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Lord of the Black Tower: A Mega-Omnibus (5-book epic fantasy box set)

Page 81

by Jack Conner


  “It will do no more than that, I assure you. He may not be confident of its fidelity, but I am. I can feel its ... evil.”

  “Would Rondthril retain its power—could it still scare, maybe even kill a god—if its evil was removed?”

  “Yes. It would still have its power: the sliver of Ungier’s essence only guides its will, it does not give it its strength. Ungier’s dark arts did that, but that is a matter separate from chaining an echo of his own will to the sword. That he did much later, after he’d decided to gift the weapon to his Firstborn. Remember, for a long time this was Ungier’s personal weapon. He used it during Omkarcharoth, back before the very Breaking of the World. But he loved Asguilar—”

  “Love! He can’t love.” Yet Baleron remembered Ungier’s feelings toward Rolenya, and he wondered.

  “Do not be so sure of that, my boy,” Logran said, as if reading his thoughts. “At any rate, he gave the thing to Asguilar, and should Ungier perish, the echo of his will that he infused Rondthril with would be exorcised. And yet ... such an assassination still remains impossible.”

  “I don’t concede that. But tall order, yes, very tall.” Baleron mused darkly, then asked, “Why did he put his will into it?”

  “If you were Ungier and you were going to give your son a weapon powerful enough to kill you, wouldn’t you want a safeguard to prevent that from happening?”

  “Could it be used against ... other, higher gods?”

  Logran raised his eyebrows. “It is loyal to the dark powers.”

  “But that’s surely an effect of Ungier’s will. If that was removed ... ?”

  Logran frowned. “Possibly.” His eyes narrowed. “But now you’re talking about slaying Gilgaroth himself. Listen to yourself, Baleron! You sound like you’ve gone mad.”

  “Perhaps I have.”

  Baleron reflected upon what he must do if he wanted to keep the sword that could possibly kill a god. Yet to keep it he must find some other way to kill one!

  “Very well,” he said. “Then tell me this: what can kill Ungier?”

  Logran sighed. “Like many other gods upon the world, Ungier has taken a form of flesh—indeed, unlike some, he was born of flesh—and that flesh can be destroyed. Though by no mortal weapon.” His kindly face grew deadly serious. “But Baleron, again I advise you not to try. This is your rash side showing, the side your father warned you about. Heed his words, Baleron. Don’t do anything foolish.”

  “What weapons could you give me if I decided otherwise?”

  “Why, Baleron? Why is this so important to you? If you don’t want an evil blade, cast it out. Have it melted down. Set it aside and choose another.”

  “The blade stays. But Ungier must go. So what arms can you give me?”

  “This is madness!” Logran rose and began pacing in agitation, waving his arms about. “Folly! You cannot assault Ungier, not shielded by his army, not in the presence of his Father, not with the aid of anything I can give you, and I can give you quite a lot, from armor enchanted to resist dragonfire to charms to ward off a Darkworm’s mind. Magical arrows that don’t miss, armor that makes not a sound and weighs practically nothing. All this and more do I have to give, should I wish. But why should I? So you can run off into the night and get yourself killed, all for what ... a few feet of metal?”

  Baleron said nothing, and Logran waited until he could stand no more of it, and demanded, “Well?”

  Baleron took a deep breath. “I’m Doomed, Logran. I’m the godsdamned Ender! Wherever I go, I spread misery and evil.”

  “Nonsense! The prophecy is mere propaganda.”

  “But don’t you see? The curse binds me to fulfill it, whether it’s real or not. The Doom makes it real! But ... with this sword ... I can do some good. Let me do it, Logran. It’s my only chance to redeem myself.”

  Logran sighed.

  Sensing imminent victory, Baleron added, “If I can’t fight the Shadow, Logran—if all I can do is spread the Wolf’s will—I think I will go mad.”

  “I will not aid your suicide.”

  Baleron studied him. He could see no give in the sorcerer’s face. Yet suddenly the prince felt much better. He smiled and rose to his feet. “I would be wise to listen to you,” he said, and took the sorcerer’s hand.

  Logran was surprised for a moment, but he recovered and shook the prince’s hand enthusiastically. “You always were a good lad, Bal. You’ll be fine, don’t worry. I’ll see you through this. I know in times of doubt the mind plays tricks on itself, but have faith in yourself and all shall be well, I promise. If you have any problems, my friend, know that you can always turn to me.”

  “Thank you.”

  Baleron moved to the balcony, where Lunir waited for him, hove into the bird’s saddle and was off.

  He meant to fly to his own balcony, as Amrelain would be waiting for him, and he could do with her company, but when he cast an eye toward the wall he saw something strange. He saw a stirring upon the battlefield, between the wall and Ungier’s encircling camp. He couldn’t make out what the activity was, and he veered to investigate. He flew toward the South Gate, where the king would be.

  Setting down near Lunir’s pen and handing the bird over to its handlers, he scaled the wall and joined his father and Rilurn, who stared out over the battlefield much as he’d left them. Even before he joined them, he heard strange music, a haunting melody of stringed instruments. Then, looking out over the battlefield, he saw the cause.

  The day’s dead, all of the ones that lay upon the battlefield—friend and foe alike—had risen.

  “Dear gods!” he heard himself mutter. The sight chilled him to the bone.

  Not only had the fallen warriors waked from death—they were dancing. Spinning and cavorting among severed limbs and blackened earth, the corpses danced. He saw a dead Borchstog with its remaining arm interlocked with that of a Havensrike soldier, both doing a jig together. He saw the burned, skeletal remains of a man leaping and pirouetting near a burning catapult. A decapitated vampire pressed against a half-Troll. Other animated corpses played fiddles. Melancholy yet jaunty music drifted on the smoky wind. Thousands of bodies moved about the battlefield. Engaged in obscene parody, some writhed in the ground in groups of ten or more.

  Horror filled Baleron. He sought out the vampires he knew were responsible for this, but the night was dark and the huddled ranks of the enemy endless.

  “Bastards!” he said.

  “Steady, son,” his father cautioned. “This is just Ungier’s way of demoralizing us. We won’t play his games, so he plays his own.”

  By the light of the torches along the wall, Baleron glanced sideways at Albrech and saw that his father looked very stern.

  In quiet tones, Baleron said, “Father, you said you would consider giving me a command of my own, and I think I’ve proven my ability to lead one today. Give me some troops and I swear I’ll bring the fight to the enemy. I will make it my mission to lead my men beyond the walls, to single out the leaders of Ungier’s host. To take them down. I need this, Father. We need this. We cannot afford to fight this defensive war. They’ll wait until we’re weak, then crush us. We cannot outlast them. Give me some men. I will make you proud.”

  His father studied him with hard blue eyes that had rarely seen his youngest son with favor. Perhaps he thought of Baleron’s Doom. Perhaps he weighed this against Baleron’s charge today that had rescued near a hundred men.

  At last he nodded, half to himself, and said, “Very well, Baleron. I will give you your command.”

  “Are you sure about this, Father?” asked Rilurn.

  “I am.”

  Finally, Baleron would lead men once more. It half-surprised him that, after all he’d been through, he still valued his father’s opinion so highly.

  “I won’t disappoint you,” he said.

  “Don’t worry about me.” Albrech nodded toward the Borchstogs. “Worry about them.”

  And so, once more, Baleron became a leader of men
. He assumed command of five hundred soldiers along the western arc of the wall, and, bolstered by Rondthril, he led them with grim determination, even as the siege stretched for two weeks, then three.

  True to his vow, he led his men in wild charges beyond the wall, where they brought considerable slaughter to the enemy. Once, utilizing Shelir’s charm, he captured a vampire and brought it back inside the wall for purposes of what he called “interrogation”. Afterwards he stuck the vampire’s head on a pike along the wall; it would have burst into flames come morning, but due to Gilgaroth’s ever-present storm clouds no sunlight reached it, and so it stayed, and Ungier raged.

  This feat earned Baleron’s command much fame in Glorifel, and his men became known as Baleron’s Fighting Five Hundred, and they became a symbol to the Glorifelans of the resistance to Gilgaroth and Ungier. Sometimes, though, Baleron felt that the people feared him as much as they feared the Enemy.

  Baleron heard a rumor that Albrech might make him a general, and he rejoiced. He’d become an empty thing, he knew, a thing of blood and death, but at least he was good at it, and at long last he’d earned his father’s favor, his life’s ambition.

  Meanwhile, the war rolled on. Its conclusion seemed inevitable.

  But then one night during the third week Baleron awoke to great cry. He slept along the wall with his soldiers, and hearing the noise he sat up with a start. Men along the parapet were yelling.

  Baleron rubbed the sleep from his eyes and ascended a stone staircase to the top of the wall, where he demanded to know what was going on.

  The nearest man pointed, and Baleron was shocked to see a serath—a Great Swan!—winging in out of the west, and upon it was a rider whose long black hair swept back away from her pale face. She was clothed in a long white fluttering dress, and to Baleron she seemed like an angel—or a ghost.

  She was too far away to see clearly, and Baleron fetched a spyglass and brought it to his eye. Almost frantically, thinking crazy thoughts, he found the figure through the glass and studied her features, which began to crystallize as she approached the lights along the wall, and then all of a sudden they snapped into focus.

  Baleron gasped and stumbled back. He felt the world tilt beneath him.

  Nothing would ever be the same again.

  Rolenya had come home.

  Chapter 10

  From the camps of the Borchstogs, arrows whistled upward, raining all about her. Cold fingers touched Baleron’s spine, but she was high and her serath eluded the bolts, at least for the moment. White dress streaming behind her, she drove toward the walls like a moonbeam.

  Ungier roused his glarumri to hound her. The great crows’ black shapes lifted off from the ground and cut through the night towards her, their riders readying bows and poisoned arrows.

  She flew closer and closer to the walls.

  Suddenly Baleron felt new worry. Logran’s wards might incinerate her. He called on the sorcerer, who arrived from his position further along up the wall, and said, “Let her through!”

  “She should first be approved by the king,” Logran said.

  “She’s approved by me! Let her in.”

  Reluctantly, recognizing the princess and desiring to obey Baleron, Logran said, “Very well. But if she turns out to be a spy, it’s on your head.”

  The squadron of glarumri pursued the swan and its rider, firing not just poisoned arrows at her but arrows of flame as well. It was a surreal sight to Baleron—the beautiful princess on her white swan, with moonlight spilling softly down on them from a shaft through the black roof of clouds, winging in above a dark horde and before the foul crows of her enemies while storm clouds flickered and brooded above, and flaming arrows sizzled through the air about her.

  “Do something!” Baleron ordered Logran. “Strike down those arrows!”

  Logran’s eyes closed. “I’m trying! Necromancers block me!”

  “Curse them! I’ll do it myself!”

  Baleron shouted an order to the captain of his archers to ready the marksmen, then quit the wall and mounted Lunir.

  “Don’t be a fool!” called Logran, but Baleron ignored him.

  “Away!” Baleron shouted.

  The glarum cawed in protest but flapped his wings and leapt into the night. Baleron wore a shield on one arm, several daggers on his chest, carried Rondthril at his hip, and even as he flew he notched an arrow in his bow.

  Without a thought, he left the protection of the wall behind. His blood pounded furiously as he flew closer and closer to Rolenya.

  Ahead, her swan flew swiftly, gracefully.

  The glarumri gnashed their teeth as they closed the distance. Flaming arrows arced out. Their deadly rain grew more precise with every second. Lightning reflected off their wolf-shaped helms.

  Baleron fell upon them.

  He drove Lunir straight into their midst. So focused were they on Rolenya that they hadn’t seen him coming, and he laughed as they scattered before him.

  His bow twanged, and Borchstogs fell from their mounts. He tried not to shoot the glarums themselves, but when one flew at him, talons outstretched, he shot it through the throat, and it spiraled, dead, to the ground far below.

  A Borchstog fired a crossbow at him. He raised his shield arm. The bolt clattered off.

  He flung a dagger at it as they closed the distance and the blade buried itself in the Borchstog’s eye. The Crow Rider slumped backward.

  Its glarum came on.

  The impact of Lunir and the enemy bird shook Baleron’s very bones. A terrible squawking and cawing ensued as the two glarums battled. They grappled, spinning entangled through the night, and Baleron held on for dear life as their talons raked each other. Their long, armored beaks stabbed deep into tender flesh. Black blood spurted. Black feathers filled the air.

  At last, Lunir, ever vicious and ill-tempered, eviscerated the enemy glarum, and it fell away, loops of intestines trailing behind.

  A quick look confirmed that Rolenya was nearing the wall. Almost within bowshot now.

  Three glarumri still pursued her.

  With a quick word to Lunir, Baleron chased after them, notching an arrow. Waited. There! He fired. The missile struck the Borchstog’s back, right below a piece of armor. Dying, the glarumril slid halfway out of its saddle. Its straps held it in, but the crow was off balance and veered away.

  Baleron’s archers on the wall fired then, a hail of precision. The long bolts flew to either side of Rolenya, taking down her remaining two pursuers in twin explosions of black blood and black feathers.

  At last, she passed over the wall. Safe.

  A flaming arrow whizzed past Baleron’s head and he turned back to face the oncoming glarumri. They were too many. Desperate, he angled Lunir down, down and down, then pulled up right before they struck the ground and fled fast toward the wall.

  He led his glarumri pursuers within range of his archers—arrows shot out—and he looked over his shoulder with relief to see crows and riders spiraling down behind him. Finally, he too passed over the wall.

  A look to the left showed Rolenya circling above a courtyard. He went to her. She set her serath down near a fishpond with a sculpture of an ancient queen rising from its center, and Baleron set down beside her.

  A crowd gathered about the returned princess, bigger by the moment as word spread. Among those gathered was Logran, looking strangely grim among the excited townspeople and soldiers.

  Baleron’s attention was solely for Rolenya. A bit dazed, she watched the townspeople with a lost expression, as if intimidated by their numbers. She made no move to dismount from her swan, so Baleron slipped off Lunir and went to her. Took her hand.

  Startled, she turned to him. This was her first true glance at him, and it changed her whole face. Her blue eyes grew huge and she lit up like a candle.

  “Baleron!” She smiled happily. On the instant, she slid down from her swan and threw herself against him. “Baleron!”

  He laughed. “It’s me, as ever was
,” he affirmed. In her ear, he whispered, “You’re home.”

  “It’s like a dream.”

  He held her tight. He could hardly believe it. But her warm body felt very real.

  Shortly King Grothgar arrived. He pushed his way through the jostling crowd, and they made way for him, their shouts and laughs receding. All wanted to give him this moment, this reunion.

  His expression at seeing Rolenya was a thing to behold. His mouth gaped open, and tears filled his hard eyes.

  “Rolenya!” he cried, and rushed to her.

  “Father!” she shouted.

  Logran stepped between them—and, to Baleron’s surprise, forcibly pushed them apart.

  “No,” the Archmage said sternly to the king. “It could be a trick.” Looking at Rolenya, he said, “She could be a spy. We must test her.”

  “Test her?” the king spat. “But it’s Rolenya!”

  “It’s me,” she said.

  Logran shook his head. “It must be done.”

  “It’s all right,” Baleron told her. “They had to do the same to me. It’s the only way.”

  Reluctantly, she nodded.

  Logran and his sorcerers took her away.

  Baleron hated to see her go, and Albrech certainly did, but both grudgingly understood the necessity of it.

  For several days Logran and his brethren kept Rolenya locked away in their temporary headquarters along the Wall while they analyzed her. Baleron and the rest of the family, especially his father, waited anxiously until at last the sorcerers finished. As it happened, Baleron was the first to be told.

  He was once again with Amrelain, having dinner and wine after a hard day’s fighting, when Logran appeared in his suite.

  Baleron stood up instantly, apprehensive. “Is it Rolenya?”

  Logran nodded, pleased. “We’ve finished testing her, my prince, and I’ve good news to report.”

  “It’s her! It’s really her!” Joy filled him. During the days of waiting, he’d agonized over the thought that the woman he saved might be an imposter.

  Logran nodded proudly. “Indeed she is.”

 

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