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Sorcerer's Moon

Page 61

by Julian May


  She looked at him aghast. ‘I know not what to say…except thank you.’

  ‘What shall we do now? I confess that I’ve not seen any of our warriors – or the Morass Worms – since dawn began to break. I suppose they’re in hot pursuit of the Salka.’

  She frowned. ‘We shall have to consult with King Coro and his generals before deciding upon the next course of action –’

  An acerbic voice spoke out of thin air. Better to consult with ME.

  ‘Is that you Vaelrath?’ Casya called.

  The leader of the worms materialized, tall and awesome, her emerald gaze brilliant with triumph. I have commanded my people to carry your cavalry and grenadiers back to the Wold Road, where they may await the arrival of the Sovereign Army. A few score humans were wounded and eight men died. This we regret.

  Dyfrig said, ‘Thank you for your concern, Vaelrath. Will you now carry us away also?’

  If you wish, said the dragon. You must be very weary.

  ‘Not I,’ Casya said, her eyes shining almost as brightly as the opals around her neck. ‘I could fight on all through the new day at your side, if you’d have me.’

  We would lief have your good counsel, Casabarela, rather than your sword. This country is strange to us. The second Salka force has abruptly halted its advance up the Shadow River. Their leaders are uncertain what to do. They have taken note of our presence and they are afraid. It’s an opportunity not to be missed.

  ‘I’ll gladly advise you. New tactics will be called for, since you’ll be fighting the Salka in forested country. Prince Dyfrig –’ She shot a tentative look at her companion.

  ‘Let me help, too, Vaelrath. My generalship is hardly the equal of Her Majesty’s, but I’ve been tutored in warfare by Cathra’s Earl Marshal of the Realm – as well as leading skirmishes against border bandits for half a dozen years.’

  The worm nodded and made a gesture. I have opened the subtle corridor. Shall we go?

  ‘Only please let Earl Marshal Parlian know where we’ve gone,’ the prince said.

  I will bespeak one of the Zeth Brethren accompanying him.

  ‘Tell Crown Prince Valardus’s wizard as well,’ Casya added with a wicked grin. ‘Inform His Highness of Didion that I look forward to our meeting – when the battle is over.’

  Rork Karum and his guests were eating their evening meal when the stout little house-wizard dashed into the great hall and made a stumbling obeisance.

  ‘My lord duke, there’s astonishing news on the wind! Every magicker on the island is bespeaking the tidings. The Salka are indeed in precipitate retreat, as was rumored earlier today. In fact…’ He lowered his voice in portentous emphasis. ‘One can see the brutes from the battlements!’

  Shouts went up from the diners.

  The pirate-lord sprang to his feet, pushing back his chair. ‘Show us, man!’

  The wizard dashed off, with Rork and most of the castle-dwellers and servitors pounding in his wake. The village refugees sitting at the low tables hesitated for a moment, then shuffled off in pursuit. Only Orrion, Nyla, and Countess Orvada were left in the hall. Even Rork Karum’s hunting dogs had run away, baying with excitement.

  ‘And so it ends, my ladies,’ Orrion said. ‘The Joint Fleet will be awaiting the monsters outside Terminal Bay. Only by scattering can the Salka hope to escape. I wonder where they’ll go?’

  ‘To hell, one would hope,’ whispered Nyla.

  ‘Morass Worms!’ Countess Orvada shook her head. ‘Led by the Wold Wraith and Dyfrig the royal bastard. It’s passing strange. And if the rumors be true, only a handful of our brave warriors actually engaged the enemy – aside from speeding their withdrawal.’

  Orrion took Nyla’s hand. ‘Shall we also go out and watch them, love?’

  ‘If you wish.’

  He asked the countess, ‘Will you also come, madam?’

  Orvada sighed as she reached for the crystal wine flask. ‘You young people go. I’ll stay here and celebrate. I’ve seen enough Salka, thank you very much.’

  Strangely somber, the two of them went off – not to the keep battlements, as Rork Karum, his retainers, and the surviving villagers had done, but to the castle’s eastern turret, which overlooked the mouth of the Dennech River.

  After they had gained the top, they stood side by side in silence for a long time, watching the dark tide of bodies emerge from the river and disappear into the sunset-tinged waters of the bay. From their high vantage point, all they could hear was the soft moaning of the wind.

  ‘Look at them,’ Nyla said at last. ‘They seem so tiny and ineffectual. But they would have eaten us alive if it had not been for you. You saved us, Orrion. Only you.’

  He said nothing.

  ‘What will become of us now?’ Her tone was almost forlorn. ‘Rork Karum has said he’ll let us go, but must we return to Cathra where you will be imprisoned?’

  ‘We’ll not be separated. Last night I had a dream. Whether or not it’s a true portent or merely a fantasy remains to be seen. In the dream, my twin brother Corodon spoke to me.’

  Her eyes widened. ‘Do you mean, he spoke on the wind?

  ‘I don’t know. Perhaps I can ask Lord Rork’s wizard to confirm the truth of it by bespeaking my older brother Bramlow in a relay through a Tarnian shaman.’

  ‘What did King Corodon say in the dream?’

  ‘He seemed to tell me that he’d rescind my banishment. Restore my rank.’

  ‘Oh, if it could only be true!’ she cried.

  ‘There was more. He said he was too weak a man to rule the Sovereignty on his own. He’s afraid he’ll make a botch of it. He – he wants me to share the throne. He said he’d force the Lords Judicial to repeal the sword-arm law and accept me – else he’d abdicate and turn the Iron Crown over to Dyfrig Beorbrook.’

  She was speechless for a long moment. ‘What if it’s true?’

  ‘There’s still the matter of our covert talent,’ he admitted. ‘Only you and a handful of others know of it – including Dyfrig himself and that strange fellow, the Royal Intelligencer. In the dream, Coro said that all have pledged to keep the secret.’

  ‘Oh.’

  He took her hand. ‘So if, albeit improbably, this thing should come to pass, will you be my queen, Nyla Brackenfield?’

  ‘I’ll be whatever you want me to be, dear heart.’ They kissed and she sank into his embrace, wondering why she suddenly felt an icy finger of fear touch her heart.

  Ullanoth clung to Deveron’s neck as they arrived at the summit of Demon Seat. From horizon to horizon the night Sky was clear of clouds, velvet blackness alive with angry whorls, slashing beams, and violent explosions of colored Light. Below, the mountain slopes lay deeply buried in snow.

  Gale winds had blown the terrace formation clean, and the Seat itself had only a thin mantle of rime encrusting it. Behind it, a climbing staff wedged among moonstone rocks still carried a tattered scrap of frost-stiffened red cloth that had once been the banner of the Sovereignty of Blenholme.

  ‘You may put me down, Snudge,’ she said. ‘Then depart at once, for I think a human body can endure here only a few moments.’

  ‘And this is truly where you want to be?’ he asked her.

  ‘Yes. But no more speaking. It hurts to breathe the cold air.’ She smiled at him.

  ‘Farewell, Conjure-Queen,’ he said. His gloved hand still held the sigil as he gave the command that would take him from her.

  When he was gone, she drew off the fur mitten that covered her own right hand, revealing a strangely twisted little ribbon of carved moonstone that had but a single surface and a single edge. It glowed steadily and scathelessly because it bonded to no one and belonged to everyone, to every thinking creature in the Ground Realm in danger of being drawn into a seductive and soul-destroying game of power.

  Are you ready, Ullanoth?

  ‘Tell me what to do.’

  Touch the Potency to the Seat. The finality of it is easy and the peace is sweet.


  Deveron had transported himself to a valley at the mountain’s base where autumn still prevailed, rather than to the place where the Source had told him to go – a large pavilion pitched amongst many others on the verge of the Wold Road, where the Sovereign and Vra-Bramlow, Earl Marshal Parlian, Prince Dyfrig, Casya Pretender, and his wife Induna waited for him.

  But they must wait. It was necessary for him to see what happened.

  He scried the mountain and saw her, tranquil and unafraid. Then his windsight unaccountably failed him and he was left only with the witness of his eyes.

  The Moon Crag formation at the tip of the peak blossomed for an instant into a new blue star brighter than any he had ever seen.

  The furious aurora vanished. In its place, enduring only for a heartbeat, were a myriad of ghostly faces. Some were smiling and some were outraged. All of them flowed together into a wide iridescent arc that spanned the Sky like an enormous moonbow.

  ‘Are the evil Beaconfolk dead, then?’ he asked.

  Good and evil endure, but the Conflict is over. A minute portion of the Link has unfortunately survived. It is not easy of access, however, and power will flow between the Realms only with great difficulty now. There is no need to fear.

  The Concealer sigil had faded to extinction even before he took Ullanoth to Demon Seat, but he still held his Great Stone tightly in his hand. He opened his fist and gasped. Subtle Gateway’s Light was dead.

  ‘Source!’ he cried indignantly. ‘After all this, must I walk back to my poor wife?’

  An inadvertent oversight. Forgive me, Snudge. All sigils empowered by the Lights have been abolished with the end of the game. But of course I’m prepared to do a special favor for a friend.

  Gateway’s blue-white internal radiance rekindled.

  ‘Take me to Induna,’ Deveron said.

  EPILOGUE

  The Royal Intelligencer

  There is more to the story, of course, but I may not be able to finish it after all. I’ve grown so very tired, and there are no genuine happy endings. Not in a place as paradoxical as High Blenholme Island, with its races of human and inhuman souls, and not elsewhere either, unless I miss my guess.

  It is sufficient, I think, to relate a few outcomes.

  The Salka offensive collapsed after both Kalawnn and Ugusawnn were found alive and taken prisoner by the Sovereign Army. They joined the other Eminences in calling for an end to hostilities and an armistice was declared. The great amphibians eschewed their dream of reconquest and did indeed withdraw to the Great Fen of Moss. However, the Eminent Four could never convince their people to enter into civilized relations with humanity, and the Salka were finally content to be left alone.

  After King Somarus suffered a fatal stroke of apoplexy when informed of his niece’s heroic role in the war with the Salka, Duke Kefalus Vandragora led an uprising that saw Casabarela Mallburn installed as the true Queen Regnant of Didion. She did give the Morass worms their homeland.

  Orrion Wincantor married Nyla Brackenfield, and after a brief interval of legal wrangling became co-Sovereign of Blenholme with his twin brother. Corodon Wincantor married Hyndry Mallburn in spite of strong advice to the contrary. Their disastrous union, fortunately childless, contributed to the destabilization and ultimate collapse of the Sovereignty. Tarn, Didion, and the renascent Conjure-Kingdom of Moss, ruled by Thalassa Dru until she died at the age of ninety-nine, declared their independence.

  Cathra endured a brief but messy civil war instigated by Duke Feribor Blackhorse, who murdered Corodon and Hyndry, drove Orrion and Nyla to exile in Didion, and seized the Iron Crown. His coup was frustrated on the same day that it was accomplished when he died in agony of a surfeit of peaches and newly fermented cider at a celebratory banquet.

  At the urging of the demoralized Cathran peerage and the Zeth Brethren, the Royal Alchymist Vra-Bramlow Wincantor assumed the throne as interim ruler. In a series of brilliant and ingenious compromises he restored calm and prosperity to Cathra and mended relations with the former vassal states. He abdicated by his own choice and his younger sister Wylgana was acclaimed High Queen after the archaic law barring the female sex from the succession was repealed. Her first official action was to have the Iron Crown melted in the forge of the royal blacksmith. The resulting lump of metal was cast ceremoniously into Cala Bay, along with a wreath commemorating her revered grandfather, King Olmigon.

  At his own request, Dyfrig Beorbrook was relieved of his office of Earl Marshal of the Realm by Queen Wylgana. He married Queen Casabarela of Didion. The couple had three children and ruled the northern kingdom together – although this fact was never officially acknowledged – until their deaths at a ripe old age.

  I myself served each succeeding Cathran ruler in turn as Royal Intelligencer, to the best of my wily ability in trying times. When High Queen Wylgana decided to revise the history of the kingdom to show her father Conrig, her pathetic brother Corodon, her great-uncle Feribor, and the late Sovereignty of Blenholme in a more favorable light, I protested the futile deception too loudly. The queen dismissed me for my pains, commanded me to leave the island, and provided me with a pension dependent on my good behavior. I lived quietly for many years on the Continent until, as is only too apparent, my instinct for troublemaking got the better of me.

  Beynor of Moss was never heard from again; but three decades ago I received an engraved invitation to attend the coronation of the new self-styled Emperor of Stippen. A handwritten postscript said: This time, it’ll be better. I sent regrets.

  The Lights still shine. Some of them may be contemplating mischief. I’m too old to care. As for my dearest Induna…My memories of her are none of your business.

  About the Author

  SORCERER’S MOON

  Julian May is the author of The Saga of the Pliocene Exile (The Many-Coloured Land, The Golden Torc, The Nonborn King and The Adversary), The Galactic Milieu Trilogy, Black Trillium (with Marion Zimmer Bradley and Andre Norton), Blood Trillium and Sky Trillium, and most recently The Rampart Worlds. The author lives in the state of Washington.

  By Julian May

  THE SAGA OF THE PLIOCENE EXILE

  The Many-Coloured Land

  The Golden Torc

  The Nonborn King

  The Adversary

  A Pliocene Companion

  INTERVENTION

  The Surveillance

  The Metaconcert

  THE GALACTIC MILIEU TRILOGY

  Jack the Bodiless

  Diamond Mask

  Magnificat

  Black Trillium (with M. Zimmer Bradley & A. Norton)

  Blood Trillium

  Sky Trillium

  THE RAMPART WORLDS

  Perseus Spur

  Orion Arm

  Sagittarius Whorl

  THE BOREAL MOON TALE

  Conqueror’s Moon

  Ironcrown Moon

  Sorcerer’s Moon

  Copyright

  HarperVoyager

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  This paperback edition 2007

  FIRST EDITION

  First published in Great Britain by Voyager 2006

  Copyright © 2006 by Starykon Productions, Inc

  The Author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work

  Maps by Richard Geiger

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

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  EPub Edition © MARCH 2010 ISBN: 978-0-007-37114-3

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