Book Read Free

The Last Banquet (Bell Mountain)

Page 27

by Lee Duigon


  “My master offers you one last chance to declare your submission to him and surrender your boy king to him. He won’t make this offer a second time!”

  “Then we won’t have to hear it a second time,” Uduqu said.

  “Why do we give a hearing to this gallows bird?” Chief Shaffur said.

  “I am a herald!” Goryk said. “It is not lawful to harm me. But what says your poor little king? Has he learned yet to speak for himself?”

  Ryons felt like being sassy, but his teachers all said kings had to act a certain way. Too bad!

  “You must think we’re all jackasses,” he said, “to be taken in by your master’s tricks again. You’d better think of some new ones! We know there is no Thunder King, and hasn’t been for years and years. We can’t hang you, I guess. But it might be a good idea for you to hang yourself. Go away!”

  Goryk showed his teeth. “Very foolish, my lords. You’ve seen but the merest fraction of my master’s power. You have no idea what you face—no idea at all.”

  Obst laughed out loud, causing all heads to turn.

  “We have no idea!” he said. “Poor fools! The living God has used your master as a tool in His hands to accomplish what He wished—the unfettering of His spirit. And yet the axe boasts itself against the woodsman! What could be sillier?

  “The bell has been rung, the lost books recovered. You will see the hand of God stretched out all over the East, from sea to sea: for He desires all the nations of men to know Him. The more you vaunt yourselves against Him, the more you fight against Him, the more you do His bidding—in spite of yourselves!

  “Go, Goryk, tell your masters that their weapons are turned against themselves; and that far from fearing them, we pity them. The spirit of the Lord is with us. Never again will it be far from us. Never again will God’s word be kept from any ear who will hear it. And you, who would imprison pitiful Heathen gods who are only idols—you have only done what the true God raised you up to do.”

  The chiefs clashed their weapons on the legs of their stools. At a nod from Uduqu, two young Abnaks ushered Goryk from the hall.

  “If he ever comes back,” said Gurun, “hang him.”

  Obst shook his head. “Be sorry for them all,” he said. “They have no understanding of what they’ve started and no thought of where it ends.”

  “Does it have an end?” King Ryons asked.

  Obst smiled at him. “The work of the Lord have an end?” he said. “No, Sire—only one new beginning after another.”

  The end for now…

  Table of Contents

  The Castaway

  Gurun Explores the Ruins

  The Trapper

  Another Journey

  An Interrupted Journey

  The King and His Council

  What Can a Blind Man See?

  Among the Blays

  Helki on the Trail

  An Omen of Wrath

  The Blays Find a Home

  Into the East

  Oziah’s Wood

  The Blays in Battle

  The Legacy of the Temple

  Two Angels

  A Heathen Prophet

  The Village and the City

  Helki on the Trail

  Hlah’s Holy Man

  Lord Reesh’s New Disciple

  Cold Wind

  Hoe Tim Met the King

  Men Like Gods

  Hlah and the Rangers

  How Gurun Met the King

  What Angel Saw, But Could Not Tell

  How the King Saved Hamber

  How the Animals Fled

  The Golden Pass

  How the King Returned to Obann

  How Orth Received a New Name

  To See Without Seeing

  Helki and the Town

  Gurun and Obst

  How Lord Reesh Met the Thunder King

  How Some Abnaks Were Tamed

  Helki Picks a Fight

  Lord Reesh Says a Prayer

  A Message from the Thunder King

  Of Gallgoid, and Helki

  How Ellayne Carried Out Her Plan

  How Gurun Received a Gift

  How Ootoo Practiced Charity

  A Valuable Piece of Rust and Dirt

  The Road up the Mountain

  The Toddling Prophet

  How a Father Got News of His Daughter

  A Stranger on the Road

  What Galloid Discovered at the Golden Hall

 

 

 


‹ Prev