Other Bantam Spectra Books by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman
THE DARKSWORD TRILOGY
Forging the Darksword
Doom of the Darksword
Triumph of the Darksword
DARKSWORD ADVENTURES ROSE OF THE PROPHET
The Will of the Wanderer
The Paladin of the Night
The Prophet of Akhran
THE DEATH GATE CYCLE
Dragon Wing
Elven Star
Serpent Mage
The Hand of Chaos
Into the Labyrinth
The Seventh Gate
by Margaret Weis
STAR OF THE GUARDIANS
The Lost King
King's Test
King's Sacrifice
Ghost Legion
by Tracy Hickman Requiem of Stars
LEGACY
OF THE
DARKSWORD
MARGARET WEIS
&
TRACY HICKMAN
BANTAM BOOKS
Dedicated to all our readers
who keep asking us, "And then what happens?"
LEGACY OF THE DARKSWORD
A Bantam Spectra Book / July 1997
SPECTRA and the portrayal of a boxed "s" are trademarks of
Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc.
All rights reserved. Copyright © 1997 by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.
Book design by Maura Fadden Rosenthal. Cover art copyright © 1997 by Larry Elmore.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system,
without permission in writing from the publisher.
For information address: Bantam Books.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Weis, Margaret.
Legacy of the darksword / Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman. p. cm. — (Darksword ; 4)
Darksword ; 4.
PS3573.53978L44 1997
813'.54—DC21 96-51551
CIP
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CHAPTER ONE
Finally, a child may be born to the rarest of all the Mysteries, the Mystery of Life. The thaumaturgist, or catalyst, is the dealer in magic, though he does not possess it in great measure himself. It is the catalyst, as his name implies, who takes the Life from the earth and the air; from fire and water, and, by assimilating it within his own body, is able to enhance it and transfer it to the magi who can use it.
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
Saryon,
now somewhere in his sixties or seventies, as reckoned by Earth time, lived
very quietly in a small flat in
Saryon had no need for measuring time
anyway. The catalyst (though no longer required in this world, that is how he
always termed himself) had no appointments, kept no calendar, rarely watched
the evening news, met no one for lunch. I was his amanuensis, or so he was
pleased to call me. I preferred the less formal term of secretary. I was sent
to Saryon by command of PrinceGarald.
I had been a servant in the Prince's
household and was supposed to have been Saryon's servant, too, but this he
would not allow. The only small tasks I was able to perform for him were those
I could sneak in before he was aware of it or those which I wrested from him by
main force.
I would have been a catalyst myself,
had our people not been banished from Thimhallan. I had very little magic in me
when I left that world as a child, and none at all now after living for twenty
years in the world of the mundane. But I do have a gift for words and this was
one reason my prince sent me to Saryon. Prince Garald deemed it essential that
the story of the Darksword be told. In particular, he hoped that by reading
these tales, the people of Earth would come to understand the exiled people of
Thimhallan.
I wrote three books, which were
immensely well received by the populace of Earth, less well received among my
own kind. Who among us likes to look upon himself and see that his life was one
of cruel waste and overindulgence, greed, selfishness, and rapacity? I held a
mirror to the people of Thimhallan. They looked into it and did not like the
ugly visage that glared back at them. Instead of blaming themselves, they
blamed the mirror. My master and I had few visitors. He had decided to
pursuehis study of mathematics, which was one reason that he had moved from the
relocation camps to
This was a calm and blessed time in
Saryon's tumultuous life, for—although he does not say so—I can see his face
light when he speaks of it and I hear a sadness in his voice, as if regretting
that such a peaceful existence could not have lasted until middle age faded,
like comfortable jeans, into old age, from thence to peaceful eternal sleep.
That was not to be, of course, and
that brings me to the evening that seems to me, looking back on it, to be the
first pearl to slide off the broken string, the pearls that were days of Earth
time and that would start falling faster and faster from that night on until
there would be no more pearls left, only the empty string and the clasp that
once held it together. And those would be tossed away, as useless.
Saryon and I were pottering about his
flat late that night, putting on the teakettle, an act which always reminded
him—so he was telling me—of another time when he'd picked up a teakettle and it
wasn't a teakettle. It was Simkin.
We had just finished listening to the
news on the radio. As I said, Saryon had not up until now been particularly
interested in the news of what was happening on Earth, news which he always
felt had little to do with him. But this news appeared, unfortunately, to have
more to do with him than he or anyone else wanted and so he paid attention to
it.
The war with Hch'nyv was not going
well. The mysterious aliens, who had appeared so suddenly, with such deadly
intent, had conquered yet another one of our colonies. Refugees, arriving back
on Earth, told terrible tales of the destruction of their colony, reported
innumerable casualties, and stated that the Hch'nyv had no desire to negotiate.
They had, in fact, slain those sent to offer the colony's surrender. The
objective of the Hch'nyv appeared to be the annihilation and eradication of
every human in the galaxy.
This was somber news. We were
discussing it when I saw Saryon jump, as if he had been startled by some sudden
noise, though I myself heard nothing.
"I must go to the front
door," he said. "Someone's there."
Saryon, who is reading the manuscript, stops
me at this point to tell me, somewhat testily, that I should break here and
elaborate on the story of J or am and Simkin and the Darksword or no one will
understand what is to come.
I reply that if we backtrack and drag
our readers along that old trail with us (a trail most have walked themselves
already!) we would likely lose more than a few along the way. I assure him that
the past will unfold as we go along. I hint gently that I am a skilled journalist,
with some experience in this field. I remind him that he was fairly well
satisfied with the work I'd done on the first three books, and I beg him to
allow me to return to this story.
Being essentially a very humble man,
who finds it overwhelming that his memoirs should be considered so important
that Prince Garald had hired me to record them, Saryon readily acknowledges my
skill in this field and permits me to continue.
"How odd," Saryon remarked. "I
wonder who is here at this time of night?"
I wondered why they did not ring the doorbell, as any normal visitor
would do. I indicated as much.
"They have rung it," Saryon said softly. "In my mind, if not my
ears. Can't you hear it?"
I could not, but this was not
surprising. Having lived most of his life in Thimhallan, he was far more
attuned to the mysteries of its magicks than I, who had been only five when
Saryon rescued me, an orphan, from the abandoned Font.
Saryon had just lit the flame beneath
the teakettle, preparatory to heating water for a bedtime tisane which we both
enjoyed and which he insisted on making for me. He turned from the kettle
tostare at the door and, like so many of us, instead of going immediately to
answer it or to look through the window to see who was there, he stood in the
kitchen in his nightshirt and slippers and wondered again aloud.
"Who could be
wanting to see me at this time of night?"
Hope's wings caused his heart to
flutter. His face flushed with anticipation. I, who had served him so long,
knew exactly what he was thinking.
Many years ago (twenty years ago, to
be precise, although I doubt if he himself had any concept of the passage of so
much time), Saryon had said good-bye to two people he loved. He had neither
seen nor heard from those two in all this time. He had no reason to think that
he should ever hear from them again, except that Joram had promised, when they
parted, that when his son was of age, he should send that son to Saryon.
Now, whenever the doorbell rang or
the knocker knocked, Saryon envisioned Joram's son standing on the doorstoop.
Saryon pictured that child with his father's long, curling black hair, but
lacking, hopefully, his father's red-black inner fire.
The psychic demand for Saryon to go to
the front door came again, this time with such a forceful intensity and
impatience that I myself was aware of it—a startling sensation for me. Had the
doorbell in fact been sounding, I could envision the person leaning on the
button. There were lights on in the kitchen, which could be seen from the
street, and whoever was out there, mentally issuing us commands, knew that
Saryon and I were home.
Jolted out of his reverie by the
second command, Saryon shouted, "I'm coming," which statement had no
hope of being heard through the thick door that led from the kitchen.
Retiring to his bedroom, he grabbed
his flannel robe, put it on over his nightshirt. I was
still dressed, having never developed a liking for nightshirts. He walked
hastily back through the kitchen, where I joined him. We went from there
through the living room and out of the living room into the small entryway. He
turned on the outside light, only to discover that it didn't work.
"The bulb must have burned
out," he said, irritated. "Turn on the hall light."
I flipped the switch. It did not work
either.
Strange, that both bulbs should have
chosen this time to burn out.
"I don't like this, Master,"
I signed, even as Saryon was unlocking the door, preparing to open it.
I had tried many times to convince
Saryon that, in this dangerous world, there might be those who would do him
harm, who would break into his house, rob and beat him, perhaps even murder
him. Thimhallan may have had its faults, but such sordid crimes were unknown to
its inhabitants, who feared centaurs and giants, dragons and faeries and
peasant revolts, not hoodlums and thugs and serial killers.
"Look through the peephole,"
I admonished.
"Nonsense," Saryon returned.
"It must be Joram's child. And how could I see him through the peephole in
the dark?"
Picturing a baby in a basket on our
doorstoop (he had, as I said, only the vaguest notion of time), Saryon flung
open the door.
We did not find a baby. What we saw
was a shadow darker than night standing on the doorstoop, blotting out the
lights of our neighbors, blotting out the light of the stars.
The shadow coalesced into a person
dressed in black robes, who wore a black cowl pulled up over the head. All I
could see of the person by the feeble light reflected from the kitchen far behind
me were two white hands, folded correctly in front of the black robes, and two
eyes, glittering.
Saryon recoiled. He pressed his hand
over his heart, which had stopped fluttering, very nearly stopped altogether.
Fearful memories leapt out of the darkness brought on us by the black-clothed
figure. The fearful memories jumped on the catalyst. "Duuk-tsarith!"
he cried through trembling lips. Duuk-tsarith, the dreaded Enforcers
of the world of Thimhallan. On our first coming—under duress—to this new world,
where magic was diluted, the Duuk-tsarith had lost almost all of their
magical power. We had heard vague rumors to the effect that, over the past
twenty years, they had found the means to regain what had been lost. Whether or
not this was true, the Duuk-tsarith had lost none of their ability to
terrify.
Saryon fell back into the entryway. He
stumbled into me and, so I vaguely recollect, put his arm out as though he
would protect me. Me! Who was supposed to protect him!
He pressed me back against the wall of
the small entryway, leaving the door standing wide open, with no thought of
slamming it in the visitor's face, with no thought of denying this dread
visitor entry. This was one who would not be denied. I knew that as well as
Saryon, and though I did make an attempt to put my own body in front of that of
the middle-aged catalyst, I had no thought of doing battle.
The Duuk-tsarith glided over
the threshold. With a brief gesture of his hand, he caused the door to swing
silently shut behind him. He put back the cowl, revealed his face, and stared
intently at Saryon for several seconds, almost as if expecting some response.
Saryon was too flustered, too upset to do anything except stand on the braided
rug and shiver and tremble.
The Enforcer's gaze shifted to me,
entered my soul, caught and held fast to my heart, so that I feared if I
disobeyed, my beating heart would stop.
The Duuk-tsarith spoke.
"First, I caution you both to remain silent. It is for your own
protection. Do you understand?"
The words were not spoken aloud. They were
fiery letters, traced across the back of my eyes.
Saryon nodded. He didn't understand
what was going on, any more than I did, but neither of us was going to argue.
"Good," said the Enforcer.
"Now I am going to perform a magic spell. Do not be alarmed. It will not
harm you."
The Duuk-tsarith spoke
inaudible words, that came to me only in whispers.
Fearfully, not terribly reassured by the Duuk-tsarith's promise, we
stared around, waiting for the Almin knew what to
happen.
Nothing happened,
at least that I could see. The Duuk-tsarith, his finger on his lips,
again to enjoin silence, led the way into the living room. We shuffled along
behind him, keeping close to each other. Once we were in the living room, the
Enforcer pointed one long, white finger.
A painting hung on the wall, a
painting which had been acquired along with the flat and which depicted a
pastoral scene of cows in a field. From behind that painting now glowed an eerie green light.
The Duuk-tsarith pointed again,
this time to the phone. The same green light surrounded the phone.
The Duuk-tsarith nodded to
himself, as if he'd expected to find this phenomenon, whatever it was. He
didn't bother to explain. Once again, and this time emphatically, he silently
cautioned us not to speak.
And then the Duuk-tsarith did a
most peculiar thing. He turned with the calm repose of a guest who has been
invited to remove his hat and coat and stay to tea. Moving with quiet grace
among the furniture, the Enforcer walked to the window, parted the curtain a
minuscule crack, and looked outside.
I was overwhelmed by a series of
fleeting impressions as my brain tried frantically to grapple with the strange
occurrence. At first, I thought that the Duuk-tsarith was signaling
reinforcements. Logic arrived to remark dryly that the apprehension of one
elderly catalyst and his scribe would hardly call for a SWAT team. That first
impression was replaced by another.
The Duuk-tsarith was looking
outside to see if he had been followed.
Not knowing what else to do and, by
now, more curious than fearful, both Saryon and I stayed with the Duuk-tsarith
in the living room. Through force of habit, I fumbled for the light switch.
"You needn't bother. It will not
work."
The voice of the Duuk-tsarith inside
my head was vibrant and sent a mild shock through me, reminding me of the first
time I had encountered electricity on this strange world.
"Don't move," the inner
voice commanded.
We remained standing in the darkened
living room. I could sense Saryon shivering in his nightshirt, for he'd turned
the heat down in the flat and his thin robe was woefully inadequate. I was
wondering if I might be allowed to bring my master a sweater, when the Duuk-tsarith
spoke silently again. And though the words were not addressed to me, I
understood them.
"You don't remember me, do you,
Saryon?"
Having had many encounters with the Duuk-tsarith—all
of them extremely unpleasant—Saryon later told me that he feared this must be
one of the Enforcers who had caught him in the forbidden library of the Font,
or maybe even one who had performed the Turning to Stone, that excruciatingly
painful punishment inflicted on those catalysts who rebelled against the
Church's authority. Why one of these people should drop by Saryon's house for a
chat in the small hours of the night was beyond him. He could only stare and
stammer and whisper to me something to the effect that, if the person would
permit us to turn on the lights and let us see a face, such an act would aid
recognition considerably.
"All will be made clear soon
enough," said the Enforcer, and it seemed to me that there was a sad
quality to his words, as if the man—it was a man, I had at last ascertained
that much—was disappointed that Saryon had not recognized him. "Now,
follow my instructions. Return to the kitchen and prepare your tea, as you
normally do. Take the cup to your bedroom, as you normally do, and lie down to
read to this young man, as you normally do. Don't deviate from your nightly
habits in even one instance, either of you. You can be seen from the bedroom
window. I do not think that I was followed, but I can't be certain."
This last sentence was not conducive
to relieving our apprehension. We did as we were commanded, however. As a
catalyst, Saryon was accustomed to obedience, as was I, having been raised a
servant in the royal household. In this case, it made no sense for my master to
stand around in his nightshirt, arguing. We went to the kitchen.
The Duuk-tsarith remained in
the darkened living room, but I could feel the man's eyes on me. It was
extremely unnerving. Until now, neither Saryon nor I had realized that we had
developed "nightly habits." Consequently, when this fact was brought
to our attention, and we were forced to think about what we did every night, we
couldn't remember doing any of it.
"Don't think," came the voice of the Duuk-tsarith. "Let your
body take over. When you are settled in your bed, Father, then we will
talk."
This was not exactly the way we would
have chosen to spend our evening, but we didn't have much choice. Saryon took
the Enforcer's advice and tried not to think about what he was doing. He turned
off the kettle, which had been whistling loudly, though we'd been too
distraught to notice. He poured the water, stirred the tea. I added to it a
plate of digestible biscuits. We tottered—tea and biscuits in hand—off to his
bedroom.
The Duuk-tsarith glided along
silently behind.
Saryon, remembering the duties of a
host, paused, turned, and held up the teacup, asking in dumb show if his
visitor would like to share our repast.
"Keep moving!" The voice in
my head was urgent. Then it added, in softer tones, "No, thank you."
Saryon went to his small bedroom, where
he placed the tea and the biscuits on the nightstand beside his bed. I pulled
up the chair. Picking up the book, I found the place where we had left off
reading last night.
Saryon climbed into bed and it was
only when he was safely tucked beneath the sheets that he remembered he usually
brushed his teeth at this point. He looked at me, made a motion of using a
toothbrush. I shrugged my shoulders, helpless to advise
or assist.
Flustered, he was about to mention it
to the Enforcer, then changed his mind. Giving me another glance, he settled
himself. He opened the book, and drank a sip of tea. I usually ate a biscuit,
but at that moment, due to the dryness in my mouth, I couldn't have swallowed
one and I feared I would choke.
The Duuk-tsarith, watching us
from the shadowed hallway, appeared satisfied. He left momentarily, returned
with a chair from the kitchen, and sat down in the hall. Again came the
whispered words of magic, and both Saryon and I looked about expectantly,
wondering which of the pictures on the wall was going to turn green.
None did.
"I believe," said the silent
voice, "that you usually listen to music, do you not?"
Of course! Saryon had forgotten. He
switched on the CD player, which was, as far as he was concerned, one of the
most miraculous and wondrous devices of this technological world. Beautiful
music—I recall that it was Mozart—filled the room. Saryon began to read aloud
from the book Right Ho, Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse, one of our favorite
authors. We would have been quite content had not the shadowy figure been
perched, like Poe's raven, in the hall.
"It is now safe to talk,"
said the Duuk-tsarith, and this time he spoke the words aloud, albeit in
a low voice. He drew the cowl back from his face. "But keep your voice
down. I have deactivated the devices of the D'karn-kair, but there may
be others present of which I am not aware."
Now that we could talk, all the
questions which had been crowding my mind fled. Not that I could have spoken
them myself, but I could have let my master speak for me. I could see that
Saryon was in much the same state.
He could only munch his biscuit, sip
his tea, and stare. The face of the Duuk-tsarith was in the direct light
and Saryon seemed to find something vaguely familiar about the man. Saryon
would later tell me that he did not experience the sensation of overwhelming
dread one usually feels in the presence of the Enforcers. Indeed, he felt a
small thrill of pleasure at the sight of the man and, if he could only have
remembered who he was, knew that he would be glad to see him.
"I'm sorry, sir." Saryon
faltered. "I know that I know you, but between age and failing eyesight
..."
The man smiled.
"I am Mosiah," he said.
CHAPTER TWO
One by one, after each had been coldly rebuffed by the strange, dark-haired child, the other children let Joram severely alone. But there was one among them who persisted in his attempts to be friendly. This was Mosiah.
THE DARKSWORD
I believe
that Saryon would have exclaimed aloud in astonishment and pleasure, but he
remembered in time the injunction to keep our voices down. He started to rise
from his bed to go enfold his old friend in a fond embrace, but the Duuk-tsarith
shook his head and motioned with his hand that Saryon was to remain where
he was. Although the bedroom shades were drawn, the light was visible from
outside and so was the catalyst's silhouette.
Saryon could only stammer,
"Mosiah ... I can't . . . I'm so sorry, my dear boy . . . twenty years . .
. I'm getting old, you see, and my memory . . . not to mention my eyesight . .
."
"Don't apologize, Father,"
Mosiah said, falling back on the old form of address, though it was hardly
applicable now. "I have changed a lot, over the years. It is small wonder
you did not recognize me."
"Indeed you have changed,"
said Saryon gravely, with a sorrowful glance at the black clothing of the
Enforcer which Mosiah wore.
Mosiah seemed surprised. "I
thought perhaps you might have heard that I had become one of the Duuk-tsarith.
Prince Garald knew."
"We rarely speak, the Prince and
I," said Saryon apologetically. "He felt it was best, for my own
safety, or so he was kind enough to say. Remaining in contact with me would
have damaged him politically. I could see that clearly. It was the main reason
I left the relocation camp."
And now it was Mosiah who looked sadly
upon Saryon, and the catalyst who was stricken with confusion and guilt.
"I ... deemed it was best,"
Saryon said, flushing. "There were those who looked at me ... if they
didn't blame me, I brought back memories. . . ." His voice died away to
silence.
"There are those who say you
abandoned them in return for favors," Mosiah said.
I could no longer contain myself. I
made a quick and violent gesture with my hand, to negate these cruel words, for
I could tell that they wounded my master.
Mosiah looked wonderingly at me, not
so much in astonishment that I did not speak—for he, as an Enforcer, must
already know everything there was to know about me, including the fact that I
was a mute—but that I was so quick to defend Saryon.
"This is Reuven," said
Saryon, introducing me.
Mosiah nodded. As I said, he must have
known all about me.
"He is your secretary,"
Mosiah said.
"That is what he has me call
him," Saryon said, glancing in my direction with a fond smile.
"Though it has always seemed to me that 'son' would be the more
appropriate term."
I felt my skin burn with pleasure, but
I only shook my head. He was dear as a father to me, the Almin knows, but I
would never take such a liberty.
"He is mute," Saryon
continued, explaining my affliction without embarrassment.
Nor did I feel any embarrassment
myself. The handicap which one has had a lifetime seems more normal than not.
As I had foreseen, Mosiah had advance knowledge of this, as his next words
proved.
"Reuven was only a small child
when the Shattering"—the term the people of Thimhallan now use for the
destruction of their way of life—"occurred. He was left an orphan.
Whatever happened to him was so traumatizing that it bereft him of speech. You
found him, critically ill and alone in the abandoned Font. He was brought up in
the household of Prince Garald, educated in the relocation camp, and sent to
you by the Prince to record the story of the Darksword. I read it," Mosiah
added, with a polite smile for me. "It was accurate, as far as it
went."
I am used to receiving mixed
compliments for my work, and therefore I made no reply. It is never dignified
to defend one's creative endeavors. And I made allowances for the fact that
Mosiah had been one of the central participants.
"As for my leaving the relocation
camp," Saryon said, continuing the earlier conversation, "I did what
I thought was best for everyone."
His hand holding the teacup began to shake.
I rose, went to him, and removed the cup, placing it on the nightstand.
"This house is quite nice,"
said Mosiah, glancing around, somewhat coldly. "Your work in the field of
mathematics and Reuven's work in literature have made you a comfortable living.
Our people in the relocation camps don't live as well as this—"
"They could if they wanted
to," Saryon said, with a flash of the old spirit.
Knowing him as I do, and knowing his
history, I guessed that this must be the same driving spirit which led him to
seek out the forbidden books in the Font library. The same spirit that helped
Joram forge the Darksword. The same spirit that faced the Turning with such
courage and kept his soul alive, though his flesh had been changed to rock.
"No barbed wire surrounds those
camps," Saryon said, speaking with increasing passion. "The guards at
the gates were placed there when we first came to keep out the curious, not to
prevent our people from leaving. Those guards should have been gone long ago,
but our people begged for them to stay. Every person in the camp could have
entered into this new world and found his or her place.
"But do they? No! They cling to
some hopeless dream of returning to Thimhallan, of going back there to
find—what? A land that is dead and blasted. Thimhallan has not changed since we
left. It will not change, no matter how much we wish for it. The magic is
gone!" Saryon's voice was soft and aching and thrilling. "It is gone
and we should accept that and go on."
"The people of Earth do not like
us," said Mosiah.
"They like me!" Saryon said
crisply. "Of course, they don't like you. You refuse to mingle with the
'mundane,' as you call them, although many of them have as much magic in their
bodies as you do in yours. Still, you shun them and isolate yourselves from
them and it is no wonder they look upon you with distrust and suspicion. It was
this same pride and arrogance which brought about the collapse of our world and
put us into those relocation camps, and it is our pride and arrogance which
keep us there!"
Mosiah would have spoken, I think, but
he could not do so without raising his voice to interrupt my master, who, now
conversing on his pet topic, was on his soapbox—a quaint term used by the
natives of this world.
Indeed, Mosiah appeared moved by this
speech. He did not reply, at first, but remained seated in thought a short
space of time.
"What you say is true,
Father," he said. "Or, rather, it was true at the beginning. We
should have left the camp, gone forth into the world. But it was not pride
which kept us behind those barricades. It was fear. Such a strange and
terrifying world! Oh, admittedly, the Earthers brought in their sociologists
and their psychologists, their counselors and teachers to try to help us 'fit
in.' But I am afraid that they did more harm than
good. The more they showed us of the wonders of this world, the more our people
shrank away from them.
"Pride, yes, we had our
share," he continued. "And not misplaced. Our world was beautiful.
There was good in it." Mosiah leaned forward, his elbows resting on
his knees, gazing earnestly at Saryon. "The Earthers could not believe in
it, Father. Even the soldiers who had been there had difficulty believing what
they had seen with their own eyes! On their return, they were ridiculed, and so
they began to doubt their own senses, saying that we drugged them, made them
see things that weren't there."
Mosiah shrugged. "The 'ologists'
were kind and they tried to understand, but it was beyond their capacity to do
so. Such an alien existence to them! When they looked at a young woman of
twenty, to all appearances healthy and normal—by their standards—who did
nothing all day but lie in bed, they could not understand what was wrong with
her. When they were told that she was lying in bed because
she was accustomed to floating through the air on wings of magic, that she had
never walked a step in her life and had no idea how to walk, nor any
inclination to do so, now that her magic was gone, they could not believe it.
"Oh, yes, I know that they
appeared to accept it on the surface. All their medical tests confirmed the
fact that the girl had never walked. But deep inside, in the inner core of
their being, they did not believe. It is like asking them to believe in the
faeries of which you wrote in your book, Reuven.
"Do you talk to your neighbors of
your visit to the faeries, Father? Have you told the woman who lives next door,
who is a secretary for a real-estate broker, that you were nearly seduced by
the faerie queen?"
Saryon's face was exceedingly red. He
stared down at the sheets, absently brushed away a few biscuit crumbs. "Of
course not. It wouldn't be fair of me to expect her to understand. Her world is
so ... dissimilar. . . ."
"Your
books." Mosiah's penetrating gaze shifted to me. "People read
them and enjoy them. But they don't believe the stories, do they? They don't
believe that such a world ever existed or that such a person as Joram ever
lived. I have even heard it suggested that you pretend to have this affliction
of yours to avoid interviews, because you are afraid that you would be revealed
as a fraud and a fake."
Saryon glanced anxiously at me, for he
was not aware that I had heard these accusations. He had gone to great lengths
to spare me. I therefore took care to indicate that they caused me no concern,
which, in truth, they did not, for so long as my work pleased one man, and that
my master, I cared nothing for what others thought.
"And herein was created a strange
dichotomy," said Mosiah. "They do not believe us, they do not
understand us, and yet they are afraid of us. They are afraid that we will
regain powers they do not believe we possessed in the first place. They try to
prove to themselves and to us that such power never existed. What they fear,
they destroy. Or try to."
An uncomfortable silence fell between
us. Saryon blinked and attempted to stifle a yawn.
"It is your normal time to
retire," Mosiah said, suddenly coming back to the present. "Do so.
Keep to your routine."
It was my custom to bid my master good
night and go to my room, to spend some time writing before I, too, went to bed.
I did so, going upstairs and turning on the light. Then I crept back down the
stairs in the darkness. Mosiah did not look particularly pleased to see me, but
I think he knew that nothing short of my death would keep me from my master's
side.
Saryon's room was now dark. We sat in
the darkness, which was not, after all, very dark, due a street lamp right
outside the window. Mosiah drew his chair closer to Saryon's bed. The CD player
remained on, for it was Saryon's habit to fall asleep to music. It was much
past his usual hour for retiring, but he stubbornly refused to admit he was
tired. Curiosity kept him awake and fighting his body's need for rest. I know
because I felt the same.
"Forgive me, Father," said
Mosiah at last. "I did not mean to be drawn down that old road, which, in
truth, has long been overgrown with weeds and now leads nowhere. Twenty years
have passed. That young girl of twenty is now a matron of forty. She learned to
walk, learned to do for herself what had previously been done for her by magic.
She learned to live in this world. Perhaps she has even come to believe
something of what the mundanes tell her. Thimhallan is nothing but a charming
memory to her, a world more real in her dreams than in her waking life. And if,
at first, she chose to cling to the hope that she would return to that
enchanted world of such miraculous beauty, who can blame her?"
"A world of beauty, yes,"
said Saryon, "but there was ugliness there, too. Ugliness made more
hideous by being denied."
"The ugliness was in the hearts
of men and women, was it not, Father?" Mosiah asked. "Not in the
world itself." "True, very true," Saryon said, and he sighed.
"And the ugliness lives still," Mosiah continued, and there came a
change in his tone, a tension, which caused both my master and me to glance at
each other and brace ourselves, for we each felt that a blow was coming.
"You have not been back to the
camps for many years," Mosiah said abruptly.
Saryon shook his head.
"You have not been in contact
with Prince Garald or anyone else? You truly know nothing of what has been
going on with our people?"
Saryon looked ashamed, but he was
forced to shake his head. At that moment I would have given all I own to be
able to talk, for it seemed to me that there was accusation in Mosiah's tone,
and I would have spoken most vehemently in my master's defense. As it was,
Saryon heard me stir in restless anger. He set his hand on mine and patted it
gently, counseling patience.
Mosiah was silent, wondering, perhaps,
how to begin. At length he said, "You maintain that our people could leave
the camps of their own free will, as you did. In the beginning, that might have
been true. It is not true now.
"The guards of the mundane left
us years ago. To give them credit, they fought to protect us, as they were
ordered, but they were not equal to the task. After several had died and more
had deserted, the army pulled out. The guards of the mundane were replaced—by
our own."
"Fought against whom? Who
attacked you? I've heard nothing of this!" Saryon protested. "Forgive
me for doubting you, Mosiah, but surely, if such dreadful things were
happening, journalists from all over the world would have descended on the
camp."
"They did, Father. The Khandic
Sages spoke to them. The journalists believed the lie—they could not help
themselves, for the Khandic Sages coat all their bitter lies with the sweet honey
of their magic."
"Khandic Sages! Who are
they?" Saryon was bewildered, shocked beyond coherent speech. "And
Prince Garald . . . How could he ... He would have never allowed ..."
"Prince Garald is a prisoner,
held hostage by his love for his people."
"A
prisoner!" Saryon gaped. "Of ... of the
mundanes?"
"No, not of the
mundanes. And not of us Enforcers, either," Mosiah added, with
another slight smile, "for I see that question in
your mind."
"Then of whom? Or
what?" Saryon asked.
"They call themselves T'kon-Duuk.
In the language of the mundanes—Technomancers. They give Life to that which
is Dead. Most horribly"—Mosiah's voice lowered—"they draw Life from
that which is dead. The power of their magic does not come from living
things, as was true in Thimhallan, but from the death of the living. Do you
remember the man who called himself Menju the Sorcerer? The
man who sought to murder Joram?"
Saryon shuddered. "Yes," he
said in a low voice.
"He was one of them. I know them
well," Mosiah added. "I used to be one of them myself."
Saryon stared aghast, unable to speak.
It was left to me—the mute—to communicate. I made a gesture, pointing from
Mosiah to Saryon and myself, asking in dumb show why Mosiah had come to us with
this information now, at this time, and what this all had to do with us. And
either he understood my gesture or he read the question in my mind.
"I have come," he said,
"because they are coming. Their leader, a Khandic Sage known as
Kevon Smythe, is coming tomorrow to talk to you, Father. The Duuk-tsarith chose
me to warn you, knowing that I am the only one of that order you would
trust."
"The Duuk-tsarith," Saryon
murmured, perplexed. "I am to trust the Duuk-tsarith and so they
send Mosiah, who is now one of them and who used to be a Technomancer.
Technomancy. Life from death."
Then Saryon looked up. "Why
me?" he asked. But he knew the answer, as well as I did.
"Joram," Mosiah replied.
"They want Joram. Or perhaps I should say, they want the
Darksword."
Saryon's mouth twitched. I realized
then the subtlety of my master, one might almost say cunning, if a man as
gentle and honest could be accused of such a thing. Though he had not known the
news Mosiah had imparted, Saryon had known from the outset that this was why
Mosiah had come, and yet my master had not mentioned it. He had been stalling,
gaining information. I regarded him in admiration.
"I am sorry, Mosiah," said
Saryon, "but you and King Garald and this Kevon Smythe and apparently a
great many other people have wasted your time. I cannot take you to Joram and
Joram cannot give you the Darksword. The circumstances are all detailed in
Reuven's book."
Saryon shrugged. "The Darksword
no longer exists. When Joram thrust the sword into the altar in the
Mosiah did not appear astonished or
chagrined; nor did he rise to his feet and apologize for having disturbed us
over nothing.
"A Darksword exists, Father. Not
the original. That, as you say, was destroyed. Joram has forged a new one. We
know the truth of this, because an attempt was made to steal it."
CHAPTER THREE
This is what the Duuk-tsarith are trained for—to be aware of everything going on around them, to be in control of everything, yet manage to keep themselves above and apart from it.
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
Saryon
was angry. His hand clenched, his anger flickered in his eyes. "You had no
right! If Joram did forge a new sword, it must have been because he felt threatened.
Was King Garald behind this? His own law clearly forbids—"
"What care do they have for the
law?" Mosiah interrupted impatiently. "They know no laws but their
own." "They?"
"The
Technomancers. Don't you understand yet, Father?" Slowly, Saryon's
hand unclenched. Fear replaced his anger. "Is Joram safe? He was supposed
to send the boy to me to be educated. I've heard nothing and I feared—"
"Joram is alive, Father,"
Mosiah said, smiling slightly. "And he is well and so is Gwendolyn. As for
Joram not sending his son to you, he did not do so because he and Gwen did not
have a son. They have a daughter. His only child, she is precious in his sight.
He is loath to send such a jewel to this world—and I can't say that I blame
him." Mosiah sighed.
"How do you know this?" Saryon demanded, his voice sharp.
"You are spying on him!"
"Protecting him, Father,"
said Mosiah softly. "Protecting him. He doesn't know of our watchfulness.
He doesn't suspect. How could he know, who has no magic Life within him? We are
careful not to disturb him or his family. Unlike others.
"Just recently, an arm of the
Technomancers known as the D'karn-darah defied the law which prohibits
any person from traveling to Thimhallan. They had read Reuven's book"—he
gave me a wry smile—"and they went to the altar at the
"The Technomancers used every
device known to man to try to free the sword, from the most sophisticated laser
cutting tools to old-fashioned blowtorches. They attempted to cut the altar
itself into pieces, to haul it back to their laboratories. They did not even scratch
its surface."
Saryon appeared relieved.
"Good." He nodded. "Excellent. Thank the Almin."
"Don't be so quick to thank Him,
yet, Father," Mosiah said. "Failing to make a dent in the altar, the
Technomancers went to Joram."
"They were wasting their time. He
would have been furious," Saryon predicted.
Mosiah's smile twisted. "He was
furious. The Khandic Sages had never seen such fury. His anger astonished
them, and they are not easily astonished. Kevon Smythe himself talked to Joram,
though now Smythe denies that he did so. He thought to win Joram with his
charm, but, as you know, Father, our friend is not easily charmed. Smythe
offered Joram vast wealth, power, whatever he wanted in exchange for the
location of raw darkstone and the secret of the forging of Darkswords.
"Smythe barely escaped with his
life. Joram threw Smythe— literally picked him up and threw him—out the door
and warned him that the next time he returned he could count his life as
nothing. By this time, the Border Patrol had arrived. You ask what took them so
long? How the Technomancers evaded their defenses? Easily. Several of their own
had managed to get themselves assigned to the duty. They shut down the alarm
signals, permitted their brethren to cross the Border without notice.
"When the Border Patrol arrived,
they escorted Smythe and his followers off-planet. To
our relief, the Technomancers lost interest in the Darksword after that. Their
scientists studied the reports brought back from Thimhallan and made the
determination that the original sword could never be removed from the altar and
it was therefore useless to them. Without Joram's assistance, and without
permission to take teams of workers to Thimhallan—permission that would never
be granted—the search for raw darkstone would be too difficult and too costly
to undertake.
"King Garald hoped that this
incident would be an end of the Technomancers' desire for the Darksword and it
might have been, Father, except that Joram did a very foolish thing."
Saryon looked as pained and unhappy as
if he himself had been responsible for Joram's behavior. "He forged a new
sword."
"Precisely.
We are not certain how. Smythe's visit had made Joram suspicious and
paranoid—"
"Made him feel as if he were
being watched," Saryon interrupted.
Mosiah paused a moment, then slightly
smiled. "I have never known you to be sarcastic, Father. Very well. I
grant that Joram had some basis for his feelings. But if he had only gone to
King Garald or General Boris instead of trying to fight the whole world all by
himself!"
"Battling life alone was always
Joram's way," Saryon said, and his voice was filled with affectionate
sorrow and understanding. "His blood is that of Emperors. He comes from a
long line of rulers who held the fate of nations in their hands. To ask for
help would be a sign of weakness. You recall the effort it took him to ask me
to help him create the Darksword. He was—"
Saryon paused. I had been wondering
when this would occur to him.
"Joram could not have
forged a Darksword," he said excitedly. "Not without a catalyst. I
drew Life from the world, gave Life to the Darksword, which in turn used that
Life to drain Life from those who possessed it."
"He didn't need you to forge the
sword itself, Father. He only needed you to enhance its abilities."
"But without a catalyst to do
that, the sword is no more dangerous than any other sword. Why would the
Technomancers still want it?"
"Consider the number of catalysts
among our people, Father. Catalysts living in poverty in the relocation camps,
who would be more than willing to exchange their gifts for the promise of
wealth and power from the Technomancers. Though the corrupt Bishop Vanya is now
dead, his legacy lives on among some of his followers."
"Yes, I can see how that could be
true," said Saryon sadly. "How did Joram manage to
escape the watchful eye of the Duuk-tsarith long enough to forge the
sword?"
Mosiah shrugged and spread his hands.
"Who knows? Such a feat would be relatively simple, especially if he had
an amulet made of darkstone. Or, for all we know, he forged this sword years
ago, before we began to keep watch. None of that matters now, however. We
attempted to keep word of this new Darksword secret, but the Technomancers
found out. Their interest has been rekindled."
"Are Joram and his family in
danger?" Saryon asked anxiously.
"Not for the moment, mainly
because of the efforts of the Duuk-tsarith. Ironic, isn't it, Father.
Those who once sought Joram's death now risk death themselves to guard his
life."
"You?"
Saryon asked. "You're risking death?"
"Yes," Mosiah replied, very
calmly. He gestured around the darkened room. "Thus the reason for these
precautions. The T'kon-Duuk are eager to get their hands on me. I know
too many of their secrets, you see, Father. I am a great danger to them. I have
come to warn you of them, of the techniques they will try to use to persuade
you to take them with you to Joram—"
Saryon raised a hand to halt the flow
of words. Mosiah ceased speaking instantly, with a quiet respect for the
elderly catalyst which did much to increase his favor with me. I could never
trust him completely, not while he wore the black robes of the Enforcers. The Duuk-tsarith
never worked for just one end. They worked for several and sought to gain
the middle into the bargain.
"I will not go," Saryon said
firmly. "Have no fear of that. I would be of no use. I don't know what you
or they or anyone else thinks I could do."
"Joram respects and trusts you,
Father. Your influence with him is—" Mosiah broke off.
He was staring at me. They were both
staring at me. I had made a noise. It must, I realize, have sounded very
strange—a guttural sort of croak in my throat. I made a signal to my master.
"Reuven says that there is
something out there," Saryon said.
The words had not yet left Saryon's
lips before Mosiah was standing next to me. This sudden movement of his was at
least as startling as the apparition I thought I had seen outside the window.
One moment he was across the room from me, sitting in the darkened hallway, and
the next instant he was by my side, peering out the window. In his fluid,
silent motion, he was one with the shadows. Imagine my astonishment when,
glancing back at my master to be certain he was all right, I caught a glimpse
of Mosiah, seated in his chair!
I realized, then, that the Enforcer
next to me was insubstantial. Mosiah's shadow, so to speak, had been sent on an
errand by its master.
"What did you see? Tell me!
Immediately!" he demanded. The words blazed in my mind.
I signaled with my hands. Saryon
translated.
"Reuven says he thinks he saw a
person dressed all in silver—"
Mosiah—the Mosiah seated in the
chair—was on his feet. His shadow had returned to its body.
"They are here," he said.
"The D'karn-darah. Blood-doom knights. Either they followed me or
they have come for their own reasons. I fear it is the latter. You are not safe
here, either of you. You must come with me. Now!"
"We're not dressed!"
Saryon protested.
It must be a very real and present
danger which sends an elderly man dashing out into the cold winter night clad
only in his nightshirt and bedslippers.
"You don't need to be,"
Mosiah replied. "Your bodies aren't going anywhere, except to bed. Follow
my instructions exactly. Father, remain where you are. Reuven, go upstairs to
your room and climb into your bed."
I was not happy at the thought of
leaving my master, though what I could have done against the power of the Duuk-tsarith
was open to question. Saryon indicated with a nod that we were to obey
Mosiah and that is what I did. I urged Mosiah to care for my master and left to
go upstairs to my small room.
Saryon always waited until he heard me
in the bedroom, which was on the level above his, before turning out the
downstairs light. Tonight was the exception since his light was already off. As
I have said, it was usually my practice to spend some time writing, but—acting
on Mosiah's orders—I abandoned this custom and retired immediately to my bed. I
turned out my light and the house was dark.
Lying alone in the darkness, I began
to be afraid. It is easy to frighten oneself at this time of night. I recalled
childhood terrors of monsters lurking in the closet. The fear I experienced
could not be banished by a flashlight, however. I wondered why I was
experiencing this feeling of dread and I realized it was because I felt
Mosiah's fear.
Whatever is out there in the night
must be terrible, I thought, to have frightened someone as powerful as the Duuk-tsarith.
I lay in my bed, ears stretched to catch every sound. The
night had its usual noises, I suppose, but they were all alarming to me, who
had never before paid them much heed. The bark of a dog, the whine and snarl of
fighting cats, a lone automobile traveling up the street. I invested these with
such sinister meanings that when Mosiah's words again lit up my mind, I was so
startled that my shudder shook the bed frame.
"Come to me," said Mosiah.
"Not your body. Leave that behind. Let your soul rise from its shell and
walk with me."
I had no idea what the man was talking
about.
I think I would have laughed—in fact,
I am afraid that I did giggle, perhaps from nervous tension—except that I felt
his dire urgency. Bewildered, I lay in my bed, wondering what I was supposed to
do, wondering if my master knew what to do. Mosiah—or perhaps I should say the
"shadow" of Mosiah—took form in the darkness, standing at the foot of
the bed.
He held out his hand to me. "It
is quite simple," he said. "You are coming with me. Your body
is staying behind. My body is downstairs right now. Yet here I stand before
you. Picture yourself rising up out of bed and walking with me. You are a
writer. You must have traveled like this in your imagination many times. When I
read your description of Merilon, I could see it again in my mind, it was so
vivid. You are a professional day-dreamer, one might say. Simply concentrate a
little bit more."
And when I did not immediately move,
Mosiah's tone sharpened. "Saryon will not leave without you. You are
putting him in danger."
He knew that would rouse me. It would
have roused me from my grave. I closed my eyes and imagined myself rising up
from my bed and joining Mosiah. At first, nothing happened. I was in such a
flutter of excitement and fear that it was difficult to concentrate.
"Relax," Mosiah said softly,
hypnotically. "Relax and slough off the heaviness of the body that weighs
you down."
His words no longer burned in my mind,
but seemed to flow through it like running water. I found myself relaxing,
letting the water run over me. My body did, in fact, feel very heavy, so heavy
that I knew I could not lift it. And yet, there was the imperative that I
bad to leave!
I stood up and I walked over to
join Mosiah. When I looked back, I was not surprised to see the heavy body
still lying in the bed, slumbering soundly, to all appearances.
My fears were forgotten in my wonder
and awe.
I started to move toward the door,
thinking to go through it and down the stairs to my master's bedroom, as I was
accustomed, but Mosiah stopped me.
"You are no longer constrained by
physical barriers, Reuven. A thought will take you to Saryon."
And he spoke truly. The moment I
thought about being with my master, I was there beside him. At the sight of me,
Saryon smiled and nodded and then, hesitantly, as if having to relearn skills
long forgotten, his soul left his body.
I was not surprised to see his spirit
suffused with a soft radiant white glow; a distinct contrast to Mosiah, whose
spirit seemed cloaked with the same black robes his body wore.
My master was pained by this, as I
could tell. And so could Mosiah.
"Once—you remember, Father—my
soul was bright and crystal clear as Reuven's. The dark and terrible things I
have seen since have left their mark upon me. But we must hurry. They will wait
only until they think you are asleep. Don't be afraid, I will not let them harm
either of you."
Mosiah's soul slid back into its body.
He spoke a word, reached out with his hand as if to some invisible door, pushed
on nothing, and walked inside.
"Hurry!" he commanded.
"Follow me."
The mind thinks of the strangest
things at the most inappropriate times. I remembered, suddenly, a television
cartoon I had seen as a child, in which the character—perhaps a rabbit, I'm not
certain—is being chased through the forest by a hunter with a gun. The rabbit
is cornered, apparently, until he opens a hole in the cartoon, crawls inside,
and pulls the hole in after him, leaving the hunter extremely befuddled.
Mosiah had done the very same thing.
He had opened a hole in our bedroom and was urging us to crawl inside!
Saryon, having lived for many, many
years in the magical world of Thimhallan, was much more accustomed to such
arcane manifestations than I was. He immediately entered the hole, then
beckoned to me to follow. I started to cross the room, remembered that I didn't
have to rely on my feet, and wished myself at my master's side.
I was in the hole. The hole closed
behind me and formed a bubble around us, holding us suspended in the air,
floating somewhere near the ceiling of Saryon's bedroom.
"A
Corridor?" Saryon asked, amazed. "Here on Earth?"
I must mention, by the way, that we
did not speak, but communicated mind to mind. And it occurred to me that, in
this spirit realm, I was no longer mute. I could talk and be heard. The
knowledge filled me with such trembling joy and terrible confusion that I was
immediately rendered more silent than I had ever been in the physical realm.
"Not as you mean it, Father. Not
a Corridor in time and space such as we had on Thimhallan," Mosiah
replied. "That skill has been lost to us, and we have not regained it. But
we do have the ability to slip inside one of time's folds."
I must try to explain the sensation of
being hidden in a "fold" of time, as Mosiah called it. The only way I
can put this is to say that it was very much like hiding behind the folds of a
heavy curtain. And, in fact, I began to feel an almost smothering constraint
upon me, which is caused by, so I learned later, the knowledge that time was
passing for my body and I—the spirit— was standing still.
The sensation is not as bad, I
understand, for those who enter the fold with both mind and body, for one has
only to step out again to be caught up in time's flow. But, despite the fact
that my body was slumbering, I began to feel a panic inside me akin to that
felt by someone fearing he may miss the last train home. The train—i.e., my
body—was moving on ahead, and I was running frantically to catch up. I think I
would have attempted to escape, then and there, but I would not leave Saryon.
I found out later that he felt the
same, but that he would not leave because of me. We laughed over that, but our
laughter was hollow.
"Shh, hush! Look!" Mosiah
cautioned.
He did not silence us so that we would
not be heard—for that was not possible, not even for the D'karn-darah. He
silenced us that we might hear them. What we heard and what we saw chilled us.
Though we could move through physical
barriers, we could not see through them. Trapped inside time's fold, we could
not move to another part of the house or see what was transpiring in any other
part of the house except Saryon's bedroom. My hearing is acute, however, and
the nervous tension I was under accentuated it. I heard a slight clicking
sound, which was our front-door lock giving way. The creak of the door's hinges
(which Saryon had been asking me to oil) meant that the front door was being
stealthily opened. At the same time I heard the snick of the lock of the back
door, heard the door itself scrape across the mud rug which we had placed at
the entrance.
Whoever had been out there had entered
the house by the front and by the back. But try as I might, I could not hear
them moving at all through the front part of the house. One of them was in the
bedroom before I was fully aware of his coming.
He was clad all in paper-thin silver
robes that clung to his body and crackled faintly as he moved, occasionally
emitting tiny blue sparks, like the fur of a cat in the darkness. His face was
plastered with the same paper-thin silver, so that only the outline of
features—a nose and mouth—were visible. Silver fabric covered his hands and
feet like a second skin.
He stood in the bedroom and Mosiah,
with a whispered thought, called our attention to a strange phenomenon. The
machines in the bedroom knew the D'karn-darah was there. The machines
responded to his coming.
The machines' response was not overt
or dramatic. I would not have noticed it, except for Mosiah's mention. The
bedroom's overhead light, which had, of course, been turned off, flickered on.
A faint hum of music came from the compact-disc player. The reading lamp gave a
feeble gleam.
The D'karn-darah ignored all
this and went immediately to Saryon's body, which continued to sleep soundly.
He put out a silver-covered hand and shook the catalyst by the shoulder.
"Saryon!" he said loudly.
Beside me, I could feel Saryon's
spirit shiver. I was thankful, then, for Mosiah's arrival and his timely
warning. If my master had been wakened in the night and seen such a horrific
sight bending over him, he might never have recovered from the shock.
At that moment I heard a female voice
say "Reuven!" loudly. I felt a slight brushing sensation across my
shoulder. Then I knew that the second person, the one who had entered by the
back door, had gone to my room. She was standing over my body.
The D'karn-darah shook Saryon
again, more forcibly, turning the sleeping body over in the bed.
"Saryon!" the man repeated, and his voice was harsh.
I trembled, for I was afraid he would
do Saryon some harm. Mosiah again reassured both of us.
"They will not hurt you," he
repeated. "They do not dare. They know you may be of use to them."
The one who had been
in my room now appeared in Saryon's bedchamber.
"Same thing?" she asked.
"Yes," answered the D'karn-darah
who stood beside my master. "Their souls have fled. They were alerted
to our coming."
"Duuk-tsarith."
"Of
course. Undoubtedly the one named Mosiah, that Enforcer who
was once the catalyst's friend."
"You were right, then. You said
we would find him here."
"He has been here. He is probably
still here, hiding in one of their cursed time folds, no doubt. And the other
two are probably with him right now. Very possibly"—the man's silver
faceless face turned and gazed around the bedroom—"they are listening to
us at this moment."
"Then it is simple. Torture the
body. Pain will cause their spirits to return. They will be only too glad,
after a while, to tell us where to find the Enforcer."
The female D'karn-darah raised her
hand, and where before had been five fingers were now five long steel needles.
Electricity began to arc from one to another. She reached the hand with the
horribly crackling needles toward Saryon's defenseless form.
Her partner halted her, his own hand
closing around her wrist.
"The Khandic Sages will be here
tomorrow, working their own methods of persuasion. They would know that we had
been here and they would not be pleased."
"They know that we are hunting
this Enforcer. They want him as much as we do."
"Yes, but they want this catalyst
more." The D'karn-darah sounded irritated. "Very well, we will
leave him to them. A pity we could not have arrived a few moments sooner. We
would have been able to capture the Duuk-tsarith. As it is, our meeting
is only delayed, Enforcer!" He spoke to the air. "And, you, Catalyst."
The silver face turned toward the figure in the bed. "I leave this, my . .
. business card."
He opened the palm of his gloved hand,
reached into his other palm, gave a twist, freeing some object—I could not see
what. He tossed that object onto the bed, at the feet of Saryon's slumbering
figure. Then the two of them left the bedroom, left the house by the back door.
At their departure, the machines in the
house returned to normal. The lights went off, the CD player ceased to play.
We waited, hidden, for some time, to
make certain the D'karn-darah were gone and that this was no trick to
lure us out of hiding. When Mosiah permitted us to return, my spirit drifted
back to find my body. I looked down upon myself.
This was much different than looking
into a mirror, for the mirror shows us what we see every day, what we have
grown accustomed to seeing. Before now, I had never seen myself with such
clarity. And though I was eager to return to Saryon and had questions to ask of
Mosiah, I was so entranced by this ability to see myself as a casual observer
might see me that I took a few moments to do just that.
Physical attributes I knew well. The
mirror shows us these. Fair hair, worn long, that someone in my childhood once
called "corn silk." Brown eyes beneath eyebrows that I did not like.
They were thick and dark brown, in stark contrast to my fair hair, and gave me
a grave and overly serious aspect. The features of my face tended to be sharp,
with prominent cheekbones and a nose that was called aquiline. It would grow
beaky as I aged.
Being young, my body was lithe,
although certainly not strong. Exercise of the mind suited me far better than
running very fast on a machine that took me nowhere. Yet now I looked at those
thin hands and spindly arms with disfavor. If Saryon was in danger, how could I
defend him?
I found that I did not have the
leisure to spend long on this inspection. The nearer my spirit drew to my body,
the more it longed to return, and I had the impression that I dove down to my
body from a great height. I awoke, shaking, stomach clenching, as one does from
a falling dream. And I have wondered, ever since, if perhaps those dreams
aren't really the first tentative journeys our spirits make.
I sat up in my bed, shaking off the feelings
of sleep that clung to my body. Hurriedly grabbing my robe, I wrapped it around
myself, and switching on the hall light, hastened down the stairs. Light came
from Saryon's bedroom. I found my master, looking as groggy as I felt, staring
at the object which the D'karn-darah had left upon the blanket.
"It will not harm you,"
Mosiah was saying as I entered. "You may pick it up, if you like."
"I will do so, sir," I
signed, and swooped down upon the object, gathering it into my hand before
Saryon could touch it.
Mosiah watched me with a slight smile,
which was, I think, approving. Saryon just shook his head with fond
exasperation.
When I was certain that the object was
benign, not likely to explode or burst into flame or—I don't know what I'd expected
exactly—I opened my hand and held it out. Saryon and I peered down on it
wonderingly.
"What is it?" he asked,
puzzled.
"Death," said Mosiah.
CHAPTER FOUR
Like a Living being, the sword sucked the magic from him, drained him. dry, then used him to continue to absorb magic from all around it.
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
"Death!"
Saryon tried to snatch the object from me, but I was too quick for him. I
clasped my hand over it tightly.
"I do not mean for any of us,
here and now," Mosiah said. His voice held a note of gentle rebuke.
"I would not have allowed this to remain in this room if it had been
dangerous."
Saryon and I exchanged glances, both
considerably ashamed.
"Of course, Mosiah," Saryon
said. "Forgive me—forgive us—for not trusting you. . . . It's just
... it has all been so strange. . . . Those dreadful people. . . ." He
shivered and drew his robe closer around his tall, spare form.
"Who were they?" I gestured.
"And what is this?"
I opened my palm. In it lay a round
medallion about two inches in diameter made of very hard, heavy plastic. The
medallion had what appeared to be a sort of magnet on the back. One side was
clear. I could see inside and what I saw was very strange. Encased in the
medallion was some sort of bluish-green, thick, and viscous sludge. As I held
the medallion in my hand the sludge began undulating, surging against the sides
of the medallion, as if it were trying to escape. It was not a pleasant sight
and made me feel queasy to watch it.
I was loath to hold on to the
medallion longer and I fidgeted with it in my hand.
"It ... it looks as if it's
alive!" Saryon said, frowning in disgust.
"They are," Mosiah answered.
"Or rather they were. Most are already dead, which is why the D'karn-darah
gave this up. The rest will be dead shortly."
"The rest of what! What's trapped
in there?" Saryon was horrified and looked about vaguely,
as if for something he could use to crack the medallion open.
"I will explain in a moment. I am
first going to remove the listening devices which the D'karn-darah placed
in your living room and in the phone. They made their presence known. There is
no longer any reason to keep up the pretense."
He left the room, returned a moment
later. "There. Now we may speak freely."
I handed over the medallion, thankful
to be rid of it.
"A very elemental organism,"
Mosiah said, holding it to the light. "A sort of organic soup, if you
will. Single-celled creatures, who are born and bred
by the Technomancers for one purpose— to die."
"How terrible!" said Saryon, shocked.
"But not much different from
calves," I pointed out, "who are born only to become veal."
"Perhaps," Saryon said with a
smile and a shake of his head.
The only disagreements—I can't even
call them arguments— he and I have ever had have been over the fact that I am a
vegetarian, while he enjoys a bit of chicken or beef on occasion. Early in my
arrival, I made the attempt—in my zeal—to convert him to my way of thinking. I
made life very unhappy for us both, I am sorry to say, until we reached an
agreement to respect each other's opinions. He now views my bean curd with
equanimity and I no longer stage a protest over a hamburger.
"The living always feed off the
dead," said Mosiah. "The hawk kills the mouse. Big fish eat their
smaller cousins. The rabbit kills the dandelion it devours, if it comes to
that. The dandelion feeds off the nutrients in the soil, nutrients which come
from the decomposing bodies of other plants and animals. Life thrives on death.
Such is the cycle."
Saryon was quite struck by this.
"I never looked at it that way."
"Nor have I," I signed,
thoughtful.
"The Dark Cultists have, for
generations," Mosiah continued. "They carried their beliefs one step
further. If death was the basis for life—"
"Then Death would be the basis
for Life!" Saryon said, suddenly understanding.
It took me a moment longer to
understand, mainly because I did not, at the time, hear the capital letters in
his words.
Of course, when he spoke of Life, he
was referring to magic, for the people of Thimhallan believe that magic is Life
and that those born without the ability to use magic are Dead.
And that, one might say, was the beginning of the story of Joram and the
Darksword.
The magic—or Life—is present in all
things living. The dandelion possesses its tiny share, as do the rabbit and the
hawk, the fish, and we humans ourselves. In very ancient times certain people
discovered how to take the Life from things around them and used it to perform
what others considered miracles. They termed such miracles "magic"
and those who could not use the magic feared and distrusted it immensely.
Wizards and witches were persecuted and slain.
"But who are the Dark
Cultists?" Saryon asked.
"Recall your history lessons,
Father," Mosiah said. "Recall how the magi of ancient times came
together and determined to leave Earth and find another world—a world where
magic could flourish and grow, not wither and die as it was bound to do on this
one.
"Recall how Merlyn, the greatest
of us all, led his people into the stars and how he founded the new world,
Thimhallan, where magic was concentrated, trapped, so that it seemed to have
disappeared from Earth completely."
" 'Seemed to have'?" Saryon
repeated.
"Excuse me," I signed,
"but if we are going to stay up for the rest of the night, may I suggest
that we move to the kitchen? I'll turn up the heat and make tea for
everyone."
We had been standing, shivering—at
least Saryon and I were shivering—in Saryon's bedroom. He looked haggard and
weary, but neither he nor I could sleep now, after so many astounding and
puzzling events.
"That is," I added,
"unless you think those terrible beings will return."
Saryon translated my gestures, but I
had the feeling that wasn't necessary. Mosiah understood me—either my thoughts
or the sign language.
"The D'karn-darah will not
come back this night," Mosiah said with confidence. "They thought to
ambush me, to take me by surprise. They know now that I am aware of them. They
will not face me in direct battle. They would be forced to kill me and they do
not want my death. They want to capture me—they must capture
me—alive."
"Why?" Saryon asked.
"Because I
infiltrated their organization. I am the only disciple of the blood-doom
knights to have ever escaped their clutches alive. I know their secrets. The D'karn-darah
want to find out how much I know and, most importantly, who else knows.
They hope, by capturing me, that I will tell them. They are wrong," he
said simply, but with firm conviction. "I would die first."
"Let us have some tea,"
Saryon said quietly.
He put his hand on Mosiah's arm, and I
knew now that my master trusted this man implicitly. I wanted to, but it was
all so strange. It was hard for me to trust my own senses, let alone trust
another person. Had what happened really happened? Had I truly left my body?
Had I hidden away in a fold of time?
I filled the teakettle with water, put
it on the burner, brought out the teapot and cups.
Mosiah sat at the table. He declined to have tea. He held, in his hand, the
medallion. None of us spoke, the entire time we waited for the water to boil,
the tea to steep. When, at last, I poured my master's tea, I had begun to
believe.
"Start at the beginning,"
said Saryon.
"Do you mind," I indicated,
"if I take notes?"
Saryon frowned and shook his head,
but Mosiah said he did not mind and that our experiences might, someday, make
an interesting book. He only hoped people would still be left alive on Earth to
read it.
I retrieved my small computer from my
bedroom, and seated with the computer in my lap, I wrote down his words.
"The Dark Cultists have existed
down through time, although we, in Thimhallan, had no record of them. What we
knew as the Council of Nine on Thimhallan, representing the nine magical arts,
was once the Council of Thirteen here on Earth. At that time the Council
believed that all magi should be represented, even those who held diverse
ethical views, and so those who practiced the dark side of magic were included.
Perhaps some of the more naive members hoped to turn their brothers and sisters
who walked in the shadows back to the light. If so, they did not succeed and,
in fact, they incorporated their own eventual downfall.
"It was the Dark Cultists who
poisoned the mundane of Earth against magi. Life did not come from life, for
them. Life—or magic—came from death. They engaged in human and animal
sacrifice, believing that the deaths of others enhanced their power. Cruel and
selfish, they used their arcane arts only to indulge themselves, to further
their own ambition, to enslave and seduce, to destroy.
"The mundane fought back. They
held witch trials, inquisitions. Magi were rounded up, tortured until they
confessed, and were burned or hanged or drowned. Among these were many members
of the Council who had used their magic for good, not evil. Shocked and
saddened by their losses, the Council of Thirteen met to consider what to do.
"The Four Dark Cults—the Cult of
the White Steed, the Black Steed, the Red Steed, and the Pale Steed—all
advocated war and conquest. They would rise up and destroy those who opposed
them, enslaving all who survived. The Nine Cults of Light refused even to
consider this option. Furious, the Four members stormed out of the meeting. In
their absence, the other members made their decision. They would leave Earth
forever. Realizing now the danger the Dark Cultists represented to their order,
the Council took care that the Dark Cultists were excluded from all their plans.
"In A.D. 1600, when Merlyn and
the Council of Nine left this world, the Dark Cultists found out about the
exodus, but—so well kept was the secret—they were too late either to impede the
exodus or to force their way along. They were left behind on Earth.
"At first, they welcomed the
change, for the Council of Nine had long curtailed the activities of the Dark
Cultists. They saw themselves as rulers of the people of Earth and so they set
out to advance their goals. But during this time on Thimhallan, Merlyn
established the Well of the World, which drew magic from Earth and concentrated
it within the boundaries of Thimhallan. The Dark Cultists found themselves
bereft of their magical power.
"They were enraged, but helpless.
They knew well what had happened, that magic was being kept within Thimhallan.
Their powers dwindled, except for times of famine or plague or war, when Death
stalked the world and increased their power. Even then, they could perform only
small magicks, mostly for their own personal benefit. They never lost their
ambition, nor their memory of how powerful they had once been. They believed
that there would come a time when they would rise again.
"And so, down through the ages,
the Four kept their loose-knit organization. Parents would pass on this dark
inheritance to their children. Worthy recruits were brought into the circle.
Fearful of discovery, the Four worked their Dark Arts in isolation, keeping
apart from others. Yet they always knew each other, one mage recognizing a
fellow mage by certain secret signs and countersigns.
"A central organization existed,
run by the Khandic Sages. So secret was this that few of the members ever knew
who was in control. Once a year the Sol-huena, the Collectors, appeared
at the door of every Dark Cultist, demanding a tithe, which was used to keep
the Council operational. The only time members ever came together was if one of
their own had been lax in payment of funds or had broken one of their strict
rules. The wizards of the Black Steed, the Sol-t'kan or Judges, sat in
judgment and passed sentence. The Sol-huena carried out that sentence.
"Eventually, as time passed, the
modern world no longer believed in witches and warlocks. The Dark Cultists were
able to leave their cellars and their caves, where they had once practiced
their arts, move into apartments and town houses. They entered politics, became
government ministers and rulers of nations, and when it suited their purposes,
fomented war and rebellion. They delight in suffering and death, for by such is
their power enhanced.
"And then came the day when the
Darksword was created."
Mosiah glanced at Saryon, who smiled
gently and sighed softly and shook his head. For though he did not regret his
part in the creation of the Darksword and the eventual downfall of Thimhallan
and often said that he would do it again, he as often added that he wished
change could have been accomplished with much less pain and suffering.
"The Four knew of the sword's
creation," said Mosiah. "Some of them said that they were aware of it
from the very hour it came into being."
Saryon was perplexed. "But how is
that possible? They were so far away. ..."
"Not far enough. Like it
or not, threads of magic bind us together, like the gossamer strands of a spiderweb.
If one strand is broken, the shock is felt throughout the web. The Four had no
idea what had happened, but they felt the sword's dark energy. They had strange
dreams and portents. Some saw the shadow of a black sword, shaped like a man,
rise out of flames. Others saw the same image of a black sword shattering a
fragile glass globe. They took it for a symbol of hope. They believed that its
creation would bring magic back to them. They were right.
"Twenty years ago, by Earth time,
Joram used the Darksword to shatter the Well of the World. Magic spewed out
into the universe. The magic was diluted when it reached Earth, but to the
parched members of the Dark Cults, the magic fell upon them like a renewing
shower."
"But I don't understand why they
should want the sword," Saryon protested. "The Darksword nullifies
magic. It was invaluable to Joram in Thimhallan, because he was the only person
alive who did not possess any magical powers. It was his only means of defense
against a world of magi. But what would these Technomancers do with the
Darksword here on Earth? Its power is nothing compared to that of ... of ... a
nuclear bomb."
"On the contrary, Father. The
Technomancers believe that the Darksword would give them immense power. Power
similar to that of a nuclear weapon, in that they could control entire
populations. And the Darksword would provide such power on an individual basis
in a handy, compact, and inexpensive form. Far more
convenient to use than a nuclear bomb and not nearly so messy."
"I am afraid I still don't
understand—"
"The Darksword absorbs Life,
Father. You have said yourself—and your young friend has written—how the sword
drew from you the magic that you were drawing from the world. 'The magic surged
through him like a blast of wind,' is, I believe, how Reuven phrased it."
Saryon paled. He had lifted his
teacup, to drink, set it down again with haste. His hand shook. He gazed at
Mosiah with sorrowful anguish.
"I am afraid so, Father,"
Mosiah answered the look, the unspoken protest. "The Technomancers know
that the Darksword has the power to absorb Life. Once the sword is in their
possession, they plan to study it, determine how to mass-produce it, and
distribute Darkswords to their followers. The swords will absorb magic, then
give up that Life, much as a living being gives up life when the being dies.
And because the Technomancers are accustomed to taking magic from the dead,
they believe they can use Darkswords to fuel their power—a far cheaper and more
efficient means than that which they are now using."
A kind of magic battery, I
typed.
"What are they using to fuel
their power?" Saryon asked, his voice low. His gaze was on the medallion,
which had now gone almost completely dark—a brownish, blackish green.
Mosiah picked up the medallion, held
it to the light.
"Imagine these organisms grown in
immense vats—vats seven times the size of this house, whose circumference would
encompass this block. Various gases are pumped into the vats. An electrical
current is passed through the gases. The result is this simple form of life.
Great quantities are manufactured. The living mass seethes and bubbles in the
vats as it grows and reproduces. Now imagine many more vats, dedicated to the
death of these organisms. Again, the electric current. But this time it
destroys, it does not create.
"As the catalysts give us Life .
. ." Mosiah paused, looked at Saryon. "As you used to give me Life,
Father. Do you remember? We were fighting Blachloch's henchmen and I
transformed into a gigantic tiger. ... I was very young," he added, with a
slight smile, "and prone to flaunt my power."
Saryon smiled. "I remember. And I
remember being quite happy to see that tiger at the time."
"At any rate"—Mosiah shook
off memory—"as the catalysts give us Life, drawing the magic from all
living beings and pouring it into those of us who use it, so the Technomancers
receive their power from the deaths—not only of these manufactured organisms,
but from the deaths of all things in this universe. The war with the Hch'nyv
has been a blessing to them," he added, his tone bitter.
"I will never take the
Technomancers to Joram," Saryon said with absolute conviction.
"Never. Like you"—he looked at Mosiah—"I would die first. You
need have no worry."
"On the contrary, Father,"
said Mosiah. "We want you to take them to Joram."
Saryon stared at Mosiah, stared a long
time in silence. His pain was so great that it grieved me to look at him.
"You want the
Darksword," he said. His brows drew together. "Who sent you?"
Mosiah leaned forward, his hands
clasped together. "The Technomancers are extremely powerful, Father. They
have seduced a great number of our people, who are now finding it easier and
faster to gain what they want in this world by exchanging magic for
technomancy. King Garald—"
"Ah!" Saryon
exclaimed, and he nodded.
"King Garald dares not openly
defy them," Mosiah continued resolutely. "Not now, not yet. But
secretly, we are building our strength, readying our resources. When the day
comes, we will take action and—"
"And what?" Saryon cried.
"Kill them? More killing?"
"If you do not acquire the
Darksword from Joram, what do you think they will do to him and to his family,
Father?" Mosiah asked coldly. "The only reason they have left him in
peace thus far is due to the laws of the mundane, which prohibit anyone from
setting foot on Thimhallan. The Technomancers have not yet been ready to reveal
themselves to the mundane.
"All that is
about to change, however. Their leader—this man Kevon Smythe—has gained
great political power among the mundane, who do not know he is a Technomancer
and wouldn't believe it if they were told. Smythe has convinced the heads of
Earth Force that, using the power of the Darksword, the Technomancers can
defeat the Hch'nyv. At this juncture in the war Earth Force is desperate enough
to try anything. Tomorrow, Kevon Smythe, King Garald, and General Boris will
call on you, Father Saryon. They will urge you to go to Joram and, speaking in
the name of all the people of Earth, beg him to hand over the Darksword."
"He will not." Saryon shook
his head, firm with conviction. "You know that, Mosiah. You know
him."
Mosiah hesitated a moment, then said,
"Yes, I know him. And so does King Garald. We are counting on the fact
that he won't give up the Darksword. We don't want the Technomancers to obtain
it."
Saryon blinked in confusion. "You
want me to ask him to give up the sword that you don't want him to give
up?"
"In a way, yes, Father. Simply
ask Joram to show you where the sword is hidden. Once we know where it is, we
will take over. We will retrieve it and keep it in our possession. We will keep
it secret and safe, guard it with our very lives, as we will guard Joram and
his family. Of that, you can rest assured."
Saryon's long hair was quite gray and
very thin and lay on his shoulders, soft as a child's. He had acquired a stoop,
and sometimes a slight palsy made his hands tremble. These physical attributes,
combined with a generally benign expression, caused people to take him for a
weak, gentle old man. There was nothing gentle about him now as he sat bolt
upright, his body rigid, the warmth in his eyes
igniting to fire.
"You've tried before to find the
Darksword, haven't you? Tried and failed!"
Mosiah regarded Saryon steadily. "It would have been better for
Joram if we had been able to discover the sword's location and safely
remove it. The Technomancers would then have no interest in him. Rest assured,
Father, if you do not acquire the Darksword by peaceful means, they will take
it by whatever means they can."
"And what about
the Duuk-tsarith!" Saryon demanded, the fire within
him burning bright. "What means will you use to take the
sword?"
Mosiah rose to his feet. His black
robes fell in folds about him. He clasped his hands together. "Know this,
Father. We will not let the Darksword fall into the hands of the
Technomancers."
"Why not?"
I signed. "What if they can use it to defeat the Hch'nyv? Wouldn't it be
worth it?"
"The Hch'nyv plan
to exterminate humankind, the Technomancers to enslave us. An unhappy
choice, wouldn't you say, Reuven? And, of course, for me and those like me,
there would be no choice at all. And, there are those among the Duuk-tsarith
who think that we may be able to use the sword in the battle against
the Hch'nyv.
"Well, Father?" Mosiah
waited for an answer. "Through King Garald's intercession, we give you
this chance to acquire the Darksword by peaceful means. If you do not, the
Technomancers will take it from Joram by force. Surely your choice is
clear."
'"And what of Joram?" Saryon rose to
face him. "What of his wife and child? He is the most hated man in the
universe. The Duuk-tsarith once pledged his death. Perhaps the only
reason you haven't killed him before now is because you don't know where he's
hidden the sword!"
Mosiah's face was stern, pale.
"We will protect Joram—"
Saryon gazed steadily at the Enforcer.
"Will you? And what about the rest of our people? How many countless
thousands have vowed to kill Joram and his wife and child on sight?"
"How many people will the Hch'nyv
kill?" Mosiah countered. "You speak of /oram's child, Father. What of
the millions of innocent children who will die if we lose the battle against
the Hch'nyv? And we are losing, Father! Every day they draw nearer
Earth. We must have the sword! We must!"
Saryon sighed. The fire died within
him. He seemed suddenly very old, very frail and feeble. He sank back down into
his chair, rested his head in his hands. "I don't know. I can't
promise."
Mosiah frowned, appeared prepared to
add to his arguments.
I rose from my chair, confronted the
Enforcer.
"My master is very tired,
sir," I signed. "It is time you left."
Mosiah glanced from one of us to the
other.
"This has been an unnerving
experience for you both," he said. "You're not thinking clearly. Go
to bed, Father. Sleep on your decision. The Almin grant that it be the right
one."
To our intense astonishment, two Duuk-tsarith materialized. Black-hooded,
black-robed, faces hidden, they appeared, one on either side of Mosiah.
Bodyguards,
reinforcements, witnesses . . . Perhaps all of these. Certainly they had
been here this entire time, watching, guarding, protecting, spying. The three
formed a triangle. They raised their hands, each placed the palm of one hand on
the palm of the hand of the person beside him. Thus linked, their power merged,
they vanished.
Saryon and I stared at the place where
they had been standing, both of us shaken and disturbed.
"They planned this!" I signed, when
I was over my shock enough to be able to give expression to my thoughts.
"They had advance knowledge that the Technomancers were coming here this
night. King Garald could have sent us warning, told us to leave."
"But he didn't. Yes,
Reuven," Saryon agreed. "It was all staged for our benefit, to make
us fear the Technomancers and force us to join sides with the Duuk-tsarith.
"Do you know, Reuven?"
my master added, glancing at the chair in which Mosiah had been sitting.
"I grieve for him. He was Joram's friend, when it was not easy to be
Joram's friend. He was loyal to Joram, even to death. Now he has become like
all the rest. Joram is alone now. Very much alone."
"He has you," I said,
touching my master very gently on his breast.
Saryon looked at me. The sorrow and
anguish on his pale and haggard face brought tears to my eyes.
"Does he, Reuven? How can I say
no to them? How can I turn them down?" He stood up, leaning heavily upon
the chair. "I am going to bed."
I bid him have a good night, though I
knew that was impossible. Taking my computer, I went up to my room and entered
all that had happened while the incidents were still fresh in my mind. Then I
lay down, but I could not sleep.
Every time I drifted off, I saw, once
again, my spirit rise from my body. And I was afraid that next time, it would
not know how to return.
CHAPTER FIVE
"What you did was right, my son. Always believe that! And always know that I love you and honor you."
SARYON'S FAREWELL TO JORAM; TRIUMPH OF THE DARKS WORD
The next morning, quite early, an army of
police entered our neighborhood and took over our quiet row of flats. Arriving
shortly after the police was a cadre of reporters in huge vans with various
gadgets all pointing skyward.
I can only imagine what the neighbors
thought. Again it struck me as odd, how the human mind dwells on the
most inconsequential issues at times of crisis. While I was busily engaged in
preparing our dwelling to receive three such notable dignitaries— the three
most powerful men in the world—my biggest worry was how we were going to
explain this to Mrs. Mumford, who lived in the flat across the street.
She was (or thought she was) the
conductor of the orchestra of our lives here on our street and nothing was
supposed to happen—be it divorce or a case of breaking and entering—without the
wave of her baton.
So far she had left Saryon and me in
peace, our lives being, up until this juncture, extremely uninteresting. Now I
could see her pinched, inquisitive face pressed close against the glass of her
living-room window, avid with frustration and curiosity. She even made a
tentative foray out into the street, to accost a policeman. I don't know what
he told her, but she dashed like a rabbit to the home of her assistant
conductor, Mrs. Billingsgate, and now two faces pressed against the latter's
living-room window. They'd be pressed against our front door tomorrow.
I was arranging some
last-of-the-season roses in a vase, and trying to think what we would say to
our neighbors in the way of explanation, when Saryon entered the room. The idle
curiosity of two snoopy old ladies vanished from my mind.
My master had not risen for breakfast,
nor had I disturbed him. Knowing he had been up late, I left him to sleep as
long as he could. He didn't look to have slept a moment. He had aged twenty
years during the night; his face was bleak and drawn, his stoop more
pronounced. He peered about the room vacantly and smiled and thanked me for
tidying up, but I knew well that he wasn't seeing any of it.
He went to the kitchen. I brewed tea
and brought him buttered toast. He stared hopelessly at the toast, but he drank
his tea.
"Sit down, Reuven," he said
in his quiet, gentle manner. "I have made a decision."
I sat down, hoping to persuade him to
eat. At that moment the doorbell rang, and at the same time there was a knock
on the back door. I gave my master a helpless glance, and with a wry smile and
a shrug, he went to answer the front door while I took care of the back.
The army of policemen, having secured
the street, now moved into our house. A woman in a business suit, who said she
was head of Earth Force security, took charge of Saryon and me, telling us that
her people would be searching and securing the premises. She marched us back
into the kitchen, sat us down, and laid out The Plan. A team of cool-eyed,
professional, and thorough people moved in behind her, bringing with them
cool-eyed, professional dogs.
I could soon hear them
upstairs, down in the cellar, and in every room in the house. Whether or not
they found any more green-glowing devices I do not know. I assume they did,
they found everything else, including a half-eaten biscuit from beneath a couch
cushion, which one of the men politely handed over to me. I offered it to his
dog, who was, however, far too professional to accept
such treats while on the job.
Seeing that Saryon's thoughts were
turned inward and that he was not paying the slightest bit of attention to The
Plan, I devoted myself to listening and understanding what it was we were to
do. All the while I wondered what decision he had made.
"His Majesty King Garald and
General Boris and their aides and entourage will arrive in the same vehicle at
precisely thirteen hundred hours. The Right Honorable Kevon Smythe and his
aides and entourage will travel in a second vehicle and will arrive at
precisely thirteen-thirty. They will all depart at fourteen hundred."
Pardon me, ma'am. I started to
write my words on a tablet, which I usually kept with me, but she indicated
that she understood sign language, for which I was grateful. "How many
aides and entourage will there be?"
I was thinking of our small living
room and wondering where on earth we would put them all. Also if we would be
expected to serve tea. If so, I was going to have to make a run to the store!
She reassured me. We were not to worry
about a thing. She and her staff would handle all the arrangements. I could
tell, by the sounds of furniture scraping over the floor, that the living room
was being adjusted.
At this point Saryon, with a blink and
a sigh, rose from the table, and with a slight bow and a vague smile for the
woman— I'm convinced he had no idea who she was or why she was there—he left,
saying something to the effect that he would be in his study and to call him
when it was time.
The woman frowned, displeased.
"He appears completely insensible to the fact that he is being paid a
great honor. For such eminent and important figures to completely rearrange
their schedules, and travel—some of them—halfway around the world, all to honor
this gentleman on his birthday! . . . Well! It seems to me that he should be
exhibiting far more gratitude."
His birthday! I had forgotten, in all
the turmoil, that this date corresponded approximately to the date he had been
born in Thimhallan. I was the one who had figured it all out (Saryon would have
never bothered) and I had, in fact, planned a small celebration for us that
evening. His gift, a new chessboard, with figures formed of dragons and
griffins and other supposedly mythic animals, was neatly wrapped upstairs in my
room. I wondered how anyone else knew it was his birthday, for we had shared
this with no one. Then I remembered the green-glowing eavesdropping devices.
So this was to be the excuse—visiting
the old catalyst on his birthday. How fortunate for them that it fell on this
date. I wondered what other excuse they would have cooked up, had this one not
been conveniently provided. I was extremely angry, more angered at this than at
the invasion of our house by the silver-robed Technomancers.
It is, sometimes, a blessing to be
mute. Had I the gift of speech, I would have used it to lash out at this woman
and probably would have spoiled everything. As it was, being forced to sign my
words, I had time to consider them. I could see, on reflection,
that it was wisdom on the part of the King and the General to keep the
true nature of this meeting secret.
"You must forgive Saryon," I
signed to the woman. "My master is a very humble man, and completely
overwhelmed by such a great honor, to the point where he is dazed by all the
attention. He feels himself very unworthy and he deplores all the fuss and
bother."
She was somewhat mollified by this,
and we went over the rest of the details. The guests would be staying one hour,
no more, and fortunately, there would be no need to serve them tea. She hinted
that Saryon might want to change out of the brown robes he was wearing—the
robes of a catalyst, such as he had worn all his life—and into a suit, and that
it would be well if I also changed out of my blue jeans into something more
appropriate to the occasion. I replied that neither of us owned a suit, at
which point she gave up on us both and left to go check on how things were
proceeding.
I went to my master's study, to inform
him that it was his birthday, which I was sure he had forgotten. I made more
hot toast and took a plate of it and the tea with me.
I explained everything—rather
heatedly, I'm afraid. Saryon regarded my flashing hands with a weary, indulgent
smile and shook his head.
"Intrigue.
Politics. All of them were born into the game. They live in the game. They have
no idea how to leave the game and so they will play the game until they die."
He sighed again and absentmindedly ate the toast. "Even Prince Garald.
King Garald, I should say. He held himself above it, when he was young. But I
suppose it's like quicksand. It sucks even good men down."
"Father," I asked him,
"what decision have you made?"
He did not speak aloud, but signed
back to me, "The men were just in this room, Reuven. For all we know, they
may have planted their electronic ears and eyes in this room. And there may be
others watching, listening, as well."
I remembered the two
Duuk-tsarith who had appeared out of the air of our kitchen, and
I understood. It seemed strange to me to think that there might be a dozen
people crowded into that small study and my master and I the only two visible.
I felt nervous when I walked out, returning the plate to the kitchen. I kept fearing I would bump into one of them.
The dignitaries arrived precisely on
time. First came the black limousine with flags of Thimhallan flying and the
royal coat of arms upon the door. Mrs. Mumford and Mrs. Billingsgate had, by
this time, abandoned all pretense. They were standing
on their front doorstoops, openmouthed and jabbering. I couldn't help but feel
a swelling of pride as His Majesty, dressed quite conservatively in a dark
suit, but wearing his medallions and ceremonial sash, accompanied by the
General in his uniform with all his medals and ribbons, stepped out of the
limo. Aides trailed after them. Soldiers came to stiff attention and saluted.
Mrs. Mumford and Mrs. Billingsgate stared until I thought it likely they might
strain something.
My pride advanced a step further as I
imagined having tea with the two women tomorrow, explaining, with suitable
modesty, how the King was an old friend of my master's; the General once a
worthy adversary. It was a harmless, if vain, fantasy—one that unfortunately
never came about. I was never to see either of our neighbors again.
King and General entered our house,
where Saryon and I both waited with extreme trepidation. My master knew these
men were going to put enormous pressure on him and he feared this meeting. I
was nervous, for Saryon's sake, but I must admit that I was looking forward to
seeing once again two people whom I had written about, especially the King, who
had once had such a notable effect on Joram's life.
King Garald had been Prince Garald
then. Of him I had written:
The beauty of the voice matched the features
of the face, delicately crafted without being weak. The eyes were large and
intelligent. The mouth was firm, the lines about it indicative of smiling and
laughter. The chin was strong without arrogance, the cheekbones high and
pronounced.
My
description, taken from my early memories and Saryon's account, was accurate,
even now, when the King was in his middle years. The lines around the firm
mouth had darkened, graven by sorrow and suffering and wearisome toil. But when
the mouth smiled, the lines softened. The smile was warm and genuine, the
source of its warmth coming from deep within. I saw at once how this man had
won the respect and perhaps even the affection of the sullen, obdurate boy
Joram.
Saryon started to bow, but Garald took
my master's hand and clasped it in both his own.
"Father Saryon," he said,
"let me be the one who does you reverence."
And the King bowed to my master.
Between pleasure and confusion, Saryon
was completely taken aback. His fears and trepidation melted in the warmth of
the King's smile. He stammered and blushed and could only protest incoherently
that His Majesty did him far too much honor. Garald, seeing my master's
embarrassment, said something light and inconsequential, to put them both at
ease.
Saryon gazed at the King, now without
restraint, and clasped his hand and said over and over with true pleasure,
"How do you do, Your Highness? How do you do?"
"I could be better,
Father," the King replied, and the lines on his face deepened and
darkened. "Times are very difficult, right now. You remember James
Boris?"
But the spell was broken. Garald had
lifted, for one moment, the burden from my master's shoulders, only to cast it
back on the next. James Boris—short, square-shouldered, solid as one of his own
tanks—was a good man, a good soldier. He had been merciful, in Thimhallan,
when, by rights, he could have been vengeful. He was genuinely pleased to see
Saryon and shook hands with my master quite cordially. So cordially that Saryon
winced as he smiled. But James Boris and his army represented Thimhallan's
doom. He could not help but be a bleak omen.
"General Boris, welcome to my
home," Saryon said gravely.
He led the way into the living room,
the move being an absolute necessity, for four of us were a tight fit in the
small entryway and the aides and entourage were forced to camp out on the front
lawn. In the living room, Saryon presented me. The King and the General both
made polite comments on my work in writing the history of the Darksword. The
King, with his innate charm, relaxed into another of those warm and disarming
smiles and told me he thought my portrayal of him far too flattering.
"Not half so flattering, Your
Majesty," I signed and Saryon translated, "as some would have
had me make it." I cast a fond glance at my master. "I had to dig
very hard to discover some human flaws in you, to make you an interesting and
believable character."
"I have flaws enough, the Almin
knows," Garald said with a slight smile, adding, "Several of my staff
members have taken a great interest in your work, Reuven. Perhaps you would be
so kind as to do them the favor of answering their questions while your master
and the General and I talk over old times."
I admired and appreciated the smooth
way he was getting rid of me. Rising to my feet, I was about to leave when
Saryon reached out a hand and clasped me by the wrist.
"Reuven is in my
confidence."
Garald and General Boris exchanged
looks. The General gave a slight nod, and the King responded with a nod in his
turn.
"Very well.
General, if you please?"
The General went to the entrance to
the living room, spoke a few words to a member of his
staff. The soldier gestured to several of his men and they departed, leaving
the four of us in the room. I heard booted footsteps resound throughout the
house, making one last check, then the booted footsteps departed and the front
door closed. I saw, through the window, the soldiers deploying, securing the
area.
Though four of us
remained in the house, it seemed empty and alone, the house of a stranger who
has moved away. A chill raised my flesh. It was as if we had already left
this house, never to return.
Of the four of us, Saryon was the most
at ease. His decision made, he was calm, gracious, and—oddly enough, with a
King and General in attendance—it was my master who was in command of the
situation.
In fact, when Garald was about to
speak, Saryon interrupted him.
"Your Majesty, your emissary
Mosiah explained matters quite clearly to me last night. The visit from the
Technomancers was also quite instructive."
At this, King Garald shifted
uncomfortably on the couch and would have again spoken, but Saryon continued
on, placid and imperturbable.
"I have reached a tentative
decision," Saryon said. "I need more information before I can make my
decision final. I hope you two gentlemen, as well as the gentleman who is expected
to arrive later, will be able to provide it."
"About the one expected
later," General Boris said. "There are a few things you should know,
Father, in regard to Kevon Smythe."
"I know quite a bit about him,
already," Saryon said, with a half smile. "I spent the night
researching him on the World Wide Weave."
"Web," I signed, correcting
him.
"Web," Saryon replied.
"I always get that confused."
The two gentlemen seemed amazed. If
they knew Saryon at all, they should not have been. Though the technology of
the combustible engine left him baffled, he had adapted to the com--puter world
like a duck to water.
"I tapped into various
sources," he continued, and I suppressed a smile, for I knew now he was
innocently showing off. "I read articles on Smythe written by political
analysts. I read newspaper reports, and even scanned a biography, which is in
the works. Not one of these mentioned that Kevon Smythe is a
Technomancer."
"Of course not, Father,"
said Garald. "He has taken care to keep that part of his life secret. And,
after all, who would believe it? Only those of us who were born and raised on
Thimhallan. And," he added, including General Boris, "those who once
visited there. Surely, you don't doubt it! After last night . . ."
"Indeed, Your
Majesty." Saryon was calm. "As I said, last night was most
instructive. All the accounts of Kevon Smythe speak of his ambition, his
meteoric rise to fortune and fame, his charismatic ability to sway people to
his cause. They all marveled at his luck—what they term 'lucky breaks'—that
gained him wealth, or put him in the right place at the right time, or caused
him to make exactly the right decision."
"What they call luck, some of us
call magic," said King Garald.
"How is it possible that no one
knows?" Saryon asked mildly.
"Are you
doubting His Majesty?" General Boris's face flushed.
Garald waved him to silence. "I
can understand Father Saryon's concern. It was difficult for me to believe, at
first. But this is how the Technomancers have long worked in this world.
"You've heard, undoubtedly,
stories of those who practice so-called Black Magic; cults of Satan worshipers,
who don black robes and mutilate animals and dance around graveyards at
"Who would believe that the
businessman in the three-piece suit who is said to be a genius at playing the
stock market uses his magical ability to make himself invisible, sits in on
board meetings of various companies, and thus gains inside information? Who
would believe that the embezzler who left her firm in financial ruin was able
to mislead everyone because of the magical hold she had on their minds?"
It sounded ludicrous, even to me, and
I had seen with my own eyes the silver-robed Technomancers invade our house.
King Garald grew bitter. "When I
first discovered that the Four Cults of Dark Magic still existed, I tried to
warn people in Earth government. Even my best friend did not believe me."
He looked at James Boris, who smiled ruefully and shook his head. "I will
not waste time by relating what occurred that finally convinced him. It nearly
cost us both our lives, but—in the end—he believed. The General suggested that
I was wasting my time and energy attempting to fight the Technomancers in the
open. I must adopt their own strategy."
"Mosiah told you he had been one
of them," said General Boris. "Did he tell you that he volunteered to
become one of them? To go undercover? To risk his life
ferreting out their dark secrets?"
"No," said Saryon,
and he looked relieved. "No, he did not."
"Through him we found out much
about their organization; we discovered the true nature of this 'chemical
factory' which they operate and for which"—King Garald smiled
wryly—"they even receive lucrative government grants!"
"You work with Smythe,"
Saryon said. "You do not denounce him."
"We have no choice," said
King Garald, and his voice was grim and harsh. "He holds our people and
the people of Earth hostage."
"The Technomancers have
infiltrated every part of the military," said General Boris. "They do
not commit sabotage. Oh, no. They are far too clever for that. They have made
themselves indispensable to us. Because of their power and their skill, we are
holding our own against the Hch'nyv. Should they withdraw their magical
assistance—worse yet, should they turn their magic against us—we would be
lost."
"How do they do this?"
Saryon was perplexed.
"I'll give a very simple example.
We have a torpedo that has an electronic brain. We can program that brain to
aim the torpedo to hit its target. The enemy detects the torpedo, sends out an
electronic signal which scrambles its brain. But they can't send out a signal
to scramble magic. A Technomancer, magically guiding that torpedo, will send it
unerringly to its target.
"And if"—General Boris's
voice dropped—"they were to magically alter that torpedo's programming,
cause it to turn and strike a different target. Not an enemy target . .
." He shrugged his massive shoulders.
"From what they have told us,
they control nuclear armaments in the same way," said King Garald. "From
our investigations, we have reason to believe that they are telling the
truth."
"To put it another way, we dare
not call their bluff," said the General bluntly.
"I don't see how the Darksword
could possibly aid you in any way against these people," said Saryon, and
I was convinced then that I knew his decision.
"Frankly, we don't either,"
said King Garald.
"Then why—"
"Because they fear it," said
the King. "We don't know why. We don't know what they've found out or how
they found out, but they have received a warning from their researchers, those
called the D'karn-kair, that the Darksword could be both an asset to
them and a danger."
Saryon shook his head.
Garald regarded him silently, then said, "There is another reason."
"I thought as much," said
Saryon, adding dryly, "You would not have gone to this much trouble to
recruit me otherwise."
"No one knows about this except
the Duuk-tsarith, and they, as always, are sworn by their oaths of
loyalty to secrecy. Otherwise, Mosiah would have told you last night. Do you
remember Bishop Radisovik, whom you used to know as Cardinal Radis-ovik?"
"Yes, yes. I remember. A good,
sensible man. So he is Bishop now. Excellent!" said Saryon.
"The Bishop was working alone in
his study one day when he sensed someone in the room with him. He lifted his
head and was astonished to find a woman seated in a chair in front of his desk.
Now this was a very unusual occurrence, for the Bishop's secretary has strict
orders never to introduce anyone into the Bishop's office without an
appointment.
"Fearing that perhaps the woman
was there to do him some type of harm, the Bishop talked to her pleasantly, all
the while using a secret button, hidden beneath his desk, to alert the guards.
"The button apparently did not
work. No guards appeared. The woman, however, assured the Bishop that he had no
reason to be afraid.
" 'I
have come to give you information,' she said. 'First, I suggest that you
discontinue your war against the Hch'nyv. You have no chance—absolutely none—of
defeating the aliens. They are far too strong and too powerful. You have seen
only a smattering of their entire force, which numbers in the billions of
billions. They will not negotiate with you. They have no need. They intend to destroy
you and they will succeed.'
"The Bishop was astonished. The
woman, he said, was very calm and imparted this terrible information in a tone
which left no doubt in his mind but that she spoke the truth.
" 'Excuse
me, madam,' the Bishop said, 'but who are you? Whom do you represent?'
"She smiled at him and said,
'Someone very close to you, who takes a personal interest in you.' Then she
continued, telling him, 'You and the people of Earth and Thimhallan have one
chance for survival. The Darksword destroyed the world. It may now be used to
save it.'
" 'But
the Darksword no longer exists,' Bishop Radisovik protested. 'It was itself
destroyed.'
" 'It
has been forged anew. Offer it to Thimhallan's maker and find salvation.'
"At that moment the Bishop's
intercom buzzed. He turned to answer it, and when he looked back, the woman was
gone. He had not heard her leave, any more than he had heard her enter. He
questioned his secretary and the building's security people, who said that no
one had either gone into or come out of the Bishop's office. The button on the
desk was discovered to be operational. No one could say why they hadn't heard
the alarm.
"What was truly remarkable,"
Garald added, "is that the security cameras in the building show no
evidence of this woman, not even the camera which is placed in the Bishop's
office. Even stranger—at that point in time we knew nothing of the fact that
Smythe had been to visit Joram or that Joram had, as the woman said, forged a
new Darksword."
"To what does the Bishop
attribute this visit, then?" Saryon asked.
Garald hesitated, then
replied, "Judging from what the woman said, about representing someone
very close to the Bishop, someone who takes a personal interest in him, the
Bishop is convinced that he was visited by an agent of the Almin. An angel, if
you will."
I noted that General Boris shifted in
his chair and looked extremely embarrassed and uncomfortable.
"An agent, maybe," said the
General. "CIA, Interpol, Her Majesty's Secret Service, FBI. But not of
God."
"How very interesting," said
Saryon, and I could see him mulling over this in his mind.
"Whoever brought us this
information, our own researchers now want that sword," said General Boris.
"To determine if there really is some way we can use it to stop the
Hch'nyv."
"But that wasn't what the an—the woman said," Saryon interposed. "She
said that the sword must be returned to Thimhal-lan's maker."
General Boris had the look on his face
of a man indulging a child's whim to hear a fairy tale. "Who is that
supposed to be— Merlyn? You find him, Father, and I'll give him the
Darksword."
Saryon appeared very stern,
considering this sacrilegious.
"At the very least," said
King Garald in mollifying tones, "we must keep the Darksword out of the
hands of the Techno-mancers."
Saryon now appeared troubled, as if he
were rethinking an already-thought-out determination. The other two would have
pressed him further, had not an enormous black limousine rolled up at that
moment.
General Boris put his hand to his ear.
"I see it," he said,
speaking to an aide through a communicator. The General looked around grimly at
us, adding, "Smythe is here."
CHAPTER SIX
"This is my magic," said Joram,
his gaze going to the sword lying on the floor.
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
'aryon and I had watched a performance of
Gounod's Faust on the BBC recently and Mephistopheles was much in my
mind as I waited to meet the head of the Technomancers. Smythe certainly did
not look the part of Mephistopheles, being of medium height with flaming red
hair and a smattering of freckles across his nose. But in the light blue eyes, that were glittering and changeable and cold as diamond, was
the reputed charm which the devil purportedly possesses and which he uses to
tempt mankind to its downfall.
Smythe was witty and effervescent and
brought light and air into our house, which seemed gloomy and suffocating by
contrast. He undoubtedly knew what terrible things the King and the General had
been saying about him and he didn't care. Smythe spoke no word in his own
defense, he said nothing against either of them. In fact, he greeted them both
with deference and pleasure. In their cold and stilted greeting of him, they
seemed, by contrast, ungracious, bitter, twisted.
"Father Saryon." Kevon
Smythe took my master's hand and a radiance shone from
him that engulfed Saryon, who actually blinked, as if looking into a blinding
light. "I am honored to meet you at long last. I have heard much of you,
all good, and of Joram. It is a subject that fascinates me. Tell me,
Father," he said as he accepted a proffered seat in a chair, not on the
couch where sat the other two, stiff and upright. "Tell me the story of
Joram and of the Darksword. I know bits of it, but I would like to hear it from
your own lips.
"I am sorry to say, Reuven,"
he added, looking at me, "that I have not read your account, of which I've
had the most favorable reports. My time is such that it does not give me
leisure to read as much as I would like. Your books are in a prominent place in
my library, and someday, when the pressures of leadership are removed, I look
forward to reading them."
It was very odd, but I felt a glow of
pleasure suffuse me, as if he had paid my books the best of compliments,
when—in bald truth—part of me knew perfectly well that he had undoubtedly
received distilled accounts of what was in the books from his subordinates and
that, though he might indeed own them, he had no intention of ever looking at them.
What was even stranger was that he was
aware of the dichotomy of feelings he produced in others and that he did so on
purpose. I was fascinated and repulsed at the same time. In his presence, all
other men, including the King and the General, appeared petty and ordinary. And
although I liked and trusted them and I did not like and did not trust him, I
had the uneasy impression that if he called me, I would follow.
Saryon felt the same. I knew because
he was talking about Joram, something he was always very reluctant to do with
any stranger.
". . . Thimhallan was founded by
the wizard Merlyn as a land where those blessed with the art of magic could
live in peace, using that art to create beautiful things. There were Nine
Mysteries of Life present in the world, then. Each person born into that world
was gifted with one of these mysteries."
Kevon Smythe's lips parted, he
whispered beneath his breath the number "thirteen" and a chill went
over me. The Four Dark Cults, who had remained behind, would have made the
number thirteen.
Saryon, unconscious of the
interruption, continued on. "There are Nine Mysteries, eight of them deal
with Life or Magic, for, in the world of Thimhallan, Life is Magic.
Everything that exists in this land exists either by the will of the Almin, who
placed it here before even the ancients arrived, or has since been either
'shaped, formed, summoned, or conjured,' these being the four Laws of Nature.
These Laws are controlled through at least one of the eight of the Mysteries:
Time, Spirit, Air, Fire, Earth, Water, Shadow, and Life. Of these Mysteries,
only the first five currently survived at the time of the Darksword's creation.
The Mysteries of Time and Spirit were lost during the Iron Wars. With them
vanished the knowledge possessed by the ancients— the ability to divine the
future and the ability to communicate with those who had passed from this life
into Beyond.
"As for the last Mystery, it is
practiced, but only by those who walk in darkness. Known as Death, its other
name is Technology."
"Quaint."
Kevon Smythe was amused. "I was told you people believed something along
those lines. And the other two . . . um . . . Mysteries, you called them. Time
and—what was it— Spirit? They are lost? Perhaps just as well. As Macbeth
discovered, looking into the future is dangerous. Are we doing what was truly
destined or is it a self-fulfilling prophecy? I think it is safer—and more
honest—to be guided by one's vision of the future. Don't you agree,
Father Saryon?"
My master was thoughtful,
introspective. "I don't know," he said at last. "The tragedy
that befell Joram and all of Thimhallan was, in a way, brought about by a
vision of the future—a vision which terrified. Would we have caused our own
destruction if we'd never heard the Prophecy concerning the Dead child?"
"Yes, we would have. So I
believe," said King Garald. "Our downfall began long before Joram was
born, as early as the Iron Wars. Intolerance, prejudice, fear, blind faith,
greed, ambition— these would have destroyed us eventually, with or without
Joram and the Darksword."
He looked pointedly at Kevon Smythe as
he spoke, but if His Majesty meant those words for the edification of Smythe,
His Majesty wasted his breath. Smythe's attention—and perhaps his magic, if
that was what he used to charm—was focused on Saryon, to the exclusion of all
else.
"To me, Thimhallan was symbolized
by Joram's mother, the Empress," said Saryon softly, sadly. "Her
husband refused to admit that she was dead, though all in court knew it. He
kept her corpse animated by magicks. The courtiers bowed, paid homage, gossiped
with her . . . reveled with a lifeless and corrupt shell of something that had
once been alive, vibrant, beautiful. Such a dreadful charade could not have
gone on forever.
"Joram's story is really very
simple. A Prophecy was given immediately following the Iron Wars, which stated:
'There will be born to the royal house one who is dead but will live, who will
die again and live again. And when he returns, he will hold in his hand the
destruction of the world.' Joram was a child of the royal house, born to the
Empress and Emperor of Merilon. He was born Dead—that is, he had no magic in
him at all. I know," said Saryon, with a sigh. "I was present when they
performed the tests on him.
"Bishop Vanya, knowing of and
fearing the Prophecy, ordered that the baby be refused all sustenance. Vanya
took the baby away to die. But the Almin is not so easily thwarted. A madwoman
named Anja found the baby and stole him, took him to the farms near the
Outlands, raised him as her own child.
"Anja knew Joram was deficient in
magic. She knew that if this deficiency were discovered, the Duuk-tsarith would
seize him and that would be the end of him. She taught him sleight-of-hand tricks
so that he could keep up a pretense of possessing magic.
"Joram was raised as a field
magus, a peasant. It was here he met Mosiah, who became Joram's one true
friend. It was also here that, when he was a teenager, Joram killed a man, a
harsh overseer, who had discovered Joram's secret. In an effort to protect her
son, Anja attacked the overseer, who killed her in self-defense. Furious, Joram
killed the overseer.
"Joram fled to the Outlands,
where he was found by the Order of the Ninth Mystery, who were also living out
there—the Technologists. They had broken the laws of Thimhallan, used
Technology to supplement their magic. It was here, among them, that Joram
learned the art of forging metal. It was here he discovered darkstone and its
ability to nullify magic. Joram developed the idea of forging a weapon made of
darkstone, a weapon that would compensate for his lack of magic, a weapon that
would give him the power he craved.
"For reasons of my own, I
assisted him in making the Dark-sword," Saryon said, adding pointedly, for
Smythe's benefit, "Darkstone must be given magical Life through the
intercession of a catalyst. Otherwise, its properties are those of any other
metal."
Smythe was gracious. "How
interesting. Please continue, Father."
Saryon shrugged. "There is not
much more to tell. Rather, there is, but the story is a long one. Suffice to
say, through a series of circumstances, Joram came to learn who he was. He came
to learn of the Prophecy. He was sentenced to death. He could have destroyed
his attackers, but he chose instead to leave the world. He crossed the Border
into what we all thought was the realm of Death. Instead, he traveled to
another part of the planet we know as Thimhallan. Here, he and the woman who
loved him were found by a member of Earth's Border Patrol. He was taken to
Earth and dwelled there for ten years with his wife, Gwendolyn.
"Discovering that there were some
on Earth who were plotting to travel to Thimhallan and conquer it, Joram
returned, bringing the Darksword, to fight those who sought to destroy our
people, our way of life. He was betrayed and would have been assassinated, but
for another strange twist of fate. Realizing that Earth Forces"—Saryon
glanced at General Boris, who was red-faced and extremely
uncomfortable—"were winning and that our people were going to be either
enslaved or slaughtered, Joram chose to end the war. He plunged the Darksword
into the sacred altar, released the magic that was pent up in the Well. The
magic flowed back into the universe. The war ended.
"The magical shell that had been
cast protectively over Thimhallan was broken. The terrible storms that had once
swept the land returned. The people had to be transported to a place of safety,
and so they were brought here, to Earth, and placed in relocation camps. Only
two remained behind: Joram and his wife, Gwendolyn. Now the most hated man in
the universe, Joram knew that his life would be in danger if he ever returned
to Earth. He chose to stay alone on Thimhallan, the world he had destroyed, as
the Prophecy predicted."
Saryon's tale had gone on rather
longer than the half hour Kevon Smythe had allowed for this business. He made
no motion to interrupt, however, nor even glanced at his timepiece, but sat
immovable, completely immersed in the catalyst's story. King Garald and General
Boris, who had lived parts of the story, glanced at their own watches and
fidgeted, yet they would not leave Smythe alone with us and so they were forced
to sit and wait. Looking outside, I saw their aides speaking into handheld
phones, undoubtedly rearranging schedules.
I was just thinking that if they
stayed much longer, we would be expected to offer them something to eat and
drink, and wondering if there were enough biscuits to go around, when Saryon
ended his tale.
"Truly," said Kevon Smythe,
and he appeared to be much affected by the story, "the Darksword is an
interesting object. Its properties should be analyzed, to see of what benefit
it may be to mankind. I know that several theories have been advanced
concerning it. It seems to me important that these theories be tested.
"In one of my corporations, I
have a team of scientists—top professionals in their fields—who are even now
making preparations to study the weapon. They understand"—Smythe glanced
smilingly at the irate King, who was on his feet—"that this artifact is
extremely valuable. These scientists would treat it with the utmost respect,
removing only small portions as necessary for study. Once the testing was completed,
the weapon would be returned to the people formerly of Thimhallan—"
"Like hell you would!"
General Boris stood up as well.
King Garald was livid. "Of
course, we all know that the testing would never be completed, would it,
Smythe? There would always be one more test to perform, one more theory to
either support or deny. Meanwhile you would be using the Dark-sword's
power—"
"For good," said Kevon
Smythe quietly, "as opposed to those, such as your black-robed Enforcers,
who would use it for evil."
King Garald's face muscles contracted
and stiffened, so that when he tried to speak, no words would come through his
fury. Smythe was able to continue.
"Father, it is your duty as one
of the brotherhood of men to persuade Joram of his duty in these troubled and
dangerous times. He used the Darksword to destroy. Let him now redeem himself
and use it to create. Create a better life for us all."
At this, I saw King Garald pause in
his attempt to speak. He was keeping close watch on Saryon. The King knew, as
well as I, that Smythe had made a mistake. His vaunted charm—be it of magical
origin or born in his blood—would not cover his error. He would have done much
better to have read my books, not left his research to underlings. He would
have then known the nature of the man with whom he dealt.
Saryon's face grew shadowed.
But if King Garald thought that he had
gained a victory by his enemy's mistake, he, too, was mistaken. I knew my
master's decision, even before he spoke it. I, alone in that room, was not
surprised.
Saryon rose to his feet. His gaze
encompassed all three men. His voice was rebuking.
"Joram and his wife and child
live alone on Thimhallan now. They are under the protection of Earth Forces.
They are not to be hounded, or bothered, or mistreated in any way. That is the
law." He turned to Kevon Smythe. "You speak very glibly of
redemption, sir. Redemption is the Almin's province. He alone will judge Joram,
not you, not me, not the King, nor any other mortal!"
Saryon took a step backward, raised
his head, regarded them all with a gaze that was
steady and unwavering. "I have made my decision. I made it last night. I
will not go to Joram. I will not be part of any attempt to trick
him into revealing the whereabouts of the Darksword. He has suffered enough.
Let him live out the remainder of his days in peace."
The three men were bitter enemies, yet
they had the same desire. They glanced at each other.
Kevon Smythe spoke. "The Hch'nyv
will not permit Joram to live in peace."
"They will slay him,"
General Boris said, "as they have already slain tens of thousands of our
people. All the outposts that remain in our system are being evacuated, their
people brought back to Earth for protection. Our fleet is too decimated to be divided.
Here, on Earth, we will make our final stand against the invaders."
Saryon regarded them gravely,
troubled. "I had not heard the situation was that critical."
Garald sighed. "We have made a
mistake with you, Father. We have put our worst argument first and we have done
it badly. Now you don't trust us, and I can't say that I blame you. But very
few people on Earth know just how desperate the situation is. We want to keep
it that way, for as long as possible."
"The panic that would follow, the
damage it would do our cause, is incalculable," said the General. "We
need troops prepared to fight the enemy, not used to quell riots in the
streets."
"What you have heard here,
Father," said Kevon Smythe, "you must not repeat, except to one
person, and that is Joram. You may tell him the truth, if only to make him
understand the danger. Then it is my hope and my prayer, Father, that he will
relinquish the Darksword willingly—to whomever he chooses. We are fighting for
the same cause, after all."
He looked like a saint, in his
self-sacrificing humility, and the King and General came off shabbily by
contrast. Yet the charm, once dispelled, could not be recast.
Saryon sank down in his chair. He
looked ill from worry and anxiety. It wasn't proper etiquette or protocol, but
I was past caring. Ignoring the three, I went to Saryon and, leaning over his
chair, asked him with a sign if I should bring him some tea.
He smiled at me and thanked me, shook
his head no. He kept his hand on mine, however, indicating that I was to remain
at his side. He sat and thought a long time, in distraught, unhappy silence.
The King and General returned to their
seats. Smythe had not left his. All three tried to look sympathetic, but they
could none of them hide an air of smugness. They were certain they had won.
At length, Saryon raised his head.
"I will go to Joram," he said quietly. "I will tell him what you
have told me. I will warn him that he and his family are in danger and that
they should evacuate to Earth. I will say nothing to him of the
Darksword. If he brings it with him, you may each go to him and present your
own need. If he does not, then you may each go to Thimhallan—once Joram and his
family have departed—and search for it."
It was a victory for them—of sorts.
They were wise enough not to continue to argue or cajole.
"And now, gentlemen," said
Saryon, "you have been kept here past your time. I don't mean to seem
rude, but I have travel arrangements to make—"
"All that has been taken care of
for you, Father," said General Boris, adding lamely, "on the ... er
... off chance that you would decide to make this trip."
"How convenient," said
Saryon, and one corner of his mouth twitched.
We were to leave that night.
One of the General's aides would remain with us and assist us with packing,
drive us to the spaceport, escort us on board ship.
Kevon Smythe left with gracious words
and seemed to take the sunlight with him. General Boris hurried out, relieved
to have it all over with, and was immediately surrounded by his staff, who had
been impatiently awaiting his release. King Garald remained a moment behind.
Saryon and I had gone to the door to
see our guests out. King Garald looked almost as ill as my master, and he, at
least, had the grace to apologize.
"I am sorry to put this burden on
you, Father," he said. "But what could I do? You've met the
man." We knew who he meant. There was no need to name him. "What
could I do?" he repeated.
"You could have faith, Your
Majesty," said Saryon gently.
King Garald smiled, then. Turning to Saryon, there on the doorstoop, the
King reached out his hand and clasped my master's. "I do, Father. I have
faith in you."
Saryon was so extremely startled by
this response that it was difficult for me to hide my smile. Garald left,
walking tall, with his shoulders back; a kingly air. General Boris was waiting
in the limousine. Kevon Smythe had already departed.
Saryon and I ducked hastily back
inside, narrowly avoiding a mob of reporters, who clamored for interviews. The
General's aide was skilled in handling the press, and all in all, they did not
give us too much trouble. After breaking only one window and trampling the
flower beds, they eventually left us in peace. I saw several interviewing Mrs.
Mumford.
I suppose that a birthday celebration
for one elderly cleric was not considered worth the expenditure of time and
money. Had they known the true story, they would have stormed the house.
Another of the General's aides was in
the study, on the phone, confirming and updating arrangements for our transport
to Thimhallan.
Saryon paused a moment in the hallway.
Noting the expression on his face, I touched his arm, drew his attention.
"You did the right thing," I
signed, and added, a little teasingly, I'm afraid, hoping to cheer his mood.
"You must have faith."
He smiled, but it was a wan, pale
smile. "Yes, Reuven. So I must."
Sighing, his head bowed, he went to
his room to prepare for our journey.
CHAPTER SEVEN
The Watchers had guarded the Border of Thimhallan for centuries. It was their enforced task, through sleepless night and dreary day, to keep watch along the boundary that separated the magical realm from whatever lay Beyond.
What did lie Beyond?
TRIUMPH OF THE DARKSWORD
I will
spare you the details of our journey, which was, I suppose, the same as any
other interplanetary flight, with the exception that we were in a military ship
with a military escort. For me, the trip into space was awe-inspiring and
exciting. This was only my second flight and the first I remembered clearly. I
had only the vaguest recollection of leaving Thimhallan, traveling on the
evacuation ships.
Saryon kept to his quarters, on the
pretext that he had work to do. He was, as I believe I have neglected to
mention, developing a mathematical theorem having to do with light-wave
particles or something of the sort. Not being mathematically inclined, I knew
little about it. The moment he and his tutor began to discuss it, I began to
feel a throbbing in my temples and was glad to leave. He claimed to be working
on this, but every time I entered his room, to see if he needed anything, I
found him staring out the porthole at the stars gliding past us.
He was reliving his life in Merilon, I
guessed. Maybe he was once more in the court of the faerie queen or standing, a
stone statue, on the border of Beyond. The past was for him both painful and
blessed. At the expression on his face, I silently withdrew, my heart aching.
We landed on the world he and I had
known as Thimhallan, the first ship from Earth in twenty years, not counting
those that arrived only to off-load supplies to the station then left again,
and not counting those that arrived secretly, carrying the Duuk-tsarith and
the Technomancers.
Saryon remained alone in his quarters
for so long after the ship settled to the ground that I began to think he had
reconsidered his decision, that he was not going to
talk to Joram after all. The General's aide was exceedingly worried and
panicked calls were made to both General Boris and King Garald. Their images
were on-screen, prepared to badger and plead, when Saryon appeared.
Motioning me to follow him, he walked
past the aide without a word, did not even glance at the screens. He moved so
swiftly through the ship that I barely had time to grab the knapsack in which I
had packed a few necessaries for us both and hurry
after him.
By the beatific expression on his
face, Saryon was lifted far above the remembrance of such things as clean
socks, bottled water, and shaving kits. Blessing the forethought which had
prompted me to pack for both of us, I slung the knapsack over my shoulders and
was following at his heels when he reached the hatch.
Whatever doubts he may have
entertained were gone. The weight of his responsibility and even the weight of
the intervening years had fallen from him. This was more than a dream come
true, for my master. He had never dared dream the dream. He had never thought
this reunion would take place. He had believed that Joram—in his self-imposed
exile—was lost to him forever.
When the hatch opened, Saryon shot out
the doorway and dashed down the ramp, his robes flapping wildly about his
ankles. I clattered down behind, struggling with the heavy knapsack, which was
throwing me off balance. We were met at the foot of the ramp by a contingent of
people from the research station. Saryon halted only because it was either stop
or run them over.
He paid them very little attention,
however; his hungry gaze going above their heads to the land beyond, a land
that, as he had known it, would have been shrouded in magical, protective mist.
The mist was gone. The land was now laid bare for all to see.
Saryon tried to see it, tried to see
everything he could of his homeland. Craning his neck and peering above the
heads of the group, he made only brief and generally incomprehensible
statements and, at length, gave up all attempts at politeness. He walked off,
leaving the commander and the urgent message he was trying to impart in
mid-sentence.
Saryon walked across the rock-strewn
ground, walked toward the land of his birth.
The base commander would have gone
after him, but I had seen the tears on my master's face. I intervened,
indicating to the commander by emphatic signs that Saryon wanted to be left
alone. The General's aide had arrived by now. She and the commander and I made
the plans necessary for our stay.
"You must make him
understand," said the base commander, frustrated. "As I was
attempting to tell the priest, we received our orders to pull out yesterday,
evacuate the station. So don't linger. Remind the priest he's not on holiday.
The last ship leaves seventy-two hours from now."
I was shocked. I stared at the man,
who understood my wordless question.
"Yes. The Hch'nyv are that close,"
he said grimly. "We'll be taking you and the prisoner and his family out
of here. I guess you and the priest there are responsible for making him see
reason, eh?"
"Well, I don't envy you."
The commander turned his gaze toward the distant hills. "That Joram—he's
gone insane, if you ask me. He was like a wild man when we went up there to
rescue Senator Smythe. Not but what he had cause, I grant you. Still, no harm
was done and there was Joram standing over the poor Senator, fists clenched,
seeming ready to bash the life out of him. And such a look Joram gave me, when
I asked him if his wife and daughter were well? He fair roasted me with those
black eyes of his and told me that the health of his family was none of my
concern. No, sir. I don't envy you and the priest. I recommend an armed
escort."
I knew that would be out of the
question, as far as Saryon was concerned, and so did the General's aide.
"They do not have far to travel
and the catalyst is familiar with this land," she told the base commander.
"The priest is an old friend of Joram's. They will not be in any danger.
And they will have communicators in the air car, which they can use should they
run into any unforeseen circumstances."
She gave me a sideways glance as she
said this, to see my reaction. I guessed then that we would have escorts—of an
unseen kind. The Duuk-tsarith, perhaps hidden in their folds of time,
would be guarding us.
"What about a driver?" asked
the commander.
"I will drive—" the aide
began.
I shook my head emphatically and
tapped myself on the chest. On my handheld computer, I typed out, I will
drive.
"Can you?" the aide
asked me, clearly dubious.
Yes, I replied stoutly, which
was almost the truth.
I had driven an air car once before,
at an amusement park, and had just about got the hang of it. It was the other
cars, coming every which way at me, which had confused me and caused my driving
to be slightly erratic. If mine was the only air car in this part of the solar
system, I figured I would be fairly safe.
Besides—I held up the computer
for the aide to see what I had written—you know that he will not let anyone
else come with us. She did know, but she didn't like it. My guess was that
this had all been arranged—the air car, I mean—with the understanding that she
would drive us, keep an eye on us, make her reports. Haven't you got spies
enough? I thought bitterly, but did not put into words. I had won this round
and could afford to be magnanimous.
"Keep in contact," the base
commander warned. "Circumstances with the enemy could change. And probably not for the better."
The aide returned to the ship, to
complain to the General. The base commander accompanied me to the air car, gave
me quick refresher lessons in operating the thing—lessons which served to
confuse me thoroughly. I tossed the knapsack in the backseat and left the air
car to fetch Saryon, who, in his eagerness, had started walking in the
direction of the distant mountains.
I hadn't taken six steps when the
commander called after me. I turned to see him picking something up off the
ground.
"Here." The commander handed
it to me. "The priest dropped this."
He held out Saryon's leather scrip,
one of the few objects he had brought with him from Thimhallan. I recalled it
well, for it was given an honored place in his study, carefully arranged upon a
small table near his desk. I always knew when Saryon was thinking about Joram
or about the past, for he would rest his hand upon the scrip, his fingers
stroking the worn leather.
I thought it touching that he had
brought the scrip with him, perhaps as a holy relic, to be rededicated. I
couldn't imagine, though—cherishing the scrip as he did—how he had come to
carelessly drop it. Thanking the commander, I placed the scrip in the backseat
along with the knapsack. Then I went to retrieve my master.
"Air car," he said, and gave
me a sharp look. "And who's to be the driver?"
"I am, sir," I signed.
"It's either that or the General's aide will drive us, and I knew you
wouldn't like to have a stranger along."
"I would much prefer that
alternative to being splattered against a tree," said Saryon irritably.
"I have driven an air car before,
sir," I returned.
"In an
amusement park!" Saryon snorted.
I was hoping that in his excitement,
he would have forgotten the circumstances. Apparently not.
"I will go find the General's
aide, sir," I signed, and started to head back toward the ship.
"Wait, Reuven."
I turned around.
"Can you . . . really drive one
of those contraptions?" He cast a nervous glance at the air car.
"Well, sir." I relaxed,
smiled, and shrugged. "I can try."
"All right, then," he said.
"Do you know the way?" I
asked. "Where are we going?"
He looked out again across the
landscape, toward the mountains that rose, snowcapped, on the horizon.
"There," he said. "The
Font. The only building left standing, after the terrible storms broke over the
world with the destruction of the Well of Life. Joram and Gwendolyn took refuge
there, and there, according to King Garald, is where they live still."
We started walking back to the air
car. "We have seventy-two hours," I told him, "before the last
ship leaves."
He gave me the same shocked look I had
given the commander. "So short a time?"
"Yes, sir.
But surely it won't take nearly that long. Once you explain the danger to Joram
. . ."
Saryon was shaking his head. I
wondered if I should tell him what the base commander had said about Joram's
being insane, decided that I would keep that to myself. I did not want to add
to my master's worries. My research on the book had seemed to indicate that
Joram was a manic-depressive and I thought it quite possible that the isolation
of his life, plus the tension created by the arrival of the Technomancers, might
well have driven him to the breaking point.
Reaching the car, I opened the door
for Saryon and saw the leather scrip draped over the backseat. I pointed at it.
"You dropped it," I signed.
"The base commander found it for you."
Saryon stared at the scrip in
perplexity. "I couldn't have dropped it. I didn't bring it. Why would
I?"
"Is it yours?" I asked,
thinking that perhaps it might belong to someone on the base.
Saryon peered closely at it. "It
looks very much like mine. Somewhat newer, perhaps, not quite as worn. Odd.
Such a thing could not come into the possession of anyone on base, because such
a thing has not been made for twenty years! It must be mine, only . . .
Mmmm. How strange."
I reminded him that he had been
distracted and upset, that perhaps he had brought it and not remembered. I also
hinted that his memory had failed him before—he was constantly forgetting where
he put his reading spectacles.
He cheerfully acknowledged that I was
right and admitted that it had crossed his mind to take the scrip, but that he
had been fearful of losing it. He thought that he had put it back in its
accustomed place.
The scrip remained lying on the
backseat. We entered the car and my thoughts centered on trying to remember all
that the commander had told me about the operation of the vehicle. The odd
discovery of the leather scrip passed clean out of my mind. Saryon settled into
the passenger's seat. I assisted him with his seat belt and then fastened my
own. He asked worriedly if there weren't more safety restraints and I said,
with more confidence than I felt, that these would be adequate.
I pushed the ON button. The air car
began to hum. I pushed the button marked JETS. The humming grew louder,
followed by a whoosh of the jets. The air car rose off the ground. Saryon had
fast hold of the door handle.
All was going very smoothly. The car
was drifting upward when Saryon spoke. "Aren't we going too high?" he
asked in a cracked voice.
I shook my head, and taking the wheel,
I pressed on it, intending to level us off.
The wheel was far more sensitive than
I had anticipated, certainly more sensitive than the wheel of the air car in
the amusement park. The car lurched downward and headed at a high rate of speed
straight for the ground.
I jerked back on the wheel, pulled up
the nose. At the same time I inadvertently increased the power and we soared up
and jumped forward, the sudden thrust nearly snapping our necks in the process.
"Almin save us!" Saryon
gasped.
"Amen to that, Father," came a sepulchral voice.
Saryon stared at me and I think it was
in his mind that perhaps the whiplash had miraculously restored my speech. I
shook my head emphatically and motioned with my chin—my hands were gripping the
wheel so tightly that I dared not let go—that the voice had come from the
backseat.
Twisting around, Saryon stared.
"I know that voice," he
muttered. "But it can't be!"
I don't know what I expected—the Duuk-tsarith,
I suppose. Not completely certain how to stop the air car, I kept driving
and at last managed to stabilize it. I cast a quick look in the rearview
mirror.
There was no one in the backseat.
"Ouch! I say!" The voice had
a peevish quality to it now. "This great smelly green bag has fallen on
top of me. I'm being frightfully dented."
Saryon was searching wildly around the
backseat and was now groping about with his hands. "Where? What?"
I managed at last to halt the air car.
I kept the jets on, and we remained floating in the air. Reaching back, I shoved
aside the knapsack.
"Thanks awfully," said the
leather scrip.
CHAPTER EIGHT
"Let me be your fool, sire. You need
one, I assure
you."
"Why, idiot?" asked Joram, the half smile in his dark
eyes.
"Because only a fool dares tell you the truth," said
Simkin.
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
"Simkin!"
Saryon gulped, swallowed. "Is that you? "In the flesh. Leather,
actually," replied the scrip. "You can't be," Saryon said and he
sounded shaken. "You're . . . you're dead. I saw your corpse."
"Never buried," the scrip returned.
"Grave mistake. Speaking of stakes, one through the heart. That or silver
bullet or sprig of holly in the heel. But everyone was so busy those last few
days, destroying the world and so forth, I can see how I came to be
overlooked."
"Stop the nonsense." Saryon
was stern. "If it is you, change into yourself. Your human self,
that is. I find this very disconcerting. Talking to a ... a leather
scrip!"
"Ah, bit of a problem." The
scrip wriggled, its leather ties curled in upon themselves in what might have
been embarrassment. "I don't seem to be able to do that anymore. Become
human. Rather lost the knack. Death takes a lot out of a fellow, you know, as I
was saying just the other day to my dear friend Mer-lyn. You remember Merlyn?
Founder of Merilon? Adequate wizard, though not as good as some would have you
believe. His fame due entirely to his press agent, of course. And spelling his
name with a y\ I mean—how pretentious! But then anyone who goes around
dressed in a blue-and-white star-spangled bathrobe—"
"I insist." Saryon was firm,
ignoring the desperate attempt to change the subject. He reached out his hand
for the leather scrip. "Now. Or I shall toss you out the window."
"You won't get rid of me that
easily!" said the scrip coolly. "I'm coming with you, no matter what.
You can't imagine how boring it has been! No amusement, absolutely none. Toss
me out," the scrip warned as Saryon's hand drew nearer, "and I'll
change into an engine part on this simply fascinating vehicle. And I know very
little about engine parts," he added, as an afterthought.
Recovering from the initial shock of
hearing what I considered to be an inanimate object speaking, I was regarding
Simkin with a great deal of interest. Of all those whose stories I had written,
those concerning Simkin intrigued me the most. Saryon and I had argued in
friendly fashion over just exactly what Simkin was.
I maintained that he was a wizard of
Thimhallan with extraordinary powers—a prodigy, a genius of magic, like Mozart
was a genius of music. Add to this a chaotic nature, an addictive lust for
adventure and excitement and a self-centered, shallow personality, and you have
a man who would betray his friends at the drop of an orange silk scarf.
Saryon admitted that all this was true
and that I was probably right; still, he had reservations.
"There are things about Simkin
that your theory doesn't resolve," Saryon had once said. "I think he
is old, very old, perhaps as old as Thimhallan itself. No, I can't prove it.
Just a feeling I have, from things he's mentioned. And I know for a fact,
Reuven, that the magic he performed is not possible. It is simply,
mathematically, not possible. It would take far more Life than a hundred
catalysts could give for him to transform himself into a teapot or a bucket.
And Simkin could perform this magic, as you say, at the drop of his orange silk
scarf! He died when Technology invaded the realm."
"What do you think he is,
then?" I had asked. Saryon had smiled and shrugged. "I have
absolutely no idea." My master was about to pick up the scrip. "I'm
warning you!" Simkin told us. "Carburetor! I have no notion what one
is or what it does, but the name attracts me. I will become Carburetor if you
so much as lay a finger—"
"Don't worry, I'm not going to
throw you out," Saryon said mildly. "On the contrary, I'm going to
carry you safely—where I would normally carry my scrip. Around my waist.
Beneath my robes. Next to my skin."
The scrip vanished so suddenly that I
found myself doubting my senses, wondering if I had actually seen (and heard)
it. In its place, in the backseat of the air car, was
the pale and ephemeral-looking image of a young man.
He was not ghostlike. Ghosts, from
what I've read about them, are more substantial. It is difficult to describe,
but imagine someone taking watercolors, painting the figure of Simkin, then
pouring water over it. Ethereal, transparent, he faded into the background and
would not have been noticed if you weren't already looking for him. The only
bright spot of color anywhere about him was a wisp of defiant orange.
"You see what I've become!"
Simkin was doleful. "A mere shadow of my former self. And who is your
silent friend here, Father? Cat got his tongue? I recall the Earl of Marchbank.
Cat got his tongue, once. Earl ate tuna for lunch. Fell asleep, mouth open. Cat
enters room, smells tuna. Ghastly sight."
"Reuven is mu—"
Saryon began.
"Let him speak for himself,
Father," Simkin interrupted.
"Mute," Saryon resumed.
"He is mute. He can't speak."
"Saves his breath to cool his porridge, eh? Must eat a considerable
amount of cold porridge. This finger-wiggling. Means something, I
presume?"
"It is sign language. That is how
he communicates. One way," Saryon amended.
"How jolly," said Simkin, with
a yawn. "I say! Could we get a move on? Nice to see you again and all
that, Father, but you were always a bit of a bore. I'm quite looking forward to
talking to Joram again. Been ages. Simply ages."
"You haven't seen Joram? All this time?" Saryon was skeptical.
"Well, there's 'seen' and then
there's 'seen,' " Simkin said evasively. "
'Seen' from a distance, 'seen' to one's best advantage, 'seen' to the task at
hand, 'seen' off on a long ocean voyage. I suppose you might say that I have,
in fact, 'seen' Joram. On the other hand, I haven't 'seen' him, if you take my
meaning.
"To put it another way," he
added, having seen that we were both lost, "Joram doesn't know I'm alive. Quite literally."
"You propose to go with
us, to have us take you to Joram," said Saryon.
"Jolly reunion!" Simkin was
enthusiastic. "In your ecclesiastical company, Padre, our dark and
temperamental friend might be willing to overlook that harmless little joke I
played on him there toward the end."
"When you betrayed him? Plotted
to murder him?" Saryon said grimly.
"It all turned out right in the
end!" Simkin protested. "And it wouldn't have, you know, if it hadn't been for me."
Saryon and I looked at each other. We
really had no choice in the matter, as Simkin well knew. It was either take him
with us or throw him out, and although his magic might be weakened, he was, as
he had so cleverly proved, still adept at altering his form.
"Very well," Saryon said
testily. "You may come with us. But you are on your own. What Joram
chooses to do with you or to you is up to him."
"What Joram chooses . . ."
Simkin repeated softly. "It seems to me, from what I've heard—Merlyn is
such a gossipy old busybody—Joram is running out of choices. I say, you don't
mind if I change back to the scrip, do you? Very fatiguing in this form—
breathing and all that. You must promise, though, Father, that you won't put me
next to your skin!" Simkin shivered. "No offense, Father, but you've
gone all wrinkly and prunelike."
"What do you mean about Joram
running out of choices?" Saryon demanded, alarmed. "Simkin! What—the
Almin take him!"
The watercolor image was gone. The
leather scrip was back, resting on the seat of the air car. And it had gone
mute, apparently. As mute as myself.
Nothing Saryon did or said could
induce it to talk. I wondered if the scrip had ever talked at all. And if it
hadn't, what did that make me? Delusional? That would be a kind word. I glanced
at my master to see if he was prey to the same uncomfortable feelings.
He was certainly regarding the scrip
very grimly. "We better drive on, Reuven," Saryon said, adding with a
frown for the scrip. "We've wasted precious time as it is."
We crossed the Borderland which had,
for endless ages, separated Thimhallan from the rest of the universe and
separated magic from the rest of the universe as well. A field of magical
energy, created by the founders of Thimhallan, the Border permitted people to
leave, but prevented them and all others from entering or reentering. It was
Joram, the Dead child of a dying world, who not only crossed that Border, but
was able to return. He had brought the two realms—one magical, one
technological—together. They had met with the violence of a thunderclap.
Keeping the speed of the air car slow, I was able to handle the vehicle with
some proficiency, although our ride was still rough and we were jounced about
considerably. Not having had much experience with air cars—or cars of any type,
for that matter—Saryon attributed the roughness to the buffeting winds. I am
ashamed to say that I did not disabuse him.
As for Simkin, we had barely started
off again when the leather scrip slid to the floor. The knapsack tumbled down
on top of it. We heard a muffled shriek, but Saryon couldn't reach the scrip.
"Should I stop?" I mouthed.
With the wind tossing around the air car, I was reluctant to do so.
"No. Serves him right,"
Saryon said.
I had not thought my master could be
so vindictive.
We drove past a red beacon light that
was now no longer operational. Saryon stared at it, twisting around to gaze at
it when it was behind us.
"That must be the alarm
beacon," he said, turning back around. He was holding fast to a hand strap
above the door on his side. "The one that used to alert those in the
outpost to anyone crossing the Border. Next, we should see the Stone Watchers.
Or what is left of them."
Along the Borderland had once stood
enormous statues known as the Watchers, the guardians of the Border. They had
been living men, before their flesh was changed to rock, frozen forever, while
their minds remained active.
Such a dreadful fate had once been
Saryon's.
I recognized the site, when we reached
it, though I had never seen it. During the last days of Thimhallan, when
violent quakes and fierce storms swept the land, the Watchers fell; the spirits
in them freed at last. Now the shattered remains littered the ground, some of
them completely covered over by windblown sand. The mounds looked very much
like graves.
Noticing the pain of memory contort
Saryon's face, I was about to increase our speed by giving more power to the
rear thrusters, taking us quickly away from this tragic site. Saryon understood
my attempt and forestalled it. I hoped he was not going to ask me to stop, for the
wind, though lessened somewhat, was still strong. If I tried to halt the air
car, we might be blown out of control. Stinging sand blasted our windshield,
rattled against the doors.
"Slow down a moment,
Reuven," he said. He stared long at the mounds as we drove slowly
past. "They cried their warning, but no one paid heed. The people
were too intent on their own ambitions, their own plots and schemes to listen
to the voices of the past. What voices call to us now, I wonder?" Saryon
mused. "And are we listening to them?"
He fell silent, thoughtful. The only
voice I heard was a faint one coming from the floor of the backseat of the air
car. The language it was using was shocking. Fortunately Saryon could not hear
Simkin over the rush of the jets and his sad reverie remained undisturbed.
We left the Border behind, crossing
over the vast stretch of sand dunes, and entered the grasslands. Saryon gazed
around blankly and I realized that he recognized nothing, no landmarks looked
familiar to him. Not only had the land changed during the cataclysmic upheavals
that followed the emptying of the Well of Life, but, I reasoned, my master had
been accustomed to traveling the magical Corridors, built by the long-lost
Diviners, which whisked the people of Thimhallan through time and space from
one place to another.
I continued flying toward the
mountains on the horizon, that being our general destination, but I was growing
worried. Heavy blue-gray clouds were massing; lightning flickered on their
fringes, which dragged the desolate ground. The wind was increasing. One of the
fierce storms for which Thimhallan is noted was fast approaching. The mountains
were my only guide and I would lose sight of them in the driving rain. The air
car was equipped with all manner of devices to assist one in navigation, but I
did not know how they worked.
Bitterly I regretted the impulse which
had prompted me to turn down the offer of a driver. We would have to stop the
air car when the storm hit, not only because we might easily lose our way, but
because we ran the risk of slamming into a tree or the side of a cliff. Heavily
forested lands lay ahead and, beyond that, the foothills.
A gust of wind hit the car, blew it
sideways about three feet. The rain began, large drops splatting into the
windshield. I thought of the small, lightweight tent we had brought and shook
my head. I couldn't share my fears and doubts with Saryon, for my hands were my
voice and I was forced to keep both hands on the steering mechanism.
There was only one thing to do and
that was to turn back before the storm grew any worse. I cut the power, lowered
the car to the ground. Saryon turned to look questioningly at me. Once the air
car had settled, I was about to explain to him our predicament, when his eyes—looking
at me—suddenly widened and shifted their gaze to a point behind me. I turned
swiftly and shrank back, startled, at the sight of the apparition which loomed
in the window.
I don't know why I was surprised. I
should have known they would be around.
The black-robed and -hooded Enforcer
made a motion. I touched the button, the window slid into the side of the car.
Rain struck me in my face. The wind blew my hair into my eyes and howled so
that I could barely hear. Yet the black robe of the Duuk-tsarith remained
dry, its folds still and unruffled. He might have been standing in the eye of
the cyclone, while we—only inches from him—were in the teeth of the storm.
He pushed back his hood and I
recognized Mosiah.
"What do you want?"
Saryon shouted. He didn't look pleased.
"You are wasting time,"
Mosiah said. "Abandon this technological monstrosity. You can be with
Joram in an instant if you use the magic."
Saryon looked questioningly at me.
"We don't know the way,
sir," I signed to him. "The storms will only grow worse. We dare not
travel blind. And we have only seventy-two hours."
"It seems we have no
choice," Saryon admitted. "How will you take us there?"
"The Corridors," said
Mosiah. "You must leave the vehicle. Bring your things with you."
I opened the door. The wind nearly
pulled it out of my hand. I was instantly soaked. Reaching into the backseat
for my knapsack, I lifted it from
the floor and looked beneath it for
the leather scrip. At least this would be an opportunity to rid ourselves of
Simkin.
The leather scrip was gone.
With deep misgivings, I pulled the
knapsack out of the backseat. I wondered what strange object I was now carrying
inside the knapsack—a teapot, perhaps.
Saryon, his robes whipping about his
lean body, stood next to Mosiah. With some difficulty caused by the wind, I
hoisted the knapsack onto my shoulders.
"Did you bring my leather
scrip?" Saryon shouted.
"No, sir!"
I signed back. "I couldn't find it."
"Oh, dear," said Saryon, and
looked extremely worried. "It is always better to know where Simkin is
than where he isn't," he said to me in a low voice.
"Have you lost something?"
Mosiah asked.
"Probably not," Saryon said
gloomily. He peered at Mosiah through the rain. "How do we travel the
Corridors? I thought they were destroyed!"
"We thought so, too," Mosiah
said. "We searched for the Corridors, after the destruction of Thimhallan,
and couldn't find them. We assumed that they were lost to us, because the magic
that had supported them was gone. But it seems that they had only moved,
shifted with the upheaval of the land."
Saryon frowned. "I don't see how
that's possible! Mathematically speaking, it isn't! Admittedly we never knew
exactly how the Corridors functioned, but the calculations necessary to open
them precluded any—"
"Father!" Mosiah
interrupted, with a smile, as if reliving old memories. "I would be
interested to hear about these calculations, but at a later date. Now shouldn't
we be going?"
"Yes, of course, I'm sorry.
Here's poor Reuven soaked to the skin. I told you to wear something heavier
than that jacket," he added in concern. "Didn't you bring a warmer
coat?"
I indicated that I was warm enough,
only very wet. I was wearing a white cable-knit sweater and blue jeans, with a
jacket over that. I knew my master, however. Had I been wearing fur, wrapped up
from head to toe, Saryon would have still been worried about me.
"We should hurry, sir," I
signed.
Not only was I looking forward to
getting out of the rain, I was eager to see the magic.
"Am I supposed to open the
Corridor?" Saryon asked. "I'm not sure I remember ..."
"No, Father," Mosiah
replied. "The days are gone when you catalysts controlled the Corridors.
Now anyone who knows the magic may use them."
He spoke a word and an oval void
appeared in the midst of the rain and the wind. The void elongated, until it
was tall enough for us to enter. Saryon looked back uncertainly at Mosiah.
"Are you coming with us? Joram
would be glad to see you."
Mosiah shook his head. "I do not
think so. Step into the Corridor, before you catch your death." He turned
to me. "The sensation you will feel is very frightening at first, but it
will soon pass. Remain calm."
Saryon started to enter the void, then he halted. "Where will it take us?"
"To the Font,
where Joram lives."
"Are you sure? I don't want to
end up in some shattered castle in Merilon—"
"I am certain, Father. I said the
Corridors had shifted. Like spokes in a wheel, they now all lead either to the
Font or away from it."
"How
strange," said Saryon. "How very
strange."
He entered the void. Urged by Mosiah,
I followed quickly after my master, almost tripping on his heels. I lost sight
of him immediately, however. The Corridor closed around me, as if it would
compress me into nothingness. I felt squeezed and smothered, unable to breathe.
Remain calm. . . .
All very well for Mosiah to say! He
wasn't suffocating! I struggled for air, struggled to free myself. I was drowning,
dying, losing consciousness. . . .
Then suddenly the Corridor opened,
like a window shade in a dark room springing up to let in bright sunlight. I
could breathe. I was on a mountaintop. The air was crisp and cool. No rain
fell. The storm clouds were in the valleys beneath us.
I looked into blue sky, saw white,
scudding clouds that were so close I felt as if I might snag one.
Saryon stood next to me, gazing around
with the eager, wistful, hungry look of one who has returned at long last to a
site where memories, painful and pleasant, were forged. We stood on the
ramparts of what had once been an immense city-fortress.
He shook his head, looking a little
dazed. "So much has changed," he murmured. He drew near, took me by
the arm, and pointed. "Up there, on the mountain's peak—made from the
mountain's peak—was the cathedral. It is gone. Entirely gone. It must have
collapsed later on, after we left. I never knew."
He stared at the ruins, which lay
scattered over the mountainside, then he turned and
looked in a different direction. His sadness brightened somewhat. "The
University is still here. Look, Reuven. The building on the side of the
mountain. Magi from all over Thimhallan came to study there, to perfect their
art. I studied mathematics there. What happy hours!"
Tunnels and corridors burrowed into
the mountain. The work of the Church had been done here, its catalysts living,
working inside the mountain, worshiping at its peak. Deep within the mountain
was the Well of Life, the source of the magic on Thimhallan, now empty and
broken.
It occurred to me, suddenly, that—but
for Joram and the Darksword—I might now be a catalyst, walking these very
corridors, bustling about importantly on the business of the Church. I could
picture myself here very clearly, as if that same shade that snapped open to
reveal the sunshine had also afforded me a glimpse of another life. I looked
out that window and saw myself looking back in.
Saryon saw his past. I saw my present.
It was exhilarating and unnerving, yet eminently satisfying. This was the land
of my birth. I was a part of this mountain, the sand, the trees, the sky. I
took a deep breath of the crisp air, and felt uplifted. And though I had no
idea how to go about it, I think—at that moment—I could have drawn Life from
the world around me, focused it within my body, and given it away.
A sound touched my reverie. Concern
for my master drew me back to reality.
Saryon stood with bowed head. He
brushed his hand swiftly across his eyes.
"Never mind," he said, when
I would have offered comfort. "Never mind. It was for the best, I know. I
weep for the beauty that was ruined, that is all. It could not have lasted
long. The ugliness would have overwhelmed it, and like Camelot, it might have
been destroyed and irretrievably lost. At least our people still live and their
memories live and the magic lives, for those who seek it."
I had not sought it, yet it had come
to me anyway. I was not a stranger to this land. It remembered me, though I had
no memory of it.
Like Saryon, I had come home.
CHAPTER NINE
"/ will run to Joram and he will take me in his arms and we will be together forever and ever. ..."
GWENDOLYN; DOOM OF THE DARKSWORD
"I
say!" came a peeved voice from the vicinity of
the knapsack. "Are you two going to stand around and slobber over each
other all day? I'm dying of ennui—the same sad fate that befell the Duke of
Uberville, who was such a boring old fart that he bored himself and died for
lack of interest."
I considered overturning the knapsack
and searching for Simkin, but to do so would have wasted precious time. I had
spent hours trying to see to it that everything fit inside and I dreaded the
thought of having to do all that over again.
I signed to Saryon, "If we ignore
him, perhaps he'll go away."
"I heard that," Simkin said.
"And I can assure you, it won't work!"
I was astonished, for I had not
spoken, and I don't think that even Simkin could have learned sign language in
the space of the few hours we had known each other.
Saryon shrugged and wryly smiled.
"The magic lives," he whispered, and there was a
warmth in his eyes that was rapidly drying up the tears.
"Where are we?" I asked.
"I was just trying to figure that
out myself," said Saryon, peering down from our perch on the ramparts.
"I know," said a muffled voice from inside the knapsack, adding
huffily, "but I'm not telling."
Below us was a courtyard, its paving
stones cracked and overgrown with a wide variety of plant life, including
several varieties of wildflower. Across the courtyard was a long, low building
with a great many windows, to let in the sunlight. Some of the windows had been
broken, but the holes had been neatly covered over with pieces of wood. Here
and there, in the courtyard, some attempt had been made to cut back the weeds,
sweep away the dead leaves, and make the area more attractive.
"Ah, yes! In that
building"—Saryon pointed to the building past the courtyard—"the
Theldara, the healers, had their infirmary. Now I know where I am."
"Did I ever tell you about the
time the Theldara came to treat my little sister for ringworm? Or was it
tapeworm? I'm sure there's a difference. One eats you and you eat one. Not that
it mattered to poor little
Simkin prattled on. Saryon turned and
began to walk along the ramparts, making his way toward a flight of stairs
which led down into the courtyard. "There was a garden here, on the other
side, where they grew herbs and other plants which they used in healing. A
quiet, restful, soothing place. I came here once. A very fine man, that
Theldara. He tried to help me, but that proved impossible. I was quite unable
to help myself, which is always the first step."
"It looks as though someone lives
here," I signed, pointing to the boarded-up windows.
"Yes," Saryon agreed
eagerly. "Yes, this would be an excellent place for Joram and his family
to reside, with access to the interior portions of the Font."
"Oh, jolly," was the opinion
of the knapsack.
Rounding a corner of the retaining
wall, we found further evidence of habitation. One part of the courtyard, where
the great Bishop Vanya had once walked in ceremony and state, was now
apparently a laundry. Several large washtubs occupied the paving stones and
lengths of rope had been strung between two ornamental trees. Fluttering from
the ropes were shirts and petticoats, sheets and undergarments, drying in the
sun.
"They are here!"
Saryon said to himself, and he had to pause a moment, to gather his strength.
Up to this point he had refused to let
himself believe that at last, after all these years, he would see the man he
loved as well or better than he could have ever loved a son.
Courage regained, Saryon hurried
ahead, not thinking consciously of where he was going, but allowing his memory
to show the way. We circled around the laundry tubs, ducked beneath the
clothes.
"Joram's flag—a
nightshirt. Well, it figures," said Simkin.
A door led into the dwelling. Looking
through a window, we could see a sunlit room, with comfortable couches and
chairs, and tables decorated with bowls of blooming flowers. Saryon hesitated a
moment, his hand trembling, then he knocked at the door. We waited.
No answer.
He knocked again, staring intently,
hopefully, through the glass windowpane.
I took the opportunity to search the
area. Walking the length of the building, I looked around the corner and into a
large garden. Hastening back to my master, I tugged on his sleeve and motioned
him to follow me.
"You've found them?" he
said.
I nodded and held up two fingers. I
had found two of them.
I stayed behind as he entered that
garden. The women would be startled, frightened, perhaps. It was best that they
saw him, at first and alone.
The two were working in the garden,
their long, cream-colored skirts kilted up around their waists, their heads
protected from the sun by wide, broad-brimmed straw hats. Their sleeves were
rolled up past the elbow, their arms were tanned brown from the sun. Both were
hoeing, their arms and the tools they held rising and falling with swift,
strong chopping strokes.
Wind chimes, hanging on a porch behind
them, made music for them, to lighten their work. The air was filled with the
rich smell of freshly turned loam.
Saryon walked forward on unsteady
legs. He opened the gate that led into the garden, and that was as far as his
strength and courage would bear him. He put out a hand to support himself on
the garden wall. He tried, I think several times, to call a name, but his voice
was mute as my own.
"Gwendolyn!" he said at
last, and spoke that name with so much love and longing that no one who heard
it could have been the least bit frightened.
She wasn't fearful. Startled, perhaps,
to hear a strange voice where no strange voice had spoken in twenty years. But
she wasn't afraid. She stopped her hoeing, lifted her head, and turned toward
the sound.
She recognized my master in an
instant. Dropping her hoe, she ran to him straight across the garden, heedless
of the plants she crushed, the flowers she trampled. Her hat flew off, in her
haste, and a mass of hair, long and golden, tumbled down behind. "Father
Saryon!" she cried, and flung her arms about him.
He clasped her tightly, and they both
held on to each other, weeping and laughing simultaneously.
Their reunion was sacred, a private
special moment for only the two of them. It seemed to me that even watching
must intrude, and so, deferentially and with some considerable curiosity,
I turned my gaze on the daughter.
She had ceased her work. Standing
straight, she regarded us from beneath the broad brim of her hat. In figure and
stature, she was the twin of her mother, of medium build, graceful in her
movements. That she was accustomed to physical labor showed in the well-defined
muscles of her bare arms and legs, her upright stance and posture. I could not
see her face, which was hidden by the shadow of the hat. She came no closer,
but stood where she was.
She is afraid, I thought, and
who can blame her? Having grown up apart, isolated, alone.
Gwendolyn had taken a step back, out
of Saryon's arms, though not out of his hold, to gaze fondly at him and he at her.
"Father, it is good to see you
again! How well you look!"
"For an old man," said
Saryon, smiling down on her. "And you are lovely as ever, Gwen. Or
lovelier, if that is possible. For now you are happy."
"Yes," she said, glancing
behind her at her daughter, "yes, I am happy, Father. We are
happy." She laid emphasis on the word.
A shadow crossed her face. Her grip on
Saryon tightened. She looked back up at him, with earnest pleading. "And
that is why you must leave, Father. Go quickly. I thank you for coming. Joram
and I have often wondered what became of you. He was worried. You had suffered
much for his sake and he feared it might have damaged your health. Now I can
give him ease, tell him you are well and prospering. Thank you for coming, but
go quickly, now."
"Pulled the welcome mat right out
from under him, didn't she?" said Simkin.
I gave the knapsack a whack.
"Where is Joram?" Saryon
asked.
"Out tending
the sheep."
A muffled, derisive snort came from
the knapsack. Gwen heard it. Glancing at me, she frowned and said defiantly,
"Yes, he is a shepherd now. And he is happy, Father. Happy and content.
For the first time in his life! And though he loves and honors you, Father
Saryon, you are from the past, you are from the dark and unhappy times. Like
that dreadful man who came here before, you will bring those terrible times
back to us!"
She meant that we would bring the
memory to them. I saw, by the pain in Saryon's face, that he gave her words
another meaning, a truer meaning. It was not the memory we were bringing to
them, but the reality.
He swallowed. His hands on her arms
trembled. His eyes grew moist. He tried several times to speak, before the
words finally came out. "Gwen, I stayed away from Joram all these years
for this very reason. Much as I longed to see him, much as I longed to
know he was well and happy, I feared I would only disturb his tranquillity. I
would not have come now, Gwen, but that I have no choice. I must see
Joram," Saryon said gently, and now his voice was firm. "I must talk
to him and to you together. There is no help for it. I am sorry."
Gwen gazed long into his face. She saw
the pain, the sadness, the understanding. She saw the resolution.
"Do you . . . have you come for
the Darksword? He won't give it up, not even to you, Father."
Saryon was shaking his head. "I
have not come for the Dark-sword. I have come for Joram, for you and
your daughter."
Gwen kept fast hold of him, for
support. When she let go, it was only to lift her hand, to wipe her eyes.
I had been so intent on their
conversation that I had forgotten the daughter. At the sight of her mother's
distress, she dropped the hoe and ran toward us, moving with long, free
strides. She pushed back the hat, to see better, and I realized that I had
misjudged her. She hadn't been afraid of us. She had been pausing to consider
us, to study us and to study herself, to determine how
she felt about us.
I paused to consider her. My life
paused, at that moment, to consider her. When life resumed, a second later, it
would never be the same. If I never saw her again, from that moment on I would
see her forever.
Thick, black, and unruly hair fell in
disordered curls from a central part, glistened in luxuriant clusters about her
shoulders. Her brows were also thick and black and straight, giving her a stern
and introspective aspect that was dispelled by the sudden, dazzling light of
large, crystalline blue eyes. That was her father's legacy. Her mother
bequeathed the oval face and pointed chin, the ease and grace of movement.
I did not love her. Love was
impossible, at that first moment of our meeting, for love is between humans and
she was something extraordinary, not truly human. It would have been like
falling in love with the image in a painting or with a statue in a gallery. I
was awed, admiring.
Prospero's daughter, I said inwardly,
recalling my Shakespeare. And then I smiled derisively at myself, remembering
her words on seeing the strangers washed ashore by her father's art: "How
many goodly creatures are there here! How beauteous mankind is!"
I could tell from her glance that
raked across me with curiosity and little more that I was not providing
images of brave new worlds. And yet I interested her. Though she had her
parents for company, youth yearns for its own, to share the newfound dreams and
budding hopes that belong to youth alone.
But for now, her first care was for
her mother. She put her arms protectively around her mother's shoulders and
faced us boldly, accusingly, her black brows a straight, heavy line.
"Who are you? What have you said
to upset her? Why do you people keep intruding upon us?"
Gwen lifted her head, dashed away her
tears, and managed a smile. "No, Eliza, don't talk in that tone. This man
is not like the others. He is one of us. This is Father Saryon. You've heard us
speak of him. He is an old friend and very dear to both your father and to
me."
"Father Saryon!" Eliza
repeated, and the heavy line lifted, the blue eyes were light and radiant, like
the sun shining down after a thunderstorm. "Of course, I have heard of
Father Saryon. You have come to teach me! Father said I was to go to you, but
he kept putting it off and now I know why—you have come to me!"
Saryon reddened, swallowed again, and,
embarrassed, looked to Gwen for guidance, to know what to say.
She was unable to assist him, but her
assistance wasn't necessary because Eliza's quick gaze went from one to the
other and she realized her mistake. The light dimmed. "That is not why
you've come. Of course not. My mother would not be crying if that were the
case. Why are you here, then? You and your"—she turned her brilliant gaze
on me, made a guess— "your son?"
"Reuven!" said Saryon. He
turned around and stretched out his hand, urging me forward. "My boy,
forgive me! You're so quiet ... I forgot you were here. He is my son by
affection, though not by birth. He was born in Thimhallan, born here in the
Font, as a matter of fact, for his mother was a catalyst."
Eliza regarded me with cool intensity
and suddenly I had another of those strange flashes, such as I had experienced
earlier, where I seemed to be looking through a window into another lifetime.
I saw myself a catalyst, standing in a
crowd of catalysts. We were dressed in our best ceremonial robes, all blending
together, our tonsured heads bowed in respect. And she walked past us, regal,
gracious, clad in silks and jewels, our queen. I lifted my head, greatly
daring, to look at her and she, at that moment, turned her head and looked at
me. She had been searching for me in the crowd and she smiled to see me.
I smiled at her, we shared a secret
moment, and then, fearing my superiors would notice, I lowered my gaze. When I
next dared look again—hoping that perhaps she was still looking at me—I saw
only her back, and even that vanished, for she was followed by all her
courtiers, every one of them walking. Walking. Why did that seem strange to me?
The image faded from before my eyes,
but did not fade in my mind. Indeed, it was so clear and well defined that the
words Your Majesty were on my lips and I think I would have spoken them
aloud, had I been able to speak. As it was, I felt bewildered and disoriented,
much as when Mosiah released us to return to our own bodies.
Recovering, I signed that I was
honored and pleased to meet those who held a special place in my master's
heart.
Eliza's eyes widened at the sight of
my flashing hands. "What is he doing?" she demanded, with the frank
and open honesty of a child.
"Reuven is mute," Saryon
explained. "He talks with his hands." And he repeated to them aloud
what I had said.
Gwendolyn gave me a preoccupied smile
and said I was welcome. Eliza appraised me, those blue eyes studying everything
about me with unabashed curiosity. What she saw was a young man of medium
height, medium build, long blond hair pulled back from a face that always
seemed to inspire women with sisterly affection. Honest, sweet, gentle were
words women used to describe me. "At last, a man we can trust," they
would say. And then they would proceed to tell me all about the men they loved.
As for what I saw in Eliza, the statue
was gaining life and warmth, becoming human.
Gwendolyn cast a glance at me and it
seemed that she suddenly had a new worry. A glance at Eliza reassured her
somewhat. Turning back to Saryon, Gwen drew him away, to speak to him in a low,
pleading tone. Eliza remained, staring at me.
My situation was extremely
embarrassing and uncomfortable. Never before had I cursed my handicap as I
cursed it now. Had I been a man like any other, I could have made polite
conversation.
I considered bringing out my
electronic notepad, writing on it. Writing what? Some inanity? What a lovely
day. Do you suppose we shall have rain?
No, I thought. Better to keep my
notepad shut.
And yet I wanted to do something to
hold her interest on me. Already, she was starting to turn her head, to look
back to her mother and Saryon. I had some notion of plucking a flower and
handing it to her, when I heard a plop at my feet.
Eliza gave a glad cry.
"Teddy!"
At my feet sat a stuffed teddy bear;
well worn, most of its fur rubbed off, one ear missing.
Eliza swooped down, picked up the
bear, and held it up, calling in delight, "Look, Mother, Reuven's found
Teddy!"
Gwen and Saryon turned from their
conversation. Gwen smiled, a strained smile. "How nice, dear."
Saryon flashed me an alarmed glance.
All I could do was helplessly shrug.
Around his neck, Teddy wore an orange
ribbon.
CHAPTER TEN
"Nevertheless, there I sat, a perfect teapot upon his desk."
TRIUMPH OF THE DARKSWORD
"
I have never seen a more
self-satisfied and smug-looking stuffed bear. I wanted very much to throttle
it.
"I found him in one of the old
parts of the Font," she continued, "where I used to play. It must
have been a nursery, because there were other toys there. But I liked Teddy
best. I used to tell him all my secrets. He was my companion, my
playmate," she said, and a wistful tone crept into her voice. "He
kept me from being alone."
I wondered if Eliza's mother knew the truth, that Teddy was, in reality, Simkin—although one might
contend that Simkin and reality had little to do with one another.
Gwendolyn bit her lip and cast a
warning glance at Saryon, asking him to keep silent.
"I lost Teddy years ago,"
Eliza was saying. "I don't remember quite how. One day he was there and
the next day, when I went to look for him, he was gone. We searched and
searched, didn't we, Mama?"
Eliza looked to me, then to Saryon.
"Where did you find him?"
My master was, for the moment, struck
mute as myself. He was hopeless at lying. I made a sign, indicating that we'd
found the bear somewhere near the Borderlands. It was not quite a lie. Saryon,
in a faint voice, repeated what I had said.
"I wonder how he came to be
there!" Eliza exclaimed, marveling.
"Who knows, child?"
Gwendolyn said briskly. She smoothed her skirt with her hands. "And now
you should go find your father. Tell him—no, wait! Please, Father? Is there no
other way?"
"Gwendolyn," said Saryon
patiently, "the matter on which I come is very urgent. And
very serious."
She sighed, bowed her head. Then, with
a forced smile, she said, "Tell Joram that Father Saryon is here."
Eliza was doubtful. Her delight in
recovering the bear faded at the sight of her mother's troubled face. For a
moment she had been a child again. The moment passed, gone forever.
"Yes, Mama," she said in a
subdued voice. "It may take me a while. He is in the far pasture."
And then she looked at me and brightened. "Could I—could Reuven come with
me? You say he was born in the Font. We must go through it on our way. He might
like to see it again."
Gwen was doubtful. "I don't know
how your father would react, child. To have a stranger come suddenly on him,
without any warning. It would be better if you went by yourself."
Eliza's brightness began to dim. You
could see it fade, as if a cloud had passed over the sun.
Her mother relented. "Very well.
Reuven may go if he wishes. Make yourself presentable first, Eliza. I can
refuse her nothing," she added to Saryon in an undertone, half-proud,
half-ashamed.
And that was why they had not taken
"Teddy" away, when both Gwen and Joram knew quite well that the bear
was not a real bear. I could imagine the guilt both felt, forced to raise their
child in isolation. Joram's own childhood had been one of bitter loneliness and
deprivation. He must have believed it a sad legacy to pass on to a daughter, a
legacy that pained him deeply.
Eliza set Teddy in a flower basket and
gave him a laughing admonition not to go and get himself lost again.
"This way, Reuven," she said
to me, smiling.
I had gained great favor with her by
the "discovery" of the bear, which hadn't been my doing at all. I
glanced back at the bear as I followed after Eliza. Teddy's black button eyes
rolled. He winked.
I deposited the knapsack next to the
bear, though I took my electronic notepad with me. Saryon and Gwendolyn sat
together on a stone bench in the shade. Eliza and I walked together through the
garden. Eliza shook her skirts down, covering her legs. She pulled the
broad-brimmed hat over her head, hiding the shining black hair and leaving her
face in shadow. She walked swiftly, with long strides, so that I had to adjust
my normally slower pace to match hers.
She said nothing the entire way across
the garden. I, of course, maintained my accustomed silence. But the moment was
a comfortable one. The silence was not empty. We filled it with our thoughts,
making it companionable. That her thoughts were serious I could tell by the
somber expression on her shadowed face.
A wall surrounded the garden. She
opened a gate and led me through it, down a flight of stone steps, which
crisscrossed the cliff face. The view from the mountain, overlooking the other
buildings of the Font—some whole, many crumbling—was breathtaking. The gray
stone against the green hillsides. The mountain peaks against the blue sky. The
trees dark green clumps against the light green of the grass. As of one accord,
unspoken, we both stopped on the narrow steps to gaze and admire.
She had gone down before me, to lead
the way. Now she looked back up at me, tilting her head to see me from beneath
the brim of her straw hat.
"You find it beautiful?" she
asked.
I nodded. I could not have spoken had
I wanted to.
"So do I,"
she said with satisfaction. "I often stop here on my way back. We live
down there," she added, pointing to a long, low building attached to
another, much larger building. "My father says it is the part of the Font
where the catalysts used to live. There is a kitchen there and a well for
water.
"Father made looms for Mother and
me. We use the rooms up here for our work. We spin our own thread, weave our
own woolen cloth. That comes from the sheep, of course. And the library is
here, too. When our work is finished, we read. Sometimes
together, sometimes separately."
We were walking down the stairs as we
talked. Or I should say, as she talked. But with her I did not feel as
if I were in a onesided conversation. Sometimes people, embarrassed by my
handicap, talk around me instead of talking to me.
Eliza continued to discuss books.
"Papa reads the books on carpentry and gardening and anything he can find
on sheep. Mama reads cookery books, though she likes best the books about
Merilon and the treatises on magic. She never reads those when Father is
around, though. It makes him sad."
"And what books do you
like?" I asked with sign language, moving my hands slowly.
I could have used the notepad, but it
seemed out of place in this world, an intrusion.
"What books do I like? That's
what you said, wasn't it?" Eliza was delighted to understand me. "The
Earth books. I know a great deal about Earth's geography and history, science
and art. But my favorites are fiction."
I looked my astonishment. If there had
ever been Earth books on Thimhallan, they must have been ancient, brought here
at the time of Merlyn and the founders. If she has learned science from those,
I thought, she must think the Earth is flat and that the sun revolves around
it.
I remembered then that, according to
Saryon, Simkin had once gotten hold of a copy of Shakespeare's plays. How he
managed to do this, Saryon was not certain. He speculated that back before the
Iron Wars, before Simkin's magical power began to wane as the magic Life in
Thimhallan began to wane, Simkin had once traveled freely between Earth and
Thimhallan. It's possible that he either knew Shakespeare or—as Saryon used to
say ironically—perhaps Simkin was Shakespeare! Had "Teddy"
given Eliza books?
Eliza answered my questioning look.
"After Thimhallan was destroyed, the evacuation ships came to take the
people to Earth. My father knew he would be staying here and he requested that
the ships bring supplies, tools, food until we could raise our own. And he
asked them to bring books."
Of course. It
all made sense. Joram had spent ten years of his life on Earth, before
returning to Thimhallan. He would know exactly what he needed to survive with
his family in exile, what was needed for both body and mind.
We had, by this time, reached the
portion of the Font where Joram had taken up residence. We did not enter,
however, but skirted around the Gothic-style buildings (I was reminded of
At the sight of Joram, I halted. My
coming did not now seem like such a good idea. I pointed to Eliza, then out to
her father. Touching my breast, I patted the top of the stone fence, which was,
by the smell and the sight of one or two sheep resting in sheds, the sheep pen.
I indicated I would wait here for their return.
Eliza looked at me and frowned. She
knew quite well what I had said; indeed,
the two of us were communicating with an
ease which, had I
thought about it, was quite remarkable. I was too dazzled and
overwhelmed to think coherently about anything then.
"But I want you to come with me," she said petulantly, as if that
would make all the difference.
I shook my head, indicated that I was
tired, which was true enough. I am not much accustomed to physical exertion and
we must have walked two kilometers already. Taking out my notepad, I typed, Your
mother is right. You should see him alone.
She looked at the notepad and read
the words. "Father has something like this," she said, touching it
hesitantly with one finger. "Only much larger. He keeps records on
it."
She was silent. Her frowning gaze turned
from me to the sheep and the distant, dark, roving figure that kept watch over
them. Her frown eased; her gaze was troubled. She turned back to me.
"Mother lied to Father Saryon, Reuven," Eliza said calmly. "She
lied to herself at the same time, so perhaps it doesn't really count as a lie.
Papa is not happy. He was content, before that man Smythe came, but ever
since then Papa has been brooding and silent, except for when he talks to
himself. He won't tell us what's wrong. He doesn't want to worry us. I think it
will be good for him to have Father Saryon to talk to. What is it," she
asked, in a pretty, wheedling tone, "that he plans to say?"
I shook my head. It was not my place
to tell her. I indicated again that I would wait for them here and motioned
that she should go to her father. She pouted some, but I think that was mostly
reflexive, for she was really very sensible and finally agreed—though
reluctantly—that perhaps this way was best.
She ran off down the hill, her skirts
flying, her hat blown back, her dark curls rampant.
I thought about her, when she was
gone. I remembered every word she said, every expression on her face, the lilt
and tone of her voice. I was not falling in love. Not yet. Oh, maybe just a
little bit. I had dated several women before now—some of them seriously, or so
I thought—but I had never been this at ease, this relaxed with a woman. I tried
to figure out why. The unusual circumstances of our meeting,
the fact that she was so open and unabashed and free to speak her mind.
Perhaps the simple fact that we had been born on the same world. And then the
oddest thought came to me.
You did not meet as strangers.
Somewhere, somehow, your souls know each other.
I grinned at this impossibly
romantic notion, though the grin was a little shaky, considering the vivid
image I'd experienced of Eliza as Queen and myself as one more
dull, plodding catalyst.
Banishing such foolish notions from my
mind, I reveled in the beauty of my surroundings. Though I could see wounds
upon the land, wounds caused by the war and later the storms and quakes and
firestorms which had raged over Thimhallan, the wounds were healing. Young
trees grew amid the ashes of the old. Grass covered the ragged scars and gouges
on the landscape. The constant wind was softening the tooth-sharp cliffs.
The solitude was peaceful, quiet. No
jets roared overhead, no televisions yammered, no sirens wailed. The air was
crisp and clean and smelled of flowers and grass and far-off rain, not petrol
and the neighbor's dinner. I was immensely content and happy as I sat there on
the low stone wall. I could picture Joram and Eliza and Gwen living here,
reading, working in the garden, tending sheep, weaving fabric. I could picture
myself here and my heart suddenly yearned for a life so simple and serene.
Of course, I was oversimplifying,
romanticizing. I was deliberately leaving out the hard work, the drudgery, the
loneliness. Earth was not the horrid place I was picturing by contrast. There
was beauty to be found there, as well as here.
But what beauty would be left to any
of us if the Hch'nyv destroyed our defenses, reached our world, and ravaged it
as they had ravaged all others? If the power of the Darksword could truly be
used to defeat the aliens, then why shouldn't Joram relinquish it? Was this the
conclusion Saryon had reached?
I worried and wondered and dreamed as
I sat upon the wall, watching Eliza on the hillside, a bright speck against the
green. I saw her meeting with her father. I could not see, from this distance,
but I could imagine him staring over to where I sat. They both stood still,
talking, for long moments. Then they both began to round up the sheep, driving
them down the hill and back toward their pen.
The stone wall on which I sat grew
suddenly very cold, very hard.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
The sword was made of a solid mass of metal—hilt and blade together, possessing neither grace nor form. The blade was straight and almost indistinguishable from the hilt. A short, blunt-edged crosspiece separated the two. The hilt was slightly rounded, to fit the hand. . . . There was something horrifying about the sword, something devilish.
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
Eliza and
her father came back, driving the sheep before them. I watched them the entire
way, the sheep flowing like a huge woolly caterpillar across the grassy
hillside. Joram walked steadfastly behind, reaching out now and then with his
shepherd's crook to guide an errant ewe back into the flock. Eliza dashed about
them like a sheepdog, waving her hat and flapping her long skirts. I have no
idea, knowing nothing of the tending of sheep, if she did harm or good, but her
grace and exuberance brought joy to her father's dark eyes and so of course she
was permitted to have her own way.
That joy dimmed considerably and
vanished altogether when those dark eyes turned their intense and unsettling
gaze upon me.
The sheep flowed past me in a woolly
wave, smelling strongly of damp wool—for it had rained upon the
hillside—bleating and baaing so that it was impossible to hear. I stood to one
side, keeping out of the way, trying not to hinder Joram's work. I was very
uncomfortable and wished devotedly I had not come.
Joram's gaze raked me from head to toe
as he came up the hillside. When he was level with me and I started to bow my
greeting, he abruptly withdrew his gaze and did not once glance in my direction
again. His face was so cold and set that it might have substituted for the
granite cliff face opposite me and no one would have noticed the difference.
He paid me not the slightest
attention. Since he was involved with his work, I was able to study him,
curious to see the man whose life story I had written.
Joram was in his late forties at this
time. Of a serious, somber mien, he looked older than he was. The rugged life,
spent mostly out-of-doors, in the wayward and harsh Thimhallan weather, had
tanned his skin a deep brown, left his face weathered and seamed. His black
hair was as thick and luxuriant as his daughter's, though his was touched with
gray at the temples and gray strands mingled with the black throughout.
He had always been strong and muscular
and his well-knit, well-muscled body might have belonged to an Olympic athlete.
The face had too many years etched on it, however; years of sorrow and tragedy
which those happier years following could never smooth away.
No wonder he paid me scant attention
and probably wished with all his heart that I would evaporate on the spot. And
he did not even know the portent of our coming, though I am sure he must have
suspected. I was Joram's doom.
The sheep being safely penned and
watered and bedded down for the night, Eliza took her father by his calloused,
work-hard hand and would have brought him over to where I stood. He removed his
hand from hers, however; not roughly, he could never be rough or harsh with his
heart's treasure. But he made it very clear that the two of us—he and I—would
not be connected in any way, especially not through her.
I could not fault him or blame him. I
felt such guilt within myself—as if this were all my doing—and such grief and
compassion for him, whose idyllic life we were destined to destroy, that tears
stung my eyelids.
Hurriedly, I blinked them back, for he
would despise any weakness on my part.
"Papa," said Eliza,
"this is Reuven. He is Father Saryon's almost son. He cannot speak, Papa. At least not with his mouth. He talks whole books with his
eyes."
She smiled, teasing me. That smile and
her beauty—for she was flushed with her exertion, her hair tousled and
windblown— did nothing to add to my composure. Charmed by Eliza, awed by Joram,
consumed by guilt and unhappiness, I bowed my respects, glad for the chance to
hide my face and try to regain my self-command.
This was not easy. Joram said no word
of greeting. When I raised my head, I saw that he had folded his arms across
his chest and was regarding me with dark displeasure, his heavy brows drawn
into a frown.
His cold forbidding darkness dimmed
his daughter's sunshine. Eliza faltered, looked uncertainly from him to me.
"Papa," she said, chiding
gently, "where are your manners? Reuven is our guest. He has come all the
way from Earth just to see us. You must make him welcome."
She did not understand. She could not
understand. I raised my hand, to ward off her words, and shook my head
slightly, all the while keeping my gaze fixed on Joram. If, as Eliza had said,
I could speak with my eyes, I hoped he would read in them understanding.
Perhaps he did. He still did not speak to me. Turning away, he walked up the
steps that crisscrossed the hillside. But before he turned, I saw that his
frowning aspect had lightened a little, if only to be replaced by sorrow.
I think, all in all, I would have
preferred his displeasure.
He strode up the steps very rapidly,
taking them two or three at a time. I marveled at his endurance, for the steps
went directly up the hill; there must have been seventy-five of them, and I was
soon panting for breath. Eliza kept beside me, and she was troubled, for she
was silent and her gaze was on her father's back.
"He is eager to see Father
Saryon," she said abruptly, in apology for Joram's rudeness.
I nodded yes, that I understood.
Pausing to catch my breath and try to ease the cramps in my calves, I signed to
her that I was not in the least offended and that she was not to worry about
me.
This she didn't understand. I took out
the electronic notepad and typed it in, showing the words to her. She read
them, looked at me. I nodded, smiled, reassuring. She smiled back, tentative,
and then sighed.
"Things are going to change,
aren't they, Reuven? Our life is going to change. His life is going to
change." Her gaze went again to her father. "And it's all my fault.
I've longed for this day, prayed for it to come. I didn't realize . . . Oh,
Papa, I'm sorry! I'm so sorry!"
Gathering her long skirts, she left
me, running up the stairs with the long stride that matched Joram's. I could
not have kept up with her if my life had depended on it. As it was, I was not
disappointed to be left behind. I needed time to sort out my own thoughts. I
trudged slowly and painfully after them.
Eliza caught up with her father. She
twined her arm through his, rested her head on his shoulder. He folded her in a
loving embrace, stroked and smoothed her black curls.
His arm around her, her arm around
him, they continued up the stairs until they reached their living quarters,
where they vanished from my sight.
I kept climbing, my strength sapped by
the ache in my legs, the burning in my lungs and my heart. Below, I could hear
the sheep, snug and safe in their barn, bleating contentedly as they settled
down for the night. In the distance, the rumble of thunder-
another storm ravaging the land below.
I wondered, then, what would happen to
the sheep when we took Joram and hls family away from their home.
Without their shepherd, they would die.
CHAPTER TWELVE
The rounded knob on the sword's hilt, combined with the long neck of the hilt itself, the handle's short, blunt arms, and the narrow body of the blade, turned the weapon into a grim parody of a human being.
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
It
occurred to me that I would miss the reunion, the first meeting between my
master and Joram, and that fear impelled me up the stairs at a much more rapid
pace than I would have thought myself capable of. I was gasping for breath when
I reached the top. Dusk was falling and the lights had been lit inside the
dwelling place and so I was able to find their rooms, when most of the rest of
the building was dark and deserted.
Entering a door nearest the lights, I
made my way along a shadowy hall into what must have been, in the days of the
Font's grandeur, the dortoir, where lived the young catalysts in training. I
say this, because of the innumerable small rooms opening off the central
corridor. In each room was a bed and desk and a washstand. The stone walls were
chill, the rooms dusty and darkened by the sadness which comes to a place when
the life that once filled it is withdrawn.
In this corridor, I lost sight of the
lights of Joram's dwelling, but found them again when I entered a large, open
room that had probably been a dining hall. I heard voices through a door to my
left. I walked from darkness and chill to light and warmth. A kitchen, which
had once fed several hundred, was now not only kitchen but the central living
area for Joram and his family.
I could see easily why they chose it.
An enormous stone fireplace provided heat and light. Twenty years before, when
the Font had teemed with life, magi hired to work with the catalysts would have
conjured up fire to cook the food and warm the body. Possessed of no magic
whatsoever, Joram cut and hauled wood to the fireplace. The flames crackled and
danced, smoke and sparks fled up the chimney. I reveled in the warmth. The air
was growing cool outside, with the setting of the sun.
Saryon and Gwen sat near the fire.
Gwen was pale and silent, staring into the flames. Occasionally she would shift
her gaze to the back part of the room, in part expectation, part dread. Saryon,
ill at ease, suddenly stood up and began roaming aimlessly about the room. Just
as abruptly, he sat back down. Joram was not present and I feared he might
refuse to see Saryon at all, which would have hurt my master terribly. Then
Eliza entered at almost the same time I did, although from a door opposite.
"Papa bids you welcome, Father
Saryon," she said, coming to stand before the catalyst, who rose to meet
her. "Please sit down and be comfortable. Papa has gone to wash and change
his clothes. He will join us shortly."
I was relieved and I think Saryon was,
too, for he smiled and gave a deep sigh before resuming his chair. Gwen
stirred, at this, and said we must be hungry and she would fix the evening
meal. Though Eliza had done a very good job of attempting to wash away the
traces, I saw that she had been crying.
She said she was certain I would like
to wash up, which was true, and offered to show me the way. I crossed the room
to join her. We were both being watched by the teddy bear with the orange
ribbon around his neck, who was seated in a small chair that must have been
specially made for a child. Just at the moment we were walking past, the bear
gave a lurch and tumbled out of the chair, landing on his nose on the floor.
"Poor Teddy," Eliza said
playfully. Picking up the bear, she dusted him off, kissed him on the top of
his well-worn head, and settled him more comfortably in the chair. "Be a
sweet Teddy," she admonished, still in her playful tone, "and you
shall have bread and honey for your supper."
Glancing back at the bear, I saw
Simkin smirk. Eliza led me into the sleeping quarters of the family, rooms
which she told me had once belonged to the higher-ranking catalysts. These
rooms were larger and much more comfortable than the narrow cells I had passed.
She took me to one at the end of the hallway.
"Here's where you will spend the
night," she said, opening the door.
A fire burned on the small hearth. The
bed was covered with clean, sweet-smelling sheets, scented with lavender. The
floor was newly swept. My knapsack rested near the bed. On the night-stand was
a jug of steaming water and a washbasin. Eliza told me, where to find the
outbuildings.
"No need to hurry," she
said. "Papa is bathing and taking his evening swim. He won't be ready for
at least another half hour."
Like her mother, she was pale and
preoccupied. The only time I'd seen her smile was when she was playing with
Teddy and that smile had faded quickly. She was about to leave when I stopped
her.
Since we had time, I typed on the
notebook. Tell me more about Teddy.
Her smile returned. "I told
you how I found him in the old nursery. I took him everywhere with me—he went
with Papa to tend the sheep, with Mama to work in the garden or wash the
clothes.
"You're going to think this is
silly." Her cheeks flushed faintly. "But I seem to remember Teddy
telling me stories—all about faeries and giants, dragons and unicorns."
She laughed self-consciously. "I suppose I must have made them up myself
and told them to Teddy, though I Have the oddest impression that it was the
other way around. What do you think?"
I don't remember what I responded.
Something about lonely children having vivid imaginations. What could I say? It
was not up to me to tell her the truth about Simkin!
She said that this must be true and
started to leave, but paused, just before she shut the door. "Now that I
recall them, some of those stories were quite horrible. Tales about duchesses
sneezing their heads off and the heads landing in the soup and earls being
buried alive by mistake and faerie queens who took men captive and used them as
slaves. What a morbid little imp I must have been!"
Laughing again, she left me, shutting
the door behind her.
Chaotic, treacherous, Simkin was quite
capable of leading grown people to ruin just for the entertainment value. It
shocked me to think that Joram and Gwen—Joram in particular, who knew what
Simkin was—had allowed him to be the playmate of their child. Yet Simkin
obviously had not harmed her and had provided her with pleasant—albeit
strange—childhood memories.
And what would happen when we took
Joram and his family back to Earth? Eliza would undoubtedly want to take along
her "Teddy." The image of Simkin loosed upon Earth was appalling. I
made a mental note to myself to discuss this with Saryon, who, worried and
preoccupied himself, had probably not given this matter much thought.
I found the outbuildings—one for men
and one for women— which must have dated back to the very early days of life in
the Font. They were as clean as was possible, but being open-air, they made me
consider that one of mankind's most wonderful achievements had been indoor
plumbing.
Back in my room, I washed myself from
the basin—envying Joram his swim—combed my hair, and changed my clothes, which
smelled strongly of sheep. Dressed in clean blue jeans and a blue cable-knit
sweater I'd purchased in
Eliza and her mother were busy in the
kitchen. I offered my services and was put in charge of slicing loaves of
freshly baked bread, which had been cooling on a rack. Eliza set out bowls of
dried fruit and honeycombs filled with honey that tasted of clover. Gwen was
stirring a pot of beans, cooked with mutton. I understood then that the sheep
meant not only wool for their clothes, but meat for their table.
Saryon looked at me rather anxiously,
when Gwen talked about the mutton, for I had been known, when younger, to
express my disapproval of meat-eaters at the dinner tables of our hosts,
usually over the prime rib. I smiled at him and shook my head, and even
accepted the responsibility of tasting the beans, when Eliza offered them, to
see if they were seasoned properly. I think they were bland. I don't remember.
It was then, when she held the wooden spoon to my lips, that
I realized I was falling in love with her.
At that moment Joram entered the room.
I could not see him, from my angle in the kitchen, but I knew by the sight of
Saryon's face, which had become as white as polished bone. Gwendolyn and Eliza
exchanged glances—conspiratorial glances. It had been by their design that we
three were in the back part of the kitchen, leaving Saryon and Joram in the
living area alone.
Joram advanced in my view, and my
heart sank, for he was every bit as grim and stoic and cold as I had seen him
on the hillside. Saryon stood tall and straight, his hands at his sides. The
two gazed at each other long minutes without moving or speaking. I don't know
what I feared—that Joram would denounce his mentor and order him out of the
house. I could envision this stern, proud man doing anything.
Eliza and Gwen clasped hands. My own
hands grew chill and I was worried for Saryon, who had begun to sag and was
looking very ill. I was going to go to him. I had already taken a step in that
direction.
Joram reached out, clasped his arms
around Saryon, and held him in a fast embrace.
"My boy," Saryon murmured
brokenly, stroking the grown man on the back as perhaps the catalyst had once
lovingly stroked the baby. "My dear boy! How good it is ... You and Gwen .
. ." Saryon broke down completely.
Gwen was sobbing into her apron. Eliza
stood watching, tears rolling unheeded down her cheeks, on her lips a sweet,
sad smile. I had tears in my own eyes, and quickly dried them on the sleeve of
my sweater.
Joram straightened. He was taller than
my master now; Saryon having become stooped with the years. Joram placed his
hands—brown and rough—on Saryon's shoulders and smiled briefly, darkly.
"Welcome to our home, Father," he said, and his tone belied his
affectionate gesture, for his voice was cool and shadowed. "Gwen and I are
pleased that you have come to visit us."
He turned to her and his dark
countenance lightened somewhat when his eyes fell upon her, as if the sun had
broken through the clouds and was shining on his face. His
tone to her softened.
"Our guests must be hungry. Is
supper ready?"
Gwen hurriedly wiped her eyes on the tail end of her apron and replied,
in a faint voice, that the table was laid and invited us to sit down. I was
going to help serve, but Eliza said no, I was to sit with the other men.
Joram took his place at the head of
the long plank table. He placed Saryon at his right hand. I sat down next to
Saryon, on my master's right.
"I believe you have met
Reuven," Saryon said mildly. "My assistant and scribe. Reuven wrote
your story, Joram. At King Garald's behest, so that the people of Earth could
understand our people. The books were very well received. You would like them,
I think."
"I would like to read them!" said Eliza, placing the bowl of
steaming beans on the table. She clasped her hands and stared at me in awe.
"You write books! You didn't tell me. How
splendid!"
My face was hot enough that we could
have toasted the bread by holding it to my cheek. Joram said nothing. Gwen
murmured something polite; I'm not sure what, I couldn't hear for the pounding
of blood in my head and the confusion of my thoughts. Eliza was so beautiful.
She was regarding me with respect and admiration.
Shipboard romance, I expostulated with
myself sternly. You are in a strange and exotic location, meeting under unusual
circumstances. Not only that, but I am the first man near her own age she has
ever met. It would be completely wrong of me to take advantage of this
situation. She would need a friend, in that brave new world to which she was
going. I would be that friend and if, after she had met the hundreds of
thousands of other young men who would be clamoring for her attention, she
happened to still think well of me, I would be there for her. One more catalyst
in the throng . . .
Saryon nudged me with his bony knee
beneath the stone table. I came back to reality with a jolt, to find that Gwen
and Eliza were taking their seats; Eliza sitting directly across from Saryon
and Gwen across from her husband. As the women sat down Joram rose to his feet
in respect. Saryon and I did the same. We all returned to our seats.
"Father," said Joram,
"would you offer a prayer?" Saryon looked astonished, as well he
might, for in the past Joram had never been at all religious. Indeed, he had
once held a grudge against the Almin, blaming Him for the tragic circumstances
of his life, when by rights the blame should have fallen on the greed and evil
ambition of men.
We bowed our heads. I thought I heard
a snigger, coming from the vicinity of Teddy, but no one else seemed to hear
anything.
"Almin," Saryon prayed,
"bless and keep us in these dark and dangerous times. Help us to work
together to defeat this dread enemy, who seeks to destroy and defile the glory
of Your creation. Amen."
Eliza and Gwen murmured
"Amen" in response. I said it myself, silently. Joram said nothing.
Lifting his head, he sent a black look at Saryon that, if he had seen it, must
have struck him to the heart. Fortunately, he did not. My master was studying
Eliza, who sat across the table from him.
"You are very much like your
grandmother, my dear," Saryon said to her. "The Empress of Merilon.
She was said to be the most beautiful woman in Thimhallan. And she was, one of
them." He turned his mild gaze to Gwen. "The other, of course, was
your mother."
Gwendolyn and Eliza both flushed at
the compliment and Eliza asked Saryon to tell her about the Empress, her
grandmother.
"Papa never talks about the old
days," Eliza said. "He says that they are gone and it is useless to
think about them. I've read about Merilon and the rest in the books, but that
isn't the same. Mother has told me some, but not much. . . ."
"Did she tell you about how she
saved us from the Duuk-tsarith when we first came to Merilon?"
Saryon asked.
"No! Did you, Mama? Will you tell
the story?"
Gwen smiled, but she, too, had seen the look
her husband cast on Saryon. She said something to the effect that she was a
poor storyteller and would leave that to the good father. Saryon launched into
his tale. Eliza listened with rapt attention. Gwen stared at her plate, made
only the barest pretense of eating. Joram ate his food in silence, looked at
nothing and everything.
"Simkin changed himself into a
tulip," Saryon was saying, bringing the story to its conclusion. "He
planted himself in the bouquet your mother was carrying and urged her to tell
the guards at the city gate that my young friends and I were all guests of her
father's! And so they admitted us—who were in reality fugitives from the
law—safely into Merilon. She told a lie, of course, but I believe that the
Almin forgave her, for she acted out of love."
Saryon smiled benignly and gave a
gentle nod toward Joram. Gwendolyn lifted her head, looked at her husband. He
returned the look and again I saw the darkness, that seemed to hang over him
perpetually, lift. The love that had been kindled that day still burned, its
warmth surrounded us and blessed us.
"Mama!
You were a heroine! How romantic. But tell me more about this Simkin,"
Eliza said, laughing.
At this, Saryon looked extremely discomfited.
My glance went involuntarily to the stuffed bear, which seemed to be quivering
with either anticipation or suppressed laughter. Saryon opened his mouth. I'm
not sure what he would have replied, but at that moment Joram, his face grim,
shoved his plate back and rose to his feet.
"We've had enough stories for the
night. You came here for a reason, or so I understand, Father. Come into the
warming room and tell us. Leave the dishes, Gwen," he added. "Father
Saryon has important work to do back on Earth. We don't want to prolong his
visit unnecessarily. You and Reuven will be our guests tonight, of
course."
"Thank you," said Saryon
faintly.
"It will only take a moment to
clear the table, Joram," Gwendolyn said nervously. "You and Father
Saryon go into the warming room. Eliza and Reuven and I will—"
Her chill, trembling hands dropped a
plate. It struck the stone floor and shattered.
All of us stood and stared at it in
unhappy silence. Everyone in that room read its dread portent.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
The sword lay like a corpse at Saryon's feet, the personification of the catalyst's sin.
THE DARKSWORD
Eliza
brought a broom and swept up the remnants of the plate.
"Reuven and I will do the dishes,
Mama," Eliza said in a low voice. "You stay with Papa."
Gwendolyn did not reply, but she
nodded, and going to Joram, she put her arm around him, rested her head on his
chest. He held her fast, bowed his dark head over her blond hair, and kissed
her gently.
I cleared the table, carried the
plates into the kitchen. Eliza tossed the broken plate into a bin, then filled
a tub with hot water from a kettle that had been steaming on the hearth. She
didn't look at me once, but kept her eyes on her work.
I guessed what she must be feeling: guilt,
remorse. Prospero's daughter wanted to see this brave new world. She was
certain in her own mind that this was why we had come—to take her back with us.
She wanted to go, to see the wonders about which she had only read. Yet she
realized, perhaps for the first time, how her going would grieve her parents.
She would never leave them.
She won't have to. They will come with
her. The knowledge cheered me.
Joram made certain that Saryon was
settled comfortably near the fire, then sat down in
what I must assume was his accustomed chair. Gwendolyn took her place in a
chair beside Joram's, near enough that they could reach out and touch hands.
On tables beside each chair were
several books and, near Gwen's chair, a basket holding balls of yarn, hand-carved
knitting needles, and another basket of mending. She reached, by habit, for one
of these. Only when the basket was in her lap did she look at Father Saryon,
and with a sigh, she put her work away and folded her hands together tightly.
No one said a word. We might have been
a party of mutes, except that then the silence would have been alive, with
thoughts flying from one to another, faces animated, eyes bright and speaking.
Each person in that room stood behind a wall—a wall of time and distance, fear
and mistrust and, in my master's case, deep sorrow.
Finishing the dishes, we joined the
others. Eliza lit candles. I added another log to the fire. Eliza went to her
own chair, near a table piled with books and another basket of handwork. There
not being any more chairs, I retrieved one from the kitchen and placed it near
my master.
Joram regarded Saryon with grim
expectation, black brows drawn in a straight heavy line above his eyes, his
expression stern and impregnable, a solid rock cliff, challenging Saryon to
hurl himself against it.
Saryon had known this would not be
easy. I don't believe he imagined it would be this hard. He drew in a breath,
but before he could speak, Joram forestalled him.
"I want you to take a message to
Prince Garald, Father," Joram said abruptly. "Tell him that his
commands have been thwarted, the law broken. My family and I were to have been
left alone and in peace on this world. That peace has been disturbed by a man
named Smythe, who came seeking the Darksword. He dared to threaten my family. I
threw him out with orders to never return. If he does come back, I take no
responsibility for what might happen. That goes for anyone else seeking the
Darksword as well."
This statement obviously included us
and made Saryon's task no easier.
"I cannot think why they have
come in the first place," Joram continued. "The Darksword was
destroyed when the world was shattered. They are wasting their time searching
for something that doesn't exist."
He was not lying, not outright. True,
the original Darksword had been destroyed. But what about the new one, the one
he had most recently made? Or did it truly exist? Perhaps the Duuk-tsarith were
mistaken. Saryon did not dare ask. To do so would be to admit that Joram was
being spied upon and that would send him into a rage.
My master had the look of a man about
to go swimming in an icy lake. He knows that entering the water little by
little will only prolong the agony and so he plunged straight in.
"Joram, Gwendolyn"—Saryon's
compassionate gaze included them both—"my business here does not concern
the Darksword. I am here to take you and your family back to Earth, where you
will be safe."
"We are safe here," said
Joram sternly, glowering, "or we would be if Garald would keep his word
and enforce his law! Or does he want the Darksword, too? That's it, isn't
it?" He bounded out of his chair, loomed over us threateningly. "That's
why you've come, Father!"
I knew then, of course, that the
reports were true. Joram had made another Darksword. He had as good as admitted
it.
Saryon stood to face him. His cheeks
were flushed, his voice shook, not with weakness, but with anger. "I am
not here for the sword, Joram. I have stated as much. You know—or at least you
should know—that I would not lie to you."
Gwendolyn was on her feet, her hands
on Joram's arm. "Joram, please!" she said softly. "You don't
know what you're saying. This is Father Saryon!"
Joram's fury subsided. He had the
grace to look ashamed of himself and to apologize. But the apology was brief
and it was cold. He returned to his chair. Gwen did not go back to hers, but
remained standing behind Joram, her presence strong and supportive, defending
him, though he had been in the wrong.
Eliza was troubled, confused, and a
little frightened. This was not what she had expected.
Saryon sat back down, looked gently,
grievingly, on Joram. ''My son, do you think this is easy for me? I see the
life you have made for yourself and your family. I see that it is peaceful and
blessed. And I am the one telling you it must end. I wish I could add that it
would be possible to regain such peace back on Earth, but that I cannot
promise. Who knows whether any of us will find peace when we return, or if we
will all be plunged into terrible war.
"Smythe spoke to you of the
Hch'nyv, the aliens who have one avowed purpose and that is to destroy the
human race. They have no interest in negotiating, they refuse all contact with
us. They have slaughtered those we sent to them in hopes of obtaining a truce.
They are closing in on us. Our military forces have pulled back, in order to
make a final stand on Earth. This outpost is the last to be evacuated.
"I cannot even promise that you
will be safe on Earth," Saryon admitted, "I can't promise that any of
us will. But at least there you will have the protection of the combined Earth
Forces. Here, you and Gwen and Eliza would be at the aliens' mercy. And, from
what we have seen, they have no concept of mercy."
Joram's mouth twisted. "And if
you have the Darksword—"
Saryon was shaking his head.
Joram amended his statement, though
the twist of his mouth deepened and his tone was bitter and ironic. "If someone
has the Darksword, then someone could use it to stop these fiendish
aliens and save the world. Still trying to redeem yourself,
Father?"
Saryon gazed at him sadly. "You
don't believe me. You think I am lying to you. I am sorry, my son. Very sorry."
"Joram," Gwen
whispered in gentle reproof, and placed her hand on his shoulder.
Joram sighed. Reaching up, he took
hold of her hand and rested his cheek against it. He kept fast hold of her as
he talked.
"I do not say you are lying,
Father." Joram spoke in a softened tone. "I am saying that you have
been tricked. You were always gullible," he added, and the bitter smile
warmed into one of affection. "You are too good for this world, Father.
Much too good. People take advantage of you."
"I do not know that I am
particularly good," Saryon said, speaking slowly, earnestly, his words
gathering force as he went, "but I have always tried to do what I believed
was right. This does not mean that I am weak, Joram, nor that I am foolish,
though you always equated goodness with weakness. You imply that these aliens
do not exist. I've seen the news reports, Joram! I've seen the pictures of the
ships attacking and destroying our colonies! I've read the accounts of the
terrible slaughter, the senseless butchery.
"No, I have not seen these aliens
with my own eyes. Few men have and lived to tell of it. But I have seen the
anxiety, the concern, the fear in the eyes of General Boris and King Garald.
They are afraid, Joram. Afraid for you, afraid for all of us. What do you think
this is—an elaborate hoax? To what purpose? All to trick you out of the
Darksword? How is that possible, when you have said yourself that it was
destroyed?"
Joram made no response.
Saryon sighed again. "My son, I
will be honest with you. I will leave nothing hidden, though what I have to
tell will anger you and rightly so. They know you have forged a new Darksword.
The Duuk-tsarith have been watching you—only to
protect you, Joram! Only to protect you from Smythe and his associates! So the Duuk-tsarith
claim, and I ... I believe them."
Joram was indeed furious, so furious
that he was choked by his rage and could not speak. And so my master was able
to continue.
"I know why you made the sword,
Joram—to protect yourself and those you love from the magic. And that is why
you cling to it. And, yes, I admit that they want the Darksword and its
secrets, Joram. Bishop Radisovik—you remember him? You know him to be a good,
wise man. Bishop Radisovik received a message which he believes came from the
Almin concerning the Darksword and how it might be used to save our people.
Whether you take the sword to Earth or not is your decision. I will not try to
influence you. I care only for the safety of yourself and your family. Do you
care about the Darksword so much, my son, that you would sacrifice your family
for it?"
Joram rose to his feet. Releasing
Gwen's hand, he stepped away from her placating touch. His voice was deep with
anger. "How can I trust them? What have I known from these people in the
past, Father? Treachery, deceit, murder—" "Honor, love, compassion,"
Saryon countered. Joram's face darkened. He was not accustomed to being
contradicted. I don't know what he might have said next, but Gwendolyn
intervened.
"Father, tell us what King Garald
plans for us," she said.
Saryon did so. He related how a ship
was waiting for them at the outpost. The ship would take them back to Earth,
where housing had been arranged. He spoke with regret of things left behind,
but there was not enough room on the ship to store many personal belongings.
"Just room enough for the
Darksword," Joram said, and sneered.
"The hell with
the Darksword!" Saryon said angrily, losing patience. "Consign
it to perdition! I do not want to see it! I do not want to hear of it! Leave
it! Bury it! Destroy it! I do not care what you do with it. You, Joram!
You and your wife and your child. These are all that matter to me."
"To you!"
Joram countered. "And that is why they sent you! To make exactly this plea
in this tone! To scare us into running. And when we are gone, then they will be
free to come and search and take what they know I would die before I give
up!"
"You can't mean this,
Father!" Eliza spoke for the first time. Rising to her feet, she faced
him. "What if they are right? What if the power of the Darksword could
save lives? Millions of lives! You have no right to withhold it. You must give
it to them!"
"Daughter," said Gwendolyn
sharply, "hold your tongue! You can't possibly
understand!"
"I understand that my father is
being selfish and obstinate," Eliza returned. "And that he doesn't
care about us! About any of us! He cares only for himself!"
Joram glared darkly at Saryon.
"You have accomplished your task, Father. You have turned my child against
me. No doubt that, too, was part of your plan. She can go with you to Earth, if
she wants. I will not stop her. You may stay the night, you and your
accomplice. But you will be gone in the morning."
He turned and started to leave the
room.
"Father!"
Eliza pleaded, heartbroken. "I don't want to leave! Father, I didn't mean
. . ." She stretched out her hands to him, but he walked past her without
a glance and disappeared into the darkness. "Father!"
He did not return.
With a ragged cry, Eliza ran from the
room, into another part of the dwelling. I heard her footsteps and then, in the
distance, a door slam.
Gwendolyn stood alone, drooping and
pale as a cut flower.
Saryon began to stammer out an
apology, though the Almin knows he had nothing for which to apologize.
Gwendolyn lifted her gaze to meet his.
"They are so alike," she said. "
"Yes," said Saryon gently.
"I know him."
Perhaps, I thought. But in the
meantime it will be a long night.
Gwendolyn gave Saryon a kiss on his
cheek. She bid me good night. I bowed silently, and she left us.
The fire had died to embers. The room
was dark and growing chill. I was afraid for Saryon, who looked very ill. I
knew how exhausted he must be, for the day had been a tiring one. The evening's
stressful and unpleasant scene had left him empty and shaken.
"Master," I signed, going to
him, "come to bed. There is nothing more we can do this night."
He did not move, nor did he seem to
see my speaking hands. He stared into the glowing coals, and from his words, spoken
to himself, I shared his vision. He was seeing the forge fire, the making of
the sword.
"I gave the first Darksword
life," he said. "A thing of evil, it sucked the light from the world
and changed it into darkness. He is right. I am still searching for
redemption."
He was shivering. I looked around the
room, spotted a woolen throw tossed on a stool near the fireplace. As I went to
retrieve it, my eye caught a tiny flash of orange light, in the corner between
the fireplace and the wall. Thinking it might be a cinder that had caught the
wood on fire, I started to brush it off, intending to
stamp it out.
The moment my hand touched it, a
shiver went through my body. Smooth, plastic, it was not of this world. It did
not belong here. I saw again the green glowing listening devices Mosiah had
discovered in our house. Except why should this one glow orange . . . ?
"No reason," said a furry
voice, near my elbow. "Except that
I happen to like orange."
Teddy sat upon the stool. The orange
glow of the listening device was reflected in his button eyes.
I might have asked how Simkin knew
what such a device was, or even if he did know what it was. I might have
asked why he waited to show it to us now, now that it was too late. I might
have asked, but I did not. I think I feared the answer. Perhaps that was a
mistake.
And I did not tell Saryon that all we
had said had been overheard by the Technomancers. Perhaps that, too, was a
mistake, but I was afraid it would only add to his misery. Whereas, if Gwen was
right—and she should surely know Joram—by morning he would have reconsidered.
By morning, we would all be gone from this place and the Technomancers could
listen to the silence.
Picking up the throw, I placed it over
Saryon's shoulders, and rousing him from his bleak reverie, I persuaded him to
go to bed. We walked together down the dark hallway, with only the lambent
light of the stars to guide us. I offered to make his tea for him, but he said
no, he was too tired. He would go straight to bed.
Any doubts I had about concealing my
knowledge of the listening device vanished. It would only worry him to no
purpose, when he needed rest.
And if that was a mistake, then it was
the first of many to be made that night. Still another mistake, and perhaps the
most drastic, was that I neglected to keep an eye on "Teddy."
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
"Wrap the sword in these rags. If anyone stops you, tell them you are carrying a child. A dead child."
JORAM; FORGING THE DARKSWORD
I woke
up, thinking I heard a sound, but unable to place what the sound had been.
Lying in bed, trying to recollect what it was and not making much headway, I
heard the creak of hinges, as of a door being either opened or shut very
slowly, so as not to disturb anyone.
Thinking perhaps it was Saryon and
that he might need me, I left my bed, pulled on my sweater and jeans, and went
out into the hall and down to his room. Listening at the door, I could hear his
gentle snoring. Whoever was up and wandering around in the night, it was not my
master.
"Joram," I thought, and
though I had been angered by his obduracy and his show of disrespect for
Saryon, I felt sorry for the man. He was being forced to leave a home he loved,
a life he had made.
"Almin give him guidance," I
prayed, and returned to my room.
Restless, knowing I would not be able
to go back to sleep, I walked to the window and parted the curtains to look out
upon the night.
My window opened up onto one of the
many gardens with which the Font was surrounded. I have no idea of the name of
the flowers which grew out there; some sort of large, white blooms that hung
heavy on their stems and seemed, to my imagination, to be hanging their heads
in sorrow. I was thinking to myself that this would make a good metaphor to use
in a new book I was then planning. I was about to turn away, to note it down,
when I saw someone enter the garden.
Of course, Joram has taken his worries
outside, I thought. I felt uneasy about disturbing his privacy and also about
the possibility of him seeing me through the window and thinking I was spying
on him. I was about to draw shut the curtains when the figure stepped out into
an open walkway, almost directly opposite me, and I saw that it was not Joram.
It was a woman, wearing a cloak and
hood and carrying a bundle in her arms.
"Eliza!" I said to myself.
"She's running away from home!"
I went cold all over. My heart
constricted. I stood bolted to the floor in that terrible indecision which
sometimes comes over one in a crisis. I had to do something, but what?
Run and wake Saryon and have him talk to her? I recalled his weariness and how ill he had
looked and decided against that.
Wake her parents?
No. I would not betray Eliza. I would
go to her myself, try to persuade her to stay.
Grabbing up my jacket, I threw it on
and dashed out into the hall. I had only the vaguest idea where I was going,
but on reflection, I seemed to remember passing the garden on my way to the
outbuildings. I found the door after only one wrong turn and stepped out into
the night. The creak of the hinges, as I passed through, was the same creak I'd
heard earlier.
The night was bright and it was easy
to see the shadowy figure ahead of me. She had been moving at a fairly rapid
pace when I first saw her from my window, and I was afraid she might have
already crossed the garden and disappeared over the wall before I could reach
her. As it was, she had reached the wall, but the bundle she was carrying had
slowed her down. She had placed the bundle on the top of the wall and with it
something else, the sight of which gave me another cold chill—Teddy.
Teddy, a.k.a. Simkin, sat on the top
of the wall beside the bundle while Eliza vaulted over the wall, in a flurry of
cloak and skirt. Turning, she reached for the bundle with one hand and Teddy
with the other. She saw me.
Her face, framed by its night-dark
cloud of hair, was pale as the heavy flowers; pale but resolute. Her eyes
widened when she saw me, and then narrowed in displeasure.
Frantically, I waved my hands, though
what I hoped to accomplish by this gesturing was beyond me. Whatever it was, it
didn't work. She snatched up the bundle, and it was obviously heavy, for she
had a difficult time managing it. She was forced to drop Teddy—on his head, I hoped—and
use both hands to grasp the bundle.
There was a muffled clang—steel
wrapped in cloth striking stone.
I knew then what she carried and the
knowledge knocked the breath from my body. I faltered, came to a halt.
She saw that I knew,
which served only to increase her haste. Securing her burden, she turned away
from me and I heard her footsteps slipping on the rocks of the hillside.
I came to my senses and hurried after
her, for now it was more imperative than ever that I catch up to her.
The Technomancers were listening. But
according to Mosiah, the Duuk-tsarith were
watching!
Expecting to see their dark forms leap
out of the shadows any moment, I scaled the wall, scrambling over it clumsily.
I have said that I was not very athletic. I could not see the ground beneath me
in the dark shadow cast by the wall. I misjudged the drop and fell heavily,
bruising my knees against the wall and scraping away the skin on the palms of
my hands.
"Oof! Zounds! Oaf! You've knocked
the stuffing out of me!" came a voice.
I was too busy trying to regain
purchase on the steep slope to pay any attention to the lamenting Teddy. My
feet scrabbled on a loose rock, which bounded down the hillside and started a
small avalanche. I slipped and slithered and then she hovered over me. The
folds of her cloak settled around me. Hands grasped my arms and pinched my
flesh.
"Stop it!" she whispered
furiously. "You're making enough noise to wake the dead!"
"Happened once," said a
doleful voice, somewhere near my elbow. "The Duke of Esterhouse. Dropped
dead, sitting in his armchair, reading the paper. Everyone afraid to tell him.
Knew he'd take the news frightfully hard. So we left him there. And then one
day cook forgot and rang the dinner bell—"
Startled, Eliza let go of me and sat
back on her heels.
"You can talk!" she said to
me in a tight voice. She was not carrying the bundle.
I shook my head emphatically. Reaching
underneath my scraped rump, I pulled out the alleged stuffed bear and gave it a
-shake.
Eliza looked at the bear and bit her
lower lip and the sudden inkling of the truth formed in my mind.
"Are you hurt?" she asked in
a grudging tone.
I shook my head.
"Good," she said. "Go
back to bed, Reuven. I know what I'm doing."
And without another word, she snatched
the bear from my hand and was up and gone in a flutter of skirt and cloak. She
stopped some distance on the hill below to pick up her heavy bundle, and then I
lost her in the darkness.
She knew where she was going. I did not.
She was accustomed to climbing and walking these steep hills. I was not. I
could not shout after her, although I wouldn't have, in any case. The last
thing I wanted to do was call attention to her and what she carried. I hoped to
be able to persuade her to return home before any harm was done. But first I
had to catch her.
It would cost more time in the long
run, I reasoned, if I stumbled blindly down the hillside. There had to be a
trail; she could not be moving so fast otherwise. I took time to search, my
knees stiffening and my palms burning. My patience was rewarded. Not far from
where I had fallen I found a crude trail, half-natural, half-man-made, carved
into the hillside. It was an old trail; the feet of many catalysts had trodden
it before me. The trail was formed of deep gouges in the hillside, reinforced
here and there with large embedded rocks or exposed tree roots.
The rocks gleamed white in the starlit
night; the tree roots, worn by the passage of many feet, were slick and shiny.
I made my way down the trail, wondering as I did so where it led.
The way was steep, and despite the
help from rocks and other foot and handholds, my going was difficult and slow.
I could no longer hear Eliza's footfalls and knew she must be far ahead of me. My
taking this route was a foolish idea. If I slipped and fell, I would probably
break my leg or my ankle, and be forced to lie out here all night with no hope
of rescue.
If only I could move faster! I could
see, in my mind, those catalysts who had once made
this trail and walked it every day, bounding down it like goats. . . .
I was bounding down it, if not like a
goat, at least swiftly and easily. Brown robes hiked up to my waist, sandals
flapping, a bag of scrolls flung over my shoulder, I ran down the trail in the
bright sunshine of a fine day. All the young catalysts and occasionally some of
the old ones took this route when they were late for classes, for this trail
led straight to the University.
The vision was eerie and startling,
just like the other vision I'd had before—of myself in
brown robes, of Eliza my queen. . . . Of course, as an author, I was accustomed
to living in my imagination and my fancies and dreams are very real to me. But
not as real as this. Again, I lifted a curtain to look out a window and saw
myself on the other side, looking back in.
But—could I use this to my benefit?
Did I dare?
I was light-headed from exhaustion and
the thin air of the high altitude. Plus I was desperate, fearful for Eliza's
safety. Otherwise I do not believe that I could have done what I did. I let go
of myself in this life and gave myself to the other life, if that's what it
truly was. I became that catalyst, late for class, certain to be in trouble
with the master, and I plunged down the hillside.
My feet knew where the stones would
be, my hands knew where to grasp. I knew where I could safely slide and once I
even jumped from one ledge to another. It was madness, it was exhilarating. If
I had stopped to think about what I was doing, I would have frozen in place and
been unable to move another step.
When I finally reached the bottom, I
gasped for breath and stared up the hillside and the catalyst that I was
vanished. I realized what I had done and my stomach turned within me. Quickly,
I looked away and started to search for Eliza. I had a final image of the
catalyst running in the opposite direction from the one I was taking and part
of me was sorry to let him go.
I had reached a broad, flat,
white-stone-paved road. It must be the main highway, leading down from the Font
to the foothills and the long abandoned city below, a city whose sole reason
for being had been to support the Font and the University. This road must have
been clogged with wheelless carts that floated on the wings of magic and the
exotic and fanciful carriages of the nobility coming to pay their respects or
to ask for favors or visit sons and daughters attending the University.
I stared down the road's bending,
winding length, shining like a white ribbon in the night, and after a moment I
saw a dark shadow moving along it, keeping to the side, but not taking any
other precautions. She was not far ahead of me and moving slowly. I guessed her
burden must have weighed more than she'd imagined when she started. I was thankful
to see that she was still alone, not counting Teddy, of course.
I hastened after her, my way
comparatively easy now. She heard my footsteps, when I drew near, and made a
halfhearted attempt to increase the speed of her pace, but that didn't last long.
Realizing the futility of trying to escape, she stopped and turned to face me.
Her extreme pallor made her face ghostly in the starlight; her black eyes
beneath their thick brows were bright with anger and defiance. But I saw that
she was tired, too, and perhaps a little frightened, and that there was
something in her which was glad she was no longer alone.
I caught hold of her arm beneath her
cloak and started to draw her into the shadows of the trees that lined the
road. "What are you doing?" she demanded, breaking free. I pointed to
the shadows, then to the gleaming white road, and shook my head.
"He's trying to tell you that we
stand out like a mole on the Countess D'Arymple's backside. She had a very
white, smooth backside," Teddy added helpfully.
"I don't see what difference it
makes," Eliza said petulantly. She held the bear tucked under one arm, the
heavy bundle awkwardly in the other hand. "No one is around to notice us,
anyway."
"From your mouth to the Almin's
ear," said Teddy, which was, more or less, exactly what I had been
thinking.
I took hold of Eliza's arm again and
this time she allowed me to lead her off that gleaming highway and into the
shadows of the trees. She carried the bundle. I did not try to take it from
her. Once in the deep shadows, she dropped the burden on the ground, in a pile
of leaves. Then she sank down on a low, crumbling wall and stared at the bundle
at her feet.
"I didn't know it would be so
heavy," she said. "It didn't seem heavy when I first picked it up.
But now it weighs more and more. And it's awkward and difficult to carry."
I pulled out my electronic notebook
from the pocket of my jacket; thanking the Almin that I'd put it there earlier,
for such had been my haste at departure that I had not thought to bring it
along. I typed the words. The Darksword.
"Yes," said Eliza,
looking at what I'd written.
What are you doing with it? Where
are you taking it? I asked.
"To the army base," she
replied.
I was so astonished,
I stared at her and forgot to type.
"My father is wrong," she
said in a low, determined voice, looking down at the sword at her feet.
"It's not his fault." She defended him loyally, glanced at me
defiantly, as if I'd accused him. "You don't know him! If he finds it hard
to trust people, can you blame him? Time and again he was betrayed by those he
trusted."
It was not quite as simple as that,
but I honored her for defending him.
"I'm taking the sword to the army
base, to give it to the Border Patrol to take back to Earth. Then people will
leave us alone and our lives will be peaceful once more. And when the sword is
gone, no one will hurt Father, ever again."
I saw the tears shine in her dark eyes
that were looking forward to that life, a life that would be empty for her,
isolated and alone on this deserted world. I saw her generous, noble spirit in
that moment and I loved her. I could not tell her. It would not be fair to take
advantage of her. But silently I pledged my heart and my soul to her service,
as I knew in that other life the catalyst had pledged his heart and soul to
serve his queen.
How do you know about the army
base? I typed.
"I've been there," she said
with a smile at my surprise. "Simkin showed me. It was his idea to take
the sword there tonight."
She fondled the bear, rubbing his
head.
"Oh, no one at the base ever saw
me," she said. "I made certain of that. Simkin used his magic to keep
me invisible. I would sit on crates and watch the people come and go and listen
to them talk. I'd do that for hours, when Mama and Papa thought I was in the
library studying." She grinned impishly. "I used to watch the
skyships take off, blasting fire and roaring like thunder. Simkin said they
were traveling to Earth. I would imagine what it would be like to be on one.
Yesterday, when you and Father Saryon came, I thought—"
Her smile faded. Resolutely, she
buried her dream. "I was wrong," she said, and started to stand up.
I stopped her. I had a great many
questions, mostly concerning Simkin. I thought it extremely odd and perhaps
even sinister that he was suggesting giving the Darksword away. But those
questions could wait.
The army base is a long distance
from here, I told her. Many miles. You could not reach it tonight or
even tomorrow by walking. Certainly not carrying the heavy
sword.
"We weren't planning to walk
all the way," she said, avoiding my eyes. "We can't use the magical
routes we normally travel, because of the Darksword destroying the magic. But
Simkin said that you . . . um . . . had an air car. We were only going to
borrow it. I would have brought it back. I know how they operate. I've even
ridden in one before, though no one knew I was there."
So much for
Prospero's daughter. The brave new world was old hat to her.
Please come back home, I wrote.
This burden is not your burden. That is why it seems so heavy. It is your
father's and he alone can cast it off or choose to carry it. Besides, you could
be in danger.
"What?" She stared at
me, amazed and disbelieving. "How? There is no one here beyond the Border
but Father Saryon, my parents, and ourselves!"
I did not feel that I could offer
adequate explanation. Come back. Talk to Father Saryon. Besides, I
added, your mother told us that, by morning, Joram will have had a change of
heart. He is reacting out of hurt and anger. When he thinks about things, he
will do what is necessary. You shouldn't take that decision away from him.
"You are right," Eliza
said, after a moment's thought. "It was only by accident I found the sword.
We missed Papa one afternoon—it was the day after that horrible Smythe-man
came. Mama was worried and sent me to look for him. I searched all over and no
sign of him. When I finally found him, where do you think he was?"
I shook my head.
"In the chapel," she said.
"I came in the door and there he was. He wasn't praying, like I thought at
first. He was sitting on the stair beneath the altar and this—the Darksword—was
across his knees. He was staring at it as if he hated and loathed it, but yet
as if he loved it and was proud of it."
Eliza shivered and drew her cloak more
closely around her. I pressed my body a little nearer, to warm her and warm
myself both. The picture she painted with her words was not a pleasant one.
"The look on his face frightened
me. I was afraid to say anything, because I knew he would be furious. I wanted
to leave. I knew I should leave, but I couldn't. I sneaked into a little
alcove near the door and I watched him. He sat for a long, long time, just
staring at the sword. And then he gave a great sigh and shook his head. He
wrapped the sword up in this cloth and opened up a little hidden door inside
the altar itself. He put the sword in there, inside the altar, and he shut the
door and left. I waited until he was gone before I dared move. I felt ashamed.
I knew I had seen something I shouldn't have seen. Something that was secret
and private to my father. And now he'll know." Her head drooped.
"He'll find out I was spying on him. He'll be so terribly disappointed."
Maybe not, I typed. We'll
take the sword back to its hiding place and he'll never realize it was gone.
"Are you sure that would be
right?" she asked me, troubled. "Wouldn't that be lying, in a
way?"
The truth will serve no purpose, I
wrote, and only hurt him. Later, when all this is passed, then you can
confess to him what you did.
She liked that. She agreed to
return to the Font with me, although she refused to let me carry the sword.
"It is my burden now," she
said with a half smile. "At least for a little
while."
I was given the honor of carrying
Teddy. Trying to ignore the fact that the bear winked its button eye at me as I
took hold of it, I was about to ask Eliza how long she had known Teddy was
Simkin or vice versa, when suddenly the bear said, in quite a different tone, a
serious alarming tone, "We are not alone."
"What?" Eliza asked, pausing
and staring around. "Who's there? Is it Papa?"
"No, it is not Papa! Keep quiet!
Don't move! Don't even breathe! Too late." Teddy groaned. "They've
heard us."
Silver shimmered in the night. Two
figures clad in silver robes, their faces hooded and masked, were walking along
the highway. They were twenty paces from us and coming up on us rapidly. Eliza
opened her mouth. I put my fingers on her lips, to warn her to keep silent. We
stood in the shadows, hardly daring to breathe, as Teddy had cautioned. The
figures continued walking and they came to a halt, right opposite us. Their
faceless faces turned slowly in our direction.
"This is where we heard voices,
sir," one was saying, speaking into some sort of communication device.
"They came from somewhere around here. Yes, sir, we'll check it out."
Eliza shrank close to me. Her free
hand clutched mine. She pressed the Darksword to her body. I put my arm around
her, held fast to her, and thought frantically of what to do if they found us,
which it seemed they must do any moment. Should we make a break for it? Should
we—
"Almin's blood," said Simkin
irritably. "It seems I must get you out of this."
The bear vanished from my hand. A
translucent form, much as if smoke had taken the shape of a young and foppish
nobleman from about the time of Louis XIV, materialized right in front of the
Technomancers.
"Oh, I say! Lovely night for a
walk, isn't it?" Simkin languidly waved his orange scarf in the air.
I must give the Technomancers credit.
They would have been more than human if they had not been startled by the
apparition materializing before them, but they kept amazingly calm. One thrust
her hand into the molten fabric of the silver robe, held up a gob of it, and a
device shaped itself out of the fabric.
"What is this thing?" asked
the other Technomancer, a male by his voice. The faceless head was gazing at
Simkin.
"I'm analyzing it now," the
woman replied.
"Analyzing me? With that?"
Simkin cast the device a scathing glance and smiled smugly. He seemed to find
the entire idea hilarious. "What does it say I am? Spirit? Specter? Spook?
Ghost? Ghoul? Wraith? I
know—doppelganger! No, better yet. Poltergeist."
He sidled around, craned his head to
try to get a look at the device. "Perhaps I'm not here at all. Perhaps
you're hallucinating. Sleep deprivation. A bad acid trip. Or maybe you're going
mad." He appeared eager to help.
"Residual magic," the woman
reported. Snapping shut the device, she slid it back into the robe, which
seemed to swallow it whole. "We postulated that there are likely to be
pockets of leftover magic all over Thimhallan."
"Residual
magic!" Simkin quivered, his voice cracked with outrage. He could
barely speak for his emotion. "Me! Simkin! The darling of Kings, the play
toy of Emperors! Me! Magical leftovers! Like some damn moldy sandwich!"
The Technomancer was reporting in
again.
"The voices checked out, sir.
Nothing to worry about. Residual magic. A substanceless phantasm, possibly an
Echo. We were warned about such. It poses no threat."
He paused a moment, listening, then
said, "Yes, sir."
"Our orders?" the woman
asked.
"Continue. The other teams are on
site and advancing."
"What do we do with this
thing?" The woman gestured at Simkin. "It has a voice. It could warn
the subject."
"Unlikely," the man
responded. "Echoes mindlessly repeat words they've heard others speak.
They mimic, like parrots, and like parrots, sometimes give the illusion of
appearing intelligent."
I cannot describe the look on Simkin's
face. His eyes bulged, his mouth opened and shut. Perhaps for the first time in
his life— which, considering that he was probably immortal,
had certainly been a long one—he was struck dumb.
The man started to walk on. The woman
was more dubious. Her silver face was turned toward Simkin.
He hung in the air, appearing more
nebulous than when he had first taken shape; a wisp of smoke and orange silk
that looked as if it could be puffed away in a breath.
"I think we should disrupt
it," the woman said.
"Against orders," the man
returned. "Someone might see the flash and raise the alarm. Remember,
those damn Duuk-tsarith are around here, too."
"I suppose you are right,"
the woman agreed charily.
The two walked on, moving at a rapid
pace up the highway toward the Font.
Eliza and I kept still, waiting until
they were out of earshot and beyond. I hushed Eliza when she would have spoken,
for I could see by the Technomancers' swift and easy movement that they had
some sort of night vision and I was afraid they might have technologies which
enhanced their hearing, as well.
When they had disappeared, going down
a dip in the highway, I moved cautiously to where I could get a better view. I
guessed from their words what was going forward, but I needed to see it for
myself.
Here and there across the hillside,
figures, shining silver in the lambent light, formed a cordon around the Font,
moving inexorably toward it, closing in.
"Who are they? What are
they?" Eliza demanded.
"Evil," I signed, and she
needed no translation.
"They've come for the Darksword,
haven't they?" she asked fearfully.
I nodded and recalled the glowing listening
devices in the living room.
"Would they ..." She had to
pause to find the courage to speak. "Would they kill to get
it?"
I nodded again, reluctantly.
"They won't believe Papa when he
says he doesn't have the sword," Eliza said, thinking through the
scenario, as I was myself. "They'll think he's lying, trying to keep it
from them. If we give it to them, perhaps they'll leave us alone. We must take
it back! We'll use the shortcut."
I agreed. I could see no other way.
But it occurred to me that even taking the shortcut, burdened as we were with
the heaVy sword and forced to keep to the shadows, we would arrive long after
the Technomancers had stormed the building.
Simkin! Simkin could warn Joram, could
tell him that we had the sword and we were bringing it back.
I turned to see the diaphanous figure
floating over the highway. The words residual magic blew hot against my
face, like a dry desert wind.
"No threat? Well, we'll see about
that!" cried Simkin. "Mer-lyn? Merlyn, where are you? Never around
when you might be of the slightest use, of course. The old fool!" and with
that, he was gone.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
"Yow fool is here to save you from your folly. Rather a nice ring to that. I must remember it."
SiMKIN; DOOM OF THE DARKSWORD
I hoped
that Simkin had read my thoughts and was gone to alert Joram and the others to
their danger. Capricious and erratic as I knew Simkin to be, however, my hope
was a forlorn one. And I did not think it likely we could count on Merlyn—with
a y or an i—to save us.
"Hurry!" urged Eliza, taking
my hand and drawing me back among the trees. "This way is faster! Through the fields."
We had to cross the wall, not
difficult, as it was low to the ground. Eliza was hampered by her long skirt
and her cloak, and needed both her hands to climb over. She hesitated only a
moment, looking into my eyes, then she handed me the Darksword, wrapped in its
cloth blanket.
I knew immediately what she'd meant
about the physical burden of the sword. The sword's weight was considerable,
for it was made of iron, mixed with darkstone, and had been designed to be
wielded by a grown man with immense physical strength. But as heavy as the
sword was to carry, it weighed far more heavily on the heart than it did on the
hands. Holding it, I glimpsed the soul that had produced it—a dark maelstrom of
fear and anger.
Bitter lessons learned, Joram had struggled up from the darkness of his soul,
saved himself from drowning beneath the perilous waters. He had returned the
original Darksword to the stone from which it was made. He had released magic
into the universe. And though he had destroyed a world, he had saved the lives
of many thousands who would otherwise have perished in the great war Earth
waged for Thimhallan. If Joram did not walk in the light, at least he could
feel the sun upon his upturned face.
The Darksword had passed out of his
life.
Through anger and fear, it had been
reforged.
Eliza climbed over the wall. Turning,
she held out her hands. I gave the Darksword back to her and the biblical quote
about the sins of the fathers came to mind.
We trudged up a long, grass-covered
slope, moving cautiously, keeping watch in all directions for the
silver-shining Techno-mancers. We didn't see any; probably—I said to myself—because
they are already nearing their goal. We did not make very good time. Clouds
moved in, hiding the stars, thickening the darkness, and making it difficult to
find our way.
We reached the crest of the hill. Not
far from us, I could barely make out the scattered white rocks which marked the
trail. I was already winded and Eliza, keeping up gamely, was breathing heavily
from the exertion of climbing and carrying the sword. I gazed at the trail in
despair. It had not seemed so steep or so long, coming down. Tired as we were,
I wondered how we would manage, even without the sword.
I turned to Eliza and saw my dismay
reflected on her pale face. Her shoulders and arms must have been burning with
fatigue. The point of the sword dropped to the rocky ground, hitting it with a
metallic thunk.
"We have to keep going," she
said, and it was not me she was exhorting to further effort but herself.
I was about to offer to take the
sword, to give her rest, when a concussive blast rocked the land. The ground
shuddered beneath our feet. The blast echoed among the mountains and then
finally died away.
"What was that?" Eliza
gasped.
I had no idea. Though storms raged in
the valley below us, that sound had not been thunder. It was too sharp and I
had seen no lightning. I looked up toward the Font, terrified of seeing fire
and smoke erupt from the building.
Logic eased my fear. The Technomancers
would never destroy the Font if they could not find the sword.
The blast and the concern it brought
lent us strength. Eliza and I resumed our climb when, for a second time, a
strange sound caused us to halt. This was nearer and more frightening—the sound
of footfalls, coming from very close behind us.
We were caught out in the open, with
no cover. We lacked the strength to run and would not have been able to run
far, in any case, hampered as we were by the heavy sword.
Eliza heard the steps the same moment
I did. We both turned, and such are the incongruities of the mind that my first
thought was one of relief. At least, if the Technomancers captured us, I
wouldn't have to climb that damn hill!
The person was a dark shadow against
the backdrop of the trees, so dark that I couldn't distinguish features. At
least,. I thought, my heart resuming its beat, the
person was not clad in silver.
"Wait there a moment, Reuven and
Eliza, will you?" called a clear voice, a woman's voice.
The woman materialized out of the
night, and as she came to us she flicked on a flashlight and played it swiftly
over us.
We blinked painfully in the harsh
light, averted our faces, and she switched the flashlight off us and played it
down around her feet.
"What do you want?" Eliza
asked, her voice strong and unafraid. "Why do you stop us?"
"Because," answered the
woman, "you should not return home. There's nothing you can do to help,
and much you might do to harm. By great good fortune, the Darksword has been
kept out of their hands. It would be folly to cast away this opportunity."
"Who are you?" Eliza asked
coldly, keeping both hands around the sword's blanket-covered hilt.
The woman stood before us, held the
light on herself so that we could get a good look at her. Of all the strange
sights we'd seen that night, this woman seemed the strangest, the most
incongruous.
She was wearing military-style
fatigues and a green flight jacket. Her hair was cut very short, almost a crew
cut. Her eyes were overlarge, her cheekbones strong, her jaw and chin jutting,
her mouth wide. She was tall—over six feet—and muscular and her age was
difficult to guess. Older than I was, by perhaps ten years. Nine tiny earrings,
in the shape of suns, moons, stars, glittered up and down her left ear. Her
nose was pierced and so was her right eyebrow. She could have stepped out of
some bar in
The woman fumbled in a zippered
pocket, pulled out something. She flicked the light on it, snapped open a
well-worn leather case, and exhibited an ID card. The light was so bright that
I couldn't read the card very well and she moved the light off the card again
almost immediately. She was an agent of something, or at least that's what I
think the card read, but I wasn't clear on what.
"It doesn't matter. You've never
heard of the people I work for," she said. "We're a very low-profile
organization."
"I have to go back," Eliza
said, her gaze going up the mountainside, straining to see her home through the
darkness. "My father and mother and Father Saryon are there alone. And
without the sword, they're in danger."
"They'd be in worse danger with
the sword. There's nothing you can do, Eliza," said the woman quietly.
"How do you know my name?"
Eliza regarded the woman with suspicion. "And Reuven's. You knew his name,
too."
"Our agency has files on both of
you. Don't be upset. We have files on everyone. My name's Scylla," the
woman continued.
CIA, I thought, or maybe Interpol. FBI
or Her Majesty's Secret Service. Some sort of government agency. It's strange,
for I had always been extremely cynical about the government, but as we stood
in the darkness the thought that some immense and powerful organization was
looking after us was rather comforting.
"Look, do we really have time for
all this?" Scylla was saying. "You should take the sword to a place
of safety."
"Yes," said Eliza. "A place
of safety. That's with my father. I'm going home." She lifted the sword,
or at least tried to lift it. It appeared heavier than ever.
Scylla gazed at Eliza, measuring her,
perhaps; trying to determine if she was serious. A glance at Eliza's pale, rigid,
and resolute face could leave no doubt, as Scylla herself must have seen.
"Look, if you're set on this, my
air car's not far back," she said. "I'll drive you there. It will be
faster."
Eliza was tempted. I don't think she
could have carried that sword another three feet, though she would have made
the attempt until she dropped down on top of it. And she was desperate to reach
her father and mother. I was desperate to reach Father Saryon. I nodded my
head.
"Very well," Eliza answered
grudgingly.
Scylla gave me an approving clap on my
shoulder that knocked me two or three paces back down the hillside. I had the
feeling she had done that deliberately, to prove her strength, to intimidate
us. She turned and left, running at an easy lope toward the highway, her
flashlight guiding her steps.
Eliza and I stood alone in the
darkness that was beginning to lighten. It was near dawn, I realized in
amazement.
"We could leave, before she comes
back," Eliza said.
It was a statement of fact, nothing
more. Yes, we could leave. But we wouldn't. We were both too tired, the sword
was too heavy, our fear and anxiety too great. We didn't have long to wait. The
air car appeared, a blot against the night.
The car soared over the wall, over the
trees alongside the highway. It slid quiet as a whisper through the air toward
us. When it was near us, Scylla lowered the car to the ground.
"Climb in," she said,
twisting around to open the back door.
We did so, bringing the Darksword with
us. Settled in the backseat, Eliza placed the sword across both our knees and
held on to it, to keep it from sliding off. I was uncomfortable, holding the
sword. The touch of it was disquieting, unnerving, as if there were a leech on
my skin, sucking out my blood. I had the feeling it was drawing something out
of me, something that, before now, I wasn't even aware I possessed. I wanted to
be rid of the sword, yet I could not cast it off, not without losing Eliza's
trust and respect. If she could bear its incubus touch, then so could I, for
her sake.
Scylla sent the air car into a steep
climb and we sped up the hill, traveling smooth and fleet as the wind. Eliza
stared fixedly out the front window, straining to see her home.
We approached the garden, then the building came in sight. Scylla cut the air car's
engines. It hovered noiselessly above the garden wall near the spot where I'd
fallen while trying to climb over.
I don't know what I'd
expected—anything from the building surrounded by Technomancers to flames leaping
from the roof. What I had not expected was to find the building dark and quiet
and seemingly as peaceful as when I'd left.
The air car crept forward, drifting
over the white flowers with their heavy, drooping heads. The car came to rest
not far from the back door.
"There's no one here!" Eliza
exclaimed, clasping my hand in her excitement. "They didn't come! Or maybe
we're ahead of them! Open the door, Reuven!"
My hand was on the button.
"They've been here," said
Scylla. "They've been and gone. It's over."
"You're wrong!" Eliza cried.
"How do you know? You can't know. . . . Reuven, open this door!"
She was frantic. I hit the button. The
door swung open. Eliza slid out. She turned to retrieve the Darksword, which I
was still holding.
"You should leave the sword
hidden in the car," Scylla advised, climbing out. "It will be safe
here. You'll need it later—for bargaining."
"Bargaining . . ." Eliza
repeated the word, licked dry lips.
I slid across the seat, out from under
the sword. Even in my worry and fear, I was relieved to be free of its
loathsome touch. Eliza stared suspiciously at Scylla, then
made a grab for the sword's hilt.
"If I leave it, you'll take
it!" she said, struggling to lift the Darksword.
Scylla shrugged. "I can take the
sword anytime I want." Hands on her hips, she smiled at us and her smile
seemed menacing. "I don't think you two could do much to stop me."
Eliza and I looked at each other and
reluctantly we acknowledged the truth. Neither of us was in any shape to battle
this woman, although, I recalled, I had not seen her carrying a weapon, either
on her person or in the air car.
"But I don't want it,"
Scylla continued. She slammed shut the car door on her side. To my
astonishment, she tossed me the keys.
"What do you want?"
Eliza demanded.
"Ah, now that's a bit more
difficult to explain," Scylla replied.
Turning on her heel, she walked across
the garden, leaving us with keys to the air car. We could do what we pleased
with the Darksword.
I drew out rny electronic notepad,
typed swiftly. The Technomancers could be waiting for us inside! Leave the
sword here.
"Do you trust her?"
Eliza asked me, agonized.
Maybe, I hedged. What she
said makes sense. She could have taken the sword from us back there on the
highway. It would have been like taking candy from two babies.
"I hope you're right,"
Eliza said fervently. She shut the door and I locked it. The Darksword, wrapped
in its cloth, lay on the backseat of the air car.
I, for one, was glad to be rid of it.
I felt stronger, my weariness eased. I was more hopeful. Eliza also seemed
relieved to be rid of the burden. We hastened after Scylla and reached her just
as she was entering the door through which I'd come out.
The hallway was dark and silent.
Perhaps it was my overwrought imagination, but the silence had a chill feel to
it. It was not the blessed silence of a house asleep. It was the silence of a
house that is empty. A tinge of smoke hung in the air. We came to my room. The
door was partially open and I distinctly remembered having shut it when I left.
I stepped to the door, looked inside,
and stood, transfixed.
The bed had been ripped open by what
appeared to be giant claws. Long slashes cut through the mattress. Gouts of
feathers lay in heaps on the floor. My knapsack had been torn apart, my clothes
strewn about the room. My other possessions—shaving kit, comb, brush—were scattered everywhere.
"You see," said Scylla.
"They were searching for the Dark-sword."
Despair robbed me of breath. I ran to
Saryon's room. Eliza stood dazed in the hall, staring with disbelief at the
destruction.
The door to my master's room was wide
open. His bed had been torn apart as well, his possessions trampled and flung
about. He was not there, though whether that was good or bad, I didn't
know.
With a wild and incoherent cry, Eliza
ran down the hallway, heading for the main living quarters. I followed after
her, adrenaline pumping, sparking my tired legs to exertion.
Scylla, shaking her head in sorrow,
followed more slowly behind.
We reached the door leading to the
warming room. Eliza gave a moan, as if she'd been struck, and her body sagged.
I was there to catch her, hold her, support her, though it was all I could do
to support myself. I was sick with horror.
Dawn's light filtered through the
window, filtered through a faint and rapidly dissipating haze of smoke.
Recalling the blast, my first thought was that a bomb had exploded. The floor
was strewn with the wreckage of shattered, smoldering furniture. The curtains
had been torn from the windows; the glass was cracked and broken. Beyond the
warming room, in the kitchen, the table had been overturned. Chairs were
smashed.
"Father!
Mother!" Eliza called.
Coughing in the smoke, she pushed me
away and started toward the door opposite, the door which led to her parents'
rooms.
A figure, clad in black robes, took
shape and form from the smoke. Eliza halted, appalled and frightened.
"You won't find them," he
said. "They are gone."
"What have you done with
them?" Eliza cried.
The man cast his hood from his face
and I recognized Mosiah. He folded his hands together before him. "I did
not take them. I tried to stop the Technomancers, but there were too many of
them." He turned his face to me. "They took Father Saryon as well,
Reuven. I am sorry."
I could make no response. My hands
hung limp at my sides. On the floor, near the hem of Mosiah's black robe, was a
smear of blood. I dreaded lest Eliza should see it. Moving close to Mosiah, I
shoved a broken chair over the stain. But either I was too
late or else Eliza read my thoughts.
"Are they all right?" she
demanded, confronting Mosiah. "Were they hurt?"
Mosiah hesitated, before reluctantly
replying, "Your father was injured."
"Very . . .
very badly?" Eliza faltered.
"I am afraid so. But Father
Saryon is with him. I don't think your mother was harmed."
"You don't thinkl Don't you know?" Eliza cried. Her voice broke; she
coughed again. The smoke stung our throats, brought tears to the eyes. Both of
us were coughing—but not Mosiah.
"No. I do not know for certain
what happened to your mother," he replied. "It was all very confused.
At least, they did not find what they sought. They did not find the Darksword.
You were wise to take it away." Mosiah's gaze went from me to Eliza. His
eyes narrowed, his voice softened. "Where is it?"
"Safe," answered Scylla,
emerging from the shadows of the hallway.
Mosiah's head jerked. "Who the
devil are you?"
"Scylla," she replied, as if
that were all anyone needed to know. She strode into the room, glanced around.
Again she showed her ID card.
Mosiah took a good look at it. His
brow wrinkled. "I've never heard of this organization. Are you part of the
CIA?"
"If I were, I couldn't tell you
now, could I?" Scylla said, putting away the card. "I thought you Duuk-tsarith
were standing guard on Joram. What happened? Take the night off?"
Mosiah was angry. His lips tightened.
"We did not expect them to attack Joram. Why should they, when it was
probable they were going to get what they wanted?"
"Ah, but they knew they
weren't," Scylla said. "Kevon Smythe once paid a visit here. He sat
in that very chair, or what's left of it. Does that give you a hint?"
"A listening device! Of
course." Mosiah was grim. "We should have foreseen the possibility.
They knew, then, that Joram had refused to relinquish the sword." He
regarded Scylla with suspicion. "You know a lot about the D'karn-darah."
"I know a lot about you,
too," Scylla retorted. "That doesn't make me Duuk-tsarith."
"You're from the
government?"
"In a manner of
speaking. Let's lay our cards on the table. I can't talk about the work
I do any more than you can talk about the work you do. You don't trust me. I
accept that. I'll work to correct your mistake. I trust you, but then I've read
your file." Scylla regarded him with increased interest. "You're much
better-looking than your file photo. What happened here?"
Mosiah appeared somewhat taken aback
by this direct approach, though I could see he wasn't pleased with that
reference to his file.
"General Boris sent you," he
said.
"I know the General. A good
man." Scylla smiled. "What happened?"
"It was all over in a matter of
moments, too fast for me to summon help." Mosiah's voice was cold, perhaps
to keep from sounding defensive. "I was alone,
standing watch unseen, remaining hidden in the corridors, as was our custom, so
as not to disturb Joram and his family."
"And where were the rest of the Duuk-tsarith?"
Scylla asked. "You might have been left alone on guard duty, but I
know you weren't alone here in the Font."
Mosiah's face darkened. He did not
reply. I knew the answer to that question well enough, as I'm sure Eliza did,
though she was only now gradually coming to understand. The other Duuk-tsarith
had been searching for the Darksword. They knew as well as the
Technomancers that Joram had refused to give it up. I thought of all these
dread forces, with their dread powers, mundane and arcane, searching for the
sword, and of Eliza and me, in our innocence, walking off with it, snatching it
out from under their very noses. A shiver crept over me. I had guessed we might
be in some danger. I had never realized how great. They needed Joram and the
Darksword. The rest of us were expendable.
"And so the other Duuk-tsarith
were off on a little treasure hunt of their own,
leaving you alone to stand guard. What made them think—wait! I know."
Scylla glanced toward Eliza. "The Darksword had been moved. You sensed its
absence, though you could not detect its presence. Very well. You were alone.
And then the Technomancers came."
"Yes, they came," said
Mosiah curtly. "There is not much to tell after that." He spoke to
Eliza, ignored Scylla pointedly, which seemed to afford her mild amusement.
"I never thought I'd say this, but we have that fool Simkin to thank for
giving us as much warning as we had."
Eliza and I exchanged glances. "I
knew it," she said softly, so that only I heard her.
"Joram could not sleep,"
Mosiah continued. "He had been out walking, down by the sheep, and had
just returned. Your mother was waiting up for him. They spoke together. I left
them alone," he said in answer to Eliza's accusing look. "I did not
intrude on their privacy. Perhaps, if I had been there . . ." He shrugged.
"It would have made no
difference," Scylla said quietly.
"I suppose not. I was here in the
warming room when I heard Joram cry out the word Simkin! I returned,
still inside the magical Corridors, to find what looked like a watered-down
version of Simkin waving that ridiculous orange scarf of his and going on about
Joram coming under attack from a horde of silver salt-shakers or something
equally nonsensical, although I must admit that pretty well describes the D'karn-darah.
"I guessed what was happening
and sent out a warning to my brethren. Joram blazed like fire and left the
room. I started to follow, when the D'karn-darah stormed the house. It
was then I made a mistake."
Mosiah gazed at us steadily. "I
thought . . . Well, you'll see. Joram had left the room. Where else would he
go, but after the Darksword? The one weapon which would
protect him and Gwendolyn—"
"Oh!" Eliza gave a
smothered cry, covered her mouth with her hand. "Oh,
no!"
"Don't blame yourself,
Eliza," Scylla said quickly. "There was nothing your father could
have done. They would have captured him and the Darksword and all would have
been at an end. At least now there is hope."
But Eliza was not comforted.
Mosiah was talking, reliving the
event, as if trying to figure out what had gone wrong. "I knew he
had gone after the Darksword! When he came back almost immediately without it,
what was I to think?"
"You thought he was deliberately
keeping it hidden, refusing to use it even in his own defense," Scylla
said.
"Yes!" Mosiah was
frustrated, angry. "I revealed myself to him. He recognized me and he
didn't seem all that surprised to see me. We didn't have much time. I could
hear the D'karn-darah coming. I asked him to give me the Darksword. Til
take it away!' I promised him. 'I'll keep it safe!' "
"How could you?" Scylla
asked. "Its null-magic would have destroyed the Corridors."
"We had designed a special sheath
for it," Mosiah said. "Once the Darksword was inside this sheath, we
could have transported it easily. Joram refused, of course. He wouldn't give me
the sword. I thought ... I thought he was being stubborn, as usual. I didn't
know that he couldn't give me the sword. I didn't know then that he knew
or guessed who had taken it."
Mosiah raised his head, looked at
Eliza. "If he had trusted me. If he had told me the truth—I know. Why
should he? It was obvious at that point that I'd been spying on him.
"After that, there's not much to
tell. Within moments three D'karn-darah entered the bedroom. We could
hear more inside the other parts of the house. Then another came to us,
dragging Father Saryon. He was all right," Mosiah reassured me, and he
smiled slightly. "He is a tough one, Reuven. The first thing the good father
said when he saw us was, 'Don't give it to them, Joram!'
"The D'karn-darah demanded
the Darksword. Joram refused. They told him to give them the sword or he would
see those he loved suffer. They had seized hold of Gwendolyn. What was Joram to
do? He couldn't give them the sword even if he had wanted to, because he didn't
have it.
" 'Take
me.' He tried to bargain with them. 'Let my wife and Father Saryon go. Take me
and I'll tell you where the sword is hidden.'
"I doubt if they would have ever
agreed to such a bargain, not when they held all the cards, but we'll never
know. At that moment a teddy bear, which had been lying on the bed, flew up and
struck the D'karn-darah who was holding Gwen captive."
"Good old Simkin," Scylla
said, smiling.
"Yes, good old Simkin,"
Mosiah echoed dryly. "The D'karn-darah was taken by surprise, as
you can well imagine. The bear struck the Technomancer on the forehead. The
blow was not a hard one, but it rocked her back on her feet. In her
astonishment, she let go of Gwen. The bear continued to pummel the D'karn-darah,
smacking her on the face, buffeting her head, and eventually ended by
clamping himself over her nose and mouth. He appeared to be trying to smother
her. At that moment Gwendolyn disappeared."
"Disappeared?" Eliza
repeated, bewildered. "What do you mean—disappeared? Did my mother run
away? What happened to her?"
"I don't know," Mosiah said,
angry at himself, at his own impotence. "If I did, I would tell you. She
vanished. One moment Gwen was there. The next she was gone. I thought at first
that perhaps some of my people had taken her into the Corridors, but later
investigation revealed that they knew nothing of what happened to her.
"But Joram thought the worst. He
assumed the D'karn-darah had taken Gwen. He went wild with rage, flung
himself barehanded at the D'karn-darah. He caught them off guard. They
had not been expecting an attack by a stuffed toy, nor one of their hostages to
disappear. Joram's lunge carried two of them to the floor. I took out the
fourth."
Mosiah smiled grimly. "You'll
find a charred spot on the bedroom floor. By that time, however, more D'karn-darah
arrived. They subdued Joram . . . and took him away."
"Subdued him," Eliza said,
noting that Mosiah had averted his gaze once more. "How? Tell me. What did
they do to my father?"
"Tell her," Scylla said.
"She needs to understand the nature of the enemy against which we
fight."
Mosiah shrugged. "Very well. They
struck Joram over the head, dazing him. Then they inserted the needles. You may
have read of a practice known as acupuncture. Needles are inserted into
specific areas of the body to produce regional anesthesia. The D'karn-darah have
developed the reverse. Each needle is charged with electromagic. The stimulus
it produces in the body is extraordinarily painful and debilitating. The pain
is only temporary, however, and goes away when the needles are removed. But
until then, a person is reduced to a state of helpless agony. When Joram was
sufficiently subdued, they took him away. Father Saryon demanded to be allowed
to accompany him, and of course, they were grateful to have an extra
hostage."
"You escaped," said Scylla.
"There was nothing I could
do," Mosiah returned coldly. "I risked being captured myself and they
have no reason to keep me alive. I deemed that I could be more useful surviving
to fight them than throwing away my life needlessly."
Eliza had gone very pale during the
description of her father's torment, but she stood strong and quiet. "What
happened to my mother?" she asked, her voice quavering only slightly. She
was fighting hard to remain under control.
"I don't know," Mosiah
confessed. "If I had to guess, I would say that the D'karn-darah took
her. But, if so . . ."He appeared thoughtful, then shrugged helplessly.
"I don't know."
"Do you know?" Eliza
turned to Scylla.
"Me? How could I know?"
Scylla demanded, astonished that she was even asked. "I wasn't there. I
wish I had been, though." She looked quite grim.
"Well, what do we do now?"
Eliza was calm, very calm, much too calm. Her hands were clenched together, the fingers twined tightly, the knuckles white.
"We wait," said Mosiah.
"Wait! Wait for what?"
"We must wait for them to contact
us," said Mosiah.
"To tell us where to bring the
Darksword," Scylla added. "To make the exchange. The
Darksword for your father's life."
"And I will give it to
them," Eliza said.
"No," said Mosiah. "You
will not."
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
"Now the game begins in earnest."
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
I will
give it to them," Eliza countered. "You won't stop me. I should
never have taken the Darksword in the first place. What they do with it doesn't
matter—"
"It does," said Mosiah.
"They will use it to enslave a world."
"My father's life is all that
matters," Eliza maintained stubbornly.
She swayed where she stood. She was
exhausted, her strength almost gone. There was nowhere to sit down; every piece
of furniture in the room had been smashed. Scylla put her arm around the young
woman, gave her a bracing hug.
"I know it all looks very bleak
now, Eliza, but things are not as bad as they seem. We'll feel better for a cup
of tea. Reuven, find something for us to sit on."
She did not speak the instruction
aloud. She signed the words to me! Smiling, she quirked her pierced eyebrow as
much as to say, See, I do know you!
Of course.
All that would be in my "file." Once I was over my astonishment, I
left the room in search of chairs. And I felt better, having a task to perform.
I had to go to distant and long-unused parts of the building to find any
furniture that was still intact. Surely the D'karn-darah could not
imagine that they would find the Darksword hidden in a straight-backed wooden
chair, but that's how it appeared. The destruction was wanton and cruel and
seemed, to my mind, to have been the result of fury and frustration over not
finding what they sought rather than of any true hope of discovery.
If this is what they do to objects,
what will they do to people? I asked myself, and the thought was chilling.
I found no chairs, but I did come
across several short wooden stools from one of the lower level rooms which must
have, I think, been used as a classroom for children. I do not know how the
Technomancers missed this room, except that it stood at an odd angle off a
corridor and would have been in pitch-darkness during the night.
As I picked up one of the stools I
noticed, even in my weariness, how it had been crafted out of a single piece of
wood. Crafted by magic, held together by magic, which prohibited the use of
nails or glue. The wood had not been cut, but lovingly shaped and coaxed into
taking the form the creator wanted.
I rubbed my hand over the smooth wood
and suddenly, inexplicably, tears came to my eyes. I wept for the loss, for all
the losses—the loss of my master, the loss of Joram and Gwendolyn, the loss of
their daughter's peaceful, serene way of life, the loss of Thimhallan, the loss
of such simple beauty as I held in my hands, the loss of that other life of my
own, the life of which I'd had such tantalizing glimpses.
I startled myself, for I am not given
to tears and sobbing. I don't believe that I had cried since I was a child. I
was half-ashamed of myself, when I finally forced myself to quit, but the
outburst of emotion had done me good, acting like a release valve. I felt
calmer and oddly rested, more capable of handling whatever might come.
Picking up four stools, slinging the
rungs over my arms, I returned to the main living quarters.
I found I had not been the only one
working. The smoldering furniture had been carried outdoors, either by Mosiah
or his magic. The smoke was clearing from the room, blown away on a crisp
morning breeze. A fire crackled in the fireplace. Water was heating in a kettle
which, though dented, had survived the destruction. Scylla was scooping loose
tea leaves into a cracked pot. Eliza was sorting through broken crockery,
searching for any cups that might have escaped intact. She looked up at me with
a wan smile when I entered. She, too, was better for having something to do.
Lifting one half of a large broken
platter, she found Teddy lying beneath it.
The bear was in a sorry state. One arm
was completely ripped off, one button eye missing. His right leg hung by a
thread, his stuffing dribbled out of torn seams. His orange scarf was
bedraggled and singed.
"Poor
Teddy!" Eliza said, and taking the maltreated bear in her arms, she
began to sob.
She had borne up bravely until that
moment. That was her release valve.
Mosiah, with a wry smile, seemed about
to say something, but Scylla forestalled him with a look and a shake of her
head. Mosiah certainly wasn't taking orders from Scylla and would have gone on
to have his say, except that even he could see this wasn't the time.
I longed to comfort Eliza, but I felt
myself in an awkward position. I had only known her a day and a night—a
traumatic day and night, to be sure, but that wasn't really relevant. Her grief
was hers alone, and there was really nothing I could
say or do to ease it.
I set down the stools near the fire.
Mosiah walked over to gaze out the window, his black robes leaving a sinuous
trail in the ash on the floor. Scylla poured water from the kettle into the
teapot. By this time Eliza had dried her tears.
"I'll sew him back
together," she said, using the sleeve of her shirt to wipe her eyes.
"Don't bother," came a weak voice. "I'm done for. Finished. Kaput. The
sands of my hourglass are running low. My goose is cooked. My stuffing left to
be nibbled by mice. What happened? Did we win? Is your dear father safe, child?
That's all that matters. If so, my life has not been spent in vain. Tell me,
before I slip away to meet my Maker—"
"He'd only throw you back,"
Mosiah said shortly. Leaving the window, he came to stare grimly down at Teddy.
"Don't fret over this fool, Eliza. Simkin is immortal. And
a very bad actor."
"So this is Simkin,"
said Scylla, joining them. She stood over him, her hands on her hips. "You
were my favorite character in Reuven's books, you know."
Teddy gazed up at her with his one
remaining button eye.
"Pardon me, madam," he said
stiffly, "but I don't believe we have been introduced."
"I'm Scylla," she answered,
and handed me a cup of tea.
Perhaps it was my fatigued
imagination, but at the sound of that name, Teddy's black button eye glittered
in the firelight and stared very hard at Scylla.
"Put me together again, will you?
There's a dear child." Teddy spoke to Eliza, but he continued staring at
Scylla.
"Put yourself together,
fool!" Mosiah said irritably. "Let Eliza alone."
"No, I don't mind," Eliza
said.
She found her mother's workbasket,
tossed into a corner, and though her lips tightened a moment when she picked up
the basket and its scattered contents, she retained control over herself.
Sitting down on the stool, she took the amputee bear into her lap and restuffed
him, then began to stitch his arm on.
Teddy smirked insufferably, when Eliza
was not looking, and made such suggestive noises—particularly when she was
poking the stuffing back into him—that I could have cheerfully torn him apart
again. But his foolery ceased whenever his black-button gaze fell on Scylla.
We sat down on the short-legged
stools, drew them near the fire. Eliza sipped her tea and sewed up Teddy.
"How long will we have to
wait?" she asked, trying to sound calm.
"Not long," Mosiah replied.
"According to General Boris's
scouting reports, the Hch'nyv will be within attacking range of Earth and Thimhallan
within forty-eight hours," Scylla said.
"The Technomancers must have the
Darksword away from here and back on Earth before then," Mosiah added.
Eliza glanced at me and a faint flush
stained her cheek. "So these . . . aliens really are a threat? It's not a
trick? They would really kill us all?"
"Without
hesitation. Without compunction. Without pity or mercy," Scylla
replied, grave and somber. "We have found no level on which we can
communicate with them, although it is rumored that others have."
"The Technomancers have made
contact," said Mosiah. "That much we know. We fear that Smythe has
made some sort of deal with them."
Forty-eight hours. Not very much time.
No one spoke, but each sat silent, absorbed in his or her own thoughts. Mine were
very black and despairing. And, as if conjured up from the darkness of the
mind, the smoke, and the fire, an image took shape and form upon the hearth.
Kevon Smythe stood before us.
"Don't be afraid," Mosiah
said swiftly. "It is a hologram."
It was well he said this, for the
image appeared very real, not watery, as do many holograms. I would have sworn
that the man himself stood before us. It must be the magic of the
Technomancers, which so enhanced the electronically created image.
"I have read of such
things!" Eliza gasped. "But I have never seen one. Can he ... can he
hear us?"
She asked this because Scylla had her
ringer to her lips and she, along with Mosiah, was hunting for the source of
the hologram. Finding it—a small boxlike object tucked into a recess in the
fireplace—they both examined it, both careful not to touch it. They exchanged
glances—the first time, I believe, they had looked at each other directly—and
Mosiah, nodding his head, drew his hood over his face and clasped his hands
together.
Eliza stood up. Teddy slid, forgotten,
from her lap. When he looked as if he was about to protest, I set my foot upon
him and kicked him backward, none too gently, underneath my stool.
If I had not admired Eliza before now,
I would have done so then. She was exhausted, frightened, grieving, anxious.
She was well aware that this was the man who was responsible for the abduction
of her parents and Father Saryon. Yet she faced him with the dignified reserve
of a Queen who knows that any overt show of anger will only demean herself and never faze her enemy.
When I look back on that moment in
memory, I see her clothed in gold, shining more brightly than the paltry light
of the hologram of the Technomancer. She did not beg or plead, knowing both
those to be fruitless. She asked of him what she might have asked of any base
intruder.
"What do you want, sir?"
He was not wearing his suit, but was
clad in white robes that I later learned were the ceremonial robes of the
Khandic Sages. Around the sleeves and hem and neck were laid out in a grid
pattern tiny filaments of metal, which glinted and winked as they caught the
light. I thought at the time they were merely fanciful decoration.
Kevon Smythe smiled his ingratiating
smile. "Since you come so swiftly to the point, mistress, I will myself be
brief. Your father is with us. He is our guest. He has come with us
voluntarily, because he knows our need is great. He left home in haste and
unfortunately neglected to bring with him an object of which he is quite fond.
That object is the Darksword. Its absence distresses him greatly. He fears it
could fall into the wrong hands and cause inestimable harm. He would like to
have it safely back in his possession. If you tell us where to find the Darksword,
Mistress Eliza, we will secure it and deliver it to your father."
Half of me believed him. I knew the
truth. I had seen the wreckage, the destruction, I had seen the blood on the
floor. He was so persuasive that I saw, in my mind, exactly what he wanted me
to see—Joram, concerned, willingly going with them. I was certain Eliza must
believe him. Mosiah thought so, too, apparently, for he glided forward,
prepared to confront the Technomancer. Scylla did not move, but watched Eliza.
"I want to see my father and
mother," Eliza said.
"I am sorry, mistress, that is
not possible," said Smythe. "Your father had a long journey and he is
fatigued, plus being most anxious over the fate of the Darksword. He fears for
your safety, my dear. The blade is sharp, the sword unwieldy. You might cut
yourself. Tell us where to find it and perhaps, by that time, your father will
have recovered sufficiently to be able to talk to you."
His smooth voice and benign manner
slid over his threats like a silken scarf.
"Sir," Eliza stated calmly,
"you lie. Your minions took my father and mother and Father Saryon by
force. Then they destroyed our home, searching for the object which my father
would never give to you, so long as he lived. And the same may be said of his
daughter. If that is all you came for, you have my leave to go."
Kevon Smythe's expression softened. He
seemed truly grieved. "It is not my place to chastise you, mistress, but
your father will not like to hear of your refusal. He will be angry with you
and will punish you for your disobedience. He has warned me that you are
sometimes a willful, stubborn child. We have his authorization to take the
sword from you by force, if that becomes necessary."
Eliza's lashes were wet with tears,
but she maintained her control. "You do not know my father if you think he
would say such a thing. You do not know me if you think I would believe it. Get
out."
Kevon Smythe shook his head
resignedly, then shifted his head to gaze at me.
"Reuven, it is good to see you again, though, I regret to say, under sad
circumstances. It seems that Father Saryon has been afflicted with a terrible
disease, which will cause his death unless he receives prompt treatment back on
Earth. Our physicians give him thirty-six hours to live. You know the good
father, Reuven. He will not leave without Joram and Joram will not leave
without the Darksword. If I were you, I would do my
best to find it, wherever it may be hidden."
His gaze shifted back to Eliza.
"Bring the Darksword to the city of Zith-el. Come to the Eastroad Gate.
Someone will be waiting for you."
The image went out. Mosiah removed the
holographic projector, which had been stashed inside the fireplace. A stone had
been pried loose, the projection machine placed inside. He tossed it on the
floor.
"You knew that was there,"
Scylla said.
"Yes. They had to have some means
to communicate with us. I found it before you arrived."
Scylla stomped on it with her heavy
boot, crushed it. "Are there any listening devices?"
"I removed them. I decided to
leave this. We needed to hear what they had to say. Zith-el." He mused.
"So they have taken Joram to Zith-el."
"Yes." Scylla slapped her
hands on her thighs. "Now we can make plans."
"We!"
Mosiah looked at her very balefully. "What do you have to do with
this? With any of this?"
"I'm here," said
Scylla, with a sly smile. "And the Darksword is in my air car. I'd say I
have a lot to do with this."
"I was right. General Boris did
send you," Mosiah said, his tone harsh. "You're one of his people.
Damn it, he promised he would leave this to us!"
"You've done such a wonderful job
so far," Scylla commented wryly.
Mosiah flushed, stiffened. "I
didn't see you around when the D'karn-darah attacked."
"Stop it!" Eliza said
sharply. "You both want the Darksword.
That's all you care about. Well, you
can't have it. I'm going to do what he says. I'm going to take it to
Zith-el."
Eliza's defiance might have seemed
childish and silly, but her grief and her own self-recrimination loaned her the
strength she lacked. She spoke with dignity and resolve, and those two people,
older and stronger and more powerful, both regarded her with respect.
"You know that you can't trust
Smythe," Mosiah told her. "He will try to take the sword and make us
all prisoners. Or worse."
"I know that I don't seem
to be able to trust anybody," Eliza said with a quaver in her voice. She
glanced at me, gave me a sweet, sad smile, and added softly, "Except
Reuven."
The pain in my heart was blessed, but
it was also too great to bear and overflowed my eyes. I turned away, ashamed of
my lack of self-control, when she was so strong.
"I do not see what other choice I
have," Eliza continued, now speaking quite calmly. "I will take the
Darksword to Smythe and hope that he will keep his promise to free my father
and Father Saryon. I will go alone—"
I made an emphatic gesture, which
caught her eye. She amended her statement. "Reuven and I will go together.
The two of you will remain here."
"I have told you the truth,
Eliza," said Scylla. "I do not want the Darksword. There is only one
man who can wield it and that is the one who forged it."
Suddenly, Scylla knelt down on one
knee in front of Eliza. Pressing the palms of her hands together, in an
attitude of prayer, Scylla raised them. "I promise you, Eliza,
I swear by the Almin, that I will do whatever lies in my power to rescue Joram
and to restore to him the Darksword."
The sight of Scylla—her army fatigues
and cropped hair— kneeling there, seemed ludicrous at first. Then I was
reminded forcibly of a drawing I had once seen of Joan of Arc, pledging her
duty to her king. There burned the same holy fervor in Scylla, so bright and
clear that her military fatigues disappeared and I saw her clad in shining
armor, offering her pledge to her queen.
The vision lasted only an instant, but
it was detailed perfectly in my mind. I saw the throne room, the crystal throne
room of the
And I was not alone. Mosiah saw the
vision, too, or so I believe. Certainly he saw something, for he stared at
Scylla in awe, though I heard him mutter, "What trick is this?"
Eliza clasped her hands over Scylla's.
"I accept your pledge. You will accompany us."
Scylla bowed her head. "My life
is yours, Your Majesty."
The title seemed so right, that none
of us caught it, until Eliza blinked.
"What did you call me?"
Scylla stood and the vision vanished.
She was once again wearing the combat fatigues and boots, her ear lined with
the tiny earrings.
"Just my little
joke." Scylla grinned and went to refill the teapot. She glanced
back at Mosiah. "You are much more handsome in person. Say, why
don't you take the same oath? Pledge yourself to rescue Joram and restore the
Darksword to its owner. You must, you know. Otherwise we won't take you with us
to Zith-el."
Mosiah was angry. "You are fools
if you think that Smythe will give up any of the hostages once he has the
Darksword! The Technomancers need Joram to teach them how to forge more."
He turned to Eliza. "Come with me back to Earth. Give the sword into the
safekeeping of King Garald. We will return with an army to rescue your father
and mother."
"The army is mobilizing to make a
last stand against the Hch'nyv," countered Scylla. "You will get no
help from them. And I doubt if they could do much against the Technomaricers
anyway. They have long been building up their strength in Zith-el, surrounding
it with their defenses. An army could not take it. It's all in our files,"
she added in answer to Mosiah's flashing look of suspicion. "You're not
the only people keeping tabs on Smythe."
Mosiah ignored her, continued speaking
to Eliza, his tone growing softer. "I am Joram's friend. If I thought
surrendering the Darksword would free him, I would be the first to advocate
such a venture. But it won't. It can't possibly. Surely you can see that?"
"What you say makes sense,
Mosiah," Eliza agreed. "But the Darksword is not mine and so any
decisions concerning it are not mine to make. I am taking the sword back to my
father. I will make that clear to this Smythe. My father will make the decision
as to what to do with the sword."
"Place the Darksword in the hand
of its gloomy and doomy creator, and you might be surprised at what
happens," advised a sepulchral voice from underneath my stool.
"Personally, I think he should give it to my friend Merlyn. I did mention
that I knew Merlyn, didn't I? You'll find him hanging around down by that moldy
old tomb of his. Quite a depressing place. I can't think what he sees in it.
Merlyn's been looking for a sword for a number of years now. Some dolt tossed
his into a lake. This isn't it, but the old boy's a bit dotty now and he
probably wouldn't know the difference."
We had forgotten Teddy.
I fished him out, dusty and indignant,
but otherwise unharmed.
I signed, "Simkin has a point.
Not about Merlyn," I added hastily. "About Joram. Once the Darksword
is in Joram's hand, it might be used to defeat the Technomancers."
"Have you forgotten that this Darksword
is not magically enhanced? No catalyst has given it Life. The Darksword stands
no chance of getting anywhere near Joram's hand," Mosiah stated bitterly.
"Kevon Smythe will take hold of it and that will be an end. We go upon a
fool's journey."
"Just like old times," Teddy
remarked with a nostalgic sigh.
"YowYe not
coming!" Mosiah said firmly.
"I wouldn't leave me
behind," Teddy warned us. "I can't be trusted. Not in the slightest.
Much better to have me where you can keep an eye on me as the Duchess of
Winifred said regarding the table where she kept her eyeball collection. She
had one for every day of the year, different colors. Used to
pop them out after breakfast. I recall the day one got loose and rolled
across the marble floor. The house catalyst mistakenly trod upon it. You can't
imagine the squi—"
"I'll take him," Eliza said
hurriedly. Snatching Teddy from me, she tucked him securely into the pocket of
her skirt. "He can stay with me."
Mosiah glared around at all of us.
"Are you determined to do this? Reuven?"
I nodded. My duty was to Father
Saryon. And even if it had not been, I would go wherever Eliza went, support
her in whatever she did.
"I go with Eliza," said
Scylla.
"And I am going to Zith-el,"
said Eliza.
"If you are resolved on this, we
should leave. You said you have an air car?" Mosiah looked at Scylla. His
expression was not friendly.
"You're coming with us?" she
asked, delighted.
"Of course.
I will not leave Joram and his wife and Father Saryon in the hands of the
Technomancers."
"You will not leave the Darksword
in our hands, isn't that what you mean?" Scylla said with a sly grin.
"Take my words however you
want," Mosiah returned. "I am tired of arguing with the lot of you.
Well, are you coming? Even with the air car, we will be lucky to arrive in
Zith-el before dark."
"And will your friends, the rest
of the Duuk-tsarith, be joining us there?" Scylla asked, raising
the eyebrow that was pierced with the tiny gold ring.
Mosiah stared out the window, into the
distance, a far distance, that only he could see. "There is no Life in
Zith-el," he said softly. "Only death. Countless of our people died
there when the quakes struck and the ground shifted, toppling the buildings.
They lie unburied, their spirits troubled, demanding to know the reason why
they died. No, the Duuk-tsarith will not go to Zith-el. There they would
suffocate and their magic would be stifled, smothered."
"But you will go," Scylla
said.
"I will go," Mosiah said,
and he was grim. "As I told you, my friends are being held captive there.
Besides, it doesn't make much difference to me whether or not my magic is
stifled. After the battle I have little Life left within me. Unless we bump
into a catalyst on the way, I will be good for nothing except throwing rocks.
Don't count on me to defend you!"
Or defend himself, I thought,
recalling how the Technomancers were hunting him.
"And how do we know we can trust
you?" Eliza asked.
"I will take your oath,"
Mosiah said, "on one condition. I will do all in my power to restore the
Darksword to Joram, its creator. But if we fail, then I claim the right to
transport the Dark-sword back to my king."
"If we fail, you will have no
king. The Technomancers will see to that," said Scylla.
Suddenly, astonishingly, she flung her
arms around Mosiah and gave him a hug. She was taller than he was by a head and
far stronger. Her hug squeezed his shoulders together and caved in his chest.
"I like you," she said. "And I never thought I'd say that to an
Enforcer. If you give me the keys, Reuven, I'll drive the air car around front.
We'll need food and blankets. I have water with me."
Releasing him, she clapped him on the
back and then strode purposefully from the room. I could hear her heavy, booted
footsteps all the way down the hall.
As I went to help Eliza with the food
and blankets, I looked back and saw Mosiah standing in the center of the empty,
decimated room. A gentle breeze from the window stirred his black robes. His
hands were clasped before him, he had drawn his hood over his head. I judged,
by the tilt of his hooded head, that he still stared far off into that distance
which was his alone to view. But now he was searching for someone or something
and not finding it, apparently.
"Who the hell are you?" , The words hung like the taint of smoke in the air.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
"And then the magic filled me! It was like the Life of everything around me, pouring into me, surging through me. I felt a hundred times more alive!"
DOOM OF THE DARKSWORD
By the
time Eliza and I had gathered up bedding and food, Scylla had driven the air
car around to the front of the building. We loaded the bedding and the food
into the luggage area in the back. That done, we stood looking somewhat
bemusedly at the air car, which only seated four—two in the front and two in
the back. The Darksword, wrapped in its blanket, lay across the backseat.
"That should go in the
rear," said Mosiah.
"No," Eliza said swiftly.
"I want it where I can see it."
"Put it on the floor in the
backseat," suggested Scylla.
Eliza grasped hold of the sword,
tugged the blanket over it more securely, and laid it across the floor of the
backseat. Mosiah took his place in the front, next to Scylla—if Eliza wanted to
keep an eye on the sword, I think Mosiah was determined to keep an eye on
Scylla. That suited me well, however, leaving me to sit in back with Eliza. She
started to climb in beside me.
"Blessed Almin!" she cried
suddenly, straightening and turning to look down the hillside. "The sheep!
I can't leave them penned up. I'll water them and turn them out to pasture. It
won't take a moment. I'll be right back."
She was gone, running down the
hillside.
"We have to stop her!"
Scylla said, starting to climb out of the air car.
"No," Mosiah countered, his
voice harsh. "Let her see for herself. Then maybe she will
understand."
See what? I didn't like this. Jumping
out of the air car, I ran after Eliza and soon caught up with her. My legs were
stiff, the muscles starting to tighten after the physical exertion from last
night. I gritted my teeth against the soreness as we dashed down the hillside
toward the sheep pen.
Even from this distance, I could see
something was terribly wrong. I tried to halt Eliza's wild rush, but she
angrily flung off my restraining hand and plunged ahead. I slowed my pace, to
ease the burning in my legs. There was no need to hurry, nothing we could do.
Nothing anyone could do.
When I arrived, I found Eliza leaning
heavily against the stone fence. Her eyes were wide, the lids stretched with
horror and disbelief.
The sheep were dead. All of them,
slaughtered. Each of them bled from the ears. Pools of blood had formed under
each mouth and nose. Eyes stared, clouded over. Each lay where it had fallen,
with no sign of a struggle. I recalled the blast we had heard. Even from a
distance we'd felt the concussive force. The Technomancers, their power running
low, had used the deaths of these animals to replenish their supply.
Eliza's head sank to her hands, but
she did not cry. She remained standing, her head bowed, so still and rigid that
I was frightened. I did what I could, in my poor silence, to comfort her,
letting her feel my touch, to know that human warmth and sympathy surrounded
her.
The air car slid soundlessly down the
hill, pulled up in front of us. Scylla climbed out. Mosiah remained in the car,
regarding the slaughter with equanimity.
"Come, Your Majesty," said
Scylla. "There is nothing we can do."
"Why?" Eliza asked, in
muffled tones, keeping her head down. "Why did they do this?"
"They feed off death."
Mosiah's voice came from the air car. "These are the fiends to whom you
are taking the Darksword, Eliza. Think about it."
I hated him at that moment. She could
have been spared this. She knew well enough, having seen the destruction in her
own home, what she faced. But I was wrong, as it turned out, and he was right.
He gauged her strength and quality better than
She raised her face and she was
composed, almost serene. "I will go alone. I alone will take the sword to
them. The rest of you should not come. It is too dangerous."
That could not be, as Scylla pointed
out with great practicality, refraining from mentioning anything in regard to
Eliza herself, but talking only of our own needs. Who would drive the air car?
We needed Scylla. As for Reuven, I would not leave Father Saryon to the
Technomancers. And Mosiah would never permit the Darksword to venture far from
his sight. Each of us had our reasons for going.
Eliza accepted the logic of all this
quietly, did not argue. She returned to the air car and slid inside. She
glanced once more at the dead sheep and her lips tightened, her hands clasped.
She looked away. I climbed in beside her, as Scylla returned to the driver's
seat.
The air car skimmed over the surface
of the ground, much smoother than when I had driven a similar vehicle. I
fumbled for something which had struck a strange chord in my mind. Not an
ill-sounding chord. It was pleasant, in fact. But strange. I tried to remember
what it was.
Your
Majesty, Scylla had called Eliza twice now. Your
Majesty.
How odd. Yet how
fitting.
The start of our journey was
uneventful. Scylla had brought a map of the
The two spent several minutes arguing
over the map. Mosiah claimed it had been drawn by General Boris's people, which
meant that they had violated the treaty. Scylla countered by saying that the Duuk-tsarith
had violated the treaty themselves. Mosiah had better look to his own sins
before he accused others.
I'm not sure how much longer the
bickering would have continued, but Eliza, who had been sitting in the back,
white-faced and silent, asked quietly, "Is the map useful?"
Scylla looked at Mosiah, who muttered
something to the effect that he supposed it was.
"Then I suggest we use it,"
Eliza said. She curled up in the corner of the seat and closed her eyes.
After that, Scylla and Mosiah spoke to
each other only when it was necessary to discuss directions. The air car soared
off down the mountainside, heading for the interior of Thimhallan.
I made certain Eliza was comfortable,
covered her with my jacket, for which consideration I received a wan smile, but
she did not open her eyes. She held Teddy in the crook of her arm, pressed
close to her breast for comfort, as a child might. I was certain that Teddy had
arranged himself in this enviable position, but I dared not move him for fear
of disturbing her rest.
I settled back in my corner, feeling
somewhat cramped in the backseat, which—so far as I could tell—was not intended
for transporting any creature possessed of legs. I knew I should sleep, for I
would need to be well rested to face whatever it was we would face at the end
of our journey.
I closed my eyes, but sleep would not
come. My body was in that state of overfatigue where the nerves twitch and the
mind travels restlessly over past events.
I felt guilty for having abandoned
Father Saryon, although I don't know what good I could have done had I been
there. And at least I had warned Eliza away from the Technomancers, although if
they had taken the sword then and there, Joram and Gwendolyn and Father Saryon
might not have been abducted.
What's done is done, I told myself.
You acted for the best.
I spent a few more fruitless moments
worrying about what we were going to do when we arrived at Zith-el, for I was
certain that Mosiah would never permit Eliza to relinquish the Darksword. Would
he try to stop her? Would he try to take the sword? Was he truly devoid of
magical Life or was that a deceit to throw us off guard? Scylla had pledged her
loyalty to Eliza. Would she fight Mosiah, if it came to that? And who was
Scylla anyway?
Was Father Saryon all right? Would the
Technomancers kill him, as they had promised, if we didn't give up the sword?
Was it wise to give up the sword to these evil people? Was this all wasted
effort, if the Hch'nyv were going to wipe us out?
Eventually, these concerns—over which
admittedly I had no control—so wore out my brain that it gave up and
surrendered to weariness. I slept.
I awoke to
darkness, a driving rainstorm, and an urgent need to relieve my bladder.
There being a distinct lack of bathroom
facilities on Thimhal-lan, I would have to make do with the bushes. The rain
pelting down on top of the air car did not fill me with any great enthusiasm
for going out into the violent storm, but the urgency of my need gave me little
choice.
Eliza slumbered in her corner,
undisturbed by the tumult of the storm. By her placid face and even breathing,
she slept deeply and dreamlessly. Fearful of waking her, I leaned forward as
noiselessly as I could and tapped Scylla on the shoulder.
Scylla glanced around swiftly, keeping
a tight grip on the wheel. Driving the air car must have been difficult, due to
the storm. We were being buffeted by strong winds, the windshield wipers could
not keep the window clear of the rain. If it had not been for the radar, with
which the air car was equipped and which provided us with a virtual map of the
terrain, we could not have kept going. As it was, we crept along, with Scylla
fixing her gaze on the radar screen and Mosiah peering out the blurred window.
I made known my request. A bright
burst of lightning nearly blinded us. Thunder cracked overhead, the rumble
shaking the air car.
"Can't you hold it?" Scylla
asked.
I shook my head. She checked the radar
screen, found a clear place, and lowered the air car down onto the ground.
"I'll go with him," Mosiah
offered. "There are dangers out there for those who don't know the
land."
I indicated that I would be grateful
for his company, but it wasn't necessary for him to get drenched on my account.
He shrugged, smiled, and opened the car door.
I opened the door on my side and
started to climb out.
"What? What's happening?"
Eliza said sleepily, blinking her eyes.
"Pit stop," said Scylla.
"What?" asked Eliza.
Embarrassed, I didn't wait to hear
more.
The wind nearly ripped the door from
my hand, pulling me halfway out of the car. I struggled out the rest of the
way. Rain soaked me to the skin in an instant. I wrestled with the door,
finally managed to slam it shut. The force of the wind blew me several steps
toward the front of the car. Mosiah fought his way around the vehicle, his
black robes sodden and clinging to his body. He had thrown off his hood, which
was ineffectual against the wind and rain. It was at that moment I knew that he
truly was devoid of Life. No wizard with any power left would have subjected
himself to such a wetting.
"Watch out!" he shouted,
grabbing hold of my arm. "Kij vines!"
He pointed, and by the lights of the
air car, I could see the deadly vines. I had written about them in my books,
about how the vines wrapped around the limbs of the unwary, dug their thorns
into the flesh, and sucked the blood of their victims, blood upon which the
plants thrived. I had, of course, never seen one. I could have gone much longer
without the pleasure. The heart-shaped leaves shone black in the night,
glistening with rain, the thorns small and sharp. The plant appeared quite
healthy, with gigantic tendrils curling over each other, layer upon layer.
Making certain to keep clear of the entangling
vines, I finished my business as quickly as possible. Mosiah stood near me,
keeping watch in all directions, and I was glad for his presence. Zipping up my
jeans, I started back for the car. Mosiah walked at my side. The storm actually
seemed to be abating; the rain was a windswept shower now instead of a torrent.
I was looking forward to climbing into the warm interior of the air car when I
felt something like wire wrap around my ankle.
The Kij vine! Frantically, I lurched
forward, trying to break its hold. Its grip was strong. The tendril pulled my
foot out from under me and began dragging me back into the main body of the
plant! I gave a strangled cry and dug my fingers into the mud, trying to brace
myself.
Needle-sharp thorns pierced the flesh
of my leg, sliding easily through my blue jeans and heavy socks. The pain was
excruciating.
At my cry, Mosiah sprang to help me.
Scylla had seen me fall and was opening the car door.
"What is it?" she shouted.
"What's happening?"
"Stay inside!" Mosiah yelled
back. "Turn the air car around! Shine the lights on us! Kij vines! They're
all over!"
He stomped on something with his foot.
I was being dragged slowly along the rain-soaked ground, my ringers scrabbling
to gain purchase, digging deep trenches in the mud. The pain was intense—the
jabbing sensation of a thorn probing for a vein, and then came the sickening
ache of the blood being sucked out.
Mosiah stood above me, peering into
the darkness. He spoke a word and pointed with his finger. There was a flash of
light, a sizzle, and a snap.
The vine released me.
I crawled forward, only to feel other
tendrils grab hold of me. Snaking out of the darkness from all directions, they
wound around my wrists and my feet. One curled around the calf of my leg.
The air car had turned. By the car's
headlights, I could see the raindrops glistening off the heart-shaped leaves of
the deadly Kij vines, and shining on the terrible, sharp thorns.
"Damn!" Mosiah swore, and
glared in frustration at the vine. He turned and ran back to the air car.
I thought—I don't know why—that he had
abandoned me. Panic welled up inside me, bringing with it a surge of
adrenaline. I will free myself! I determined. I tried not to give way to
fear, tried to remain calm and think clearly. With all the strength I possessed
and a great deal I did not, I jerked my wrist and actually succeeded in freeing
myself from one of the vines.
But that was only one, and now four
more at least had hold of me.
Eliza was out of the car, ignoring
Mosiah's orders.
"The
Darksword!" Mosiah was saying. "Hand me the Dark-sword! That's
the only thing that will save him!"
My face was covered with muck and my
hair was in my eyes. I continued to fight the vine, but my strength was failing.
The pain of the thorns was debilitating. I felt sick and faint.
"To me!"
Mosiah yelled. "Give it to me! No! Don't risk—"
I heard footsteps and the swish of
long skirts.
I shook the hair from my eyes. Eliza
stood over me, the Dark-sword in her hand.
"Don't move, Reuven! I don't want
to hit you!"
I forced myself to lie still, though I
could feel the vines tightening, the thorns drinking deep.
The car lights illuminated her from
behind, forming a halo around her dark hair, an aura around her body. The light
did not touch the Darksword. Either that or it absorbed the light into itself.
Eliza raised the sword and slashed down with it. I heard it slice through the
vines, but to my pain-dulled mind, she was fighting the lethal plant with the night
itself.
Suddenly I was free. The plant gave up
its hold; the tendrils went limp and lifeless as a hand that has been cut off
at the wrist.
Mosiah and Scylla were there to help
me to my feet. I wiped the muck from my face and, with their help, stumbled to
the air car. Eliza came after us, holding the Darksword ready in her hand, but
the Kij vine had apparently given up the attack. Looking back on it, I saw its
leaves withered and curling wherever the Darksword had touched it.
They assisted me to the car.
Fortunately, the rain had all but ceased now.
"Will he be all right?"
Eliza hovered over me. Her obvious concern eased me like a soothing balm.
"The pain fades quickly,"
Mosiah said. "And the thorns are not poisonous. I know from experience."
"You were always stumbling into
them, as I recall," offered Teddy from the floor. He sounded peevish.
"I warned you against them, time and again—"
"You did not. You said they were
edible," Mosiah recalled with a half smile.
"Well, I knew one of us
was," Teddy muttered, then raised his voice in ire. "Is it absolutely
necessary for the lot of you to drip all over me?"
"I'd feed you to the Kij
vines," said Mosiah, reaching inside to pick up Teddy, "but even they
must have some taste." He started to return the bear to the seat,
but instead held him, stared at him. "I wonder . . ."
"Put me down!" Teddy
complained. "You're pinching me!"
Mosiah plunked the stuffed bear on the
seat beside me.
"How are you feeling?"
Scylla asked.
"Not well," said Teddy,
groaning.
"I was talking to Reuven,"
Scylla said severely. She rolled up my pants leg and began examining my
injuries.
I nodded, to indicate I was better.
The pain was fading, as Mosiah had predicted. The horror was not. I could still
feel those tendrils tightening around my legs. I shivered from cold and
reaction to the ordeal.
"You should change out of those
wet clothes," Eliza said.
"Not here," Mosiah stated.
"Not now."
"For once, I agree with the
wizard," Scylla said. "Get back in the car, all of you. I'll turn the
heat on. Reuven, take off what clothes you can. Eliza, cover him with as many
blankets as we have. You'll find a first-aid kit back there. Use the ointment
on those wounds."
Eliza returned the Darksword to its place
on the floor, sliding it under the blanket, out of sight. She said no word
about what she'd done to save me, and refused to look at me when I tried to
sign my thanks. Instead, she searched for and discovered the first-aid kit,
then busied herself with the blankets, pulling them out of the back
compartment.
The air car rose up from that
ill-fated place and slid smoothly forward, making better time now that the
storm had abated. A watery sun peered down at us, blinking, as the clouds
scudded over its weak eye.
"Mid-afternoon," Mosiah
said, gazing at the sky.
"As dark as it was, I thought it
was night," Eliza said.
She began treating my cuts and wounds
with the ointment. Embarrassed at this attention, I had endeavored to take the
tube from her, but she refused to let me. "Lie back and rest," she
ordered, and helped me peel off my sodden woolen sweater.
She dabbed ointment on the thorn
wounds, which were red and fiery, with dark blood oozing from them. When Eliza
spread the salve over them, the redness vanished, the bleeding stopped, the
pain eased and was soon completely gone. Eliza's eyes widened at the change.
"This is wonderful," she
said, looking at the small tube. "We have medical supplies sent to us by
the Earth Forces, but nothing like this!"
"Standard government issue,"
said Scylla, with a shrug.
Mosiah twisted around in his seat,
studied the almost healed wounds on my arms and legs. He looked at Scylla.
"What government issues miracles
these days?" he asked.
She glanced at him and grinned.
"And where did you find that thunderbolt you launched, Enforcer?
Just happen to have one up your sleeve? I thought you said your magic was
depleted. No Life." She shook her head in mock sorrow, and continued on.
"And you asking for the Darksword. Quick thinking. Yet what would you have
done with it, I wonder?"
"Used it to free Reuven,"
Mosiah replied. "Then I would have changed myself into a bat and flown
away with it, of course. Or did you think I'd take it and try to run with it, through
this godforsaken wilderness, and you with an air car to catch me!"
He sat hunched and huddled in his
robes, which were as wet as my clothes. He held his shoulders rigid, to keep
from revealing that he was shivering.
"I thought the sword too heavy
for Eliza to wield," he added coldly. "I see now that I was
wrong."
Scylla made no reply, but from the
faint flush I could see rising up the back of her neck, I believe that she was
ashamed of having made the accusation. He had given his word to help us and we
had no reason to doubt him. If he had a small reserve of Life left to him, that
was only sensible. No wizard depleted himself utterly, if he could help it. He
had voluntarily gone out into the drenching rainstorm to guard me, and if he
hadn't warned me of the Kij vines, I might well have floundered in among them
so deeply that not even the Darksword could have saved me.
Eliza offered him a blanket, which he
refused with a curt shake of his head. She said nothing; her face was calm and
smooth. She still did not trust him and she made no apology for it. She tucked
the blanket around me, made certain I was comfortable. She repacked the
first-aid kit, then asked if there was anything else she could do for me. She
offered me the electronic notepad, in case I wanted to write anything.
I indicated no, smiling, to show her
that I was much better. And, indeed, I was. The horror was starting to recede.
The air car was warming up rapidly. My shivering ceased, the pain was gone. The
ointment deserved some credit, undoubtedly, but no salve can heal the terrors
of the soul. Eliza's touch had been the true cure.
Some emotions need no words. Eliza saw
in my eyes what I could not speak. A slight flush mantled her cheeks and she
looked away from me, to the notepad in her hand. The pad provided
her an excuse to change the subject.
"I don't want to disturb you,
Reuven, if you're tired—"
I shook my head. She could never
disturb me, nor could I ever be too tired to do anything she might ask of me.
"I would like to learn sign
language," she said, almost shyly. "Would you mind teaching me?"
Would I mind! I knew she was doing
this only out of kindness, to take my mind off the terrible experience I had
suffered. I agreed, of course, hoping it might take her mind off her own
horrors. She moved closer to me. I began by teaching her the alphabet, spelling
out her name. She understood immediately. She was a quick student, and within a
very short time she had the entire alphabet and could run through it, hand and
fingers flashing.
The air car soared over rain-soaked
grasslands, lifted and climbed up over treetops. We were traveling very fast
now, though I wondered if our speed would make up for the time we had lost in
the storm. Mosiah maintained his cool, offended silence.
The sun continued to shine, though it
was often hidden by racing clouds. Scylla turned down the heat in the air car,
which— with the wet clothes—was beginning to resemble a sauna.
"Those Kij vines," she said
abruptly. "They behaved rather oddly, don't you think?"
Mosiah looked at her, and though I was
busy with Eliza, I saw a glint of interest flicker in his eyes.
"Perhaps," was all he said noncommittally.
"What do you mean?"
"They came after Reuven,"
Scylla said. "Did you ever know the vines to be that aggressive? And those
vines had grown tall and thick. Isn't that unusual?"
Mosiah shrugged. "The Finhanish
are no longer around to keep them thinned out. The Sif-Hanar are no
longer here to control the weather. Of course, left alone, the Kij vines would
thrive."
"Plants born of magic,"
Scylla mused. "Created by magic. One would think that when the magic in
this land was depleted, the plants would lose their source of sustenance and
they would die off. Not grow more abundantly."
"Born of magic?" Eliza
interrupted our lesson to ask. "What do you mean? We grow corn and carrots
and wheat and there's nothing magic about them."
"But there is about the Kij
vine," Mosiah replied. "It was created at the end of the Iron Wars,
when some of the D'karn-duuk—the warlocks and war masters—saw the battle
ending with themselves on the losing side. They had already used their magic to
turn humans into giants, or twist humans into a combination of beast and man,
which became the centaur. The warlocks perverted plant life, developing the Kij
vine and other deadly vegetation, used them to ambush the unwary.
"When the wars ended, the ranks
of the D'karn-duuk were depleted. They could no longer control their own
creations, and so the giants and the centaur and the Kij vines were left on
their own, to do what they could to survive."
"I heard stories about the
centaur," Eliza said. "They captured my father once and nearly killed
him. He said they were cruel and loved to inflict pain, but that this came out
of their own great anger and suffering."
"I have to work very hard to feel
sympathy for the centaur," Mosiah said dryly, "but I suppose this is
true. Or should I say it was true, for they must have died when the
magic died."
"Like the Kij vines," said
Scylla, her pierced eyebrow arching. "And certain bears
of my acquaintance." She glanced back at Teddy, who smirked at her
and winked.
"Here's a thought," she
said. "What if the first Darksword did not destroy the Well of
Life, as everyone has always supposed. What if, instead, the Darksword capped
it?"
"Impossible.
The magic was released into the universe," Mosiah stated.
"The magic of Thimhallan was
released, and perhaps a gush of magic from the Well. Then the Well was sealed.
And ever since, the magic has been building beneath the surface. . . ."
"Well, really!" Simkin cried
suddenly. "I won't stay to be insulted."
With that and a flash of orange scarf,
Teddy vanished.
"What was all that about?"
Eliza asked, bewildered. "Where did he go?"
"I wonder." Mosiah glanced
sidelong at Scylla. "I wonder about a lot of things."
So did I. If
Scylla's theory was right and the magic had been building beneath Thimhallan
all these years . . . what would happen? One effect was most obvious.
Magic—strong and powerful—was available to whoever might be able to use it.
But surely, I argued with myself, if
that were true, then certainly the Duuk-tsarith would have discovered it
long ago.
Perhaps they had. Perhaps that is why
they are so desperate to attain the Darksword. Not only could it destroy the
Life that might be building beneath the Well, but if the new Darksword were to
be given this powerful Life, its own power might be increased.
I turned the question upside down and
inside out in my mind and never came to a satisfactory answer. It didn't seem
to me that there could ever be an answer. Within forty-eight hours, we would
flee this place, most likely never to return.
Mosiah said nothing more. Scylla
appeared lost in thought. The two lapsed into an uncomfortable silence. I
continued my lesson with Eliza.
I was relieved that Teddy was gone,
until I remembered my master's warning—that it was always better to know where
Simkin was than where he wasn't.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
"It takes nerves of stone to enter Zith-el in this manner."
DARKSWORD ADVENTURES
We
reached Zith-el not long after sunset. The afterglow— bright beneath gray storm
clouds—tinged the sky with a lurid red that tipped the snow-covered mountains
of the Ekard range with blood. It was an ominous sign and one that was not lost
on my companions.
"Of all the cities on Thimhallan,
Zith-el was the one that suffered the most damage when the Well of Life was
destroyed," Mosiah told us. "The buildings of Zith-el soared countless
stories into the air. The people also tunneled deep into the ground in search
of living space. When the magic was withdrawn and the fearsome quakes shook the
land, the buildings fell, the tunnels collapsed. Thousands died, crushed to
death, trapped in the rubble, or buried alive beneath the ground."
The air car slowed. Zith-el's Outer
Wall, which had protected the city from invasion, had been a wall of magic,
completely invisible, much like what we on Earth know as a force field. The
wall should have been destroyed.
Perhaps it was, perhaps it wasn't.
We had no way of knowing, and after
the Kij vines we could no longer assume that magic on Thimhallan was as
depleted as we had once thought. I remembered what the Technomancers had said
about "residual pockets."
All that could be seen inside the city
was the thick forest, which had been part of the marvelous Zoo, for which
Zith-el was known. Oddly, if the wall was gone, the forest had not encroached
onto the grasslands.
"Were there any survivors in
Zith-el?" Eliza asked. Her voice was strained. Mosiah said no word of
blame, but the daughter of the man who had caused the downfall of Thimhallan
must feel defensive.
"Yes," Mosiah answered,
"and they were the most unfortunate of all. When the magic was weakened,
the creatures of the Zoo were set free and took their revenge on those who had
kept them prisoner."
Eliza gazed on the city that had once
teemed with life, whose walls now encompassed nothing but death. She knew the
history of her father and what he had done and why he had done it. Joram was
honest, brutally honest, and I do not believe that he would have spared himself
in the telling. In all probability he had judged himself more harshly than even
his detractors.
But sealed up, safe and secure, inside
the Font, Eliza had never been brought face-to-face with the knowledge of what
her father had done to this world and to its people. Father Saryon and I had
disturbed Eliza's tranquillity by bringing her visions of a different world. The
Technomancers had shattered her happy life, her innocent pleasure in her home
and her family. Mosiah's words and the crumbled walls of Zith-el shook her
faith in her father, the worst and most painful shock of all.
The air car had slowed. Scylla lowered
it into the tall stands of grass that surrounded the city. The shadows of the
mountains had brought dusk to us on the plains, though the sky was still bright
behind them. She kept the lights off.
She and Mosiah discussed how best to
proceed, arguing over whether it would be better to remain in the air car or
leave it outside the city and enter Zith-el on foot.
"The Technomancers know we are
here," Mosiah observed. "With their sensor equipment, they've
probably been following us since we left the Font."
"Yes, but they don't know how
many we are or if we have the Darksword," Scylla argued.
"We're here, aren't we?"
Mosiah returned bluntly. "Why else would we come?"
Scylla admitted that he had a valid
point, but she urged stealth as opposed to driving right up to the gate.
"At the least, we should not turn over the Darksword until we are assured
of the hostages' safety."
Mosiah shook his head.
I left that decision to them. With
four of us facing an army of Technomancers, it didn't seem to me to make the
slightest bit of difference what we did. Pulling out my electronic notebook, I
began looking up some reference material I had acquired on Zith-el, thinking to
let Eliza read my notes.
When I found them, I started to show
them to her, then checked myself.
Believing herself unobserved, shrouded
in the twilight shadows, she had leaned down and, with one hand, drawn off the
blanket from the Darksword. It was dark against darkness.
Her father had forged the first
Darksword. Father Saryon had given it Life. The blood of thousands had
consecrated it. Now here was a second, another. Would blood stain its blade as
well?
Her face was so open, so honest,
emotions passed across its surface like ripples on still water. I could guess
her thoughts. Her words, spoken softly to herself, proved my guess right.
"Why did he forge it anew? Why
did it have to come back into the world? And what should I do with it
now?"
Sighing, she leaned against the seat,
her expression sad and troubled.
And yet, what choice did she have?
None that I could
see. Unable to offer help, I did not intrude on Eliza's private pain. I
reread the notes written by an unnamed adventurer in the
Zith-el is a
compact city whose major distinction is that it is surrounded by the most
wonderful Zoo in all of Thimhallan. Visitors traveling from other cities to see
the Zoo's wonders provide a large portion of Zith-el's income.
History: Zith-el—a Finhanish druid of the Vanjnan Clans—was
born about 352 YL. He purchased a wife from a fellow clansman, who had captured
the woman during a raid on Trandar. The woman, named
He, his wife, and their family
traveled up the
The city was built around her.
Zith-el believed that the ground was
sacred and . . . vowed to the Almin that he would never allow the city to
expand beyond its original borders.
And that was the reason
why, as its population grew, Zith-el was forced to build up and down. It could
never expand outward.
I glanced up from my reading. The air
car glided forward through the tall grass, which brushed against its sides with
an irritating swishing sound. At first, we were able to see the trees of the
Zoo above the waving sea of green, but we soon lost sight of them in the
gathering gloom of night. The city itself was dark, that
once must have glittered with light.
Moving out of the foothills toward the
gate specified—the East Road Gate—we came upon the
The stars were coming out. I looked at
them and found myself wondering if any of those sparkling points of light were
the battle cruisers of the Hch'nyv, bearing down on us. That reminded me
forcibly of the time constraint. We had this night, the next day, and the next
night before the window of safety slammed shut.
The moon shone, as well, silvering the
ragged storm clouds, which had continued to keep clear of us. About three-quarters
full, the moon was faint now, but would brighten as the night darkened. That
comforted me, though, when I thought of it, I had no idea why it should.
Scylla brought the car to a halt. The
East Road Gate was built into a small section of the Outer Wall to the west of
the city. East Road therefore seemed a misnomer, but the East Road actually
took its name as meaning "east road leading away from the Font," all
directions in Thimhallan having been determined from the Font, which was considered
the center of the world.
I went back to my notes.
There are two
walls around the city, the Outer Wall and the City Wall. The City Wall runs
along the lines originally laid down by Zith-el (the city's founder) and marks
the place where the city ends and the Zoo begins. The Outer Wall surrounds the
Zoo. Completely invisible, it allows a marvelous view of all the creatures, yet
keeps/ them well confined. Its (the Zoo's) nearest point to the city is some
four mila from the City Wall.
Four gates in both walls provide the
only entrances and exits for overland travelers. These gates are one-way only.
You step through the open portal, only to find the back sealed shut. Gates
leading into the city are located on the east and west sides of the walls,
while gates leading out of the city are located on the north and south sides.
It is said that all the gates through the City Wall can be deactivated by a
word from the Lord of Zith-el in order to keep the city protected from attack.
The gates have a second and highly startling
function. Upon entering the gate in the Outer Wall, the traveler must pass
through the Zoo that surrounds the city in order to enter the city proper.
Since it would disturb the sensibilities of those touring the Zoo to see other
humans like themselves wandering about, the gates temporarily transform the
unsuspecting entrant into the illusion of some animal.
We
might all turn into Teddies, I thought.
Scylla shut off the engine to the air
car. It settled down upon the road and we sat in darkness and in silence,
watching the gate.
Nothing, no one appeared.
"They are waiting for us to show
ourselves," Mosiah said, his voice harsh and overloud in the stillness.
"Let's get this over with."
He drew his hood up over his head and
put his hand on the door. Scylla reached out, clasped hold of his arm, halting
him.
"You should not go. The
Technomancers have no reason to harm any of the three of us. But you . .
." She leaned near him, said softly, "We are close to the Borderland.
Stay hidden in the car. When the Technomancers are gone, return to the base. Go
back to Earth and prepare King Garald and General Boris. They have to face the
fact that the Technomancers will soon be in possession of the Darksword. They
need to be forewarned, to make what plans they can."
He regarded her in silence for long
moments, such profound silence that I could hear his breath come and go. I
could hear Scylla's breathing, hear Eliza's, hear my own. I could hear my own
heart beating.
"I wish I knew," Mosiah said
at last, "whether you were just trying to get rid of me or whether you
truly cared about"— pausing, he then said, somewhat
lamely—"about King Garald and the Darksword."
Scylla grinned. I could see her face
in the lambent light of stars and moon and the setting sun. Her eyes flashed
with laughter and that cheered me, too, as had the moonglow.
"I care," she said, and her
grasp on his arm tightened.
"About the people of Earth, I
meant," he said gruffly.
"Them, too," Scylla
responded, her grin widening.
He regarded her in frowning
perplexity, for he thought she was teasing him and this was certainly no time
for kidding around.
"All right, Mosiah, so I was
wrong about you at the beginning," Scylla said, shrugging. "You're
not your typical Enforcer, probably because you weren't born to it. And, as I
said, you're much better-looking than your file photos. Return to Earth.
There's nothing you can do here and you'll only put yourself in danger and
maybe us along with you."
"Very well," he agreed,
after another moment's thought. "I will remain inside the car. But leave
the Darksword here with me, at least until you have proof that the hostages are
alive. If the Technomancers try to seize it, they will find me guarding it;
something they might not expect."
"A fine guard," Scylla
scoffed. "You with no Life and no other weapon."
Mosiah smiled, for the first time
since I'd met him. "The Technomancers don't know that."
Scylla looked startled, then she chuckled. "You have a point, Mosiah. If your
plan is okay with Eliza, it's okay with me."
Eliza did not answer. I wasn't certain
she had even heard, but then she nodded, once, slowly.
"The Almin go with you,"
Mosiah said.
"And with you," said Scylla,
and she clapped him in bois^er-ous good humor on the shoulder.
"Ready?" We might have been going to a carnival, for her ebullient
spirits.
Eliza's face glimmered pale in the
darkness. It seemed as if I were sitting beside a ghost. She stretched out her
hand, to touch either Scylla or Mosiah, but she hesitated, then
rested her hand on the back of the front seat.
"Did my father do the right
thing?" she asked, and my heart ached for the agony in her voice.
"All those people dying ... I never realized ... I need to know."
Mosiah turned his face away. He stared
out the front of the car window, toward the city that had become a tomb.
Scylla's grin vanished. Her expression
somber, she rested her hand on Eliza's, and the touch that had been so brash
was now gentle.
"How can we ever know, Eliza?
Toss a pebble in the lake. The ripples spread out far beyond the entry point,
continue long after the pebble sinks to the bottom. Each and every action we
take, from the smallest to the largest, has ramifications that we will never
see. We can only do what we believe is best and right at the time. Your father
did that, Eliza. Given the circumstances, he made the best decision—perhaps the
only decision—he could."
Eliza was not speaking only of her
father. She was speaking for herself. In returning the sword to the
Technomancers, was she making the right decision? Would the ripples from
her action fade into the placid smoothness of time's lake or build into a
crushing tidal wave?
Eliza drew in a deep breath. She had
made her decision.
"I am ready," she said. She
drew the blanket over the Darksword.
We opened the doors of the air car and
climbed out, all except Mosiah, who hunkered down in the front seat. We left
the Darksword on the floor in the back.
Scylla had brought with her a pair of
infrared binoculars. With these, she scanned the strange forest, a forest which
had remained inside boundaries that were supposedly no longer there. Ahead of
us was the East Road Gate—at least that's what I assumed it was. An invisible
gate in an invisible wall is not easy to find.
"No one," Scylla said,
lowering the binoculars.
"I feel as if someone was
watching me," said Eliza, shivering, though the night wind was warm.
"Yes," Scylla agreed.
"So do I." She kept her gaze forward,
shifting, seeking, searching.
"What do we do?" Eliza
demanded. Her voice cracked. The strain was starting to wear her down.
"Why is no one here?"
"Patience," counseled
Scylla. "This is their game. We have to play by their rules. Remember—we
must see for ourselves that the hostages are alive and well. Look inside the
gate. Do you see anything?"
I recalled what I had read. In the
past, anyone who entered the gate was immediately transformed into the likeness
of one of the inmates of the Zoo—a daunting possibility. For if the Kan-Hanar,
the gatekeepers, discovered that you had been erroneously admitted, you
might become a permanent resident of the Zoo.
This edict maintained the integrity of
the Zoo. The sight of fat tradesmen tramping through the hunting grounds of the
fierce centaurs would spoil the effect. To say nothing of the fact that the
centaurs—who were not illusion, but very real—might decide to feast on a fat
tradesman. And so the tradesmen were transformed into images of centaurs and
thus—if they kept to the path— passed through the Zoo swiftly and safely.
Of course, the elite magi who either
lived in Zith-el or had business there entered that city by way of the
Corridors, and so did not have to go through the demeaning process of entering
the gate. This experience was reserved for peasants, students, peddlers, field
magi, and the lower ranks of the catalysts.
"I see nothing inside the
gate," Eliza said. "Nothing at all. That's very strange. It's as if
there were a huge hole cut out of the forest."
I nodded, to indicate that my view was the
same.
"And yet the magic is supposed to
be gone," Scylla murmured.
"Not according to your theory,"
I signed.
I have no idea whether she understood
me or not, it being difficult to read sign language in near darkness.
"Are we . . , are we supposed to
meet them inside there?" Eliza asked, daunted at
the prospect of entering the dark maw which gaped before us.
"No," said Scylla
reassuringly. "They said to meet outside the East Road Gate. If the
Technomancers are in Zith-el, my guess is that they found some means of
entering that did not involve passing through the Zoo."
I could well believe that the
Technomancers would be reluctant to enter. Standing before the gate was like
standing in the mouth of a cave, feeling the chill air that comes from deep
underground touch your skin with clammy fingers. A strange smell emanated from
the Zoo, drifting only occasionally to the nostrils, then vanishing. It was the
smell of living things, of excrement and rotten food, mingled with the odor of
verdure and loam, and, underneath it, decay.
We stood waiting for perhaps fifteen
minutes, our uneasiness growing. If the Technomancers meant to unnerve us, they
succeeded, at least with Eliza and myself. I'm not sure what it would have
taken to unnerve Scylla, who stood beside us, arms folded across her chest, a
slight smile on her lips.
Eliza shivered again. I offered to go
back to the car for her wrap, but Scylla stopped me.
"Look!" she said softly, and
pointed.
A figure was moving toward us, on our
side of the invisible wall. It did not walk, but glided over the ground. It was
alone and was, by its dress, a woman. Eliza gasped and clasped her hands.
"Mother!" she whispered.
The figure was Gwendolyn, coming
toward us, drifting over the ground. I recalled then that she was one of the
magi, that she could float where the mundane were forced to walk. But I also
recalled that I had not once seen her use her magic when we were at her home.
Perhaps that was out of respect for Joram.
Gwen floated toward us, her gaze
focused lovingly on her daughter.
"Mother?"
Eliza repeated, perplexed, hopeful, afraid.
Gwendolyn dropped gracefully to the
ground and held out her arms. "My child," she said in choked tones. "How
frightened you must have been!"
Eliza held back. "Mother, why are
you here? Did you escape them? Where is Papa?"
Gwendolyn took a step toward her
daughter. "Are you all right, love?"
Reaching out, she took one of Eliza's hands.
Eliza flinched, but then, seeing her
mother's worried, loving face so near, she seemed to melt.
"I'm fine, Mother. Only so
worried about you and Papa! I heard he was hurt. How is he?"
"Eliza, have you brought the
Darksword?" Gwendolyn asked, smoothing her daughter's black curls.
"Yes," said Eliza. "But
Papa! Is he well? And Father Saryon? Is he all right?"
"Of course,
child. I would not have come to you otherwise," Gwendolyn replied,
with a reassuring smile. "Your father is angry with you for taking the
Darksword, but if you return it, he will forgive you."
"Mother, I'm frightened for Papa.
I saw the blood! And they killed the sheep. All the sheep are dead,
Mother!"
"You know how hot-tempered your
father is." Gwen sighed. "He was caught off guard when the
Technomancers entered our house. Their leader admits that they acted rashly and
he has apologized. Your father suffered a slight injury. Nothing serious. His
greatest hurt lies with you, Eliza. He believes you have betrayed him!"
"I didn't mean to betray
him," Eliza said, her voice quavering. "I thought if I gave them the
sword, they would go away and leave us alone and we could be happy again!
That's all I meant to do."
"I understand, daughter, and so
will your father. Come and tell him this yourself. My pet!" Gwendolyn
extended her hand. "We have so little time! Give me the Darksword and our
family will be reunited."
I looked at Scylla, wondering if she
would remind Eliza of the admonition to see for herself that the hostages were
alive and well. Not that I didn't trust Gwendolyn, but the thought came to me
that perhaps she was acting under duress.
Eliza gave a deep sigh, as if she were
throwing off a heavy burden. "Yes, Mother. I will give you the
Darksword."
Turning, she walked back to the car.
Gwendolyn remained standing near the wall. Her fond gaze never left her
daughter.
I thought Scylla would make some
protest, but she kept silent. It was Eliza's decision to make, after all.
Returning to the car, she opened the
back door and bent down to pick up the sword. I think Mosiah tried arguing with
her, but—if so—their conversation was brief. Eliza slammed the door irritably
and started to walk back to us. She carried with her the Darksword, both hands
clasped around the hilt, the sword's blade pointed down.
Mosiah climbed out of the car,
following after her, moving swiftly, silently.
Eliza had her back turned to him. She
was facing her mother. She did not see him or hear him and Gwendolyn had eyes
only for her daughter. Mosiah, in his black robes, was difficult to distinguish
in the half-light. I saw him because I had been expecting him to do something
like this. I had no doubt at all in my mind that he had deceived us, that he
was going to try to take the Darksword by force. Scylla saw him, but she only
stood, watching, that same slight smile on her lips.
Well, she had as good as admitted that
she was attracted to him. But what about her pledge to Eliza? I could trust
neither of these two apparently. Perhaps they were in league with each other.
It was up to me.
If I could have, I would have shouted
a warning to Eliza. I could not, however, and so, with an inarticulate cry, I
pointed toward Mosiah.
At the strange sound of my cry, Eliza
looked at me, alarmed and startled.
I pointed again, frantically.
She was just starting to turn when
Mosiah reached her. He grabbed hold of the Darksword.
Taken by surprise, she tried valiantly
to keep hold of the weapon, but Mosiah was strong and wrested it from her with
ease. Then, to my intense astonishment, he turned and, with all his strength,
flung the Darksword as far from him as he could manage. He flung it directly
into the gate.
The sword disappeared as if it had
become one with the darkness.
Gwendolyn reached out to seize hold of
Eliza.
Mosiah barreled into the woman,
knocking her heavily to the ground.
Eliza screamed,
a scream that ended in a strangled gasp.
Gwendolyn vanished. Mosiah wrestled
with a being clad in short white robes, white boots, white gloves, and a
smiling skull mask beneath a white hood.
"An
Interrogator!" Scylla sucked in her breath.
"Run!" Mosiah cried, pinning
the white-robed person to the ground. "More will be coming!"
Indeed, we could see the silver
shimmer of the D'karn-darah surround us as they sprang up from the tall
grass and surged toward us.
"Run where?" Scylla
demanded.
The D'karn-darah stood between
us and the air car. They were bearing down on us. Mosiah slammed the head of
the Interrogator into the ground. The skull mask lolled to one side, lay quiet.
Mosiah leapt to his feet and made a scrambling dash toward us.
"The gate!" he gasped.
"Run for it!"
The D'karn-darah had formed a
semicircle and were closing in on us, though not very
fast. It almost looked as if they were herding us toward the gate, which was
now the only retreat open to us.
Eliza stood numb with shock, staring
at the hideous being that had taken the form of her mother. I caught hold of
her hand, pulled her away, nearly dragged her off her feet. Scylla took hold of
her from the other side.
"Your Majesty, we must get you
safely away from these evil men," Scylla said firmly. "This way! Through the gate!"
Eliza nodded and started to run, but
she stumbled over her long skirts. Scylla and I helped her up and propelled her
toward the gate. By now, Mosiah had joined us. We were within a foot or two of
the gate, about to enter, when he gave a loud cry and held out his arms,
blocking our way. He pointed to what looked like a silver coin, shining on the
ground.
"Look out! It's a stasis mine! Go
around! Don't step on it!"
Glancing back, I saw the D'karn-darah
increase their speed.
They had been expecting the stasis
mine to stop us. Seeing it had failed, they started to close in. But we had already
reached the gate.
What made me think that, once inside
the gate, we would be safe from our pursuers? For all I knew, they would come
in after us. The most we could hope for was to lose them in the forest's
darkness, but they were so close behind that this hope seemed a forlorn one.
Of course, I now know what drew me
forward. A good thing I did not know then, I would never have believed it. As
it was, I had no chance to believe or disbelieve. I entered the Eastroad Gate,
entered the city of
Magic was very much alive on
Thimhallan.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Magic is the substance and essence of Life—that is the philosophy of this land and all who dwell here. Life and magic are one and the same. They are inseparable and indistinguishable.
DARKSWORD AD VENTURES
I did not
recall losing consciousness, yet it seemed to me that I awoke from sleep. Then
came a frightening sensation of being compressed, the air squeezed from my
lungs, as if some force were trying to flatten me. That sensation ended almost
before I was fully aware of it. All I could see around me was a dreamlike
shimmer of color. I could hear only indistinct sounds.
I experienced a sickening feeling of
falling, as when one dreams of falling. The fall was gentle, however, and I hit
the ground running, fearful of pursuit. I almost immediately tripped over the
hem of a long robe.
I tumbled forward and landed painfully
on my hands and knees, scraping my knees against the cloth of the robes and
cutting my right hand on an exposed tree root.
The fall left me shaken. My entrance
through the gate left me more shaken still. I sat back on my heels, drew a
shivering breath, and looked around. My first thought was of Eliza: was she
safe? My second thought was in question marks and exclamation points: what in
the Almin's name had happened to me?!
My blue jeans and sweater were gone.
In their place, I was wearing a long robe, made of cloth that was white in
color. The cloth was velvet, and very fine, soft and smooth. Though well made,
the robe was plain, devoid of any decoration save for a red band of trim around
the hem of the sleeves, and the skirt, which reached to my ankles.
Feeling an unusual coolness on my
head, I lifted my hand to discover that my long hair was gone, cut short, and
tonsured! Gingerly, and with a certain amount of horror, I felt the smooth
round bald spot on the top of my head, where my hair had been shaved, and now
grew in a ring that framed my face and just barely covered my ears.
The magic of the gate must have done
this, I realized confusedly, yet the information I had just read on Zith-el
indicated that the gate would change us into creatures of the Zoo. I had never
read that the people of Zith-el kept catalysts in their Zoo, yet that is most
certainly what I was dressed as—a catalyst in Thimhallan.
A catalyst in a Thimhallan which no
longer existed!
I pondered this amazing and perplexing
occurrence and wondered what I should do next. I was alone, so far as I could
tell, in a thick and shadowed forest. Had I not fallen over my robes, I would
have run headlong into a large oak tree. I was encircled by trees—oaks, mostly,
though here and there some pines and ferns grew, vying for the meager sunlight
which filtered through the oaks' green foliage. I was just noting in relief
that I did not see the heart-shaped leaves of the Kij vine, when it occurred to
me that what I was seeing, I was seeing by the light of the sun.
It had been near nightfall when we ran
into the gate.
Slowly I rose to my feet, the white
robe falling in soft folds around me. I could not call out to my companions to
let them know where I was, which was—on second thought—probably just as well. I
might have been discovered by our pursuers. I looked around, trying to see some
sign of my companions. Almost the moment I moved, I heard a soft voice.
"Reuven?
Is that you? Over here."
I heard at almost the same instant
another voice say worriedly, "Your Majesty! Are you all right?"
I stumbled through the undergrowth
toward the first voice, which I had recognized as Mosiah's, and emerged into a
small clearing. He had his back to me, for he had turned at the sound of the
other voice. It resembled Scylla's, though its accent was strange.
We heard the clink of metal and the
rattle of chain and a crashing in the brush and Scylla's voice again calling to
Her Majesty.
I touched Mosiah on the arm to attract
his attention.
He turned and looked at me and his
eyebrows shot up, his mouth gaped, and his eyes widened. By that I knew that
the white robes and tonsured hair were not an illusion of my own making, as I
had been most desperately hoping.
"Reuven?"
He gasped out my name, and it was more question than recognition.
"I think so," I signed.
"I'm not sure. Do you know what is going on?"
"I have no idea!" he
replied. His words were heartfelt and uttered with such sincerity that I
believed him. My first thought was that he or the other Duuk-tsarith had
been responsible for this transformation. I knew now that was not the case.
A flash of sunlight glinting off metal
some distance away caught my eye.
A knight clad in
silver-plate armor worn over chain mail burst through the forest cover,
sword drawn. The knight bent over something on the ground and quickly sheathed
the sword.
"Your Majesty!" cried the
knight. "Are you hurt?"
"I am all right, Sir Knight. Only a bruise here and there and those more to my dignity than my
person."
"Allow me to assist you,
Your Majesty."
The knight reached out a gloved hand.
A slender, delicate hand that flashed
with jewels reached up from the forest floor and grasped the knight's hand. A
figure clad in the long, straight skirts of an old-fashioned riding habit rose
to her feet. It was Eliza, or rather it had been Eliza, I was not sure who she
was now, any more than I was sure who I was. The knight in plate and chain mail
was undoubtedly Scylla.
"Blessed Almin," whispered
Mosiah, and I would have echoed his prayer if I'd had the voice to do so.
"What is going on?" I signed
to Mosiah.
He made no answer, but he stared hard
at Scylla.
I tried again. "The
Technomancers? Did they follow us?"
He glanced around, shrugged, and then
shook his head. "If they have followed us, they're nowhere in sight and
that's not like them. The D'karn-darah don't
deal in subtleties."
By which I gathered that if they had
followed us we would be their captives by now. I breathed a little easier. Some
good had come out of this, it seemed, though the old saying about frying pans
and fires came into my mind.
The knight was respectfully brushing
dirt from Eliza's gown, which was made of blue velvet, trimmed in black. A
golden crown gleamed in her black hair, jewels sparkled on her hands. I realized
in baffled amazement and with a sense of growing wonder that I recognized her.
This was the Eliza I had seen in that brief glimpse inside another life. Her
dress was different, but everything else about her was the same: her hair, now
intricately braided and coiffed, her stance, her bearing, the jewels on her
fingers. Eliza was ruefully plucking twigs from her hair and
wiping the mud and grass stains from her hands, her every movement graceful and
regal.
"Where are our Enforcer and our
priest?" she asked worriedly, glancing around. "I hope they escaped
the mob safely."
"I trust they did so, Your
Majesty. The catalyst was to my left when we entered the gate, the Duuk-tsarith
was behind us. The mob was not that close. Most were at the West Gate, trying
to attack the carriage. Our ruse worked perfectly. Everyone thought you were in
the carriage, Your Majesty. It never occurred to them that you would dare to
enter the Eastroad Gate on foot."
"My brave knights," Eliza
said with a sigh. "We fear many have suffered grievous harm for our
sake."
"Their lives are pledged to Your
Majesty, as is my own."
Mosiah started forward, slipping
silently through the undergrowth. I followed after him, trying to emulate his
stealth, but at my very first step my foot snapped a tree branch with a sound
like a gunshot.
Scylla raised her sword and moved to
stand protectively in front of her charge. Eliza looked curiously and without
fear in our direction as Mosiah and I walked into the light filtering down from
the oak leaves. I was expecting the same astonishment in their faces which I
had seen in Mosiah's, even laughter at my expense, at the sight of my odd
haircut.
But the only expression on the faces
of both was relief and gladness, which emotions were echoed in Scylla's voice.
"Thank the Almin! You are
safe!" Scylla's tone altered, becoming commanding. "Were any of the
mob bold enough to follow us through the gate, Enforcer?"
Mosiah glanced around. "Why ask
me? You can see as well as I."
"Pardon, Enforcer," Scylla
returned coolly, "but you Duuk-tsarith have magical means at your
disposal, means which I lack."
"Pardon me, Sir
Knight"—Mosiah's tone was sarcastic—"but have you forgotten that I am
devoid of Life and cannot work my magic?"
Scylla indicated me with a nod of her
head. "But you have a catalyst with you. He may be a house catalyst and
not trained to the specific needs of you warlocks, but he would do in an
emergency, I suppose."
They were all looking at me now.
"Father Reuven, you are
hurt!" Eliza pointed at my hand and I noticed, for the first time, that it
was bleeding. Before I could sign that it was nothing more than a scratch, she
had taken hold of my hand and was stanching the flow of blood with a
handkerchief that she drew from out of the cuff of her long sleeve. The
handkerchief was lacy and appeared to be made of the finest cloth. I drew my
hand back.
"Don't be ridiculous,
Father," she said in an imperious tone which indicated she was accustomed
to being obeyed. She clasped my hand and dabbed at the wound with the
handkerchief, wiping off the blood and dirt.
"We will send for the Theldara
when our meeting is concluded and we are safe within the walls of the
city," she continued.
Her touch was gentle, so as not to give
me pain. But her touch did give me pain, a pain
that was not of the flesh but shivered through my body as if I had been pierced
with a sword.
She continued, "The cut is not
deep, but it is fouled with dirt and likely to putrefy if it is not treated."
I bowed my head in humble
acknowledgment of her command and gratitude for the kindness she showed to me.
I noticed that she kept her eyes lowered so as not to look into mine, and that her hand holding my hand trembled ever so
slightly.
"Father Reuven," said
Mosiah sharply. "Why do you call him that?"
Eliza gazed at Mosiah in astonishment.
"Do you speak, Enforcer, even though no one spoke to you? We must have
been in danger, to have so loosened your tongue! But, you are right." Her
cheeks flushed prettily and she glanced up at me from beneath her long
eyelashes. "We should say 'Lord Father' now that Reuven has been raised in
rank. You must pardon us, Lord Father," she added gravely, "for this
promotion was so newly done that we are not yet accustomed to the new
title."
My hand signed the words, "I owe
it all to Your Gracious Majesty's intercession on my behalf with Bishop
Radisovik."
She gave me a cool, slight smile with
her lips and a sparkling, pleased smile with her eyes. She understood me! She
understood the sign language, as if we had been speaking it for years, not for
only a few hours to pass the time in the air car. And I had known before I
signed that she would understand me.
I only wished I understood myself! Who
was this Bishop Radisovik I had mentioned? The only Radisovik I knew of was
with King Garald back on Earth. Some part of me was cognizant of what I was
saying, some part of me had guided my hand to sign the words. If I looked deep
into myself, I was certain I would see and understand.
Coward that I was, I turned my face
away. I wasn't ready to know the truth. Not yet.
Half turning his body, his motions
concealed by his black robes, Mosiah mouthed the words, "Do you know
what is going on?"
Slowly, I shook my head.
Scylla looked to the blue sky,
that was barely visible beneath the oak trees. "It is midmorning,
the time set for the rendezvous. We should make our way to the meeting place
without further delay. Centaurs still roam this forest, or so I have heard.
First, though"—her gaze went to Mosiah—"we should make certain that
we are not being followed."
Mosiah turned to me and held out his
black-robed arm.
"Open the Conduit. Give me Life,
Catalyst," he commanded, his tone mocking, as if he would have added, Now we'll see this charade come to an end!
I wanted to run. Nothing I had yet
encountered, not even the Technomancers, had frightened me as much as this
command. It was not the fear that I couldn't grant Life that daunted me. It was
the knowledge that I could do it which made me want
to flee in panic.
I would have run, I think, if Eliza's eyes had not been on me. She was watching me
with pride and affection. I stretched out a trembling hand and grasped Mosiah's
arm. I stepped back and allowed the other Reuven to move forward.
"Almin," he prayed with my
thoughts, "grant me Life."
The Conduit opened. The magic of
Thimhallan flowed through me.
I felt the Life thrumming beneath my
feet, swelling up from the living organisms underground. I was aware of the
roots of the oak trees digging in the soil, drawing in nourishment and water.
Like the oak, I was drawing in nourishment. I was drawing in the magic.
I breathed it. I heard it singing. I
smelled it and tasted it as it flowed through my being. I concentrated it
within me and then gave it, a wondrous gift, to Mosiah.
His eyes widened with astonishment as
he felt the Life flow into his body. His arm jerked in my grasp. He wanted at
first to break the connection. He didn't want to believe this any more than I
did. But common sense prevailed. We were in danger. He needed Life and I was
supplying it. He held his arm still in my grasp.
And then it was over. The Life was
drained from me. As a catalyst, I could neither use magic nor retain it. I
could act only as the intermediary. I was exhausted. It would take many hours
of rest for me to recover, still more before I would be able to open the
Conduit again. Yet I knew that I had been blessed, for I felt within me the
touch of this world and all its beings, a touch which would never leave me.
Suffused with Life, looking
considerably confused by it all, Mosiah stared from one to the other of us—from
me, drained and tired, but left with a feeling of serenity; to Scylla, who was
frowning with impatience and tapping the hilt of her sword with her fingers; to
Eliza, calm and aloof, standing somewhat apart from the rest of us, in a shaft
of sunlight that glittered on the golden circlet she wore in her black hair.
"I wish I knew what the hell was
going on," he muttered to himself, and then, shrugging, he placed his hand
on the nearest of the oak trees, bent his head near it as if he were conversing
with it.
Branches above my head began to creak
and rattle together as if in a high wind, rubbing against the intermingled
branches of the tree's neighbor, who stirred and began conversation with its
neighbor. Soon all the trees around us were shifting branches and dropping
twigs and reaching out their long arms to touch other trees.
The leaves rustled and shadows
shifted. Mosiah stood beside the oak, his cheek pressed against its rough
trunk. At length the rustling and creaking seemed to die down somewhat.
"This part of the Zoo is safe to
walk in," he reported, "for the time being. A band of centaurs live
near here, but they are out hunting and will not be back before nightfall.
Because of them, no one else dares enter. That includes the mob, Your
Majesty," he said, with a slight touch of cynical disbelief remaining in
his voice. "Your knights entered the West Gate safely, though I fear your
carriage is destroyed."
Eliza received this news with
equanimity, bowing her head in gracious appreciation and smiling to hear those
who risked their lives to protect her had not met with any harm.
"Also," he added, watching
the reaction of the other two, "the Darksword is nowhere to be seen. The
trees have no knowledge of such a weapon."
"Well, I should hope not,"
said Scylla. "You don't suppose it would be lying right out in the
open!"
"I might suppose that, since I
threw it in here," Mosiah said, but his voice was low. I was the only one
who heard him.
"There is one other person inside
this part of the Zoo," Mosiah continued. "A catalyst, by his garb. He
is in a clearing about twenty paces to the east of our current position."
"Excellent!"
Scylla grinned and nodded. "That will be Father Saryon."
I gasped and would have signed
something, but Mosiah halted me.
His eyes narrowed with suspicion and
displeasure. "What do you mean? You mentioned a rendezvous. Is that with
Saryon? How did he escape? Is Joram with him?"
Now it was Scylla who looked
astonished. Eliza drew herself up straight and regarded Mosiah with a cold
gaze.
"What sort of cruel joke do you
make, Enforcer?" Scylla demanded angrily. "To ask
of Joram!"
"I make no joke, believe
me," Mosiah returned. "Tell me— what of Joram?"
"You know the answer very well,
Enforcer," Scylla retorted.
"The Emperor of Merilon is dead.
He died twenty years ago, in the
"How did he die?" Mosiah
asked, and his voice was calm.
"At the hands
of the Executioner."
"Ah," said Mosiah, and he
sighed in relief. "Now I know what is going on!"
CHAPTER TWENTY
"For returning to this realm and bringing upon it untold danger, the sentence of death is placed upon this man Joram."
BISHOP VANYA; TRIUMPH OF THE DARKSWORD
Scylla
frowned, her brow creased. "I fear you have taken serious hurt, Enforcer. A blow on the head, perhaps?"
Mosiah put his hand to his forehead.
"Yes, for a moment I was quite disoriented. I was loath to tell you. I did
not want to worry Her Majesty." Hands folded, he bowed. His tone was
respectful, all trace of sarcasm gone.
Eliza had been cold and withdrawn. At
this statement, she warmed and drew near him, looking concerned. "Are you
all right now, Enforcer?"
"Thank you, Your Majesty. I am
recovering. I fear, however, that there may be gaps in my memory. If anything
that I say or do sounds odd, you must put it down to that account. I beg you to
be patient with any questions I may ask."
How very clever! I thought. Now he
frees himself to ask whatever questions he will and they will think it's
nothing more than the bump on his head.
"Certainly,
Enforcer." The Queen was gracious. "And now we should be going
to meet with Father Saryon. We are already late and he will be worried. Sir
Knight, will you lead the way?"
"Yes, Your
Majesty."
Scylla, sword drawn, took a moment to
get her bearings, which she did by looking again at the sun, then
searched the ground for signs of a trail. She found one, not far distant,
which—by the cloven hoofprints—had been made by some sort of beast.
"This is a centaur trail,"
Mosiah warned. "Isn't that dangerous?"
"You said yourself they were off
hunting," Scylla countered. "We have need of speed and this is faster
and easier than slogging through the undergrowth. Besides, centaur
prefer ambushing lone, helpless travelers—such as Father Saryon."
"True," Mosiah conceded.
"If you will take the lead, Sir Knight. I will guard the rear."
As she walked near him, to take her
place at the head of our small group, Scylla paused and looked Mosiah squarely
in the eyes. "Are you certain you're all right, Enforcer?" she asked,
and there was true caring and concern in her voice, softness in her bright
eyes.
"Yes, lady," he said,
astonished. "Thank you."
She grinned at him and clapped him on
the upper arm with an enthusiasm that made him wince, then
she turned and continued moving cautiously and watchfully along the path. Eliza
gathered her long skirts and followed.
Mosiah stood a moment staring after
Scylla in confusion, a confusion which did not all arise from the strange and
inexplicable situation in which we found ourselves, but which was the confusion
experienced by any man in any place in any time when confronted with the
strange and inexplicable motives of a woman.
Shaking his head, he shrugged and
gestured to me to join him.
The trail was wide enough for two
people to walk side by side, though, by the prints, the centaurs walked along
it in single file.
I signed to Mosiah, "You seem to
have some idea what is happening to us."
"So do you, I believe," he
said, glancing at me sidelong.
I felt called upon to explain.
"I've caught glimpses of myself in ... another life," was the best
way I could describe it. "And I've seen Eliza and Scylla there, too. I
didn't say anything before because I wasn't sure."
"Tell me what you saw."
I did so, adding that it wasn't much
and wasn't likely to help us. "It didn't seem to make any sense."
"It doesn't make sense now,"
he said, and his face was grim. "We have been sent to another time, an
alternate time. But why? How did we get here? And why do you recall
another time and I recall another time, yet neither Scylla nor Eliza
seems to. And how do we get back?"
"The
Technomancers?" I suggested. "Perhaps they are responsible.
What was that . . . thing . . . you attacked out beyond the Wall. The thing in the white mask that looked like Gwendolyn."
"She was one of the
Kylanistic order of the Technomancers," Mosiah
replied. "They are known as the Interrogators. They have the ability to
take on the face and form and voice of another person in order to induce the
victim to do precisely what Eliza was about to do—hand over our valuables, our
secrets. They can infiltrate any organization by using such disguises."
"How did you know it wasn't Gwendolyn?
Could you see through the disguise?"
"Their disguises are not easy to
penetrate. They overplayed their hand by having the woman use magic. In all the
time we have kept watch on Joram, I've never seen Gwen rely on Life. Not even
when she's alone. Eliza noticed and thought it was odd, but she was too willing
to believe it was her mother to question it. Then, I saw Joram's injuries. I know
it was more serious than they let on."
"Why did she abandon the
disguise?"
"It takes a great deal of magical
energy to maintain the illusion. She could not expend the energy necessary and
fight me at the same time, which is why I attacked her."
"If you had
been wrong?" I hinted.
"But I wasn't. If I had been,
however, and it really was Gwen, then I would have had a chance of rescuing
her."
"Do you believe that the
Technomancers have her prisoner?"
"I would say yes, since they were
able to create such a realistic illusion. On the other hand, I would say no,
since Smythe didn't mention her as one of the hostages."
"But what else could have
happened to her?"
Mosiah shook his head. Either he
didn't know or he wasn't saying.
I tried another question. "That
thing you called a stasis mine. What was that?"
"If one of us had stepped on it,
it would have trapped us all in a stasis field. We could not have moved until
the Technomancers released us."
I hesitated to ask my next question,
because I feared his answer. Finally, I ventured, "What if this experience
is not real—a hallucination. Maybe they're controlling our minds."
"If that is true," he said
with a wry smile, "and they are controlling our minds, then I doubt
if they would permit your mind to consider the possibility. The Technomancers
may be responsible for this, though I can't fathom why they would want to send
us to another time when they so clearly had us where they wanted us in the last
one."
He was silent a moment, then said
quietly, "There were those who once practiced the Mystery of Time upon
Thimhallan. The Diviners."
"Yes, but they perished
during the Iron Wars," I pointed out. "Their kind was never seen or
heard of after that."
"True. Well, we must keep our
eyes and ears open and see if we can solve this mystery. Joram is dead."
Mosiah pondered. "What would Thimhallan have been like if Joram had died
at the hands of the Executioner? If Joram had died before he destroyed the Well
of Life and released the magic? I wonder. . . "
He retreated into his own thoughts,
fell back a pace or two behind me to indicate that he wanted to be alone. I was
intent on my thoughts for a moment or two and then I noticed that Eliza was
glancing at me out of the corner of her eye and that, by her smile,
she seemed to invite me to come walk beside her.
My heartbeat quickened. I drew near
her. With a small gesture toward Scylla's armored back, to enjoin silence,
Eliza began to sign to me. It amused me to find that my language of the hands—
a poor second to a voice—was becoming a language of intrigue and secrecy.
"I arn sorry for my part in our
quarrel last night," Eliza signed to me. "Will you forgive me,
Reuven?"
I knew well the quarrel she meant,
though I could not have said that a second ago. As words or images will trigger
memories of a dream, so her reference brought the entire scene to me, only much
more real than any dream. It was not a dream. It had happened—at least in this
here and now, it had happened.
Perhaps it was the influence of the
magical Life flowing through my veins, but my other self—the self of Earth—was
rapidly fading into the background.
"There is nothing to forgive, my
dear one," I signed in return.
I looked at her, the sun glistening on
her black curls, the golden shimmer of her crown, the dappled sunlight now
sparkling on her jewels, the shadows of the trees now gliding over her, dimming
all light but her own.
I loved her. My love for her flowed
out of me to her as the Life had flowed out of me to Mosiah.
I had loved her since we were children
together and I would go on loving her, no matter what happened, until the day
came when I would present that love as a gift to the Almin and reside forever
in His blessedness.
The images of our past, our youth, and
our present were still confused—I remembered her as a newborn child, I
remembered an undercurrent of fear throughout my childhood. I remembered years
spent in study at the Font, holiday time spent in my home with the one who was
my foster sister, and so much more. I remembered leaving a sassy, willful child
and returning to find a beautiful, spirited woman. But who had raised us? Where
had we lived? That was hidden from me.
"Your safety was my only
concern," I signed.
"You understand that there could
be no other way," she returned. "That this was something I had to do,
being my father's heir." She regarded me intently, awaiting my answer.
"I understand," I signed.
"I understood then. I only said those things to provoke you. It worked. I
thought you'd take a swing at me again, like in the old days."
I was hoping to make her laugh. My
mischievous delight as a child, I am sorry to say, had been to tease her until
she lost her temper and struck at me with her small fists. Though I always
protested that I was the innocent victim, I was not believed and we were both
sent to bed without our suppers on those occasions.
She did not laugh, though she smiled
at the memory. Impulsively, she reached out, took hold of my hand, and
whispered, "Like in the old days, Reuven, I can count on you and you alone
to brush away the glittering faerie dust the rest would scatter over my duties.
You alone show me the ugly reality beneath. You force me to look at the
ugliness and then to see beyond it, to hope. Admit it"—her eyes gleamed
with a hint of triumph— "if I had refused to come, you would have been
disappointed in me."
"I would have thought that for
once in your life you had made a sensible and rational decision," I
signed, attempting to look stern. "As it is, my only disappointment would
have been if you had not permitted me to come with you."
"And how could I leave you
behind?" she asked, smiling and mocking me. Forgetting herself, she spoke
out loud. "I'd have to hear you whine about it for days. 'Eliza got to go
and I didn't!' " she concluded in a childish
voice, talking through her nose.
"Hush!" said Scylla,
turning. "I beg your pardon, Your Majesty. It's just that—"
"We're not on a picnic, Your
Majesty," Mosiah said dourly, gliding up to stand beside us.
"You are right, both of
you," Eliza murmured, her cheeks flushed. "It won't happen
again."
"We are very near the meeting
place," Scylla said. "Enforcer?"
The oak trees had creaked and rattled
their limbs as we walked along and I guessed that they must be continuing to
provide Mosiah with information.
"Father Saryon is in the clearing
and he is alone. He has, however, heard our approach and is more than a little
unnerved. I suggest we ease his fears."
"I will go forth into the
glade," said Scylla. "You remain here with Her Majesty."
"Oh, nonsense!" said Eliza,
losing patience. "We'll all go together. If it is a trap, we've already
walked into it. Come, Reuven."
Emerging into a glade, we came upon an
elderly priest, who had been looking nervously to his right and left previous
to our appearance.
At the sight of us, he breathed a
gentle sigh. He smiled and extended his hands, one to either of us.
"My children," Saryon said
in heartfelt tones.
My eyes blurred with tears. I knew
then the man who had been father to Eliza and to me, the man who had taken two
orphans into his home and into his heart.
No wonder I had felt the love of a son
for a father in that other life. Such love knows no bounds, would stretch
across the gulf of time.
He gave me his hand and looked with
pleasure and pride upon my white robes with their red trim. The white marked me
a house catalyst, one who is in the employ of some noble family. The red
indicated that I was a Lord Father, a high rank for one of my years.
He would have bowed and kissed Eliza's
hand, but she forestalled him by flinging her arms around his neck and kissing
him heartily on the cheek. He hugged her and held her close, all the while
keeping firm hold of my hand, and we had a most joyous family reunion there in
the glade in the Zoo of Zith-el.
"It has been so long since I've
seen both of you," he said, releasing us to look at us fondly.
"We do think the Emperor might
let you come to visit us in Merilon," said Eliza, a tiny furrow creasing
her forehead.
"No, no, Emperor Garald is
right," Saryon said, sighing. "The ways are dangerous, very
dangerous."
"The Conduits are safe."
"The Thon-li refuse to guarantee
it these days. Menju the Sorcerer has many allies on Thimhallan. Not that I
care for any danger for myself, mind you," he added with a touch of
spirit. "I am more than ready to go to my rest, to be reunited with your
father and your mother." He patted Eliza's hand. "But I cannot put
down the great burden I bear. Not yet. Not yet."
I blinked my eyes free of the glad
tears, and now that I could see Father Saryon more clearly, I was shocked at
his appearance. He had aged far beyond his years, was gray and stooped, as if
the burden of which he spoke was a physical one. He was not frail or fragile in
spirit, only in body.
Scylla and Mosiah had held back at the
edge of the glade, to give us a moment's privacy for our reunion and also to
make certain no one and nothing was lying in wait. Now they walked forward,
both making respectful bows to Father Saryon. He greeted Mosiah with pleasure,
mentioning that he had heard Mosiah was now in Queen Eliza's service. Mosiah
stood with hands folded before him, silent and observant.
Scylla was not known to Saryon,
apparently, for Eliza introduced her as her knight and captain of her guard.
Scylla was polite, but her manner was brisk. She was obviously ill at ease.
"We should stay here no longer
than is necessary, Your Majesty. With your gracious
permission, I would suggest that we leave immediately."
"Is that well with you, Father
Saryon?" Eliza asked him, regarding him anxiously. She, too, was concerned
and dismayed at his wan appearance. "You look tired. Did you walk all this
way? The journey must have been a strenuous one for you. Do you need to
rest?"
"There can be no rest for me
until I have completed my task. Yet," he added, looking earnestly and
searchingly at Eliza, "yet I would go to my grave bearing this secret if
you are the least bit unsure, Daughter. Will you take on this heavy
responsibility? Have you considered well the perils you will face?"
Eliza gripped him by both hands.
"Yes, Father, dear Father, the only father I have ever known. Yes, I have
considered the perils. They've been shown to me in vivid detail," she
added with a glance and a smile for me, before she turned back to Saryon.
"I am prepared to take the responsibility; to finish, if need be, what my
father began."
"He would have been proud of you,
Eliza," Saryon said gently. "So proud."
"Your
Majesty—"
"Yes, Scylla, we are leaving.
Father, you must guide us, for you are the only one who knows the way."
Saryon shook his head and I guessed
that the way of which he was thinking was not the sun-dappled path through the
forest, but the path forever cloaked with darkness which leads into the future.
Eliza walked at his side, holding on
to his arm in a close and confiding manner which pleased him immensely. The
trail not being wide enough for three of us to walk side by side, I fell a pace
or two behind, which put me between Saryon and Eliza in front and Scylla and
Mosiah in back.
"Perhaps I am still suffering
from the effects of my injury," Mosiah said, "but what is there to
fear, besides the usual fears which always attend anyone insane enough to walk
through the Zoo of Zith-el? You said yourself that the centaurs would not
attack us."
Scylla made a disparaging sound in her
throat. "Short work to them if they did. No, it is not the centaurs I
fear, nor darkrovers, nor giants, nor faeries." She paused a moment, then
said quietly, "I wonder that you cannot guess."
"You fear the Duuk-tsarith. Of
which I am one."
"True, but you have always been
of an independent nature Mosiah, and were not afraid to go your own way, if you
thought the other way wrong. That was why Her Majesty chose you to accompany
us. You are the only one of her Enforcers she felt she could trust."
"What is it you fear the Duuk-tsarith
will do?"
"Why, try to seize the Darks
word, of course," Scylla responded.
"So that is why we're here,"
Mosiah said thoughtfully. " 'I am prepared to take the responsibility,'
the Queen said. Eliza means to use the Darksword. And Father Saryon knows where
it is."
"Certainly.
Didn't Her Majesty explain this to you before we left?"
"Perhaps Her Majesty does not put
as much faith in me as you do," Mosiah said wryly.
Scylla sighed. "One can hardly
blame her—after all that's happened. Emperor Garald believes that the Duuk-tsarith
are under his control and will obey his commands. Certainly, they've given
him no reason to think otherwise, but still . . ."
"You don't trust them."
"The Darksword is a great prize.
It could give them enormous power, especially if they discovered the secret to
making more swords."
"I don't see how. No one with
Life can use it. The Darksword would drain them of their magic and leave them
helpless."
"That bump you took must be
severe," Scylla said. "Or maybe it's a recurrence of those injuries
you suffered in the collapse of Lord Samuel's house during the battle. Whatever
it is, you're obviously not thinking straight. The Dead among the Duuk-tsarith
would wield the Darksword. You were the one who told me that is why
the Dead were recruited in the first place. And then it's widely known that the
Duuk-tsarith don't believe in the Bishop's prophecy. Like many others,
they think it's a political device cooked up by the Emperor and Radisovik to
frighten the rebels."
"My head throbs," Mosiah
said, and he sounded very plaintive. "Remind me of this prophecy."
Scylla lowered her voice, spoke
solemnly. "That the Devil himself was raising an army against us. Demons
armed with Hell's Light would come down on us from the skies and destroy every
living thing in Thimhallan."
So startled and alarmed was I by this
prophecy that I turned in consternation and stared at Mosiah.
"The
Hch'nyv!" I signed.
"What?" Scylla demanded.
"I don't understand. What is he talking about?"
"A previous conversation we had.
It is not important." Mosiah made a swift motion with his hand, counseling
me to keep quiet. "This prophecy . . . when is it to be fulfilled?"
"This time tomorrow, the demons
will launch their attack. Thus Bishop Radisovik was told: 'Only the Darksword
in the hands of Joram's heir can save us.' "
"And who gave the Bishop this
infor—this prophecy?"
"A being of light," said
Scylla, sounding awed. "An angel sent from the Almin."
"I can understand how my brethren
in the Duuk-tsarith could be skeptical," Mosiah said. "I must
admit I find it hard to believe."
Scylla drew in a deep breath, seeming
about to argue or reprimand. Slowly, however, she released it. "This is
not the time for another of our theological debates. Though I do worry about
your soul and pray for you nightly."
Mosiah appeared considerably taken
aback by this statement and didn't seem to know what to say. Scylla was also
silent, preoccupied.
I was watching them and listening as
best I could while keeping one eye on the path ahead. He started to speak, but
she interrupted him.
"I wish Her Majesty had discussed
this with you!" she said, then added decisively, "Still, it is only
right that you know. But this must be kept secret. The Emperor sent a message
to Earth, to General Boris."
Scylla paused, expecting Mosiah to
look shocked. He accepted this news very calmly.
"What is wrong with that? General
Boris and King—I mean Emperor Garald are friends, after all."
"Hush! Never say such a thing
aloud! Don't even think it! It would be worth the price of the Emperor's life
if it were known that he had ties with the enemy."
"The enemy.
I see. What did our enemy General Boris have to say about this heavenly
missive?"
"That the Devil
is indeed coming, though not perhaps in the form we might expect. Boris
went on to add details about an invasion force that had destroyed Earth's
outposts and was now rapidly closing in on Earth. He said that Earth Forces
would do what they could to protect Thimhallan, although he added in a closing
note that he feared they fought a losing battle and warned us to ready our
defenses."
Mosiah and I again exchanged looks. I
turned away with a sigh. The Hch'nyv. It had to be. I had hoped that we had
left them behind in that other time, but that apparently was not the case. They
were coming and they were right on schedule. We had less than forty-eight hours
to stop them.
The Darksword in the
hands of Joram's heir. The Darksword in Joram's hands. How could a sword
in anybody's hands halt the advance of an alien horde, when neutron bombs,
photon missiles, laser cannons—the most sophisticated, powerful killing
machines humans had ever devised—had not put even a dent in their armor?
I felt suddenly very tired, my footsteps
dragged. This was all so futile! Hopeless! Our feeble struggles were doing
nothing more than alerting the spider to the fact that we were tangled in its
web. I was thinking it would be far better to sit down beneath these lovely
oaks with a couple of bottles of good wine and drink a final toast to humanity,
when a hand smote me between the shoulder blades.
"Cheer up, Lord Father!"
Scylla said, and after nearly knocking me flat, she very kindly assisted me to
keep my balance. "Joram's heir will soon have the Darksword and then all
will be well."
She strode past me, going to the front
of the line in response to a gesture from Eliza, a gesture that I had not even
seen, so dark were the thoughts surrounding me.
All during this conversation, our path
had been veering downward at a gentle slope. The oaks gave way to poplar and
aspen, these gave way to willows. I had long heard the sounds of rushing water,
and rounding a bend, we came in sight of a narrow, swift-flowing river. The
The sun shone bright on the water, its
light warm on my face. Looking into the heavens, I saw the white wisps of
clouds drawn like flimsy veils over the blue sky. Cotton from the cottonwoods
drifted down around us, a summer snowstorm.
The water was green where it ran
smooth, foaming white where it leapt over rocks, black where it ran beneath the
overhanging limbs of the trees lining the bank. Some distance from us was one
enormous willow, which leaned far out over the river, its arms gracefully
outstretched, its leaves trailing through the water. Its exposed roots were
gnarled and huge, like knuckles on a boxer, from the effort of keeping fast
hold on the soil.
"There." Father Saryon
pointed. "That is our destination."
We walked along the bank, approaching
the willow, and none of us said a word. I do not know what the others were
thinking, but in my mind I saw the river red with blood, the willow withering
in flame, the blue sky gray with smoke. But whereas before I had been
despairing, now I was angry.
We would fight to save this: the sun,
the sky, the clouds, the willow. Hopeless though it
might be, though no one would be left alive to tell of it, we would fight to
the very end.
Father Saryon pointed at something
else downstream from our position and said something; I couldn't hear what, due
to the bubbling of the water. I moved closer, coming level with Scylla and
Eliza. Mosiah did not immediately join us. When I looked back for him, I saw
him kneeling down on the path, in apparent conversation with an enormous raven with
bristling black feathers, which gave it a hunchbacked appearance.
The Duuk-tsarith often used
ravens as an extension of the Enforcer's ears and eyes.
"—not far," Saryon was
saying. "There at the bend. Be careful. The path along the riverbank is muddy
and very slippery."
There was a slight drop-off from the
path in the woods to the path along the riverbank, caused by the churning of
the water in a small pool below us, which had eroded the bank. Saryon was about
to make a clumsy descent. I interceded, offering to go first and stand ready to
assist those who came after.
Scylla remained on the highest part of
the path, her hand on her sword hilt, keeping watch all around us. I gathered
up the skirts of my robes and half jumped, half slid down to the river trail.
Once I had regained my feet, I turned and reached out my arms to Eliza. She did
not hesitate, but made the jump with skill. She did not really need my help,
but she ended up in my arms anyway.
For a brief moment we held fast to
each other. She looked up into my eyes and I gazed down into hers. She loved
me! I knew then that she loved me, as I loved her. My joy was bright as the
sunshine on the water, but the next moment the joy flowed into a shallow,
stagnant pool, dark and dismal.
Our love could never come to anything.
She was Queen of Merilon and I was her house catalyst, a mute catalyst at that.
She had duties and responsibilities to her people, duties in which I could
assist her, in my humble calling, but only in my humble calling. She was
betrothed. I knew her future husband well; he was the son of Emperor Garald and
was much younger than Eliza. They were waiting for the boy to come of age. The
marriage would strengthen the Empire, forever bonding the kingdoms of Merilon
and Sharakan.
Provided, of course, that the Hch'nyv
did not kill us all first.
Eliza slipped out of my grasp.
"You help Father Saryon now, Reuven," she said softly, and walking a
slight distance from me, she turned away from me and stared out across the
glistening water. I watched her a moment, saw her hand reach up to her eyes,
but the movement was swift and was not repeated.
She had accepted her duty and was
resigned to it. Could I do less, with her brave example before me?
I held out my hand to Father Saryon,
and helped him safely to the bank below.
"It wasn't this difficult twenty
years ago," he said. "At least not that I remember. I managed
by myself without any trouble at all. I was much younger then, of course."
He came level with me and looked at me intently. "Are you all right,
Reuven?"
"Yes, sir, I am," I signed.
He looked from me to Eliza, who
remained standing with her back to us all, and his expression grew sad and
sorrowful. I saw that he knew, that he must have known
for some time.
"I am sorry, my son," he said. "I wish—"
But I was never to know what he
wished, for he was unable to express it. Shaking his head, he went to Eliza and
rested his hand gently upon her arm.
Scylla jumped and landed beside me,
with a rattle of armor and a thud that shook the ground. She brushed off
brusquely my attempt at assistance.
"Where is the Enforcer?" she
asked impatiently, and turned back to peer up the bank.
Mosiah stood above us, a dark and
ominous figure in his black robes, which fluttered in the wind. The raven
hopped on the ground at his side.
"Father Saryon," he called.
"Where are you bound?"
Saryon gazed up at him. "There is
a cave in the bend of the river—"
"No, Father," said Mosiah,
and his voice was deep and stern. "You must find some other path. We dare
not go near that cave. The raven has warned me. That cave is the dwelling of a
Dragon of the Night."
Scylla looked alarmed. Eliza paled and
her eyes widened. Father Saryon was not the least bit disconcerted by this news.
He nodded and smiled. "Yes, I know."
"You know!" Mosiah leapt
from the bank. His black robes billowed around him. He drifted like a sooty
wisp of cottonwood to the bank and landed in front of Saryon. The raven, taking
wing, flapped and fluttered at his shoulder. "You know and you will go
anyway?"
"Do you realize, Father,"
Scylla added, "the risk we run? An army of warlocks could not win a battle
against a Dragon of the Night, should it awake and attack us."
"I know the risk well,"
Saryon said, with a flash of his old spirit. "I ran that risk myself, all
alone, twenty years ago. Not out of choice, mind you, but out of desperation. I
don't need you three to remind me."
He gazed at us, his eyes narrowed.
"If you want to recover the Darksword, that is where we must go. The
Dragon of the Night is the Darksword's guardian."
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Saryon caught Joratn in his arms. Touching the fabric of the crimson-stained robes, the catalyst felt the warm wetness of life's blood draining from Joram's body, falling through Saryon's fingers like the petals of a shattered tulip.
TRIUMPH OF THE DARKSWORD
Eliza
listened gravely to Mosiah's arguments against going. She asked Father Saryon
if there was any way to retrieve the Darksword without facing the dragon. On
his replying that there was not, she said it was her intention to go with
Father Saryon, but that she would not ask any of the rest of us to go with her.
In fact, it was her express command that we remain behind.
Needless to say, that was one command
in her reign she could not convince any of us to obey. After some further
discussion we headed for the cave—all five of us.
"Now at least," said Mosiah
as he trudged along behind me, "we won't have to worry about dying at the
hands of the Hch'nyv."
"According to Father
Saryon," I signed, "the dragon is charmed. As I recall, a person is
able to control one of these dragons if he touches the charm the warlocks
embedded in the dragon's head."
"Thank you, Mister
Encyclopedia," Mosiah retorted sarcastically. We had left the sunshine and
returned to the shadows, walking beneath the willows and cottonwoods that
bordered the river. "It takes a very strong and powerful personality to
cast a charm on a dragon. My respect for Father Saryon is vast, but 'strong'
and 'powerful' are not words I would use to describe him."
"I think you underestimate
him," I signed back defensively. "He was strong enough to sacrifice
himself when they would have turned Joram to stone. He was strong enough and
powerful enough to assist Joram in fighting Blachloch."
Mosiah remained unconvinced.
"Twenty years have passed since he left the Darksword with the dragon!
Even if Father Saryon did actually charm the beast, the charm could not
possibly hold it that long!"
I felt regretfully that Mosiah was
right. The Dragons of Night had been designed by their creators as killing
machines, made to slaughter on command. During the Iron Wars some of these
dragons had escaped their creators and wreaked havoc among their own forces. After
the war the D'karn-duuk, who had made the dragons and controlled them,
were mostly dead. Those who survived were too battle-shocked and exhausted to
deal with the Warchanged. The Dragons of Night escaped and fled below ground,
seeking to hide from the light of day, which they loathed and feared, in the
endless night of tunnel and cave.
They have no love for man, remembering
always who had doomed them to this dark life and hating
them for it.
We had now arrived at the
cavern entrance. Halting on the riverhank, we stared at it
bleakly. The opening—dark against the gray rock face—was
an enormous archway of gray stone, easy for all of
us to enter, or it would have been had not most of it been sunk
underwater! A part of the river had branched off, flowed, swift and
deep, into the cavern.
"You're out of luck,
Father," Mosiah said. "The river has changed course. Unless
you would have us swim these treacherous currents, we can't go inside."
The raven, perched on a tree limb, gave a raucous caw.
I am ashamed to say that my first
reaction was one of relief, until I saw Eliza.
Up to this time she had borne calmly
and courageously all dangers and setbacks. This disappointment was too much for
her to bear. She clenched her fists.
"We must get inside!" she
cried, her face white to the lips, adding wildly, "I will swim if I
have to."
The water flowing into the cave was
fast-moving, with small, swirling whirlpools and dangerous eddies that splashed
and foamed among sharp rocks. Swimming was not an option.
"We could build a raft,"
said Scylla. "Lash together some logs. Perhaps the Enforcer with his
magic—"
"I am not a conjurer, nor am I Pron-alban,
a craftsman," said Mosiah coldly. "I am not learned in
boatbuilding, and I don't think you want to wait while I study up on the
subject."
"I wasn't asking you to build a
full-blown sailing vessel," Scylla returned, her eyes flashing in anger.
"But I do think you might be able to use one of your fire spells to
burn out the inside of a log so that we could make a canoe."
"Canoe!"
Mosiah snorted. "Perhaps we'll use your head, Sir Knight. It must be
hollow enough! Has it ever occurred to you that I will need to conserve all the
Life I have left to extricate us from the clutches of this dragon, which—I have
the feeling—isn't going to be exactly charmed to see us."
All this time Father Saryon had been
attempting to say something. At last, he had his chance. "Do you have so
little faith in me, to think I would bring you to a drowned cave?"
He smiled as he said the words, but we
felt the rebuke, especially myself and Eliza.
"Forgive me, Father," Eliza
said, looking remorseful. "You are right. I should have had faith in
you."
"If not me, then at least in the
Almin," Saryon said, and he cast a glance at Mosiah which indicated that
the elderly priest had also heard at least part of our former conversation.
Mosiah said nothing, made no apology.
He stood stoic and silent, his arms crossed, his hands concealed in the black
sleeves of his robes.
Saryon continued, adding briskly,
"There is a path, over here. A rock ledge runs above the water level. This
path leads to a corridor which takes us away from the river, down into the
bowels of the cavern."
The path along the riverbank made a
meandering turn to the left, circling around a large willow, whose limbs and
trunk sheltered part of the cave entrance from view. Saryon parted the swaying,
leafy branches and there was the rock ledge, leading into the cavern.
Mosiah offered to go first and I
thought perhaps this was his way of making amends for having been so
short-tempered.
"Don't follow me until you
receive my signal," he cautioned.
He entered the cave, taking the raven
with him, and soon passed beyond our sight. I wondered why the bird had been
invited to come, then realized—when it came flapping back out of the cave
entrance, like an overlarge bat—that the raven was to be the messenger.
"Come ahead," the bird
croaked in a raspy voice. "One of you at a time."
Eliza went next, entering the cavern
stalwartly and without fear. My fear for her was enough for both of us,
however. I watched her as long as I could, as if my will alone would hold her
on that ledge and she must fall when she was out of my sight.
The raven had flown in with her and I
waited in agony until the bird returned. "She is safe. Send the
next."
"You go, Reuven," said Saryon,
a smile in his eyes.
I could not believe I was actually
eager to enter that cave, but now nothing could have kept me from it.
Chill damp air washed over me and I
had to wait until my eyes adjusted to the darkness. The light shining outside
the cavern gleamed off the rushing water and lit my way for a short distance.
The path was wide here and I was able to make fairly good time.
But then the path narrowed, until I
could barely place my two feet side by side. The ledge rounded a bend in the
wall, which cut off the light. I expected this part to be dark and was
astonished to find the way bathed in a warm reddish glow. One of the
stalactites overhead radiated light and warmth, as if the rock had been heated.
I could see the path, a shimmering ribbon of gray above the black and
shimmering water. The raven winged past me, returning to Mosiah.
I understood now why the Enforcer had
offered to go first. He had walked the darkness in order to light the way for
the rest of us.
The path began to rise and here it
narrowed farther, until I was forced to place my back against the wall and
shuffle sideways. I crept along, out of sight of my friends behind me, not yet
within sight of Mosiah and Eliza ahead of me. One false step and I would plunge
into the murky, foaming water below. Sweat beaded on my brow and trickled down
my breast; the cold air set me shivering. I had never in my life felt so alone.
I took another step and I could see
the end, and there, waiting for me, were Mosiah and Eliza. I was so eager to
reach them that I was tempted to fling caution to the winds and make a dash for
safety.
"Easy now," Mosiah warned.
"This is the hardest part."
I controlled the urge to bolt. I
pressed so hard against the rock that I scraped the flesh off my back and edged
carefully along the path. It grew wider as I went and I was able to quicken my
pace. I stumbled into Eliza's arms and we clung to each other for comfort, our
shared warmth driving away the thought of falling into the swirling water. I
blessed Saryon for having sent me ahead to have this time with her.
Mosiah watched us with a faintly
sardonic smile on his lips, though he said nothing, merely sending the raven
back with the message, "Next!"
Father Saryon arrived, his movements
so awkward and ungainly upon the ledge that we thought more than once he must
topple over. He would always manage to save himself, however, his hands
snagging an outcropping of rock when his foot slipped or his feet maintaining a
toehold when his hands could not find purchase.
He reached us at last and wiped dirt
from his palms. "That was much easier than the first time I made that
trip," he said, keeping his voice low. Though the dragon was far down in
the very bottom of the cavern, we dared not take a chance on its hearing us.
"I did not have a wizard with me to provide light." He nodded his
thanks to Mosiah. "And I was carrying the Dark-sword at the time."
"What drove you to make the trip
at all, Father?" Mosiah asked, his eyes visible
in the shadows of his hood only by their reflection of the red-glowing
stalactite. He had sent the raven back for Scylla. "Were you
pursued?"
Saryon was silent a moment, his face
pale and haggard at the memory. "I think, on reflection, that I probably
was not, but I had no way of knowing that at the time. Besides, to be safe, I
had to believe that they were in pursuit. What led me into this cave?
Instinct, maybe, the instinct of the hunted to seek a dark place in which to
hide. Or maybe the hand of the Almin."
Mosiah lifted an eyebrow, turned away,
and watched the path. We heard the clash of steel against rock and Mosiah
muttered, "So much for stealth."
The sound was immediately muffled. A
short wait, and then Scylla appeared, rounding that same treacherous bend, the
red of the stalactite burning like flame in her silver armor.
She was having a difficult time of it.
The breastplate prevented her from flattening her back against the wall, as the
rest of us had done. She was inching her way along, clinging to the wall with
her hands. And then she came to a halt, leaned her head back against the wall,
and closed her eyes.
"Tell her," Mosiah said to
the raven, "that this is no time for a nap!"
The raven floated over, hovered
near Scylla. We could not hear what she said, but the words
seemed forced out in a gasp that was audible from
where we stood.
"She says she can't move,"
the raven reported. Landing on the path beside Mosiah, it began
to clean its beak with a clawed foot. "She knows she's going to
fall."
Frozen in terror, Scylla clung to the
wall. My heart ached for her. I had known the same fear and the Almin only knew
what had kept me going. The sight of Eliza, I think.
"She needs help," said
Father Saryon, gathering up the skirt of his robe.
"I'll go," said Mosiah.
"I don't want to have to drag both of you out of the river!"
He returned along the treacherous
path. Facing the wall, he edged his way forward, until he was within an arm's
length of Scylla.
"What's the matter?" he
asked.
Scylla could not move her head to look
at him. She could barely move her lips. "I ... I can't swim!"
"Bless the girl!" Mosiah
said in exasperation. "If you fall into the water, you won't have to worry
about swimming. You'll sink like a boulder in that armor."
At this, Scylla gave a brief,
mirthless laugh. "You're such a comfort!" she said through clenched
teeth.
"I have my magic," Mosiah
told her. "I don't want to use it, unless I have to. But I will not let
you fall. Look at me. Look at me, Scylla."
Scylla managed to twist her head,
looked at Mosiah.
He extended his hand. "Here, take
hold."
She raised her arm, the armor scraping
against the rock, and slowly reached toward Mosiah, her hand outstretched. He
clasped his hand over hers, and held on to her tightly. Her face smoothed in
relief. She ventured forward. He drew her along the path, holding her steady.
At the end, when they reached safe
ground, Scylla gave a great shuddering sob and covered her face with her hands.
I think Mosiah would have put his arms around her, but for her armor.
Hugging her would have been tantamount
to embracing an iron stove.
"I have shamed myself,"
Scylla whispered fiercely. "Before my queen!"
"By what?
Proving you're human like the rest of us. I, for one, was happy to see it. I
was beginning to wonder."
Scylla uncovered her eyes and looked
at Mosiah, as if she suspected there might be more to this statement than
appeared. He was half-amused, half-sympathetic, nothing
deeper.
"Thank you," Scylla said, her voice husky. "You saved my life, Enforcer. I
am in your debt." Subdued, she walked over to Eliza and knelt before her
on one knee. "Forgive me, Your Majesty, for my cowardice in the face of
danger. If you wish to remove me from the position of trust in which you have
placed me, I will readily understand."
"Oh, Scylla!" cried Eliza
warmly. "We are of Mosiah's opinion. We are glad to see that you are
flawed, like the rest of us. It's very difficult to love a paragon."
Scylla was overcome and, for a moment,
could not speak. At length, wiping her hand across her nose and eyes, she stood
up and threw back her head, faced us proudly, if somewhat defiantly.
"Which way do we go now,
Father?" Eliza asked.
We had been concentrating so hard on
the path behind us that we had given no consideration to the path before us.
The river veered off to the right. Our ledge ended, but we could see the
shadowy opening of what appeared to be a tunnel.
"We go down," said Saryon.
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
"Perhaps the killer's gone. ..."
"I doubt it. He didn't get
what he came for."
AND JORAM; TRIUMPH OF THE DARKSWORD
We went
down. And down. And down. A flaming brand lit our way. Mosiah had been going to
expend more of his magical Life to provide light, but that proved unnecessary.
"You will find a brand,
tinderbox, and flint in a small chamber near the entrance to the tunnel,"
Saryon advised us. "I left them there myself, on the chance that someday I
would return."
"Tools of the Dark Arts,"
Mosiah said, with a slight smile, barkening back to a time on Thimhallan when
the use of such "tools" as a tinderbox and flint was prohibited. Such
objects gave Life to that which was Dead.
Scylla carried the brand, walked in
front with Saryon. I remained at Eliza's side, our hands twined together. From
this point on, our lives would be changed for good or ill. Perhaps, in a short
time, we would be dead. It didn't matter anymore that she was a queen and I was
her house catalyst. Our love, a love that had sent down its roots in early
childhood, had grown strong like the oak, and though the tree might be cut
down, it could never be uprooted.
Mosiah followed behind alone, the
raven having refused to accompany us anywhere near the dragon.
The path ran smooth, cutting down
through the rock in a steep spiral that was almost a corkscrew. It was easy to
walk, almost too easy. It seemed to be hurrying us downward—a circumstance
which we found ominous.
"This was never formed by
nature," Mosiah observed.
"No," Saryon agreed.
"So I thought when I first discovered it."
Mosiah came to a halt. "And you
descended this all unknowing, Father? When anything from griffins to darkrovers
could have been at the bottom? Forgive me, Father, but you were never the
adventurous sort. I think you should tell us how you first found this cave. Before we go on."
"We will not have
this!" Eliza was angry. "You have insulted Father Saryon for the last
time, Enforcer—"
"No, child," Saryon said.
Looking about, he found an outcropping of rock and sank down upon it.
"Mosiah is right. Don't tell me, Daughter," he added with a smile for
her, "that you yourself are not curious about what we will find when we
reach the dragon's lair. I could use the rest. We must not be long, though. We
must reach the dragon's lair before night falls, while it is still sleepy and
lethargic."
"Amen to that," Mosiah said.
What I write now is Father Saryon's
story, in his own words.
I have sometimes wondered what would
have happened if Simkin had not tricked Menju the Sorcerer into sending him to
Earth. I think matters might have turned out much differently. Had Simkin been
here, I am certain that he might have saved Joram's life. Emperor Garald does
not agree with me and I must admit that I see his view. There is no doubt that
Simkin set Joram up for the ambush, for it was Simkin who suggested that Joram
find help for your poor mother in the
I will never forget that terrible day.
I had gone to the
I tried to dissuade him, but he
refused to listen. Simkin told us to be at the
I don't suppose it matters now, one
way or the other. Your father and I went to the
I was paralyzed with fear, not knowing
what dread fate these awful sounds portended.
The cracking sounds stopped. I looked
about and saw nothing amiss, at first. I was about to take Gwendolyn into the
His hand was pressed over his chest
and blood welled from between his fingers.
I ran to him and caught him in my
arms. I lowered him to the ground. I did not know then what had happened to
him. Later I learned that he had been killed by a heinous tool of the Dark
Arts, a weapon known as a "gun."
All I knew then was that he was dying
and there was nothing I could do except hold him.
"The Darksword . . ." he
said, his voice coming in painful gasps. "Take it, Father. . . Hide it ...
from them. My child!" He clasped my hand with his dying strength, and I
believe that he willed himself to live the few moments longer it took him to
impart this message. "If my child is in need . . . you must give the
sword. . ."
I had not known then that Gwen was
pregnant. Joram knew, and that was another reason he had wanted so desperately
to find a way to help her.
"Yes,
Joram!" I promised, through my tears.
He looked past me, to Gwen, who stood
above him.
"I am coming," he said to
her, and closed his eyes and slipped away to join the dead.
She reached out her hand, not to the
body, but to his soul. "My beloved. I have waited for you a long, long time."
You know what happened after that. The
forces of Menju the Sorcerer attacked Thimhallan. Our armies were crushed,
utterly defeated. If Menju had had his way, we would have been exterminated
into the bargain, but the man we know now as General Boris protected us.
Menju did not insist on our
destruction. He had what he wanted. He sealed up the Well of Life so that magic
no longer flowed into the world of Thimhallan. Bereft of their magic, most of
the people in Thimhallan said bitterly that they might as well be dead. Many
did kill themselves. It was a terrible time.
Fortunately, Garald, who was then King
of Sharakan, following the death of his father, was able to act quickly and
take control. He brought in the Sorcerers, the practitioners of the Dark Arts,
and they taught our people how to use tools to do what magic had always done
for them in the past. Gradually, as the years went by, we rebuilt the cities,
though the buildings were crude and ugly, compared with what they had once
been.
But all that would come later. Joram
was dead. I had two responsibilities now, or rather three. The Darksword, Gwen,
and the child she bore. Whoever had killed Joram must still be in the
He was a powerful Duuk-tsarith. I
could not hope to escape him. Suddenly, however, he was pushed backward, almost
to the edge of the cliff. I saw him struggling, but he fought an invisible foe!
And then I knew—the dead were giving
us a chance to escape.
Picking up the Darksword, I grabbed
Gwen's hand. She came with me docilely. We fled that sorrowful place. Later,
when the Emperor sent to recover Joram's body, it was found laid
out in state inside the
All of Thimhallan was in confusion, as
you can imagine. Bad as that was for some, it was good for me, for no one cared
about a middle-aged catalyst and a young woman they took for my daughter. My
first thought was to go to the Font. I am not sure why, except that it had been
my home for so long. Arriving there, I realized my mistake, for though the
place was in an uproar, there were people who knew me and connected me with
Joram. In order to be truly safe, I would have to take Gwen and travel to a
part of the country where neither of us were known.
It was while I was at the Font,
however, that I came across a child, a little boy of about five years of age.
He was an orphan, they said. His parents were catalysts, and had been killed in
the first assault. The boy was mute. He could not speak, and whether that was
due to the shock of seeing his parents slain before his eyes or if he had been
born mute, none could say.
I looked at that silent boy and I saw
in his eyes the same emptiness, the same grief, the same loss I felt in my own
heart. I took him with me. I named him Reuven.
We started our journey. I chose to
relocate to Zith-el. Although I had heard that the city was heavily damaged in
the war, it was one place where I was certain that no one would know me.
The magical wall that guarded the city
was gone. The Zoo creatures had mostly escaped and returned to the wild. The
inhabitants were dazed and disbelieving. All of the tall buildings had been
destroyed, but Zith-el is also a city of tunnels, and the survivors moved
underground.
We found a small place for ourselves,
little more than a niche in one of the tunnels. Here Gwen and little Reuven and
I dwelt, living on the sustenance that was brought to us by our conquerors.
Gwen never did return to the world of
the living. She was happy with the dead, for Joram was with her. She remained
with me only long enough to bring her child into this world, and then she died.
Reuven and I were left alone with the baby. I named her Eliza.
But I am getting ahead of myself.
I had carried with me, all this time,
the Darksword. And not a day dawned but that I feared someone would find me and
then they would find it. Menju the Sorcerer was searching for the Darksword, so
I heard. Fearing the use he might make of it, I determined to hide the sword in
a place where it would never be discovered.
I prayed to the Almin for guidance and
that night I dreamed I was walking in the Zoo. The next morning I wrapped the
Darksword in a blanket and carried it to the Zoo. This was dangerous, even
foolhardy, you might say, for though many of the Zoo's creatures had run off,
others had stayed behind. I might run into a centaur or worse.
But it seemed to me that the Almin
guided me and though my faith had wavered in the days before Joram's death,
when I saw the rest and peace he found in death—a peace he had never known in
life—I could only believe that all had happened for the best.
I wandered through the forest, searching
for something, though I didn't know what. And then, coming down the same path
we walked, I saw this cave.
I saw something else, too. A black dragon.
The dragon was lying outside the cave
and my first thought was that it was sunning itself, for it lay stretched out
full-length, with its head upon a rock, basking in the sunlight.
As Mosiah has said—I am not much of an
adventurer. My impulse was to flee, but I turned in such haste that I lost my
footing. I dropped the Darksword. It fell among the rocks on the riverbank,
landing with a clang that must have been heard by the dead back in my small
house.
I froze, terrified, and waited for the
dragon to rear up its head and attack me.
But the dragon never moved.
Of course, you are all laughing at me,
because you know that a black dragon—a Dragon of the Night—would never be out
taking a sunbath. The creatures loathe the sunlight, which burns into the eyes,
causing such intense pain that the dragons lose consciousness.
At last, I remembered what I should
have known all along. This Dragon of the Night was either unconscious or dead.
Cautiously, I approached the dragon,
and as I drew near I saw its body rise and fall with its breathing. It was not
dead.
I knew then why the Almin had sent me
this way. A comatose Dragon of the Night can be easily controlled by means of
the charm on its forehead. Here was the perfect guardian for the Darksword, the
dragon's cave the perfect hiding place.
I did not have much time. As I told
you, I was fearful of pursuit. That fear gave me courage, for otherwise I do
not believe I would ever have found the nerve to do what I did.
I had never seen a dragon this close
before. The beast was monstrous, beautiful, awful. It was so black that it
seemed to be a hole cut through daytime, revealing night beneath. I saw the
charm upon its head, an oval diamond, shaped smooth, without any facets. It
alone sparkled in the sunlight, which did not touch any part of the dragon, did
not gleam on the scales or shine on the leathery wings.
I stretched out my hand, which was
trembling so that I first missed the diamond completely and touched the
dragon's hide. It was dry and rough and hot from the sun and I jumped as if I
had touched flame. Then, finally, I put my hand upon the diamond.
A feeling of power and authority
suffused me. I knew that I could prevail over anything. You will laugh again,
but I tell you that I never experienced the like before. I had such confidence
in myself and my own abilities that I felt as if I alone could rebuild Zith-el,
brick by brick. (Yes, we were using bricks, those creations of the Dark Arts.)
To charm this dragon and bend the
creature to my will seemed a paltry thing. A child could do it. Words of potent
magic flared in my brain. I spoke them aloud.
The dragon did not move, did not
respond at all.
My power and my confidence began to
ebb.
I pulled back my hand and noted that
it was wet. Wet with blood.
Of course! That was why the dragon had
been caught in the sunlight! The creature had been wounded. It had emerged from
its cave at night, probably to drink from the river, when it collapsed and was
now caught out in the sun.
Had the charm worked? Would it work on
an unconscious dragon? Surely it would, I argued. The charm was meant to work
on the beast when it was comatose.
Yet, argued that cursed part of me
which never fails to play devil's advocate, the charm was meant to work when
the dragon was comatose from lying in the sun, not from being struck by one of
the mundane's killing lights. Plus, for all I knew, the dragon might be dying.
A sensible man—or a less desperate
one—would have walked away. But here was the perfect guardian and the ideal
hiding place for the Darksword. I could not rid myself of the notion that the
Almin had guided me here for this reason. I settled down to wait, at least
until nightfall. If the charm had not worked, the wounded dragon would be
sluggish and I had some chance of escaping. I settled down upon the rocks a
short distance from the dragon and waited for night.
The hours I passed provided me an
excellent opportunity for studying the dragon. I found myself awed by the
beauty and magnificence of the creature and saddened by the fact that it had
been bred to nothing but dealing death. The Dragon of Night has an inborn
hatred for all other living beings, even those of its own kind. It cannot bear
young and when the last of these great beasts dies, that will be the end of
them.
A good thing, you say. Perhaps. The
Almin knows best.
I watched its even breathing, which
seemed strong, so that I eventually concluded the dragon was not dying.
Night came early to the forest. When
the deepening shadows blocked the sunlight from its eyes, the beast began to
stir. The dragon's huge body lay on the rocks, but one wing dipped into the
river water. I heard the water lap against the rocks and saw the shoulder bone
twitch. The dragon snuffled and blew and its lower jawbone scraped along the
rock as it shifted its head, endeavoring to move into even deeper shadows.
My heart was in my throat. I would
have run then, but for one hopeful sign. The diamond on the head of the dragon
had begun to glow dimly. Which meant that the charm had
worked.
I hoped. And prayed.
I had spent the daylight hours waiting
impatiently for night. Now it seemed to me that night came all too fast.
Darkness closed in with a vengeance. The dragon was one with the darkness. I
could no longer see it at all.
The diamond's light was very bright
now, shining with a prickly brilliance. It did not radiate light. I could not
see the dragon by the gem's glow. I could see only the diamond itself. When it
suddenly lurched into the air, I knew that the dragon was fully awake and had
lifted its head.
I rose hastily to my feet, leaving the
Darksword lying on the ground nearby. I could have used it to defend myself,
but I feared that the sword's powerful null-magic might undo the charm. Time enough to pick it up if I needed it.
The dragon rotated its head. I could
see the diamond moving and I could hear the dragon—its claws pushing its body
up from the rocks, its wings lifting with a mighty splash from the water.
The dragon was searching for me.
Certain that all vestige of sunlight was gone, the
dragon opened its eyes.
They shone pale and cold as moonlight.
I averted my gaze, for even though the
beast was charmed, if you look into the eyes of a Dragon of Night, you will end
up a raving lunatic.
The dragon reared up on its hind legs
and lifted its wings, spreading them out like the wings of a bat.
I was struck with such awe that if I
had died then and there, I believe I would have deemed it worth death to have
seen that terrible, magnificent sight.
A thousand thousand tiny pinpoints of
white light glittered in the blackness of the wings, as if the dragon's wings
were made of the starlit sky. Thus, in battle, do the dragons mimic the night
sky in order to swoop down unseen upon their enemies. Those tiny pinpoints of
light not only resemble stars, they are also deadly weapons. A flip of the wing
causes them to fall like meteors. The small shooting stars
burn easily through flesh.
The lights glittered before my eyes,
but none fell on me. The charm had worked. I gave fervent thanks to the Almin.
The lunar-white eyes stared at me,
bathing me in moonlight. I kept my eyes lowered.
"You are the master," the
dragon said, and hatred shook its voice.
"Yes," I replied, as boldly
as I could. "I am the master."
"I am constrained to do your
bidding," the dragon said with cold fury. "What do you want of
me?"
"I have an object here," I
said, and very carefully I lifted the Darksword. I had to control the fear in
my heart, or else the sword would sense that I was threatened and start to
disrupt the magic of the charm. "I command you to take it with you into
your cave and guard it well. You must give it up to no one except to me or to
Joram's heir."
I held up the Darksword and it was now
the dragon's turn to shield its eyes. The lids dropped, the white light was
hooded. The dragon's wings shivered, the false stars winked out. I could not
see the sword for the darkness, yet its null-magic must have been piercing and
deadly as daylight in the eyes of this creature of magic.
"Wrap it! Cover it!" the
dragon cried in anger and in pain.
Hurriedly, I did so, shrouding the
Darksword with the blanket.
Once the sword was concealed, the
dragon again opened its eyes. Its loathing for me had increased tenfold, a
thought that was not comforting.
"I will guard the Darksword,"
the dragon said. "I have no choice. You are the master. But you must take
it down to my cavern and there bury it under a cairn of rock so that no part of
it is visible. I am hungry. I will go to hunt food now. But do not fear. I will
return and I will do what you ask of me. You are the master."
Spreading its wings, the dragon leapt
from the rock and soared into the air. I lost sight of it immediately, for I
could not tell what was night sky and what was the dragon.
But now my heart was lightened with
hope. Carrying the Darksword, I entered the cave and made my way down to the
very bottom, where I found the floor littered with shining black scales and
bones. The dragon's lair.
I placed the Darksword on the floor of
the cavern, in a part far distant from what I took to be the dragon's nest. I
covered the sword with rocks, forming a large mound.
I had just finished when the dragon
returned, entering through a back way, for it emerged suddenly into the cave.
The body of a male centaur hung from its cruel teeth.
The dragon eyed the cairn, which was
now illuminated with a pale, chill light.
"Leave," it commanded,
adding the single word, "Master," in grudging tones.
I was glad to obey, for the smell of
the blood of the freshly slaughtered centaur sickened me. I made my way back up
to the world of true starlight. By the time I reached the cave opening, I was
exhausted and could go no farther. I rested there until morning. Leaving behind
the tinderbox and flint and the brand which I had carried in the tunnel, I
returned home.
The Darksword was as safe as I could
possibly make it. Many times I have wondered if it was still there, if the
dragon was still guarding it, if the charm was still holding. Many times I was
tempted to go to see for myself, but then a peaceful feeling would steal over me. Now was
not the time.
It was the Almin, reassuring me.
And so I have not been back here since
that day twenty years ago when I left the Darksword beneath the rock cairn with
the Dragon of Night.
I would not have come back now, but the
peaceful feeling is no longer in my heart. In its place is an
urgency, a fear, which leads me to believe that it is the Almin's will
that the Darksword be recovered.
That it be given to Joram's heir, to
Joram's daughter.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
"Have they truly found peace in death? Are they happy?"
"They will be, when you free
them."
JORAM AND GWENDOLYN; TRIUMPH OF THE DARKSWORD
I could
not help but cast Mosiah a glance of triumph, hoping to impress upon him how
thoroughly he had misjudged Saryon.
Mosiah appeared preoccupied, and did
not notice. "You made one statement which I find curious, Father. You said
that magic had vanished from Thimhallan. Yet Father Reuven gave me Life. The
magic lives around us. I can feel it."
Father Saryon regarded Mosiah with an
expression of astonishment. "Well, certainly, my son. You were partly
responsible for magic's return. The raid upon the Well of Life . . ."
"Forgive him, Father,"
Scylla interrupted. "He received a blow to the head during our fight with
the thugs outside the East Road Gate. He has great gaps in his memory."
"I would be obliged if you would
refresh that memory, Father," Mosiah said. "Just so
that I know what to expect."
"Well . . ." Father Saryon
was nonplussed. "There isn't much to tell, I suppose. Or rather, there is
a lot to tell but we don't have time for most of it. How those calling
themselves the Dark Cultists arrived from Earth. A man named Kevon Smythe drove
King Garald from power, almost succeeded in having him assassinated, but Garald
was warned in time and escaped.
"How you and King Garald lived
the lives of outlaws in the wilderness. You don't remember that?" Saryon
gazed anxiously at Mosiah, who merely smiled and remained silent.
"And then Simkin returned from
Earth—"
"Ah," said Mosiah, and then
he again fell silent.
"Simkin returned. He told Garald
how the Well of Life had not been destroyed. It had been merely capped—"
At this, which was exactly the theory
we had postulated, I made a sign to Mosiah, who made me a sign to keep silent.
"The Dark Cultists had a secret
source, however. They were bleeding off the magical Life, using it for
themselves. In a daring raid, you, Mosiah, Garald, and his friend James Boris
broke open the Well and released the magic back into the world. We were then
able to fight Smythe and the Dark Cultists. Smythe fled back to Earth.
"Garald returned to the rulership
of Sharakan and also that of Merilon. I traveled to Sharakan to congratulate
him and to present to him my wards." Saryon looked fondly at Eliza and me.
"King Garald was struck by Eliza's beauty and was deeply touched to hear
that she was Joram's daughter. He granted her the right to claim the throne of
Merilon, as Joram's heir.
"Garald made Eliza Queen of Merilon. Reuven traveled to the Font,
to enter into his training as a catalyst. Merilon and Sharakan became allies.
Cardinal Radisovik was made Bishop, following the death of Vanya. The Bishop
was kind enough to appoint me as Eliza's adviser until she came of age."
Saryon smiled, shook his head. "I considered myself most unsuited to the
task, but Radisovik turned all my noes into yes before I truly knew what was
happening. Besides, Eliza needed very little advice."
Eliza reached out, pressed Saryon's
hand gratefully.
"Times are difficult,"
Saryon said, sighing. "Magic has been restored, but it is weak. Though the
barrier around Thimhallan has been rebuilt, we know that magic is seeping out
of it and there doesn't appear to be anything we can do to stop it.
Undoubtedly, Smythe and his Dark Cultists are responsible.
"We are forced to live on a
combination of sorcery and steel. The Duuk-tsarith have grown ever more
powerful, since they are capable of absorbing more Life than anyone else in the
world. Emperor Garald trusts them, but I—" Saryon halted, somewhat
confused.
"I understand, Father,"
Mosiah said quietly. "Now that you talk, much of my own memory returns.
You have good reason not to trust many among the Duuk-tsarith."
"I trust you, Mosiah,"
Saryon said. "And that is what is important. Knights"—he smiled at
Scylla—"now guard the realm. Though at first Garald was viewed as a
savior, he has come to be reviled. Smythe, in exile on Earth, has his followers
upon Thimhallan. They are managing to foment unrest among the lower classes,
foretelling the coming of the end of the world unless Smythe is permitted to
return to save it.
"You heard about the warning
which came to Bishop Radisovik?"
We nodded in silence.
"The Darksword must be returned
to the maker of the world. That was the message, though we are not certain what
it means. The maker of the world was Merlyn, but he's been dead and gone these
many years . . ."
Not according
to Simkin! I thought suddenly and, pondering this, I lost, for a moment, the
thread of wha.t Saryon was saying.
". . . recovered
by Joram's descendant. Emperor Garald came to me in person"—Saryon
flushed, embarrassed—"to ask for the Darksword. I agreed, but only if I
were permitted to seek it in secret and, in secret, give it directly into the
hands of Eliza, Joram's daughter. The Emperor gave me his word of honor that we
would not be followed, that no one would attempt to take the sword from
us."
"The Emperor's word is not the word
of the Duuk-tsarith," said Mosiah.
"But, surely, they would be
constrained to obey," Saryon said, and it seemed to me that he was
pleading for reassurance.
"Since when,
Father? There is a saying on Earth. 'They have their own agenda.' I do
not see them being impressed by a visitation from an angel."
"Do you think we were
followed?" Eliza asked him.
"I think we should be very
careful," Mosiah answered her gravely. "And that we have taken enough
time."
We resumed our journey, moving with
greater caution but more speed. It was already late afternoon. We had less than
twenty-four hours before the arrival of the Hch'nyv. The part of me that
remembered Earth wondered, with a pang, if our planet was now under attack.
No use fretting about events over
which I had no control. I would do my part here. We continued following the
corkscrew tunnel, which delved straight down and which had perhaps been shaped
by the warlocks who had brought the Dragons of Night into being.
We walked at a good pace, for the way
was easy, and we made good time. Still, our walk lasted over an hour from our
starting point, which leads me to believe that we must have descended at least
three or four miles below the surface of Thimhallan.
Though we could neither see nor hear
the dragon, which would be slumbering during the daylight hours, we could smell
it and its refuse. The air grew fetid and various odors of a most unpleasant
nature—stale urine and dung and decay—soon caused us to gag and cover our noses
with handkerchiefs or whatever cloth came to hand.
The one consolation we had, if you
could call it such, was Mosiah's pronouncement. "The dung smells
fresh," he observed. "This must mean that your dragon is still alive,
Father, and still making this cave its residence."
"I don't remember the smell being
this bad," Saryon said, his voice muffled by the sleeve of his robe.
"The dragon's had twenty years to
add to it," Scylla observed. "I don't like to think of what else
we'll find in that lair. Mounds of rotting corpses, among
other things."
"Fortunately, dragons will
not eat humans," Eli/a said, shivering, "or so we've heard. We taste
bad."
"Don't believe all you hear, Your
Majesty," Mosiah said, and that effectively ended that conversation.
Our enthusiasm had begun to wane,
though not our hope and hope is what carried us on. We were tired, our legs
ached, and we were all of us half-sick with the stench, which tainted
everything, even the water we had brought with us. We rounded yet another
corner, our feet dragging, when Scylla, who was in the lead, came to a sudden
halt, her hand raised.
The torchlight that had before gleamed
off curve after curve in the rock wall now illuminated nothing. A vast yawning
darkness gaped before us.
"This is the dragon's lair,"
Saryon whispered, and so quiet were we that his whisper carried clearly.
We hardly dared breathe, for we could
hear the sound of other breathing, stentorian breathing, as if someone were
pumping a giant bellows.
We hesitated, at that tense point when
the gambler at the craps table breathes on the dice, then clutches them in his
hand for a single, heart-stopping instant, asking for the win. And then throws.
"I will go first," Saryon
said. "Do not come until I call that all is safe. If the dragon attacks
me, Scylla, Mosiah"—he gazed at them intently—"I expect you two to do
everything possible to protect my children."
"I promise, Father," Scylla
said reverently, and raised her sword, hilt first.
"I promise, as well,
Father," Mosiah said, his hands folded. "Good luck. I'm sorry . .
." He paused, and did not finish his sentence.
"Sorry?" Saryon repeated
mildly. "Sorry for what, my son?"
"I'm sorry about Joram,"
Mosiah said.
Saryon lifted his eyebrows. Joram had,
after all, been dead twenty years.
He had been dead to them, but not to
Mosiah.
Eliza hugged Saryon close. Blinking
back her tears, she managed a smile. "The Almin go with you, Father,"
she whispered. "My father, the only father I have ever known."
I, too, embraced him in the name of
father. It was right, eminently right.
He asked the Almin's blessing on us
all and he alone entered the chamber.
We waited in the tunnel, ears strained
to hear the slightest sound. I was so tense, I no
longer noticed the stench.
"Dragon of the Night," came Saryon's voice from the darkness. "You know me.
You know who I am."
Scraping sounds, as
of a massive head sliding along the rock floor, a gigantic body shifting
position. And then a pale, cold white light lit the chamber.
We could see Saryon, a stark black
silhouette against that white light. We could not see the dragon, for its head
was far, far above Saryon, out of our view. I remembered that I was not to look
directly into the dragon's eyes.
We held our breath for the answer,
which might be instant death. Eliza and I clasped each other by the hand.
"I know you," said the
Dragon of Night, hating him. "Why have you come to disturb my rest?"
We breathed again. The charm had held!
Impulsively, Eliza hugged me. I put my arm around her.
Mosiah flashed us a stern, reproving
glance. Neither he nor Scylla had lowered their guard. She stood with the torch
held high in one hand, her sword in the other. He had his hands clenched, magic
spells in his mind and on his lips. He reminded us silently that there was
still great danger.
Accepting the rebuke, Eliza and I drew
apart, yet our hands again found each other's in the darkness.
"I come to relieve you of your
burden," Saryon said. "And to free you of the charm. This young woman
is Joram's heir."
"I am here," Eliza called.
Releasing my hand, she walked into the
chamber. Scylla and I both would have followed, but Mosiah held out his arms,
blocking the way.
"Neither of you were mentioned in
the charming!" he said swiftly. "You could break it!"
His caution was sensible. He certainly
knew more about charms and spells than I did. I was forced to stay behind,
though it took every ounce of self-control I possessed to remain there in the
tunnel and watch Eliza walk away from me, walk into deadly peril.
Scylla was pale, her eyes dark and
huge. She, too, understood the wisdom of Mosiah's words, yet she was in agony
at the thought of her charge going where her knight could not follow. Sweat
beaded on the knight's brow. She bit her nether lip.
We could do nothing but wait.
Eliza and Saryon stood in silhouette
before the dragon, bathed in that pale, white light, which did not illuminate,
but turned all it touched a ghostly gray.
"She is Dead," said the
dragon. And then, in a terrible voice, the dragon repeated the Prophecy. "
'There will be born to the Royal House one who is dead yet will live, who will
die again and live again. And when he returns, he will hold in his hand the
destruction of the world.' "
"That was spoken of my
father," said Eliza, proudly, calmly.
"You are indeed what you claim.
Take that which is yours. Remove it from my lair. It has troubled my sleep
these past twenty years."
The two walked to a large mound of
rocks, which stood just to the left of our line of sight. With Eliza's help,
Saryon began to shift the rocks, working swiftly. Neither
wanted to stay in there any longer than they had to. The three of us,
waiting for them, dared not stir. Though we could not see the dragon, we knew
that it was aware of our presence. Its hatred and loathing were almost
palpable. It longed to slaughter us, not for food, but for revenge. The charm
held it back, but just barely.
And then the work was finished. Saryon
and Eliza stood above the cairn. She saw for the first time her father's
creation. Repulsed, her courage failed her. Then, jaw tightening, she reached
down and picked up the Darksword.
Without warning, black-robed figures
materialized out of the darkness. Five surrounded us. More appeared in the
dragon's lair, their black robes and hoods standing out in stark contrast to
the white light.
"Keep still!" Mosiah warned
softly, urgently. "Go quickly before it is too late! You will destroy us
all!"
"Silence,
traitor."
One of the Duuk-tsarith raised
his hand and Mosiah doubled over in wrenching pain and fell to his knees. Still
he was defiant.
"Fools!" he managed to gasp.
Scylla advanced a step, her sword
raised.
The same Duuk-tsarith again
moved his hand. Scylla's steel blade changed to water, ran down her upraised
arm, and dripped upon the stone at her feet. She stared, in openmouthed
astonishment, at her empty hand.
"What is the meaning of
this?" Father Saryon demanded angrily.
"Relinquish the Darksword,"
another of the Duuk-tsarith commanded. He approached Eliza.
"Relinquish it and you will come to no harm."
"We have no need of you. Leave
us. We will take the Darksword to the Emperor!" Eliza said imperiously.
"Emperor no more," countered
the Duuk-tsarith. "Garald and his false, lying bishop have been
deposed. We rule Thimhal-lan now. Give us the Darksword."
Eliza fell back before them. "You
have no right—"
Red flame sprang from the fingertips
of the Duuk-tsarith, formed into fiery tentacles that reached out to
encircle Eliza and make her captive.
Instinctively, she lifted the
Darksword to shield herself from the magic.
Tentacles of flame struck the
Darksword. The darkstone drank them in greedily and began to glow with a
white-blue flame of its own.
"The child of the traitor Joram
is hereby sentenced to death," the Duuk-tsarith pronounced.
Magic surged and heaved and sparked.
"Stop!
Cast no spells!" Saryon cried in terror. He stumbled forward, to put
himself between Eliza and the Duuk-tsarith. "The dragon—"
The Darksword sucked in the magic. The
metal seemed superheated, the white-blue glow of the flame was dazzling,
blinding. . . .
The Dragon of the Night roared in pain
and fury. It lifted its wings, the deadly stars glittered. The dragon opened
its eyes wide. Its mind-shattering light flared within the cavern. Saryon
clutched his head and reeled in pain, then he collapsed upon the stone floor.
White stars of death showered down around us. The Duuk-tsarith's black
robes burst into flame. They and their spells withered in the horrific blaze.
"Fools!"
Mosiah repeated, with the grim quiet of despair. "You have doomed us
all!"
I looked for Scylla, but could not
find her. Weaponless and alone, she must have gone forth to do battle with the
dragon.
"Eliza!" I cried, and ran
into the cave, not to save her, for nothing could do that, but to die with her.
I ran and it was as if I had leapt off
an immense cliff. I spread my arms and discovered I could fly.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
"Simkin's a monumental liar. I don't see how you can put up with
him!"
"Because he's
an amusing liar. And that makes him different."
"Different?"
"From the rest
of you."
MOSIAH AND JORAM; FORGING THE DARKSWORD
Again,
the frightening sensation of being squeezed, the air forced from my lungs, my
body compressed and flattened like that of a mouse squeezing itself into a tiny
crack. My flight ended abruptly and painfully in a tumble. I rolled down a
rocky incline, came up hard against a stone wall.
For a moment I lay there, dazed and
bruised and cut, gasping for air like a landed fish. Fearing the dragon, I
opened my eyes, prepared to do what little I could to defend myself and Eliza.
I looked around, blinked.
The dragon was gone. The Duuk-tsarith
were gone. Father Saryon was gone. Scylla was there, and Mosiah, and Eliza.
We were in a cavern, the same cavern. It smelled the same. The floor was
covered with refuse, bones lay scattered about. Eliza stood in the center of
the cavern, holding the Darksword.
Dropping the sword, she hurried to me, bent over me. "Reuven! That
was a nasty fall! Are you all right?" Was I? No, I wasn't.
Eliza no longer wore the blue velvet
riding outfit, no glittering golden circlet adorned her head. She was dressed
in the plain woolen skirt and simple blouse she had been wearing when we first
set out upon this strange journey.
I started to push myself up, mindful
of entangling myself in my robes, except that I wasn't wearing robes. I was
wearing jeans and a blue sweater.
"Scylla! Quick! He's hurt!" Eliza cried.
Scylla, clad in combat fatigues, her
earrings winking and sparkling in the light of a flashlight, squatted down and
peered at me intently. Reaching out her hand, she brushed aside the hair on my
forehead.
"The cut's not deep. The
bleeding's already stopped. He may have a headache for a while, but no
permanent damage."
Eliza drew out a handkerchief—a plain,
white handkerchief— and began to dab at the cut on my forehead.
Angrily, I thrust away her hand. Scrambling
to my feet, I backed up against the wall and glared at the two women, who were
regarding me in astonishment. Had it been a dream? A hallucination? If so, it
was the most incredibly real dream I had ever experienced.
"What's going on here?" Mosiah
demanded, coming over to us.
"Reuven's foot turned on a stone
and he fell and hit his head," Eliza said. "Scylla says it's not
serious, but look at him. He's staring at me as if I were a dragon about to
tear him apart!"
"And you," said Scylla, confronting
Mosiah. "Where have you been?"
"I don't know," he said
harshly. "Where have I been?"
"How the hell should I
know?" Scylla demanded, looking amazed. "What's wrong? Did you hit
your head, too?"
Mosiah was suddenly grave, thoughtful.
"Yes," he said quietly. "Come to think of it, I did."
He knew! He had been there, wherever
it was! Limp with relief, I leaned back against the cave wall and tried to
collect my thoughts. Most of them were too far scattered to get hold of, but at
least I knew I wasn't going insane. I started to ask Mosiah one of the thousand
questions that was in my mind, but he made me a
discreet sign with his hand.
"Say nothing. Not yet," he
counseled.
"There," Scylla said,
dusting off my clothes with an enthusiasm which nearly had me back on the stone
floor again. "You look a little better."
Eliza bent down, picked up the
Darksword. I had a sudden, horrifying vision of a black dragon, claws stained
red with blood, knocking the Darksword from her hands. She fell. The claws
ripped and tore her flesh. Her screams . . .
The vision faded, though not the
horror. My body was wet with sweat and I shivered in the cavern's dank air.
"You do realize that we are
standing in a dragon's lair," Mosiah said sharply.
"That's what Scylla told
me." Eliza shrugged. She was too preoccupied with worry over her father to
evince much interest.
"It's an old one," Scylla
said. "No need to be afraid. All the dragons died when the Well of Life
was destroyed."
"It certainly smells occupied,"
Mosiah maintained, frowning. "And how did the Darksword end up here! I
threw it through the gate—"
"And damn near made me into a
shish kebab," came a plaintive voice from a dark corner.
"Bear-on-a-Spit. Teriyaki Teddy. Lucky for you I was around. Those
silver-plated goons would have snapped it up if it hadn't been for me. As for
the cave, it's hermetically sealed. Like Tupperware. Keeps
the rot fresh for centuries."
Flashing her light around the cavern,
Scylla located the source of the voice.
"Teddy!" Eliza cried in
delight.
The stuffed bear sat propped up
against a stalagmite. "I thought you'd never get here," he said
peevishly. "What have you been doing? Going on picnics, I suppose. Taking bus trips to
Still carrying the Darksword, Eliza
walked over to Teddy, bent down to pick him up.
The bear's beady black eyes glittered
in alarm. The stuffed body squirmed out of her reach. "Don't bring that
ugly thing near me!"
"The
Darksword?" Eliza said, wondering, then
added, "Oh, of course. I understand."
"I don't," Mosiah said
sharply. "The Darksword disrupts his magic. He can't stand to have it near
him. And yet he maintains that he brought it here!"
"You'd be amazed what I can do
when I put my mind to it," Simkin said, sniffing. "And I never said I
brought it here. I do have friends left in this world, you know. People who
appreciate me. My dear friend Merlyn, for one."
"Merlyn. Of course."
Mosiah's lip curled. "Kevon Smythe for another?"
"Sticks and stones may break my
bones but Darkswords will never hurt me," Teddy said, and the bear
grinned.
"What does it matter how the
sword came to be here?" Eliza asked impatiently. "Now that we have
it, we must find my father and mother and Father Saryon."
Startled, I looked at Mosiah.
"Your father.
Joram," Mosiah asked. "He's alive?"
"Of course he is!" she
answered, and repeated emphatically, "Of course he is."
"Oh, yes, Joram's alive, all
right," the bear said in languid tones. "In a foul temper, though.
Can't blame him. Locked up in a prison cell with only the
elderly bald party for company."
Eliza grasped the Darksword tightly,
her knuckles whitening, on the hilt. "You've found him? He's safe?"
"He's seen better days, as the
Duchess of Orleans said when she discovered her husband impaled on the door
knocker. He's conscious, and taking solid food. Your father. Not the Duke.
There was nothing much we could do for him, beyond polish his head every
Sunday."
"What about my mother?"
"Nada.
Nothing. Zip. Sorry and all that, but I sighted neither hide nor hair of
her. She is not being held captive in the same location as your father and the
catalyst, that much I can tell you."
"You've been there." Mosiah
was skeptical.
"Certainly," replied the
bear.
"To the
Technomancers' prison. Where they're holding Saryon
and Joram."
"If you would remove that
black hood from over your head, Mosiah," the bear said in nasty tones,
"you might be able to hear better. Isn't that
what I said? I was just returning from there, in fact, when you hurled that
great bloody sword at me."
"And where is this prison?"
"Right there," the bear
replied, and gave a bored glance upward.
"Above
us!" Eliza exclaimed. She had looked pale and downcast at hearing
no news of her mother, but now the color came flooding back to her cheeks.
"In the upper
chambers of the cave. Not far. A good, brisk walk on a summer's day,
straight uphill, of course, but think what wonders the climb will do for your
calves."
While this may have been good news in
one respect, it was certainly chilling in another. We flashed alarmed glances
at each other.
"I'll watch the door,"
Scylla offered. "And keep your voices down!"
That warning came a bit late. We
hadn't been shouting, but we hadn't been talking in whispers, either. And noise
echoes in caverns.
"If the Technomancers are in the
chambers above us, why did you bring the Darksword here?" Mosiah demanded
of Simkin. "Unless you meant to give it to them."
"If I did, I wouldn't be down
here in this smelly, dank hole with the lot of you, now, would I?" Simkin
said, his nose button twitching. "I'd be up there where it's dry and comfy
and stinks of nothing worse than Kevon Smythe's cheap cologne. He may be a man
of the people, but I don't see why he has to smell like one.
"Why bring the Darksword
here?" Mosiah pursued with extraordinary patience.
"Because, my dear thickheaded
clodhopper friend, this is obviously the last place they would think to
look! Having lost you, they are this moment turning Zith-el upside down
searching for you and the sword. You don't see them searching down here, do
you?"
"He's got a point," Scylla
admitted.
"He always does," Mosiah
grumbled. "Why didn't we see the Technomancers or they see us when we
entered the cave?"
"You would have, if you'd come in
the front."
"You're saying we came in the
back?"
"I didn't see any flashing signs,
exit or egress, don't you know, but if you want to think of it that way, yes,
you came in the back."
"Is my father in a cell?"
Eliza asked. "Is he being guarded? How many
guards?"
"Two. As I said, everyone
is certain you're in Zith-el—"
Scylla moved away from the cavern
door, back toward us. "We should go now," she said. "Quickly."
"I don't trust him." Mosiah
was grim. "He betrayed Joram once and caused his death—almost caused
his death," he amended. "Whatever Simkin does, he does for his own
amusement. Don't fool yourself, Eliza. He cares nothing for you, nothing for
Joram, nothing for any of us. I have no doubt that if he thinks the Hch'nyv
would provide him a moment's entertainment, he'd wave that orange scarf of his
and direct them to the landing site."
Eliza turned to the bear, only to find
its eyes closed. It was gently snoring. "Simkin!" she said,
imploring.
The eyes snapped open. "What? Oh,
pardon. Must have dozed off during that long harangue. As for me, what our
cowturd-kicking friend says is absolutely true. I'm not to be trusted. Not in
the slightest."
The black button eyes glinted. The
black-stitched mouth quirked. "Listen to Mosiah, the wise Duuk-tsarith.
Now, there's a trustworthy bunch. We are all ears, my friend. I
could be, if I wanted, you know—all ears, that is. What is your suggested
plan of action?"
Mosiah's lips tightened. He said
nothing, however. I am sure he was remembering that in that other life of ours,
it was the Duuk-tsarith who had betrayed us. Simkin knew this, too. I
could tell from the squint in the bear's eye. He knew and he was laughing at
us.
Eliza made her decision. "If the
Technomancers are searching somewhere else for us, we should not pass up this
opportunity to rescue my father and Saryon. We may never have another chance."
"It could be a trap," Mosiah
warned. "Just as the Interrogator impersonating your mother was a
trap."
"It could be," Eliza said
calmly. "But if so, it really doesn't matter, does it? We're running out
of time."
"But which time? That's the question,"
Mosiah muttered.
Eliza hadn't heard him. I did, and it
gave me cause for thought.
"What about the Darksword?"
she was saying. "Should we take it with us?"
"Too dangerous," Scylla
advised. "If they capture us, at least they won't have the Darksword. We
may still be able to use it to bargain our way out. Why not leave it here where
it will be safe?"
"Out in the open?"
Scylla flashed the light around the
cavern, halted the beam. "There's all these rocks stacked up over here.
We'll hide the sword underneath them. Build a cairn over it."
Eliza placed the Darksword on the
cavern floor. She and Scylla gathered stones, began to build a cairn around it.
It was like watching a video rewind. I saw them build the cairn up, whereas
only moments before, I had seen Eliza and Father Saryon tear the cairn down. At
this, my mind rebelled.
I hurried over to join Mosiah, who was
standing silent, hands folded, watching.
"Tell me what is happening!"
I signed frantically.
"Do you mean our little game of
time hopscotch? I'm not sure," he mused, sotto voce. "It appears that
there is a time line running parallel to the one in which we now find
ourselves. An alternate time line, for in that one Joram died twenty years ago
and in this one it was Simkin, disguised as Joram, who 'died' at the hands of
the assassin. But why is this happening? And if Scylla and Eliza are present in
both worlds, why is it that you and I appear to be the only ones conscious of
both worlds?"
"Do you know the answer?"
He shrugged. "Your guess is as
good as mine, Reuven. I am sure of one thing, though. The Hch'nyv were coming
in that other world. They're coming in this one. As Her Majesty says, time is
running out."
I asked the question I had most feared
asking. "Time ran out for us in that last world, didn't it? We were all
killed. I know, because when I try to catch a glimpse of that other life, I see
nothing anymore. I only feel a great and terrible anger at those who betrayed
us, and bitter sorrow over what will be lost."
"You are right," Mosiah
said. "The dragon slaughtered us. I saw you die. I saw Eliza die. I saw my
own death approaching. The one person I didn't see, though, was Scylla,"
he added. "Now, isn't that interesting?"
I waited for him to continue, but he
said nothing more.
I signed, "Do you think we've
been given another chance?"
"Either that," Mosiah
replied, "or someone is being highly entertained by our struggles against
the inevitable."
We both looked at the bear, who was
again slumbering contentedly against the stalagmite. And it may have been my
imagination, but I thought I saw Teddy smile.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
"Strike me dead. I'm rotten."
SIMKIN, UPON CHANGING HIMSELF INTO A TREE; FORGING THE DARKS WORD
The
Darksword was buried under the cairn, a cairn that was exactly like the one I
had seen before, down to the placement of the last rock. I could not look at it
without feeling a shiver creep up from my tailbone and I was glad when we left
the chamber. We moved cautiously through the spiraling tunnel, this time going
up instead of down. It did not appear as if the Technomancers had searched the
lower levels—there was no reason why they should. To judge by the thick layer
of undisturbed dust on the smooth floor, no one had been here for perhaps as
many years as the magically shaped tunnel had been in existence. We took no
chances, however, and crept along as silently as possible, guided by the
ghostly image of Simkin and the faint eerie glow of his orange silk scarf.
Simkin's transformation had come about
under duress. Before leaving the chamber, Mosiah had insisted on carrying
Teddy, in order to keep an eye on him.
"Absolutely
not!" Teddy was appalled at the indignity and pleaded and bleated.
Finding Mosiah proof against both the bear's threats and Eliza's intercessions
on his behalf, Simkin had abandoned his stuffed self and condescended to appear
before us "naked," as he put it.
"It takes a great deal out of me,
maintaining this form, as you can see. Or can't see," Simkin said in gloomy
undertones as we walked through the tunnel. The orange glow from his scarf lit
the way for Mosiah and me. Scylla and Eliza came behind us, using
Scylla's flashlight.
"Odd," said Mosiah.
"The Kij vine finds enough magical Life to thrive. I am surprised you
don't."
"The Kij vine," Simkin
observed, "is a weed."
"Precisely," Mosiah said
dryly.
"Oh, very
funny. Ha-ha and all that. According to you, I have Life coming out my
ears and I'm just frittering it away, scattering it to the four winds in a
blithe and merry dance of revelry. I'll have you know," Simkin added in
aggrieved tones, "that I haven't changed clothes in twenty years! Twenty
years!"
He dabbed at his eyes with the scarf,
which was the only solid piece of him.
"Perhaps you're using your magic
for other purposes," Mosiah suggested. "Such as
sending us hopscotching through time."
"What do you take me for?"
Simkin demanded, sniffing. "A bloody amusement park? There are lots of
places I would be glad to send you, Mosiah, but bounding gleefully among the
nanosec-. onds is not one of them.
"I say!" Simkin came to a
halt, glared at us indignantly. "Have you been leaping the years? Annus
touristi? And you didn't take mel"
"What now?" Scylla
demanded, coming up from her position as rear guard. "What's the
matter?"
"Nothing," Mosiah said.
"Then keep moving! This is no
time to stop and have a chat!" Scylla stalked on ahead of us.
"Got you in
trouble!" Simkin said in smothered tones, and laughing, he flitted
back to walk beside Eliza and flirt with her, most shamefully.
"An interesting point, don't you
think?" Mosiah said to me softly. "Simkin wasn't with us in
that other time. And Simkin would never throw a party that he himself didn't
attend!"
I conceded that this might be true.
Still, as I glanced behind me, watching uneasily the orange glow bob along
close to Eliza, I recalled that in each of the alternate lines of time, Simkin
had betrayed Joram. Why were we to suppose that this one would be any
different?
Except that now he would not be
betraying Joram. The treacherous kiss would be given to Joram's daughter.
The tunnel seemed much longer going up
than coming down. By the time we neared the top, my legs ached, I was gulping
for breath, and the difficult part was only beginning.
I had pictured the top portion of the
cavern as being the same as in the alternate time, if that's truly where (or
should I say when!) we had been. I soon realized I was wrong. Rounding a
bend, Scylla, in the lead, suddenly switched off her light and jumped backward.
"Light!" she whispered.
"It's coming from ahead!"
Now that her flashlight was turned
off, I could see the glow of another light reflected on the cavern walls. There
had been no light in the other cavern, I recalled, remembering that Saryon had
left a tinderbox and flint and a brand behind.
"What's up there?" Mosiah
asked Simkin.
"Rock, air,
water." Simkin waved the orange scarf. "Oh! You want
specifics! Well, let's see." He frowned in deep thought. "This
tunnel ends at the river. At the opening to the tunnel, there is a small
chamber, just off to the right as you're facing the tunnel. Or is it the left,
as you're facing the river? Of course, if you're in the river, it's
rather behind you and—"
"Simkin, please!" Eliza
said, and her voice quavered. "What? Sorry, dear girl. Truly." Simkin
looked very contrite. "Forgot that you're taking this personally. Let's
see. Where was I? In the river . . . Right. We don't want to go in the river.
Not if it can be avoided. No need to, really. Joram and the Father Skinhead are
being held prisoner in the small chamber which is to the right—no, make that
left. . . . Anyway, the small chamber. You can't miss it."
"No, and they won't be able to
miss us," Mosiah said grimly. "They'll spot us the moment we walk
into the light. If only I had Life enough—"
"I don't see what's stopping you,
Enforcer. You have a catalyst right here," Eliza said. "Father
Reuven. He may be a house catalyst and not trained to the specific needs of you
warlocks, but he would do in an emergency, I suppose."
"Father Reuven!" Scylla
chuckled. "How funny." Mosiah and I did not laugh. We stared at
Eliza. She had spoken of me as if we were in that other time, using the very
same words Scylla had used in a similar situation.
"Why are you looking at me like
that? What did I say—oh." Eliza blinked in confusion. "What did I
say? And why did I say it? Father Reuven. House catalyst. But it sounds so
natural. . . ."
Mosiah was looking at me now, his
expression thoughtful. Suddenly he thrust his black-robed arm out.
"Catalyst," he said softly, "give me Life."
I would have laughed. My hand lifted
to sign that I did not know how. . . . And yet, I did know how. I remembered. I
remembered the wonderful feeling as the Life flowed into me. I remembered how
to reach out for the magic with one hand while the other held Mosiah's arm. I
was the vessel, the magic ran into me, and for that brief moment I was blessed.
I closed my eyes and willed the Life
of Thimhallan to come to me.
At first I felt nothing, and fear that
I would fail, fail Eliza, twisted inside me. I concentrated all my effort,
praying to the Almin, pleading. . . . The Life came suddenly, in a great surge,
as if it had been pent up and was waiting only for release. The energy gave me
a severe jolt. My body tingled and burned, as if each drop of blood was a tiny
spark. The sensation was excruciatingly painful, not pleasant, as it had been
in the alternate time.
Frightened and hurting, I tried to end
it, tried to snatch my hand from Mosiah's arm, but he refused to let me go. The
magic leapt between us in a blue arc that twined around his arm and mine.
The flame of the arc crackled out. I
was empty, the fire replaced by a sensation of cold that left me numb and
shaking. I sank to my knees, my strength sapped.
Eliza knelt and put her arm around me.
"Reuven, are you all right?"
I nodded, though I felt sick and
dizzy.
"Blessed Almin," said
Scylla, awed. "I've never seen anything like that!"
"I doubt you ever will
again," said Mosiah, massaging his arm. "That was the Life
transference of a catalyst to a warlock. We thought such transferences had died
with the magic, for it has not been successfully performed since the war ended.
Strange," he murmured to himself. "Very
strange."
"Not so strange if the magic
hasn't died," Scylla observed.
Simkin yawned. "While you all are
playing at being magi, I'm off to reconnoiter. Wait for me here. Do you know,
I'm quite enjoying this!"
"Wait—damn!"
Mosiah clutched empty air. Simkin had
vanished.
"Now what do we do?" I
signed.
"Hand ourselves over to the
Technomancers," Mosiah said bitterly. "We might as well."
"Nonsense," Eliza said
crisply. "We'll wait here for him to return. He will return. I have
faith in Ted—Simkin."
"So did your father," Mosiah
said grimly. He glanced around, stiffened. "We're missing someone
else."
We could see a short distance down the
tunnel by the light reflecting off the rocks. Scylla was nowhere in sight.
"Back!"
Mosiah urged, and he started herding Eliza and me down the tunnel. "Back
the way we came! We can hold out—"
"Psst! Over here!" came a
piercing whisper.
A hand waved at us from the darkness.
An arm attached to the hand appeared
and Scylla emerged from the shadows. "I've found another chamber. We can
hide in here and keep watch!"
Eliza gave Mosiah a reproachful glance
and went to join Scylla. I started after her. Mosiah clamped hold of my arm.
"Do you remember another chamber
in the cave the last time we were inside it?"
I shook my head. "But it was dark
and confused."
"Wasn't it," Mosiah said
coolly.
The chamber Scylla had found was
located directly across the tunnel from where we had been standing. It provided
a clear view of a small cavern. Two Technomancers, in their silver masks and
robes, stood guard outside the entrance.
Long minutes passed. Nothing happened,
and the thought occurred to me that Simkin had been right about one thing, at
least. The Technomancers must have felt their prisoners were secure and that we
were far away. Either that or the prisoners were not in there at all. I was
wondering if Simkin had led us on a wild-goose chase when one of the
Technomancers spoke.
"Time to check on them," he
said.
The other nodded and turned on his
heel, took a step, and fell headlong, sprawling on the cavern floor.
"Son-of-a-bitch!" the man
swore as he picked himself up.
"What the hell happened to
you?" his companion asked, turning to stare.
"I fell over a rock! That
rock!" The Technomancer glared and pointed.
"Well, watch where you're going
next time."
The Technomancer stared balefully at
the rock. "I'll swear, that wasn't there before."
"You're just clumsy," said
the other Technomancer, shrugging.
"No, I'm serious. I've been in
and out of this blasted prison cell thirty times today and I'll swear that rock
wasn't there!" The Technomancer picked it up. "I'll be damned!"
he said, amazed. "This rock has . . . eyes!"
Those of us hunkered down in the
chamber exchanged glances. None of us said the word, but we were all thinking
it.
Simkin.
"What the devil are
you two doing? Standing there discussing a rock," came another voice. I
recognized it and so did Mosiah.
"Smythe!" he whispered.
"If you've taken up
geology," Smythe continued, "do it on your time. Not mine."
The two Technomancers snapped to
attention. Smythe appeared, coming from the direction of the cavern entrance.
He was not wearing the business suit in which I'd last seen him, but was
dressed in the robes, trimmed in gold, that he'd worn in the hologram. His face
was in the light and it was a good thing I had recognized him from his voice. I
might not have done so otherwise. The face that had been so handsome and charming
was grim and contorted with suppressed rage. Four bodyguards in silver trooped
after him.
"But, sir, look at this
rock—"
"Is it darkstone?" Smythe
demanded impatiently.
"No, sir, it doesn't appear to
be. Ordinary limestone, maybe. But it—"
"Darkstone is the only rock in
which I'm interested. Toss it in the river."
The Technomancer looked again at the
rock and seemed to want to argue. A glance at Smythe's scowling face, and the
Technomancer gave a heave, flung the rock into the dark, swiftly flowing water.
I could swear that I heard a faint
indignant shriek as the rock sailed through the air. It hit the water with a
splash and sank . . . like a rock.
"How are the prisoners?"
Smythe asked. "Any change?"
"That Joram's growing worse, sir.
He won't be with us long if he doesn't get help."
Eliza, beside me, made a choked sound.
"Hush!" Scylla breathed.
Mosiah cast them both a warning
glance. I found Eliza's hand. Her flesh was chill to the touch. Her fingers
tightened convulsively around mine.
"I'm going to talk to
Joram," Smythe was saying. "If he's that bad off, he may be willing
to cooperate. Two of you come with me. The rest of you wait outside."
Smythe entered the chamber where the
prisoners were being held. Two of his guards followed after him. The others
took up positions out in the corridor.
There was nothing we could do but
wait. Not only would we endanger ourselves if we tried to fight such
overwhelming numbers, we would place the prisoners' lives in jeopardy. There was
every possibility the Technomancers would kill their prisoners rather than let
them be rescued.
We hid in the darkness, straining to
hear. The first voice we heard was Father Saryon's. His tone was strong and
indignant, which meant that he was well. I closed my eyes and breathed a prayer
to the Almin in thankfulness.
"Joram is very ill, as you can
see, Mr. Smythe. My friend needs medical attention immediately. I insist that
you take him to the outpost. They have a medical facility there—"
"Certainly," said Smythe,
and his voice was smooth and eager to please. "We will provide him with
the antidote to the poison— as soon as he tells me where to find the
Darksword."
"Poison?"
Saryon was horrified. "You poisoned him?"
"A slow-acting
variety. We use the same to cause the deaths of the organisms in our
perpetual generators. Death comes very slowly and very painfully, I am told.
Now, my friend. Where is the Darksword? Tell us that, and you will feel much
better.".
"He does not know!" Saryon said
angrily.
"Ah, but I think he does,"
said Smythe. "He gave it to his daughter to hide. We saw her in possession
of the sword, so you needn't trouble to lie about it. We are on her
trail—"
"If you hurt her . . ." The
voice was weak, but it was definitely Joram's.
We heard scuffling sounds and a
stifled cry.
Eliza turned her head into my
shoulder. I held her tightly and the rage I felt toward Smythe at that moment
appalled me. I had always thought of myself as a pacifist. Now I knew I had it in
me to kill.
"Don't! Leave him alone!"
Saryon cried, and we heard a rustling sound, as if he threw himself
protectively in front of Joram. "He is weak and ill."
"He will be far more ill if he
does not cooperate."
"He can be of no use to you dead!"
"He isn't going to die. At least
not yet. As you say, I have need of him. Give him the stimulant. There. That
will keep him alive a little longer. He won't feel very good, but he'll live,
which is more than I can say for you, Father Saryon. You are of no use to me
whatsoever. I have catalysts of my own, prepared to give the Darksword Life,
once it is recovered.
"Listen to me, Joram. You have
five minutes to reconsider your stubborn refusal to tell me where your daughter
is hiding. If you do not, Father Saryon will be flayed alive, a particularly
nasty way to die. Bind his feet and his hands."
We four stared, horrified, at each
other. We had five minutes to act, five minutes to rescue the hostages, or
Father Saryon would most certainly be tortured and murdered. There were six
guards, plus Kevon Smythe, and only four of us.
"Scylla, you have your gun,"
Mosiah began, speaking in a tense whisper. "You—"
"Gun," she said. "I
don't have a gun."
Mosiah glared at her. "You don't
carry a gun! What kind of agent are you?"
"A smart one," Scylla
returned. "From what I've seen, carrying a gun is an open invitation for
someone to shoot you."
Mosiah was grim. "We have no
choice, I guess. We have to take on all six of the D'karn-darah—"
"Make that seven," Scylla
said.
Another silver-robed Technomancer had
apparently entered the cavern. I say "apparently" because I had been
watching the cavern entrance and I had not seen anyone come inside. The new
arrival glided up behind the two guards waiting at the entrance. Reaching out a
silver-gloved hand, the D'karn-darah tapped one of them on the shoulder.
It was the Technomancer who had thrown
the rock in the river. He jumped, turned. His robes flowed around him like
liquid mercury.
"What the devil—who are you?" he
demanded. "What do you want? And don't come sneaking up on someone like
that. It's bad enough being on this blasted planet, with rocks that have eyes
and God knows what else! What do you want?" he repeated nervously.
"A message from
HQ for the master."
"He's inside the prison
cell."
"It's urgent," said the D'karn-darah.
"I'll go tell him,"
volunteered the other Technomancer.
"Wait," said the first. His
tone was suspicious. "Why didn't they just send the message the usual
way—using the seerstones?"
"None of your seerstones are
working. Try them."
The first Technomancer put his wrist
to his ear. The second did the same. The second looked at the first, who
shrugged and jerked his head toward the prison cell. The Technomancer left to
report.
Smythe emerged. His choleric face was
a fierce red, his brows drawn tight in a vicious scowl.
"What do you mean the seerstones
aren't working?" he demanded.
"We don't know, sir,"
returned the newly arrived Technomancer. "Perhaps it's this cave, blocking
the signal. I have an urgent message for you, sir."
"Deliver it!" Smythe
snapped.
The silver-hooded head revolved,
glanced in the direction of the other D'karn-darah. "It is for you
alone, Master. We should speak in private. It is most urgent, sir."
Smythe looked back in frustration
toward the prison. His unhealthy choler increased. "Of all the damn luck.
I just about had, him broken! This better be good!" He turned to one of
the guards. "Remind the good father that he has three minutes left. Three
minutes."
"Come over here, Master,"
said the messenger, and he gestured—alarmingly—in the direction of our small
hidden cavern.
The two walked toward us. The silver
robes of the D'karn-darah swished about his ankles, revealing his
silver-slippered feet, and I suddenly noticed that this Technomancer was
wearing orange socks.
"Simkin!"
Mosiah breathed into my ear.
Beyond all reason, it was, it had to
be Simkin, disguised as a Technomancer and leading Kevon Smythe straight toward
our hiding place.
"That
bastard!" Mosiah whispered. "If it's the last thing I do,
I'll—"
"Shhh!" Scylla hushed him.
Eliza gripped my hand tightly. We
didn't dare move, for fear he'd hear us. We went completely immobile in the
darkness, every breath seeming to whistle loud as a cyclone, our heartbeats
booming like thunder. Mosiah's body tensed. He was readying his magic for one
gigantic, lethal burst.
Desperate, frantic plans rushed
through my mind, none of them making any sense, or offering any hope.
Four more paces and Kevon Smythe would
bump right into us. At the second pace, the D'karn-darah that was Simkin
came to a halt.
Smythe stopped, turned to face him.
"What's all this about?" he
asked irritably.
"Sir," said Simkin, "the
representatives of the Hch'nyv have arrived in Zith-el."
I heard a soft gasp, as if Mosiah had
been punched in the solar plexus. Scylla exhaled softly.
Smythe's color went from red to sallow
yellow, as if someone had opened a major artery and drained all his blood in an
instant. Such stark terror was on his face that I could almost have felt sorry
for him. He quickly recovered his equanimity, but the vestiges of that fear
remained.
"What do they want?" he asked, his voice under tight control.
"The Darksword," said Simkin
laconically.
Smythe cast a furious glance back
toward the prison. "We haven't recovered it yet. We will. They must give
us more time." "Earth Forces are in retreat. Earth takeover is
beginning. You haven't much time. Such were their words to us. It is their
religious leaders that are pushing the issue, sir. Their gods or whatever it is
they worship have warned them that the Darksword is a distinct threat."
"I know all about their blasted
gods!" Smythe said, his voice shaking with fury and fear. Once again, he
clamped down hard on himself. "We made a deal. Remind them of it. They
have Earth in exchange for the Darksword. We have Thimhallan. They provide us
with Death. We provide them with Life. We will recover the Darksword and we
will give it to them, but in our own good time. Tell them that."
Simkin shook his silver-hooded head.
"They will not listen to those they consider underlings."
Smythe fumed, glanced again at the
prison, in an agony of indecision. "Very well. I'll go deal with the
matter." He turned on his heel, stalked away, shouting orders. "My
guards! Come with me. I'm needed back at HQ. You two. Kill the priest. I don't
care how. Do it slowly and make certain Joram has a ringside seat."
"What if he decides to talk,
Master?"
"Get his information, then transport him immediately to me at HQ. Use the
teleporter."
"Yes, sir. Do we still kill the
priest?"
"What do you think?" Smythe
demanded impatiently. "He's of no use to me."
"Yes, sir.
Could you leave someone to help us, sir? The tele-porter is not functioning
efficiently on this planet."
"I'll stay here and give them a
hand," said Simkin from beneath his silver hood.
"Very
well." Smythe was obviously anxious to be gone./He
left the cavern, his four bodyguards trooping after him.
I looked at the others, to see my own
feelings of revulsion, horror, and fury reflected on their faces. I could not
comprehend how any human could be so consumed with power that he would make a
deal with a heinous enemy, a deal sacrificing millions of his fellow humans on
the altar of his own ambition.
The two Technomancers went into the
prison to retrieve the captives. Simkin remained outside, rocking back and
forth on his heels and humming to himself. The humming was off-key and
extremely jarring to the nerves. He did not once look in our direction or give
us the slightest sign.
I was beginning to think that we had
been mistaken. Perhaps the Technomancer wasn't Simkin, after all. Perhaps it
was merely a Technomancer with an odd taste in footwear.
Mosiah shared my doubts. "That
fool! What's he doing? If it is him . . ."
"Whether it is or it isn't, he
got rid of Smythe," Scylla pointed out. "And four of the guards. We
should attack now."
"Let them bring the hostages out
of the cell first," said Mosiah. "They're probably using a stasis
field to hold them and we'd never be able to remove it ourselves."
"Good point, Enforcer," said
Scylla admiringly. "What's the plan?"
"Plan!"
Mosiah snorted. "I'm the only one with a weapon and that's my
magic."
"Not even a laser pistol would
have any effect on that protective armor of theirs," Scylla returned in a
hoarse whisper. "Besides, I have my own weapons."
"Which are?"
"You'll see. I guarantee you that
I'll put one out of commission, if you can handle the other."
Mosiah didn't like it, but this was no
time to argue. We could hear scuffling sounds from inside the prison. Simkin's
humming grew louder and more nerve-racking, if that was possible.
"At my signal, Scylla, you
attack," Mosiah ordered. "Reuven, you and Eliza rescue Joram and
Father Saryon."
"Where do we take them?"
Eliza asked.
"Down the
tunnel. Back to the cavern where you hid the
Darksword."
"What then?"
"Let's get that far first,"
Mosiah said.
Simkin's humming was setting my teeth
on edge. I've never heard such a strange and ear-piercing sound come from any
living human throat. But then, this was Simkin. The two Technomancer guards
emerged. One had hold of Father Saryon. He looked upset and anxious, but I knew
that his anxiety was for Joram, not for himself, though he was the one who was
about to be put to death. Saryon kept twisting his head, trying to see over his
shoulder, trying to see Joram, who was being dragged out behind him.
At the sight of her father, Eliza gave
a small moan and immediately covered her mouth with her hand to prevent any
further cries from escaping her.
Joram's skin was a grayish white,
beaded with sweat. Blood matted his hair and was caked on one side of his face,
where a deep, ugly wound crossed over his cheek, almost laying the bone bare.
His right hand was clasped over his left arm, which hung limp. His shirt was
torn, blood covered the shirtfront, and the sleeve of the left arm was saturated.
The stimulant, his fever, and his anger gave his eyes an unnatural luster. He
was weak, but grimly alert and defiant.
"Release Father Saryon. Then and
only then will I tell you where to find the Darksword."
"You'll tell us," said one
of the Technomancers. "When you see the priest lying there with half his
flesh flayed from his body, screaming for us to end his torment in death,
you'll tell us."
The Technomancer flung Father Saryon
to the ground. His hands were bound, he was unable to break his fall, and he
landed heavily, crying out in pain. I would have rushed forward then and there,
but common sense and Mosiah's whispered warning prevailed.
Simkin approached Father Saryon,
looked down at him.
There was a sharp snapping sound.
The Technomancer standing nearest
Simkin stared wildly, gasped, and backed away.
"What are you doing?" he
cried shrilly.
"Following orders," said
Simkin. "Giving you a hand."
He held out his own hand, which he had
broken off at the wrist.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
The
magic that Joram longed for and sought every morning to feel burning in his
soul never came to him.
When he was fifteen, he stopped asking
Anja when he would gain the magic.
Deep inside of him, he already knew
the answer.
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
"In addition, I'll help you get ahead,"
Simkin added. He lifted his head from his shoulders—unscrewed his head would be
more precisely the term—and flung it straight at one of the Technomancers.
The man may have had some small
magical powers, although from what I had seen, the Technomancers were so
beholden to Technology as to make the magic almost irrelevant. Certainly he had
never seen magic in such maniacal form. He gaped when Simkin broke off his own
hand. But when Simkin's head, covered with a silver hood, the ends flapping,
flew through the air at him, the Technomancer gave a strangled cry and flung
his arms over his face. Simkin's head exploded with a force that stopped my heart, shook the cave . . . and resulted in a shower of
daisies.
"Now!"
Mosiah yelled.
The Life flowed through him and
transformed him as he ran. His black robes writhed around him, flattened to
cover his body in spiky black fur. His head elongated, changed to a muzzle with
yellow fangs protruding from beneath black, curled lips. His legs transformed
into the legs of a beast, his forearms were covered with black fur, claws
sprouted from the fingernails. The hem of his robes twisted into a tail with a
barb sharp as a razor. Mosiah had become a darkrover, the type known as a
hunterkill, one of the most feared of all the creations of the ancient war
masters.
The Technomancer uncovered his eyes,
gazed in bafflement at the daisies drifting down around his head. They might
have been scattered over his grave. The next sight he saw was a terrible one—a
hunterkill bounding across the cavern floor, running upright on its powerful
hind legs, jaws snapping, its claws reaching for the Technomancer's throat.
His silver robes acted as armor,
capable—as Scylla had said— of deflecting all attacks by conventional weapons.
The darkrover was certainly not a conventional weapon, however. Mosiah hurled
himself on the Technomancer. The silver robes crackled and the darkrover
shrieked in pain, but Mosiah's claws scratched and tore. His weight carried the
Technomancer to the ground.
The other Technomancer guard was not
quite as befuddled by the magic surging around him as his fellow. A weapon
appeared in his hand, a scythe, that gleamed with a fell energy. He stood over
Father Saryon, swinging the scythe in a vicious arc. The blade sang as it
whipped through the air, reminding me of Simkin's off-key humming.
Eliza and I held back, agonized,
afraid for the captives. But there was nothing we could do. Saryon lay
flattened on the ground. Every sweep of the scythe came a little closer to him.
Joram was behind the scythe-wielding Technomancer, leaning up against the
cavern wall, his eyes bright and burning with the effects of the poison. He
lurched forward, with the idea of knocking down the Technomancer from behind.
The guard heard him, however. Whipping
the scythe around, he struck Joram on the side of the head with its handle.
Joram fell, landed near Father Saryon. Even then, defiantly, Joram raised his
head. Blood, fresh blood, covered his face. His head sank between his arms. He
lay still.
Eliza cried out and would have run to
her father, regardless of her own danger. I caught hold of her, held her.
"Allow me, Your Majesty,"
said Scylla, and advanced, barehanded, on the Technomancer wielding the scythe.
"Be careful, Scylla!" the
darkrover shouted, using Mosiah's voice.
The jaws of the hunterkill dribbled
blood and saliva, its claws were red, blood smeared
its black fur. I glanced over at its prey and was sorry I did. Hastily, I
averted my gaze from what was left of the Technomancer's body. It was covered
with blood and daisies.
"That scythe can drain a person
of Life," Mosiah cautioned.
"I don't know why you think that
would affect me," Scylla said, flashing Mosiah a grin and a wink.
She advanced on the Technomancer,
watching his movements, and suddenly kicked out her leg in the path of the
swinging scythe. Eliza covered her eyes. I watched in horror, expecting to see
Scylla's leg hacked off by the vicious blade.
The blade struck her combat boot and
shattered, flying apart in thousands of tiny sparkling shards as if it had been
brittle and fragile as ice. I could not see the expression on the silver-hooded
head, but I could guess that he was staring at his weapon in astonishment. He
quickly recovered, however, shifted his hands to use the scythe's handle as a
club, and tried to jab Scylla.
She struck out with the heel of her
boot, catching the Technomancer full in the nose of his silver-hooded head. I
heard a sickening, crackling sound and thought at first it was the silver
armor's defensive shield activating. A smear of blood blossomed on the silver
hood. The sound had been the man's nose breaking. He toppled over
backward. A kick to the head while he was on the ground finished him.
"What's going on in there?"
a voice shouted from outside the cavern. "Is everything all right?"
"More Technos," said Mosiah.
He had retained his darkrover shape, his eyes glowed red and hideous.
"They must be the ones guarding the teleporter. They'll be here quickly.
They've got a hover barge! Go!" he urged, waving bloody claws at us.
"Take Father Saryon and Joram and go! I will deal with these."
Saryon was on his knees, bending over
the unconscious Joram. Eliza was at her father's side, holding his hand. I
wondered how we would manage to carry him with us, for he was a tall man and
muscular.
"I won't leave Joram," said
Saryon firmly.
"Nor will I," Eliza said.
Tears streamed down her face but I don't believe that she was aware of them.
"Smythe has the antidote to the
poison." Saryon's gaze went to Eliza. "Do you know where the
Darksword is?"
"Yes, Father."
"Then we must find it and give it
to him. It is the only way to save your father's life."
"He may not keep his end of the
bargain," Scylla cautioned.
"Perhaps he will," Saryon
said bleakly. "He must."
"We must carry him away from this
place," Scylla urged. "We should not leave him here for them to find.
They might take out their wrath at your escape on him."
She touched Joram on the forehead. Her
deft hands glided smoothly over the broken skin, wiping away the blood.
Joram opened his eyes, blinked, as if
he were looking into a dazzling light.
"The guards aren't answering.
Something's wrong," came the voice from outside the cavern. "I'm
going to go check." .
"Go!" Mosiah snarled. He
bounded over to hide in the shadows near the cavern entrance.
"I can make it," Joram said,
fending off all offers of assistance. "I don't need any help."
As it was, he stumbled when he tried
to rise, but Scylla was there, her strong arm and shoulder supporting him.
"Reuven," she called,
"take hold of him from the other side."
I did as she commanded. Hastening to
Joram's side, I caught hold of him around the waist. He glowered at both Scylla
and me and for a moment I thought he was going to defy us.
"If you don't allow us to help
you, sir," Scylla said quietly, "you will not move ten paces from
this spot. When you fall, your daughter will remain with you, as will Father
Saryon. The Technomancers will catch them and that will be an end to all which
you have struggled to protect. Is that what you want?"
Joram's forbidding expression
dissolved. He shook his head. "No. I will accept your help." He
glanced over at me. "And Reuven's."
"Eliza, you lead the way,"
Scylla said. "Hurry now."
"Wait!" Eliza turned to
Father Saryon. "Where is Mother? Was she in that prison with you?"
"No, child," Saryon said,
looking concerned. "She was not. I thought perhaps you might know—"
Eliza shook her head.
"She is not here," Saryon
said. "And that is a hopeful sign. If the Technomancers had made her
captive, they would have made use of her by now. I think that somehow she
managed to escape them."
"Then where is she?" Eliza
demanded.
"Perhaps I have an idea,"
Saryon said. "Do not worry. I believe that wherever she is, she is safe.
Safer than we are."
Eliza gave her father a gentle kiss on
his bloodstained cheek, then grabbing hold of Saryon's
hand, she led the way back down the spiraling tunnel. Scylla and I, half
carrying Joram, hastened after. He groaned with pain only once, when we first
started to move, then gritted his teeth and tightened his lips over his agony.
Behind us, we heard a savage howl and
a scream.
It occurred to me to wonder, just as
we left the area, what had become of Simkin.
I glanced back. There, lying on an
empty pile of silver robes, was a teddy bear. Its head was missing and so were
both of its arms. The orange ribbon that had been tied in a jaunty bow around
Teddy's neck lay limply across the body.
I hurried on, thankful that Eliza had
been too preoccupied with her father to see.
"It's very strange," said
Saryon, after we had traveled about a mile down the corkscrew tunnel, "but
this place seems familiar to me. And I know I've never been here in my
life."
"Not in this life, perhaps,
Father," said Scylla, "but who knows where you've been gallivanting
around in other lives?"
Saryon glanced back at her with a weak
smile, thinking she was joking and politely pretending to be amused, although
he must have been thinking that this was not the time for levity. Eliza was
endeavoring to find our way, using Scylla's flashlight as a guide, and paying
no attention to what was being said. Joram was too intent on combating his pain
to search for hidden meanings.
I alone realized that there might be
more to Scylla's statement than appeared. I glanced at her sidelong, with Joram
between us, and caught her looking at me, a smile on her lips. I could not
question her; my hands were occupied in supporting Joram.
I had no thought, then, of the truth.
I'm not certain I would ever have figured it out, but I began to see how a few
small pieces of the puzzle might fit together. I wished that Mosiah were here,
to see what he would have made of her peculiar statement.
But for all I knew, Mosiah might very
well be dead. We had heard nothing of him since we left. Our only sign that he
had lived long enough to perform his task was that we had not been overtaken by
the guards.
We continued on. Joram grew heavier as
his strength flagged and he relied more on us to support him. Scylla bore most
of the weight, but I had my share and my shoulders burned and ached with the
strain. I thought of the pain he must be enduring in silence, with no
complaint, and I felt ashamed. Resolutely, I put the thought of my own
discomfort out of my mind and trudged on.
Saryon came to a sudden halt. "I
don't like this," he said. "Something lives down here. Can't you
smell it? A dragon," he added, his brow furrowed. "A
Dragon of the Night."
"Something used to live
down here, Father," Eliza answered, flashing the light around the
smooth-sided, smooth-floored tunnel. "I'm not sure what it was, but it's
gone now. It must have died when the magic died. Why do you think it's a
dragon?"
"I don't know." Saryon was
perplexed. "The thought came to me, that's all." He was shrewd and he
had lived most of his life in magical Thimhallan. He looked at Scylla, his expression
puzzled and uneasy. He was beginning to take her joke more seriously.
"Perhaps we should wait here for Mosiah. Not travel any farther until we
find out what has happened to him. Are you certain we have to go deeper into
this awful place?"
"Yes, Father," said Eliza.
"I'm sorry, but we must go on. The Darksword is down here."
At this, Joram raised his head. His
pallor was frightening, the blood formed dark streaks over his face. He had
once again lapsed into unconsciousness, his feet dragged, his eyes closed.
Except that I could feel the beat of his heart beneath my arm, I might have
thought he had died. The word Darksword on his daughter's lips was
perhaps the only thing that could have roused him.
"Where is it?" he gasped,
and his voice was little more than a breath. "Is it safe?"
"Yes, Father," Eliza
answered, and her suffering for his suffering choked her. "It is safe. Oh,
Father, I am so sorry! I had no right-"
He was shaking his head. "I was
the one who had no right," he said, and then his head lolled. His eyes
closed and he sagged in our arms.
"Whatever happens, I have to
rest!" I signed urgently, afraid I would drop him.
Scylla nodded and we lowered him to
the cavern floor.
Painful warmth flooded through my
cramped shoulders. I bit my lips to keep from crying out.
"Is he going to be all
right?" Eliza asked fearfully, crouching down beside him. She smoothed the
black curly hair from his face, the hair that, but for the streaks of gray at
his temples, was the exact match of her own. "He looks so ill."
"We don't have much time,"
Scylla admitted. "Either for Joram or for ourselves and
the rest of those who are counting on us."
"I am confused," I signed.
"I have lost track of time—any time! How long do we have?"
"Until
"That's when the last ship leaves
the outpost?" Saryon asked.
Scylla gave him a strange look.
"The last ship has left," she replied coolly. "
"What?" My frantic gestures
revealed my fear and alarm. "How will we return the Darksword to Earth?
What good would it do? Why do we persist in this folly? We're all going to die
anyway!"
She was about to answer when the sound
of footfalls, moving rapidly, echoed down the tunnel. The noise silenced us
all. Scylla was on her feet, placing herself between us and whoever was coming
down the tunnel.
"Douse the light!" she
hissed.
Eliza shut off the flashlight. We
huddled together in the dark, our fear a living thing that seemed to take shape
and form around us. Then I heard a voice, a soft voice, Saryon's voice,
speaking to the Almin in prayer. His hand, strong and warm, closed over mine.
He was offering me comfort and a gentle reminder that our lives were being
guided, watched over, protected by one greater than ourselves. Though this
should all come to some terrible end, we would not be alone. I said a prayer
myself, asking for forgiveness for my lack of faith and strength to go on.
A figure lurched out of the darkness,
nearly ran headlong into Scylla. "What the—" came a voice.
"Mosiah!"
Scylla breathed a sigh in relief.
Eliza switched on the light.
Mosiah glared around at us. "What
the devil are you all doing?" he demanded angrily. "Having a picnic?
Why—"
He caught sight of Joram, lying
unconscious on the tunnel floor. "Oh," Mosiah said, and he shook his
head. His gaze shifted back to Scylla. "Is he dead?"
"No, but he's not doing
well," she answered guardedly, with a glance at Eliza.
"We can't wait. I took care of
the Technomancers, but more will be coming through the teleporter at any
moment. I could not prevent them from sounding the alarm. We must recover the
Darksword and get out of here quickly! You and I will carry him."
"You don't look able to carry
yourself," Scylla said as they bent together to lift up Joram. "Do
you have any Life left?"
"Not much." Mosiah grunted
from the exertion. He had changed back to his usual form, but the alteration
must have been a draining one. He looked exhausted to the point of dropping.
"Perhaps I could give you Life
again," I said, feeling guilty that I had failed them.
Saryon regarded me with amazement.
"You gave Mosiah Life, Reuven? How? When?"
"It will take too long to
explain, Father," said Mosiah. He and Scylla, supporting Joram between
them, started moving down the tunnel. He refused my offer, stating that I
should conserve my strength, for we were not out of this yet.
The Hch'nyv would be attacking
Thimhallan at
Of course, I should have faith, as
Saryon had silently counseled. But it was very hard for me to trust in the
Almin when reason and logic were so overwhelmingly against us.
I was trying to nurture hope's
flickering flame when I heard a sound that doused it utterly.
It was a sound I had heard before in this
tunnel, a sound I'd heard in that other life, a life that had come to such a
horrible end.
Stentorian breathing rumbled from the
cavern that was not all that far below us.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
"Here's to folly," Simkin announced, and together they tottered forward into the fiery illusions, the champagne glasses clinking along behind.
DOOM OF THE DARKSWORD
The
dragon," Mosiah said. "A Dragon of the Night." "But that's
impossible!" Saryon gasped. "The dragons were creations of the magic.
They must have all died when Life disappeared from Thimhallan."
"The Life didn't disappear,
Father. The Well was shattered, but the magic didn't escape, as we had
thought."
"We believe that the Well may
have been capped, Father," Scylla added.
"I don't believe there's a
dragon. There can't be," Eliza argued. "We were just down
there."
"If you remember, I said that
cave smelled occupied," Mosiah returned.
"But ... I still don't
understand. . . ." Saryon appeared bewildered. "How do you know that
a Dragon of the Night lives in that cavern? It could be anything! A bear,
maybe."
"A bear?
Yes, of course. Dear Teddy! Well, that explains it. Or doesn't, as the case may
be. As to the cavern, we've been there before. In fact, we've died there
before." Mosiah was looking directly at Scylla. "Haven't we, Sir
Knight?"
Scylla shrugged. "If you say
so." She rolled her eyes and, leaning over to me, whispered, "Humor
him."
"The Darksword is there,
too," Eliza reminded us. "We must return to the cavern to recover the
sword."
"We cannot challenge a Dragon of
the Night," Saryon protested vigorously. "They are terrible
creatures. Terrible!"
"The dragon is before us, but the
Technomancers are behind us," Mosiah pointed out. "We can't very well
go back."
At last, as I said, I was beginning to
have a glimmer of understanding. I touched Saryon's arm, to draw attention to
myself.
"You can charm the dragon,
Father," I signed.
"No," he returned hurriedly.
"Absolutely not."
"Yes," I repeated. "You
did it before, in the other life."
"What other life?" Saryon
stared at me in perplexity. "I charmed a dragon? I am certain I would
recall doing such a thing," he added more testily, "and I assure you
that I do not."
"If he's going to do it, he must
act swiftly," Mosiah warned. "While the sun is still shining. When
night falls, the dragon .will awaken and go out in search of food. It is
twilight now."
Eliza kept watch beside her father,
her attention divided between ourselves and him. She did not understand
completely what we were saying, but she understood the urgency and did not
interrupt us with demands for us to explain. She trusted us. I smiled at her
reassuringly.
"I tell you I know nothing about
charming dragons!" Saryon was shaking his head.
"You do," said Mosiah.
"You are the only one of us who does. I cannot."
"You are Duuk-tsarith\" Saryon
argued.
"But I was trained on Earth. The
only dragons I ever saw were created by special effects. I can't take time to
explain, but in an alternate time, Father, a time in which Joram died twenty
years ago, you came upon a Dragon of the Night—this very dragon, or so I
believe—and you were able to charm it. Think, Father! Lessons you learned at
the Font. All catalysts were taught the spells of the war wizards."
"I ... It's been so long. . .
." Saryon put his hand to his temples, as if they ached. "If I fail,
we would all die. Die most horribly."
"We know," Mosiah said.
I noticed in all this that Scylla kept
silent. She did not venture to persuade or argue. I could not yet understand,
but I was beginning to understand, if that makes any sense.
"Father Saryon." It was
Joram who spoke.
So intent had we been on our
discussion I had not noticed that he had regained consciousness. His head was
pillowed in his daughter's lap. She wiped the sweat from his brow, smoothed
back the damp hair, and watched over him anxiously, lovingly.
Joram smiled. He lifted his hand.
Saryon knelt and clasped Joram's hand to his breast. It was obvious to him, to
all of us, that Joram had very little time left to live.
"Father Saryon," he said,
and it took an effort for him to speak. "You were able to charm me. What
is a dragon, compared to that?"
"I will," Saryon said
brokenly. "I will . . . try. The rest of you . . . wait here."
He stood up and would have rushed down
the tunnel, then and there, if we hadn't stopped him.
"You cannot charm the dragon and
retrieve the Darksword at the same time," Mosiah pointed out. "The
Darksword would disrupt the charm."
"That's true," Saryon
admitted.
"I will recover the
Darksword—" Mosiah began.
"I will recover the
Darksword," said Eliza firmly. "It is my legacy."
A spasm of agony contorted Joram's
face. He shook his head, but he was too weak to argue or try to stop her. A
single tear tracked through the blood on his cheek. A tear
that was not wrung from him by his own physical pain, but by the pain of
regret, remorse.
Eliza saw the tear and gathered her
father close, hugging him to her. "Don't, Father!" She wept with him.
"I am proud to bear this! Proud to be your daughter. You shattered the
world. Perhaps it is left to me to save it!"
Kissing him, she rose quickly to her
feet. "I am ready."
I was afraid Mosiah would argue or try
to dissuade her. He regarded her intently for a moment, then he bowed.
"Very well, Your Majesty," he said. "I will go, and of course
Reuven will go as well. I may need my catalyst," he added.
I was filled with pride, so much that
it almost pushed out my fear. Almost. I could not forget the terror of the last
time we had faced the Dragon of the Night. The terror and pain of my own death.
Worse—the horror of seeing Eliza die. Resolutely, I trampled down the memory. I
would never have found the courage to stir a step otherwise.
"Someone must stay with my
father," Eliza said, looking at me. "I had hoped that Reuven—"
"I will stay with Joram,"
Scylla volunteered. She grinned at us. The ring in her eyebrow glinted.
"You're on your own now."
"I do not understand any of
this," Saryon said plaintively.
"You must have faith," I
signed to him.
"And you are impertinent to your
teacher," he said with a wan smile. He gave a bleak sigh. "Come,
then. We will go charm this dragon."
The Dragons of the Night loathe
sunlight to such an extent that even though they burrow down into the deepest,
darkest parts of Thimhallan they can find, they sleep during the daytime. This
dragon was asleep, to judge by its rhythmic breathing, but its sleep appeared
restless and shallow. We could hear the gigantic body move, scales scraping
against the rock floor. I recalled in that other life what the dragon had said
about the presence of the Darksword in its lair, how it had disturbed its rest.
Either that, or its waking time was very near.
I remembered the stench from my last
visit to this place. The smell seemed worse, this time. We all of us covered
our noses and mouths, to keep from retching. We brought no light with us, for
fear that even the beam of the flashlight might wake the dragon and arouse its
ire. Moving slowly and silently, feeling our way with our hands, we crept along
the last few yards of the tunnel. We rounded a corner, and came upon the
dragon's lair.
The diamond embedded in its forehead
shone with a cold, sharp brilliance. It did not illuminate. We could not see
the dragon. We could see nothing, not even each other, though we stood bunched
together, side by side.
The dragon's breathing reverberated
through the tunnel. It shifted its body again as we stood outside its lair, and
the floor shook as it flopped over on its side, its tail thrashing against the
wall. The diamond lowered, the dragon had settled its head on its side,
apparently. We stood in the darkness, immersed in fear and awe.
I could not have ventured inside that
cavern. I don't know where Saryon found the courage to do so. But then, where
had he found the courage to suffer himself to be turned into living stone?
"Wait here," he said to us,
his words no more than a breath. "I must do this alone."
He left us and walked into the cavern.
I could not see him, but I could hear his robes rustle and the soft padding of
his feet. His figure passed in front of me, blotting from my sight the light of
the diamond.
Eliza clasped my hand. I held on to
her tightly. Mosiah stood beside us, tense. Sometimes I could hear whispered
words and I guessed that he was rehearsing his magic in his mind. Not that it
would do us much good. We'd been through that before.
The Duuk-tsarithl Were they
here now as they had been here in that other time? Would they try to seize the
sword?
Taking hold of Mosiah's hand, I signed
my question with my fingers pressed against his palm. If he could not see my
words, at least he could feel them.
"I thought of that myself,"
he said back to me, his mouth against my ear. "I have sought my brethren.
They are not here."
At least that was one worry off my
mind.
I had not forgotten Saryon. I walked
with him in spirit every step of the way. The dragon snuffled and shifted once
again. A gleam of pale light beamed from a slit in its eyelids. My heart
stopped. Eliza gripped my hand so tightly that she left bruise marks on it, yet
I don't recall feeling any pain at the time.
Saryon halted, held still. The dragon
breathed a great sigh, and the eyelids closed. The light vanished. Those of us
in the cavern added our sighs to the dragon's.
Saryon moved forward once more. He must be
very close to the dragon's head now, I thought. I could see the diamond again,
since the dragon had changed position. The massive head was lying completely on
its side, resting on the jawbone. And then I saw a hand, Saryon's hand, looking
frail and fragile, silhouetted against the diamond's bright chill light.
The hand hesitated a moment. He must
be asking the Almin for strength, as I was praying to the Almin to protect him,
protect us all.
Saryon's hand touched the diamond.
The diamond flashed. The dragon
twitched, muscles contracting, a tremor passed through it. In the alternate
time the Dragon of the Night had been injured, caught out in full sunlight.
This dragon was probably very healthy and it was inside its dark lair. The
dragon made a rumbling sound, deep in its chest. Its claws scrabbled against
the floor.
"Now!"
Mosiah whispered urgently, though Saryon could not hear him. "What is he
waiting for? Cast the spell now!"
I cannot imagine what it would have
been like to have had my hand on the dragon's head, to feel that great beast
move beneath my fingers. I could not blame my master for faltering at this
juncture. His hand jerked back, the fingers clenched.
Mosiah took a step forward. Eliza pressed
her cheek against my arm.
The diamond moved. The dragon was
raising its head.
Saryon gave a great gasp,
that I could hear distinctly, and then his hand pressed down hard
against the diamond.
He spoke words that I didn't
understand. Words of power and authority. The dragon ceased to move. It might
have melded with the stone around us.
Saryon finished speaking the charm and
stepped back, removing his hand from the diamond.
This was the moment when we would know
whether we lived or died.
The dragon reared its head up off the
cavern floor. The eyes opened and the pale light that was like the light of a
gibbous moon bathed us.
"Do not look into the eyes!"
Mosiah cautioned loudly, loud enough for Saryon to hear.
The dragon spread its wings. I could
hear the rustle and the creaking of its tendons, and thousands of tiny,
sparkling deadly lights appeared in the cavern's darkness.
The dragon spoke, the voice vibrated
with fury, and I breathed easier.
"You are the master," it
said.
"I am," Saryon replied, his own voice firm. "You will do
as I command."
"I do so because I am constrained
to do so," the dragon answered. "Take care that you do not lose your
hold over me. What is it you want?"
"In your lair is an object which
we greatly value. We want to retrieve it safely and take it away with us. After
that, we will trouble you no more."
"I know of that object,"
said the dragon. "It is a sword of light. It hurts my eyes, destroys my
rest. Take it and be gone."
"A sword of light?"
Eliza whispered wonderingly.
"Eliza," Saryon called to
her, without turning his gaze away from the dragon. "Come and take the
Darksword."
"Go with her, Reuven," said
Mosiah.
I could not have stayed behind. We
walked forward, Eliza and I, into the dragon's lair. The light of the eyes
focused on us, flared around us.
Though spellbound and constrained not
to harm us, the dragon was tempting us to lift our gaze and meet its eyes,
hoping we would fall victim to the madness. The feeling was in my heart that it
would almost be worth the madness in exchange for a single glimpse of a
creature of such wondrous, cruel beauty.
To banish the temptation, I kept my
gaze on Eliza. She looked to the rock cairn that covered the Darksword.
"Make haste, my children,"
urged Saryon quietly.
Was he at last recalling that other
time? The time in which we were his children? I hoped he was. Though it had
ended in tragedy, I wanted him to know the love I bore him flowed from that
time, as well as my own. He was my father.
Reaching the rock cairn, Eliza and I
began to take it apart. We worked as swiftly as we could, lifting the rocks and
tossing them aside. At last, the Darksword came into view. It did not shine, as
I had almost expected from the dragon's words. It did not reflect the moonlight
of the dragon's eyes. It seemed, instead, to reflect the dragon's darkness.
Eliza took hold of the Darksword by the handle and raised it up.
"Cover it!" the
dragon shrieked, and the light from its eyes was hooded, plunging us into
darkness.
Hastily, Eliza wrapped the Darksword
in its blanket, which had been lying near it.
"Take it and get out!" The
dragon writhed and thrashed, as if it was in the most terrible pain.
"This
way!" Saryon called, his voice alone guiding us, for we could not
see.
Clasping hands, finding comfort in
each other's touch, Eliza and I advanced cautiously toward his voice. We tried
to hurry, but we were afraid of falling over the rocks, bones, and other debris
scattered around. The journey across the dragon's lair, with the great beast
roaring and lashing out so near us, was terrifying. Saryon's voice, calm and
steady, guided us through the nightmare.
"Here, I am here!" Saryon
cried, and his hands found us in the darkness, his arms gathered us to him.
"My children!" His embrace on us tightened and I knew then that he
had seen into that alternate time. "My children!" he repeated.
My heart swelled with love for him,
love that enhanced the love I felt for Eliza, expanded that love until it
filled me completely, admitted no room for fear. I was
no longer afraid of the darkness or the dragon, the Technomancers, or even the
Hch'nyv. The future might be filled with horror. I might never see the sunrise,
I might be dead by morning. But this moment, with this blessed feeling warm
inside me, would be enough.
Saryon's grip tightened still further.
I felt his body tense.
"Be careful," he warned
softly. "Someone is in here."
"Father," came
Mosiah's voice at almost the same moment. "Get out of there! Now!"
The dragon had ceased its pain-filled
roar. It lay still on the cavern floor, its eyes hooded, so that only a slit of
pale light shone from them. I could still sense its hatred of us, but that
hatred was now tempered with fear.
"Father!"
Mosiah's call was urgent.
"Wait," said Saryon quietly.
A figure stood before us in the middle
of the dragon's lair. Calm and relaxed, she might have been standing in our
living room back home. She took no notice of the dragon, who had pressed its
body back up against the wall, as far from her as it could manage.
"Mother!"
Eliza breathed.
Mosiah was beside us. "It could
be another trick!"
My first thought was that the
Technomancers must be very brave or very desperate to enact a charade before
such a dreadful audience as the Dragon of the Night. Then I realized that
desperate was an apt description of Kevon Smythe as we had last seen him.
Gwendolyn looked exactly as I had seen
her when we first met, except that the lines of care and worry had been
smoothed from her face. Her expression was serene. She had eyes for only her
daughter, and no Interrogator could have mimicked the love and pride with which
she gazed upon Eliza.
"It is my mother,"
Eliza said, her voice aching with longing. "I am sure of
it."
"Wait," Mosiah counseled.
"Don't go near. Not yet."
Remembering the horror of the last
meeting with the Interrogator, Eliza remained standing beside Saryon. She
wanted this to be real. Yet how could it? From where had Gwendolyn come? And
why had she come to us now, in the middle of the dragon's lair?
"I want you to meet someone,
Daughter," Gwen said.
She reached out her hand, reached into
the darkness, and another figure appeared, shimmering into view at Gwendolyn's
side. I was reminded of Simkin, for this second figure had the same watercolor,
transparent look to it that Simkin had exhibited when he wasn't playing at
being stuffed. Gwen led the figure by the hand, drew the figure close to us.
And then I recognized the person. I
gasped and looked wildly at Eliza. I even reached out and touched her, to make
certain she was real. Eliza stood beside me and Eliza stood before me, both at
the same time or, rather, one in one time and one in another. The one before me
I recognized as Queen Eliza. She wore the same blue riding habit, the same
circlet of gold glinted in her dark hair.
Mosiah sucked in his breath. Saryon
smiled wistfully, sadly. He kept his arm around Eliza, supporting her.
"What . . . what is this?"
Eliza, my true Eliza, cried brokenly. She stared at her reflection in time's
mirror. "Who is this?"
"You, my daughter," said
Gwendolyn. "You as you might have been in another time. She cannot speak
to you, for in her time she is dead. I alone can understand her words. She
wanted to prove to you, to all of you"—her gaze swept over every one of
us, lingered longest on Mosiah—"that everything you have experienced has
been real. That I am real."
"I don't understand!" Eliza
faltered.
"Look at yourself, Eliza. Look at
yourself and open your mind to the impossible."
Eliza stared long at the shimmering
figure and then she suddenly looked around at Saryon, who smiled and nodded yes
to her unspoken question. She next looked wildly at me and I signed, "I am
as you remember, in this time and the other."
Her lips parted, her eyes glistened.
Her gaze next went to Mosiah, who grudgingly and reluctantly inclined his
hooded head.
"I am your Enforcer, Your
Majesty," he said, a hint of irony in his voice.
"Your
Majesty. So Scylla called me. I never even noticed that until now. So some part
of me did know, even then," Eliza said softly, wonderingly, to herself.
"And now, my daughter,"
Gwendolyn said, "you must heed my instructions
and obey them. You must take the Darksword to Merlyn's tomb. Now. This moment.
It must be lying on Merlyn's tomb at
"Merlyn!"
Eliza was amazed. "Teddy kept talking about Merlyn. He said something
about giving the sword to Merlyn—"
"Oh, Blessed Almin!" Mosiah
snorted in disgust.
"But . . . Father. You don't
know, Mother!" Eliza went back to her point of main concern. "They've
poisoned him! I must give them the sword or Father will die."
"Take the sword to Merlyn's
tomb," Gwen repeated.
"Why?" Mosiah asked harshly.
"Why take it there?"
"Trust me, Daughter," said
Gwendolyn, ignoring Mosiah. "Trust yourself. Follow your heart."
A cry shattered the darkness. From
back in the tunnel, where she was guarding Joram, Scylla shouted, "Mosiah!
They're coming! Look out! I can't stop—" Her voice was cut short.
We heard scuffling sounds and then the
tramping of many pairs of booted feet. The dragon lifted its head, anger
rumbled in its chest. The eyes opened wider, the light that drove men to
madness gleamed more brightly.
Gwendolyn was gone and so was the
image of Eliza.
"Father!"
Eliza cried.
"No time!" Mosiah said
urgently, catching hold of her. "We have to find a way out. Simkin said
there was another exit. Father Saryon! The dragon! It must know another way. You
must command it to show us."
"What? Oh, dear, no!" Saryon
was alarmed and appalled. He cast the dragon a sidelong glance and shuddered.
"Not again. The spell is slipping. I can feel it."
"Father Saryon," Eliza
pleaded. She held the Darksword, wrapped in the blanket. "Mosiah is right.
This is our only chance. How else can we take the sword to the tomb in
time?"
Leaning down, he kissed her on the
forehead. "I could never deny you anything. Reuven used to complain that I
spoiled you. But then, you two were all I had."
Saryon left us. He walked over to
stand, once more, in front of the dragon. He kept his eyes lowered.
"Make certain the sword is
hidden," Mosiah said to Eliza. "You remember what happened the last
time."
Then it had been the Duuk-tsarith who
had attacked us. Then Eliza had wielded the Darksword and its power had broken
the spell. Outside, in this time, I could hear the footsteps coming nearer. I
wondered what had happened to Scylla and hoped with all my heart that she was
safe. I trusted that they would not hurt Joram any more than he'd been hurt
already. They needed him alive still, so long as his daughter was in possession
of the Darksword.
"Dragon," said Saryon.
"I command you. We are in danger. Help us to escape those who pursue
us."
"You are in danger, old
man," said the dragon, its lip curling to reveal hideous, yellowed, and
bloodstained fangs. "Your danger lies ahead of you, not behind."
The diamond's light was rapidly
dimming. As Saryon had warned, the spell was slipping. The dragon started to
crawl toward us. It began to lift the night-dark wings. I could see the sparkle
of the deadly stars.
Saryon drew himself up tall. I saw in
him now what I had seen in him before, in our living room, facing a king, a
general, and the dread leader of the Dark Cultists. His inner strength, his
love for us, his faith in his Creator shone brighter than the dragon's hideous
light.
"Dragon, you will obey me,"
said Saryon.
The diamond on the dragon's head
flared, glittered with brilliance. The dragon glared at him balefully, but it
was constrained by the charm's unseen force to lower its head. The Dragon of
the Night bowed before Saryon. The pale eyes were slits of enmity, but the
dragon kept them hooded.
"If you dare, old man, climb upon
my back."
"Quickly,
children!" Saryon urged. "Mosiah?"
"I will stay behind to cover your
escape," Mosiah said.
"But they'll kill you!"
Saryon cried.
"Come with them, Duuk-tsarith,'"
the dragon said, its voice grating. "I will deal with those who pursue
you. I feel the need to kill something!"
Mosiah did not wait to be asked
twice. I now trusted him. He was loyal to his word and would have defended us
to the death, but he still had hopes of obtaining the Darksword and was loath
to let it out of his sight.
By this time I was climbing up onto
the dragon. I followed Saryon, who appeared to have been riding dragons all his
life, though I know for certain he had never done such a thing. We crawled up
the bony structure of the enormous black wing, being careful—as he warned
us—not to step on the membrane or we might tear it. The dragon's body quivered
beneath us, as the ground in the vicinity of a volcano quakes from the pent-up
fire within. Saryon and I both helped Eliza, who would not relinquish the sword
to anyone, not even for a moment. We were settling on the dragon's bony back,
which proved extremely uncomfortable, Mosiah had just climbed off the wing and
onto the back, when the Technomancers in their silver robes entered the cavern.
"Hide your eyes!" Mosiah
shouted to us, and pulled his hood over his head.
I did as he ordered, covered my eyes
with my hands, but I could still see the white glare, so intense was the pale
light beaming from the dragon's eyes. The beast roared and reared its head and
lifted its wings, but even as it attacked it took care not to dislodge us, who
were seated on its back.
I heard dreadful, agonized screams.
Star bursts flashed on the backs of my closed eyelids. The screams ended very
suddenly.
The body beneath me began to move, to
ripple into motion. The wings creaked, the glow of the white light faded. A
rush of fresh air, cool and sweet smelling after the rank stench of the cavern,
struck me in the face. I opened my eyes. Before me was a gigantic opening, like
a huge chimney, large enough for the dragon to ascend.
We soared out and upward, the dragon's
wings beating slowly, carrying our weight without effort. We were nothing more
than annoying insects, clinging to its hide.
I looked up into the night sky and I
gasped.
It was filled with stars, more stars
than I remembered having seen when we first arrived. And then the truth hit me
a terrible blow, even as Mosiah put it into words.
"Those aren't stars. Those are
spaceships. Refugees. The last survivors from Earth. They have come here, the
final hope. The Hch'nyv are behind them."
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
Merlyn looked upon it with eyes that had seen centuries pass, chose this place for his tomb, and now lies bound by the Last Enchantment in the glade he loved.
FORGING THE DARKSWORD
We flew over the darkened
A few knew the truth, perhaps; knew that
the image showing up on their radar screens was a dragon. King Garald, Bishop
Radisovik, and General Boris would have recognized the creature. But they could
not know that we rode the Dragon of the Night. They had come here out of faith
and because this was the last place to run to. They could not know where we
were bound or upon what errand. For that matter, now that I thought of it, we
knew little more. Did the Technomancers know it all? Was this a trap? Had Gwen
and Queen Eliza been an illusion?
Mosiah thought so, apparently, but
then he was one who would always term the glass half-empty. I did not know what
to think. Gwendolyn had seemed so real, the love and affection for her daughter
had been genuine, of that I am certain. And how could the Technomancers have
conjured up an illusion of Eliza from an alternate time? When I thought of all
this, my spirit soared with the dragon.
But they could have knowledge about
that time, I realized, and my spirit plummeted to the ground. Kevon Smythe and
the Dark Cultists had been present in that time as well. Perhaps everything we
had experienced had been their doing.
I looked up into the sky again, the
sky that was pocked with life. I thought of the millions up there, afraid,
despairing, bewildered. All that remained of mankind, who had fled the only
home he'd ever known and embarked into space, a cold and lonely place to die.
The assault ships of the Hch'nyv would come soon, once their conquest of Earth
was assured. I imagined the sky bright with fire. . . .
Shivering, I turned my gaze away. When
I looked back, the sky was covered over with storm clouds and all was darkness.
I felt a certain amount of relief, hidden away from the pleading, trusting,
frantic gazes of those who were—all unknowing—-depending on us.
The ride was not a pleasant one. We
flew through a rain squall and were thoroughly soaked. The chill air rushing
over the dragon's wings set our teeth to chattering. We huddled together for
warmth, clung together to keep from falling off. The dragon's back was broad
and we sat between the wings, but the bones of the spine were sharp and dug
painfully into my backside, while my thighs soon ached from the uncomfortable
position. And though the dragon was under a geis to fly us to Merilon and the tomb
of Merlyn, the beast's enmity toward us was strong.
The dragon loathed our touch, our
smell, and, if the charm had failed, would have immediately rolled over and
dumped us to our deaths. As it was, the dragon would occasionally veer to one
side, forcing us to cling to its mane and scales to avoid sliding off before it
would reluctantly and slowly level off. I suppose it considered that if one of
us was clumsy enough to fall, that was our own concern and it could not be held
responsible.
Eliza grasped the Darksword. Mosiah
kept hold of her, as did Father Saryon. I hung on to a bony protuberance right
above the main tendon for the wings. I could see nothing below us, except when
the frequent flashes of lightning illuminated the ground and then it was only
for an instant. All I saw at first were thick stands of forest or the smooth
grass of the plains. Then I located a winding river.
"The Famirish," shouted
Saryon over the rush of air swirling past us. "We are getting close!"
We flew along the course of the
Famirish, the dragon sinking lower until it seemed to me that we must crash
among the tree-tops. The dragon knew its business, however, and though it came
perilously close, so close that I should think the treetops must have tickled
its belly, it never collided with any of them.
A flash of lightning more brilliant
than the rest spread across the sky in a blanket of flame. By its light, I
obtained my first glimpse of the city of
According to lore, when the ancient
wizard Merlyn had removed his followers from the persecutions of Earth and led
them to Thimhallan, the first place they came to was a grove of oak trees on a
plain between two ranges of mountains. Merlyn was so taken with the beauty that
he founded his city here and proclaimed that this grove would be his final
resting place.
He and the other conjurers and shapers
created a floating platform of delicately carved, translucent marble and
quartz, which they had called the Pedestal. Upon this Pedestal, which drifted
among the clouds, they built the city of
It was a sad sight, an oppressive
sight, reminding us all too clearly that man's works, no matter how glorious,
are but temporary, that there must come a time when the workman's hand falls,
forever stilled, and then Nature will do her best to erase all trace of him.
"Did Merlyn's tornb even survive,
Father?" Mosiah asked.
"Why, yes, don't you remember?
No, of course, you wouldn't." Saryon answered his own question. "I
forgot how grievously you were injured in the attack on the city. The grove
burned to the ground, but the tomb remained untouched. The firestorms swept
right over it. Some have later claimed that the grass around the tomb was not
even scorched, but that is not true." Saryon shook his head and sighed,
his memories sad ones.
Another flash revealed Eliza's face. She
was very pale, her expression one of awe, mingled with profound sorrow. She was
seeing, as I myself saw it, Merilon rebuilt, in that other lifetime, and
contrasting that image with the bleak, bitter reality.
I closed my eyes and I saw, in that
other time, Merilon. The floating platform was gone; no one was able to summon
up the powerful magicks needed to perform such a feat. The buildings— made of
ordinary stone, not crystal—stood on the ground. The palace was a fortress,
solid and thick-walled, made to withstand attacks, not play host to glittering
parties. The Grove of Merlyn had been replanted. A stand of
young oak trees, small but sturdy, kept guard over Merlyn's tomb.
I looked into that time and saw the
end. I saw the young oaks wither and die in the laser fire of the Hch'nyv. I
turned my gaze away and looked into that time no more.
The dragon began to spiral downward.
We could see nothing of where we were headed, because another of those fierce,
sudden storms closed in on us. Rain slashed my face, forced me to shut my eyes.
Lightning flared much too close, thunder cracked and boomed. I saw the ground
only when we were almost upon it, a flash of lightning illuminating wet grass
and the burned-out stumps of dead trees. The dragon was descending much too
fast it seemed to me, and I wondered if the beast might be going to kill
itself, and us along with it, thereby relieving itself of the geis and a foe at
the same time.
At the last possible moment, when I
was certain that we were going to crash headlong, the dragon lifted its wings,
gracefully swooped upward, and reached out for the ground with its powerful
hind legs. The landing was rough for us, though not for the dragon. We were
thrown forward by the force of the impact. I hit my head on the bony mane and
scraped my hands on the scales.
"I have brought you to the
tomb," said the dragon. "Now leave and trouble me no more."
We were only too happy to obey. I slid
down the dragon's rain-wet back and landed heavily on the ground. I helped Eliza,
who was still clutching the sword. She was shivering with the cold, her skirt
hung in sodden folds around her, her blouse clung to her breasts. Her hair was
a mass of wet, tangled ringlets, straggling over her face. She was grim,
composed, resolute, prepared to do whatever might be asked of her.
Saryon and Mosiah joined us. The
dragon reared up, its wings spread, the starlike deadly darts shining through
the lashing rain. The pale eyes flared.
"I have obeyed your
command," the dragon declared. "Release me of the spell."
"I do not release you,"
Saryon said, seeing the trick the dragon was attempting to play upon him.
"Once you return to your lair, the spell will be lifted."
The Dragon of the Night gave us a
parting snarl and a frustrated snap in the air with its jaws, then it leapt into the storm, wings beating, and soared
upward to disappear into the clouds.
Saryon slumped when the dragon was
gone, relieved of a terrible burden.
"Perhaps we should have ordered
the dragon to remain," Mosiah said, "or at least return if we called.
We might need to make a swift retreat."
Saryon shook his head. "My
strength was giving out. The dragon fought me every second. I could not have
held the spell much longer. Besides"—he looked around at where we stood in
the wind and the rain—"for good or for ill, our journey ends here."
"Where is the tomb?" Eliza asked, the first words she had spoken since we left the
dragon's lair.
"I'm not sure," said Saryon.
"It's all so different. . . ."
The storm was beginning to subside.
Thunder still rumbled, but now from a distance. The clouds remained overhead,
however, blotting out the starlight and the lights of the starships. Without
the flaring lightning, we were all but blind.
"We could stumble around for
hours searching for the tomb," Saryon said, frustrated. "And we don't
have hours. It's nearly
Mosiah spoke a word, lifted his hand.
A globe of soft yellow light appeared in his palm. I don't know when the sight
of something has been more comforting. It was as if he had reached back to
Earth and snatched a bit of sunshine from a summer day, brought it here to
cheer us and light our path. The light seemed even to ease the chill. I stopped
shivering. Eliza managed a sad smile.
"There is the tomb," said
Saryon, pointing.
The light shone on the ruins of the
oak trees that had once been the tomb's guardians. It was a dismal sight until,
moving forward, I saw where several thin, supple
saplings, growing from the seeds of their parents, were preparing to take over
the guardianship duties.
The tomb, made of pure white marble,
stood in the center of the circle of trees. The rest of the grove was overgrown
with plant life run amok, but no plants had come near the tomb. Vines creeping
that direction twined away, went around it. The grass had grown tall, but the
blades bent away, as if they would not, from respect, touch it.
Mosiah held the light high, for us to
see. "I remember when I first came here," he said quietly. "I
felt very peaceful. This was the only part of Merilon where I was truly at
home. I am glad to know that, though much has changed around it, the feel of
the place remains the same."
"It is a blessed place,"
said Saryon. "Merlyn's spirit remains."
"Now that we are here, what
should I do?" Eliza asked. "Should I lay the Darksword on the tomb
or—"
She caught her breath. I did the same,
both of us having seen the same thing at the same time.
Something already lay on the tomb, a
dark form against the tomb's whiteness.
"I knew it!" Mosiah
muttered, with a bitter oath. "This was a trap. We—don't! Eliza! Stop!"
He reached out to grasp hold of her
but he was too late. Her loving eyes had seen clearly what was only a vague
shadow to the rest of us. With a wild, stricken, hollow cry, Eliza ran toward
the tomb. Reaching the marble sarcophagus, she flung the Dark-sword down onto
the wet grass. Hands outstretched, sobbing, she threw herself on the body that
lay on the tomb's cold white surface.
The body was Joram's.
Mosiah paid no attention to the body
on the tomb. His responsibility was the Darksword and he hastened to retrieve
it, where it lay in the grass, a thing of ugly darkness, not illuminated by his
magical light. He had his hand almost on it when he halted.
"Scylla!"
Mosiah shone his light upon her.
It was not surprising we had not
noticed her earlier. She was a huddled mass, leaning against the tomb. Blood
covered one side of her face. She opened her eyes and looked up at Mosiah.
"Flee!" she warned, with a
gasping breath. "Take the Darksword and—"
"Too late for that, I'm
afraid."
A man clad in white robes emerged from
the shadows of the charred oaks. Mosiah made a dive for the Darksword. A beam
of light flared out from the darkness, struck Mosiah in the chest, slammed him
back against the tomb. He slid down it, collapsed onto the wet grass.
Bending down, Kevon Smythe picked up
the Darksword.
"A pity you came too late, my
dear," he said, speaking to Eliza. He did not even glance at the two
wounded people at his feet. "We had the antidote all prepared, but as you
can see, it will do your poor father little good now.
His last words were to you. He said he forgave you."
I lunged at the smug, triumphant man.
I had no weapon, but I think—I know—I could have strangled him.
I did not go far. Strong hands caught
hold of me, hands covered in silver gloves. They affixed a silver disk on my
breast. Pain tingled through my body and I found myself unable to move. Just to
breathe was a struggle. My limbs were paralyzed.
They attached silver disks to Saryon,
who stood near me, and to Mosiah. I was glad to see that they feared him, for
it meant that he was not dead. Scylla's hands remained free. Her feet were
bound by some type of metal restraints that clamped over her combat boots.
Weakly, she pushed herself into a sitting position, and I realized that she
could not move the lower portion of her body. She looked up at Eliza.
"Forgive me ... Your
Majesty," Scylla said softly. "I ... failed you. I failed him."
Eliza said nothing. I don't believe
she even heard. She was lost in her grief. Her head lay on her father's still
breast, her arms cradled him. She urged him to come back to her by every term
of endearment, but he could not respond, not even to her loved voice.
"Bring the mother," Smythe
called. "We might as well have the entire family."
A Technomancer emerged from the
shadows of the burned trees, dragging Gwendolyn by the arm. She was disheveled,
her clothes stained and torn, but she did not appear to have been harmed.
The image we had seen in the dragon's
lair must have been a trick, I thought. Yet even now, with proof at hand, I
doubted. I had seen the love in her eyes. No disguise, however clever, could
have feigned that. Her first concern was for her grieving daughter.
Gwendolyn put her arms around Eliza,
who sobbed against her mother's breast.
"Oh, Mother, it is all my fault!"
"Hush, child!" Gwen smoothed
Eliza's black curls, the curls that were so like her father's. "It would not
have mattered. If you had not taken the Darksword, your father would have used
it and they would have killed him. Your father loved you, Eliza, and he was
very proud of you."
Eliza shook her head, unable to talk.
Gwen continued to soothe her.
"Your father is well, now, child.
At long last, he is well and he is happy."
Silence fell, a silence broken only by
Eliza's lessening sobs. I glanced worriedly at Saryon. His body trembled with
the enormity of his own emotion. Tears slid unchecked down his cheeks. He could
not lift his hand to wipe them away.
Kevon Smythe stood before us, holding
the Darksword. His lip curled slightly. "An ugly thing, isn't it?"
"You're no beauty yourself."
I knew that voice. Simkin!
I looked about expectantly, hopefully,
my eyes searching the darkness.
Nothing appeared, not a teapot, not a
stuffed bear, not a washed-out, watercolor transparency of the foppish young
man.
I began to doubt myself. Had I really
heard the voice? Had anyone else heard it? Smythe was still gazing triumphantly
at the sword. The Technomancers, who outnumbered us at least three to one, were
at ease, relaxed. Why not? Their captives were completely immobilized. Scylla
was concerned with Mosiah, who was starting to regain consciousness. Gwen and
Eliza comforted each other. Saryon wept for the man that had been dearer than a
son.
I must have imagined it, I thought,
despair closing in on me.
"It is almost
"Yes, thank you for reminding me.
I will take the sword to the meeting place. Once I hand it over to the
Hch'nyv—"
"You'll be a fool if you
do," Scylla told him. "They will never keep their bargain with you.
They will allow no humans to remain alive."
"On the contrary, they appear
quite well disposed toward us," Smythe countered smoothly. "Perhaps
because we have shown them how we can be of use to them."
"What are your orders while
you're away, sir?" the Technomancer asked. "What do we do with these?"
The silver-gloved hand gestured, included all of us. "Kill them?"
"Not all of them," Smythe
replied after a moment's thought. "Hand the Enforcer over to the
Interrogators. He'll soon be glad to die. Turn the girl and her mother over to
the Interrogators as well. Joram must have told them something about how he
forged the Darksword, where he discovered the darkstone, and so forth. They may
yet be of use to us."
I bent every ounce of my strength, my
will, into attempting to break free. I focused all my energy upon lifting my
hand, to tear the paralyzing disk from my chest. I could not move so much as my
little finger.
"As for the priest and the mute
and the CIA agent or whatever she is," Smythe continued, "we will
give them to the Hch'nyv, as a symbol of our good faith. The rest of you, make
the arrangements for the first of those refugee ships to land. Go aboard and
start the culling process. You know those we want: those who are young, fit,
and strong. Pull out the elderly, children below an age where they might be of
use, and any who are sick or handicapped. They will be given to the Hch'nyv, as
we agreed. Also remove any magi who possess Life and who refuse to join our
ranks. Execute them immediately. Once they are back on their homeland, they
might be a danger to us."
Smythe held up the Darksword, his two
hands clasped just beneath the hilt. "Now that the Darksword is
mine—"
"Am I yours?" cried
the sword in a mocking voice. "Oh, this is the happiest day of my life!
Give us a hug, snookums!"
The Darksword began to wriggle and
writhe. The bulbous head atop the hilt nodded back and forth, the
crosspiece—that was like two arms—waved up and down. The blade twitched this
way and that. Smythe stared wildly at the undulating sword, clutching it as he might
have clutched a snake which he fears will bite him if he lets it fall.
The crosspiece arms elongated. The
bulbous head expanded, the hilt became a neck, the blade transformed into the
body of a man not old, not young, with a face like a fox wearing a silky beard.
He was dressed all in orange, from his feathered hat to his velvet doublet to
his shapely legs and glittering shoes.
The astonished Smythe still held on to
Simkin—a solid, flesh-and-blood Simkin—who laughed and, flinging his arms
around Smythe, gave him a smacking kiss on the lips.
"Did you mean it? Did you truly
mean it? Am I yours?" Simkin asked, holding Smythe at arm's length and
regarding him with grave solemnity.
"Seize him!" Smythe shouted
in rage, and struck at Simkin with his hands.
"Wrong answer," said Simkin
softly.
A Technomancer ran forward, fixed one
of the silver paralyzing disks onto the orange velvet doublet.
"Why, how
kind!" Simkin regarded the disk with an appraising frown, then looked up at the Technomancer. "But I don't think
it goes with my outfit." Casually, he plucked off the silver disk and
placed it neatly on the breast of the startled Technomancer.
The man's body jerked,
went rigid.
"Tell me what you have done with
the Darksword," Smythe demanded, almost choked with rage, "or I'll
order them to shoot! You'll be dead before you can draw your next breath."
"Fire away," said Simkin
with a yawn. He leaned against the tomb and stared very hard at his
fingernails. "What was that, Smythe? The Darksword? I'll tell you exactly
where it is. It is being guarded by a dragon, a Dragon of the Night. You might
be able to recover it, but not before
Smythe gnashed his teeth in fury. "Shoot
him!"
Silver robes shimmered and coalesced.
Each Technomancer held a sleek, shining silver handgun.
A beam of blinding light slashed
through the darkness. It did not hit Simkin, but struck the tomb right next to
him. The marble exploded, fragments of rock flew through the air. A second beam
of laser flared. Simkin caught the light in his hands. Molding the laser light
as if it were clay, he made it into a shining ball, and flung it up in the air.
The ball transformed into a raven, which took wing, flew once around Simkin's
head, then fluttered down to perch on the tomb. The raven began to clean its
beak with a claw.
Kevon Smythe's face was mottled
red and white. Saliva flecked his lips. "Shoot him!" he tried
to command again, but he was so hoarse with fury and fear that his lips formed
the words but no sound came out.
"Oh, I say. I find this quite
fatiguing," said Simkin languidly. He waved an orange silk handkerchief
and the Tech-nomancers' handguns changed into bouquets of tulips. The silver
disk fell from my breast onto the ground, where it turned into a mouse and
scampered off into the grass. I could move again, breathe again.
Scylla reached down, plucked off the
ankle manacles, as she might have plucked off a pair of shoes. She assisted
Mosiah to stand. He was very pale, but fully conscious and alert. He regarded
Simkin with narrowed eyes, not trusting him. Saryon was freed as well. His
expression was troubled. Simkin was having a good time, playing with us all,
not just the Technomancers. Certainly, it appeared that he was on our side, but
we had no way of knowing how long that might last, especially if he grew bored.
Right now, though, he was simply having fun. The Technomancers produced other
weapons: stasis grenades, morph guns, reaper scythes, only to have them
transformed into objects strange, useless, and grotesque—anything from
saltshak-ers to bananas, clock radios, and pink gin fizzes adorned with tiny
umbrellas. The magic burst around us in a dazzling array like a fireworks show
gone berserk.
I began to fear I was losing my mind
and I was not surprised to see some of the Technomancers bolt and run.
In the midst of all his foolery,
Simkin caught sight of Eliza. She stood near her mother, staring at him in
bewildered astonishment.
He ceased his magic show. Doffing his
feathered hat, he extended his leg, and made a graceful bow. "Your
Majesty." Rising, he replaced the hat at a jaunty angle on his head and
asked, "Do you like my outfit? I call it Apocalypse Apricot."
Eliza looked dazed. The sight of
Simkin emerging from the Darksword had shocked her from her grief. But she
didn't know what to make of this. Like the rest of us, she wondered if he
brought victory or if he was fixing the lock and seal on our doom.
"Who are you?" Kevon
Smythe demanded.
"A pocket of residual
magic," said Simkin with a sly smile. "That's the problem, isn't it?
You don't know me. You and your kind never did. Oh, you tried to manipulate me.
You tried to use me. But it never truly worked, because you never really
believed in me."
Simkin turned on his fancy orange
heel. He gave the raven a pat on the head and smoothed its feathers, to which
affectionate gesture the bird answered with a rude croak. Grinning, Simkin
walked around the marble tomb to stand at Joram's head.
We watched him in silence. None of us
moved, not Eliza nor Saryon, not Mosiah, Smythe, nor the Technomancers who
still had nerve enough to remain. Simkin held us all in thrall.
He gazed down at Joram's ashen face
that was still and cold as the marble on which he lay. Simkin ran his fingers
through Joram's black curls, carefully arranged them on the dead man's
shoulders.
"He believed," Simkin said.
"He could make no use of me whatsoever. I betrayed him, I mocked him, I used
him. He shattered a world to free me, he gave his life to protect me. What I do
now, I do for him."
Again, Simkin transformed, shriveling
and shrinking, withering in upon himself. He was, once again, the black and
unlovely Darksword. Except that this time I noted the sword had a flashing
orange jewel embedded in the hilt.
The Darksword placed itself across
Joram's chest.
A wind rose from the west, strong and
biting cold. Above us, in the night sky, the storm clouds blew away, torn to
shreds by the wind. The light of star and starship glittered white against the
darkness. And then the wind died. The air was still.
All waited, stars and wind and ourselves.
Scylla stretched out her hand.
"You can wake up now, Joram. Hurry. It's nearly
Joram slowly opened his eyes. He
looked first at Scylla.
She nodded. "All is well."
I knew then that my vague
understandings had been right. She was the one who had sent us
hopscotching through time. She was the one who had brought all this about. She
was an agent, as she had claimed, but she did not work for the CIA or the FBI.
She was an agent of God.
Joram turned his head, looked over at
Gwen and Eliza.
Gwen smiled, as if she had been a
party to the charade. I saw then, gathered around her, shadowy figures,
hundreds of them. The dead. She had once spoken for them and they had not
forsaken her. She had escaped capture by the Technomancers. The dead had
rescued her. The vision we had seen in the dragon's lair was true.
Eliza gasped, wanting to believe, yet
not daring to believe.
"No!" Kevon Smythe cried,
half-strangled. "It can't be! You were dead!"
" There will be born to the royal
house one who is dead but will live, who will die again and live again,' " Joram quoted. He sat up, hearty and vigorous, and
jumped down from the tomb.
"Quidquid
deliqusti. Amen," said the Darksword.
Joram laid the Darksword on Merlyn's
tomb.
A man appeared beside the tomb. He was
tall, with short-cut white hair and a gray, grizzled beard. He wore armor of an
ancient design over chain mail. He bore no weapon, other than a staff of oak
twined with holly.
Reaching down, he clasped his hand
around the Darksword and picked it up.
"You're no Excalibur," he
said, "but you'll do."
"Thank you," the sword said
coldly.
The old man held the sword high in the
air and spoke words long forgotten. Light began to shine from the sword, a
light that was blinding to some, for Smythe cried out in pain and flung his
arms over his head. His followers clapped their hands over their eyes, lowered
their heads, unable to look.
I could not take my eyes away.
The light expanded, spreading outward,
banishing the darkness. A globe of light surrounded the tomb, and then a globe
of light surrounded those of us standing near the tomb. The light flowed
outward, to the grove, the broken city of
The light lit the heavens, encompassed
the starships.
The light lifted us up.
I stood in a radiant globe that was
bearing me upward. Looking down, I saw the dark rain-wet grass below my feet. I
saw Smythe gazing up in wonder and horror; seeing his own doom swarming out of
the skies to claim him. Thimhallan, a world founded by exiles, fell away from
me.
We would be exiles ourselves, refugees
fleeing to some new world, lit by some far distant star.
But we bore the magic with us.
EPILOGUE
Having
read and reviewed my manuscript, Saryon suggests that I include a detailed
explanation of our time "hopscotching," for fear that many of my
readers may be confused. Certainly, as he said, it was confusing enough just
living through it. When Scylla explained it to me later, after we had settled
ourselves in our new world, it made much more sense. I have therefore included
her descriptions of the alternate time lines in an appendix, which follows.
I have written before about the
various Mysteries of Life that existed on Thimhallan. There were nine of them,
seven of them which existed in the world during Joram's lifetime. Two of the
Mysteries—that of Time and that of Spirit—were lost during the Iron Wars. It
was believed that all the practitioners of these Mysteries died. That was not
the case. Scylla herself was of the Seventh Mystery, that of Time. She was a
Diviner.
Possessing the ability to look into
the future, as well as into the past, the Diviners were said to be closest to
seeing the Mind of God.
"We do not view the future as one
long path," Scylla told me. "Rather, we see it as several paths
branching off a main road. Mortals can walk but one path at a time, the paths
of their choice. The rest are alternate futures, what might have been."
The Diviners looked into the future
and saw the Hch'nyv. They saw the ultimate defeat of Earth Forces, the
eradication of human life from the universe.
"That existed in all paths,"
said Scylla. "All except one and that in only one of his many paths. If
Joram could come to the tomb of Merlyn on the very last night at the very last
second of the very last minute of the very last hour and in that second present
the Darksword to Merlyn, the greatest of all magi would be able to cast a spell
that would save humankind from destruction, transport them to a new world.
"Unfortunately, every path we
took to reach that second ended in disaster.
"We generally do not meddle in
time, but this was critical. There was a chance, a slim one, but that chance
could be obtained only by a manipulation of times—of jumping between times. It
would be tricky, for the participants must be rescued from one time before they
died and transported to another. The four of you had to be dropped down in the
middle of alternate lives you never knew you had been leading.
"It was imperative that two of
you—you, Reuven, and Mosiah—recalled the alternate time, even though it would
confuse you, for you had to be able to take what you learned in one and
transfer it to another.
"As for Eliza and Father Saryon,
the tasks each had to perform were so dangerous that I deemed it best, for
their own peace of mind, if neither knew of the alternate time. Such knowledge
might cause them to hesitate at a critical moment. Also, the fact that they
were so comfortable in their own times helped you and Mosiah to adapt more
quickly."
Scylla grinned at me. "Better to
have two of you confused than all of you."
That depends on how you look at it, I
suppose.
And this, I believe, wraps up my
story. I must put my manuscript aside now, for it is my wedding day. It has
been a year to the day that we have spent on this wonderful new world and Eliza
and I are marking the anniversary with our wedding.
Her father, Joram, has accepted our
union, though of course he does not consider me at all good enough for his
daughter. He will never love me, but I think he is at least beginning to like
me a little. He says that he sees much of Father Saryon in me and he smiles his
dark smile when he says this, so that I believe it to be a compliment. Most of it, anyway.
In Gwendolyn, I have found the mother
I never knew. She has learned sign language for my sake and we spend a part of
each day in study, for she is teaching me much I need to know about how she
uses Life. Magic is abundant on this new world of ours. Even we catalysts can
use it.
All but Father
Saryon. And Joram.
He will not even try, though both Gwen
and Eliza tease him to do so. He is content with himself as he is, which must be the greatest blessing to come to him in
this lifetime.
As for Scylla and Mosiah, they were
married almost as soon as we arrived in our new part of the universe. Theirs is
an interesting and exciting life, if dangerous. For, just as there are dark and
shadowed parts to the human heart, so there are dark and shadowed parts to the
world of our creation.
Father Saryon is, at last, truly happy
and content. He is spending his time formulating a new theory of relativity,
having figured out where Einstein went wrong on the last one.
As for Simkin, we have not seen him
since we left Thimhallan.
But I always look twice at anything
orange. . . .
APPENDIX
This was taken from Scylla's description of our "time hop-scotching," as Mosiah so inelegantly put it. I have written out each of the three time lines involved. You can see where they have been cut and spliced in my story.
THE FIRST TIME LINE
The Darksword is forged. Joram goes Beyond and
is gone for ten years. He comes back to Thimhallan to warn of Menju the
Sorcerer, a Dark Cultist (one of the blood-doom knights) who has plans to
attack Thimhallan. Earth Forces attack. Joram goes to the
The Darksword is recovered by the
grieving Father Saryon, who rescues Gwen and flees with her to the Font. Earth
soldiers attack the Font, and some of the catalysts are killed. Many more are
able to hide in the numerous catacombs and tunnels. Here Saryon finds a
five-year-old boy whom he names Reuven, crouched near the bodies of his dead
parents. Saryon rescues the child and takes him along with Gwen to safety.
Gwen continues in her madness, only
now she is happy for she can talk to Joram, who has become one of the dead. She
longs to join him and remains among the living only to give birth to their
daughter, Eliza. Gwen dies soon after. Saryon is left to raise Eliza and
Reuven. Keeping Eliza's identity a secret, Saryon flees with the children to
Zith-el.
The armies of
Earth win. Menju the Sorcerer plans to take over Thimhallan. Fearful of attack
from the magi, he orders that the Well of Life be sealed. The source of magic
is shut off, except from a chosen few—Menju and the other Dark Cultists. Magic
dies in Thimhallan. The people are forced to learn to live without it. They
must rebuild their cities and they turn to the Sorcerers to help them.
A schism arises among the Dark Cults.
Menju is put on trial before the Sol-t'kan. He is found guilty of
innumerable crimes, the main one being that he intended to rule Thimhallan
alone, without offering to share any of its resources with his brethren. Menju
is put to death. Kevon Smythe takes over rulership of the Dark Cultists.
Smythe travels to Thimhallan.
Saryon discovers that the Dark
Cultists are searching for the Darksword. Guided by the Almin, he ventures into
the Zoo, which has been damaged in the assault on Zith-el. The magical
boundaries that surrounded the Zoo have been destroyed, its creatures roam
free. Saryon comes across the lair of a Dragon of Night. The creature was
stunned during the attack on Zith-el. Having been caught outside in the light,
it is comatose.
Saryon charms the dragon, who swears
its loyalty to him. Saryon leaves the Darksword with the Dragon of Night,
telling it that it should give the sword only to himself or the heir of Joram,
Eliza. Bound by the charm, the dragon agrees. Saryon returns to Zith-el,
continues to live there with his adopted children, Eliza and Reuven.
Smythe was going to put Prince Garald
to death, but foreseeing his doom, the Prince fled Sharakan before the soldiers
could capture him. He and his followers hid out in the Outlands, always on the
run from the Technomancers. Garald dreams of driving Smythe from Thimhallan,
but without magic, there is little he can do against the powerful
Technomancers.
At this juncture Simkin returns from
his travels to Earth. Garald accuses Simkin of betraying Joram and orders him
put to death.
Simkin bargains for his life. He knows
of a source of magic, if Garald is interested.
The Well of Life is sealed, but Simkin
reveals that there is a tap, used by Smythe and his people to renew their own
magic. In a daring raid, Prince Garald, his friend James Boris, Mosiah, and
their knights steal into the Well and, following a swift, bitter battle, unseal
the Well.
Magic is once again released into
Thimhallan. Garald forces Smythe and his Technomancers to retreat to Earth.
Garald's one worry is the Darksword.
He knows that Smythe is searching for it and fears that if the Technomancers
find it, they will use it to once more rule the world. Garald believes that
Saryon knows where the Darksword is hidden. He finds Saryon and his
wards—Reuven and Eliza. Garald is struck by Eliza's beauty and guesses her
parentage. Saryon reveals her true identity. Garald asks about the Darksword.
Saryon is evasive.
Garald puts Joram's daughter, Eliza,
on the throne of Mer-ilon. Merilon and Sharakan are allies. Bishop Vanya has
died. Cardinal Radisovik has been made Bishop and he decrees that Father Saryon
should be Eliza's adviser until she comes of age. Father Saryon accepts this
task reluctantly, thinking himself un-suited. He leaves Reuven behind at the
Font, in training as a catalyst.
Magic is restored, but it is weak.
Though the barrier surrounding Thimhallan is rebuilt, magic is found to be
seeping out of it and there doesn't appear to be anything anyone can do to stop
it.
The people live on a combination of
sorcery and steel. The Duuk-tsarith are the wizards, they being the ones
with the most power left in magic. Prince Garald trains more knights to guard
the realm.
Times are difficult. Though at first
Garald was viewed as a savior, he has come to be reviled. Smythe, in exile on
Earth, has his followers upon Thimhallan and they foment unrest among the lower
classes, foretelling the coming of the end of the world unless Smythe is
permitted to return to save it.
The Hch'nyv have
attacked outposts and are closing in on Earth. Smythe is secretly plotting with
the Hch'nyv, agreeing to give them Earth if he is given Thimhallan. The Hch'nyv
have no intention of honoring the agreement, planning to kill Smythe as soon as
he hands over the Darksword, which their own Diviners have warned them means
ultimate defeat.
Taking the form of an angel, Scylla
appears to Bishop Radisovik and warns him of a great doom coming to all peoples
on Earth and Thimhallan. The Darksword must be taken to the tomb of Merlyn and
this must be done by Joram's descendant, Queen Eliza. Radisovik informs King
Garald. At the same time a messenger arrives from General Boris, telling of the
Hch'nyv's approach. Garald is convinced of its truth.
Garald sends the Duuk-tsarith for
Father Saryon. Garald explains their desperate situation and begs Saryon to
reveal the location of the Darksword. Saryon at length agrees, but he will give
it into the hands only of the heir. Garald gives his word of honor that this
will happen.
More and more people are being drawn
under Smythe's sway. Mobs roam the countryside. Eliza, guarded by her knights,
travels to Zith-el. On the way, the carriage is attacked. Alerted ahead of
time, the Queen; her house catalyst, Reuven; her Enforcer, Mosiah; and one of
her knights, Scylla, sneak in the side gate.
They are met in the forest by Father
Saryon, who guides them to the cave of the Dragon of Night.
The dragon recognizes Saryon, who
introduces Eliza. She goes forward to recover the sword. As she picks it up Duuk-tsarith
appear in the cavern. They do not believe Radisovik's vision of the angel,
they think that the Hch'nyv are part of a plot designed by the Technomancers.
The Duuk-tsarith have deposed King Garald and taken up rulership of the
world. They demand the Darksword.
Eliza raises the sword to defend
herself. The Darksword begins to draw Life from the Duuk-tsarith. The
sword's null-magic breaks the charmed hold Saryon has on the dragon.
The Dragon of Night kills Eliza and
everyone in the cave. The dragon hurls the Darksword into the deepest part of
the River Famirish.
The Hch'nyv destroy
Earth and Thimhallan. The human race is extinct.
THE SECOND TIME LINE
Saryon and Reuven travel to Thimhallan from
Earth to meet Joram. They warn him of the coming of the Hch'nyv. Saryon tries
to persuade Joram to return to Earth with his family.
Fearing that this is a trick to steal
the Darksword, Joram refuses.
His daughter, Eliza, steals the
Darksword during the night. She leaves the house, intending to take the sword
to the military outpost, hand it over to the people of Earth. Reuven sees her
leave and, realizing her danger, goes after her.
The Technomancers arrive, confront
Joram, and demand that he hand over the Darksword. Joram seeks the weapon in
its hiding place, discovers that it is gone. Eliza is gone as well. Joram
realizes what has happened. He battles the Technomancers and is joined in his
fight by Mosiah, who has been keeping Joram and his family under guard.
The Technomancers capture Joram and
Father Saryon. They are about to capture Gwen, but she is rescued by the dead,
who take her away to their realm.
Scylla finds Reuven and Eliza. They
return to the house, discover Mosiah, and hear that Joram has been captured by
the Technomancers. Smythe appears and tells Eliza that he will exchange her
father's life for the sword. She is to meet him in Zith-el, where the
Technomancers have their headquarters.
Scylla, Eliza, and Mosiah travel to
Zith-el, accompanied by Simkin, in the form of a teddy bear.
Eliza and her escort reach the gate.
An Interrogator, disguised as Gwen, tricks Eliza into giving up the Darksword.
Mosiah recognizes the Interrogator,
seizes the Darksword, and hurls it into the gate. He, Reuven, and Eliza enter
the gate and run straight into the arms of the waiting Technomancers.
In the ensuing battle, Eliza is
killed. The Technomancers seize the Darksword. They transport it and their
prisoners to Earth.
Despondent over the death of his
beloved daughter, blaming himself, Joram dies of his wounds on the trip back.
The Hch'nyv attack Earth. Kevon Smythe
hands over the Darksword, expects his life to be spared.
It isn't.
The Hch'nyv destroy
Earth and Thimhallan. The human race is wiped out.
THE THIRD TIME LINE
As you know, having read the book, Scylla
managed, by jumping between time lines, to create a third time line, one in
which we had a chance to survive. Simkin was the key and Scylla admitted that
she herself didn't know until the very end whether he would help us or blithely
cast us all aside.
"We were fortunate that the
Technomancers lost no opportunity to insult him. As he told Smythe, they
didn't believe in him," Scylla said. "In the end, that's why he
decided to help."
Not even she knew, or so she claims,
that Simkin had taken the form of the Darksword. But thinking back, I realize
now that was why the dragon complained so bitterly of the sword's bright light,
hurting its eyes. The dragon could see more than we could, apparently.
As for the Darksword itself, does it
still lie in some cave back on flame-ravaged Thimhallan?
We will not discover the answer in our
lifetime, but who knows? Perhaps, when thousands of years have passed and the
Hch'nyv have been vanquished by some more powerful race, one of our descendants
might read this book of mine and return to Thimhallan, to Zith-el, to the cave
of the dragon. . . .