by David Drake
Reflection from the fabric of silk with metal threads illuminated the great room better than chandeliers did the feasting hall of the palace at Valles. That wouldn't help during the new moon, of course. There were benches around both sidewalls and a high wooden throne with gilt-or perhaps golden-dragon finials at the end opposite the entrance. Garric would've expected a clear space in the center of the hall. Petitioners would stand there during audiences and servants would set up trestle tables for feasts. Instead, a massive black sarcophagus stood directly under the oculus. Shin and Kore stood at either end of the sarcophagus, staring at it hostilely. Garric joined them, bringing the torch close to get a better view of the ornate reliefs. "Is it ebony?" he asked, but he was already reaching out to answer his own question. He tapped the lid with his knuckles. "It's stone," he said in surprise. "It must be jet. It's hard enough to take delicate carvings, at any rate. These are very good." As Garric eyed the reliefs more carefully, he realized their strangeness as well as the carver's skill. There were two separate bands on the lid, arranged so that the figures' feet were toward the door. In the center of the upper register stood a skeletally thin human figure, probably a man, wearing long robes. His arms were spread to either side in blessing.
Though the features were stylized and in any case very small-the face was the size of the end of a man's thumb-Garric thought he detected a similarity to Lord Holm. The lower register was covered with a profusion of animals, each one identifiably distinct from its many fellows. The beasts fell into at least a dozen different species, each of them similar to an animal which Garric had seen or at least read descriptions of-but none really identical to anything familiar. The largest of the carved animals were the elephants. These had unusually long, curving tusks, but that could be explained as artistic license.
The hump of fat on the beasts' shoulders, though, and the shaggy hair that covered their bodies were like nothing Garric had seen or heard of. Likewise the lions seemed ordinary enough until you noticed the curved canines projecting beneath the lower jaw, the antelopes had four horns rather than two, and the wolves' heads seemed too massive for even their unusually robust bodies. The circling vultures were far too big also, assuming the elephants and other animals weren't pygmy versions of their present relatives. "It's an odd place for Lord Holm to keep his father's coffin, wouldn't you think?" said the ogre, who must've noticed the same resemblance that Garric thought he saw. "Of course, one never knows what humans will decide to do. I blame it on their skulls being so small that their brains get squeezed." "It's not Holm's father," said the aegipan. "At least it's not his father unless Holm is many thousands of years old. Ten thousand at least, I would judge." Garric stepped back and frowned. "Judge how?" he said. Shin touched the hilt of the dagger Garric had found in the peel tower and said, "May I borrow this?" "Yes," said Garric. "Of course." Shin drew the dagger and slid its point down the margin of the lid. Garric winced to see the blade mistreated, though on consideration he realized that jet wasn't hard enough to dull good steel. "Do you see how bright the edges of the scratch are?" the aegipan said, gesturing with one hand while the other replaced the dagger in Garric's sheath.
It was a remarkable piece of coordination. "Compare them with the dullness of the reliefs. Air doesn't act quickly on jet, but it acts; and this sarcophagus was made millennia ago." In all truth, Garric couldn't see the distinction-certainly not by torchlight and probably not in the full blaze of the sun. But neither did he see any reason to doubt Shin's judgment, on this matter or on anything else the aegipan chose to state with such assurance. He looked up at the dome. From where he stood, the rim of the oculus clipped a sooty edge from the moon's silver and gray. Shin examined the tapestries. They seemed to be well made, but the scenes had no obvious connection with this black palace. Garric wondered if Holm or one of his ancestors had looted them in a raid. Kore opened the door in the partition wall behind the throne and squatted to look down the passage to the living quarters beyond. She'd have to crawl to negotiate it, and from the blank disgust on her face she saw no reason to do so. Something sizzled.
Garric turned. The light of the full moon blazed straight down on the sarcophagus, flattening the reliefs. A figure formed, coalescing out of the air instead of rising through the stone lid. Garric stepped back, touching his hilt but not drawing the sword. Kore and the aegipan sidled around the edges of the hall, placing themselves beside Garric and close to the outside door. The figure, at least seven feet tall even without the pedestal of the sarcophagus to stand on, looked down at Garric and laughed. It was indeed a taller, more cadaverous version of Lord Holm. "You are the sacrifice?" the figure said. Its voice boomed as if from a vast cavern. "Not before time, I must say.
My blood must be thinning for matters to have waited so long." Garric drew his sword with a mutedsring of the gray steel blade. He backed another step, trusting his companions to keep clear without him having to waste attention on them. "Milord," he said to the robed wizard. "I told your descendent I'd spend the night in this palace. I'm not a sacrifice, to you or him or to anyone. My friends and I will go now and leave the night to you." The wizard laughed again and raised his left hand, knuckles out. On the fourth finger was a ring with a huge red stone. "Belia!" he said. A film of scarlet wizardlight covered the interior of the hall like the membrane inside an egg shell. Kore growled and hunched toward the open doorway. She rebounded from the red shimmer, snarled, and ripped outward at it with both hands the way one would try to tear a silk curtain. Her claws slid without gripping.
Garric lunged, thrusting for the wizard's right kneecap. It was the easiest target and, though it wouldn't be immediately fatal, it'd bring the tall man's vitals within reach of a second stroke.
"Eithabira!" the wizard said and wrapped himself in wizardlight like a cicada in its chrysalis. The edge that'd sheared hard limestone bounced away. The blade sang a high note; Garric's right hand and forearm felt as though he'd plunged them into boiling water. He damped the vibration by holding the sword against his thigh. The wizard's laugh boomed again. He clenched his left fist so that the fiery jewel pointed at Garric. Garric made an overarm cut into the sarcophagus lid between the wizard's feet. The jet shattered. The wizard toppled backward with a hoarse shout. The glimmer of wizardlight vanished like frost in sunshine. "Mount!" Kore shouted, turning and dropping to one knee. "Mount!" Garric wobbled. He was as dizzy as if he hadn't had anything to drink in three days. "Quickly!" said the aegipan, pausing in the doorway to look back. The building rocked, springing several panes of glass from their casements. The ogre took Garric in her arms and bolted out of the palace. Tremors shook the lake. Shin ran ahead, dancing over the blocks of the causeway as they rose and fell. In the palace behind them the wizard cried out again. He sounded like a rabbit in a leg snare, but very much louder. "I'm all right now!"
Garric said. He thought he was. He started to sheathe his sword but changed his mind. "I can walk myself!" A great head broke the surface of the asphalt, raising its trunk high as it struggled to mount the causeway. It would've been an elephant if not for the shaggy hair covering its body. It trumpeted shrilly as Kore raced past with Garric. The pitiless moonlight gleamed as more creatures broke from their ancient bondage all across the lake. "Quickly!" cried the aegipan. The ogre's clawed strides struck sparks with each leap over the crumbling asphalt surface. *** Ilna'd expected either a landscape like the valley she was leaving or a swamp like the one where Garric'd found catmen preying on the Grass People. In the event, when she stepped through the portal her bare feet scrunched into coarse sand. It was the color of rust, but the small red sun exaggerated the hue. The terrain was largely barren, but there was water despite the lack of ground cover. What Ilna first thought were sedges-on closer look they weren't-grew in a pool a few double paces to the left, and the swales were studded with what seemed to be ferns springing from woody knobs like cypress knees.
"Well, no doubt which way they came," said Karpos. He nodded toward the track worn into the sa
nd, not so much a line of footprints as a parallel double ridge thrown up to either side of the path. It reminded Ilna of the way ants wore trackways in gritty soil after a rain. "Not that there was anyway," said Asion, who'd bent down to gather pebbles from the sand. He used his stubby left index finger to sort through possibilities before suddenly flicking four smooth chunks of quartz into the other palm. He transferred them to his bullet pouch. Less than half a mile ahead stood a structure of glass, all flat planes with the same number of sides as a hand has fingers. The dim sun easing toward the western horizon turned some facets rosy while others reflected the sky or the ground, but the glass had no color of its own. Karpos sighed and unstrung his bow, then hung the staff across his chest by the slack string. He hadn't had time to retrieve any arrows from the beasts he'd shot. "I'll lead," he said, swinging out ahead of the rest of the party. He walked beside the Coerli trackway instead of obliterating it, though here the care was reflexive rather than purposeful. As much for courtesy as any better cause, Ilna followed to the side also; Temple was across the track from her. "Think you can hit a cat with those rocks you're picking up?" Karpos said quietly. Ilna glanced over her shoulder at Asion. He was watching their back trail with a pebble in the pocket of his sling. He shrugged and said, "It makes me feel better." "Yeah," said his partner. "Ido know what you mean." There were no trees in this place, though unfamiliar plants with straight stems and a crown of short leaves-they sprang from the trunk like the flowers on the stalk of a hollyhock-grew taller than she was, or even than Temple and Karpos. Mats of rootlets supported them, often standing proud where winds had scoured away the surrounding sand. "I saw something move!"
Asion called. "One of them scales on the house, it moved!" "I thought it was just the light," said Karpos. "But if you say it moved, I believe you." They reached the structure. From a flat to the opposite point, each pane was as high as Ilna or a Corl. The trail led to one whose bottom edge was along the ground. Sand'd been brushed away in the recent past. Ilna could see into the glass, but its ripples distorted the things inside so that she couldn't tell what they were.
Karpos pushed gingerly with his left fingertips; he held his long knife ready in his right. The glass didn't move. "Temple?" he said.
"Do you know how to make it open?" "Asion," Temple said. He'd drawn his sword and held his buckler advanced. "Shoot into the center of this pane; that should do it." He glanced at the rest of them. "I'd expect all the warriors to have been in the raiding party," he added,
"but I could be wrong." Ilna nodded, lifting her hands slightly to call attention to the pattern she'd just knotted. She didn't spread the fabric yet; it'd paralyze her companions if they looked at it.
Asion backed a pace, automatically checking to the sides and behind him; a sling's arc covered a lot of area. He swayed the stone at the end of its tether, settling it in the leather cup. "Karpos?" Temple warned quietly. He held his buckler out, putting it between Ilna's face and the panel, then turned his own head away. Karpos covered his eyes with his left forearm. Asion's thong snapped through the air.
Glass shattered almost simultaneously in aCrack! like nearby lightning. The panel puffed outward in a cloud of rainbow dust which left a few sparkles in the air even after most had settled on the red ground. "I'll lead," said Temple, stepping into the building. His bronze sword was point-forward at waist level, and the buckler was advanced in his left hand. "Follow me," Ilna said curtly to the hunters as she entered in turn. The air within was moister than that of the sand wastes outside, and it smelled strongly of the Coerli. The flooring was fibrous butrock; remarkable as that seemed, it wasn't a mistake Ilna's bare feet couldn't possibly have made. The material gave her sensations not of pastures or ripening flax but rather of heat and fire and pressures beyond what anything living could bear.
Could rock feel pain? Ilna smiled. It pleased her to imagine that it could. The glass walls muted the light, but they let through enough to see by. The building was partitioned inside, but Ilna found she couldn't be sure whether the walls ran up to the roof-or indeed, if there was a ceiling below the roof. Everything was distorted, much as though she'd been trying to see things underwater. "They're up ahead!"
Asion called, though he was watching the rear. "Temple, I smell'em!"
Temple stepped around a corner. Slipped around it, rather; Ilna didn't see the motion, only the big man's presencehere and thenthere. "This is the nursery," Temple said mildly, though he didn't lower his sword.
"The kits. None are older than six weeks." Ilna moved to his left side. Yes, kits; as many as the fingers of one hand. They were in a waist-deep pit sunk into the floor, too deep for them to climb out on their own. All but one snapped and snarled at the humans, jumping and clinging to the rim of their prison for a moment before slipping back; the remaining one cowered against the back wall. "Four males, one female," Temple said. "There's at least one female of breeding age also, probably two. They'll be hiding somewhere, probably in the larder." He quirked a smile at her. "The Coerli aren't like humans, Ilna," he added. "Or at least like you." Ilna sniffed in disgust. A generalized disgust, she supposed: at the catmen, but at people and at life itself. She shook her head and said, "There's a wizard here, you said. Do you know where he is?" If she wove something to answer her question, she'd have to put down the defensive pattern she carried.
For choice she wouldn't do that. "He'll be as high up as he can get, I would guess," Temple said, looking upward. "The building had a peak on the outside, so there must be something above the flat ceiling we see." Ilna followed his glance. She didn't see a ceiling, flat or otherwise. The combination of reflection and distortion in the glass panels threatened to give her a headache. "All right," she said, more harshly than deserved by anything Temple'd said or done. "Take me there, if you will." "Mistress?" said Karpos uncomfortably. "What should we do about-" He gestured toward the kits with his little finger rather than the knife in that hand. "-these?" "Kill them, of course!" Ilna said. She glared at Temple to see if he dared object, but the big man's face remained impassive. "But you're not to take the scalps." "I think it'll be this way," Temple said as though he hadn't heard the exchange. He nodded in the direction they'd been going since they entered the building. Without waiting for a reply, he walked around the pit to the corridor she could see from where they stood.
She followed, listening to the shriek of a kit. It'd dodged Asion's knife by enough that the stroke wounded instead of killing quickly.
The sound didn't give Ilna the touch of cold pleasure that she usually got from knowing that the beasts were in pain. The rooms-the spaces-of the strange building were irregular in fashions Ilna couldn't understand. She must not be seeing them properly; she'd always before been able to grasp patterns, even in the rocks she hated. Her failure suddenly spilled over in a gush of self-loathing that made her dizzy.
"Here're the stairs," Temple said, nodding toward what she now saw was a diagonal panel standing an arm's length out from the wall. She hadn't recognized it as separate until the big man tapped it with the rim of his buckler. "Shall I lead?" "No," said Ilna, stepping past him with her yarn held up but still not extended. "I will." "The pantry's beneath the stairs, behind another baffle," Temple said. "They'll wait!" said Ilna. Her unjustified anger at Temple made her angry with herself. The steps were both shallower and taller than they'd have been for people; the Coerli had smaller feet but their legs were springier. For Ilna it was almost like climbing a ladder. She kept her eyes upward so that she'd be ready if the cat wizard suddenly appeared at the top of the stairs. The kits had stopped squealing. She found herself hoping that the hunters wouldn't discover where the females were hiding until after the wizard was dealt with. Her lips pursed, but at least the anger had slipped back into a more usual state of mild disapproval of herself and the world. Ilnastepped onto a round platform. Until she'd mounted high enough that her eyes were above its rim, she hadn't been sure that the staircase didn't end with the roof itself. In the center of the flat surfa
ce sat a male Corl. He had the flowing mane of a chieftain and what'd obviously been a powerful physique many years ago. Many decades ago. The beast facing her was by far the oldest Corl she'd ever seen. His mane was white and now scraggly, and he'd worn the fur off every joint. The mottled, purplish color of his skin showed through the remaining fur, turning it dirty gray. Ilna held her pattern taut before her. The beast's eyes were closed. "Do not bother with that, animal," he said. She'd never before heard the cats make sounds that she could understand. "I know all things, so I know my doom. I will not struggle." He coughed a laugh.
"How can one struggle against fate?" he asked. "Even I, Neunt, the greatest wizard of all time, cannot defeat fate." Ilna laughed, though there was little humor in the sound. "I've always thought braggarts were fools," she said. "You've proved that better than most, beast, choosing to tell me how powerful you arenow." "You can lower that," said Temple quietly, indicating Ilna's pattern with his left index finger. He'd slung his buckler, but he held the sword ready. Ilna started to snap that she didn't trust others to determine what was safe or wasn't, especially when dealing with wizards… but she did trust Temple, she found to her surprise. She folded the pattern into her sleeve without picking the strands apart, then immediately took out a fresh hank to determine the direction they must go next. Neunt opened his eyes. They were a milky blue in which Ilna could barely see the pupils; if he hadn't made a point of closing them, she'd have assumed the wizard was blind. "The Messengers gave me the power I demanded of them," he said in a harsh, cracked voice. "Everything I asked for… and now you're here and you will kill me, because you are a thing I did not foresee." He laughed again, but the sound trailed off into wheezing. He's going to die shortly whether we kill him or not, Ilna thought. Though of course we'll kill him. "Do you know the Messengers?" Neunt asked when he had control of his voice again. "You do not, I suspect. I did not, I could not-" Suddenly anger snarled in his broken voice. "No one could foresee you! No one!" Ilna looked at Temple. "Kill him," she said. "I'll determine what we do next." "I will tell you your course," the wizard said calmly. "That's why I waited for you instead of ending my own life as I'd planned. I will tell you how to reach the Messengers, who will give you the power you desire. Every power that you demand, they will provide." Ilna stared at the ancient Corl, absorbing his words. From the floor below, Karpos called, "Mistress? We've taken care of the females. What do you want us to do now?" "You can come up here," Temple said, surprising Ilna both with what he'd said and the fact that he'd spoken at all.