The Wizardwar

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The Wizardwar Page 2

by Elaine Cunningham


  She heard the warehouses’ stout oaken doors explode like lightning-struck trees. A chorus of elven song surged, then faded as freed prisoners fled into the surrounding forest Joyous tears spilled from Kiva’s eyes, though she herself did not hold much hope of rescue.

  The tower’s doors flew open and crashed into the wall. Two enormous gargoyles, similar in appearance to the water demon, stalked into the room. They took up ambush positions on either side of the open door.

  After a moment of stunned disbelief, the apprentices quickly armed themselves with wands or fireball spells. One young man conjured a crimson lightning bolt and held it aloft like a ready javelin. Even the tower itself prepared for invasion. Bright lines of fire raced through the cracks between the marble ties, gathering power that would erupt in geysers of random, killing flame. Stone carvings stirred to life. Winged serpents peeled away from the ceiling’s bas-relief and spiraled heavily downward. Black marble skeletons wrenched free of the grimly sculpted tangles that passed for art.

  A hush fell over the tower as the captives awaited the coming battle with a mixture of dread and hope.

  Up, and quickly!

  The silent command rang in Kiva’s mind like an elven battle cry. Perplexed expressions on the faces of the other captives suggested the message had come to all. There was powerful magic in the silent voice, magic untouched by the necromancer’s malevolent amusement. That was enough for Kiva.

  Hope lent her strength. She leaped and seized a crossbar, swung her feet up and hooked them over the bar, then pulled herself up and reached for the next handhold. Around the room other captives scrambled upward as best they could.

  An angry gray cloud erupted in the midst of the tower with a roar like a captive dragon. It exploded into a torrent of rain. The force of the downpour threatened to tear Kiva from her perch, but she climbed doggedly, and a small, unfamiliar curve lifted the corners of her mouth as she perceived the attacker’s strategy.

  Steam rose from the floor with a searing hiss as the arcane waters met the necromancer’s lurking flames. The apprentices stumbled back, screaming, throwing aside their magical weapons as they tried to shield their faces from the rising, scalding mist.

  Instantly the cloud changed, compressing into an enormous, ice-blue blanket. It swept over Kiva like a ghostly embrace, then drove down into the scalding mist. Steam changed to delicate webs of ice crystals, which in turn crunched down into a thick, solid sheet of ice.

  Stone and marble guardians froze, their feet encased in ice, the magic that animated them gone. One winged snake had not yet landed. Its wings locked in place as the ice-cloud passed over it, and it plunged down, exploding on impact and sending shards of black marble skittering across the frozen floor.

  Only the twin gargoyles shrugged off the magic-killing rain. They thrashed about frantically, but they could not break themselves free of the icy trap. Someone else, apparently, could.

  Neat cracks appeared in the ice around them, and the stone monsters rose into the air on small frozen squares like monstrous sultans on tiny flying carpets. Still struggling, they soared through the open door and landed with thunderous finality back in their accustomed places.

  Kiva dropped back to the floor of her cage, ignoring the burning chill beneath her bare feet. She darted a quick look around for more defenses.

  Several of the apprentice wizards lay dead, their bodies covered with a thick shroud of ice. Others were captured in ankle-deep ice, some shrieking in agony, others already falling into shock and silence. One young wizard had had the presence of mind to climb above the rising steam. He sat upon the shoulders of a marble skeleton, staring with stupid amazement at the limp crimson rope in his hand—all that remained of his splendid lightning bolt. A wild-eyed female apprentice stood halfway up the spiral stairs, frantically peeled away the budding twigs that had appeared on her wand, as if denuding the branches could restore the magic lost to the rain. She glanced up, briefly, as the invaders entered, then returned her attention to her ruined wand.

  Several men in warrior’s garb stalked into the room, their eyes scanning for further resistance. When they perceived none, they set about freeing the captives. A tall, strongly built man came to Kiva’s cage, a man with a scimitar nose and a single long braid of dark chestnut hair. He took a small wand from his belt and lowered it to the skull-shaped lock securing her door.

  “Don’t!” croaked Kiva in a voice left raw by too many screams, too little song. She reached through the bars and seized the wizard’s wrist With her free hand she pointed toward the “mirror” and the suddenly calm and watchful demon.

  The monster grinned in anticipation. Bloody saliva hung from its fangs in long strings.

  “You cannot,” Kiva repeated. “Disturb the lock, and you unleash the demon.”

  The wizard glanced at the drooling fiend. “Don’t fear, child. We will not let it harm you.”

  “Lord Akhlaur will soon return! You cannot fight him and the demon both,” she argued.

  “Neither can Akhlaur fight two such battles. Has the demon any loyalty to him?”

  Loyalty to Akhlaur? she echoed, silently and incredulously. “The demon is a prisoner.”

  “Then you need not fear its release. It will not be you or me whom the creature seeks. Just be ready to flee as soon as the door opens.”

  Suddenly the wizard’s eyes clouded, as if he were listening to distant voices. After a moment his gaze sharpened, hardened. He spun toward his comrades. “Akhlaur comes.”

  They formed ranks, their wands held like ready swords or their hands filled with bright globes that coursed with the snap and shudder of contained power.

  A tall, black-haired man strode into the tower. Rich black and crimson robes swirled around him, and he gazed about with the faint interest a courtier might display upon entering a ballroom. Behind him came Noor, his favorite apprentice, a doe-eyed young woman of soft beauty and ironclad ambition.

  Cradled in Noor’s hands was a ruby-colored crystal nearly as large as a man’s head, sparkling with thousands of facets and shaped like a many-pointed star. It glowed, quite literally, with life. Kiva’s gaze clung to the crimson gem with a mixture of longing and despair.

  “Well met, Zalathorm,” Akhlaur said with a hint of amusement.

  The name startled Kiva. Even here, a prisoner in an isolated estate, she knew that name! She had heard stories of the wizard who was slowly bringing peace and order out of the killing chaos spawned by Akhlaur’s rise to power.

  A second shock jolted through her when one of the wizards broke from the group and strode forward. The great Zalathorm was a man of middle years and middling height. His hair and beard were a soft brown, a pallid color by Halruaan standards. Nothing in his face or garb suggested power. His hands were empty of weapons or magic. He stood a full head shorter than Akhlaur, and his somber, plain-featured face provided sharp contrast to the necromancer’s aristocratic features. An image flooded Kiva’s mind of a jousting match between a farmer’s dun pony and a raven-black pegasus.

  “I wondered when you’d get around to visiting,” Akhlaur said. His gaze moved from Zalathorm and slid dismissively over the battle-ready wizards. His smirk sharpened into a contemptuous sneer. “This was the best you could do? Transformation into mindless undead could only improve this lot!”

  A white-haired wizard spat out a curse and lifted his wand to avenge this insult As he leveled it at Akhlaur, Kiva noted the expression of pure panic flooding Noor’s face. The apprentice uttered a strangled little cry and flung out a hand as if to stave off the magical assault.

  Light burst from the old wizard’s wand. It veered sharply away from Akhlaur and streaked toward Noor like lightning to a lodestone. As magical energy flowed into the crimson gem, Noor’s black hair rose and writhed about her contorted face. The old wizard’s wand quickly spent itself, blackened, and withered to a thin line of falling ashes.

  The magic came on, flowing until the wizard’s outstretched hand was little mor
e than skin-wrapped bone. Where there was life, there was magic, and Akhlaur’s crimson star drank swiftly and deeply of both. The brave man died quickly, and his desiccated shell fell to the ice-covered floor with a faint, brittle clatter.

  Stunned silence fell over the wizards. Only Zalathorm maintained presence of mind. He beckoned to the crimson star. The gem lifted out of Noor’s slack hands and floated over to him. To Kiva’s astonishment, Akhlaur did not intervene.

  “You cannot harm me with that,” the necromancer said, still with a hint of amusement in his voice.

  “Nor you me,” Zalathorm returned grimly. “With this gem, we entrusted our lives to each other’s keeping.”

  The necromancer lifted raven-wing brows in mock surprise. “Why, Zalathorm! Take care, or I shall suspect you of harboring doubts about our friendship!”

  “Doubts? I don’t know which is the greater perversion: the use you have made of this gem, or the monster you made of the man I once called friend.”

  Akhlaur sent a droll glance toward his apprentice. Noor stood over the slain wizard, both hands clasped over her mouth and tears streaming down her lovely face. The necromancer took no notice of her distress.

  “Tiresome, isn’t he?” he said, tipping his head in Zalathorm’s direction. “What can one expect of a man whose family motto is Too stupid to die?’ ”

  Zalathorm lifted the gem as if in challenge, then swiftly traced a spell with his free hand. Every wizard in the room mirrored his deft gestures.

  The room exploded into white light and shrieking power. Kiva dropped and hugged the floor of her cage as the tower wrenched free of its moorings and soared above the forest canopy.

  Again she smiled, for the power of this casting was as great as any magic she’d endured at Akhlaur’s hands. Moving an entire tower, a wizard’s tower—Akhlaur’s tower!—was an astonishing feat! Immediately she sensed Zalathorm’s intent, and again she dared to hope.

  When the tower shuddered to a stop, Kiva closed her eyes and inhaled deeply, as if she could draw the forest into herself. Senses she could never describe to a human told her where the tower now rested. Deep in the swamp was a rift carved into the land by a long-ago cataclysm known to the elves as the Sundering. The rift was a hidden place, a suitable tomb for Akhlaur’s tower—and a place far from the laraken and its magic-draining power.

  Kiva hauled herself to her knees and looked about for the necromancer. He stood crouched in guard position, brandishing a skull-headed scepter and an ebony wand like a pair of swords. Her throat clenched in dread, for she knew the spells stored in these weapons and knew Akhlaur could hold off magical attacks for a very long time.

  Yet he did not strike.

  Her gaze slid to the necromancer’s face. A puzzled moment passed before she understood his wild eyes, his twisted expression.

  Akhlaur was afraid.

  Of course! The magical rain had stripped away even these powerful weapons! Akhlaur’s confidence had rested upon his laraken and its ability to strip spells from other wizards and transfer them to its master. Now the tower had been removed well beyond the laraken’s hunting ground, and no new magic flowed to the waiting scepter and wand.

  Akhlaur’s frantic gaze sought out his apprentice. The laraken!” he howled to Noor, brandishing his scepter at the circling wizards in the manner of one who attempts to hold off wolves with a stick. “Summon the laraken!”

  Kiva laughed. The sound was ragged, yet it rang with both hatred and triumph. Noor would not do as Akhlaur asked. The slain wizard had been her father—Kiva knew this in her blood and bones, just as she knew the spirit of the old wizard was now imprisoned in the crimson star, along with Kiva’s kin. The anguish and guilt on Noor’s face when the white-haired wizard died was as familiar to Kiva as the sound of her own heartbeat.

  However, obedience to Akhlaur was a powerful habit. The girl’s hands began to trace a summoning spell before she had time to consider her own will. She hesitated, and half-formed magic crackled in a shining nimbus around her as her uncertain gaze swept the room.

  Several of the wizards had leveled their wands at her, ready to slay her if need be. All of them looked to Zalathorm, who held up a restraining hand and studied Noor with sympathetic and measuring eyes.

  “Your father,” he said softly, “was a hard man but a good one. He believed magic carries a stern price. He came here to pay his daughter’s debts.”

  Noor’s eyes clung to the crimson star in Zalathorm’s hands. “You will free them?”

  “Yes,” the wizard said simply. In a softer voice, he added, “I will grant them rest and respect”

  Joy rose in Kiva like springtime. For a shining moment, she believed Zalathorm could actually free her, would free them all!

  With a single, sharp gesture, Noor finished the summoning spell. Kiva had witnessed the laraken’s summoning many times, and she saw at once that the spell cast was not the spell Noor had begun.

  Power crackled through the tower, and the roar of angry seas filled the air. Rising above the surge was a keening, vengeful shriek. A shriek Kiva knew well.

  She frantically backed away from the portal, flattening herself against the bars as she awaited the demon’s release.

  Stand clear!

  Again the voice—the voice of the wizard who’d started to free her—sounded in her head. Kiva edged away from the bars. Bright energy jolted through them, and the lock’s skull-like jaw went slack as it melted. Kiva tore at the door, not caring that the heated metal burned her fingers.

  She stumbled away from the cage. Her retreat was unheeded, for the wizards’ attention was fixed upon the creature bursting free of the shimmering oval and the open cage.

  The water demon shielded its glowing red eyes with a dagger-taloned hand as its gaze swept the room. Red orbs focused upon the necromancer. Hatred burned in them like hellfire.

  “Akhlaur,” the demon said in a grating, watery voice, pronouncing the word like a foul curse. It sprung, impossibly quick, its massive hands arched into rending talons.

  The wizard dropped his useless weapons and seized the creature’s wrists. He frantically chanted spells to summon preternatural strength and killing magic. Zalathorm’s wizards fell back as evil fought evil like two dark fires, each determined to consume the other.

  Arcane power crackled like black lightning around the struggling pair. Akhlaur’s luxuriant black hair singed away and drifted off in a cloud of ash. His handsome face blistered and contorted with pain—pain that fed his death-magic spells.

  Suddenly the eels upon the demon’s head shrieked and flailed in agony. One by one, they burned and withered, then fell limp to the creature’s massive shoulders like lank strands of hair. Fetid steam rose from the demon’s body, and green-black scales lifted from its flesh like worn shingles. Too furious to meet death alone, the demon forced Akhlaur inexorably back toward the portal.

  The necromancer’s hate-filled eyes sought Noor’s face. He captured her gaze, then jerked one of the demon’s hands, pantomiming a slashing motion. The girl’s head snapped back, and four burning lines opened her throat.

  Then Akhlaur was gone. In the mirror, the entwined figures of necromancer and demon rapidly diminished as they fell away from the glowing portal. Kiva felt a surge of triumph, then a sudden, gut-wrenching drop.

  To her astonishment, she felt herself sucked into the Plane of Water with the necromancer!

  Down she fell, sinking through a sea of magic, falling away from her forest, her clan and kin. Away from her past, her heritage. From herself. Falling too far to ever, ever return.

  In some part of her mind, Kiva knew she was trapped in a dream. Two centuries had come and gone since Akhlaur’s defeat She awakened abruptly but not with the sudden jolt that usually followed an interrupted dream.

  To her horror, she was falling still, tumbling helplessly through thin mountain air. The vision of Akhlaur’s tower had been only a dream, but this nightmare was very, very real!

  The elf flaile
d and tumbled, clawing at the empty darkness. Wind whistled past her and carried her shrieks away into the uncaring night Stars whirled and spun overhead, mocking her with the long-lost memories of starlit dances in elven glades. Kiva felt no sorrow over her forgotten innocence—its loss was too old to mourn. As she fell toward certain death, her only regret was the unfinished revenge that had sustained her for two centuries.

  A sudden blur of light and color flashed past her, circled, and dipped out of sight. Kiva struck something soft and yielding and felt herself received and cradled as if in strong, silken arms.

  For several moments she lay facedown, too dazed to move, too stunned to make sense of either her fall or her rescue. After a while she raised her head and peered into the elaborate, swirling pattern of a carpet. The wind still whistled past her, but its passage no longer felt cold or mocking.

  A flying carpet, then. Kiva felt about for the edges of the magical conveyance and rolled toward the safety of the middle. She cautiously sat up and found herself face to face with Akhlaur himself.

  Two centuries of exile in the Plane of Water had taken its toll on Akhlaur. Lustrous black hair had given way to a pate covered with fine, faintly green scales. His long fingers were webbed, and rows of gills shaped like jagged lightning slashed the sides of his neck, but his expression of faint, derisive amusement was maddeningly familiar. For a moment Kiva heartily wished she’d left him in his watery prison.

  “You are a restless sleeper, little Kiva,” Akhlaur observed in an arch tone.

  “Elves do not sleep,” she reminded him, though she wondered why she bothered. Akhlaur was singularly uninterested in elven nature except as it pertained to his experiments.

  “I trust you are unharmed by your little adventure?” he asked, his manner a blatant parody of a master’s concern for his faithful servant.

  Kiva managed a faint smile, though she suspected Akhlaur had nudged her off the carpet in the first place just to enjoy her fall and her terror!

 

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