on her guard again. "From whom?"
"My
wife," Rod explained, "and my children."
She
stared. Then weariness filled her face. "I see them;
they
pick the corpses of the soldiers. Do not lie to me,
fellow.
How could a tinker and his bairns and wife, fare
against
an armored knight and a dozen soldiers?" She hefted
the
whip again.
"Now,
hold on!" Rod felt his anger mounting again, too.
He took
a deep breath, and tried to remember that the poor
woman
had been chased for most of the night—probably.
"My
wife and kids aren't robbing bodies—they're trying
to
break the enchantments that bind living men. Uncon-
scious,
but living—I hope. You see, we're not quite what
we seem
to be."
"Indeed,"
she hissed between her teeth, and forced her-
self to
her feet again, swinging the whip up. "So I had
thought!"
"Not
that way! This tinker outfit is just a disguise!" Rod
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 103
straightened
in the saddle, squaring his shoulders. "I am
Rodney
Gallowglass, Lord High Warlock of Gramarye—
and
that woman back there is the Lady Gwendylon."
She
stared. Then her lips parted, and she whispered,
"Give
me a sign."
"A
sign?" Exasperated, Rod bit down on his irritation
and
forced himself to imagine just how paranoid he'd be
feeling
in her place. He took another deep breath, expelled
it.
"Oh, all right!" Rod closed his eyes and let his mind go
blank,
concentrating. His usual haze of needs and respon-
sibilities
seemed to ebb and clear, till he could hear his
children's
voices, as though they were right next to him.
He
singled out the one who looked least threatening and
thought,
Gregory! Come here!
Air
popped outward, and Gregory floated next to his
shoulder.
"Aye, Papa?"
The
woman stared.
Then
her knees gave way again, and she sat down, nod-
ding
weakly. "Aye. Thou art the High Warlock."
"Papa?"
Gregory cocked his head to the side, frowning
up at
his father. "Why didst thou call?"
"For
what you just did, son."
The
child stared. "What did I?"
"You
proved I'm what I said I was." He turned back to
the
woman. "And whom have I the pleasure of addressing?"
Now it
was her turn to pull herself together and remember
her
dignity. "I am Elyena, Duchess of Romanov."
7
Rod
steered the tottering horses off the road and into the
meadow
near Gwen, holding up the Duchess with his left
arm. As
he pulled them to a halt, she raised her head, looking
about,
then crowded closer to him. "The soldiers..."
Rod
turned, and saw all the soldiers gathered in a knot
under a
low tree. Most of them held their heads in their
hands.
Some had lifted their gazes and were looking
around,
blinking, their faces drawn and uncertain. The
knight
lay by them with his helmet off. Gwen knelt over
him.
"Don't
worry," Rod said, trying to sound reassuring.
"They
feel as though they've just awakened from a bad
dream.
They're on your side again." He jumped down from
the
box. "Just stay there."
She
did, huddling into herself—and not looking at all
reassured.
Rod
sighed, and thought sharply, Cordelia!
The
little girl leaped up halfway across the meadow and
looked
around. She located her father and jumped on her
broomstick,
zooming straight over to him. "Aye, Papa?"
Rod
noticed the Duchess staring. Well, at least she was
distracted.
"Cordelia, this lady needs..."
But
Cordelia was staring past him, toward the windows
104
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 105
of the
coach, and a delighted grin curved on her lips. "Chil-
dren!"
Rod
turned, suprised.
Two
little faces filled one of the windows, looking about
with
frank curiousity.
Cordelia
skipped past Rod, hands behind her back. The
Duchess's
children watched her warily. Cordelia stopped
right
below them and cocked her head to the side. "I am
hight
Cordelia."
They
didn't answer; they just stared.
Rod touched
her shoulder. "They've been having some
bad
scares lately, honey."
The
elder boy looked up in indignation. "Was not scared!"
"Yeah,
sure, you were calm as a mill pond. Just go easy,
honey."
"Oh,
Papa!" she said, exasperated. "Can they not see I
wish
them no harm?" Before he could answer, she whirled
away to
the Duchess. "May I play with them?"
The
Duchess stared down at her. Then, slowly, she said,
"Why...
an they wish it... certes."
That
they would wish it. Rod did not doubt; he knew his
daughter.
Already, the two boys were watching her with
marked
interest.
"Oh,
good!" Cordelia spun back to the children. "I have
brothers,
too. Thou mayst play with them also, an thou dost
wish
it."
The two
boys still looked wary, but Cordelia's friendli-
ness
was infectious. The younger opened the coach door,
and
stepped out. "I," he said, "am Gaston."
Rod
turned away, quite certain the Duchess's attention
would
be fully occupied for a while, and went over to his
wife.
As he
came up, she sat back on her heels, gazing down
at the
knight and shaking her head. Instantly, Rod was alert.
"What's
the matter? Is the hypnosis too strong?"
Gwen
shook her head again. "I have broke the spell, my
lord.
Yet I can bring him no closer to life than this."
Rod
turned, staring down at the knight. He saw a lined
face
and bald head, with a fringe of gray hair. His skin was
gray,
and covered with a sheen of sweat. Guilt swept through
706
Christopher Stasheff
Rod. He
knelt beside the knight. "But it was only 120 volts!
Only
fifteen amperes! And I only hit him with it for a few
seconds!"
Gwen
shook her head. "It may have as easily been the
fall,
my lord. His heart had stopped, and I labored to make
it
begin to beat again."
"Heart
attack?" Rod took a closer look at the knight.
"He's
middle-aged—and he's let himself sag out of shape."
He
shook his head, looking up at Gwen. "There was no
way I
could tell that. He had his helmet on, and the visor
was
down."
"In
truth, thou couldst not," she agreed, "and anything
thou
hadst done to stop him, might have hurt him this badly."
She
lifted her eyes, gazing into his. "Yet, my lord, I mis-
doubt
me an 'twas any action of thine that did strike him
down.
He had ridden too many miles in harness."
Rod
nodded slowly. "Whoever sent him out to lead a
troop
in full armor, at his age, must've seen him only as a
thing,
not a person. Who... ? No, cancel that. Of course—
who
else? Alfar."
"We
will tend him, milady."
Gwen
looked up, and saw the sergeant kneeling across
from
her.
"Sir
Verin is old, but dear to us," the soldier explained.
"How
he came to this pass, we know not. We will tend
him."
He lifted his head, showing haunted eyes. "Lady—
what
have our bodies done, the whiles our souls slept?"
"Naught
that is any fault of thine." She touched his hand,
smiling
gently. "Trouble not thine heart."
Geoffrey
darted up beside her. "Mama! There are chil-
dren!
May we go play?"
Gwen
looked up, startled. "Why..."
"We've
got company," Rod explained.
A short
while later, the parents sat around a hasty camp-
fire
while the children played nearby. The Duchess sat,
shivering
in spite of the sun's midday warmth. Gwen had
fetched
a blanket from Fess's pack and wrapped it around
her,
but the poor lady still shivered with reaction. She gazed
at the
children, who were winding up a raucous game of
tag.
"Ah, bless them! Poor mites." Tears gathered at the
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 107
comers
of her eyes. "They know not the meaning of what
hath
happed."
"Thou
hast not told them, then?" Gwen said softly.
The
Duchess shook her head. "They know what they
have
seen, and no more." She looked up at Rod, a hard
stare.
"And I will not tell them until I know."
Rod
stared back, and nodded slowly. "Why not? Your
husband
could still be alive. It's even possible that he's
well."
The
Duchess nodded slowly, maintaining the glare. But
she
couldn't hold it long, and her head dropped.
Nearby,
the children collapsed in a panting tangle.
"Nay,
but tell!" Cordelia cajoled. "Didst thou truly see
the
evil sorcerer?"
"Nay,"
said the youngest; and "We saw naught," said the
eldest.
"Naught save the inside of our keep. Mother penned
us
there, and would not even let us go so far as the window."
"Yet
thou didst come in a coach," Magnus reminded.
"Didst
thou see naught then?"
The
boys shook their heads, and the youngest said, "We
knew
only that Mother bade us follow her down to the
courtyard,
and placed us in the coach. Through the gate
house,
we heard the clash of arms afar off; yet she drew
the
curtains closely, and bade us open them not."
The
oldest added, "We could hear the rumble of the
wheels
echoing about us, and knew that we passed through
the gatehouse.
Then the portcullis did crash down behind
us, and
the noises of war began to grow nearer."
Geoffrey's
eyes glinted.
"Then
they began to grow fainter, till they were lost
behind
us," the eldest went on, "and we heard naught but
the
grating of the coach's wheels."
The
youngest nodded. "When at last we did part the
curtains,
there was naught to see but summer fields and
groves."
The
Duchess pressed her face into her hands, and her
shoulders
shook with more than shivering. Gwen tucked the
blanket
more tightly around her, murmuring soothing in-
anities.
She glanced at Rod and nodded toward the children.
Rod
took the cue. "Uh, kids—could you maybe change
the
subject?"
708
Christopher Stasheff
"Eh?"
Cordelia looked up and took in the situation at a
glance.
"Oh!" She was instantly contrite. "We are sorry,
Papa."
She turned to the other children, catching the hands
of the
Duchess's sons. "Come, let us play at tracking."
The
fatuous look they gave her boded well for her teen-
aged
future, and ill for Rod's coming peace of mind. But
they
darted away, calling to one another, and Magnus hid
his
face against a large tree, and began to count.
The
Duchess lifted her head, turning it from side to side
in
wonder. "They so quickly forget such ill!"
"Well,
yes—but you haven't really told them the bad
parts,"
Rod said judiciously. "For all they know, their fa-
ther's
winning the battle. And can you really say he didn't?"
"Nay,"
she said, as though it were forced from her. "Yet
I did
not flee till I looked down from the battlements, and
saw
that the melee had begun to go against him—even as
we had
feared." Then she buried her face in her hands, and
her
shoulders heaved with sobbing. Gwen clucked over her,
comforting,
and Rod had the good taste to keep quiet until
the
Duchess had regained some measure of control over
herself.
She lifted her head, gazing out over the meadow
with
unseeing eyes. "When first the reeves began to bring
us
tales of villages suborned, we dismissed them with laugh-
ter.
Who could come to rule a village, whiles its knight
stood
by to shield it? Yet the first tale was followed by a
second,
and a second by a third, then a fourth, then a fifth—
and
ever was it the same: that a sorcerer had made the people
bow to
him. Then it was a witch who forced the homage,
with
the sorcerer's power supporting her; then a warlock."
"How'd
they do it?" Rod asked. "Did the reeves know?"
The
Duchess shook her head. "They had heard only ru-
mors of
dire threats, and of bams bursting into flame, and
kine
that sickened and fell. Yet for the greater part, there
had
been only surliness and complaining from the peasants,
complaining
that swelled louder and louder. Then the witch
or
warlock stepped amongst them, and they turned with
joyful
will to bow to him or her, and the sorcerer whose
power
lay 'neath. My lord did bid one of his knights to ride
about
his own estates, and visit the villages therein. The
knight
returned, and spoke of peasant mobs that howled in
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 109
fury,
brandishing scythes and mattocks, and hurling stones.
When he
charged, they broke and ran; yet when he turned
away,
eftsoons they gathered all against him once again."
Her
mouth hardened. "Thus were they bid, I doubt not."
"Sudden,
rabid loyalty." Rod glanced at Gwen. "Would
you say
they didn't really seem to be themselves? The peas-
ants, I
mean."
"Nay,
assurdly not!" The Duchess shuddered. "They were
as
unlike what they had been, as Maytime is from winter.
Such
reports angered milord, but not greatly. They angered
his
vassal, the Baron de Gratecieux, far more; for, look you,
the
greater part of Milord Duke's revenues was yielded to
him by
his counts, who gained theirs from their barons. Yet
the
barons gain theirs from their knights."
Rod
nodded. "So a knight's village resisting payments
is a
little more serious to the baron than to his duke."
The
Duchess nodded too. "He did implore Milord Duke
for
arms and men, which my lord did give him gladly. Then
rode
the Baron 'gainst the sorcerer."
She
fell silent. Rod waited.
When
she didn't go on. Rod asked, "What happened?"
The
Duchess shuddered. "Eh, such reports as we had
were
horrible, in truth! The Baron's force did meet with a
host of
magics—fell creatures that did pounce from the air,
fireballs
and rocks that appeared among them, hurtling;
arrows
that sped without bows or archers, and war-axes and
maces
that struck without a hand to bear them. Then peasant
mobs
did charge upon them, howling and striking with their
sickles.
Yet far worst of all was a creeping fear, a sense of
horror
that overcame the Baron's soldiers, till they broke
and
ran, screaming hoarsely in their terror."
Rod met
Gwen's eyes, and her words sounded in his ears
alone:
/ count a witch-moss crofter, and the warlock who
doth
hurl stones 'mongst us; and there be witches who do
make
the weapons fly. Yet what's this creeping horror?
Rod
could only shake his head. He looked down at the
Duchess
again. "What happened to the Baron?"
The
Duchess shuddered. "He came not home; yet in later
battles,
he has been seen—leading such soldiers as lived,
against
the sorcerer's foes."
110 Christopher Stasheff
Rod
caught Gwen's eye again; she nodded. Well, they'd
met
that compulsive hypnosis already. "How many of the
soldiers
survived?"
"There
were, mayhap, half a dozen that lived to flee, of
the
threescore that marched to battle."
Rod
whistled softly. "Six out of sixty? This sorcerer's
efficient,
isn't he? How many of the defeated ones were
following
Baron de Gratecieux in the next battle?"
The
Duchess shrugged. "From the report we had—may-
hap
twoscore."
"Forty
out of sixty, captured and brainwashed?" Rod
shuddered.
"But some got away—the six you mentioned."
"Aye.
But a warlock pursued them. One only bore word
to us;
we know not what happened to the other five."
"It's
a fair guess, though." Rod frowned. "So right from
the
beginning, Alfar's made a point of trying to keep word
from
leaking out." Somehow, that didn't smack of the me-
dieval
mind. "You say you learned this afterwards?"
The
Duchess nodded. "It took that lone soldier a week
and a
day to win home to us."
"A
lot can happen in a week."
"So
it did. The sorcerer and his coven marched against
the
Castle Gratecieux; most of the household acclaimed
Alfar
their suzerain. The Baroness and some loyal few ob-
jected,
and fought to close the gates. They could not prevail,
though,
and those who did acclaim the sorcerer their lord,
did ope
the gate, lower the drawbridge, and raise the port-
cullis."
Rod
shrugged. "Well, if they could make whole villages
switch
allegiance, why not a castleful?"
"What
did the sorcerer to the Baroness?" Gwen asked,
eyes
wide.
The
Duchess squeezed her eyes shut. "She doth rest in
the
dungeon, with her children—though the eldest was
wounded
in the brawling."
Gwen's
face hardened.
"How
did you leam this?" Rod tried to sound gentle.
"Servants
in Gratecieux's castle have cousins in my kitch-
ens."
"Servants'
network." Rod nodded. "So Alfar just took
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 111
over
the castle. Of course, he went on to take over the rest
of the
manor."
"Such
villages as did not already bow to him, aye. They
fell to
his sway one by one. At last, the other barons did
take
alarm, and did band together to declare war upon him."
"Bad
tactics." Rod shook his head. "The hell with the
declaration;
they should've just gone in, and mopped him
up."
The
Duchess stared, scandalized.
"Just
an idea," Rod said quickly.
The
Duchess shook her head. "'Twould have availed
them
naught. They fought a sorcerer."
Rod
lifted his head slowly, eyes widening, nostrils flar-
ing. He
turned to Gwen. "So he's got people thinking they
can't
win, before they even march. They're half defeated
before
they begin fighting."
"Mayhap,"
the Duchess said, in a dull voice, "yet with
great
ease did he defeat the barons. A score of sorcerer's
soldiers
did grapple with the barons' outriders, on the left
flank.
The scouts cried for a rescue, and soldiers ran to aid
them.
The sorcerer's men withdrew; yet no sooner had they
vanished
into the forest, than another band attacked the
vanguard
of the right flank. Again soldiers ran to bring aid,
and
again the sorcerer's men withdrew; and, with greater
confidence,
the barons' men marched ahead."
Even
hearing the story. Rod felt a chill. "Too much con-
fidence."
The
Duchess nodded, and bit her lip. "When they came
within
sight of Castle Gratecieux, a wave of soldiers broke
upon
them from the forest. At t'other side of the road, rocks
began
to appear, with thunder-crashes, and also from that
side
came a swarm of thrown stones—yet no one was there
to
throw them. The soldiers recoiled upon themselves, then
stood
to fight; yet they fell in droves. Three of the five
barons
fought to the last with their men, and were lost. The
other
two rallied mayhap a score, and retreated. The sor-
cerer's
army pressed them hard, but well did they defend
themselves.
Naetheless, a half of the men fell, and one of
the
barons with them. The other half won through to the
High
Road, whereupon they could turn and flee, faster than
112 Christopher Stasheff
the
sorcerer's men could follow. A warlock followed them,
and
rocks appeared all about them; yet he grew careless
and, of
a sudden, an archer whirled and let fly. The arrow
pierced
the warlock, and he tumbled from the sky, scream-
ing.
Then away rode the baron and his poor remnant—and
thus
was the word brought to us. And I assure thee, mine
husband
did honor that archer."
"So
should we all," Rod said. "It always helps, having
a
demonstration that your enemy can be beaten. Didn't your
husband
take these rumors of danger seriously before then?"
"Nay,
not truly. He could not begin to believe that a band
of
peasants could be any true danger to armored knights
and
soldiers, even though they were witches. Yet when the
Baron
Marole stood before him and told him the account
of his
last battle, my lord did rise in wrath. He summoned
up his
knights and men, and did send his fleetest courier
south,
to bear word of all that had happed to Their Royal
Majesties."
Rod
frowned. "He sent a messenger? How long ago?"
The
Duchess shrugged. "Five days agone."
Rod
shook his head. "He should have been in Runnymede
before
we left."
She
stared at him for a long moment, her eyes widening,
haunted.
"He did not come."
"No,"
Rod answered, "he didn't."
The
Duchess dropped her gaze. "Alas, poor wight! Need
we
guess at what hath happed?"
"No,
I think it's pretty obvious." Rod gazed north along
the
road. "In fact, he might even have dressed himself as
a
peasant, in hopes he'd be overlooked. In any case, he's
probably
the reason Alfar sent his new army out to cut down
refugees."
"Refugees?"
The Duchess looked up, frowning. "What
are
these?"
"Poor
folk, who flee the ravages of war," Gwen ex-
plained.
Rod
nodded. "Usually because their homes have been
destroyed.
In this case, though, the only ones who've been
heading
south are the ones who realized what was coming,
and got
out while they could."
"You've
seen such folk, then?"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 113
Rod
nodded. "A few. I'd say we've been running into
one
every mile or so."
The
Duchess shook her head slowly. "I marvel that they
'scaped
the sorcerer's soldiers!"
"They
started early enough, I guess—but I'm sure the
soldiers
caught up with plenty of other bands. And, of
course,
we did manage to, ah, interfere, when a squad of
men-at-arms
was trying to stop a family we bumped into."
The
Duchess studied his face. "What had this family
seen?"
"Not
a dam thing—but they'd heard rumors."
"And
were wise enough to heed them." The Duchess's
mouth
hardened. "Yet will Their Royal Majesties send an
army
north, after naught but rumor?"
Rod
shook his head. "Not a chance."
She
frowned. "Yet how is it thou dost..." Then she
broke
off, eyes widening in surprise, then hope. "Yet thou
dost
come, thou!"
Rod
answered with a sardonic smile. "Quick-witted, I
see.
And yes, the King sent us—to find out the truth of the
rumors."
"And
thou dost lead thy wife and baims into so vile a
brew of
foulness?" the Duchess cried. She turned on Gwen.
"Oh
lady, nay! If thou dost thy children love, spare them
this
horror!"
Gwen
looked up at Rod, startled.
Like a
gentleman. Rod declined the unexpected advan-
tage.
He only said, "Well... you'll understand that my wife
and
children are a bit better equipped to deal with evil
witches
than most might be—so they're not really in so
great a
danger."
It
earned him a look of warmth from Gwen, but the
Duchess
cried, "Danger enow! Lord Warlock, do not let
them
go! Thou dost not comprehend the might of this fell
sorcerer!"
"We've
had a taste of it."
"Then
let that taste make thee lose thine appetite! A
fulness
of his work will sicken thy soul! 'Tis one thing to
see a
mere squadron of his victims, such as these poor
folk..."
She waved toward the soldiers. "Yet when thou
dost
see them come against thee by the hundreds, thine heart
114
Christopher Stasheff
shall
shrink in horror! Tis not that his magic is so fell—
'tis
the purely evil malice of his soul!"
Rod's
eyes gleamed. "You've seen him yourself, then?"
She
dropped her eyes. "Aye, though only from a dis-
tance.
'Twas enow." She shuddered. "I could feel his hatred
washing
o'er me, as though I stood 'neath a cloudburst of
dirtied
water. Methought that I should ne'er again feel clean!"
"But
how could the Duke let you come so near the battle!"
"He
fought against it, I assure thee—yet the battle did
come
nigh to me. For when he had dispatched the courier
southwards,
and his knights had come up with all their men,
he
donned his armor and rode forth to meet the sorcerer."
Rod
nodded. "Sounds right. I never would've accused
Duke
Romanov of hesitating—or of the slightest bit of
uncertainty."
"Error,
though?" The Duchess looked up, with a sardonic
smile.
"I know mine husband. Lord Warlock. Dearly though
I love
him, I cannot help but be aware of his rashness. Yet
in this
matter, I believe, even full caution would have im-
pelled
him to battle—for 'twas fight or flee, look you, and,
as Duke,
he could not flee—for he was sworn to the pro-
tection
of his people. 'Twas his duty, then, to fight—and
if he
must needs fight, 'twas best to fight just then, when
the
sorcerer and his forces were newly come from battle,
and
would therefore be weakened with battle losses."
"But
strengthened with the men he'd captured." Rod
frowned.
"Or didn't you realize..." He gazed at her, and
let the
words gel in his mouth.
"What?"
She frowned.
Rod
cleared his throat, and shifted from one foot to the
other.
"Well, uh... where he recruited his men from. His
army, I
mean."
"Ah."
She smiled bitterly. "From those he had defeated,
dost
thou mean? Aye, that word was brought to us with the
news of
Baron Gratecieux's lost battle. The soldier who
came back,
did tell us of old friends he'd seen who, he
knew,
had fought in the train of one of Gratecieux's vassal
knights."
"Well,
at least it's not a surprise now," Rod sighed. "I
suppose
it would take Alfar a little while to process his new
recruits..."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 115
"To
bind them under his spell?" The Duchess shook her
head.
"I know not. I know only that my lord did march out
toward
the castle that had been Gratecieux's—and I went
up to
the highest turret, to see them go."
Rod
lifted his head a little. "Could you see all the way
to
Gratecieux's castle?"
"Aye;
his towers are taller even than those of Their Royal
Majesties.
We can see only the battlements—yet we can
see
that much. Not that I had need to."
Rod frowned.
"You mean they didn't even get that far?"
The
Duchess nodded. "The sorcerer had marched out to
meet
him. Even when my lord set out, the sorcerer's forces
already
stood, drawn up and waiting, by a ravine midway
betwixt
the two castles. 'Tis as though he knew aforetime
of my
lord's coming."
"He
did," Rod growled. "All witches and warlocks here
are
mind readers."
The
Duchess looked up, surprised. Then her mouth tight-
ened in
exasperation. "Aye, certes. And I knew it. I had
but to
think—and I did not."
"It
matters not," Gwen said quickly.
"Truth.
What aid could I provide?" The Duchess spread
her
hands helplessly. "I could but watch. Yet though the
sorcerer
had magics, my lord the Duke had guile."
"Oh,
really? You mean he managed to escape the am-
bush?"
"Aye,
and drew them onto ground of his choosing. For
they
waited on the road, look you, with a wooded slope to
the
left, and a bank strewn with boulders on the right."
Rod
nodded. "Good ambush country. What'd your hus-
band do
about the roadblock?"
"He
saw it afar off, and marched his force off the road
ere the
slopes had begun to enfold it. Out into the open
plain
they went, and away toward Castle Gratecieux."
"Oh,
nice." Rod grinned. "Go knock on the door while
the
army's out waiting for you." His opinion of Duke
Romanov
went up a notch. No matter; it had plenty of room.
"The
sorcerer did not appreciate his wisdom," the Duchess
assured
Rod. "He marched his men posthaste out into the
plain,
to once again block my lord's path, and more men
than
had bestrode the road, burst from the trees and rock."
116
Christopher Stasheff
"Of
course. Your husband knows an ambush point when
he sees
one—and it is nice to be proven right now and
then,
isn't it?"
The
Duchess exchanged a wifely glance with Gwen.
Rod
hurried. "I gather they did manage to cut him off."
"They
did indeed; yet my lord's troops were drawn up
in
battle array, and fresh, whiles the sorcerer's straggled
hard
from a chase. Then they met, with a fearful clash of
arms
and a howling of men, that I could hear clearly over
the
leagues. And, at first, my lord's forces bore back the
sorcerer's.
Little could I see from my tower; but the coil of
men did
move away, and therefore did I know that the
sorcerer
retreated, and my lord did follow."
"Delightful!
But I take it that didn't last?"
"Nay."
She spread her hands. "I cannot tell why, or what
did hap
to change the tide of battle. I only know that the
coil
began to grow again, and swelled far too quickly. Thus
I knew
that my husband's forces did flee—in truth, that I
did
witness a rout. I stayed to see no more, but flew down
to
gather up my boys, and bundle them into the coach. I
bade
them keep the curtains close, and lie upon the floor;
then
turned I to old Peter, the groom, and I did cry, "The
coachman
hath gone to fight by my lord's side! Up, old
Peter,
and aid us in our flight!' Yet he did not stir; he only
glowered
up at me, and spat at my feet. 'Not I,' he growled.
'Ne'er
again shall I serve a lordling!'"
Rod
didn't speak, but flint struck steel in his gaze.
Gwen
saw, and nodded. "'Twas even so. The sorcerer's
spells
had reached out to entrap his mind."
"What
did you do?" Rod asked the Duchess.
"I
fled," the Duchess said simply. "I did not stay to seek
another
coachman, lest old Peter's surliness turn to malice.
I had
no wish to have spellbound creatures seek to drag me
down.
Nay, I sprang up on the box myself, and seized the
whip. I
attempted to crack it over the horses' heads, but it
only
whistled past them; yet that was enow, and they trotted
forward.
Through the gates and over the drawbridge I drove,
with my
heart in my throat, for fear the team would seize
the
bits, and run wild away; yet they trotted obediently, and
I found
that I had moved in barely ample time. For even
as my
coach's wheels roared onto the drawbridge, the port-
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
117
cullis
shot down behind me with a crash, and the bridge
beneath
me began to tremble. As soon as I was clear, I did
look
back, and, surely, did see the bridge begin to rise."
"Yet
thou wast free!" Gwen breathed.
The
Duchess shook her head. "Nay, not yet. For as I
raced
away from the castle, I did see my lord's soldiers
charging
towards me with the sorcerer's men-at-arms hot
on
their heels. I knew I must pass near to their flight ere I
could
win free to the southward road; I prayed that our
faithful
men, seeing me, would turn to fight, and gain us
that
last vital moment in which to escape. Yet were my
hopes
dashed, for as they came nigh me, fire kindled in
their
eyes, and a dozen of them ran to catch my horses'
reins,
howling for my blood and my children's heads—
they,
who but minutes before had fought in our defense!"
She
buried her face in her hands, sobbing.
Gwen
wrapped an arm around her, and murmured, "They
did not
know. I have broke this spell from two bands of
men
now, and thus can tell thee how it is: Their minds are
put to
sleep, and the thoughts that float above that slumber
are not
theirs. The men themselves, who swore thee faith
and
served thee well, do keep the faith they swore! If they
are
waked, and learn what their bodies did while their minds
slept,
they will be heart-struck, even as these." She nodded
toward
the soldiers gathered under the tree.
"Heart-struck,
as am I!" the Duchess sobbed. "For when
they
are waked from their enchantment, what shall I say to
them?
"That scar upon thy cheek is my own doing, but I
did not
truly mean to do it?' For, look thee, as they threw
themselves
at the horses' bits, I struck out with the whip,
and
scored them wheresoe'er I might—on their hands, then-
arms,
their chests or, aye, even their faces! And they fell
back,
then they fell back..." Her voice dissolved into weep-
ing
again.
"You
had no choice." Rod's voice was harsh.
"No
choice, in truth!" Gwen cried. "Wouldst thou have
let
them drag thine horses to a halt, wrench ope thy carriage,
and
drag out thy baims, to take to Alfar?"
The
Duchess shuddered. "'Tis even as thou dost say."
She
caught her breath, swallowed, and nodded. "'Tis even
so. I
could not let them triumph."
118
Christopher
Stasheff
"But
Alfar did?"
"Oh,
aye, of that am I certain—and my lord doth lie in
the
sleep of death! Or, if I am blessed, only battered and
bloody,
but alive in a dungeon! Ah, how shall I look into
his
eyes again, if ever he is freed, if ever we do meet again?
For
which, pray Heaven! Yet what shall I say? For I was
not
there to hold his castle against his return!"
"He
was probably in chains before he came anywhere
near
home." Rod carefully didn't mention the alternative.
"If
I know Duke Romanov, he probably didn't even start
the
return trip."
Gwen
nodded. "All the land doth know that thy husband
would
sooner die than flee, milady. Belike they dragged
him
down fighting, and bore him away to prison."
"Aye."
She took a deep breath, and squared her shoul-
ders.
"Aye, that is most likely. He would not have even
known
his men had fled. And they would seek to capture
him, no
matter the cost—would they not? For surely, an
imprisoned
Duke is a mighty weapon! Yet I did flee."
"And
thus he would have bade thee do!"
Rod
nodded. "Yes, he would have. If he'd thought you
might
have stayed to fight against an enemy like that, he'd
have
been in a panic—and a less effective fighter for it;
his
fear for you would have shackled his sword arm." He
shook
his head. "No, knowing that you'd do everything you
could
to get the children to safety, if he lost the battle, was
all
that gave him a clear enough mind to fight the battle."
The
Duchess sat still, head bowed.
"'Tis
even as milord doth say," Gwen murmured, "and
thou
dost know it to be true. Thou art thyself the daughter
of
noblemen."
Slowly,
then, the Duchess nodded. "Aye, 'tis true. I have
done
naught but my duty."
"And
your lord will praise you for it," Rod assured her.
"Bewail
his loss—but don't bewail your own conduct. You
know
you did exactly as you should have."
The
Duchess sighed, straightening and poising her head.
"Indeed,
'tis true—yet I did need to hear one speak it
anew. I
thank thee. Lady Gallowglass—and thou. Lord
Warlock."
But her eyes were on Gwen's when her sudden
smile
showed.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 119
Rod
heaved a sigh of relief. "I take it you've been driving
without
a rest."
"Aye,
the poor horses! Though I slowed to a walk as
often
as I dared—yet are the poor beasts near to founder-
ing."
"They
lasted." Rod turned to glance at the horses grazing.
A
couple had already dozed off. "It's a wonder, though—
they
must've been going for a whole day and night."
The
Duchess nodded. "Less a few hours. We began our
flight
late in the afternoon."
Gwen
caught Rod's eye, with a covert smile. He didn't
hear
her thoughts, but he didn't have to; they no doubt
would've
been something along the lines of: Subtle as a
nuclear
blast.
"Papa!
PapaPapaPapaPapaPapa!"
Rod
looked up, glad of the reprieve.
The
children came pelting across the meadow—or at
least,
the Duchess's two did. Rod's brood behaved more
like
spears.
"Papa!"
Javelin Geoffrey struck into him, and clung. Rod
staggered
back a step, caught his breath, and said, "Yes.
What's
so important that it can't wait a second?"
"Illaren's
papa!" Geoffrey crowed. "We saw him!"
Illaren,
the elder of the Duchess's children, nodded ea-
gerly.
His
mother sat galvanized.
"You
what?" Rod caught his son under the shoulders
and
held him at arm's length. "Now, be very careful what
you
say, son. Remember, you could hurt people's feelings
very
badly, if you're making a mistake.... Now. You don't
mean to
tell me you just saw Duke Romanov here, do you?"
"Oh,
no. Papa!" Geoffrey cried in disgust; and Magnus
exploded.
"'Twas last night. Papa—when we chased the
warlock!"
v
"The nasty one, who threw rocks," Gregory chimed in.
"Art
thou mindful, Papa, of when he took thee to the dun-
geon?"
"Yes,
I remember." Suddenly, vividly, in his mind's eye,
Rod saw
the prisoner shackled to the wall again. "You mean
... the
man in chains... ?"
"Aye!
Wouldst thou not say, Papa, that he was..." He
720 Christopher Stasheff
turned
to Illaren, nose wrinkling. "How didst thou picture
thy
father?"
"A
great bear of a man," Illaren supplied.
"Aye!"
Geoffrey whirled back to Rod. "With hair of so
dark a
brown 'twas near to black. And richly clad, with
gilded
armor!"
Rod
nodded, faster and faster. "Yes... yes! Yes on the
armor,
too—what there was left of it, anyway."
"But
that is Father!" cried the younger boy.
"Art
thou certain!" The Duchess came to her feet, stag-
gering,
Geoffrey
stilled, staring at her, eyes huge. "In truth, we
are."
"Dost
thou truly mean..."
"They're
right." Rod turned a grave face to her. "I didn't
recognize
him, at the time—but I should have. It was your
husband,
my lady Duchess. I'm sure of it."
She
stood rigid, staring at him.
Then
her eyes rolled up, and she collapsed.
Gwen
stepped forward, and caught her in an expert grip.
"Be
not affrighted," she assured the two boys. "Thy mother
doth
but swoon—and 'tis from joy, not grief."
"But
Illaren's papa is sorely hurted. Papa!" Magnus re-
minded
Rod.
"Yes."
Rod fixed his eldest with an unwavering stare.
"He
was hurt—and imprisoned. Remember that."
Magnus
stared up at him, face unreadable.
"A
Duke." Rod's tone was cold, measured. "With all his
knights,
with all his men-at-arms, with all his might, he
was
sorely wounded, captured, and imprisoned." He turned
his
head slowly, surveying his children. "Against a power
that
could do that, what could four children do? And what
would
happen to them?"
"But
we are witches!" Cordelia cried.
"Warlocks!"
Geoffrey's chin thrust forward.
"So,"
Rod said, "are they."
"They
have come against us," Geoffrey cried, "and we
have
triumphed!"
"Yes—when
there were six of us, and one of them.
What's
going to happen if we meet all of them together?"
He
stared into Geoffrey's eyes. "As the Duke did."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 121
"We
will no? go back!" Cordelia stamped her foot.
Rod
stiffened, his face paling. "You... will... do... as
...
I... tell you!"
Magnus's
face darkened, and his mouth opened, but
Gwen's
hand slid around to cover it. "Children." Her voice
was
quiet, but all four stilled at the sound. Gwen looked
directly
into Rod's eyes. "I gave thy father my promise."
"What
promise?" Cordelia cried.
"That
if he did insist, we would go home." She raised
a hand
to still the instant tumult. "Now he doth insist."
Rod
nodded slowly, and let his gaze warm as he looked
at her.
"But,
Afama..."
"Hush,"
she commanded, "for there is this, too—these
horrors
that the Duchess hath spoke of to me. Nay, children,
'tis
even as thy father hath said—there is danger in the
North,
horrible and rampant. Tis no place for children."
Cordelia
whirled on her. "But you. Mama..."
"Must
come with thee, to see thee safely home," Gwen
said,
and her tone was iron. "Or dost thou truly say that I
have
but to bid thee 'Go,' and thou'It return to Runnymede
straightaway?
That thou wouldst truly not seek to follow
thy
father, and myself, unseen?"
Cordelia
clenched her fists and stamped her foot, glaring
up at
her mother with incipient mutiny, but she didn't an-
swer.
Gwen
nodded slowly. " 'Tis even as I thought." She lifted
her
gaze to Rod. "And there is this, too—I do not believe
the
Duchess and her sons are safe yet."
Rod
nodded. "Very true."
Gwen
nodded too, and turned back to the children. "We
must
needs guard them."
"But
the soldiers..."
"Did
lately chase them," Gwen reminded. "Who is to
say the
sorcerer's power may not reach down from the North
to
ensnare them again, and turn them 'gainst the Duchess
and her
boys?"
Illaren
exchanged a quick, frightened look with his brother.
"But,
Mama..." Geoffrey cried.
"Thou
wilt do as thou art bid," Gwen commanded, "and
thou
wilt do it presently. Thou, whose care is ever the
722
Christopher Stasheff
ordering
of battles—wilt thou truly deny that the course of
wisdom
is to guard this family, and take them to King Tuan,
to bear
witness?"
Geoffrey
glowered back up at her, then said reluctantly,
"Nay.
Thou hast the right of it. Mama."
"Doesn't
she always," Rod muttered; but nobody seemed
to hear
him.
She
turned to him. "We shall go, husband—even as thou
dost
wish."
"But
Papa won't be safe!" Cordelia whirled to throw her
arms
around his midriff.
Rod
hugged her to him, but shook his head. "I've faced
danger
without you before, children. There was even a time
when I
didn't have your mother along to protect me."
Magnus
shook his head, eyes wide with alarm. "Never
such
danger as this. Papa. A vile, evil sorcerer, with a whole
army of
witches behind him!"
"I've
gone into the middle of an army before—and I
only
had a dagger against all their swords, and worse. Much
worse."
"Yet
these are witches!"
"Yes—and
I've got more than a mental dagger, to use
against
them." Rod held his son's eyes with a grave stare.
"I
think I can match their sorcerer, spell for spell and power
for
power—and pull a few tricks he hasn't even dreamed
of,
since he was a child." He hauled Magnus in against
him,
too. "No, don't worry about me this time. Some day,
I'll
probably meet that enemy who's just a little too much
stronger
than I am—but Alfar isn't it. For all his powers
and all
his nastiness, he doesn't really worry me that much."
"Nor
should he."
Rod
looked up to see his youngest son sitting cross-
legged,
apart from the huddle. "I think thou hast the right
of it.
Papa. I think this sorcerer's arm is thickened more
with
fear, than with strength."
"An
that is so," said Geoffrey, "thou must needs match
him
and, aye, e'en o'ermatch him. Papa."
"Well."
Rod inclined his head gravely. "Thank you, my
sons.
Hearing you say it, makes me feel a lot better." And,
illogically,
it did—and not just because his children had,
when
last came to last, become his cheering section. He
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 123
had a
strange respect for his two younger sons. He wondered
if that
was a good thing.
Apparently,
Cordelia and Magnus felt the same way.
They
pried themselves away from Rod, and the eldest nod-
ded.
"If Gregory doth not foresee thy doom. Papa, it hath
yet to
run."
"Yes."
Rod nodded. "Alfar's not my Nemesis." He turned
back to
Gregory. "What is?"
The
child gazed off into space for a minute, his eyes
losing
focus. Then he looked at his father again, and an-
swered,
with total certainty, "Dreams."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 125
8
The
Duchess slapped the horses with the reins, and the coach
creaked
into motion as they plodded forward. They quick-
ened to
a trot, and the coach rolled away. Gwen turned back
from
her seat beside the Duchess, and waved. Four smaller
hands
sprouted up from the coach roof, and waved franti-
cally
too.
Rod
returned the wave .until they were out of sight, feel-
ing the
hollowness grow within him. Slowly, he turned back
toward
the North, and watched the soldiers moving away,
bearing
their wounded knight on a horse-litter. They had
decided
to go back into the sorcerer's army, disguised as
loyal
automatons. Gwen had told them how to hide their
true
thoughts with a surface of simulated hypnosis—think-
ing the
standardized thoughts that all Alfar's army shared.
She had
also made clear their danger; Alfar would not look
kindly
on traitors. They understood her fully, every single
man
jack of them; but their guilt feelings ruled them, and
they
welcomed the danger as expiation. Rod watched them
go,
hoping he wouldn't meet any of them again until the
whole
rebellion had been squelched.
Somehow,
he was certain that it would be. It was assinine
to
place faith in the pronouncements of a three-year-old—
but his
little Gregory was uncanny, and very perceptive.
124
Acting
on the basis of his predictions would be idiocy—
but he
could let himself feel heartened by them. After all,
Gregory
wasn't your average preschooler.
On the
other hand, just because he had a ten-year-old's
vocabulary,
didn't mean he had a general's grasp of the
situation.
Rod took his opinions the way he took a palm
reading—emotionally
satisfying, but not much use for help-
ing
decide what to do next. He turned to Fess, stuck a foot
in the
stirrup, and mounted. "Come on. Alloy Animal!
Northward
ho!"
Fess
moved away after the departing squadron. "Where
are we
bound. Rod?"
"To
Alfar, of course. But for the immediate future, find
a large
farmstead, would you?"
"A
farmstead? What do you seek there, Rod?"
"The
final touch in our disguise." But Rod wasn't really
paying
attention. His whole being was focused on the dev-
astating,
terrifying sensation of being alone, for the first
time in
twelve years. Oh, he'd been on his own before
during
that time—but never for very long, only a day or
two,
and he'd been too busy to think about it. But he had
the
time now—and he was appalled to realize how much
he'd
come to depend on his family's presence. He felt shorn;
he felt
as though he'd been cut off from his trunk and roots,
like a
lopped branch. There seemed to be a knot in his chest,
and a
numbing fear of the world about him. For the first
time in
twelve years, he faced that world alone, without
Gwen's
massive support, or the gaiety of his children—not
to
mention the very considerable aid of their powers.
The
prospect was thoroughly daunting.
He
tried to shake off the mood, throwing his shoulders
back
and lifting his chin. "This is ridiculous, Fess. I'm the
lone
wolf; I'm the man who penetrated the Prudential Net-
work
and overthrew its Foreman! I'm the knife in the dark,
the
vicious secret agent who brings down empires!"
"If
you say so. Rod."
"I
do say so, damn it! I'm me. Rod Gallowglass—not
just a
father and a husband!... No, damn it, I'm Rodney
d'Armand!
That 'Gallowglass' is just an alias I took when
I came
here, to help me look like a native! And Rodney
726 Christopher Stasheff
d'Armand
managed without Gwen and the kids for twenty-
nine
years!"
"True,"
Fess agreed. "Of course, you lived in your fa-
ther's
house for nineteen of them."
"All
right, so I was only on my own for ten years! But
that's
almost as long as I've been married, isn't it?"
"Of
course."
"Yes."
Rod frowned. "On the other hand, it's only as
long—isn't
it?"
"That,
too, is true."
"Yeah."
Rod scowled. "Habit-forming little creatures,
aren't
they?"
"There,
perhaps, you have touched the nub of it," Jie
robot
agreed. "Most people live their lives by habit patterns,
Rod."
"Yeah—but
they're just habits." Rod squared his shoul-
ders
again. "And you can always change your habits."
"Do
you truly want to, Rod?"
"So
when I get home, I'll change them back! But for the
time
being, I can't have them with me—so I'd better get
used to
it again. I can manage without them—and I will."
"Of
course you will. Rod."
Rod
caught the undertone in Fess's voice and glared at
the
back of his metal skull. "What's the 'but' I hear in there,
Fess?"
"Merely
that you will not be happy about it...."
"Rod,
no! This is intolerable!"
"Oh,
shut up and reverse your gears."
The
robot heaved a martyred blast of white noise and
stepped
back a pace or two. Rod lifted the shafts of the cart
and buckled
them into the harness he'd strapped onto Fess
in
place of a saddle.
"This
is a severe debasement of a thoroughbred, Rod."
"Oh,
come off it!" Rod climbed up to the single-board
seat
and picked up the reins. "You used to pilot a spaceship,
Fess.
That's the same basic concept as pulling a cart."
"No—it
is analagous to driving a cart. And your state-
ment is
otherwise as accurate as claiming that a diamond
embodies
the same concept as a piece of cut plastic."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 127
"Hairsplitting,"
Rod said airily, and slapped Fess's back
with
the reins.
The
robot plodded forward, sighing, "My factory did not
manufacture
me to be a cart horse."
"Oh,
stuff it! When my ancestors met you, you were
piloting
a miner's burro-boat in the asteroid belt around Sol!
I've
heard the family legends!"
"I
know; I taught them to you myself," Fess sighed,
again.
"This is merely poetic justice. Northward, Rod?"
"Northward,"
Rod confirmed, "on the King's High Way.
Hyah!"
He slapped the synthetic horsehide with the reins
again.
It chimed faintly, and Fess broke into a trot. They
swerved
out of the dirt track onto the High Road in a two-
wheeled
cart, leaving behind a ragged yeoman gazing hap-
pily at
the gold in his palm, and shaking his head at the
foolishness
of tinkers, who no sooner came by a bit of
money,
than they had to find something to spend it on.
As they
trotted northward, Fess observed, "About your
discussion
with your wife, Rod..."
"Grand
woman." Rod shook his head in admiration. "She
always
sees the realities of a situation."
"How
are we defining 'reality' in this context. Rod?"
"We
don't; it defines us. But you mean she was just
letting
me have my own way, don't you?"
"Not
simply that," Fess mused. "Not in regard to any-
thing
of real importance."
"Meaning
she usually talks me into doing things her
way."
Rod sat up straighter, frowning. "Wait a minute! You
don't
mean that's what she's done this time, too, do you?"
"No.
I merely thought that you achieved her cooperation
with
remarkable ease."
"When
you start using so many polysyllables, I know
you're
trying to tell me something unpleasant. You mean it
was too
easy?"
"I
did have something of the sort in mind, yes."
"Well,
don't worry about it." Rod propped his elbows
on his
knees. "It was short, but it wasn't really easy. Not
when
you consider all the preliminary skirmishes."
"Perhaps...
Still, it does not seem her way..."
"No...
If she thinks I'm going to lose my temper, she
728
Christopher Stasheff
stands
firm anyway—unless she sees good reason to change
her
mind. And I think having given me a promise is a pretty
good
reason. But at the bottom of it all, Fess, I don't think
I'm the
one who convinced her."
"You
mean the Duchess?"
Rod
nodded. "Mother-to-mother communication always
carries
greater credibility, for a wife and mother."
"Come,
Rod! Certainly you don't believe yourself in-
capable
of convincing your wife of your viewpoint!"
"Meaning
I think she won't listen to me?" Rod nodded.
"She
won't. Unless, of course, I happen to be right...."
It
wasn't hard to tell when they reached the border; there
was a
patrol there to remind him of it.
"Hold!"
the sergeant snapped, as two privates brought
their
pikes down with a crash to bar the road.
Rod
pulled in on the reins, doing his best to think like
a
crochety old farmer—indignant and resentful. "Aye, aye,
calm
thysen! I've held, I've held!"
"Well
for thee that thou hast," the sergeant growled. He
nodded
to the two rankers. "Search." They nodded, and
went to
the back of the cart, to begin probing through the
cabbages
and bran sacks.
'"Ere!
'Ere! What dost thou?" Rod cried, appalled. "Leave
my
cabbages be!"
"Tis
orders, gaffer." The sergeant stepped up beside
him,
arms akimbo. "Our master. Duke Alfar, demands that
we
search any man who doth seek to come within the borders
of
Romanov."
Rod
stared, appalled—and the emotion was real. So
Alfar
had promoted himself! "Duke Alfar? What nonsense
is
this? 'Tis Ivan who is Duke here!"
"Treason!"
another private hissed, his pike leaping out
level.
Rod's fighting instincts impelled him to jump for the
young
man's throat—but he belayed them sternly, and did
what a
poor peasant would do: shrank back a little, but
manfully
held his ground. He stared into the boy's eyes,
and saw
a look that was intense, but abstracted—as though
the kid
wasn't quite all here, but wherever he was, he cared
about
it an awful lot.
Hypnoed
into fanaticism.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 129
The
sergeant was grinning, and he had the same sort of
shallow
look behind the eyeballs. "Where hast thou been,
gaffer?
Buried in thy fields, with thine head stuck in a clod?
Ivan is
beaten and gaoled, and Alfar is now Duke of Ro-
manov!"
"Nay,
it cannot be!" But Rod eyed the soldiers' uniforms
warily.
The
sergeant saw the glance, and chuckled in his throat.
"Aye.
'Tis Alfar's livery." He scowled past Rod. "Hast thou
not
done yet? 'Tis a cart, not a caravan!"
Rod
turned to look, and stared in horror.
"Aye,
we've done." The troopers straightened up.
"Naught
here, Auncient."
"Nay,
not so," Rod snapped. "I've still a few turnips
left.
Hadst thou not purses large enow for all on't?"
"None
o' yer lip," the sergeant growled. "If thou hast
lost a
few cabbages, what matter? Thou hast yet much to
sell at
the market in Korasteshev."
"Why
dost thou come North?" demanded one of the men-
at-arms—the
one with the quick pike.
Rod
turned to him, suddenly aware of danger. He gazed
at the
trooper, his eyes glazing, as the world he saw became
a
little less than real, and his mind opened to receive impres-
sions.
What was really going on behind the soldier's face?
He felt
a pressure, almost as though someone were press-
ing a
finger against his brain. Mentally, he stilled, becoming
totally
passive. He sensed the differences in the minds around
him; it
was like smelling, as though each mind gave off its
own
aroma.
But
four of them were all thinking the same thought:
Stop
those who flee, to make Alfar stronger and greater.
However,
someone coming into the Duchy was very boring.
He was
no threat—just more potential, just one more mind
that
would help magnify Alfar's glory.
But the
fifth mind was alive and alert, and teeming with
suspicion.
A dozen questions jammed up at its outlet, de-
manding
to be asked. Underneath them lay the suspicion
that
the stranger might be a spy or, worse, an assassin. And
at the
bottom of the mind writhed a turmoil of unvoiced
thoughts,
all rising from a brew of emotions: ambition,
suspicion,
shame, anger, hatred. Rod carefully suppressed
130 Christopher Stasheff
a
shudder, and bent all his efforts toward thinking like a
peasant
fanner. He was a rough, unlettered country man,
who
labored twelve hours a day on his lord's fields, and
four
hours a day on his own—the four to raise a cash crop
that
could all be fitted into one small cart. Of course, he
tried
hard to get the most money he could, for all that
work—the
small, additional amount that would make the
difference
between poverty, and an adequate living for him-
self
and his family during the winter. What did these ar-
rogant
bastards mean by trying to keep him from Duke
Romanov's
fat market in Korasteshev! And where did they
get the
idea to act so high and mighty? Just because they
were
wearing leather armor and carrying pikes! Especially
when
anyone could see that, under the green and brown
uniforms,
they were dirt peasants, like himself—probably
less.
Probably mere serfs, and the sons of serfs.
The
soldier shifted impatiently. "Tell, peasant! Why dost
thou
seek to come into—"
"Why,
t' sell m' bran 'n' cabbages 'n' turnips," Rod
answered.
"Dosta think I'd wast m' horse for a day's plea-
sure?"
The
sentry ignored the question. "You're Earl Tudor's
man,"
he growled. "Why not sell in Caernarvon? Why come
North
all the way to Korasteshev?"
"
'Tis not 'all the way,'" Rod snorted. "I live scarce three
leagues
yon." He nodded toward the road behind him.
"Korasteshev
is closer for me." He glared at the trooper—but
he let
his mind dwell hungrily on the thought of the prices he
could
get in Korasteshev. Everyone knew Duke Romanov's
barons
were fighting among themselves—and the more fool
the
Duke, for letting them! And every peasant knew that, when
armies
fought, crops got trampled. Nay, surely the folk in Ko-
rasteshev
would be paying far more for cabbages than those
in Earl
Tudor's peaceful Caernarvon!
The soldier's
face relaxed. So, the cranky old codger's
greedy!
Well and good—greed, we know how to deal with....
Rod
just barely managed to restrain a surge of indigna-
tion.
Old?!? Codger, okay—but, old? He diverted the im-
pulse
into suspicious fuming: Who was this bare-cheeked
brat,
to be asking him questions? Why, he was scarcely done
suckling
his mother's milk!
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 131
He was
gratified to see the young man redden a little—
but the
boy's suspicion wasn't quite finished yet. He ran a
trained
eye over Fess. "How comes a poor dirt farmer to
have so
fine a horse?"
Panic!
Anxiety! The one thing that men might really
blame
him for. Rod had been caught. And hard on the heels
of that
emotion, came a surge of shame. He glanced at Fess.
Eh, my
wife was beautiful, ten years agone! Small wonder
that
Sir Ewing took notice of her....
He
turned back to the young man. "Sir Ewing gave him
to me,
saying he was too old to bear an armored knight
still."
The
suspicion was still there in the young soldier's mind;
it just
changed direction. The young man was trying to find
a flaw
in the story. "Why would a knight give even a cast-
off
charger to a poor peasant?"
The
shame again. Rod let it mount, burning. "Why, for
...
favors... we did him, me and mine." Mostly 'mine.'
There
was a brief, lurid image of a strapping, tow-headed
man in
bed with a voluptuous young woman, with chestnut
hair—not
that you could see much else of her... and the
vision
was gone. But the shame remained, and rage mounted
under
it. "For favors." Rod's face had turned to wood. "Not
that
'tis any affair of thine."
"'Affair,'
is it?" The young man let a mocking grin spread.
"Aye,
thine 'affair' now, is only the selling of thy cabbages,
I
warrant." He turned to the sergeant. "Why do we linger,
wasting
time on this peasant, Auncient?"
"Why,
for that he hath not set his horse to going," the
sergeant
growled. "Be off with thee, fellow! Get thy cart
out
from our station! Get thee hence to the market!"
"Aye—and
I thank thy worships," Rod said sourly. He
turned
away and slapped the reins on Fess's back—but very
gently,
to avoid the metallic ring. Fess started up again,
plodding
away.
Rod
kept a tight rein on his thoughts. It was such a huge,
aching
temptation to indulge himself in speculation! But he
was
certainly still in range of the young telepath, and would
be for
several miles at least—even if the kid's powers were
weak.
And if they were strong... No, Rod kept a steady
mental
stream of embarrassment and anger seething. That
732 Christopher Stasheff
the
young bastard should have subjected him to such per-
sonal
questions! What a filthy mind he must have! And
where
did such a low-born serf's son get any right to be
questioning
him, old Owen, about his comings and goings?
Underneath
that surface spate, in bursts of pure thought
not
encoded into words, boiled the host of questions. In-
teresting,
that the ranker had asked the questions, and the
sergeant
hadn't even seemed to notice that his authority was
being
usurped. Interesting, that the sorcerer's sentries would
pose as
underlings; they had, at least, some craftiness in
their
disguises. That the young warlock was one of those
who had
volunteered to work for Alfar, completely will-
ingly,
Rod had no doubt; the youngster clearly had the
inferiority
complex and paranoia of the persecuted witchling
grown
to manhood—and the ambition that stemmed from
it.
Inwardly, Rod shuddered—if he'd been Alfar, he'd never
have
been able to sleep easily, knowing that his underlings
would
very cheerfully have sliced him to bits and taken his
place.
On the
other hand, the fact that they hadn't indicated
that
Alfar was either an extremely powerful old esper, or
was surrounded
by a few henchmen who were genuinely
loyal.
Or both.
But the
chance that telepaths were constantly running
surveillance
over the duchy, was just too high. Rod couldn't
afford
to take chances. His concentration might falter at just
the
moment that one of the sentry-minds happened to be
listening
to the area he was in. He had to take more thorough
mental
precautions.
Accordingly,
he let the tension from the confrontation at
the
border, begin to ebb away, and began to relax—as "old"
Owen,
of course. What does it matter, what the fuzz-cheeked
brat
said? I'm in Romanov—and I can sell my crop for
that
much greater price! But my, it's been a long day! He'd
been up
before dawn, Owen had—as he always was, of
course;
but travelling was more wearying than threshing.
His
eyelids were sagging. How nice it would be, to nap for
a
bit—just a little bit! Maybe the half of an hour, or so. In
fact,
he was beginning to nod. It wasn't safe, driving when
he was
so sleepy. Nay, surely he'd better nap.
So he
steered the cart off to the side of the road, reined
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
133
the
horse to a stop, lashed the reins to the top bar of the
cart,
clambered over the seat into the back, and found him-
self a
small nest among his baskets. The boards weren't too
much
harder than his pallet at home—and at least he could
lean
back.
He let
his head loll, eyes closing, letting the drowsiness
claim
him, letting his thoughts darken and grow still....
"Rod."
Rod
jolted upright, blinking, hauling his mind out of the
fringes
of the web of sleep. "Huh? Wha? Wha's'a mattuh?"
"Did
you intend to doze. Rod?"
"Who,
me? Ridiculous!" Rod snorted. "Just putting on
a very
good act. Well... okay, maybe I got carried away...."
"As
you wish. Rod." Fess was peacefully nibbling at the
roadside
grass. Rod made a mental note to dump the robot's
wastebasket.
For the time being, of course, Fess's act was
as
necessary as Rod's.
Of
course, he did have to keep it an act. He lay back
against
a bran sack, closed his eyes, and let drowsiness
claim
him again, let the surface of his mind flicker with the
images
of Owen's imaginary day.
Underneath,
he tried to remember what had happened
inside
his head when he had first come to Gramarye, how
it had
felt.
He
remembered the shock when he had found out that
someone
was reading his mind. He had been eyeing one of
the
teenaged witches with admiration, speculating about her
measurements,
when she had gasped, and turned to glare
at him.
He remembered how embarrassed he'd been, and
the
clamoring panic inside as he realized someone could
read
his mind. Worse, that any of the Gramarye "witches"
could—and
that there were dozens of them, at least!
But by
the time he'd met Gwen, only a week or so later,
she
hadn't been able to read his thoughts. For nine years,
that
had been the one mar on an otherwise blissful marriage.
There
had been spats, of course, and there had been the
constant,
underlying tension that always stems from two
people
trying to make one life together; but the loving re-
assurance
she'd had every reason to look forward to, the
warmth
of being able to meld her mind with her husband's,
just
hadn't been there. That had put a continuing, unspoken
134 Christopher Stasheff
strain
on the marriage, with Gwen hiding feelings of having
been
cheated—not by Rod, but by life—and Rod trying
less
successfully to bury his feelings of inferiority.
Then,
when the family had been kidnapped to the land
ofTir
Chlis in an alternative universe. Rod had encountered
his
analog, the alternate High Warlock, Lord Kem—who
was
very much like Lord Gallowglass, enough so to be
Rod's
double. But there had been some major differences
under
the skin—such as Kern's roaring temper. And huge
magical
powers—one of which was the ability to blend his
mind
with Rod's, to lend him Kem's powers. That had
wakened
Rod's own slumbering esper powers—and af-
flicted
him with a hair-trigger temper. Fortunately, it had
also
roused a mind reading ability he'd never suspected he'd
had.
And, suddenly, Gwen had been able to read his mind;
he'd no
longer been telepathically invisible.
So, if
he had been open to mind reading when he came
to
Gramarye, but had been telepathically invisible when he'd
met
Gwen, his mind had probably closed itself off in that
first
panic of embarrassment, finding out that somebody
could
read his thoughts when he most definitely hadn't
wanted
her to.
Of
course, when the girl got done looking indignant, she
hod
looked rather pleased....
He
tried to remember how he had felt at that moment,
and
caught it—exposed, vulnerable. Being so open was
intolerable;
he couldn't allow other people to know so much
about
him, that they might be able to use to hurt him. He
couldn't
let them have the advantage of knowing what he
was
going to do, before he did it.
He
could feel himself pulling back, withdrawing, pulling
inward,
politely but firmly closing himself off, locking out
the
rest of the world. He would smile, he would still interact
with
them—but they could not, would not, know his inner
self....
He came
out of the reverie with an inward shudder. With
an
attitude like that, it was amazing his marriage had lasted
the
first nine years. On second thought, knowing Gwen, it
was
understandable; he hoped he'd made it up to her, since
then.
By
turning into a howling demon whenever a few things
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 135
went
wrong all at the same time?
Be
fair, he told himself, frowning. If she'd rather have
him
emotionally open, she had to accept everything that
implied.
Could he help it if, underneath the mask, he wasn't
really
a very nice guy?
Now he
was being unfair to himself. Wasn't he? Surely
there
had to be a way to be open, without going berserk
every
so often.
There
had to be, and he'd get busy searching for it—as
soon as
the current crisis was out of the way.
He
stilled, suddenly remembering that his technique might
not
have worked. He might not have managed to regain his
telepathic
invisibility; he might still be exposed to passing
telepaths.
So he
sat very still, letting his mind open up, eyes still
closed
in mock slumber. He let his thoughts slumber, too,
let
them idle into dreams, while his mind opened up to all
and any
impressions.
He
didn't hear a thought.
He
would've believed there wasn't a thinking being for
a
hundred miles—and it wasn't just human thoughts that
were
missing, either. When he concentrated on mind reading
this
way, he always heard a continuing background murmur
of
animal minds—simple, vivid emotions: hunger, rage,
desire.
Even earthworms radiated sharp, intense little spikes
of
satisfaction as they chewed their way cheerfully through
the
dirt.
But not
now. Either the worms had plowed into sandy
soil,
or his mind was closed off from both directions. He
couldn't
hear anything—not the background murmur, not
the
defiance of a skylark, nothing. He felt as though a vital
part of
him had been chopped off, that he was less than he
had
been. After three years as a telepath, this was a sudden,
devastating
impoverishment.
But it
was necessary. Without it, he'd very quickly be
detected
and, shortly thereafter, be dead.
He felt
a little better, after that realization. No, he de-
cided,
mental deafness was definitely preferable to per-
manent
sleep. Besides, the 'deafness' was only temporary.
He
hoped.
He
shrugged off the thought, and cranked his eyelids open
736 Christopher Stasheff
just
enough to see through the lashes. The road was clear, as
far as
he could see. Of course, someone might be coming up
behind
him, so he kept up the act: He sat up slowly, blinking
around
him as though he couldn't remember where he was.
Then he
lifted his head, as though remembering, smiled,
yawned,
and stretched. He leaned forward, elbows on knees,
and
blinked at the scenery around him while he waited for his
body to
come awake. Finally, Owen reached down to untie
the
reins, sat up, and clucked to his horse, giving his back a
light
(very light) slap. The horse lifted his head, looked back
to see
his master awake, then turned front again and leaned
into
the horsecollar. The wagon creaked, groaned, and clat-
tered
back onto the High Road again.
As the
wooden wheels rolled away on the paving stones,
Rod
worked at fighting down a rising fear—that, when this
struggle
with renegade espers was over, he might not be
able to
come out of his shell again, might be permanently
maimed
mentally, and never again able to be fully with his
family.
"It's done, Fess. I've closed my mind off. The rest
of the
world is telepathically invisible to me."
"And
you to it?" Fess sounded surprised. "Wasn't that a
bit
drastic. Rod?"
"Yes—but
in a land of hostile telepaths, I think it was
necessary."
The
robot was silent for a few hoofbeats, then nodded
slowly.
"It is a wise course, Rod. Indeed, I would have
counselled
it, if you had asked me."
Rod
caught the implied reproach. "I couldn't, though—
not
while an enemy telepath might have been able to read
my
mind." He was silent for a few seconds, then added,
"It's
scarey, Fess."
"I
can understand that it would be, Rod, after three years
as a
telepath. But I should think Alfar would be even more
frightening."
"What,
him?" Rod shrugged. "Not really. I mean, if
worst
comes to worst and I don't come back, Tuan will start
marching."
"A
rather gruesome interpretation. What do you fear,
Rod?"
"Being
stuck here, inside myself." Rod shuddered. "And
not
being able to unlock my mind again."
9
The sun
was low, ahead and to the left, bathing the road,
and the
dusty leaves that bordered it, in an orange glow that
made
the whole world seem somewhat better than it really
was—and
Rod began to relax as he gazed at it. It was a
magical
road, somehow, twisting away through gilded leaves
to some
unguessable, wonderful faery world ahead.
Around
the turn, a man cried out in alarm, and a chorus
of
bellowing shouts answered him. Quarterstaves cracked
wood on
wood, and clanked on iron.
Rod
stared, snapping out of his reverie. Then he barked
"Charge!"
and Fess sprang into a gallop. The cart rattled
and
bumped behind him, melons and cabbages bouncing
out
into the roadway. Rod swerved into the turn with one
wheel
off the ground—and saw a gray-haired man whirling
a
quarterstaff high, low, from side to side, blocking the
furious
blows of three thick-bodied, shag-haired thugs with
five-day
beards. Two of them had iron caps—which was
just as
well, since they weren't very good with their staves.
Even as
Rod watched, the gray-head managed to crack his
staff
down on one of their skulls. The man howled and
flinched
back, pressing a hand to his head; then, reassured
that he
wasn't injured, he roared and leaped back into the
fight,
flailing a huge, windmilling arc of a blow that would
737
138 Christopher Stasheff
have
pulverized anything in its way. But the older man's
staff
snapped out at an angle, blocking the blow—and the
thug's
stick shot down the smooth wood, straight toward
the
victim's knuckles. The traveller's staff pushed farther,
though,
coming around in a half circle, and the thug's stick
plowed
into the ground. By that time, the other end of the
older man's
staff was swinging up to block a short, vicious
blow
from the thug on the other side.
Anger
flared in Rod, the smoldering resentment of in-
justice.
"Anybody that good has earned help!" Rod snapped.
"We
can't let him be killed just because he's outnumbered!
Never!"
Pess's
hooves whipped into a blur that no real horse could
have
managed. Rod swung his whip back, fighting against
his own
anger to withhold the blow until the right moment.
A
handful of soldiers broke through the screen of brush
at the
roadside, riding into view from a woodland track.
Rod
hauled on Fess's reins—not that the horse needed
it; but
it helped Rod to force down his anger, contain the
frustration
at not striking out. "Hold it, Fess! Company's
coming.
Maybe we'd better leave this goodman to natural
processes."
The
sergeant saw the fracas, swung his arm in an over-
hand
circle that ended pointing toward the thugs, and shouted
as he
kicked his mount into a gallop. His troopers bellowed
an
answer, and their horses leaped into a charge.
The
thugs were making too much noise to hear, until the
soldiers
were only thirty feet away. Then one of them looked
up and
shouted. The other two turned, stared for one mo-
ment of
panic, then whirled and plunged into the underbrush
with
howls of dismay.
The
sergeant reined in just in front of the older man.
"I
thank thee, Auncient." The traveler bowed, leaning
on his
staff. "They'd have stripped me bare and left me for
wolf-meat!"
"Nay,
certes! We could not allow such work, could we,
then?"
The sergeant grinned to his men for a chorus of
agreement,
and turned back to the traveler. "Such goods as
wayfarers
own, are ours to claim." He leaned down, shoving
an open
palm under the traveler's nose. "Thy purse, gaffer!"
The
older man stared at him, appalled. Then he heaved
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 139
a sigh,
and untied his purse from his belt. He set it in the
sergeant's
hand. "Take it, then—and surely, I owe thee
what I
can give, for thy good offices."
"Dost
thou indeed?" The sergeant straightened, opening
the
purse with a sly grin. But it faded quickly to a scowl
of
indignation, as he looked into the little bag. He glared
down at
the traveler. "Here, now! What manner of jest is
this?"
"Why,
naught!" the traveler said, surprised. "What few
coins I
have, are there!"
"Few
indeed." The sergeant upended the purse, and five
copper
coins clinked into his palm. He growled and tossed
them
into the dust. "Come, then! None take to the road
without
a few shillings at least, to provide for themselves."
The
older man shook his head. "I had no more—and
my
daughter's near to term with her first. I must be there;
she'll
have need of me."
"She
will, indeed," the sergeant growled, "and thou'lt
be
wanting." He nodded to his men. "Strip him, and slash
his
clothes. We'll find shillings, though they be within his
flesh."
The
traveler stepped back, horrified, as the soldiers
crowded
in, chuckling. Then his face firmed with resig-
nation,
and his staff lifted.
"Seize
him!" the sergeant barked.
"So
much for natural processes." Rod's anger surged up,
freed.
"Now, Fess!"
The
great black horse sprang forward.
One of
the soldiers chopped down at the traveler with
his
pike; but his victim's quarterstaff cracked against the
pike-shaft,
and it swerved, crashing into the shield of the
trooper
next to him. "Here now!" the man barked, and
swung
his own axe.
"Nay,
nay!" the sergeant cried in disgust. "Is one lone..."
A
bellow of rage drowned him out, and his eyes bulged
as
Rod's whip wrapped itself around his throat. Rod yanked
back as
Fess crashed into a trooper, and the sergeant shot
out of
his saddle. The trooper screamed as his horse went
flying.
Fess slammed into another horse, reaching for its
rider
with steel teeth, as Rod turned to catch up a club he'd
hidden
among the grain sacks, and whirled it straight-armed
140 Christopher Stasheff
down at
the steel cap of a third trooper with a bellow of
fury.
The blow rang like the parish bell on a holy day, and
the
soldier slumped to the ground, his helmet flying off.
Fess
tossed his head as he let go of the second trooper's
arm,
and the man spun flying to slam into a tree. Rod turned,
just as
the fourth trooper hit the ground. The traveler's staff
rose,
and fell with a dull thud. Rod winced, his rage ending
as
suddenly as it had begun, transmuting into leaden chagrin.
He
looked about him at the three fallen men. He fought
against
it. He'd been right, damn it! And none of them were
really
hurt. Nothing permanent, anyway...
Then he
turned, and saw the older man looking up, pant-
ing,
eyes white-rimmed, staff leaping up to guard again.
Rod
dropped the reins and held his hands up shoulder-
high,
palms open. "Not me, gaffer! I'm just here to help!"
The
staff hung poised as the battle tension ebbed from
the
traveler's muscles. Finally, he lowered his guard, and
smiled.
"I give thee thanks, then—though I'm no one's
'gaffer.'"
"Not
yet, maybe—but you will be, soon." Rod forced
a weak
smile. "I couldn't help overhearing."
"Nay,
I think thou didst attempt such hearing—and I
thank
thee for it." The traveler grounded the butt of his
staff,
and held out his hand.
"I
am called Simon, and my village is Versclos."
"I
am, uhhh..." Rod leaned down to shake Simon's
hand,
groping frantically to remember the name he'd used
for his
"old farmer" act. "Call me Owen. Of Armand."
"Owen
of Armand?" Simon lifted an eyebrow. "I've not
heard
of that village."
"It's
far from here—to the south." Galactic south, any-
way.
"I
thank thee for thy good offices, Owen of Armand."
Simon's
handclasp was warm and firm. "Indeed, had it not
been
for thee..." He broke off suddenly, staring.
Rod
frowned.
Simon
lifted his head with a jolt and gave it a quick
shake.
"Nay, pardon! My mind wanders. Had it not been
for
thee, these liveried bandits would have stripped me
bare—and
sin' that there were no shillings for them to
find..."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 141
Rod's
mouth thinned and hardened. "They probably would
have
stripped you down to your skin, then used their knives
to look
for pockets."
"I
do not doubt it." Simon turned toward the soldiers.
"Yet
'tis not their doing. They labor under a wicked en-
chantment.
Come, we must attend to them." And he turned
away,
to kneel down by one of the troopers, leaving Rod
with a
puzzled frown. That had been rather abrupt—and,
polite
though he was, Simon had very obviously been trying
to
change the subject. What had he suddenly seen in Rod,
that
had so offended him? "Odd victim we have, here," he
muttered.
"Odd
indeed," Fess agreed. "To judge by his vocabulary
and
bearing, one would think him too well-qualified to be
a road wanderer."
Rod
lifted his head slowly. "Interesting point... Well,
let's
give him a hand." He lashed the reins around the top
bar of
the cart and swung down to the ground.
Simon
was kneeling by the sergeant, hand on the man's
shoulder,
but still holding to his staff with the other. He
stared
into the man's face, frowning, head cocked to the
side,
as though he were listening. Rod started to ask, then
saw the
abstracted glaze in Simon's eyes, and managed to
shut
his mouth in time to keep the words in. He'd seen that
same
look in Gwen's face too many times to mistake it—
especially
since he'd seen it in all his children's faces, too,
now and
then—especially Gregory's. Exactly what was
going
on. Rod didn't know—but it was certainly something
psionic.
The
sergeant's eyes opened. He blinked, scowling against
pain,
then sat up, massaging his throat. "What hast thou..."
Then
his eyes widened in horror. "Nay, I! what have / done
to
thee?"
Rod
relaxed, reassured. The sergeant had his conscience
back.
The
man's eyes lost focus as he took a quick tour back
through
memory. "I have... nay, I have oppressed... I have
murdered!
Eh, poor folk!" He squeezed his eyes shut, face
clenched
in pain. "I have seen these hands cut down fleeing
peasants,
then steal what few coins they had! I have heard
mine
own voice curse at villagers, and hale forth their sons
r
742
Christopher Stasheff THE WARLOCK ENRAGED 143
to
serve in the sorcerer's army! I have..."
"Done
naught." Simon spoke sternly, but without anger,
his
voice pitched and hardened to pierce the sergeant's re-
morse.
"Be of good cheer, Auncient—for thou didst labor
under
enchantment. Whilst thy mind slumbered, ensorceled,
thy
body moved at the bidding of another. His commands
were
laid in thee, and thy body remembered, and governed
its
actions by his orders. Whatsoe'er thou dost recall thine
hands
doing, or thy voice crying, 'twas not thine own doing,
but
Alfar's."
The
sergeant looked up, hope rising in his gaze.
Rod held
his face carefully impassive. Interesting, very
interesting,
that Simon knew the nature of the spell. Even
more
interesting, that he could break it.
Which
meant, of course, that he was a telepath. And
which
meant that the startled look he had given Rod, was
because
he saw a man before him, but didn't sense a mind
to go
with it. Rod could understand his amazement; he'd
felt
the same way a few times, himself....
It also
raised the interesting question of how Simon had
escaped
Alfar's dragnet. Or did the sorcerer routinely leave
witches
and warlocks free to roam about the countryside,
even
though they hadn't signed up with him? Somehow,
Rod
doubted it.
The
sergeant gave Simon a glance up from the depths of
despair.
"What nonsense dost thou speak? When could so
vile a
spell have been laid upon me?"
"Why,
I cannot tell," the traveler answered, "for I was
not
there. Yet, think—'twas in all likelihood hard after a
battle,
when thou hadst been taken prisoner."
The
sergeant's eyes widened, and he turned »way, but
he was
not seeing the roadside, nor the trees. "Aye, the
battle...
Our gallant Duke led us against the sorcerer's vile
army,
and they fought poorly, advancing on us with pikes
lowered,
but with their gazes fixed. 'Twas daunting, for
their
pikes never varied, nor the even tread of their feet;
but our
Duke cried, 'Why, they are puppets! And they can
do only
what their master wills, when he pulls their string.
Onward,
brave hearts—for he cannot govern a thousand
separate
fights!' And he lowered his lance, charging straight
toward
the foe. We took heart with a shout and followed,
and
'twas even as he said, for we had but to sidestep the
pikes.
Though the men behind them sought to follow, we
could
move faster, and step through to stab and cut. Thus
the
sorcerer's army began to give ground—not through
retreat,
but through being forced back bodily.
"But
something vile and huge struck at us from the sky
with a
scream and, of a sudden, the air was filled with flying
rocks.
Sheets of fire enveloped our army, and we cried out
in
fear. Daunted, we gave ground, and the sorcerer's troops
strode
after, to follow.
"Then,
of a sudden, the man in front of me turned, with
a
strange look in his eye—eerie and fey. 'Turn, man!' I
cried,
and stabbed past him with my pike, knocking aside
a blow
that would have slain him. 'Turn, and fight for thy
Duke!'
'Nay,' quoth he, 'for what hath the duke done ever,
save to
take from us as much, and return as little, as he
might?
I shall fight for the sorcerer now!' And he raised
his
pike to strike at me. Yet whatever spell held him, it had
slowed
him. I stared in horror at what I had heard him say,
then
saw his pike sweeping down at me. I struck it aside;
but all
about me, the Duke's soldiers in the front of the
army
were turning to strike at their comrades behind. In an
instant,
I was hard put to defend myself—yet 'twas from
men of
mine own livery! Distant behind them, I saw the
Duke on
his tall horse, surrounded by pikes; yet those at
his
back, that jabbed at his armor, were held by his own
men! He
turned, roaring in rage, and his sword chopped in
a half
circle, reaping pike-heads like corn; yet a dozen
sprang
up for every one that fell.
"Then,
of a sudden, there was a fellow who floated in
midair,
above the Duke, who dropped a noose about our
lord
and cast loops of rope to follow it, binding his arms
to his
sides. He roared in anger, but the warlock shot away
from
him, jerking him from his horse. He crashed down
below
the hedge of pikes, and I cried out in despair, striking
out
with my own pike, blocking the blades about me; yet
a
heaviness crept over me. I struggled against it and, praise
Heaven,
felt anger rise to counter; yet even so, the heaviness
grew
greater and greater. I scarce seemed to feel the pike
in my
hands. Then all darkened about me, as though I had
fallen
asleep." Slowly, he lifted his head, looking up at
144 Christopher Stasheff
Simon.
"I recall no more of the battle."
Simon
nodded. "Belike thou, in thy turn, didst turn upon
thy
comrades behind. Yet be of good cheer; for they, belike,
fell
also under the spell. What else dost thou recall?"
"Why..."
The soldier turned away again, his eyes glaz-
ing.
"Only brief snatches. I am mindful of marching in the
midst
of a troop, a thousand strong or more. The sorcerer's
livery
bounded its rim, with those of us who wore the Duke's
colors
within; and in our center rode our great Duke himself,
his
helmet gone, a bloody rag tied about his head—and his
arms
bound behind him!" He squeezed his eyes shut, bowing
his
head. "Alas, my noble lord!"
"Buck
up!" Rod reached out to clasp the man's shoulder.
"At
least he's still alive."
"Aye,
verily! For he did glare about him, cursing!" The
sergeant's
eyes glittered. "Ah, gallant Duke! Him the spell
could
not entrap!"
"He's
a strong-willed man," Rod agreed. "What else do
you
remember?"
"Why
... coming home." The sergeant's mouth tight-
ened.
"Eh, but what manner of homecoming was this? For
I saw
an armed band haling milord Duke away to his own
dungeons.
Then, with wild cheering, all soldiers turned, to
welcome
the sorcerer Alfar as he rode through the gates in
a
gilded coach—and I, I was one of them!"
"What
did he look like?" Rod demanded.
The
sergeant shook his head. "I cannot truly say. 'Twas
naught
but a brief glimpse 'twixt the curtains of a rolling
coach,
as he went by. A slight man, with a flowing beard
and a
velvet hat. No more could I tell thee."
Simon
nodded. "And after that?"
"After?
Why—the guardroom. And those of us who
wore
the Duke's livery had no weapons. Yet we played at
dice,
and quaffed wine, the whiles they who wore the sor-
cerer's
livery took us, one by one, away, and brought us
back
wearing Alfar's colors." His face worked; he spat.
"What
happened when you were taken away?" Rod asked
gently.
The
sergeant shrugged. "I went willingly; wherefore not?
The
sorcerer was all-wise and good; assuredly his folk could
not
harm me!" His mouth tightened, as though he'd tasted
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 145
bitterness.
"They took me, one soldier on either side, their
pikes
in their hands, though there was no need for such."
"And
wither did these two take thee?"
"To
the chamber of the Captain of the Watch; yet 'twas
not he
who waited there within. And I would not have known
the
place, for 'twas darkened, and filled with sweet aromas.
A
candle burned on a table, and they sat me in a chair beside
it, the
whiles the door closed behind. 'Twas all dark then,
and I
could see that one sat across from me; yet I could not
tell
his face nor colors, for they were lost in shadow. 'Sleep,'
he bade
me, 'sleep well. Thou hast fought hard; thou hast
fought
bravely. Thou hast earned thy reward of slumber.'
Thus he
spake; and truly, mine eyes did close, and dark-
ness
folded about me, and 'twas warm and comforting."
He
looked up, blinking. "The rest, thou hast heard. I have
but now
waked from that slumber. What I remember, I recall
as
though 'twere a dream."
"What
was the dream?" Rod frowned, intent. "What
happened
after they hyp-, uh, put your mind to sleep?"
The
sergeant shrugged. "Naught, We lazed about the
guardroom
for a day, mayhap two, and all the talk was of
the excellence
of the sorcerer, and how well-suited to the
duchy
would be his rule.
"Then,
of a sudden, the captain cried, 'To horse!' and
we ran
for our weapons. 'The peasant folk flee,' cried he.
'They
have taken to the roads; southwards they wander, to
bear
treacherous words to Earl Tudor and King Loguire.
Out
upon them, barracks scum! Out upon them, and haul
t'.>;m
back or slay them were they stand!' And out we rushed,
to
horse and to road, and away to the South we thundered,
galloping,
seeking poor folk to slaughter." He squeezed his
eyes
shut, pressing his hand over his eyes. "Alas, poor souls!
What
guilt was theirs? Only that they sought to shield their
wives
and baims from war and evil! What fault was theirs,
that
earned so harsh a reward?" He lifted his gaze to the
traveler,
and his eyes were wide and haunted. "For we found
them, a
single family; and we found a dozen such, one by
one;
and one by one, we slew them. Our swords whirled,
cleaving
through blood and bone, flinging wide a spray of
crimson.
Then, when all the corpses lay pooling all their
scarlet
gore together in a single pond, we did dismount, slit
146
Christopher Stasheff
their
purses, and search their bodies, to carry away what
few
coins they had hoarded, to bear back to Alfar the sor-
cerer."
He buried his face in his hands. "Ay me! How shall
I live,
with such pictures seared upon my brain?" He turned
to Rod.
"But we have plunder—aye, booty rich indeed!
For
every peasant family had a coin or two—and we have
thirty
shillings! A pound, and half again! Wealth indeed, to
hale
home to Alfar!" He threw back his head, and howled,
"A
curse upon the man, and all his minions! A curse upon
one who
could do such evil to his fellow man! And curses,
too,
upon the witches who do serve him—on all witches,
for
surely such evil lies in all their hearts!"
"Nay,
not so!" Simon spoke sternly. " Tis only this hand-
ful of
miserable recreants who do evil to their fellow men!
Belike
they are unable to gain fellowship of other men and
women,
and blame their loneliness'not on themselves, but
on the
other folk, who do not befriend them. I doubt me
not an
they do tell themselves the goodfolk envy them their
magic,
and therefore spurn all witches. Thus do they reason
out
some license for themselves to steal, and lord it over
other
folk."
Rod was
impressed. He hadn't expected such insight, in
an
average yeoman.
Neither
had the sergeant. He stared up at Simon, wide-
eyed.
"How well thou dost know them!"
"As
well I should." Simon's mouth tightened at the cor-
ners.
"For I am myself a warlock. But!" He held up a palm,
to stop
the sergeant's startled oath. "But like the greater
number
of my fellows, I have learned the ways of hiding
all my
powers, and deal with other folk as well as any man.
I have
had a wife who was not a witch. Together, we reared
children
who, though they had some Power, learned well
to hide
it, and have grown up in the liking of their fellows.
We do
not seek for power; we do not seek for wealth. We
have
already what we most care for—the good regard of
others."
The
sergeant's mouth went crooked. "An thou hast so
deep a
regard for we humble common folk, why canst thou
not
ward us from these evil ones?"
"Why,
so they did," Simon answered, "those warlocks
and
witches who had real power. I knew one crone who
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 147
was a
healer—many had she mended in both mind and
body;
and I have known warlocks, gentle men who did speak
with
those whose minds were laboring in confusion, or
disarranged,
and led them out into the light of sanity again.
But I
myself?" He shrugged. "My powers were never so
great.
I have known warlocks who can disappear, and appear
again
some miles distant, and I have heard of some who
can
make their thoughts be heard in others' minds—aye,
even
those who are not witches. But I?" He shook his head,
with a
sad smile. "I am none of these. I have power, aye;
yet it
is weak and feeble—enough to prevent my being a
man,
like other men, yet not enough to make me a warlock
like to
other warlocks. Neither fish nor flesh, I know not
where
to nest. Oh, I can hear what others think if they are
near to
me—but that is all. I did not know I could do
more..."
his smile hardened, "... until Alfar did bind with
his
spell, boys from mine own village—and they did drop
their
hoes, and turn to march away toward his castle, for
his
army, I doubt not. I ran after one, and caught him by
the
arm. 'Whither dost thou go?' I cried; but he turned
sneering
to me, and raised his fist, to strike me away. Yet..."
and
Simon's lips curved in a small smile, "... I have some
skill
in arms. I fended off his blow, and struck ere he could
draw
his fist again, and I did stretch the poor lad senseless
upon
the road. And whiles he lay thus, unwillingly in slum-
ber, I
knelt beside him, frantic in my need, crying out to
him,
'Wake! Dost'a not see thou art ensorceled?' For this
was my
neighbor's son, look you, who had been my chil-
dren's
playfellow. I could not stand aside to let the sorcerer
take
him while breath yet passed within my lungs. With
every
grain of my poor, puny witch power, I did seek to
reach
and wake his slumbering mind, where it lay 'neath
Alfar's
spell."
The
sergeant stared at him, round-eyed. "And did he
waken?"
Simon
nodded, closing his eyes. "He did. Praise Heaven,
for he
did. And when his body likewise woke, he sat up
bewildered,
for he'd no notion how he'd come to be there,
lying
in the midroad, half a league from home. I took him
back to
his father; yet I bethought me that what I could do
for
one, I might so hap to do for others. Thus, when any
148
Christopher Stasheff THE WARLOCK ENRAGED 149
boy
from our village did gain that far-off gaze and wander
toward
the High Road in a trance, I followed, struck him
down,
and woke his mind; and when the spell began to
wrap
itself around my neighbors' minds also, I waited till
night
fell, and they slumbered, then passed from house to
house,
standing against the wall and seeking to wake them
from
their enchantments. At length I fell ill from exhaus-
tion—but
my village held, alone free from the weird.
"And
so, at last—two days agone—a warlock came
himself,
a meager, pimply-faced lad, but with soldiers at
his
back. Then I could do naught; the boys all marched
away;
yet, at the least, their parents saw they were com-
pelled."
"Yet
did the warlock not seek thee out?"
Simon
shrugged. "He did attempt it; for with a whole
village
yet free-minded, he knew there must needs be a
witch or
warlock who had prevented it. Yet as I've told
thee,
my power's weak; I can only hear thoughts. And that
I was
adept at hiding what little force I had. I was careful
not to
think of witch powers, or spell breaking; I thought
only of
suspicion, and how much I did resent Alfar's do-
minion."
He shook his head slowly. "He could not find me;
for
every mind in all that hamlet thought as I did."
"And
this was but two days agone?" the sergeant cried.
"Two
days," Simon confirmed.
"Then
'tis months that thou hast held thy neighbors'
minds
'gainst Alfar's spell!"
"It
is. Yet in all comely truth, 'tis not till now that Alfar's
had
soldiers to spare for such an errand."
"Aye."
The sergeant's face hardened again. "Yet with
the
Duke captured, he could spare the men, and the time—
for all
present threats were laid."
"I
doubt it not. Yet I assure thee, I did tremble with relief
when
that warlock passed from our village.
"Then
I bethought me that I'd cheated Death quite long
enow.
Nay, I reasoned that I'd done my part, and had es-
caped
thus far more by luck than skill—and, in comely
truth,
my daughter doth draw near to her confinement. Ac-
cordingly,
I sought the better part of valor, and turned my
steps
southward, hoping I might break from his evil-seized,
ensorceled
realm into the free air of Earl Tudor's county."
He
turned to Rod. "And I have come near—so near! 'Tis
but a
half day's journey now, is't not?"
Rod
nodded. "Guards at the border, though. You'd have
trouble
getting across."
Simon
smiled, amused. "Not I."
"Aye."
The soldier gave him an appraising glance. "Thou
hast
something of the look of the wild stag about thee. I
doubt
not an thou couldst find thy freedom through the forest
trails,
where no sentry's eye doth watch."
"Just
so. Yet I think I must not go."
"Nay!"
The sergeant leaned forward. "Go thou must!
Make
good thine escape whilst thou may!"
"And
if I do? Wilt thou?"
The
sergeant lowered his gaze. "I must go back—for
I've
blood on mine hands, and must atone."
"Stuff
and nonsense!" Simon snorted. "These deaths were
Alfar's
doing, and none of thine. Do thou make thine escape,
to join
King Tuan's army, and march back to take thy ven-
geance
'gainst the sorcerer."
The
sergeant shook his head. "Nay. 'Twould take too
long.
And... if we journey north again, my men and I, and
take
our places amidst the sorcerer's force—then there will
be
peasant lives spared, when next they send out to sweep
the
roads. And when King Tuan comes, there will be swords
to
fight for him, within the sorcerer's ranks."
"'Tis
worthy," Simon mused.
"And
stupid!" Rod snorted. "The first warlock who runs
a
security check on the army, listening for traitorous thoughts,
will
find you out. All you'll accomplish is an early exe-
cution."
The
sergeant glared at him, then turned back to Simon.
"Canst
thou not teach us the way of hiding our thoughts?"
"I
can tell thee the way of it," Simon said slowly, "yet
'tis
not quickly learned. It will require constant practice—
and
never mayest thou relent. Such vigilance is well-nigh
impossible,
for one who hath but newly learned. Thou may-
est
quite easily be found out."
"Then
give them choice," the sergeant said. "Wake them
from
their spellbound sleep, and say to them what thou hast
said to
me. I doubt me not an all of them will choose as I
do—to
ride back North."
150
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
151
Simon
smiled, and shrugged. "Can I do less? I, who am
practiced
at such dissimulation? Nay. I shall be a half day's
ride
behind thee."
"That,"
Rod said, "is just a form of suicide. The only
thing
that's uncertain about it, is the date."
Simon
looked up, in mild surprise. "Yet thou dost journey
northward."
"Well,
yes," Rod admitted, "But I have duty involved.
It's
required of me—never mind why."
"As
it is of me—no matter why." Simon gave him the
sardonic
smile and rose to his feet, standing a little taller,
a
little straighter. "Craven was I, to ever flee. My work
remains.
I must turn back, and set my face against the North,
that I
may go to aid more souls who labor in enchanted
sleep,
the whiles their bodies wake."
"Nay,
thou must not!" The sergeant stepped forward,
alarmed.
"In truth, thou hast done all any man should ask
of
thee!"
"'Tis
good of thee, to speak so." Simon smiled with
gentle
warmth. "Yet I'm beholden to them—for look you,
these
are my people, and have been all my life. They have
aided
me in all the daily trials that a poor man undergoes,
and
tended me and mine in illness, and consoled us in
bereavement—as
I have done for them. Such bonds are not
severed
only for reason that I'm the only one able to give
aid
now. Nay, i* truth I played the craven, when that I did
flee."
"Thou
didst not," the sergeant asserted. "What will it
profit
them, for thou to turn back? Thy spell-breaking will
but
draw the warlock to thee again—and when he hath
taken
thee, thy folk will rest spellbound once more."
Simon
fairly beamed, but shook his head. "I may escape
his
notice, as I've done already. Nay, I'll not again play
coward."
The
sergeant sighed. "Thou wast not craven to be afeared;
for
certes, thou hast much to fear. Therefore, an thou wilt
wake my
men from this foul spell, we all shall company
thee."
"And
make the danger greater!" Rod stepped forward,
frowning.
"How much chance do you think you boys would
have
against a squad of twenty, Auncient?"
The
sergeant hesitated, frowning.
Rod
pressed the point. "One civilian, going North with
five
armed men? Alfar's witch-sentries would smell a rat,
even if
they didn't have noses."
Simon's
face lit with a delighted smile. "Yet think, good-
man!
They could say I was their prisoner!"
Rod
gave the sergeant a jaundiced eye. "Do you have
any
orders about taking prisoners?"
"Nay,"
the sergeant admitted. "We were commanded to
but
slay and rob."
"You'd
stand out like a haystack in a cornfield." Rod
shook
his head. "Pleasant fellow, isn't he, this Alfar? Ef-
ficient,
though. Nasty, but efficient."
"Nay;
he's most plainly evil," the sergeant growled.
"Yeah,
but you don't fight evil by standing out in front
of a
full army and declaring war on them. At least, not
when
you're only a handful."
Simon
gave the sergeant a sad nod. " 'Tis even so, Aun-
cient.
Thou and thy men were best to fare on southward."
The
sergeant's jaw tightened; he shook his head. "I will
not
choose to go—nor, I think, will even one of my men."
"Well,
if you're bound and determined," Rod sighed,
"let's
make your lives as expensive as possible. Even just
a
handful of men can do an amazing amount of damage."
"Indeed?"
The sergeant turned to him eagerly. "How dost
thou
mean?"
"You
could be guerillas," Rod explained. "The word
means
'little war,' and that's just what you do—make little
wars
within a big war. Most of the time, you see, you'd be
riding
along like good little Alfarites—but whenever there's
a
chance, you can turn into raiders."
The
sergeant clamped his lips, turning away in exasper-
ation.
"What use are bandits, 'gainst an army?"
"A
lot, if you choose the right targets. For example, if
you
break into the armoury and steal all the crossbow bolts,
or even
break all the arrows..."
The
sergeant lifted his head, eyes lighting. "Aye—that
would
hamper an army's fighting, would it not?"
"Some,"
Rod agreed, "though there are still spears, pikes,
and
swords. At this level of technology, commandoes have
a
tougher time hurting the main army. Actually, I was think-
752
Christopher Stasheff THE WARLOCK ENRAGED 153
ing of
you getting into the kitchens and pouring a few
bucketfuls
of salt on the food."
Slowly,
the sergeant grinned.
"It'll
work even better if you can link up with the other
groups
who've had their spells broken," Rod added.
The
sergeant stared. "There be others?"
"There
will be." Simon's eye glittered.
Rod
glanced at him, and tried to suppress a smile. He
turned
back to the sergeant. "Yes, uh, a Southern witch,
yesterday—she
broke the spell on another squad, like yours,
and
they opted to go back North, too."
"Allies!"
the sergeant cried, then frowned in doubt. "But
how
shall we know them? We cannot ask every soldier in
the
sorcerer's army, 'Art thou of the band whose spell is
broke?'"
"Scarcely,"
Rod agreed. "But any bands Simon frees
from
now on, he can give secret names—ones you can say
aloud
for everyone to hear, but that only the ones whose
spells
are broken will recognize. For example, from now
on,
you'll be, um... Balthazar." He turned to Simon. "And
you can
name the auncients of the next two groups you
free,
'Melchior' and 'Casper.'"
"What
use is this?" the sergeant demanded.
"Well,
if another soldier comes up to you, and says he
has a
message from Auncient Melchior, you can exchange
information,
because you'll know he's a part of the freedom
movement.
But you shouldn't get together, mind you. The
bigger
your force, the easier you'll be to find."
"Then
what use this sending of messages?"
"So
you can all agree to hit the same target at the same
time.
For example, you might want to make a big enough
raid to
actually take over a castle, or something. And, of
course,
when King Tuan's army marches North, you can
all
meet just behind the sorcerer's army, and hit them from
the
back while he hits 'em from the front."
"Doth
he come, then?" The sergeant fairly pounced on
the
idea.
"Oh,
he'll come," Rod said, with more certainty than he
felt.
"A message went South, yesterday."
Simon
and the sergeant both stared at him.
With a
sinking heart. Rod realized he'd made a bad slip.
"I
couldn't help overhearing," he added, lamely.
"Certes,
thou couldst not," Simon murmured. "Yet I be-
think
me thou'rt not the humble yeoman farmer that thou
dost
seem."
"Aye,"
the sergeant agreed. "Thou'rt a man of arms, by
thy
knowledge. What rank hast thou? What is thy station?"
"Proxima
Centauri Terminal," Rod answered. "And as
to my
rank, just take my word for it—I've got enough to
know
what I'm talking about. And as to the name, call me,
uh—'Kem.'"
Instantly,
he knew it was a bad choice. If people call you
Kern,
said his id, from its morass of superstitious fear, you'll
lose
track of who you are. You'll start thinking you are
Kern,
and you'll be absorbed into him.
Ridiculous,
his ego responded. Kern's will can't reach
across
universes. The name's just a word, not a threat to
your
identity.
His
superego surveyed the two, came to its own conclu-
sions,
and declared it a draw.
Rod
swallowed, firmed his jaw, and stuck to his story.
"Kem,"
he said again. "That's all you need to know. Just
take it
and go with it as far as you can, Auncient."
"Indeed
I will. Yet why ought I not to know who it is
who
doth command me?"
"Not
command," Rod pointed out. "I'm just giving you
advice.
It was your idea to go back North, not mine. If you
want a
command, I'll tell you to go South."
"Nay,"
the sergeant said quickly. "Yet I thank thee for
thy
good, um, 'advice.'"
"My
pleasure, I'm sure. And, of course, if the worst
should
happen, and they should capture you..."
"I
will not betray thee," the sergeant said firmly. "Let
them
bring hot irons; let them bring their thumbscrews. I
shall
breathe no word."
"You
won't have to. All they'll have to do is read your
mind.
You may be able to keep from saying it aloud, but
you
can't keep from thinking about it."
The
sergeant looked doubtful.
Rod
nodded. "So the whole idea is to not know anything
more
than is absolutely necessary. But—just in case we
should
be able to get something moving, mind you..."
154
Christopher Stasheff
"Aye!"
"If
someone should come to you, and say that Kem says
to
attack a given place at a given time, you'll know what
to
do."
The soldier
lifted his head, with a slow grin. "Aye. I
shall
indeed now. And I swear to thee, I will execute what
thou
dost command."
"Good
man." Rod slapped him on the shoulder. "Now—
let's
get to waking up your men." He turned to Simon. "If
you
would, Master Simon? The sooner we can split up and
hit the
road, the better."
Simon
nodded, with a smile, and turned away to the
fallen
troopers.
"Well
done," Fess's voice murmured behind Rod's ear.
"You
excel as a catalyst. Rod."
"Oh,
I'm great at knocking over the first domino," Rod
muttered
back. "Only trouble is, this time I have to set them
up,
too."
10
The
osprey circled above them, its wings dipping as it bal-
anced
in the updraft. Rod scowled up at it, wondering if its
eyes
were green, like Owen's. "Simon, how far are we from
the
coast?"
"Mayhap
a day's ride." Simon followed Rod's gaze. "Ah,
I see.
'Tis a fish-hawk, is't not?"
"Far
as I know. But if the ocean's only twenty miles off,
it's
probably genuine." Rod turned to his companion.
"Thought
you were a dirt farmer. How would you know
what a
fish-hawk looks like?"
Simon
shrugged. "As I've said, the ocean's not so far."
Which
was true enough. Rod reflected. He didn't really
have
anything to be suspicious about—but in enemy ter-
ritory,
he couldn't help it. He wasn't that far from suspecting
the
nearest boulder might be a witch in disguise.
"Then,
too," Simon said, amused, "I've never claimed
to be a
farmer."
Rod
looked up, surprised. "True enough," he said slowly.
"I
did just assume. After all, what other occupations would
there
be, in a small village?"
'"Tis
hard by the King's High Way," Simon explained.
"I
keep an inn."
Rod
lifted his head, mouth opening before the words
755
756
Christopher Stasheff
came.
"Oh." He nodded slowly. "I see. And quality folk
stop in
frequently, eh?"
"Mayhap
twice in a month. There was ever a constant
coming
and going with the castle of Milord Duke. I did
hearken
to their speech, and did mimic it as best I could,
the
better to please them."
He'd
hearkened to a lot more than their speech. Rod
reflected.
The aristocrats would no doubt have been aghast,
if
they'd known a mind reader served them. And, of course,
Simon
couldn't have had too many illusions left, about the
lords.
So why
was he still loyal?
Probably
because the alternative was so much worse. "I
don't
suppose they taught you how to read?"
"Nay;
my father sent me to the vicar, for lessons. He
kept an
inn before me, and knew 'twould be useful for an
innkeeper
to read and write, and cast up sums."
So.
Unwittingly, Rod had stumbled into one of the local
community
leaders. "An enlightened man."
"Indeed
he was. And what art thou?"
Every
alarm bell in Rod's head broke into clamor. Ad-
mittedly,
he'd made a pretty big slip; but did Simon have
to be
so quick on the uptake? "Why... I'm a farmer. Do I
look so
much like a knight, as to confuse you? Or a Duke,
perhaps?"
Then his face cleared with a sudden, delighted
smile,
and he turned to jab a finger at Simon. "/ know! You
thought
I was a goldsmith!"
Simon
managed to choke the laugh down into a chuckle,
and
shook his head. "Nay, goodman. I speak not of thine
occupation,
but of what thou art—that thou art there, but
thou'rt
not."
Rod
stared, totally taken aback. "What do you mean,
I'm not
here?"
"In
thy thoughts." Simon laid a finger against his fore-
head.
"I have told thee I can hear men's thoughts—yet I
cannot
hear thine."
"Oh."
Rod turned back to the road, gazing ahead, mus-
ing—while,
inside, he virtually collapsed into a shuddering
heap of
relief. "Yes... I've been told that before...." Glad
it's
working...
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 157
Simon
smiled, but with his brows knit. " 'Tis more than
simply
not hearing thy thoughts. When my mind doth 'lis-
ten'
for thee, there is not even a sense of thy presence. How
comes
this?"
Rod
shrugged. "I can guess, but that's all."
"And
what is thy guess?"
"That
I'm more worried about mind readers than your
average
peasant."
Simon
shook his head. "That would not explain it. I have
known
some filled with morbid fear their thoughts would
be
heard—and I think they had reason, though I sought to
avoid
them. Still, I could have heard their thoughts, an I
had
wished to. Certes, I could sense that they were there.
Yet
with thee, I can do neither. I think, companion, that
thou
must needs have some trace of witch power of thine
own,
that thy will doth wrap into a shield."
"You
trying to tell me I'm a witch?" Rod did a fairly
good
imitation of bristling.
Simon
only smiled sadly. "Even less than I am. Nay, I'd
not
fear that. Thou canst not hear thoughts, canst thou?"
"No,"
Rod said truthfully—at least, for the time being.
Simon
smiled. "Then thou'rt not a witch. Now tell me—
why
dost thou come North? Thou must needs know that
thou
dost drive toward danger."
"I
sure must, after you and the auncient finished with
me."
Rod hunched his shoulders, pulling into himself. "As
to the
danger, I'll chance it. I can get better prices for my
produce
in Korasteshev, than I can in all of Tudor's county!
And my
family's always hungry."
"They
will hunger more, an thou dost not return." Simon's
voice
dropped, full of sincerity. "I bid thee, friend, turn
back."
"What's
the matter? Don't like my company?"
Simon's
eamestness collapsed into a smile. "Nay—thou
art a
pleasant enough companion...."
Personally,
Rod thought he was being rather churlish.
But
Simon was very tolerant. "Yet for thine own sake,
I bid
thee turn toward the South again. The sorcerer's war-
locks
will not take kindly to one whose mind they cannot
sense."
758
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
159
"Oh,
the warlocks won't pay any attention to a mere
peasant
coming to market." At least. Rod hoped they
wouldn't.
"The
prices in Romanov cannot be so much better than
they
are in Tudor." Simon held Rod's eyes with a steady
gaze.
It seemed to bum through his retinas and into his
brain.
"What more is there to thine answer?"
Reluctantly,
Rod admitted, "There is more—but that's
all
you're going to get."
Simon
held his gaze for a minute.
Then he
sighed, and turned away. "Well, it is thy fate,
and
thou must needs answer for it thyself. Yet be mindful,
friend,
that thy wife and baims do depend upon thee."
Rod was
mindful of it, all right. For a sick instant, he
had a
vision of Gwen and the children waiting weeks, with-
out
word of him. Then he thrust the thought sternly aside,
and
tried to envision the look on his boys' faces if he aban-
doned
his mission and came back to be safe. "You have
obligations
to the people of your village. Master Simon. So
have
I."
"What—to
the folk of thy town?"
"Well,
to my people, anyway." Rod had the whole of
Gramarye
in mind, not to mention the Decentralized Dem-
ocratic
Tribunal. "And once you've accepted an obligation
of that
sort, you can't put it aside just because it becomes
dangerous."
"Aye,
that's so," Simon said, frowning. '"Tis this that
I've
but now come to see."
Rod
turned to him, frowning too. "But you've already
done
your part, taken your risks. No one would call you a
coward
for going South now!"
"I
would," Simon said simply.
Rod
looked directly into his eyes for a moment, then
turned
away with a sigh. "What can I say to that, goodman?"
"Naught,
save 'gee-up' to thine horse."
"Why?"
Rod asked sourly. "This cart may be pulled by
a
horse, but it's being driven by a pair of mules."
Sundown
caught them still on the road, with grainfields
at
either hand. "Nay," Simon assured Rod, "there is no town
near."
"I
was afraid of that," Rod sighed. "Well, the earth has
been my
bed before this." And he drove off the road, pulling
Fess to
a stop in the weeds between the track and the field.
He was
cutting vegetables into a small pot before Simon
could
even volunteer.
The
innkeeper eyed him quizzically, then asked, "Dost
ever
have a pot with thee?"
"I
was a tinker once. Habits stick."
Simon
smiled, shaking his head, and leaned back on an
elbow.
"I think such travels are not wholely new to thee."
"We're
even," Rod snorted. "I get the feeling spell-
breaking
isn't all that new to you."
Simon
was still for a moment, but his eyes brightened.
"Almost
could I believe thou didst read minds."
"If
I did, I'd need to have yours translated. So when did
you
start spell-breaking?"
Simon
sat up, hooking his forearms around his shins,
resting
his chin on his knees. "The men of the village came
oft to
mine inn for drinking of beer, which they took as
part-price
for the produce they brought. Anon would come
one
whose heart was heavy, with thoughts in turmoil, to
drink
and be silent—mayhap in hopes that beer would quiet
his
unrest."
Rod
nodded. "Strange how we keep trying that solution.
Especially
since it never works."
"Nay;
but speaking thy thoughts to a willing ear, can
help to
calm them; and the troubled ones would talk, for I
would
hearken, and give what sympathy I could. Yet one
there
came who seemed like unto a wall in winter—like to
spring
apart at the first freeze. He could not talk, but huddled
over
his flagon. Yet the jumble of his thoughts rode upon
such
pain that they fairly screamed. I could not have shut
my mind
to them, even had I wished to—and brooding
over
all was the shadow of a noose."
Rod
looked up sharply. "The kid was suicidal?"
"Aye.
And he was no child, but in his thirties. 'Tis these
passages
from one state to another that do wreak their havocs
within
us, and his children all had grown."
Rod
couldn't understand the problem; but he had Gwen
for a
wife. "What could you do about it?"
"Fill
another flagon, and one for myself, and go to sit
760
Christopher Stasheff
by him.
Then, 'neath the pretext of conversing—and 'twas
very
much a pretense, for I alone did speak—I felt through
the
snarl of his thoughts, found the sources of his pain and
shame,
then asked aloud the questions that did make him
speak
them. And 'twas not easy for him thus to speak—
yet I
encouraged, and he did summon up sufficient reso-
lution.
I meant only to have him thus give me pretext to
discuss
his secret fears, to tell him they were not so fear-
some—yet
I found that, once he had spoken them aloud,
and
heard his own voice saying them, these secrets then
lost
half their power. Then could I ask a question whose
answer
would show him the goodness within him that could
counter
his hidden monsters, and, when we were done, he'd
calmed
tolerably well."
"You
saved his life," Rod accused.
Simon
smiled, flattered. "Mayhap I did. I began, then,
to give
such aid to all such troubled souls that I encountered.
Nay, I
even sought them out, when they did not come into
my
inn."
"Could
be dangerous, there," Rod pointed out. "Just so
much of
that hauling people back from the edge, before the
neighbors
decided you had to be a witch to do it. Especially
since
you were poaching on the parish priest's territory."
Simon
shook his head. "Who knew of it? Not even those
I
aided—for I gave no advice nor exhortation. And look,
you,
'twas a village. We all knew one another, so there was
naught
of surprise should I encounter any one of them, and
chat a
while. Yet withal, the folk began to say that troubled
souls
could find a haven in mine inn."
Definitely
poaching on the priest's territory," Rod mut-
tered.
"And that was an awful lot of grief to be taking on
yourself."
Simon
shrugged, irritated. "They were my people. Mas-
ter
Owen. Are, I should say. And there were never more
than
three in a year."
Rod
didn't look convinced.
Simon
dropped his gaze to the campfire. "Thus, when
Tom
Shepherd lapsed into sullenness, his brothers brought
him to
my taproom. In truth, they half-carried him; he could
no
longer even walk of his own." He shook his head. " 'Twas
an old
friend of mine—or should I say, an old neighbor."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 161
"What
was the matter with him?"
Simon
turned his head from side to side. "His face was
slack;
he could not move of his own, and did but sit, not
speaking.
I drew a stool up next to his, and gazed into his
face,
the whiles I asked questions, which he did not answer;
yet all
the while, my mind was open, hearkening at its
hardest,
for any thought that might slip through his mind."
"Sounds
catatonic." Rod frowned. "I shouldn't think there
would've
been any thoughts."
"There
was one—but only one. And that one did fill
him,
consuming all his mind and heart with a single grave-
yard
knell."
"Suicidal,
again?"
Simon
shook his head. "Nay. 'Twas not a wish to die,
look
thou, nor even a willingness, but a sureness, a certainty,
that he
would die, was indeed that moment dying, but slowly."
Rod sat
very still.
"I
labored mightily 'gainst that compulsion. Yet I could
but ask
questions that would recall to mind the things that
would
make him wish to live—wife, and baims, and careful
neighbors;
yet naught availed." He shook his head. "One
would
have thought he had not heard; for still throughout
him
rang the brazen knell of death." Simon sighed, turning
his
head slowly from side to side. "In the end, I could but
bid his
brothers take him to the priest, but the good friar
fared
no better than I." He shrugged. "I could not cast into
his
mind thoughts to counter that fell compulsion. The power
was not
in me."
Rod
nodded, understanding. Simon was only a telepath,
not a
projective.
Simon
picked up a stick, and poked at the fire. "He died,
in the
end. He ate not, nor drank, and withered up like a
November
leaf. And I, heartsick, began to wonder how
such a
doom came to burden him. For he'd ever been a
cheerful
fellow, and I could see that one had laid a spell
upon
him. Aye, I pondered how one could be so evil as to
do so
fell a deed.
"So
I commenced long walks throughout the county till
at
length I found that same wholehearted, whole consump-
tion of
a mind—yet 'twas not one mind, but a score; for I
came
into a village, and found that half the folk who lived
762
Christopher
Stasheff
THE WARLOCK
ENRAGED
163
there
were bewitched. Oh, aye, they walked and spoke like
any
normal folk—but all their minds were filled with but
one
single thought."
"Death?"
Rod felt the eenness creeping over the back of
his
skull.
"Nay."
Simon shook his head. "'Twas praise of Alfar."
"Oh-h-h."
Rod lifted his head slowly. "The sorcerer's
enchantment
team had been at work."
"They
had—and, knowing that, I went back to mine
own
village and, in chatting with my fellow villagers, asked
a
question here, and another there, and slowly built up a
picture
of that which had occurred to Tom Shepherd. He'd
met a
warlock in the fields, who had bade him kneel to
Alfar.
Tom spat upon the ground, and told that warlock that
his
Alfar was naught but a villein, who truly owed allegiance
to Duke
Romanov, even as Tom Shepherd did. The warlock
then
bade him swear loyalty to Alfar, or die; but Tom laughed
in his
face, and bade him do his worst."
"So
he did?"
"Aye,
he did indeed! Then, knowing this, I went back
to the
village where half had been of one thought only, and
that
thought Alfar's. I found only ten of a hundred still free
in
their thoughts, and those ten walking through a living
nightmare
of fear; for I spoke with some, and heard within
their thoughts
that several of them had defied the warlocks,
and
died as Tom Shepherd had. Even as I stood there, one
broke
beneath his weight "of fear, and swore inside himself
that
he'd be Alfar's man henceforth, and be done with terror."
Simon
shuddered. "I assure thee, I left that village as quickly
as I
might."
He
turned to look directly into Rod's eyes, and his gaze
seemed
to bore into Rod's brain. "I cannot allow such ob-
scenities
of horror to exist, the whiles I sit by and do naught."
He
shook his head slowly. "Craven was I, ever to think I
could
walk away and leave this evil be."
"No,"
Rod said. "No, you can't, can you? Not and still
be who
you are."
Simon
frowned. "Strangely put—yet, I doubt me not,
quite
true."
The
campsite was quiet for a few minutes, as both men
sat
watching the flames, each immersed in his own thoughts.
Then
Rod lifted his head, to find Simon's gaze on him.
"Now,"
said the innkeeper, "'tis thy turn. Is't not?"
"For
what?"
"For
honesty. Why dost thou go North?"
Rod
held his gaze for a few moments, then, slowly, he
said,
"Same reason as yours, really—or one pretty much
like
it. I've seen some of Alfar's work, and it's sickened
me. I
can't call myself a man if I let that happen without
fighting
it. At the very least, I've got to help keep it from
spreading—or
die trying."
"As
indeed thou mayest," Simon breathed. "Yet that is
not the
whole of thine answer, is it?"
"No—but
that's all you're going to get."
They
gazed at one another for several heartbeats, the
blade
of Rod's glare clashing off the velvet wall of Simon's
acceptance.
Finally, the innkeeper nodded. "'Tis thine af-
fair,
of course." He sounded as though he meant it.
He
turned back to the fire. "Thou art mine ally for this
time. I
need know no more than that the sorcerer's thine
enemy."
"Well,
that—and that the stew's ready." Rod leaned over
to
sniff the vapors. "Not bad, for field rations. Want some?"
When
Simon rolled up in his cloak to sleep. Rod went
over to
curry Fess. The job wasn't really stage dressing at
all—Fess's
horsehair may have owed more to plastic than
to
genetics, but it still collected brambles and burrs on
occasion.
"So."
Rod ran the currycomb along Fess's withers. "Alfar
started
out with nothing but feelings of inferiority, and a
grudge
against the world."
"An
ordinary paranoid personality," Fess noted.
"Yeah,
except that he was an esper. And somewhere
along
the line, he all of a sudden became a lot more powerful
than
your average warlock." He looked up at Fess. "Maybe
just
because he managed to talk some other witches into
joining
him?"
"Perhaps."
The robot sounded very skeptical. "I cannot
help
but think there is more to the matter than that."
"Probably
right, too... So. Alfar had a sudden boost in
power,
and/or got together a gang. Then he started leaning
f64 Christopher Stasheff \
on the
local citizenry, like any good gangster." i
"The
process seems to begin with intimidation," Fess '
noted. ;
Rod
stopped currying for a minute. "Maybe... Even the
soldiers
were scared, when they were marching against
him...."
He shrugged. "Hard to say. In any event, he's
finally
able to mass-hypnotize whole villages—though from
the
soldier's account, it needs to be redone in depth, on an
individual
basis."
"The
soldiers' mass hypnosis was done during the heat
of
battle. Rod, and very quickly. The peasant villages seem
to have
been done more leisurely, by Simon's statement—
over a
period of days, perhaps even weeks."
"True—so
it would be more thorough. Though, appar-
ently,
some are harder to hypnotize than others." He looked
up at
Fess again. "And espers appears to be immune."
"So
it would seem, to judge by Simon."
"Yes..."
Briefly, Rod wondered about that. Then he
shrugged
it off. "Anyhow. When Alfar'd built enough of a
power
base, one of the local knights got worried, and tried
to
knock him down before he grew too big. But he was
already
too big."
"Indeed,"
Fess agreed. "He was already powerful enough
to
overcome a knight with his village force."
Rod
nodded. "And by the time he was big enough to
worry
the local baron, he'd absorbed the forces of several
knights.
So the baron fell, and the chain reaction began—
the
baron, then the count, then finally the duke himself—
and it
doesn't end there, does it?"
"Certainly
not, Rod. After all, he now has the resources
of a
duchy to draw on."
"Yes.
We all know what he's going to do now, don't
we?"
"But
surely Gwendylon and the children have already
borne
word to Tuan and Catharine, Rod—and the Duchess's
personal
account must certainly have been very persuasive.
I doubt
not that Tuan is already gathering his forces."
"Gathering
them, yes. But it's going to be at least a week
or two
before he can march North."
"Surely
Alfar cannot consolidate his newly won forces
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 165
with
sufficient speed to enable him to carry the attack to
Tuan!"
"Oh,
I don't think he would, anyway." Rod looked up
into
Fess's imitation eyes. "All the Duke's horses and all
the
Duke's men aren't quite enough to take on the King's
army."
"True,"
the robot conceded. "Therefore, he will attack
Earl
Tudor."
"You
really think he'd dare strike that close to Tuan?"
"Perhaps
not. Perhaps he will seek to conquer Hapsburg
first."
"It's
just great, having outgoing neighbors ... and if he
manages
to swallow Hapsburg, he'll have to digest him
before
he can take on Tudor."
"I
doubt that he would try. He might be able to defeat
the
Earl quickly, but he must surely need a week or two to
complete
the indoctrination of the captured soldiers."
"And
while he's digesting, he's right next to Tuan. No,
you're
right. He'd try to march through Tudor, and attack
Tuan
right away. Which means our job is to keep him from
being
able to attack another baron, before Tuan attacks him."
"What
methods do you propose. Rod?"
Rod
shrugged. "The usual—hit and run, practical jokes,
whispering
campaigns—nothing sensible. Keep him off-
balance.
Which shouldn't be too hard; he's going to be
feeling
pretty insecure, right about now."
"He
will indeed. And, being paranoid, he will seek to
eliminate
whatever enemies he does see, before he turns his
attention
to attack."
"Maybe.
But a paranoid also might decide to attack be-
fore
the next baron can attack him, and start his own secret
police
to take care of internal enemies." Rod clenched a fist
in
frustration. "Damn! If only you could predict what a
single
human being would do!"
"Be
glad you cannot," Fess reminded, "or VETO and its
totalitarians
could easily triumph."
"True,"
Rod growled. "Truer than I like. And speaking
of our
proletarian pals, do you see any evidence of their
meddling
in this?"
"Alfar's
techniques do resemble theirs," Fess admitted.
166 Christopher Stasheff
"Resemble?
Wish fulfillment, more likely! He's got the
kind of
power they dream of—long-distance, mass-
production
brainwashing! What wouldn't any good little
dictator
give for that?"
"His
soul, perhaps?"
"Are
you kidding? Totalitarianism works the other way.
around—everybody
else gives their souls to the dictator!"
"Unpleasant,
but probably accurate. Nonetheless, there
is no
evidence of futurian activity."
"Neither
totalitarians nor anarchists, huh?"
"Certainly
not. Rod."
"Not
even the sudden, huge jump in Alfar's powers?"
"That
ability does bother me," Pess admitted. "A pro-
jective
telepath, who seems to be able to take on a whole
parish
at one time... Still, there's no reason to believe the
totalitarians
would be behind it."
"Oh,
yes there is," Rod countered. "From everything
Simon's
told me, and it just backed up what Gwen said—
the
trance these people seem to walk around in, is thoroughly
impersonal."
"Almost
depersonalized, you might say? I had, had
something
of the same thought too. Rod. I recognize the
state."
"Yes—mechanical,
isn't it?"
"True.
But that is not conclusive evidence of futurian
meddling."
"No—but
it does make you wonder." Rod gave the syn-
thetic
horsehair a last swipe with the brush. "There! As new
and
shiny as though you'd just come from the factory. Do
you
mind a long tether, just for appearances?"
"I
would mind not having it. It is certainly necessary,
Rod."
"Must
keep them up, mustn't we?" Rod reached into the
cart,
pulled out a length of rope, tied one end to Fess's
halter
and the other to a convenient tree branch. "Besides,
you can
break it easily, if you want."
"I
will not hesitate to do so," Fess assured him. "Sleep
while
you can. Rod. You will need the rest."
"You're
such an optomist." Rod pulled his cloak out of
the
cart and went back to the campfire. "I'm not exactly in
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 167
a great
mood for emptying my mind of the cares of the
day."
Try,"
the robot urged.
"If
I try to sleep, I'll stay awake." Rod lay down and
rolled
up in his cloak. "How about trying to stay awake?"
"Not
if you truly want to sleep. I could play soft music,
Rod."
"Thanks,
but I think the nightbirds are doing a pretty
good
job of that."
"As
you wish. Good night. Rod."
"I
hope so," Rod returned. "Same to you, Fess." He
rolled
over toward the fire...
... and
found himself staring into Simon's wide-open,
calm,
and thoughtful eyes.
"Uh..
.hi, there." Rod forced a sickly grin. "Say, I'll
bet
you're wondering what I was doing, rambling on like
that—aren't
you?"
"Not
greatly," Simon answered, "though I do find thy
conversation
to be of great interest."
"Oh,
I'm sure." Rod's stomach sank. "Does it, uh, bother
you,
to, uh, hear me talk to my horse."
"Not
at all." Simon looked faintly surprised. "And 'tis
certainly
not so desperate as talking to thyself."
"That's
a point..."
'"Tis
also scarcely amazing." Simon favored him with
a
rather bleak smile. "Be mindful, I'm an innkeeper, and
many
carters have stopped at my inn. Every one I've known,
has
spoken to his horse."
"Oh."
Rod hoped his surprise didn't shown in his face.
"You
mean I'm not exactly unusual?"
"Only
in this: thou'rt the first I've heard who, when he
spoke
to his horse, made sense."
Rod
supposed it was a compliment.
11
They
were up at first light, and on the road by dawn. With
the
main issues out of the way, the two of them chatted
together
easily—Simon the innkeeper, and Owen the farmer.
And if,
as morning wore on, Owen's tales of his children
bore a
startling resemblance to the experiences of Rod
Gallowglass,
it can scarcely be surprising. On the other
hand,
all the stories had nothing to do with juvenile witch
powers;
Rod stayed sufficiently on his guard not to make
that
particular slip.
It
wasn't easy. Rod found they had a lot in common—
wives,
and children. He also found Simon to be surprisingly
refreshing.
Instead of their usual dire predictions about the
horrors
of adolescence that lay in store for the unwary father,
Simon
restricted his anecdotes to childhood disasters—
though,
when pressed, he admitted that all his children were
grown,
and the tale of his daughter's impending first birth
was
quite true. Rod immediately began insisting, all over
again,
that Simon turn back to the South and his daughter,
the
more so because Simon had mentioned earlier that his
wife
had died quite a few years ago; but the innkeeper merely
informed
Rod that his daughter really lived north of his
home
village—wherefore, he had been doubly cowardly to
flee.
There wasn't much Rod could say to that, so he relaxed
768
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 169
and
enjoyed Simon's company. So, by the time they came
to the
first village. Rod was feeling in fine form—which
was
fortunate, because they were greeted by a mob.
The
peasants stormed out of the village, howling and
throwing
stones and waving pitchforks—but not at Simon
and
Rod. Their target was a small man, who sprinted madly,
managing
to stay a dozen yards ahead of them.
"Slay
the warlock!" they cried. "Stone him!" "Stab him!
Drain
his blood!" "Burn him! Bum him Bum Him BURN
HIM!"
Simon
and Rod stared at each other, startled. Then Simon
snapped,
"He could not be of Alfar's brood, or soldiers
would
even now be cutting down these peasants! Quickly,
Owen!"
"You
heard him!" Rod cracked the whip over Fess's head,
keeping
up the act. "Charge!"
Fess
leaped into a gallop. Cartwheels roared behind him.
Rod
pulled up hard as they passed the fleeing warlock,
and
Simon shouted, "Up behind, man! For thy lifeblood's
sake!"
The
running man looked up, startled, then jumped into
the
cart, as Simon rose to his feet and cried out, in a voice
that
seared through the crowd's shouting:
"I,
too, am a magic worker! Two warlocks face thee
now!
Dost thou still wish wood to kindle?"
The
crowd froze, the words of violence dying on their
tongues.
Simon
stood relaxed, but his face was granite. Slowly,
he
surveyed the crowd, picking out individual faces here
and
there. But he didn't say a word.
Finally,
a fat little man stepped forward, shaking a club
at
Simon. "Step aside, fellow! Withdraw thy cart and horse!
Our
quarrel's with this foul warlock, not with thee!"
"Nay,"
Simon answered. "To the contrary; every war-
lock's
business is every other's, for there are few of us
indeed."
"Every
warlock?" the fat man bleated in indignation. "Is
Alfar's
business also thine?"
His
words set off an ugly murmur that increased in ug-
liness
as it built.
770 Christopher Stasheff
"Alfar's
business ours?" Simon's eyes widened. "Why
would
it not be?"
The
noise cut off as the crowd stared at him, frozen.
Then
the people began to mutter to one another, worried,
a
little fearful. One scrawny warlock by himself was one
thing—but
two together, with Alfar's backing...
Simon's
voice cut through their hubbub. "'Twould be
better
an thou didst now go back unto thine homes."
"What
dost thou speak of!" the fat little man cried. "Turn
to our
homes? Nay! For we have one who must be punished!
What
dost thou think thyself to..."
His
voice ran down under Simon's stony glare. Behind
him,
the crowd stared, then began to whisper among them-
selves
again. Rod heard snatches of "Evil Eye!" "Evil Eye!"
He did
the best he could to reinforce the idea, staring at the
fat
little leader with his eyes narrowed a little, teeth showing
in a
wolfish grin.
"Thou
wilt go," Simon said, his voice like an icepick.
Rod
could scarcely believe the transformation. He
could've
sworn Simon was at least two inches taller and
four
inches broader. His eyes glowed; his face was alive
and
vibrant. He fairly exuded power.
Cowed,
the crowd drew in upon itself, muttering darkly.
Simon's
voice rose above. "We have shown thee plainly
wherein
doth lie the true power in this land—but it need
not be
turned against thee. Go, now—go to thine homes."
Then he
smiled, and his aura seemed to mellow—he seemed
gentler,
somehow, and reassuring. "Go," he urged, "go
quickly."
The
crowd was shaken by the transformation. Their emo-
tions
had been yanked back and forth; they didn't know
whether
to resent Simon, or be grateful to him. For a mo-
ment,
they stood, uncertain. Then one man turned away,
slowly.
Another saw him, and turned to follow. A third saw
them,
and turned, then a fourth. Then the whole crowd was
moving
back toward the village.
The fat
little man glanced at them, appalled, then back
toward
Simon. "Retribution shall follow," he cried, but fear
hollowed
his voice. "Retribution, and flames for all witches!"
Rod's
eyes narrowed to slits, and he gathered himself;
but
Simon laid a restraining hand on his shoulder, and said
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 171
mildly,
"Go whilst thou may—or retribution there shall be
indeed,
and I shall not lift one finger to stay it."
The
little man glanced at Rod in sudden terror, then
whirled
about, and hurried to follow the villagers back to-
ward
the houses.
Rod,
Simon, and the stranger only watched him, frozen
in
tableau till he'd disappeared among the buildings. Then,
the
moment he was out of sight, Simon heaved a long sigh,
going
limp.
"I
should say," Rod agreed. "You do that kind of thing
often?"
"Nay."
Simon collapsed onto the board seat. "Never in
my
life."
"Then
you've got one hell of a talent for it." Privately,
Rod had
a strong suspicion that Simon was at least a little
bit of
a projective, but didn't realize it.
Even
with his nerves a-jangle from facing down a mob
for the
first time, Simon remembered the fugitive. He turned,
looking
back into the cart. "Art thou well, countryman?"
"Aye,"
the stranger wheezed, "thanks to thee, goodmen.
And
thou hadst not come, there had been naught but a bloody
lump
left of me. E'en now I tremble, to think of them!
From
the depths of my soul I thank thee. I shall pray down
upon
thee one blessing, for every star that stands in the sky!
I
shall..."
"You
shall live." Rod couldn't repress the grin. "And
we're
glad of it. But if you're a warlock, why didn't you
just
disappear?" Then a sudden thought hit him, and he
turned
to Simon. "Is he a warlock?"
"Aye."
Simon nodded, his eyes on the stranger. "There
is the
feeling I've had, twice aforetime, when I've met
another
warlock and heard his thoughts—that feeling of
being
in a mind enlarged, in a greater space of soul."
Rod
knew the feeling; he'd met it himself. With a variant
form
and intensity, it was one of the great benefits of being
married
to another esper—and one of the curses of being
an
esper himself, when he was near another telepath whom
he
didn't like. He'd decided some time ago that it was mental
feedback—but
controlled feedback. It must've been, or it
would've
torn both minds apart. The bom witch, he thought,
must develop
a perceptual screen in infancy, a sort of block-
772 Christopher Stasheff
ing
mechanism that would reduce the recycled mental en-
ergy to
comfortable levels.
"He
is a warlock," Simon said again. "Why, therefore,
didst thou
not disappear, goodman?"
"Why,
for that I could not." The stranger smiled apolo-
getically,
spreading his hands and cocking his head to the
side.
"What can I say to thee? I am a very poor warlock,
who can
but hear others' thoughts, and that only when
they're
hard by me. E'en then, I cannot hear them well."
"I,
too," Simon said, with a sad smile. "I can but hear
one
that's within the same house as I."
"And
I, only when they are within a few yards," the
stranger
said, nodding. "But so little as that is enough, I
wot, so
that, now and again, summat of others' thoughts
do come
into mine head, unknowing—the thought comes
that
so-and-so is a-love with such-and-such, or that this one
wishes
the other dead. And, again and now, I let slip an
unguarded
word or two, and the one I'm speaking to doth
stare
at me, in horror, and doth cry, 'How couldst thou know
of
that? None have heard it of me; to none have I spoken
of
it!'"
"So
they figured out what you were." Rod nodded.
"Aye;
and it cost me what few friends I had, from my
earliest
years; yet it made me no enemies; for I am, as I've
said, a
most powerless warlock, and all, thankfully, knew
that I
meant no one harm."
Rod
could believe it. The stranger was short, slump-
shouldered
and concave-ctiested, flabby, with a little pot-
belly.
His hair was dun-colored. He had large, pale eyes, a
snub
nose, and a perpetual hangdog look about him. He
couldn't
have been much over thirty, but already his cheeks
were
beginning to sag. In a year or five, he'd have jowls.
A
schlemiel. Rod decided, a poor soul who would never
intentionally
hurt anybody, but would always be clumsy,
both
physically and socially. "Nobody really wanted you
around,
huh? But they didn't mind you, either."
"Aye,"
the stranger said, with a rueful smile.
"I
know the way of it," Simon sighed. "There was such
a lad
in my village."
"There
always is," Rod said. "It's a necessary social
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 173
function.
Everybody needs somebody whose name they can't
quite
remember."
"Well
said." Simon smiled. "And thou dost touch my
conscience.
How art thou called, goodman?"
"Flaran,"
the stranger answered, with the same smile.
"Flaran,"
Simon repeated, thoughtfully. "Tell me,
Flaran—when
Alfar the sorcerer began to rise to power,
did thy
fellows expect thee to hail him?"
Plaran's
smile gained warmth. "They did that. Thou hast
endured
it thyself, hast thou not?" And, when Simon nod-
ded, he
chuckled. "So I thought; thou hast spoke too much
of what
I have seen myself. Aye, all my neighbors did think
that,
solely because I've a touch of the Power, I should cry
that
Alfar was the greatest hope this duchy hath ever seen.
Yet I
did not. In truth, I said I did not trust the man."
Simon
nodded. "Yet they thought thou didst give them
the
lie."
"They
did," Flaran agreed. "Straightaway, then, mine
old
friends—or neighbors, at least—began to mistrust me;
in
truth, as Alfar's fame and power have grown, they have
doubted
me more and more."
"Still,
thou'rt of them." Simon frowned. "When last came
to
last, thou wert of their clan and kind. I would think they
would
not hound and stone thee."
"Nor
did I—and still I misdoubt me an they would have.
But
folk began to pass through our village, pushing hand-
carts
and bearing packs upon their backs; and, though we
did not
have great store of food or ale, 'Stay.' we urged
them.
'Nay,' they answered, 'for the sorcerer's armies do
march,
and we do flee them. We dare not bide, for they'll
swallow
up this village also.' Then they turned, and marched
on
toward the South."
Rod and
Simon exchanged a quick glance. Simon nodded
in
corroboration. Rod understood; Simon had been one of
the
ones who had come marching through the village, and
had not
stayed. "And this small ball of a man with the great
mouth?"
Simon turned back to Flaran. "Was he of thy vil-
lage,
or of the strangers?"
"Of
the strangers," Flaran answered, "and he did come
into
our village crying doom upon all who had any powers.
174 Christopher Stasheff
None
could be trusted, quoth he, for all witch folk must
needs
hate all common men, and must needs fight them;
therefore,
any witch or warlock must needs be an agent of
Alfar's."
Simon's
eyes burned. "Indeed? Would I could have done
more
than send him back to thy village."
"Nay,
friend. Thou wouldst but have made my neighbors
certain
in their hatred. Even as 'twas, he did turn my fellows
against
me—though, in all truth, the news from the North
had
made them so wary, they needed little turning. I came
into
the inn for a pint, but when I stood near to the landlord,
I heard
his thoughts, his rage and mistrust, his secret fear
that
the fat little stranger might be right, that mayhap all
witch
folk should be stoned. Nay, I dropped my flagon and
fled."
"And,
of course, they all ran after you." Rod reflected
that
the pack instinct must have taken over.
Flaran
shuddered. "Tis even as thou dost say. 'Twas
not
even an hour agone. I dodged and hid, then dodged and
ran. At
last they found me out, and I could hide no longer.
Nay, I
fled off down the road—but I was wearied, and must
needs
fight to stay running. Heaven be praised that thou
didst
come up the High Road then, or I had been a paste
of a
person!"
Simon
reached out to clap Flaran on the shoulder. "Cour-
age,
friend—this bloodlust shall fade, as it hath aforetime.
Ever
and anon have they come out hunting witches—and
ever
and anon hath it passed. This shall, also."
Flaran
braved a small smile, but he didn't look con-
vinced.
Rod
wasn't, either—the whole thing had too much of
the
deliberate about it. It was preplanned, well-organized
whipping-up
of sentiment, and there was only one group
organized
enough to do the whipping-up—but why would
Alfar
be trying to work up antiesper sentiment?
The
answer hit him like a sap, in instant balance to the
question:
Alfar would whip up the witch hunt to eliminate
his
competition. After all, the only force in the duchy that
could
stand against him, were the witches who hadn't signed
up with
him. Left alone long enough, they just might band
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 175
together
in self-defense—as Simon and Flaran were doing,
even
now. If they organized a large enough band of fugitive
witches
and warlocks, they would constitute a power that
might
actually unseat him. And what better way to eliminate
the
independents, than the time-tried old witch hunt?
When
you looked at it that way, it made excellent sense—
especially
since the unaligned espers would tend to be op-
posed
to him; they'd be the most sensitive to his kind of
hypnotic
tyranny. "Say, uh—did either one of you ever feel
one of
Alfar's men trying to take over your mind?"
Both
men looked up, startled. Then Simon nodded,
gravely.
"Aye. It was..." he shuddered, "... most obscene,
friend
Owen."
"I
could barely feel it," Haran added, "yet it turned my
stomach
and made my gorge to rise. And it raised such a
wave of
fear in me, that I thought it like to shake me to
pieces.
To feel fingers of thought, stroking at thy mind..."
He
broke off, looking queasy.
"Try
not to think of it," Rod said, cursing his impul-
siveness.
"Sorry I brought it up." And these two, he re-
flected,
were the gentle kind. What would happen when
Alfar's
men tried to take on a warlock who had a bit more
arrogance?
Or even just one who liked to fight? He would
have
flown into a rage, and gone hunting for Alfar.
And Rod
couldn't blame him. The thought of someone
meddling
with his mind started the sullen flow of anger. He
recognized
it, and tried to relax, let it drain away—but the
image
of Gwen and the children rose up in his mind, with
the
instant thought of some overbearing young warlock trying
to
touch their minds—and the rage exploded with a sud-
denness
that left him defenseless against it, shaking his body
with
its intensity, wild and searing, searching for a target,
any
target, striving to master Rod, to make him its instru-
ment.
He held himself still, fighting to contain it, to keep
it
inside himself, to keep it from hurting anyone else.
But
both warlocks were staring at him. "My friend,"
Simon
said, wide-eyed, "art thou well?"
Such a
mild question, and so well-intentioned! But it
broke
the fragile membrane of Rod's control.
He
hurled himself away from the cart, off the road and
776
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
177
into
the field beside. Don't hurt them. Let it blow, but don't
hurt
them. He needed some way to channel the anger, some
way to
let it spend itself harmlessly, and running was as
good as
anything else.
A
boulder loomed up ahead of him, a rock outcrop four
feet
high, with smaller boulders around the base. Rod seized
one
about a foot across, hefting it up above his head with
a grunt
of agony. He stood for a moment, poised, glaring
at the
boulder, then hurled his rock with all his might,
shouting,
"Blast you!"
The
rock hit the boulder with a crack like a gunshot.
Stone
chips flew, and the smaller rock split and clattered to
the
base of the boulder.
"Bum
in your own magic!" Rod screamed at it. "Fall
down a
rathole, and forget how to teleport! Jump into the
sky,
and don't come back down!" He raged on and on, a
five-minute
stream of incoherent curses.
Finally,
the anger ebbed. Rod sank to one knee, still
glaring
at the boulder. Then, slowly, he bowed his head,
gasping
for breath, and waited for the trembling to stop.
When
his heartbeat had slowed, he stood up, swaying a
little.
Then he forced himself to turn back toward the cart,
fifty
yards away—and saw Flaran staring at him.
But
Simon stood near him, leaning on his staff, waiting,
watching
him with gentle sympathy.
That
was what stung—the sympathy. Rod winced at the
sight;
it magnified his chagrin tenfold. He turned away,
muttering,
"Sorry about that. I, uh... I don't do that too
often."
/ hope.
"Thou
didst only as I did feel," Simon assured him.
"Well...
thanks." That didn't really help. "I just get
outraged
at the thought of someone trampling on other peo-
ple,
without even thinking about them!"
Simon
nodded. "And when the object of thy wrath is not
nigh
thee, 'tis harder to forebear. Indeed, thou didst well
to seek
a thing of stone unfeeling, to wreak thy vengeance
on."
"But
the force of it's wasted—is that what you're think-
ing?
Why spend all that energy, without hurting the thing
I'm
angry at?"
Simon
scowled. "I had not thought that—but aye, now
that
thou dost say it. 'Tis better husbandry, to contain thine
anger
till thou canst use its force to right the wrong that
angers
thee."
"Easy
enough to say," Rod said, with a sardonic smile.
"But
how do you contain your anger? I know it sounds
simple—but
you should try it, sometime! You would..."
He
broke off, staring at Simon. Slowly, he said, "You have
tried
it, haven't you?" Then, nodding, "Yes. I think you
have.
That last line had the ring of experience behind it."
"'Tis
even so," Simon admitted.
"You
had a temper? You flew into rages? You? Mr. Nice
Guy
himself? Mr. Calmness? Mr. Phlegmatic? You?"
"Indeed,"
Simon admitted, and, for the first time, his
smile
was tinged with irony. " 'Tis not so easy, friend Owen,
to hide
thy knowledge of others' thoughts. 'Tis most tempt-
ing, in
moments of anger, to use those thoughts against
them—to
say, 'Me a coward? When thou didst face the
battle
with panic clamoring through thy veins, and would
have
fled, had thy captain not stood behind thee with his
sword?'
For indeed, he had marched forward, and none
who saw
him would have thought him less than brave. Yet
I knew,
I—and was fool enough to speak it aloud. Then,
to
another, 'How canst thou call me a lecher. Father, when
thou
hast thyself lusted after Tom Plowman's wife?"
Rod
whistled. "You don't take on the clergy!"
"Aye,
but in my youthful pride, I thought that I had
power
o'er all—for I had but newly learned that I could
hear
other's thoughts and, in my delight and careless strength,
did
hearken to the thoughts of all about me. No person in
that
town was free from my thought-hearing. When one did
sneer
at me, I used my hoarded knowledge of his darkest
secrets
and proclaimed his shame for all to hear! He did
swell
up with rage, but durst not strike where all might see,
and
know the truth of what I'd said. Nay, he could only
turn
away with snarls—and I would gloat, rejoicing in my
newfound
power."
Rod
frowned. "How long did you get away with that?"
"Thrice."
Simon grimaced, shaking his head. "Three times
only.
For when the anger passed, the folk I'd wronged began
778
Christopher Stasheff
to
ponder. They knew they'd never spoken of their secret
fears
or lusts to any person living. By chance, they spoke
to one
another...."
"By
chance, my rabbit's foot! You'd insulted each one
publicly;
they knew who to compare notes with!"
"Like
enough," Simon sighed. "And once they all knew
that
I'd spoken things none of them had ever said aloud,
'twas
but a small step to see that I must needs be a warlock,
and one
who would not hesitate to use what knowledge I
gained,
from others thoughts to their harm. They spread
that
word throughout the town, of course..."
"
'Of course' is right," Rod murmured, "especially with
the
village priest in there. Who'd doubt his word? After all,
even if
he did covet his neighbor's wife, at least he didn't
do
anything about it."
"Which
is more than could be said for most of his flock,"
Simon
said, with a tart grimace. "Aye, he too did speak of
my
'fell power'—and the rumor ran through all the town,
to
harry all my neighbors out against me." His face twisted
with
bitterness. "I' truth, 'twas no more than my desert;
yet I
felt betrayed when they came against me as a mob,
screaming,
"Thought thief!' 'Slanderer!' and 'Sorcerer!'
—betrayed,
for that most of them had gossiped 'gainst
me, one
time or another—yet I'd forgiven them."
"Yes—but
you had a weapon they couldn't use."
"Aye—not
'wouldn't,' but 'couldn't.'" Simon's grimace
turned
sardonic. "And for that reason, they did raise the
hue and
cry, and harried me from their town." He shuddered,
closing
his eyes. "Ah, praise Heaven that I have no powers
other
than thought-hearing! For in mine anger, I would have
turned
and hurled great stones at them, fireballs, sharp knives;
I would
have raised these folk up high, and slammed them
to the
earth!" He shuddered again, and his eyes sprang open,
staring.
Rod
could see the anger rising in him again, and spoke
quickly,
calmly. "Easy, easy. It was a long time ago."
"And
the wrong's been righted. Aye." Simon managed
to
dredge up his smile again. "I did leam the error of my
ways; I
did repent, and did full pennance. For when I fled
my
native village, I wandered, blind with rage, immersed
in
bitterness, neither knowing nor caring whither my steps
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 179
progressed.
Forty leagues, fifty leagues, an hundred—till
at
last, worn out with hatred, I sank down in a cave and
slept.
And in my slumber, a soothing balm did waft to me,
to calm
my troubled spirit. When I waked, I felt refreshed,
made
new again. Wondering, I quested with my mind, to
seek
out the agency that had wrought this miracle. I found
a well
of holy thought which, in my slumber, I had drawn
upon,
unwitting. 'Twas a company of holy brothers and,
by
great good fortune, the cave I'd tumbled into was scarce
an
hundred yards from their community." Simon gazed off
into
the distance. "My soul did seek their solace, and did
lead my
steps unto them."
"Possible,"
Rod agreed. "But I thought there was only
one
monastery in this land—the Abbey of St. Vidicon,
down
South."
"Nay;
there's another, here in Romanov, though 'tis not
overlarge."
Rod
nodded, musing. He knew that the main monastery
was a
conclave of espers, who knew about the outside uni-
verse
and modem technology, and who were continually
experimenting
with their psi powers, trying to find new ways
to use
them. Could this northern monastery be the same
type of
thing? Maybe not, if they hadn't noticed Simon's
troubled
spirit so close by.
On the
other hand, maybe they had... "So just being
near
the monks, healed your soul."
Simon
nodded. "Indeed, their peace pervaded me. I made
a
broom, and swept the cave; I made a bed of branch and
bracken.
As the days passed, I made a cozy house there,
and let
the friars' peace still my rage, and fill my soul." He
smiled,
gazing off into the past. "Their serenity abides within
me
still, so deeply did it reach." He turned to Rod. "After
some
weeks, I did begin to ponder at their peace and calm-
ness.
What was its source? How did they come by it? I
hearkened
more carefully to their thoughts. And of them
all, I
found most wondrous were those that dwelt on herbs
and
their effects. So I commenced to spend much time
within
the minds of the monks who labored in the stillroom,
distilling
liquors and elixers. I drank up every fact, each
notion.
As the
leaves turned toward winter, I built a door to my
780 Christopher Stasheff
cave; I
tanned furs and made a coat, then sat down by my
fire
and hearkened all the more closely; for the monks were
pent up
for the winter. The snows lay deep; they could not
venture
forth. Then even friends could grate each upon the
other's
nerves. The brotherhood was ripe for rifting. Quar-
rels
did erupt, and I hung upon their every shout, eager to
see if
they might still be holy. Yet I was amazed; for, even
when
their tempers flared, the monks remembered their
devotions.
They forgave each other, turned away!" Simon
sighed,
shaking his head. "How wondrous did it seem!"
"Damn
straight!" Rod croaked. "How'd they do it?"
"By
their devotion to their God," Simon said, with a
beatific
smile, "and by being ever mindful that He, and His
Way,
were more important than themselves, or their pride—
or,
aye, even their honor."
"Their
honor?" Rod stiffened, staring. "Hey, now! You
can't
mean they thought that God wanted them to be hu-
miliatied!"
Simon
shook his head. "Nay, quite the contrary! They
trusted
their God to prevent such!"
Rod
felt a certain foreboding creeping over him. He
turned
his head to the side, watching Simon out of the
comers
of his eyes. "How was He supposed to do that?"
"By
giving them to know, within themselves, which deeds
were
right to do, and which were wrong. Then, even though
a man
forebore to do some deed that other men did expect
of him,
he might yet know himself to be worthy, even though
his
fellows did jeer. Thus might he turn aside in pride,
without
a trace of shame—for look thou, when all's said
and
done, humiliation is within thee, not something visited
upon
thee by thy fellows."
Rod
frowned. "Are you trying to tell me a man can save
face,
even though everybody else is pointing the finger of
scom at
him?"
Simon
shook his head. "There was never need to. For if
any man
stepped aside from a quarrel, and another ridiculed
him for
it, the first had but to say, 'My God doth not wish
it,'
and the other would comprehend, and only respect him
for his
forebearance. Indeed, 'twas not even needful for the
first
man to say aught aloud; 'twas only needful that he say
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 181
unto
himself, in his heart, 'My God hath commanded me
to love
my neighbor,' and he would not think less of himself
for
retreating." He looked directly into Rod's eyes. "For
this
'honor' that thou dost hold dear, this 'face' thou speakest
of, is
most truly but thine own opinion of thyself. We com-
monly
suppose that 'tis what others think of us, but 'tis not
so.
'Tis simply that most of us have so little regard for
ourselves,
that we believe others' opinions of us to be more
important
than our own. Therefore have we the need to save
our
countenances—our 'faces,' which term means only what
others
see of us. Yet we know that only by what they say
they
think of us—so our 'faces,' when all is truly said, are
others'
opinions of us. We feel we must demand others'
respect,
or we cannot respect ourselves." He shook his head,
smiling.
"But 'tis false, dost thou see."
"Surprisingly,
I think I do." Rod frowned. "If any man
really
has a high opinion of himself, he won't care what
others
think of him—as long as he knows he's good."
In the
cart, Flaran shifted impatiently. He had been fol-
lowing
the conversation from a distance and seemed dis-
pleased
by its direction.
Simon
nodded, eyes glowing. "'Tis true, 'tis true! Yet
few are
capable of that. Few are so sure of themselves, that
their
own opinion can matter more to them than all the rest
of
their fellows' regard—and those few who are, be also
frequently
insufferable in their arrogance."
"Which
means," Rod pointed out, "that they really don't
have
much faith in themselves—or they wouldn't have to
make
such a show of their supposed superiority."
"'Tis
true, by all accounts. Nay, most of us, to have any
sure
sense of worth, must needs rely on some authority
that's
above us all, that doth assure us we are right. It will
suffice,
whether it be law, philosophy—or God. Then, should
tempers
flare, and thou dost draw back thine hand to smite
me, and
I, in wrath, set mine hand upon my dagger—one
of us
must needs retreat, or there will be mayhem sure."
"Yes,"
Rod agreed, "but what happens if neither of us
is
willing to? We'd lose face, we'd lose honor."
Simon
nodded. "But if I can say, 'I will not strike, be-
cause
my Lord hath commanded me to love mine enemy'—
782 Christopher Stasheff
why,
then can I sheathe my dagger, step back, withdraw,
and
think myself no less a man for the doing of it." His
smile
gained warmth. "Thus may my God be 'the salvation
of my
countenance.'"
Rod
nodded slowly. "I can see how that would work—
but
you'd have to be a real believer."
"Indeed."
Simon sighed, and shook his head. "'Tis the
work of
a saint, friend Owen—and I am certainly none
such."
Well,
Rod had his own opinion about that.
"Yet
there was sufficient of the monks' peace that did
invest
me so that, when the seasons turned to spring, and
a
villager came to beseech me for a cure for his cow, which
was
a-calving, but had taken ill—why, in my lone-ness, I
delighted
in his company, even for so short a while. I did
distill
the herbs that he did need, and sent him on his way.
Some
weeks later, another came—then another, and an-
other.
I welcomed their company, and strove to gain their
liking—yet
I minded me what I had learned of the good
brothers—that
the folk themselves were of greater import
than
their actions, or careless words. Thus did I leam to
contain
mine anger, and never reveal in wrath aught that I
might
have learned from their thoughts. Eh, but there were
times
it was not easy; for though their lips spoke courteously,
their
minds could hold insults grievous about the weird
wood-hermit
whose aid they sought. He smiled, amused at
the
memory of himself, the staunch innkeeper, as a wild-
eyed
anchorite. "Yet I was mindful that they were my fellow
men,
and of infinite worth thereby. Sorely tried I was, from
time to
time, to utter words that would have blasted pride—
the
hidden truths about themselves that would have made
them
shrink within. Yet I forebore, and was ever mindful
that
they were for cherishing. I served them all, from the
poor
peasant to the village priest, who first felt me to be a
challenge
yet finally came to respect me."
Rod
smiled, amused. "Yes. I suppose if you can deal
with
those who wear their authority like mantles, you can
deal
with anything."
"Aye."
Simon frowned, leaning forward. "And even as
I have
done, so mayest thou do also."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 183
Rod
stared at him a minute, then turned away. He started
back
toward the roadway, to avoid having to meet Simon's
gaze.
"What—withhold my anger, even against such a sink
of
corruption as Alfar?" He shook his head. "I can't
understand
how you can do that, with someone who's caused
so much
misery to so many people!"
At the
mention of Alfar's name, Haran climbed out of
the
cart, and came to join them wfiere they stood.
"Loose
anger at the deeds," Simon murmured, "but with-
hold it
from the man."
Rod
ground his teeth. "I hear your words, but I can't
comprehend
their meaning. How can you separate the man
from
his actions?"
"By
being mindful that any human creature is a precious
thing,
and can turn aside from his own evil, if he can but
recognize
it."
"Can,
sure." Rod's shoulders shook with a heave of inner
laughter.
"But, will? What are the odds on that. Master
Simon?"
"Any
person may be misled."
Rod
shook his head. "You're assuming that Alfar's bas-
ically
good—just an ordinary man, who's given in to the
temptation
for revenge, discovered he can actually gain
power,
and been corrupted by it."
"Certes."
Simon peered up at him, frowning. "Is it not
ever
thus, with those who wreak wrong?"
"Maybe—but
you're forgetting the possibility of evil.
Actual,
spiritual evil." Rod looked up, and noted Flaran's
presence.
He weighed what he was about to say, and decided
that he
didn't mind Flaran's hearing it. "Sure, all human
souls
have the potential for goodness—but in some, that
potential
is already buried before they're two years old. And
it's
buried so deeply that it's almost impossible to uncover
it.
They grow up believing that nobody's really capable of
giving.
They themselves can't love, or give love—and they
assume
everybody who talks about it is just putting on an
act."
He took a deep breath, and went on. "Though it's not
really
necessary to talk about that. All you really need is
the
word 'corruption.' Alfar succumbed to the temptation
to do
something he knows is wrong, because he loved the
184 Christopher Stasheff
idea of
being powerful. And now that he's tasted power,
he'll
do anything rather than give it up. No matter who he
has to
hurt, how many he has to kill, how much suffering
he
causes. Anything's better than going back to being what
he
really is—just an ordinary, humdrum human being, who
probably
isn't even very well-liked."
Flaran's
eyes were huge; he stood frozen.
"Yet
be mindful, he's human," Simon coaxed. "Hath that
no
meaning for thee, friend Owen?"
Rod
shook his head. "Don't let the fact that he's human,
make
you believe that he thinks yo« are. He can't—he's
treating
people as though they were bolts for a crossbow—
something
to use, then forget about. He tramples through
other
minds without the slightest thought. Doesn't he realize
these
are real, feeling people, too?" He shook his head. "He
can't,
or he wouldn't be doing it. He's got to be totally
without
a conscience, totally calloused—really, actually,
evil."
"Yet
he is a person withal," Flaran piped up, timidly.
"Even
Alfar is not a devil. Master Owen."
"Not
in body, maybe," Rod grunted. "I can believe he
doesn't
have horns, or a barbed tail. His soul, though..."
"Yet
he doth have a soul," Flaran pleaded. "Look you,
he may
be an evil man—but he's a man nonetheless."
Rod
drew a deep, shaky breath, then let it out slowly.
"Friend
Flaran... I beg you, leave off! I've seen Alfar's
works,
and those of his minions. Let us not speak of his
humanity."
Flaran
was silent, but he stared at Rod, huge-eyed.
Rod
steeled himself against the look and picked up the
reins.
He slapped them on Fess's back, and the robot-horse
started
forward.
When
the silence had grown very uncomfortable. Rod
asked,
"That fat little loudmouth, who was leading that
mob—how
did he figure out that Flaran was a warlock?"
"Why...
he heard my neighbors speak of it. I would
guess...."
"Doesn't
seem likely," Rod said, frowning. "He was a
stranger,
after all. How would he find out about the local
skeletons,
so quickly?"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 185
"I
think," Simon said, "that Alfar doth have adherents,
minor
witches and warlocks who can do little but read minds,
salted
here and there about the duchy—and their prime duty
is to
espy those of Power."
"Oh?"
Rod held himself still, kept his tone casual. "How'd
you
hear about that?"
"I
did not; but now and again, I've felt the touch of a
mind
that quested, but did not seek anything, or anyone,
of
which it was certain. And, anon, I've caught snatches
of
thought clearly between warlocks, warning that such-
and-such
had some trace of Power."
"How
did they not espy thee?" Flaran asked, surprised.
Simon
smiled. "I am, as we've said, rather weak at
warlockery.
And, too, I've learned to hide what poor weak
powers
I have, thinking like one who hath none at all,
keeping
the surface of my thoughts ever calm, and quite
ordinary.
"Tis the key to not letting slip the odd comment
that
doth reveal thee—to think like an ordinary man; then
you'll
speak and act like one."
Flaran
nodded, gaze locked onto Simon's face. "I will
hearken
to that. I will heed thee."
"Do
so; 'twill save thee much grief. Nay, begin to think
like
John Common even now, for we never know when
Alfar's
spies may be listening."
Flaran
started, darting a quick glance over each shoulder,
then
huddled in on himself.
"And,
friend Owen, there's naught to fear for thee,"
Simon
reassured Rod, "no spy would even know thou'rt
there!"
Flaran
looked up, astounded. "Why! How is that?"
"Oh,
I'm, er, uh—invisible. To a mind reader." Rod said
it as
nonchalantly as he could, and tried to throttle down a
burst
of anger. How dare Simon let slip information about
him!
Serves you right, he told himself, in an attempt at
soothing.
And it was true; he should've known better than
to
confide in a stranger. But Simon was so damn like-
able.
...
"Ah,
if only I could so hide me!" Flaran cried. "Nay,
then,
tell! How dost thou do it?"
"Nice
question," Rod grated. "I really couldn't tell you.
186
Christopher Stasheff
But I
think it has something to do with my basic dislike of
all
human beings."
Flaran
stared at him, shocked.
"When
you really get down to it," Rod admitted, "I guess
I just
don't really like people very well."
That
rather put a damper on the conversation for a while.
They
rode on northward, each immersed in his own thoughts.
For his
part. Rod couldn't help feeling that both of his
companions
were trying to become immersed in his thoughts,
too.
Not that they didn't both seem to be good people—
but Rod
was beginning to be very suspicious. The talk about
mental
spies had made him nervous, and he found himself
remembering
that Simon and Flaran were both strangers,
after
all.
A wave
of loneliness hit him, and he glanced up at the
skies.
In spite of the longing, he was relieved to see the air
clear,
with a singular dearth of winged wildlife. At least his
family
was safe from getting mixed up in the mess.
Odd,
though. He wasn't used to having Gwen listen to
him.
12
He did
notice the squirrel peering at him from the branches,
and the
doves stopping their preening to watch him from
the
roof of the inn, as they pulled the cart into an innyard.
Rod
climbed down and stood, surprised how much his joints
ached
from the four-hour ride. He tied the reins to a hitching
post,
and turned back to see Flaran climbing down from the
cart
also, and Simon stretching his legs carefully.
"Don't
worry," Rod assured him, "they still work."
Simon
looked up, and smiled. "The question is, do I
wish
they wouldn't?"
"Just
at a guess, I'd say you're still having fun." Rod
turned
into the inn. "Shall we see what the kitchens hold?"
The
question was as much good business as hunger; Rod
was
able to trade a bushel of produce for three lunches.
Flaran
insisted on paying Rod the penny he'd been planning
to
spend on beer, and Simon matched him. Rod protested,
but
wound up accepting.
Dinner
came with a liberal supply of gossip. "Ye come
off the
road?" the landlord asked, as he set their plates in
front
of them. "Then say—is't true, what they say ofAlfar?"
"Uh—depends
on what you've heard," Rod said, feeling
wary.
"Myself, I've heard a lot about the man."
"Why,
that he has dropped from sight!" A peasant leaned
787
188
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
189
over
from another table. "That none have seen him since
he took
Castle Romanov."
"Oh,
really?" Rod perked up noticeably. "Now, that's
one I
hadn't heard!"
"
Tis most strange, if 'tis true," the peasant said. "Here's
a man
who hath appeared from nowhere, conquered most
of the
duchy—and vanished!"
"Ah,
but there's reason, Doln," an older peasant grinned.
"Some
say he was stole away by a demon!"
"Eh,
Harl—there's some as says he is a demon," chirped
a
grandfather.
"Well,
that would certainly explain why he appeared out
of
nowhere," Rod said, judiciously.
The
third peasant caught the note of skepticism, and
looked
up with a frown. "Dost'a not believe in demons?"
"Dunno,"
Rod said, "I've never seen one."
"Such
talk of demons is nonsense, Kench," Doln scoffed.
"Why
would demons take him away, when he's doing good
demons'
work?"
"Some
say he's roaming the land, clad as a peasant,"
Harl
grunted.
"Wherefore
should he not?" Kench grinned. "He is a
peasant,
is he not?"
"Aye,
but he's also a warlock," Harl reminded, "and
they
say he seeks through the land for folk who would aid
him
well in his governing."
Doln
looked up, with a gleam in his eye. "That, I could
credit
more easily."
"Thou
wilt credit aught," Kench scoffed.
"Belike
he doth prowl unseen," Harl mused. "Would he
not
seek out traitors?"
Flaran
and Simon stiffened, and Rod could feel little cold
prickles
running up his spine.
The
peasants didn't like the idea, either. They glanced
quickly
over their shoulders, twisting their fingers into charms
against
evil. "How fell it is," Harl gasped, "to think that
one
could spy on thee, and thou wouldst never know it!"
Rod
thought of mentioning that spies usually tried very
hard to
make sure nobody noticed them, but decided not
to.
"Take
heed of those rumors, and thou dost wish it," the
landlord
chuckled. "For myself, I note only that the land is
well-run."
The
others turned to look at him, lifting their heads slowly.
"That's
so," Doln nodded. "Dost'a say, then, that Alfar's
still
in his castle?"
"Belike,"
the landlord shrugged. "'Tis that, or his cap-
tains
govern well in their own rights."
"That,
I doubt." Rod shook his head. "I never yet heard
of a
committee doing any really effective governing. There
has to
be one man who always has the final say."
"Well,
then." The landlord turned to Rod with a grin. "I
must
needs think Alfar's in his castle." And he turned away
to the
kitchen, chuckling and shaking his head. "Rumor!
Only
fools listen to it!"
"In
which case, most people are fools," Rod said softly
to
Simon and Plaran. "So, if there's a rumor going around
that
you don't want people to believe, the thing to do is to
set up
a counter-rumor."
"Which
thou dost think Alfar hath done?" Simon had his
small
smile on again.
"No
doubt of it. Just look at the results—anybody who
might
'been thinking of a counter-coup while Alfar was
gone,
would be thoroughly scared off. On the other hand,
he
might really be roaming the countryside in disguise."
"Would
that not make witch folk loyal to him?" Flaran
grinned.
"For would he not be most likely to choose his
own
kind, to aid him in his governing?"
With
his usual unerring social grace, he had spoken a
bit too
loudly. Harl looked up, and called out, "All witch
folk
would be loyal to Alfar. Wherefore ought they not to
be?"
Flaran
and Simon were instantly on their guard.
Rod
tried to pull the sting out of it. He turned to Harl,
deliberately
casual. "For that matter, wouldn't every peasant
be
loyal to him? The rumor's that he's looking for talented
people
for his, uh, reign."
"Why...
'tis so." Harl frowned, suddenly doubtful.
Doln
looked up, eyes alight. "Aye! He could not find
witches
enough to do all the tasks that are needed in gov-
erning,
could he?"
"No."
Rod repressed a smile. "He certainly couldn't."
790 Christopher Stasheff
Doln
grinned, and turned to discuss the possibility with
Harl
and Kench. Rod reflected, with some surprise, that
even a
Gramarye peasant could have ambition. Which, of
course,
was perfectly natural; he should have foreseen it.
He'd
have to discuss the issue with Tuan when he went
back to
Runnymede; if it wasn't planned for, it could become
dangerous.
He
turned back to Flaran. "We can't be the only ones
who've
figured this out. Now, watch—the common people
will
all of a sudden start being really loyal, to Alfar—
because
they're going to think they have a chance to rise
in the
world."
"Indeed
they may." Flaran grinned. "Would not the low-
born
have opportunity under the rule of an upstart?"
Rod
frowned; the comment was a little too Marxist for
his
liking. "Yeah, if they happen to be the lucky ones out
of
thousands, the ones he wanted."
"Yet
I should think that he has these by him already,"
said
Simon. "He hath chosen his people ere he began this
madcap
climb. I would not look for him to place any great
trust
in those new to his banner."
Flaran
frowned; he had definitely not wanted to hear that.
"But
the hope of it could make a lot of people like him,"
Rod
pointed out. "Just the idea that a lowborn peasant's son
has
come to rule a duchy, will pull an amazing amount of
support
to him."
"Can
rumor truly do so much?" Flaran breathed.
"That,
and more," Rod said grimly. "Which is the best
reason
of all for thinking Alfar's still in his castle."
Flaran
stared. Then he closed his eyes, shook his head,
and
opened them again.
"I,
too, am puzzled." Simon frowned. "How can a rumor
mean..."
His voice trailed off as his face cleared with
understanding.
Rod
nodded. "All he has to do is stay inside the castle
and
make sure the rumor gets started. Once it's running,
it's
going to keep building peasant loyalty on the one hand,
and
make everybody a little more wary about thinking dis-
loyal
thoughts, or doing any plotting, on the other—for
fear
Alfar himself might be listening in."
Flaran
shuddered, and glanced quickly about the room—
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 191
and,
suddenly. Rod had a sinking feeling in his stomach.
Alfar
could indeed be in that very taproom, could be one
of the
peasants, could be the landlord, lying in wait for one
of
Tuan's agents to come by—such as Rod himself. He
could
be about to spring the trap on Rod, any second....
Then
chagrin hit, and hard on its heels, anger. This was
just
what Alfar wanted Tuan's agents to be thinking. It was
called
"demoralization," and it had almost worked. Rod's
respect
for the sorcerer went up, as his animosity increased.
He was
amazed that a medieval peasant could be so de-
vious.
On the
other hand, maybe he had some help....
Simon
leaned over to Rod and murmured, "Do not look,
or
disguise it if thou must—but yon wench hath kept her
eye on
us, since we came through the door."
"That
is a little odd," Rod admitted. "None of us is
exactly
what you'd call a model of masculine pulchritude."
"True
enough," Simon answered, with a sardonic smile.
"Yet
'tis not with her eyes alone that she's kept watch over
us."
"Oh,
really?" All of a sudden Rod's danger sensors were
tuned
to maximum—not that they'd done much good so
far. He
pulled out a coin, flipped it—and made sure it
"accidentally"
flipped her way. As he turned to pick it up,
he
managed a quick glance at her, and decided it wasn't
much of
a surprise that he hadn't noticed her sooner. She
was
average size, no heavier than she ought to be, with a
pretty
enough face and dark blond hair.
Rod
picked up the coin and turned back to Simon. "Not
exactly
your stereotyped witch, is she?"
Simon
frowned. "A very ordinary witch, I would say."
"That's
a contradiction in terms. She's also not very
experienced
at hiding her interest."
"Oh,
she doth well enough," Simon demurred. "Yet I've
more
experience at this sort of hiding than most, Master
Owen—and,
when one of us doth say that which doth amaze
her,
her shield doth slip."
Rod
frowned. "Then why didn't she head for the door
as soon
as we started talking about her?"
"Because
thy mind is hid, let alone thy thoughts—and
for
myself, I'm thinking one thought and saying another."
192 Christopher Stasheff
He
grinned at Rod's surprise. "Be not amazed—what women
can do,
we men may learn to do also. As for Flaran, I speak
so
softly that he cannot hear."
Rod
glanced quickly at the klutz; he was looking rather
nettled.
Rod turned back to Simon. "Then there's no real
danger,
is there?"
"Oh,
there is alarm in her." Simon glanced at the serving-
wench,
then back at Rod. "We had best be on our way,
Master
Owen, and quickly, ere she calls another who doth
serve
Alfar."
Rod
turned toward the girl, considering risks and coming
to a
quick decision. "No, I don't think that's really neces-
sary."
He beckoned to the wench. Fear leaped in her eyes,
but she
had no reason for it, and did need to keep her cover
while
she studied them—so she came. Slowly, as though
she
were being dragged, but she came. "What may I offer,
goodmen?
Ale? Or more meat?"
"Neither,
just now." Rod plastered on a friendly smile.
"Tell
me—does it bother you that I'm not here, when I
really
am?"
She
stared at him in shocked surprise, and Simon mut-
tered,
"Well done; she is quite disarmed. Certes, Alfar's her
master.
She holds watch for witches."
Rod's
dagger was out before Simon finished the first
sentence,
its point touching the wench's midriff. She stared
at the
naked steel, horrified.
"Sit."
Rod kept the smile, but it had turned vicious.
"Sir,"
she gasped, gaze locked on the blade, "I dare not."
"Dare
not disobey me? No, you don't. Now sit."
Trembling,
she lowered herself to the empty stool. Rod
took
her hand, gave her a glowing smile. "Simon, dig around
and see
what you can find." He let the smile turn fatuous,
clasped
both hands around hers, and leaned forward, croon-
ing,
"Now, pretty lass, sit still and try to pay no heed to
the
fingers you'll feel in your mind—and if their touch
disgusts
you, be mindful that you would have spoken words
with
your mind, that would have sent soldiers to slay us."
He
lifted her hand to his lips, kissed it, then beamed at her
again.
"I know—you feel like nothing so much as leaping
up and
screaming. But if you do, my knife is close at hand—
and do
not think that you can snatch it with your mind faster
THE WARLOCK
ENRAGED 193
than I
can stab—for, in this case, the hand is quicker than
the
mind." He saw her glance at the knife, and warned, "I
assure
you, I've dealt with witches before." Which, he
reckoned,
was his understatement for the year.
Her gaze
darted back to his face, terrified. "But... why
dost
thou kiss mine hand, when thou'rt mine enemy?"
"So
that anyone watching... there, young Doln is staring
at
me—no, don't look!—and his gaze is anything but
friendly.
In fact, I think he favors my heart for the main
course.
No, don't hope—I assure you, I'm a better fighter
than
he, far better." He saw the flicker of fear in her eyes,
and
decided to press it. "Sit very still, now. You wouldn't
want me
to hurt him, would you?"
"Oh,
do not!" she cried. Then, realizing she'd given away
more
than military secrets, she blushed and dropped her
eyes.
"Aye,
well done," Simon purred. "Gaze at the tabletop,
there's
a good lass, and naught else; think of naught but its
grain,
and its color... Now!"
The
girl stiffened with a gasp, head flung back, eyes
shut;
then she slumped in her chair.
"Stand
away from her!" Doln was on his feet, knife out.
Rod
stood slowly, his grin turning wolfish, knifepoint
circling.
"Why, it shall be as you say—I shall stand away
from
her. Shall I stand toward you, then?"
Harl
scowled and stood up behind Doln, but the youth's
eyes
showed doubt. He stood his ground, though—swal-
lowing
hard, but he stood.
"Gently,
now, gently," Simon soothed. "She sleeps, lad—
she but
sleeps."
Doln
glanced at him, then at the unconscious girl, and
the
white showed all around his eyes.
"Softly,
lad." Rod followed Simon's lead. "We're not
hurting
her." He darted a quick glance at Simon. "Nay,
unless
I mistake, my friend seeks to aid her."
"What
manner of aid is this, that steals away her sense?"
Doln
cried.
"What
manner indeed!" Flaran huddled back in his chair,
eyes
wide with terror.
Kench's
glare would have killed a viper, and Harl gath-
ered
himself and stepped up behind Doln.
Christopher
Stasheff
194
The
girl sighed, and her head rolled back.
"Ask
her," Rod said softly. "She'll be awake in a minute."
Doln's
gaze darted to her. Her eyelids fluttered, then
opened.
She looked around her, uncomprehending, then
suddenly
realized where she was, and her eyes widened;
she
gasped.
"Marianne!"
Doln dropped to one knee, clasping her
hand.
"What have these fellows done to thee!"
Her
gaze darted down to him; she shrank away. Then
she
recognized him, and relaxed a little. She looked around,
and her
gaze centered on Rod. Slowly, it turned to Simon,
then
back at Doln, and her lips quivered with a smile. "Nay,
be not
af eared for me, good Doln. I am well—aye, more
well
than I have been for some weeks." She turned back to
Simon,
frowning, then back to Doln. "These goodmen have
aided
me."
Doln
looked from one to another wildly, "What manner
of aid
is this, that makes thee to swoon?"
"That,
thou dost not need know," Simon advised. "Stand
away,
now, I beg thee, for we must have further converse
with
thy Marianne."
"I
am not his," she said, with a touch of asperity, then
instantly
balanced it with a dazzling smile at Doln. "I did
not
know thou hadst concern of me."
Doln swallowed
heavily, and stood, but his eyes were
still
on her. "I... I do care for thy welfare, Marianne."
"I
know it, now—and I thank thee." Her color had come
back
completely, now. She clasped his hand, and looked up
at him
through long lashes. "Most deeply do I thank thee.
Yet I
prithee, do as this goodman doth bid thee, and stand
away,
good Doln, for truly must I speak with them."
Reluctantly,
Doln backed away from the table—and
bumped
into Harl, who muttered a curse, and turned away
to his stool.
Doln did, too, gaze flicking from Simon to
Marianne,
then to Rod, then back to Marianne again. Then
Kench
muttered something, and Doln turned to him, frown-
ing,
then fell to muttering with Harl and the gaffer, casting
frequent
glares at Rod and Simon.
He
didn't notice Flaran. But then, who ever did?
Marianne
turned back to Simon with a happy smile,
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 195
patting
her hair into place. "I must needs thank thee for
more
things than one. Nay, ask what thou wilt. I will most
gladly
answer."
Rod
rubbed a hand over his face to cover a smile, then
turned
to Simon. "Mind telling me what went on there?"
"Only
what thou hast seen aforetime," Simon answered.
"She
labored under a spell. I have broken it."
"A
spell?" Rod stared at Marianne, appalled. "A
witch!.'?.'"
"Even
so." The girl bowed her head in shame. "I see
now
that I must have been."
Simon
reached out and caught her hand. "There's no
shame
in it, lass. 'Tis no fault of thine, that thou wert
enchanted."
"But
it is!" She looked up at him, wide-eyed. "For I hid
my
witch power from the goodfolk, full of guilt and em-
barrassment—till
I began to believe that I was better than
they,
for I could read minds and make things move by mere
thought,
whilst they could not. Nay, it did come to seem
to me
that we witch folk were the true nobility, the new
nobility,
who could and should rule the world—aye, and
better
than the lords do!"
"This,
thou dost count fault of thine own?" Simon asked,
with a
smile.
"Is't
not?" She blushed, and looked down. "Alas, that
ever I
thought so! Yet I did—and no other witch did seem
to feel
as I did, no honest one; for I listened for their
thoughts,
and heard them afar. Nay, none thought to lead
the witches
to their rightful place—not even within the
Royal
Coven. Thus, when Alfar began to reach out for
vassals,
declaring he would lead the witch folk on to glory
and to
rule, I declared him my leader on the instant, and
pledged
him my fealty. All that he asked, I swore I would
do."
"And
the service that he asked of thee?"
"Only
this." She gestured around at the inn in disgust.
"Here
is my glory and rule! To work as I had done, and
watch,
then speak to them of any witchfolk I found who,
in either
deed or thought, did struggle 'gainst Alfar. So I
did—and
most joyously." She plunged her face into her
196 Christopher Stasheff
hands,
"Eh, what a bitch I have been, what a vile, dastardly
traitor!
For three witches have I delivered unto them—poor,
weak
souls, who only sought to flee to safety!" She lifted
tragic
eyes to gaze at Simon. "Yet truthfully did it seem to
me that
any witch who did not acclaim Alfar, must needs
be a
traitor to her own kind. Therefore did I summon aid
from
Alfar's coven, and soldiers came, under the command
of a
warlock, to take those witches away, and..." She
buried
her face in her hands again. "Aiee! What did they
to
those poor folk!"
Her
shoulders shook with weeping. Simon reached out
to touch
her, clasping her shoulder. "Nay, be not so grieved!
For
thou didst these things not of thine own free will and
choice!"
Her
gaze leaped up to his, tears still coursing down her
cheeks.
"Yet how could it be otherwise?"
"When
first thou didst begin to think thyself greater than
thy
neighbors, the sorcerer's folk had already begun their
vile
work on thee." Simon's smile hardened. "These first
thoughts,
that witches ought to govern by right of birth,
were
not truly thine. But they were oh, most gently and
skillfully
worked in, among thoughts of thine own, that thou
mightst
think them so."
'Truly?"
she gasped, wide-eyed.
Simon
nodded. "Be sure. I have myself slipped through
thy
thoughts, witch—I must ask they pardon—and I know."
"Oh,
the pardon is instantly given!" she cried. "How can
I thank
thee, for breaking this spell?" Then her face lit up,
and she
clapped her hands. "I know! I shall wander north-
ward,
and myself seek to break spells that bind goodfolk!"
Rod
darted a quick glance at Simon, and saw the fore-
boding
in his face. He turned back to Marianne. "Uh—I
don't
think that would be the best idea."
Her
face fell. "Would it not? What, then..."
"Well,
basically the same thing—just do it right here."
Rod
managed to smile. "What Alfar was having you do,
but for
our side. Keep working as a servingwench, and spy
out
witch folk who're going south. But when you find them,
don't
report them to Alfar's henchmen."
"But
that is so small an aid!" she cried, disappointed.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 197
"Those
whom thou dost save will not think it so," Simon
assured
her.
"But
they would be just as much saved if I were not here
at
all."
"Not
so." Rod shook his head. "If you left this post,
Alfar's
men would find it out quickly enough, and they'd
send
some other witch here to do the job. The only way
you can
protect the fugitives, is to stay here and cover for
them."
"Assuredly
there must be work of greater import I can
do!"
An imp
pricked Rod with temptation. He grinned, and
succumbed.
"There is, now that you mention it. You can
find
another witch or two, who plan to stay."
"Others?"
She stared, amazed. "How will that aid?"
"Because
each of them can find two other witches," Rod
explained,
"and each of those, two more, and so on and
on—and
we can build up a network of witches opposed to
Alfar,
all throughout the duchy of Romanov."
She
frowned, shaking her head. "What aid will that be?"
"King
Tuan will march North, sooner or later. When he
does,
we'll send word through the net, for the witches to
gather
where the battle's going to be, to help."
"Help
in a battle?" Her eyes were round. "How?"
"Well
send word about that, too. Just be ready to do it."
Slowly,
she nodded. "I do not fully comprehend—yet I
do
trust in thee. I shall do as thou dost bid."
"Good
lass! And don't worry, you'll understand plenty.
It
won't be very complicated—just to gather at a certain
place,
and attack whatever part of the sorcerer's army you're
assigned."
"An
thou sayest it." She still seemed doubtful. "But how
shall I
know what to do, or when?"
"Someone
will tell you. From now on, your name is,
uh,
'Esmeralda,' to anyone else in the anti-Alfar network.
So, if
someone comes in and says he has word for
Esmeralda,
from Kem..." Again, Rod wished he hadn't
chosen
that name. "... you'll know it's a message from
me."
"But
wherefore ought I not to be called Marianne?"
198 Christopher Stasheff
"So
nobody can betray you. This way, if they tell Alfar
or his
men they've a traitor named 'Esmeralda,' they won't
know
who it really is."
"And
'Kem' is thy false name?"
/ sure
hope so. "It's as good a name as any. The whole
idea is
that we don't know each other's real names, remem-
ber.
Will you do it—be Esmeralda, and watch for witches
to not
report?"
Slowly,
she nodded. "Aye—if thou dost truly believe
this is
the greatest aid I can offer."
"Good
lass!" Rod clasped her hand, relieved—she was
too
young, and really too sweet, to wind up in Alfar's torture
chambers.
Better to leave her where it was safe. "Now,
uh—would
you please go reassure your friend Doln, there?
I can't
help this feeling that he's just dying to shove a knife
between
my ribs."
"Certes."
She flushed prettily, and stood. "I thank thee,
goodman."
She turned away, becoming shy and demure as
she
neared her swain.
"I
think she hath forgot thee quite," Simon said, with
his
small smile.
"Yes.
And that's the way it should be, isn't it?" Rod was
watching
Doln, whose gaze was riveted to Marianne's face.
He
caught her hand, and Rod turned back to Simon and
Flaran
with a sigh. "Young love! Isn't it wonderful?"
"In
truth." Simon watched the young couple over Rod's
shoulder.
"Yet I cannot help but think, friend Owen, that
there's
some truth to her words—not that her thoughts of
overweening
greatness were her own, nay, but that, shall
we say,
Alfar's seeds fell on fertile ground?"
"Oh,
well, sure! People can't be hypnotized if they really
don't
want to be—and this particular kind of long-range
telepathic
hypnosis couldn't have worked so well if she
didn't
already have a bit of that resentful attitude—it's
called
'feelings of inferiority.'"
"Inferiority?"
Flaran stared. "Yet how can that be? Witch
power
makes us greater than other folk!"
Rod
didn't miss the 'us.' "Yeah, but they don't feel that
way.
All they know is that they stand out, that they're
different,
and that if people find out just how different,
nobody'll
like them." He shrugged. "If nobody likes you,
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 199
you
must be inferior. I know it doesn't really make sense,
but
that's how our minds work. And, since nobody can
stand
to think so little of themselves pretty soon, the warlock
starts
telling himself that he's not really inferior—it's just
that
everybody's picking on him, because they're jealous.
And, of
course, people do pick on witches—they've been
doing
it, here, for hundreds of years."
"Aye!"
Flaran seized the thought. "'Tis not merely a
matter
of our telling ourselves others bully us—'tis true!"
"Oh,
yeah, it's easy to feel persecuted, when you really
are.
But that must mean you're worse than inferior." He
made a
backwards arc with his forefinger. "If people're
picking
on you, and they're nice people, ones you ordinarily
like,
and all of a sudden, they're picking on you—then you
must be
worse than second-rate; you must be evil! But who
can
stand thinking they're outright evil?"
"Evil
folk," Flaran answered quickly.
"And
there you have it." Rod spread his hands. "Instead
of
saying, 'I'm second-rate,' they're saying, 'I'm evil'—
they'd
rather be first-rate evil than second-rate good."
Flaran
stared, lost.
"Or!"
Rod held up a forefinger. "Or you decide that
you're
not evil, and you're not second-rate, either—they're
just
picking on you because they're jealous. So their picking
on you
proves that you're better than they are. They're just
afraid
of the competition. They're out to get you because
you're
a threat to them."
Flaran's
head lifted slowly, and Rod could see his eyes
clearing
with understanding.
Rod
shrugged. "All the witch folk probably have that
attitude
to some degree—it's called paranoia. But they keep
it
under control; they know that even if there're wisps of
truth
attached to the notion, there's more truth in thinking
of
their neighbors as being basically good folk—which they
are.
And if the witch has even a grain of humility, she's as
much
aware of her faults as she is of her powers—so they
manage
to keep their feelings of persecution under control.
It's a
sort of a balance between paranoia and reality. But it
does
make them ready, even eager, victims, for Alfar's style
of
brainwashing—uh, persuasion."
Flaran
turned away, staring at the table. The color had
200 Christopher Stasheff
drained
out of his face, and his hands trembled.
Rod
watched him, shaking his head with a sad smile.
The
poor kid, he thought, the poor innocent. In some ways,
Raran
probably would have preferred to just go along from
day to
day for the rest of his life, feeling inferior and picked-
on. And
it must've been very demeaning, to find out that
his
feelings were, if not normal, at least standard for his
condition—it
was bad enough being born an esper, but it
was
worse finding out you weren't even exceptional.
He
turned away, to catch Simon's eye. The old man had
a
sympathetic look, and Rod smiled back, nodding. They
both
knew—it was rough, learning the facts of life.
Back on
the road. Rod and Simon tried to strike up a
cheerful
family topic conversation again; but the mood had
changed,
and it was an uphill fight all the way. When they
each
realized that the other guy was trying just as hard, they
gave it
up.
Of
course, the ambiance wasn't helped much by Flaran
riding
along on Rod's other side sunk in gloom, glowering
at the
road.
So they
rode along in silence, the unease and tension
growing,
until Rod'd had about as much as he could take.
"Look
Flaran, I know it's hard to accept the idea that Alfar's
turning
the whole population into puppets—but that is what
he's
doing. So we have to just admit it, and try to go beyond
it, to
figure out what we can do about it. See? Feeling lousy
won't
do anybody any good."
Flaran
looked up at Rod, and his attention came back,
as
though from a great distance. Slowly, his eyes focused.
"Nay.
Nay, 'tis not that which hath me so bemused, friend
Owen."
Rod
just looked at him for a moment.
Then he
said, "Oh." And, "Really?"
He
straightened in his seat and tilted his head back,
looking
down at Flaran a little. "What is bothering you?"
"These
thoughts which the servingwench hath uttered."
"What—about
witches being naturally superior?" Rod
shook
his head. "That's nonsense."
"Nay,
'tis good sense—or, if not good, at least sense."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 201
Raran
gazed past Rod's shoulder at the sky. "Truly, witches
should
rule."
"Oh,
come off it! Next thing I know, you'll be telling
me how
Alfar's really a good guy, and is really freeing the
peasants,
not conquering them!"
Raran's
eyes widened. "Why—that is true." He began
to nod,
faster and faster. "In truth, 'tis all true. He doth free
the
peasants from the rule of the lords."
Rod
turned away, his mouth working, and swallowed
heavily.
He looked up at Simon. "Check him, will you?
Give
him the once-over. He sounds as though the spell's
beginning
to creep over him."
"Oh,
nay!" Raran said in scorn, but Simon frowned,
gazing
off into space for a moment. Then he shook his head.
"I
do not read even so much as he doth utter. Master Owen—
only
thoughts of how goodly seem the fields about us, and
the
face of the wench who served us." His eyes focused on
Rod's
again. "Still, those are not the thoughts of a spell-
bound
mind."
"Spellbound?
Nay, certes!" Raran cried. "Only because
I speak
truth, Master Owen?"
"Truth?"
Rod snorted. "Somebody must have warped
your
mind, if you think that's truth!"
"Nay,
then—lay it out and look at it!" Raran spread his
hands.
"It doth seem the common people must needs have
masters..."
"I
could dispute that," Rod growled.
"But
not gainsay it! From all that I have seen, 'tis true!"
Raran
craned his neck to look over Rod's shoulder at Simon.
"Wouldst
thou not say so. Master Simon?"
"Someone
must govern," Simon admitted reluctantly.
"And
if one must govern—why, then, one must be mas-
ter!"
Raran slapped his knee. "And is it not far better for
the peasant
folk to have masters who were born, as they
were,
peasants? Who know the pain of poverty, and the
grinding
toil of the common folk? Is that not far better for
them
than the rule of those who are born to silver plates
and
ruby rings, in castles, who have never known a hard
day's
work, nor a moment's want? Nay, these lords even
look
down from their high towers, and speak of we poor
202 Christopher Stasheff
folk as
though we were chattels! Things to be owned! Cattle!
Not men
and women!"
Rod
stared, horrified. "Where'd you hear that line of
rubbish?"
Flaran
reddened. "Can there be truth in rubbish?"
"I
don't know who you've been talking to," Rod said,
"but
it sure wasn't a lord. Most of 'em don't say things like
that—and
where would you have had a chance to hear 'em
talking,
anyway?"
"Mine
ears do be large. Master Owen. I may be foolish
in my
speaking, but I am wise in my listening. I have spoken
with
folk who serve the lords, and thus have I learned how
they speak
of us. And, too, I have hearkened to my neigh-
bors ,
to their groans and cries of grief under the lords' rule —
and I
cannot help but think that they do not serve the best
of
masters." Plaran shook his head. "Nay, the words of that
servingwench
do make most excellent sense—for who could
better
know the people's wants, than those who can hear
their
thoughts? And who can better guard them in their
labors,
than one who knows what it is to labor so?"
"Excuses,"
Rod growled. He turned away, and saw, in
the
distance, a party of peasants coming out of a side road,
clad in
rough homespun and bowed under the weight of
huge
packs. "There!" He stabbed a finger at them. "That's
the
kind of sense you've been making! Poor people, wan-
dering
the roads, lost and alone, because their homes have
been
destroyed in battle! Folk bereft, whose villages still
stand,
but who have packed what they can carry and have
fled,
because they fear the rule of an upstart they don't
trust!"
"Yet
peasants' homes do ever bum in wars," Flaran cried,
"ever
and aye, when the lords do seek to resolve some
private
quarrel with their armies! This time, at the least, the
war may
bring them some benefit, for he who wins will
have
been born among them!"
"Excuses,"
Rod said again, "rationalizations!" He turned
to look
squarely at Flaran. "Let me tell you what that is—
a
rationalization. It's giving something the appearance of
rationality,
of reason, when it doesn't have the reality of
it.
It's finding a way to justify what you want to do, any-
way.
It's finding an excuse for something you've already
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
203
done—a
way to make it seem to be good, when it really
isn't.
That's all you're doing here—trying to find a way to
make
the wrong things you want to do, seem right. All your
arguments
really boil down to, 'I want power, so I'm going
to take
it.' And the real reasons are envy and revenge!"
He
noticed, out of the comer of his eye, that the peasants
had
stopped, staring up at them, on both sides of the cart.
All the
better—let witnesses hear it!
"Yet
how canst thou speak so?" Flaran frowned, cocking
his
head to the side. "Thou hast thyself an enormous power!"
Rod
froze. How had he let his cover slip? "What...
power...
is... that?"
"Why,
the talent of not being seen by the mind! Our
friend
Simon hath said it—to a thought-hearer, thou dost
not
seem to be here at all!"
"Nay,
then!" the younger man cried, "even I have noticed
it,
weak though my powers are!"
Rod
shrugged; that was explanation enough, for the mo-
ment.
"How
great a talent that is!" Flaran cried. "What great
advantage
must it needs give thee, if one doth seek thee
with
evil intent! If thou wert of Alfar's band, he would
surely
create thee Duke of Spies!" He smiled, leaning for-
ward,
eyes glittering. "Would that not be most excellent,
Master
Owen? Wouldst thou not be delighted to be a duke?"
"I'd
say it would be horrible," Rod grated. "Do you
realize
what that would mean? I'd be helping to enforce one
of the
harshest tyrannies humanity has ever known! Stop
and
think!" He held up a forefinger. "Even under the tightest
dictatorships
Old Terra ever knew, people have still been
able to
have one thing that was theirs, alone to themselves—
their
minds. At least their thoughts were free. But Alfar's
trying
to change that; he's trying to set up a tyranny so
complete
that nobody can even call his thoughts his own!"
"How
small a thing that is!" Flaran waved away the
objection.
"Thoughts are naught, Master Owen—they are
gossamer,
mere spiders' webs! What are free thoughts against
a
filled belly, and an ease of grinding toil? What is freedom
of
thought, against freedom from want? What worth hath
the
secrecy of the mind, when weighed against the knowl-
edge
that the King doth hold every least peasant to be his
204 Christopher Stasheff
own
equal? But think!" He gazed off into space, eyes glit-
tering.
"Think how sweet this land could be, an witches
ruled
it! What an earthly paradise we could make here for
ourselves,
an folk of good heart could labor freely with their
minds,
to build it!"
Rod
stared, astounded by the younger man's enthusiasm.
Then he
leaned back, letting his mouth twist to show his
skepticism.
"All right—tell me."
"Why!
What could they not do, an witches could use
their
power openly? Never would there be drought or flood,
for
witches could move the storms about so as to water all
the
land! Never would murrain slay cattle or other stock,
for
witches could be open in their curing! Nor, for that
matter,
would folk need to die from illness, when witch-
physicians
could be by to aid them! Never would the peas-
ants go
hungry, to give their substance unto their lord, that
he
might deck himself with finery, or gamble through the
night!
Never would the people grumble in their misery,
unheard,
for a warlock would hear their thoughts, and find
a means
of ending that which troubled them!"
"Yeah,
unless those peasants were grumbling because the
king-warlock
was doing something they didn't like! Then
he'd
just shut them up, by hypnotism!"
"Oh,
such would be so few!" Flaran gave him a look of
disgust.
"Why trouble thyself for a mere handful of mal-
contents?
Ever will some few be discontented with their
lot!"
"Right—and
Alfar's one of them! But it wouldn't be
just a
few malcontents, if the witch folk ruled—it'd be the
vast
majority, the normals, who'd be feeling like half-humans,
because
they didn't have any witch power! And they'd resent
the
governing ones who did—but they'd know the witches
would
wipe out anybody who dared utter it! So they'd keep
quiet,
but live in terror, and their whole lives would be one
long
torture! Just ordinary people, like these men around
us!"
He gestured at the peasants, who were pressing close
all
about them, eyes burning. "Better move along, boys.
I'm
having trouble keeping my temper; and when warlocks
fight,
bystanders may get hit with stray magic."
"Ah,
art thou a warlock, then?" Flaran cried.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 205
Rod
ground his teeth in frustration, furious with himself
for the
slip he'd made; but he made a brave try at covering.
"According
to you, I am. Didn't you just say my invisible
mind
was a great talent?"
"In
truth I did—and if thou art a warlock, then art thou
also a
traitor!" Flaran leaped to his feet, face dark with
anger,
suddenly seeming bigger—almost a genuine threat.
Rod
wasn't exactly feeling pacific, himself. "Watch your
tongue!
I'm a King's man, and loyal to the bone!"
"Then
art thou a traitor to witchhood!" Flaran stormed.
"Naught
but a tool for hire, and the King's pay is best! Nay,
thus
art thou but a tool of the lordlings, a toy in their
games—but
it is we who are their pawns and moved about
the
land for their mere amusement! And thou dost abet them!
Thou,
who, by blood, ought to join with Alfar and oppose
them!
Nay, thou'rt worse than a traitor—thou'rt a shameless
slave!"
"Watch
your tongue!" Rod sprang to his feet, and the
cart rocked
dangerously. But Flaran kept his footing easily,
and,
for some reason, that ignited Rod's anger into a blow-
torch.
"Beware who you're calling a slave! You've fallen
so far
under Alfar's spell that you've become nothing but
his
puppet!"
"Nay—his
votary!" Flaran's eyes burned with sudden
zeal.
"Fool thou art, not to see his greatness! For Alfar will
triumph,
and all witch folk with him—Alfar will reign, and
those
self-sold witches who do oppose him, will die in
torments
of fire! Alfar is the future, and all who obstruct
him
will be ground into dust! Kneel, fool!" he roared, leap-
ing up
onto the cart-seat, finger spearing down at Rod.
"Kneel
to Alfar, and swear him thy loyalty, or a traitor's
death
shalt thou die!"
The
thin tissue of Rod's self-control tore, and rage erupted.
"Who
the hell do you think you are, to tell me what to
swear!
You idiot, you dog's-meat gull! He's ground your
ego
into powder, and there's nothing left of the real you!
You
don't exist anymore!"
"Nay—I
exist, but thou shall not!" Flaran yanked a
quarterstaff
from the peasant next to him and smashed a
two-handed
blow down at Rod.
206 Christopher Stasheff
Rod
ducked inside the swing, coming up next to Flaran
with
his dagger in his hand, but a dozen hands seized him
and
yanked him back, the sky reeled above him, framed by
peasant
faces with burning eyes. He saw a club swinging
down at
him—and, where the peasants' smocks had come
open at
the necks, chain mail and a glimpse of green-and-
brown
livery.
Then
pain exploded through Rod's forehead, and night
came
early.
13
A
blowtorch, set on "low," was burning its way through
Rod's
brain. But it was a very poor blowtorch; it seemed
to go
over the same path again and again, in a regular,
pulsing
rhythm. He forced his eyes open, hoping to catch
the
bastard who was holding the torch.
Blackness.
Blackness
everywhere, except for a trapezoid of flick-
ering
orange. He frowned, peering more closely at it, squint-
ing
against the raging in his head, and figured out that it
was the
reflection of a flame on a rock wall. There were
stripes
up and down—the shadows of bars, no doubt. There
were a
couple of other stripes, too, zigging and zagging—
the
trails of water droplets. Then Rod became aware of
fragile
orange webs, higher up—gossamer niter, lit by the
firelight.
He
added it all up, and enlightenment bloomed—he was
in a
dungeon again. The firelight was a guard's torch, out
in the
hall, and the trapezoid was the shadow of the little
barred
grille in the door.
He
heaved a sigh and lay back. This kept happening to
him,
time and again. There'd been the gaol in Pardope, the
Dictator's
"guest chamber" in Caerleath, the dungeon under
207
208
Christopher Stasheff
the
House of Clovis, and the cell in the Duke's castle in Tir
Chlis,
where Father Al had taught him how to use his ESP
talents...
and the list went on. He frowned, trying to re-
member
back to the first one, but it was too much for his
poor,
scrambled brain.
He put
the list away, and very slowly, very carefully,
rolled
up onto one elbow. The blowtorch shot out a fiery
geyser
that seemed to consume his whole head, right down
his
backbone, but only for a few moments; then it subsided,
and
fell into perspective as a mere headache. A real beaut,
Rod had
to admit—those soldiers hadn't exactly been deft,
but
they'd made up for it with enthusiasm. He pressed a
hand to
his throbbing forehead, remembering the chain mail
under
the peasant tunics. It was a very neat little trap he'd
walked
into—but he couldn't imagine a less appetizing bait
than
Flaran.
Not
that it hadn't worked, though.
He
lifted his head slowly, looking around him. Compared
to the
other dungeons he'd been in, this one was definitely
second-rate.
But, at least he had a couple of roommates,
manacled
to the wall across from him—though one of them
had
lost quite a bit of weight over the years; he was a pure
skeleton.
Well, not "pure"—he did have some mold patches
here
and there. The other one had some patches, too, but
they
were purple, shading toward maroon. It was Simon,
and his
chin was sunk on his chest.
Rod
squeezed his eyes shut, trying to block out the head-
ache,
trying to think. Why should Simon be here? He wasn't
a spy.
Rod considered the question thoroughly, till the brain-
storm
struck: He could ask. So he cleared his throat, and
tried.
"Uh... Simon..."
The
other man looked up, surprised. Then his face re-
laxed
into a sad smile. "Ah, thou dost wake, then!"
"Yeah—kind
of." Rod set both palms against the floor
and did
a very slow push-up. The headache clamored in
indignation,
and he fell back against the wall with a gasp—
but
victorious; he was sitting up. The headache punished
him
unmercifully, then decided to accept the situation and
lapsed
into the background. Rod drew in a long, shuddering
breath.
"What... what happened? You shouldn't be here—
just
me. What'd Flaran have against you?"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 209
"He
knew me for what I was," Simon sighed. "When
the
soldiers had felled thee, young Flaran turned on me,
raging.
"Who was this 'Owen?' Thou, vile traitor, will
speak!
Wherefore did this false, unminded man march north-
ward
into our domain?"
"Our?"
Rod frowned.
Simon
shrugged. "By good chance, I did not know the
answers
he sought. I said as much, and he whirled toward
the
soldiers, pointing back at me, screaming, 'Torture him!
Hale
him down now, and break his fingers, joint by joint!'
'Nay,'
I cried, 'I have naught to hide,' and I abandoned all
pretence
of cloaking my mind, casting aside all shields and
attempts
at hiding."
"What
good could that do? As mind readers go, he was
barely
literate."
"Oh,
nay! He was a veritable scholar!" Simon's mouth
tightened.
"Thou, my friend, wert not alone in thy decep-
tions.
I felt naught, but I saw his face grow calm. Then his
eyes
lit with excitement—but they soon filled with disap-
pointment,
and he did turn away to the soldiers in disgust.
"There's
naught here—naught but an old man, with some
talent
for spell-breaking. He could have gone free but, more's
the
fool, he hath come back North to seek to undo our
work.'
Then the auncient said, 'He's a traitor, then,' and
the
look that he gave me was venomed—yet there was that
strange
emptiness behind it."
Rod
nodded. "Spellbound."
"Indeed.
Then the auncient said further, 'Shall we flay
him?'
and cold nails seemed to skewer my belly. But Flaran
gave me
a measuring glance, and shook his head. 'Nay. He
may yet
prove useful. Only bind him and bring him.' Then
he did
fix his gaze upon me, and his eyes did seem to swell,
glowing,
to bum into my brain. 'An thou dost seek to break
spells
on these soldiers,' he swore. 'I will slay thee.'"
"So."
Rod lifted his eyebrows. "Our young klutz wasn't
quite
the fool he seemed to be, was he?"
"Nay.
In truth, he did command. He bade the soldiers
march
home, and all did turn to take up the journey. Some
hundreds
of yards further, we came to tethered horses. The
soldiers
untied them and mounted—and there were pack
mules
for myself and for thee, and a great chestnut charger
270 Christopher Stasheff
with a
saddle adorned with silver for Raran."
Rod
watched Simon for a moment, then said, "Not ex-
actly
an accident we ran into them, was it?"
Simon
smiled, with irony. "In truth, 'twas quite well-
planned."
"Even
to the point of rigging up a peasant mob to be
chasing
Flaran, at just the right time to run into us on the
road."
Rod's mouth tightened. "He knew that was a sure
way to
make us take him in. And he stayed with us just
long
enough to make sure we were what he thought we
were,
before he turned us over to his bully boys."
"He
did give us the opportunity to turn our coats to Alfar's
livery,"
Simon pointed out.
"Yes.
Generous of him, wasn't it?" Rod scowled. "But
how did
he catch onto us?"
Simon
sighed, and shook his head. "I can only think that
some
spy of his must have sighted us, and followed unbe-
knownst."
"Yeah—that
makes sense." With a sudden stab of guilt,
Rod
realized that Alfar had probably had spies watching
him
from the moment he crossed the border. After all, he'd
certainly
had Rod in sight before then. Rod just hadn't
counted
on the sorcerer's being so thorough.
Nothing
to do about it now. Rod shook himself—and
instantly
regretted it; the headache stabbed again. But he
thrust
it all behind him, and asked, "How far did they ride?"
"All
the rest of the day, and far into the night," Simon
answered.
"But
it was only mid-moming." Rod frowned. "That
must
have been... let me see..." He pressed a hand against
his
aching head, and the clank of the wrist-chain seemed to
drive
right through from ear to ear. But he absorbed the
pain and
let it disperse through his skull, trying to think.
"Sixteen
hours. And I was out cold all that time?"
Simon
nodded. "Whenever thou didst show sign of wak-
ening,
Flaran bade his soldiers strike thee again."
"No
wonder my head's exploding! How many times did
they
hit me?"
"More
than half a dozen."
Rod
shuddered. "I'm just lucky I don't have a fracture.
On the
other hand..." He frowned, and lifted a hand to
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 211
probe
his skull, then thought better of it. "I guess I'll have
to
hope. Why didn't he want me awake?"
"He
did not say; yet I would conjecture that he did not
wish to
chance discovery of the range of thy powers."
Rod
felt an icicle-stab. "Powers? What're you talking
about?
I just happen to be invisible to any listening witches,
that's
all."
"Mayhap;
yet in this, I must needs admit that, in Flaran's
place,
I would have done as he did. For whether thou dost
shield
thy mind by chance, or by intention, truly matters
not—such
shielding bespeaks great witch power. Nay, thou'rt
a true
warlock. Master Owen, whether thou dost know it
or
not—and a most puissant one, to be able to hide thy
mind so
thoroughly." Simon leaned back against the wall.
"And
there is ever, of course, the chance that thou dost
know it
indeed, and dost hide thy thoughts by deliberation.
And if
that were the case, and if I were thine enemy, I would
not
wish to gamble on the extent of thy powers. I, too,
would
not chance thy waking."
Rod
just gazed at Simon.
Then he
looked away, with a sigh. "Well, I can't fault
your
logic—or his wisdom. But why did he bring you
along?"
Simon
shrugged. "Who can say? Yet I doubt not he'll
seek to
force thee to answer certain questions, whether thou
dost
know them or not—and if thine own pain is not enough
to make
thee speak, mayhap he'll think that mine will."
Rod
shivered. "That boy's a real charmer, isn't he?"
"In
truth. He did turn to me, jabbing with a finger. 'Do
not
seek to hide thy thoughts,' he cried, 'nor to disguise
them,
or I shall bid them slay thee out of hand.' I assured
him I
would not, the more so since I saw no point in such
disguising.
For what could he learn from my mind, that's
of any
import?"
"And
that he didn't learn from traveling with the two of
us."
Rod was glad that the light was too dim for Simon to
see his
face burning. "Or that he couldn't find out by, let
us say,
more 'orthodox' means? For example, if he's keeping
tab on
your thoughts, he knows I'm awake now."
"Aye.
I doubt me not an we'll see him presently."
"No
doubt at all; I'm sure he's still in charge of our case.
272 Christopher Stasheff
... So
he was giving the orders, huh? To the soldiers, I
mean."
"Aye.
There was no doubt of that."
Rod
nodded. "Then he's probably the one who arranged
the
ambush."
Simon
gazed at him for a moment, then nodded slowly.
"That
would be likely."
"So
he's not exactly the simple half-telepath he claimed
to
be."
Simon's
lips curved with the ghost of his smile. "Nay,
Master
Owen. He is certainly not that."
"He
didn't happen to let out any hints about his real self,
did
he?"
Simon
shook his head. "The surface of his thoughts stayed
ever as
it had been. For aught that I could hear from him,
his name
was ever Flaran; yet his thoughts were all extolling
Alfar,
and how greatly advantaged the land was, since he'd
taken
power."
Rod
frowned. "Nothing about the job at hand?"
"Aye;
he did think how greatly thy capture would please
Alfar."
"I
should think it would." Rod closed his eyes, leaning
his
head back against the wall, hoping the cold stone might
cool
the burning. "No matter what else we might say about
our boy
Plaran, we've got to admit he was effective."
A key
grated in the lock. Rod looked up at a slab of
dungeon
warder with a face that might have been carved
out of
granite. He didn't say a word, just held the door open
and
stepped aside to admit a lord, gorgeously clad in brocade
doublet
and trunk-hose, burgundy tights and shoes, fine lace
ruff,
and cloth-of-gold mantle, with a golden coronet on his
head.
His chin was high in arrogance; he wore a look of
stem
command. Rod had to look twice before he recognized
Flaran.
"Clothes do make the man," he murmured.
Plaran
smiled, his lips curving with contempt. "Clothes,
aye—and
a knowledge of power."
The
last word echoed in Rod's head. He held his gaze
on
Flaran. "So the rumor was true—Alfar was wandering
around
the country, disguised as a peasant."
Flaran
inclined his head in acknowledgement.
"Well,
0 Potentate Alfar." Rod leaned back against the
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 213
wall.
"I have to admit you did a great job of disguising
yourself
as a peasant. Could it be you had experience to
draw
on?"
Alfar's
eyes sparked with anger, and Simon seemed to
shrink
in on himself in horror. The sorcerer snapped. "In-
deed, I
was numbered 'mongst the downtrodden till a year
agone."
"But
that's all behind you now, of course."
His
voice was a little too innocent. Alfar's gaze hardened.
"Be
not mistaken. Think not that I'm a peasant still—for
thou
dost lie within my power now, and thou wilt find it
absolute."
Rod
shrugged. "So you're a powerful peasant. Or did
you
honestly think you could be something more?"
"Greatly
more," Alfar grated, "as thou wilt discover."
"Oh?"
Rod tilted his head to the side. "What, may I
ask?"
"A
duke—Duke Alfar, of the Northern coast! And thou,
slave,
shall address me as such!"
"Oh."
Rod kept his lips pursed from the word. "I'm a
slave
now, am I?"
"Why?"
Alfar's eyes kindled. "What else wouldst thou
call
thyself?"
Rod
watched him for a second, then smiled. "I'm a
peasant,
too. Aren't I?"
"Assuredly,"
Alfar said drily. "Yet whatsoever thou art,
thou
art also a most excellent thought-hearer, an thou hast
been
able to probe 'neath my thoughts to discover who I
truly
am."
"Oh,
that didn't take mind reading. None at all. I mean,
just
look at it logically: Who, in all the great North Country,
would
be the most likely one to go wandering around dis-
guised
as a schlemazel peasant, supporting Alfar's policies
with
great verve and enthusiasm, and would have authority
to
command his soldiers?"
"One
of my lieutenants, mayhap," Alfar said, through
thinned
lips.
Rod
shook his head. "You never said one word about
having
to refer a decision to someone higher up—at least,
not
from Simon's reports about what happened while I was
out
cold. But you did mention 'our' domain, which meant
214 Christopher Stasheff
that
you were either one of the lieutenants, viewing himself
as a
partner—and from what I'd heard of Alfar, I didn't
think
he was the type to share power..."
"Thou
didst think aright," Flaran growled.
"See?
And that left the 'or' to the 'either'—and the 'or'
was
that the 'our' you'd used was the royal 'our.' And that
meant
that Flaran was really Alfar." Rod spread his hands.
"See?
Just common sense."
"Scarcely
'common.'" Alfar frowned. "In truth, 'tis a
most
strange mode of thought."
"People
keep telling me that, here," Rod sighed. He'd
found
that chains of reasoning were alien to the medieval
mind.
"But that was the royal 'our,' wasn't it? And you are
planning
to try for the throne, aren't you?"
Alfar's
answer was an acid smile. "Thou hast come to
the
truth of it at last—though I greatly doubt thou didst
find it
in such a manner."
"Don't
worry, I did." Rod smiled sourly. "Even right
now,
with you right next to me, I can't read your mind.
Not a whisper."
"Be
done with thy deception!" Alfar blazed. "Only a
warlock
of great power could cloak his thoughts so com-
pletely
that he seems not even to exist!"
Rod
shrugged. "Have it your way. But would that mighty
warlock
be able to read minds when his own was closed
off?"
Alfar
stared.
Then he
lifted his head slowly, nodding. "Well, then."
And,
"Thou wilt, at least, not deny that thou art Tuan's
spy."
"King
Tuan, to you! But I agree, that much is pretty
obvious."
"Most
excellent! Thou canst now tell to Tuan every small-
est
detail of my dungeon—if ever thou dost set eyes upon
him
again."
For all
his bravado, a shiver of apprehension shook Rod.
He
ignored it. "Tuan already knows all he needs."
"Indeed?"
Alfar's eyes glittered. "And what is that?"
"That
you've taken over the duchy, by casting a spell
over
all the people—and that you'll attack him, if he doesn't
obliterate
you first."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 215
"Will
he, now! Fascinating! And how much else doth he
know?"
Rod
shrugged. "None of your concern—but do let it
worry
you."
Alfar
stood rigid, the color draining from his face.
Then he
whirled, knife whipping out to prick Simon's
throat.
"Again I will demand of thee—what information
hath
Tuan?"
His
gaze locked with Rod's. Simon paled, but his eyes
held
only calm and understanding, without the slightest trace
of
fear.
Rod
sighed, and capitulated. "He knows your whole ca-
reer,
from the first peasant you intimidated, up to your battle
with
Duke Bourbon."
"Ah,"
Alfar breathed. "But he knoweth not the outcome.
Doth
he?"
"No,"
Rod admitted, "but it was a pretty clear guess."
"'Twas
the Duchess, was it not? She did escape my
hunters.
Indeed, my spies in Tudor's county, and in Runny -
mede,
attacked her, but were repulsed by puissant magics."
His
gaze hardened. "Magics wielded by a woman and four
children."
Inwardly,
Rod went limp with relief, hearing his family's
safety
confirmed. But outwardly, he only permitted himself
a small
smile.
"Yet
thou wouldst know of that, wouldst thou not?" Alfar
breathed.
"Thou didst dispatch them on that errand, didst
thou
not?"
Rod
looked at the drop of blood rising from the point of
the
dagger, considered his options, and decided honesty
wouldn't
hurt. "It was my idea, yes."
Alfar's
breath hissed out in triumph. "Then 'twas thy
wife
and bairns who did accompany the Duchess and her
brats,
whilst yet they did live!"
Alarm
shrilled through Rod. Did the bastard mean his
family
was dead? And the anger heaved up, rising.
Oblivious,
Alfar was still speaking. "And thou art he
who's
called Rod Gallowglass, art thou not?"
"Yes.
I'm the High Warlock." Rod's eyes narrowed, red-
dening.
Simon
stared, poleaxed.
276 Christopher Stasheff
Alfar's
lips were parted, his eyes glittering. "How didst
thou do
it? Tell me the manner of it! How didst thou cease
to be,
to the mind, the whiles thou wert apparent to the
eye?"
"You
should know," Rod grated. "Weren't you eaves-
dropping?"
"Every
minute, I assure thee. I held thy trace the whiles
thou
didst buy a can and didst drive out to the road. Then,
of a
sudden, there were no thoughts but a peasant's."
"Quite
a range you've got there."
"More
than thirty leagues. How didst thou cloak thy
thoughts?"
"I
didn't—not then." Rod throttled the rage down to a
slow
bum, keeping his mind in control, floating on top of
the
emotion. "I just started thinking like a peasant."
Alfar
stared.
Then he
frowned. "Then thou dost counterfeit most ex-
cellently."
"I
had some acting lessons." And they were coming in
handy,
helping him keep the rage under control. "I didn't
pull
the real disappearing act until I was across the border."
Privately,
he found it interesting that Alfar could have been
so
thoroughly deceived. Either he wasn't very good at read-
ing
thoughts in depth, or Rod was even better at believing
himself
to be somebody fictitious than he had thought.
"Ah,
'twas then? Tell me the manner of it." But his knife
hand
was trembling.
Nonetheless,
Simon was staring at Rod, not Alfar, and
with
awe, not fear.
And
he'd been friendly to Rod, and he was an innocent
bystander...
Rod
shrugged. "I withdrew, that's all. Pulled back into
my
shell. Decided nobody was worth my trouble."
Alfar
stared at him.
Then he
frowned. "Canst say no more than that?"
Rod
shrugged. "Details. Techniques. Remembering times
in my
past when I wanted to get away from people, and
letting
the feeling grow. None of it could teach you how to
do it.
The first time, it just happens."
Alfar
watched him, eyes narrowed.
Then he
straightened, sliding the knife back into its sheath,
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
217
and
Simon almost collapsed with a sigh of relief.
Rod
felt a little relief, too, but the anger countered it.
"Tis
even as I've thought," Alfar said, with grim sat-
isfaction.
"From aught I've heard of thee, thy chivalry ex-
ceeds
thy sense."
"Would
you care to explain that?" Rod's voice was vel-
vet.
"Why,
'tis plainly seen! Would a sensible captain risk
his own
pain, or mayhap even life, on a perilous mission?
Nay! He
would send a spy, and let the underling be racked
and
torn! But thou, who dost pride thyself on thine honor..."
he made
the word an obscenity, "... wouldst rather waste
thine
hours spying out the enemy thyself!"
Now Rod
understood the man—and he didn't bother
hiding
his contempt. "Just sit back in Runnymede and read
through
intelligence reports, huh?"
"That
would be wise." Alfar stood, arms akimbo, smirk-
ing
down at him. "Or dost thou truly believe thou couldst
accomplish
more in thine own person?"
Rod
studied the sorcerer—cocky stance, chip on the
shoulder,
the whole arrogant air (and didn't overlook the
menace,
or the sadistic glitter at the back of the eye) and
wondered
why he didn't feel more fear. He did know, though,
that
he'd better not let Alfar know that.
So he
stuck his chin out just that little bit farther, and
made
his tone defiant. "I only know this: by the time I
realized
that it was really dangerous, it was too much a
hazard
to let anyone else go in my place."
"How
gallant." Alfar's scorn was withering.
"It
seems I was right." Rod held his gaze on Alfar's eyes.
"If
you could catch onto me, you could catch onto anybody
I might
send. How'd you see through my disguise?"
A slow
smile spread over Alfar's face. He lifted his head,
chest
swelling, and stepped toward Rod, almost strutting.
"I
did sense danger when my spies sent word that the High
Warlock
did journey northward. Yet sin' that thou didst come
with
thy wife and bairns, it might well have been naught
but a
pleasure jaunt. Naetheless, he did note that thou hadst
but
lately spoken with Tuan and Catharine."
Rod
shrugged. "I do that all the time." But his interest
was
piqued. "So your man couldn't eavesdrop on my con-
278 Christopher Stasheff
versation
with Their Majesties, huh?"
Alfar
flushed, glowering.
"Well."
Rod leaned back against the wall. "Nice to know
my
wife's noise-shield works so well."
"Is
that how thou dost manage it!" Alfar's eyes gleamed.
"In
truth, their thoughts are well-nigh impossible to single
out
from all that buzzing hum of thoughts that doth surround
them."
He nodded, with a calculating look. "Thy wife hath
talent."
Rod
quailed at the threat his tone implied—especially
since
Gwen hadn't held a shield around the royal couple.
"Just
be glad I sent her back."
"Mayhap
I had ought to be. Mayhap 'tis fitting that what
my
lieutenants could not accomplish, mine actions could."
"'Lieutenants?'"
Rod stared in disbelief, then let a slow
smile
grow. "You mean that lousy marksman was one of
your
best?"
Alfar's
gaze darkened. "'Twas purposely done. I bade
him
discourage thee, not slay thee or thine."
"Wise."
Rod nodded. "If you had, I'd've broken off the
spy
mission right there, and shot back to Runnymede to tell
Tuan to
call out the army. But you did a great job of warning
us you
were there."
"Aye—and
did secure a gauge of the range and strength
of thy
powers, and thy wife's and bairns'. Wherefore did I
send
mine other lieutenants to afright thee a second, then a
third
time, that I might leam thy pattern of attack, and its
weaknesses.
Nay, if thy wife and baims had come north
farther,
I would have known well how to deal with them."
The
chill had settled around Rod's backbone, and wasn't
leaving.
"I did have some notion that it was getting a little
too
thick. So when the Duchess and her boys came along,
I took
advantage of the excuse to send my family back
South,
to safety."
Alfar
nodded. "And went on northward thyself. Then
thou
didst stop by a farmstead, where thou didst buy a
horsecart
and peasant garb—and my man lost trace of thee,
the
whiles thou didst don thy smock and buskins."
Very
interesting! Rod hadn't gone invisible until he'd
crossed
the border, "Let me guess: that's when you decided
you'd
better get involved on the personal level."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 219
Alfar
nodded. "Even as thou hadst, I did don peasant
garb,
and took the southward road, afoot and unguarded."
He
smiled, amused, as though to say. Why would Alfar need
guards?
Rod
resolved to take the first possible opportunity to
demonstrate
exactly why. Aloud, he said, "Why didn't you
ride to
the border first? You could have intercepted me
there."
"Oh,
I was certain I would discover thee as I went! Thou
hadst,
after all, no need to use aught but the High Road—
and
good reason not to, for thou wouldst then have been
most
strikingly noticed, in byways where only villagers do
journey.
Yet long ere I encountered thee, I did come upon
a troop
of guardsmen, and something about them caught
my
notice. I did look deeply into their auncient's eyes and
thoughts
and, 'neath the surface, discovered that he was no
longer
spellbound! That, even though they wore my colors!"
His
smile was not pleasant. "I found occasion to journey
with
them, begging their protection and, as we walked,
wove my
spell about each one in turn. When only the aun-
cient
remained disenchanted, I bade his troopers seize him;
so they
did. Then did I pose him questions, the whiles I
hearkened
to the answers that rose within his mind, un-
spoken."
Rod
decided he'd better find a new interrogation tech-
nique;
this one was obviously so easy to invent that it boded
fair to
becoming common.
"From
his mind," Alfar went on, "I gained the image of
the man
who'd broke his spell...." He nodded toward
Simon.
"And I saw, to my surprise, that he was accom-
panied,
by a most ill-favored, surly peasant."
Rod
straightened in indignation. "Hey, now!"
Alfar
smiled, satisfied that his barb had drawn blood.
"But
'twas easily seen that the spell-breaker must needs be
the
High Warlock. Why, he had so great a look of dignity!"
Simon
looked up, startled.
Alfar's
eye glinted. "And his serving man had so churlish
a
look!"
But Rod
wasn't about to bite on the same bait twice. He
shrugged.
"I won't argue. When it comes to churls, you
should
know what you're talking about."
220 Christopher Stasheff
Alfar
flushed, and dropped a hand to his dagger.
Rod
leaned back lazily. "What did you do with the sol-
diers?"
He was tense, dreading the answer.
Alfar
shrugged. "What ought I to do? I enchanted the
auncient
too, and sent them on northward to rejoin mine
army."
Rod
lifted his head, surprised. "You didn't punish them?
No
racks, no thumbscrews? No crash diets?"
Alfar
looked equally surprised. "Dost thou punish an
arrow
that has fallen to earth, if thine enemy hath picked
it up,
and set it to his bowstring? Nay; thou dost catch it
when he
doth loose it at thee, and restore it to thy quiver.
Oh, I
sent them on northward. I did not wish to chance their
beholding
thee again—or, more's to the point, thy spell-
breaker.
But at the next guardpost, I showed my badge
of
authority..." He fingered the medallion on his breast.
"...
and bade the soldiers disguise themselves as peasants,
to wait
in ambush where a country way joined the High
Road.
Then I summoned a lesser warlock to abide with
them,
in readiness to transmit orders to march, when he
should
receive a thought-code—Alfar's greatness, and why
all
witches ought to join with him." He smiled, vindictively.
Rod
knew better than to withhold ego-oil when the one
with
the inferiority complex held the knife. "So that's why
the
sudden diatribe, eh?"
"Certes."
Alfar's eyes danced. "There's method in aught
I do.
Then did I march southward, my thoughts ranging
ahead
of myself, till I heard Simon's. I found a village
warlock,
then, and bade him lead his people out to chase
me...."
"The
little fat guy. But of course, you made sure all their
rocks
would miss, and they wouldn't catch you."
"Why,
certes." Alfar grinned, enjoying the account of
his own
cleverness. "And as I had foreknown, thou couldst
not
forebear to save a poor weakling, beset by human
wolves."
"Yes."
Rod's mouth twisted with the sour taste of his
own
gullibility. "We fell right into it, didn't we? Just picked
you up,
and carried you right along."
"Thou
wast, in truth, most gracious," Alfar said, with a
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 221
saccharine
smile. "'Twas but a day's work to discover that
'twas
Simon broke the spells, yet that he could do little
more—and
that thou must needs be the High Warlock."
"My
natural greatness just shone through those peasant
rags,
huh?"
"Oh,
indubitably. Yet 'twas more truthfully thy face."
"Naturally
noble, eh?"
"Nay,
only familiar. Mine agents had borne me pictures
in
their minds, more faithful than any painter could render.
Oh,
thou hast disguised thyself somewhat, with peasant's
smock
and grime; yet I know something of deception my-
self,
and can look past surface features to those that underlie
them.
Yet I knew thee even ere I'd set eyes upon thy face;
for
thou wast there to mine eyes, but not to my mind, and
only a
most puissant warlock could shield himself so thor-
oughly."
Rod
shrugged. "I seem to have had that knack before I
started
doing any of what you call magic.... But, go on."
"Pay
heed!" Alfar held up a forefinger. "Even then, I
offered
thee thine opportunity to join with me and mine!
And
only when thou didst refuse, and that with such force
that I
knew thou couldst not be persuaded, did I seize thee."
His
gaze intensified, locked on Rod's eyes. "E'en now, an
thou
dost wish to join with me, I will rejoice, and welcome
thee!"
"Providing,
of course, that I can prove I mean it."
"Of
course. What use art thou, if I cannot rely on thee
to the
uttermost?" His eyes glittered, and his mouth quivered
with
suppressed glee. "Indeed, I've even now the means to
insure
thy loyalty."
Dread
shot through Rod and, hard after it, anger. He
throttled
it down and growled, "What means?"
"Thou
hast no need to know. Thou dost not, after all,
wish to
ally thy fortunes with mine."
The
rage surged up, and Rod let it rise. "I'll grind your
head
under my heel, if I can ever find a forked stick big
enough
to hold your neck down!"
Alfar
went white, and sprang at Rod, his knife slipping
out.
Fear shot through Rod, like a spark to gunpowder and
the
anger exploded, shooting through his every vein and
222 Christopher
Stasheff
nerve,
smashing out of him in reaction.
Alfar
slammed back against the far wall and slid to the
floor,
dazed.
Rod's
chains jangled as they broke apart, and fell.
He
thrust himself away from the wall, rising to his feet,
borrowed
rage-power filling every cell of his body. The
headache
throbbed through him, darkening all he saw except
for an
oval of light that contained Alfar, crumpled in a heap.
Rod
waded toward the fallen man, feeling anger envelop
him,
pervading him, as though Lord Kem's spirit reached
across
the void between the universes, to take possession
of him.
His finger rose with the weight of all his man-
slayings,
pointing out to explode the sorcerer.
Then
Alfar's eyes cleared; he saw Rod's face, and his
eyes
filled with terror. Rod reached out to touch him—but
thunder
rocked the cell, and the sorcerer was gone.
Rod
stood staring at the empty space where the sorcerer
had
been, finger still pointing, forgotten. "Teleported," he
choked
out. "Got away."
He
straightened slowly, thrusting outward with his mind,
exploding
his mental shield, opening himself to all and every
sense
impression about him, concentrating on the human
thoughts.
Nowhere was there a trace of Alfar.
Rod
nodded, perversely satisfied; Alfar hadn't just tele-
ported
out of the cell—he'd whipped himself clean out of
the
castle, and so far away that he couldn't be "heard."
14
Rod
sagged back, sitting against the cell wall as the biggest
reason
for his anger abated. His emotions began to subside,
but
still within him there was an impulse toward violence,
a lust
for battle that kept the anger and built it, filling his
whole
body with quaking rage.
That
scared Rod. He tried to force the mindless rage
down;
and as he did, Simon's voice bored through to him:
"Owen!
Owen! Lord Gallowglass! Nay, I'll call thee as I
knew
thee!" A hand clasped his wrist; fingers dug in. "Mas-
ter
Owen! Or Rod Gallowglass, whichever thou art! Hast
thou
lost thyself, then?"
"Yes,"
Rod grated, staring at the wall, unseeing. "Yes.
Damn
near."
Simon
groaned. "Is there naught of the High Warlock
left in
thee?"
"Which
one?" Rod growled. "Which High Warlock?"
Simon
answered in a voice filled with wonder. "Rod
Gallowglass,
High Warlock of Gramarye! What other High
Warlock
is there?"
"Lord
Kem," Rod muttered, "High Warlock of the land
ofTir
Chlis." He rose to his feet, and stood stock-still, stood
against
the humming in his mind, the thrumming in his
veins.
Then he forced the words out. "What is he like—
this
High Warlock?"
223
V
Christopher
Stasheff
224
"Which
one?" Simon cried.
"Yes."
Rod nodded. "That's the question. But tell me of
this
Rod Gallowglass."
"But
thou art he!"
"Tell
me of him!" Rod commanded.
Simon
stared, at a loss. But no matter what he thought
of the
oddness of Rod's question, or the irrationality of what
he did,
Simon swallowed it, absorbed it, and gave what
was
needed.
"Rod
Gallowglass is the Lord High Warlock."
"That
doesn't help any," Rod growled. "Tell me some-
thing
different about him."
Simon
stared for a moment, then began again, "He is
somewhat
taller than most, though not overmuch..."
"No,
no! Not what he looks like! That doesn't help at
all! What's
he like inside?"
Simon
just stared at him, confounded.
"Quickly!"
Rod snapped. "Tell me! Now! I need an an-
chor,
something to hold to!"
"Hast
thou lost thyself so truly, then?"
"Yes!"
Finally,
the actuality of the emergency struck home to
Simon.
He leaned forward and said, earnestly, "I have not
known
thee overiong. Rod Gallowglass, and that only in
thy
guise as old Owen. Yet from what I've seen of thee,
thou
art... well, aye, thou art surly. And taciturn. Yet art
thou
good-hearted withal. Aye, thou hast ever the good of
thy
fellows at heart, at nearly every moment." He frowned.
"I've
heard it said of thee, that thou hast a wry humor, and
dost
commonly speak with wit. Yet I've not seen much of
that in
old Owen, save some bites of sarcasm—which are
as
often turned against himself, as against any other."
"Good."
Rod nodded. "Very good." He could feel the
anger
lessening, feel himself calming. But underneath it,
there
was still fury, goading him to action, any action. Lord
Kem.
"Tell me..." Rod muttered, and swallowed. "Tell
me
something about myself, that doesn't apply to Kem—
for
most of what you've said might be true of him, too, I
don't
know; I scarcely met the man. It might, though. Tell
me
something about me, that's definitely mine alone, that
couldn't
be his!"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 225
"Why..."
Simon floundered, "there is thy garb. Would
he go
about as a peasant?"
"Possible.
Try again."
"There
is thy horse..."
"Yes!"
Rod pounced on it. "Tell me about him!"
"
'Tis a great black beast," Simon said slowly, "and most
excellent
in his lines. Indeed, 'twas the one great flaw in
thy
guise; for any could see that he was truly a knight's
destrier,
not a common cart horse." He frowned, gazing off
into
space. "And now I mind me, thou dost call him 'Fess.'"
"Fess."
Rod smiled. "Yes. I could never forget Fess, no
matter
what. And Lord Kern couldn't possibly have one
like
him. He's been with me as long as I've been alive—
no,
longer. He's served my family for generations, did you
know
that?"
"Assuredly,
I did not." Simon watched him, wide-eyed.
"He's
not what he seems, you know."
"Aye,
certes, he's not!"
"No,
not just that way." Rod frowned. "He's, uh, mag-
ical.
But not your kind of magic—mine. He's not really a
horse
of any kind. He could be anything."
"A
pooka," Simon murmured, unable to tear his gaze
away.
"No,
not that way! He's cold iron, underneath that horse-
hair—well,
an alloy really. Plus, he's got a mind that's
really
a thing apart." Rod remembered how easily he could
take
the basketball-sized sphere that held Fess's computer-
brain
out of the horse-body and plug it into his starship, to
astrogate
and pilot. "I mean, his brain's really a thing apart.
But
he's always calm—well, almost always. And su-
premely
logical. And always has good advice for me." The
core of
anger was shrinking; it had almost disappeared, and
Rod
could feel the last tendrils of rage withdrawing into it.
If Lord
Kern really had reached across the void between
the
universes in response to Rod's anger, he had lost his
grip.
And if it was really just his own bloodlust driving him
toward
violence, it was under control again now. Rod's
mouth
quirked into a sardonic smile. "Thank you. Milord.
I
appreciate your assistance, and will call upon it frequently,
when
there is need. But for now, I am myself again, and
must
trace this foul sorcerer in the ways which I deem best,
226 Christopher Stasheff
in this
world in which horses may be of metal, with machines
for
brains."
Simon
cocked his head, trying to hear, but not quite
catching
Rod's words.
Rod
felt Kem's presence—or the bulk of his own anger,
whichever
it was—ebb. Whether "Kern" was real, or just
a projection
of his subconscious, it was now as thoroughly
gone as
it could be. He heaved a sigh, and turned to Simon.
"Thank
you. You pulled me out of it."
"Gladly,"
Simon said, "though I misdoubt me an I com-
prehend."
"It's
really very simple. You see, there's another High
Warlock,
in another kingdom, far, far away—extremely far
away;
there isn't even a way to measure it. It's in another
universe,
if you can believe that."
"Believe
it, aye. Understanding it's another matter."
"Just
try and drink it in," Rod advised. "We won't have
an
examination in this course. Now, this other High Warlock
is my
analog. That means that he corresponds to me in every
detail;
what he does in his universe, what I do in mine. I
visited
his country for a while, and had occasion to borrow
his
powers; he channelled them through me, of course. But
now it
seems that was habit-forming; he keeps trying to
reach
across to this universe, and take up residence in my
body."
Simon
paled. "Surely he cannot!"
Rod shrugged.
"Maybe not. Maybe it's just my own lust
for
violence, the temptation to commit mayhem, and I'm
labelling
it 'Lord Kern' to try to separate the actions I believe
to be
wrong, from my conscience." He glowered off into
space.
"That doesn't really work, of course. The respon-
sibility's
mine, no matter what illusion I create as an excuse.
Even if
I say Lord Kem did it, it'll really be me who
committed
the deed. It'll still be me, even if I try to disguise
it."
He turned to Simon with a bleak smile. "But I seem to
be able
to lie to myself very convincingly. I'm thoroughly
capable
of persuading myself that I'm somebody else, when
I want
to."
"So."
Simon frowned. "I have convinced thee that thou
art
thyself again?"
Rod
nodded. "More importantly, you've shown me that
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 227
I can
restore myself to my real personality, instead of the
make-believe
one, welding my thoughts and my actions
back
into a whole again. It's a matter of remembering who
I am.
Fess was the key; Fess was the final thing that did
it.
Because, you see..." He quirked a smile. "... Fess
couldn't
exist in Lord Kem's universe."
Simon
frowned. "I do not understand why not; yet will
I
accept thine assurance." Then his eyes sparked, and wid-
ened.
"Yet mayhap I do comprehend. Thine horse doth stand
for
thee, doth he not? For if he could not be, in this Lord
Kem's
land, then neither couldst thou!"
"Not
without being imported, no." Then Rod stiffened,
turning
aside from Simon, feeling as though an electric
current
were passing through him. "Yes... he does stand
for me
in a lot of ways, doesn't he?" The computer mind
in the
horsehair body was rather symbolic of technological
Rod in
Gramarye's medieval culture....
But of
himself...?
"I
think 'tis so," Simon was saying. "And even as thine
horse
is the key to returning thee to control of thine actions,
so
thine anger is the key to summoning this 'Lord Kern'
which,
thou dost say, thou hast created, to take responsibility
for
thine own fell deeds, that thou mayest give thyself the
lie
that 'tis no fault of thine own."
Rod
stood still for a moment, then nodded slowly. "Yes.
And it
is a lie." He dropped down, to sit on his heels. Simon
sat by
him. "Ever since I came back from Lord Kern's
universe,
I've been flying into rages—and it's scary, very
scary."
"So."
Simon's eyes glinted. "Thou hast been afraid to
draw on
thine own powers, for fear of summoning him."
Rod
stared at him for a while. Then, slowly, he nodded.
"Yes,
that would make sense, wouldn't it? Association.
Using
magic for the first time, resulted in Lord Kem's being
a house
guest within my skull; so using them again, should
bring
him back. A certain illogical sort of reason to it, isn't
there?"
"It
doth sound so, when thou dost say it."
"Yes—but
stating it also makes me able to see that it
doesn't
make sense." Rod grinned. "I have to draw on my
powers,
though. There have been times when they came in
228
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
229
almighty
handy. Just now, for example—Alfar had his dag-
ger at
my throat, so I had nothing to lose." He shuddered.
"And
'Lord Kem' almost took over completely, this time."
"Aye."
Simon smiled. "Thou didst fear, didst thou not?
To use
thy powers, for fear of summoning 'Lord Kem.'"
Rod
nodded, chagrined. "Even if he's just an illusion I
made
up. Yeah. I'd still be afraid of it."
"Yet
thou dost wish to use these powers." Simon raised
a
forefinger. "Whether they be Lord Kem's, or but thine
own
magics, that thine anger doth conjure up, thou dost
fear to
use them, lest thou shouldst yield to temptation, and
let
thine hands do what thou dost abhor."
Rod
nodded slowly. "Nicely said. Separating the thought
from
the action. Yes. I have always been a bit schizoid."
"Then
contain the power thou dost conjure up," Simon
urged.
"Thus thou mayst reunite thy thoughts with thine
action,
by containing thine active part within the pen thy
thoughts
do make. Contain 'Lord Kem,' even as thou dost
contain
thine anger. Assuredly thou hast not forgot our con-
versation,
touching on that point? 'Twas directly after
thou..."
"After
I beat up on that poor, unsuspecting, defenseless
rock.
Yes." Rod nodded, lips tight with chagrin. "Yeah, I
remember
it. But I still don't understand how you keep the
lid on
your anger."
"Nay,
I do not!" Simon frowned, shaking a finger at
Rod.
"If the anger rises, do not attempt to bury it, nor to
pretend
that it's not there. Let it be in thine awareness, and
do not
seek to throttle it—but contain it."
Rod
frowned. "And how do you manage that?"
"By
distancing thyself from the person who doth anger
thee,"
Simon answered. "'Tis not easily done, I know—
for
when the folk of the village had come to like me, and
their
priest had become my friend, I did come from out
mine
hermitage, to live among them. I built myself mine
inn—with
their aid. And, in good time, I found myself a
wife."
His head lifted, gazing off into the past again. "She
bore me
bonny bairns, and together we labored to rear
them."
"That's
right—you do have a daughter."
"Two—and
a son. Who, by Heaven's grace, went for a
soldier
in the last war, and remained in the South, to serve
Lord
Borgia. Beshrew me, but I love him! Yet whilst he
grew,
he tried me sorely!"
"I
wouldn't say I know all about that," Rod growled,
"but
I'm sure learning. How did you deal with it?"
"By
holding in my mind, and never letting go, the notion
that
'twas not me his anger aimed at, but at that which I
stood
for."
"Authority,"
Rod guessed. "Limits on his actions."
"Aye—and
the tree from which he needed to separate
himself,
the shoot, or he'd not be a being in his own right.
Yet
'twas more than that—'twas that he was not angry at
me, but
at what I'd done or said."
"That
doesn't make much sense." Rod frowned. "What
you're
trying to say is, it was anger, not hatred."
Simon
gazed off into space. "Mayhap that is the sense
of it.
Yet whether it be anger or hatred, anger at thee or at
what
thou hast done, be mindful that, if worst comes to
worst,
thou hast but to recall that this person, this event, is
but a
part of thy life, not the whole of it—a part with which
thou
mayest have to deal but, when the dealing's done,
canst lock
out from thy life."
"What
if you can't?" Rod exploded. "What if you're
tied to
them? What if you have to deal with them continually,
every
day? What if you love them?"
Simon
sat, grave and attentive. He nodded. "Aye. 'Tis
far
more easy to hold thy temper with one whom thou dost
see for
but an hour or two each day, for thou canst go to
thine
home, shut the door behind thee, and forget them."
His
face eased into a gentle smile. "Be mindful that these
you
love are people too, and deserving of as much respect
and
care as those with whom thou dost deal for but an hour
or two
each day. If thou dost not treat thy family well,
pretend
they're friends."
The
thought gave Rod an icy chill. "But they're not!
They're
inextricable parts of my life—parts of myself!"
"Nay!"
Simon's eyes blazed, and his face was the coun-
tenance
of a stern patriarch. "Never must thou believe them
so! For
look you, no one else can be a part of thee; they
230 Christopher Stasheff
are
themselves withal, and are apart from thee!"
Rod
just stared, astounded by the intensity of Simon's
emotion.
Simon
shook his head slowly. "Never think that, simply
because
thou dost love a person, or she doth love thee, that
she is
no longer her self, a separate thing, apart."
"But...
but... but that's the goal of marriage!" Rod
sputtered.
"For two to become one!"
"Tis
a foul lie!" Simon retorted. '"Tis but an excuse
for one
to enslave another, then make her cease to be! Thy
wife
is, withal, one person, contained within her own skin,
and is,
and ought to be, one whole, of which all the parts
are
fused together, a being, separate, independent—one
who
loves thee, yet who is apart." Suddenly, he smiled,
and his
warmth was back. "For look you, an she were not
a
separate person, thou wouldst have none to love thee."
"But...
but, the word marriage! Isn't that what it means—
two
people, being welded together into a single unit?"
Simon
shook his head impatiently. "That may be what
the
word doth mean. Yet be not deceived; two cannot be-
come
one. 'Tis not possible. I confess it hath a pretty sound—
but
doth its beauty suffice to make it right?"
Rod
stared at Simon, astounded by the older man's words.
"What
of thee?" Simon demanded. "Would it be right
for one
to attempt to make thee someone other than thou
art?"
"No!
I'm me, damn it! If anybody tried to make me
somebody
else, he'd eliminate me!"
"Then
'tis wrong for thee to attempt to make another
become
part of thee!" Simon stabbed at him with a fore-
finger.
Rod
frowned, thinking it over.
"An
two folk do wed," Simon said softly, "they should
take
pleasure in one another's company—not essay to be-
come
one another." He smiled again, gently. "For how canst
thou become
a part of someone else, save by erasing either
themselves,
or thee?"
Rod
lifted his head, then slowly nodded. "I see your
point.
And as it is with my family, so it is with Lord Kem,
isn't
it? He keeps trying to become Lord Gallowglass—and
if he
did. Rod Gallowglass would cease to exist."
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
231
"Ah,
then!" Simon's eyes lit. "Dost thou, then, mislike
this
notion of thyself and Lord Kem merging together, fus-
ing,
growing, into something larger and greater?"
"I'd
kill the man who tried to wipe me out that way!"
Rod
leaped to his feet in anger. "That's not making me
bigger
and better—that's stealing my soul!"
Simon
only smiled into Rod's wrath, letting its force pass
him by,
untouched. "Yet if the thought so repels thee with
this
Lord Kern—who, thou hast told me, is thine other
self—how
can it be right if the 'other half is thy wife?"
Rod
stared, poleaxed, his anger evaporated.
"Is
it thy wife, or thy bairns—or the fear of ceasing to
be?"
Rod
dropped down to sit crosslegged again, leaning for-
ward
intently. "Then why do I only get angry when they
oppose
me? Why don't I get angry when they agree with
me?"
"For
that, when they oppose thee, there is danger of thy
self
being digested; but when they agree with thee, 'tis they
who may
be merged into thee."
Rod
mulled that over. "So it's a threat. I get angry when
there's
a threat."
"Certes,"
Simon said, surprised. "What else is anger's
purpose?"
"Yes—self-preservation,"
Rod said slowly. "It's the im-
pulse
to fight—to get rid of a threat." His mouth quirked
into a
sudden smile, and his shoulders shook with a silent,
internal
laugh. "My lord! Me threatened, by my three-year-
old
son?"
"Art
thou not?" Simon said softly.
Rob
sobered. "It's ridiculous. He couldn't possibly hurt
me."
"Oh,
he can," Simon breathed, "in thy heart, in thy
soul—most
shrewdly."
Rod
studied his face. Then he said, "But he's so little,
so
vulnerable!" Then he scowled. "But, damn it, it is hard
to remember
that when he's coming up with one of those
insights
that make me feel stupid!"
Simon
nodded, commiserating. "Thou must, therefore,
be ever
mindful, and tell thyself again: 'He doth not lessen
me.'
For that is what we truly fear, is it not? That our selves
232 Christopher Stasheff
will be
diminished, and, if 'tis diminished too much, 'twill
cease
to exist. Is that not what we resist, what anger guards
against?"
"But
it's so assinine," Rod breathed, "to think that such
a small
one could hurt big me!"
"Aye—and
therefore must thou bring it to mind anew,
whenever
thou dost feel the slightest ghost of anger." Simon
sat
back, smiling. "And as 'tis with thy baims, so 'tis with
Lord
Kem."
Rod
just sat, spellbound, then, slowly, he nodded. "So
that's
the key to holding my temper? Just remembering that
I'm
myself?"
"And
that Lord Kern is not Rod Gallowglass. Just so."
Simon
closed his eyes and nodded. "Yet 'tis not so easily
done.
Lord Warlock. To be mindful of thyself, thou must
needs
accept thyself—and to do that, one must be content
with
his self. Thou must needs come to believe that Rod
Gallowglass
is a good thing to be."
"Well,
I think I can do that," Rod said slowly, "Especially
since
I've always felt Rod Gallowglass is an even better
thing
to be, when he's with his wife Gwen."
"Thy
wife?" Simon frowned. "That hath a ring of great
wrongness
to it. Nay, Lord Warlock—an thou dost rely on
another
person for thy sense of worth, thou dost not truly
believe
that thou hast any. Thou shouldst enjoy her company
because
she is herself, and is pleasing to thee, is agreeable
company—not
because she is a part of thee, nor because
the two
of thee together make thy self a worthwhile thing
to
be."
Rod
frowned. "I suppose that makes sense, in its way.
If I
depend on Gwen for my own sense of worth, then,
whenever
she finds me less than perfect, or finds anything
at all
wrong with me, I'll believe I'm not worth anything."
Simon
nodded, his eyes glittering, encouraging.
"And
that would feel to me, as though she were trying
to
destroy me, make me less than I am—which'll make me
angry,
because I'll feel that I need to fight back, for my
own
survival."
Simon
still nodded. "'Tis even as it happed to me—'til
I
realized why, with my wife and myself, each quarrel was
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 233
worse
than the last—for, of course, she felt even as I did—
that
she must needs attack me, to survive." He shook his
head,
like a cautioning schoolteacher. '"Tis wrong of thee,
to make
her the custodian of thy value. That is thine own
burden,
and thou must needs accept it."
Rod
nodded. "Learn to like being inside my own skin,
eh?"
"Aye."
Simon smiled, amused. "And do not seek to so
burden
thine horse, either."
"Yeah—Fess."
That jolted Rod back to the issue. "He
was the
symbol that pulled me back to my own identity.
Does
that mean I'm closer to my horse, than to my wife?"
"I
think not." Simon throttled a chuckle. "For when all's
said
and done, a horse is a thing, not a person. It may have
a
temperament all its own, and some quirks and snags of
mood,
just as a person hath; and each horse may be as
unique
and separate as each human is from another—yet
when
all's said and done, it hath not an immortal soul, and
cannot
therefore challenge thee in any way that will truly
make
thee feel any less. It cannot lessen thy sense of self,
any
more than a shoe or a shovel can."
Rod
nodded slowly. That made sense—more than Simon
knew;
for Fess wasn't a living horse, but a computer in a
body
full of servo-mechanisms. Sure, the computer pro-
jected
a personality by its vocodered voice—but that per-
sonality
was only an illusion, a carefully-crafted artifact,
albeit
an intangible one. Fess was, really, only a metal
machine,
and his identity was as much an illusion as his
ability
to think. "My horse is like a sword, in a way," he
said
thoughtfully.
Simon
laughed softly. "In truth, he doth seem to be some-
what
more than a shoe or a shovel."
"No,
I was thinking of mystique. For a knight, his sword
was the
symbol of his courage, his prowess—and his honor.
Each
sword was a separate, unique, individual thing, to the
medieval
mind, and its owner invested it with a full-fledged
persona.
He even gave it a name. Sometimes, in the legends,
it even
had a will of its own. You couldn't think of a famous
sword,
without thinking of the knight who owned it. Ex-
calibur
evoked the image of King Arthur, Durandal evoked
r
234
Christopher Stasheff
pictures
of Roland, Gram brought to mind Siegried slaying
Fafnir.
The sword was the symbol of the knight who bore
it."
"As
thine horse is the symbol of thee?"
Rod
frowned. "That doesn't quite feel right, somehow—
but
it's close. Metaphorically, I suppose Fess is my sword."
"Then
use him." Simon's eyes glowed. "Draw thy blade,
and go
to slay the monster who enslaves us."
Rod sat
still a moment, feeling within him for fear—
and,
yes, it was there; but so was the courage to answer it.
But
courage wouldn't do much good, really; in this case,
it'd
just let him go ahead into a situation that was too
dangerous
for him to survive. How about confidence, though?
Could
he summon Lord Kem, let himself fill with anger,
and not
be mastered by it? He thought of Fess, and all the
qualities
in himself that Fess represented, and felt calm
certainty
rising in response to the mental image. He nodded.
"I'm
up to it. But if I start to fall in, pull me out, will you?"
"Gladly,"
Simon answered, with a full, warm smile.
"Then
hold on." Rod stood, grasped Simon's shoulder,
and
thought of Alfar, of his arrogance, his insolence, and
the
threat he represented to Rod and his children. Hot anger
surged
in answer, anger building toward rage. Rod felt Lord
Kern's
familiar wrath—but he was aware of it, now, as
something
that was a part of him, truly, not implanted from
someone
else—and, being of himself, it was as much under
his
control as his fingers, or his tongue. He opened his
mind,
concentrating on the world of thought. The world of
sight
dimmed, and his blood began to pound in his ears.
Only
the thoughts were real—the darting, scheming thoughts
of the
warlocks and witches; the dulled, mechanical plod-
ding thoughts
of the soldiers and servants—and the cease-
less
background drone that had to be the projective telepath,
who had
hypnotized a whole duchy. What else could it be,
that
emitted such a constant paen of praise, such a continual
pushing
of thought against mind?
Whatever
it was. Rod was suddenly certain that it was
the key
to all the pride and ambition that was Alfar's con-
quest.
He scanned the castle till he found the direction in
which
it was strongest, then willed himself to it.
15
It was
a small room, a round room, a room of gray stone
blocks
with three tall, skinny windows. But those windows
were
sealed with some clear substance, and the air of the
chamber
was unnaturally cool—climate-controlled. Every
alarm
bell in Rod's head screamed. He glanced at Simon.
The
older warlock tottered, dazed. Rod held him up, growl-
ing,
"Steady. That's what happens when a warlock dis-
appears."
"I
had... ne'er had the opportunity aforetime," Simon
gasped.
He looked around him, whites showing all around
his
eyes. Finally, he turned back to Rod, awe-struck. "Eh,
but
thou'rt truly the Lord Warlock, thou."
"The
same," Rod confirmed, "but nonetheless your pupil
in
fathering and husbandry."
"As
I am to thee, in wizardry." Simon pointed a trembling
finger
at the metal box in the center of the room. It sat on
a
slender pedestal at chest height, and had a gray, irridescent
cylinder
atop one end. The other sprouted a cable that dropped
down to
the floor, ran over to the wall and up it, to a window,
where
it disappeared—probably to a transmitting antenna,
Rod
decided. "What," Simon asked, in a voice that shook,
"is
that spawn of alchemy?"
"Probably,"
Rod agreed. "It's a machine of some sort,
r
236 Christopher Stasheff
anyway."
He could feel the insistent pounding of the mes-
sage,
extoling Alfar's virtues over and over again. It was
much
stronger than it had been when he was in the dungeon.
It
belabored him, convincing, persuading by sheer repeti-
tion.
Alfar was master, Alfar was great, Alfar was rightful
lord of
all that was human.... "I think I know what it is,
Simon—or,
at least, what it does. If I'm right, the last time
I saw
one of these, it was alive."
"How?"
Simon stared, horrified. "A living thing cannot
be a
machine."
"No
more than a machine can be a living thing. But this
one
sure seems to be. If you didn't know better, wouldn't
you
swear that thing's thinking at us?"
"Wh...
this?" Simon pointed at the contraption, features
writhing
with revulsion. "Assuredly it doth not!"
"Assure
me again—I could need it." Under his breath,
Rod
murmured, "Fess. Where are you?"
"Here,
Rod, in the castle stables," Fess's voice answered
from
behind his ear.
"Close
your eyes," Rod growled, "and don't worry about
what's
happening." He closed his eyes, envisioning Fess,
and the
stable he was in. In excellent repair, probably, since
it had
been Duke Romanov's just a week ago—but slipping
a bit
now. The straw surely needed changing, for example,
and the
manure needed clearing. But he needed Fess, needed
him
badly, right here.... He made the thought an imper-
ative,
an unworded summons, sharp, demanding.
Thunder
rocked the little room, and Fess was there,
looking
about him wildly. Rod saw as he opened his eyes
again.
The robot's voice came out slurred. "Whhhaddt
...
wherrre... I have... have I... telllepo..." Suddenly
his
head whipped up, then slammed down. All four legs
spraddled
out, stiff, knees locked. The neck was stiff, too,
pointing
the head at the floor; then it relaxed, and the head
began
to swing between the fetlocks.
"Seizure,"
Rod explained. "It always happens, when he
can't
avoid witnessing magic."
But
Simon didn't answer. He was staring at the electronic
gizmo,
and his eyes had glazed. He took a stumbling step
toward
it. Of course. Rod thought. This close to the gadget
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 237
... He
grabbed Simon by the shoulders, and gave him a
shake.
"Simon! Wake up!" He clapped his hands sharply,
an inch
in front of Simon's nose. Simon started, and his
eyes
came back into focus. "What... Lord Warlock! For
the
half of a minute, I thought... I could believe..."
"That
the background noise is right, and Alfar's a good
guy."
Rod nodded, mouth a thin, straight line. "Not sur-
prising.
Now I'm sure what that weird device is—but let's
confirm
it." He turned back to Fess, felt under the pommel
of the
saddle for an enlarged vertebra, and pushed it. It
clicked
faintly. After a moment, Fess's head lifted slowly
and
turned to look at Rod, the great plastic eyes clearing.
"I...
had a... seizure, Rrrod."
"You
did," Rod confirmed. "But let me show you some-
thing
you can cope with." He took a step toward the ped-
estal,
pointing. "There's a background thought-message,
constantly
repeating, Fess. Over and over, it praises Alfar
to the
skies—and it's much stronger here than anywhere
else."
The
robot's head tracked him. Then Fess stepped closer
to the
metal box. The great horsehead lifted, looking at the
box
from the top, then from the front, then the back. Finally
Fess
opined, "There is sufficient data for a meaningful con-
clusion,
Rod."
"Oh,
ducky! What's it add up to?"
"That
the futurian totalitarians are supporting Alfar's con-
quests."
"Are
they really," Rod said drily. "Care to confirm my
guess
as to what it does?"
"Certainly.
It's a device that converts electricity into
psionic
power. I would conjecture that the large, rectangular
base
contains some sort of animal brain in a nutrient so-
lution,
with wires carrying power from an atomic pack into
the
medulla, and leads from the cerebrum carrying power
at
human thought frequencies into a modulator. The cylinder
at the
rear of the machine would seem to perform that
function.
This modulated message is fed out through the
cable,
which presumably goes up to an antenna on the roof
of this
tower."
"Thanks."
Rod swallowed against a suddenly queasy
stomach.
"Nice to have my guess confirmed—I suppose.
r
238
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
239
Their
technology has improved since we met the Kobold,
hasn't
it?"
"The
state of the art advances constantly, Rod."
"Relentlessly,
you might almost say." Rod turned to
Simon.
"It projects thoughts. Not a living thought, you
understand—a
recorded one, made as carefully as people
make
chairs, or ships, or castles, but just as thoroughly
made.
Then that thought is set down, as you'd write a
message
in ink, almost—and sent out from this machine,
to the
whole of the duchy, again and again, drumming itself
into
people's heads. Warlocks and witches can at least realize
they're
being bombarded—but the average peasant in the
field
has no idea it's happening. But warlock or witch, it
doesn't
seem to matter—it converts them all."
"Who
placed it here?" Simon's voice trembled.
"People
from the future." Rod's face was set, stony.
"People
who want the whole universe to be ruled by one
single
power." He glared around at the blank stone walls.
"Where're
its builders? Hiding somewhere, out of harm's
way,
while Alfar and his coven do their dirty work for them.
But I
must admit I'm disappointed—I was hoping to find
a few
of them here, keeping guard." He could feel indig-
nation
spurring his anger higher; he began to tremble.
"Peace,
peace." Simon grasped his forearm. "Wherefor
would
they? Why guard what none know of, and none need
tend?"
"Yeah—it's
fully automatic, isn't it? And just because
I
expected them to be here, doesn't mean they should feel
obligated
to show up. But I was at least expecting a human
witch
or warlock to be doing the thinking! Maybe hooked
up to a
psionic amplifier—but nonetheless one of Alfar's
henchmen,
taking it in relays! But... this is it!" He spread
his
hands toward the machine. "This is all there is! Here's
the
spectacular sorcerer—here's the arch-magus! Here's your
rebel
warlock warlord, fantastically powerful—until its bat-
tery
runs down!"
"'Twill
suffice," Simon said, beside him.
"Damn
straight it will!" Rod turned to rummage in Fess's
saddlebag.
"Where's that hammer I used to carry?"
"May
I suggest that it would be more effective, and more
immediate,
to turn the machine off. Rod?"
Rod
shrugged. "Why not? I'm not picky—I'll wreck it
any way
I can!" He turned to the machine, looking it up
and
down. "Where's the off switch?"
"I
detect a pressure-pad next to the cylinder," Pess said.
"Would
you press it, please. Rod?"
"Sure."
Rod pressed the cross-hatched square. The ma-
chine
clicked, whirred for a second, then pushed one end
of the
cylinder toward Rod. He lifted it off, holding it warily
at
arm's length. "What is it?"
"From
the circuitry. Rod, I would conjecture that the
cylinder
is the transducer. This disc, therefore, would be
the
recorded message."
"Oh,
is it, now!" Rod whipped his arm back for a straight
pitch,
aimed at the wall.
"Might
I also suggest," Fess said quickly, "that we may
find a
use for the disc itself?"
Rod
scowled. "Always possible, I suppose—but not very
satisfying."
He dropped it into his belt-pouch. "So we've
stopped
it from mass-hypnotizing the population. Now, how
do we
wake them up?"
"Why
not try telepathy?" the robot suggested. "The mes-
sage is
recorded thought, placed in contact with the trans-
ducer;
presumably it will function just as well, from contact
with
living thought."
Rod
turned to his friend with a glittering eye. "Oh, Master
Simon..."
In
spite of himself, the older man took a step backward.
But,
stoutly, he said, "Wherein may I aid. Lord Warlock?"
"By
thinking at the machine." Rod tossed his head toward
the
gadget. "But you'll have to put your forehead against
Simon's
eyes bulged; his face went slack in horror.
"Oh,
it won't hurt your mind," Rod said quickly. "That
much,
I'm sure of. This end of the machine can only receive
thoughts—it
can't send out anything." He turned, bowing,
and
pressed his forehead against the transducer. "See? No
danger."
"Indeed,"
Simon breathed, awestruck. "Wherefore dost
thou
not give it thine own thoughts?"
"Because
I don't know how to break Alfar's spell." Rod
stepped
back, bowing Simon toward the machine. "Would
f
240
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
241
you try
it, please? Just press your forehead against that round
plate,
and pretend it's a soldier who's been spellbound."
Simon
stood rigid for a few seconds. Then he took a
deep
breath, and stepped forward. Rod watched him place
his
forehead against the transducer, with admiration. The
humble
country innkeeper had as much real courage as a
knight.
Simon
closed his eyes. His face tensed as he began his
spell-breaking
thought sequence.
Rod
stiffened as the 'message' hit him, full-strength. It
had no
words; it was only a feeling, as though someone
very
sympathetic was listening to him, listening deeply, to
everything
Rod could tell, down to his very core—then,
kindly,
gently, but very firmly, contradicting. Rod shook his
head
and cleared his throat. "Well! He's certainly getting
across,
isn't he?" He turned to Fess. "How'11 we know
whether
it works or not?"
"By
Alfar's reaction. Rod. He doubtless detected our
disabling
his message, but refrained from attacking us, wary
of your
power."
Rod's
head lifted, "I... hadn't... thought of that."
"I
consider it a distinct possibility," Fess mused. "Now,
however,
Alfar must realize that we are destroying the very
base of
his power—that he must attack us now, or lose all
he has
conquered."
Quintuple
thunder roared in a long, ripping sequence,
and
Alfar was there with three witches and a warlock at his
back,
chopping down at Rod with a scimitar.
Rod
leaped back with a whoop of delight. The sword's
tip
hissed past him, and he and Fess instantly jumped into
place
between Simon and the sorcerer's band. One of the
witches
stabbed a hand at them, all five fingers stiff and
pointing,
and a dozen whirling slivers of steel darted toward
them.
Fess
took a step to his left, blocking Rod and Simon
both.
The darts clanged against his horsehide, and he stepped
back—just
in time to step on the witch's foot. She screamed
and
careened away, hobbling as Alfar lashed at Rod with
the
scimitar again. But this time. Rod leaped high and kicked
the
sword out of his hand as Fess reared, lashing out at the
other
warlock and witch with his forehooves. Rod sliced a
karate
chop at Alfar, and the sorcerer leaped back, but not
quite
quickly enough—Rod's fingertips scored his collar-
bone,
and Alfar howled in pain. The witch was staring at
Fess,
wild-eyed, backing away slowly, and Rod could
feel a
crazy assortment of emotions crashing through
him—anger,
fear, confusion, love. She was the emotional
projective,
hitting Fess with everything she had, totally
confounded
by his complete lack of response.
Which
reminded Rod who he was, and that the emotions
were
illusions. He managed to ignore them as Alfar wound
up for
a whammy. But he didn't have time; a stone leaped
out of
the wall, and slammed straight at Rod. He side-
stepped,
but the block caught him on the shoulder. Pain
shot
through him, and his temper leaped up in response.
He
slumped back against the wall, striving frantically to
reign
in his temper, trying to channel it, knowing that rage
would
slow his reflexes; they'd get under his guard, and
chop
him down. Another block shot straight at him and he
dropped
to a crouch, ducking his head. The block cracked
into
the wall behind; Another whirled tumbling and slammed
into
Fess's hindquarters. Rod galvanized with alarm—if
that
boulder had hit Fess in the midriff, it might've staved
in his
armored side, and damaged his computer-brain!
That
was just distraction enough. He saw the stone com-
ing,
and spun away—but not fast enough. Its comer cracked
into
his hip, and agony screamed through his side, turning
his
whole leg into flame. His knee folded, and he fell.
And
Alfar was above him with his scimitar again, chop-
ping
down with a gloating grin.
Rod
rolled at the last second. The huge blade smashed
into
the stone floor, and twisted out of Alfar's hands. One
of the
fallen stones shot up off the floor, straight at his face.
Alfar
screamed in shock, and stepped back—and tripped
over
something, crashing down onto his back.
Rod was
up on one knee, trying frantically to force him-
self to
his feet. He stared at the obstacle Alfar had stumbled
over,
and it stared back for a fraction of a second—Geof-
frey!
The boy grinned just before he leaped to his feet, his
eighteen-inch
sword whipping out to stab down at the fal-
len
sorcerer, who just barely managed to twist out of the
way in
time. His hand flailed about the floor till it found
242
Christopher Stasheff THE WARLOCK ENRAGED 243
the
scimitar's hilt, and wrapped fast around it.
A block
of stone smashed at Geoffrey. He dodged, but
Rod
roared with rage when he saw how closely the block
had
come. He sprang at the telekinetic—but Alfar jumped
into
his path, slashing with the scimitar again. Rod leaped
back,
letting the blow whistle past him, then lunged over
it with
a chop. Alfar just barely managed to twist aside.
The
telekinetic was surrounded by blocks of stone smash-
ing
into each other. Her lips were drawn back in a feral
snarl,
and drops of sweat beaded her forehead. Geoffrey
ducked
in under the hedge of stone and stabbed upward.
The
telekinetic screamed and jumped back, stumbled over
Gregory,
and fell. Magnus's cudgel whacked her at the base
of her
skull and she went limp.
Cordelia
crouched glaring at the other witch—but be-
tween
them was a storybook witch, complete with cone hat,
broomstick,
hooked nose, warts, and insane cackle, hands
clawing
at the child. A ghost materialized beside her, moan-
ing,
and something huge, flabby, and moist, with yellow,
bloodshot
eyes, lifted itself up off the floor, extruding pseu-
dopod
tentacles toward the little girl. But Cordelia spat,
"Aroint
thee, witch! Dost thou think me a babe?" and threw
her
broomstick at the illusionist. It speared through the
storybook
witch and arrowed toward the illusionist, who
screamed
and threw up her hands to ward it off—and the
ghost,
witch, and monster disappeared. But the broomstick
whirled
and whipped about, belaboring the woman from
every
side faster than she could block, whacking her about
the
head and shoulders. She screamed, and darted toward
the
chamber door—and Gwen's full-sized broomstick swung
down
from the ceiling and cracked into her forehead. Her
eyes
rolled up, and she crumpled.
Rod
twisted aside from Alfar's scimitar and reached out
to
brace himself against the wall, just as his burning leg
tried
to give out under him again. He shoved against the
stone,
shifting his weight onto his good leg, and drew his
sword
just in time to parry another cut. He riposted and
thrust,
faster than Alfar could recover. The sorcerer darted
back,
just an inch farther than Rod's thrust, and saw two
of his
lieutenants on the floor. He was just in time to see
Fess's
hoof catch the emotional projective a glancing blow
on the
temple. She folded at the knees and hit the flagstones,
out
cold. He shrieked, and Rod leaped, catching the sor-
cerer's
arm with his left hand to steady himself. Alfar whirled,
saw
Rod's sword chopping down, screamed again—and
Rod
caught the unspoken image of another place. He closed
his
eyes and willed himself nor there, just as Alfar teleported
toward
it. Dimly, Rod heard a thunder-boom, and knew
Alfar
had managed to disappear from the tower room. His
eyes
sprang open—and he found himself still clinging to
the
sorcerer's arm, in the midst of formless grayness, lit
by dim,
sourceless light. There was nothing, anywhere—
nothing
but his enemy.
Alfar
looked about him, and screamed, "We are lost!"
Then he
squeezed his eyes shut, and Rod caught the impulse
toward
someplace he didn't recognize. He countered grimly.
Their
bodies rocked, as though hit by a shock wave, but
stayed
put. "You're in the Void," Rod growled, "and you're
not
getting out!"
Alfar
screamed, hoarse with terror and rage, and whirled
to chop
at him with the scimitar. But Rod yanked him close,
caught
his sword hand, and cracked it against his good knee.
Pain
shot through him, almost making him go limp—but
Alfar
was still screaming, in hoarse, panting caws, and the
scimitar
went whirling away through empty space. Rod
slammed
an uppercut into the sorcerer's face. He dodged,
but the
blow caught him alongside the jaw. His head rocked,
but he
slammed a knee into Rod's groin. Rod doubled over
in
agony, but clung to Alfar's arm and a shred of sense; his
right
hand slipped the dagger out of his boot, and he shot
his
last ounce of strength into a sudden stab into Alfar's
belly.
The blade jabbed up under the ribcage, and Alfar
folded
over it, arms flailing, eyes bulging in agony. Con-
science
smote; Rod yanked the dagger out and stabbed again,
quickly,
mercifully, into the heart. He saw Alfar's eyes
glaze;
then the body went limp in his hands. Rod held it a
second,
staring, unbelieving. Then chagrin hit, and he felt
his
soul quail at the reality of another manslaughter. "It was
him or
me," Rod grated; but no one heard except himself.
He let
go, shoving, and the body drifted away from him,
244
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
245
turning
slowly, trailing an arc of blood. It swung away,
revolving,
and faded into the mists, a thin red line tracing
its
departure.
Rod
turned away, sickened. For a long, measureless in-
stant,
he drifted in space, numbed, absorbing his guilt,
accepting
the spiritual responsibility, knowing that it had
been
justified, had been necessary—and was nonetheless
horrible.
Finally,
the tide of guilt ebbed, and he opened his mind
to
other thoughts—Gwen, and the children! Had they all
come
through that melee alive? And what the hell had they
been
doing there, anyway? Never mind the fact that if they
hadn't
been, they'd be short one husband and father by
now—nonetheless!
What were they doing where it was so
dangerous?
Helping
him, obviously—and they'd have to help him
again,
or he'd never find how to get out of here. He wasn't
scared
of the Void; he'd been here before, between uni-
verses.
And, of
course, he'd get home the same way now. He
closed
his eyes, and listened with his mind. There—
Gregory's
thought, unvoiced, a frightened longing for his
father—the
same beacon that had brought him home before.
Rod
sighed and relaxed, letting the boy's thought fill his
mind.
Then he willed himself back to his three-year-old
son.
"Is
that all of them?" Rod ground his teeth against a
sudden
stab of pain from his upper arm.
"Be
brave, my lord," Gwen murmured. She finished
binding
the compress to his triceps. "Aye, every one of
them
has come—every witch and warlock of the Royal
Coven.
E'en old Agatha and Galen have come from their
Dark
Tower, to flit from hamlet to village, speaking with
these
poor peasants, who have waked to panic, and the loss
of
understanding."
"I
don't blame 'em," Rod grunted. "If I all of a sudden
came to
my senses and realized that I'd been loyal to an
upstart
for the last few weeks while my duke was casually
bumped
off, I'd be a little disoriented, too. In fact, I'd be
frightened
as hell." He winced as Gwen bound his arm to
his
side. "Is that really necessary?"
"It
must," she answered, in a tone that brooked no ar-
gument.
"Yet 'tis but for a day or two, 'til the healing hath
begun."
"And
I didn't even notice I'd been sliced, there." Rod
looked
down at the bandage. "Well, it was only a flesh
wound."
Gwen
nodded. "Praise Heaven it came no closer to the
bone!"
"Lord
Warlock!"
Rod
looked up.
They
were in the Great Hall of Duke Romanov's castle.
It was
a vast stone room, thirty feet high, forty wide, and
eighty
long—and empty, for the moment, since all the boards
and
trestles had been piled against the walls at the end of
the
last meal, for the evening's entertainments. The High
Table
was still up, of course, on its dais, and Rod sat in
one of
the chairs, with Gwen beside him—though pointedly
not in
the Duke's and Duchess's places.
An
auncient, still wearing Alfar's livery, came striding
toward
them from the screens passage, eyes alight with
excitement.
"Did
you lock up the traitors?" Rod demanded.
"Aye,
milord." The auncient came to a halt directly in
front
of Rod. " 'Twas that to be said for the sorcerer's having
used
our bodies for his army, the whiles he lulled our souls
into
slumber—that when we waked, we knew on the instant
which
soldiers had been loyal to the usurper of their own
wills,
e'en though they'd remained wakeful."
Rod
nodded. "By some strange coincidence, the ones
who had
been giving the orders." There had been a few
opportunistic
knights who had been loyal to Alfar without
benefit
of hypnotism, too. Rod had had to lock them in a
dungeon
himself, medieval caste rules being what they were.
One of
them had resisted; but after the others saw what
happened
to him, they went quietly. It was just too embar-
rassing,
being defeated by a bunch of children.... A couple
of them,
quicker to react, had escaped as soon as peasants
started
waking up all around them. That was all right; Rod
246
Christopher Stasheff
had a
few thousand mortified soldiers on his hand, who
needed
something to do to appease their consciences. A
hunt
was just fine.
But the
common soldiers who had allied with Alfar, could
be left
to the tender mercies of their erstwhile comrades—
once
Rod had made it clear that he expected them to, at
least,
survive. "So you found the deepest, darkest, dungeon,
and
locked them in it?"
"Aye,
milord." The auncient's eyes glowed. "We loosed
its
sole tenant." He turned toward the screens passage with
a bow,
and in limped the prisoner. His doublet and hose
were
torn, and crusted with dried blood; his face was smeared
with
dirt, and his hair matted. There was a great livid gash
along
the right-hand side of his face, scabbed over, that
would
leave a horrible scar; and he limped heavily, his limbs
sodden
with inactivity; but his back was straight, and his
chin
was high. Two knights were with him, blinking, dazed,
as
disoriented as any of the soldiers, but straight and proud.
Simon
followed after, looking perplexed.
Rod
shoved himself to his feet, ignoring the searing pro-
test
from his wounded hip, and the auncient announced:
"Hail
my lord, the Duke of Romanov!"
Rod
stepped down from the dais to clasp his one-time
enemy
by the shoulders. "Praise Heaven you're alive!"
"And
thee, for this fair rescue!" The Duke inclined his
head.
"Well met. Lord Warlock! I, and all my line, shall
ever be
indebted to thee and thine!"
"Well,
maybe more the 'thine' than the 'thee.'" Rod
glanced
behind him at the children who sat, prim and proper,
on the
dais steps with their mother fairly glowing behind
them.
"When push came to shove, they had to haul my
bacon
out of the fire."
"Then
I thank thee mightily. Lady Gallowglass, and thee,
brave
children!" The Duke inclined his head again.
Blushing,
they leaped to their feet and bowed.
When
the Duke straightened, there was anxiety in his
face.
"Lord Warlock—my wife and bairns. Did they...
escape?"
"They
did, and my wife and children made sure they
reached
Runnymede safely." Rod turned to Gwen. "Didn't
you?"
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 247
"Certes,
my lord. We would not have turned aside from
what
we'd promised thee we'd do."
"Yes—you
never did promise to stay safe, did you? But
Alfar
mentioned something about a dire fate in store for
you...."
"Indeed!"
Gwen opened her eyes wider. "Then it was
never
taken out from storage. I wonder thou wast so merciful
in thy
dealings with him."
"Well,
I never did like lingering deaths." But Rod couldn't
help
feeling better about it all.
"He
also implied that the Duchess and her boys didn't
stay
safe...."
"False
again," Gwen said quickly, just as the Duke's
anguish
was beginning to show anew. "We saw them to
Runnymede,
where they bide safely, in the care of Their
Royal
Majesties."
"Yes...
what are monarchs for?" But Rod noted the flash
of
shame that flitted across Romanov's features—no doubt
in
memory of his rebellion.
"We
played with them not three hours agone, Papa,"
Geoffrey
added.
The
Duke heaved a sigh, relaxing. Then the father and
host in
him both took over. "Three hours? And thy children
have
not dined in that time?" He spun to the auncient. "Good
Auncient,
seek out the cooks! Rouse them from their dazes,
and bid
them bring meat and wine—and honeycakes."
The
children perked up most noticeably.
"Three
hours agone." The Duke turned back to the chil-
dren
with a frown. "Was this in Runnymede?"
The
children nodded.
The
Duke turned back to Rod. "How could they come
to aid
thee, then?"
"Nice
question." Rod turned to Gwen again. "It was
rather
dangerous here, dear. Just how close were you, while
you
were waiting for me to need you?"
"The
lads were in Runnymede, my lord, even as thou
hast
but now heard," Gwen answered. "They could bide
there,
sin' that they may travel an hundred leagues in the
bat of
an eyelash."
Rod had
notion that their range was farther than that,
much
farther, but he didn't deem it wise to say so—es-
248
Christopher Stasheff
pecially
not where they could hear (or mind read).
"At
the outset," Gwen continued, "Cordelia and I did
bide
with them, for we could attend to thy thoughts e'en
from
that distance, and fly to thine aid if thou didst come
near to
danger. It did greatly trouble me, therefore, when
thy
thoughts did so abruptly cease."
Cordelia
nodded confirmation, her eyes huge. "She did
weep.
Papa."
"Oh,
no, darling!" Rod caught Gwen's hands. "I didn't
mean
to..."
"Nay,
certes." She smiled. "Yet thou wilt therefore com-
prehend
my concern."
Rod
nodded slowly. "I'd say so, yes."
"I
therefore did leave the boys in care of Their Royal
Majesties,
and Brom O'Berin, and flew northward again. I
took on
the guise of an osprey...."
Rod
rolled his eyes up. "I knew, when I saw that blasted
fish-hawk
that far inland, that I was in trouble!" Of course,
he knew
that Gwen couldn't really shrink down to the size
of a
bird any more than a butterfly could play midwife to
a
giraffe. It was just a projective illusion, making people
think
that they saw a bird instead of a woman. "If I hadn't
shielded
my thoughts, I probably would've seen through
your
spell!"
"An
thou hadst not shielded thy thoughts, I would not
have
had to fly near enough to see thee," Gwen retorted.
"And
though thou hadst disguised thyself, I knew thee. Rod
Gallowglass."
That,
at least, was reassuring—in its way.
"Then,"
Gwen finished, " 'twas but a matter of hearken-
ing to
the thoughts of that goodman who did ride beside
thee."
Gwen turned to Simon. "I thank thee. Master Simon."
The
older man still looked confused, but he bowed any-
way,
smiling. "I was honored to be of service, milady—
e'en
though I knew it not."
"And
when thou wert taken," Gwen went on, "I did
summon
Cordelia to me, to bide in waiting, in a deserted
shepherd's
croft. Then, when thou didst burst forth from
thy
shield, I could not help but hear thy thoughts for myself."
"Not
that you were about to try to ignore them," Rod
murmured.
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED 249
"Nay,
certes!" Gwen cried in indignation. "Then, when
thou
didst come unto the tower chamber, I knew the moment
of
battle was nigh, and did summon Cordelia from her croft
to fly
to the tower; and when the unearthly device did cease
to
compel, and did commence to disenchant, I knew the
time of
battle had come. Then did I summon thy sons, that
the
family might be together once again."
"Very
homey," Rod grinned. "And, though I was mighty
glad to
see you all, I don't mind saying I'm even gladder
to know
the kids were safe, right down until the last mo-
ment."
"Certes,
my lord! I would not endanger them."
Rod
gave her the fish-eye. "What do you call that last
little
fracas we went through—homework?"
"Oh,
nay! 'Twas far too great a delight!" Geoffrey cried.
"Homework's
delight," Gregory lisped.
"Papa!"
Cordelia cried indignantly; and Magnus's chin
jutted
out a quarter-inch further. " 'Twas scarce more than
chores."
"We'd
fought each of them aforetime," Geoffrey re-
minded
him, "and knew their powers—save Alfar, and we
left
him to thee."
"Nice
to know you have confidence in me. But there
could've
been accidents...."
"So
there may ever be, with baims," Gwen sighed. "Here,
at
least, they were under mine eye. Bethink thee, husband,
what
might chance an I were to leave them in the kitchen,
untended."
Rod
shuddered. "You've made your point; please don't
try the
experiment." He turned to the Duke. "Ever begin to
feel
redundant?"
"Nay,
Papa," Magnus cried. "We could only aid thee in
the
ending of this campaign."
"Truly,"
Gregory said, round-eyed, "we knew not enough
to
bring the sorcerer to bay."
But Rod
had caught the sly glance between Magnus and
Geoffrey.
Under the circumstances, though, he deemed it
wiser
not to say anything about it.
"Now,
mine husband." Gwen clasped his hands. "In this
last
battle, I did hear thy thoughts at all times. Thine anger
was
there, aye, but thou didst contain it. Hast thou, then,
250
Christopher
Stasheff
THE
WARLOCK ENRAGED
251
so much
ta'en this goodman's advice to thine heart?" She
nodded
at Simon.
"I
have," Rod confirmed. "It worked this time, at least."
"Dost
thou mean thou wilt not become angry again. Papa?"
Cordelia
cried, and the other children looked up in delight.
"I
can't promise that," Rod hedged, "but I think I'll have
better
luck controlling it. Why—what were you planning
to
do?"
Whatever
they would have answered was forestalled by
the
cooks, stumbling in with dinner. They set down the
platters
on the table, and the children leaped in with joyful
cries.
Magnus got there first, wrenched off a drumstick,
and
thrust it at his father. "Here, Papa! "Tis thy place of
right!"
"Why,
thank you," Rod said, amused. "Nice to know I
have
some rank around here."
"I
shall have the other." Cordelia reached for the other
drumstick.
"Nay;
thou hast never favored the legs of the fowl!"
Geoffrey's
hand darted out, and grabbed the bone before
hers.
"Loose
that!" Cordelia cried. " 'Twas my claim was first!"
"As
'twas my hand!"
"Yet
I came to the bird before either of thee!" Magnus
laid a
hand on the bone of contention. "My remembrance
of our
father, doth not bar me from this choice!"
"Uh,
children," Rod said mildly, "quiet down, please."
"'Tis
mine!"
"Nay!
'Tis mine!"
"I
am eldest! My claim is first!"
"Children!"
Rod hiked his volume a bit. "Cut it out!"
Gwen
laid a restraining hand on his arm. That did it; his
temper
leaped.
Cordelia
turned on her brothers. "Now, beshrew me an
thou
art not the most arrogant, ungentlemanly boys the world
hath
ever..."
"Wherefore
beshrew thee? Thou art a shrew already!"
And the
discussion disintegrated into wild shouts of ac-
cusation
and counter-accusation.
Rod
stood rigid, trying to contain his soaring anger. Then
Simon
caught his eye. Rod stared at the older man's calm,
level
gaze, and felt a measure of strength that he hadn't
known
he had. He took a deep breath and reminded himself
that
their bickering might make them look childish (as it
should),
but not him—if he didn't start shouting with them.
The
thought checked his anger and held it. He was himself,
Rod
Gallowglass—and he wasn't any the less himself, nor
any
less important, nor any less in any way, just because
his
children didn't heed him.
But he
did know how to get their attention. He reached
out,
grasped the last drumstick, and twisted it loose.
The
children whirled, appalled. "Papa!" "Nay! Thou hast
no
need!" "Thou already hast one. Papa!"
"
'Tis not justice," little Gregory piped, chin tucked in
truculently
over folded arms.
"But
it does settle the argument," Rod pointed out. He
turned
to Gwen, presenting the drumstick with a flourish
and a
bow. "My dear, you saved the day. Your glory is as
great
as mine."
"But,
Papa!" Cordelia jammed her fists on her hips,
glowering
up at him. "Thou'rt supposed to be a nice daddy
now!"
"Why,"
Rod murmured, "wherever did you get an idea
like
that?"