Warrior (The Key to Magic)

Home > Other > Warrior (The Key to Magic) > Page 11
Warrior (The Key to Magic) Page 11

by H. Jonas Rhynedahll


  Whorlyr knew what their tactic would be. As they had trained to do, the lancers, holding their well-dressed line, would canter forward and slowly build speed into a charge. Depending upon the shock of the mass of their galloping warhorses to halt his advance, they would curve their flanks inward to wrap around and encircle his much smaller force, and then have the following echelons of mounted archers fire decimating volley after decimating volley into the trap. That simple method had won their ancestors uncounted victories and preserved Yhmghaegnor, a gleaming city of Imperial architecture, from sack and ruin for three hundred and sixty-three years.

  Of course, they had never seen anything like the Algaraemyr platforms and had no conception of the disaster that awaited them.

  "Brother Zsii, signal to all droves. When we move forward once more, shift from column to wedge."

  The archivist cupped his far talking disk and repeated Whorlyr's orders.

  The Archdeacon had granted the exclusive use of a matched set of five of the Holy Relics for this operation and the lead vehicles and first subordinate vehicles of each drove had an attached operator. Thus far, the superior coordination had made the battalion perform with the agility of a dancer.

  "Encourager N'loe, when the enemy commences their charge, move toward them at maximum speed."

  "As you will it, my chieftain." N'loe, a small but deceptively strong man, was a K'hilbaeii recently recruited personally by Whorlyr.

  "Fire teams, stand ready. Check weapons. Shoot only when you have a clear shot."

  As did all the Algaraemyr platforms of the battalion, Battalion One carried eight other Salients, all steady veterans, who waited, seated but alert, on their benches. Each team of four would fire their enervated bolt throwers out the side loops and in the wedge formation, the adjacent platforms would be close enough to be struck.

  Whorlyr took a moment to grip the handle of his own bolt thrower in its leather sheath -- an innovation of his own design that he had brought first to the Archdeacon's attention to insure that he received proper credit -- strapped to his right hip. The Holy Relic copy had a weak, just detectable warmth at a spot where his two fore fingers lay on the stock, meaning that it was in functioning order.

  Because of an unexpected and as yet unexplained high frequency of failure of the copies, it had been necessary to postpone the launch of Whorlyr's sortie north from Mhevyr for two days until a sufficient number of working bolt throwers could be produced. He had considered starting the expedition without full equipment, but had decided against it because he saw this test of the Algaraemyr platforms as critical to confirming the flexibility of his own command abilities to the Archdeacon and wanted every advantage that magic could provide.

  "Message from Battalion Two," Archivist Zsii announced. "Senior Assault Brother Bh'sh indicates that platform forty has abruptly lost levitation and grounded."

  Thus far, the failure rate for platforms operated longer than twelve hours was in the neighborhood of ten percent. The column had left Mhevyr and traveled sixty-leagues without a vehicle mishap, so this breakdown was not unexpected.

  "Send to Battalion Two that the stranded teams should retrieve the defective Algaraemyr Device, abandon the platform and set fire to it. Platform thirty-nine will fall back to recover them."

  "As you say, brother," Zsii acknowledged.

  The Horse Guards began to move and Battalion One surged forward off the road, flattening the grass and gradually building up speed. At the first of the fences, Whorlyr braced himself on the handholds. Preceptor Szint'sl had included additional bracing at the forward end to allow the platforms to withstand minor collisions and its armor gave it significant mass. A platform could not smash through a solid fortress wall, but insubstantial objects such as the fences should not impede its advance. He did, however, expect a shock.

  The platform jarred hard and lost speed as it knocked a hole in the fence, a great racket echoing through the interior, but kept its course and accelerated very quickly. It took the next fence the same and crossed the stream with nary a bobble. To either side, the other platforms slid into their positions in the formation.

  Whorlyr kept watch as the distance between his battalion and the Horse Guards narrowed, first to three hundred paces, then to two, and finally to a hundred. At fifty, the lances came down and the stamp of the thousands of hooves on the tilled soil was like thunder. Finally, he ducked back into the platform, pulling the hatch closed behind him.

  When the first horse caromed off the rounded and sloped front end, he yelled, "Open fire!"

  In the few seconds it took the Salients to move to their loops, the sounds of the crash of the lancers into the wedge of the platforms was nearly deafening and the tip of at least one lance pierced an unoccupied loop before being snapped into splinters. The platform began to bounce and shake from the impacts and from riding overtop fallen foes.

  Taking careful aim, the Salients began to discharge their bolt throwers.

  Whorlyr stuck up one hand to steady himself against a wooden ribs as he walked forward to join Encourager N'loe. When the shaking settled out, he bent to look through the drover's port and saw that the way was now clear. The Algaraemyr platforms had punched straight through the enemy line and were now deep behind it.

  "Brother Zsii, tell Battalion Two to roll right and enfilade. Brother N'loe, we will roll left."

  In another half hour, the battle was done.

  Calling another halt, Whorlyr climbed back up through the observation hatch to find the field covered with carnage and the Horse Guards annihilated. None of the Yhmghaegnorii remained standing, but there appeared to be a huge number of wounded and thousands of broken and dying horses, many of whom were screaming.

  "Brother Zsii, send to Mhevyr the message 'Objective Achieved' and then tell Senior Assault Brother Bh'sh to deploy teams to put down the wounded horses."

  With care, the archivist removed the violet long-distance far talking disk from its reliquary, meditated a moment, then repeated the message and received an acknowledgement. Once the precious device had been returned to its case, he transmitted Whorlyr's order to Battalion Two on the standard disk and then held it to his ear to receive the reply.

  "Senior Assault Brother Bh'sh requests instructions concerning enemy wounded," Zsii told Whorlyr.

  "Put them down as well. It would not do for any of the Horse Guards to live to vex the Brotherhood at some later date."

  SIXTEEN

  143rd Year of the Reign of the City

  Fourthday, Waxing, 3rd Springmoon, 1645 After the Founding of the Empire

  Shelmton, just outside the municipal walls of Mhajhkaei

  Rhavaelei held the vial up to the musty light fighting its way through the single, grime encrusted pane of the window. The fluid within was murky, tinged with a green like bread mold, and sluggish with disuse, just like this tiny alcove hidden in the bowels of the otherwise well-ordered and spotless shop.

  "This will ignite his passion?" she demanded of the shop owner.

  "Not just your intended's passion, but his utter devotion. You'll n'er have t' worry about him wandering after th' other women. He'll cleave to you like a drowning man t' a spar. Now, mind, you'll have to have him in your bed straightaway. The effect will fade within a day or so if you don't seal the bargain, if you know what I mean."

  It had taken Rhavaelei's agents a good month to find a verifiable witch. There were hundreds of mountebanks and charlatans in the city, both male and female, who sold useless charms and filters, claimed to be able to ward the evil eye, or produced vague visions of futures, but only Mistress D'lupchois, Scholar and Purveyor of Natural Medicines, could be proven through personal testimony to be a true worker of magic.

  Somewhat to Rhavaelei's surprise, she had not found Mistress D'lupchois to be stooped, aged, or disfigured, but rather a somewhat tall, not quite plump, and cheerily jovial woman who openly sold products that ranged from draughts to combat loose stools to creams to cure toothache to drops to soothe c
olicky babies.

  Mistress D'lupchois, whose eyes had revealed to Rhavaelei a significant intellect, had immediately taken in the expensive gown hidden beneath Rhavaelei's plain greatcloak, obviously determined that her new customer had not come for the sanctioned products displayed on her shelves, and cut right to the point.

  "Is it a son or a daughter that you want?"

  According to the reports, Mistress D'lupchois' clandestine trade in magical potions, technically still illegal and subject to public revulsion due to their lingering association with dread sorcery, dealt with providing a son where there had only been daughters or vice versa. But it was one of her other apparently equally potent medicines that Rhavaelei had need of.

  "I am not yet married. I require something that will make a man want me in a way that he cannot resist."

  Mistress D'lupchois had tilted her head and stared at Rhavaelei with an amused expression. "Seems like to me, my lady, that you'd already know how t' do that."

  "This man cannot be swayed by a strategic sigh, a glimpse of hidden lace, or a coquettish glance."

  At least not from me, Rhavaelei had amended to herself.

  Mistress D'lupchois had shrugged. "I let people make their own decisions. Come with me t' th' back."

  Without haggling, Rhavaelei paid the woman's price -- twenty silver, a paltry price to pay for a royal prize -- and strode quickly from the shop, the vial clenched in her white gloved fist.

  SEVENTEEN

  When the more than half-full Father Moon was fully risen, Mar set aside his book and turned off the lamp to let his eyes adjust to the moonlight coming through the open shutters of the balcony. It was close to midnight and with the exception of the guards outside in the corridor and those on duty elsewhere, most everyone in the Palace, according to his ethereal sense, was already asleep.

  The one exception to this was Mhiskva, easily identified by the particularly aggressive tenor of his Blood Oath link. As usual, the marine captain was prowling through the labyrinth of the palace, no doubt bearing his great axe and keeping his eye out for Phaelle'n mischief. The Gaaelfharenii very seldom slept.

  While Mar waited for the shadowy room to become more distinct, he massaged the tender ends of his stumps. They had taken to throbbing continually with occasional enflamed twinges. His ethereal skill and the rate of regrowth had begun to improve dramatically, but he had not yet discovered a way to mute the associated pain.

  He floated up from his chair and out into the open air of the balcony. Only a few paces across, the balcony was three storeys up and only a dozen armlengths back from the south wall of the palace. He had chosen the room for the excellent view of the rooftops of the Citadel and would sometimes think of roaming across them while the city slumbered, though he never had. After another moment, he rose into the night. Having no desire to sleep, he did not go west toward the moored Number One but rather swept north to swoop high above the central dome.

  Though masons had, within the last fortnight, begun repairs to the top of the North Tower, the highest storey remained unfinished and had yet to receive a roof. As a consequence, the upper several floors of the tower had not been reoccupied. Of all the palace, the tower's pinnacle provided the greatest buffer of space between him and the constant disturbance made both in his awareness and in the background ether by those who were linked to him via the Blood Oath. It had thus become his preferred nighttime perch.

  He came down near the stools and table where the masons sat to have their lunch. He often lay upon the table to relieve the strain of his brigandine, but tonight he settled his back onto the wooden floor so that the half-completed walls rose up to limit his view to a defined circle of a few clouds, the stars in between, and the slightly off center waxing moon.

  Rather than immediately focus on his stumps, he simply gawked at the stars and thought of Telriy.

  After some time, he shook off this profitless revelry and began to weave the spells that created new flesh and bone.

  Much later, an unfamiliar modulation clove the background ether nearby and he instantly shot up to a standing position to find Waleck's projected image a few armlengths away. The image showed a different man this time, one wearing better clothes, one whose hair was perhaps not as gray, and one whose face perhaps not as lined.

  "Where is Telriy?" Mar asked before the vision could speak.

  "She is safe and she and your child are well."

  "Tell me where she it."

  "It had to be as it is, Mar. Your path is now as it should be. You will live."

  "Where is Telriy?"

  "You will know in due time. This is all that I can say."

  Mar smashed the image with a furious cascade of ethereal flux and it disintegrated into a shower of incandescent motes.

  The old man did not try to appear to him again.

  EIGHTEEN

  Master Ghimrael, Ordeliea, and Master Tribiz presented Mar with the final models late on Fifthday afternoon.

  Hovering, he slowly lowered his stubs into the padded thigh sockets while Ordeliea and her father, kneeling to either side, held the respective legs upright. As he had perfected a spell that made the contraptions cleave to him, the leather straps of the previous design had been removed. With his weight fully settled, he keyed the modulations that gave the legs life and nodded at the two woodworkers to release them.

  Having already gained significant practice with previous versions, Mar took several steps forward without difficulty, driving the wood and brass constructions with nuanced nudges from his stubs.

  "I think that is your best yet, my lord king," Master Tribiz said. "Quite nearly lifelike."

  Mar defeated the sharp frown that this remark spurred and made a quick turn about on the balls of his wooden feet.

  "Much better response this time," he told the three.

  "The extra small pivot solved the jamming problem," Ordeliea agreed. "How do the adjustments to mounting sockets feel?"

  Waleck's appearance had reminded Mar how little actual control he had over events and set him to thinking that he should complete his legs before some major interruption cropped up. As a consequence, he had put much more time into his regrowth spells and the stubs of his legs were now at least a span longer. Twice already in the design process it had been necessary to make adjustments to the brass-reinforced hollows that enclosed the ends of his legs. While he expected the growth rate to slow when he began to reconstruct the relatively more complex structures of his knees, within a fortnight he believed that the entirety of both artificial thighs and knees would have to be removed to accommodate his own returned flesh. He had not yet expressly revealed to anyone what he was attempting to accomplish, but he believed that at the very least Ordeliea, who had taken the initial and subsequent measurements of his amputated limbs, had already guessed.

  His original motivation for commissioning the artificial legs had been a simple desire to conceal his progress, both to prevent premature requests for this new healing magic and to allow him to restore his limbs without distraction. Now, in retrospect, those cautions seemed inconsequential.

  "Very comfortable." Mar walked back across the carpet toward the balcony that overlooked the restored gardens. "The left knee seems like it's sticking a bit."

  Master Tribiz, a small, neatly appointed man who tended to fidget except when working with his brass creations, opened his leather tool case and removed two small wrenches and an oilcan.

  "By your leave, my lord king, if you could lift the left leg and bend the lower leg to the vertical? Thank you." The brass worker made a series of adjustments to the springs of the complex apparatus. "Try that, please."

  Mar turned about again and circled the three crafters, taking bolder strides as he grew more confident in his spells. "That took care of it."

  "These are suitable?" Ghimrael asked.

  Mar nodded. "I think so. You've all done excellent work. I may still need modifications and adjustments from time to time, though."

  Ghimrael
bowed. "We will be available at any time should you need us, my lord king."

  "I should come by every few days to check the fit," Ordeliea suggested, then quickly added, "To prevent sores or chaffing."

  "Yes, thank you. That will be fine."

  After the three had gone, Mar continued to practice with the legs, stamping about the room with greater and greater vigor until he could dash from one side to the other without having to use the magic of his brigandine to keep him from toppling. Satisfied, he walked across to the door of the anteroom where four of the Auxiliaries were always stationed when he was in residence.

  When he spelled the door open -- he had long since enchanted every portal in the palace that he had need to pass through -- the four youths, Hryen, his sister Lyeut, and the two brothers Siel and Mlehn, stopped chatting, jumped up from the couches on which they had been lounging, and snapped to attention. Yhejia had had jackets and trousers in imperial colors made for all the Auxiliaries and insisted that they be worn any time the young people were standing messenger duty.

  "Hryen, run tell Aael that I want a tailor and a cobbler. It's time for some new clothes."

  Hryen immediately saluted and dashed through the opposite doorway into the hall beyond.

  The remaining three looked at his artificial legs with unconcealed curiosity. From time to time, all of the Auxiliaries had peeked at him practicing with the previous versions.

  The never bashful Mlehn asked, "Those are the final ones?"

  "Yes. How do they look?"

  "I don't like them," Lyeut said. "They make you look funny."

  "I think they're grand," Siel countered. "Can you still fly?"

  "Of course." Mar raised himself and the legs a few fingerlengths from the floor and circled the three Auxiliaries thrice in rapid succession.

 

‹ Prev