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With A Single Spell

Page 14

by Lawrence Watt-Evans


  The next door he tried led to a privy, and the third to what had apparently been a dressing room. Here he found a few more bits of jewelry, which, again, he gathered up quickly.

  Seeing nothing more worthy of investigation in this suite he climbed back down to the balcony and began working his way down toward the other staircase.

  Before he had gone halfway, though, Peren called up to him, “Wait a minute, Tobas.”

  He paused. “What is it?”

  “How is it that you’re doing all the exploring?”

  Tobas had no good answer for that.

  “It seems safe enough,” Peren insisted.

  “All right, then,” Tobas agreed. “Come on up. On that side is the lady’s apartment; this side should be the lord’s, then, and I think it was he who was the wizard.”

  Peren nodded. “We’ll see,” he said, as he headed for the stairs.

  As he drew near, Tobas remembered the jewelry. He held out a handful of gold and glittering gems — though much of the gold was probably plate, and the larger jewels glass. “I found these up there,” he said. “We’ll divide them up later.”

  “All right,” Peren said.

  “Now, let’s see what’s up here.” Tobas led the way up the remaining staircase.

  As he had expected, it led to an audience chamber, roughly the size of the lady’s sitting room and bedroom put together. A heavy wooden throne still stood in its accustomed place, obviously bolted to the floor, but the other furnishings had largely been reduced to a layer of dust, sticks, and tatters along the lower edges. The draperies behind the throne that had once shielded the inner chambers had been eaten away by insects, leaving a sort of ragged lacework thick with dust; when Tobas poked at them they collapsed completely.

  He and Peren moved on into the sitting room; here, protected by solid walls, unbroken windows, and the stubborn drapes, time had done little damage. Tables and chairs were heaped along the lower edges, but only a few were broken; boxes lay scattered, their contents spilled and lost, for the most part. Some still held powders; Tobas looked at these carefully, sniffing cautiously at some.

  He could not identify any with certainty, but he thought several of the powders resembled ones he had seen Roggit use in his spells. Perhaps the wizard-lord had kept ready supplies of some of his ingredients close at hand here, in case magic was called for during audiences.

  A few of the empty boxes were trimmed with gold, jewels, or time-blackened silver, but those that held powders were unadorned.

  Tobas did not bother to pick up any of the valuables here; he had enough from the lady’s chambers. Peren, however, still had an empty pouch or two on his belt, and gathered up the most obviously precious items.

  A door led out to the upper arcade of the Great Hall, and another further into the apartment.

  The next chamber was not, as Tobas had expected, the bedchamber, but appeared to be a small guardroom or antechamber. Four chairs, their upholstery crumbled to dust but otherwise still sound, were piled in one corner, and several spears and swords lay nearby, blades blackened but still solid.

  Beyond that was the lord’s bedchamber, and under the thick coating of dust that lay everywhere the mattress and draperies were still intact — brittle, faded, incredibly dry and fragile, but intact. The bed itself had slid down against the lower wall, but had not tipped over or broken. Two wardrobes had been less fortunate, as had an immense chest of drawers. Something heavy had struck the formal railing below the foot of the bed and reduced it to kindling, a few of the scattered pieces still shiny with gilding.

  Their footsteps stirred up the dust, and both youths sneezed a few times in response.

  Three doors led onward, one to a privy, one to the arcade, and the third, at last, to the wizard’s private study.

  The furniture here had been simple enough — no tapestries, no carvings, just a simple, unadorned table and walls completely lined with shelves. About half of the shelves had remained in place, though their contents had not; everything else lay in a great heap of rotting books, broken glass, and scrap wood.

  Tobas immediately began pulling out the books, looking for a book of spells, ignoring the clouds of dust that rose around him and ignoring Peren.

  Peren, for his part, went back to exploring the rest of the castle, gathering up anything that looked even remotely valuable in a sack improvised from the most intact of the wizard’s bedroom tapestries.

  The sack shredded under the weight of the loot fairly quickly, and Peren switched to collecting as much as he could carry and heaping it on the balcony.

  He had been at this for perhaps an hour when the fading of the light became unmistakable. He made himself a torch out of tapestry fragments and an old table-leg, spent fifteen minutes getting it lit — the fabric might be dry, but igniting it with flint and steel was still no easy task — and then returned to the wizard’s study.

  He found Tobas squinting in the thickening gloom, trying to make out the contents of yet another book.

  “Tobas,” he said, “it’s getting dark.”

  “I know,” the young wizard replied. “Could you make me a torch like that?”

  “Have you found anything?”

  “Histories, and love poems, and even cookbooks, but no books of magic. I thought this was one, but it’s not, it’s a text on the curative properties of herbs — useful, I suppose, but not wizardry.”

  “Have you noticed that there isn’t a single fireplace or chimney in this entire castle?”

  “Hm? No, I hadn’t; I suppose it was heated by magic originally. Could you get me something for more light?”

  “Can’t the rest of these books wait until morning?”

  “What?” Tobas looked about himself absent-mindedly; in his hopeful fascination with the books he had become somewhat distracted. “Oh, I guess they can, really. I found something else, though — look here, behind these boards.” He rose and crossed to the lower end of the sloping floor, where he pushed aside a pile of fallen shelving and pointed to empty darkness beyond.

  The study was not the final room in the wizard’s apartment; Tobas had found a door leading on still further into the depths of the suite.

  “What’s in there?” Peren asked.

  “I haven’t looked,” Tobas replied. “There’s no light. I don’t think there are any windows, just solid stone walls. I was waiting for you to come back before I decided what to do about it.”

  Peren held up his torch and peered in. “It’s a passageway, I think, not a room.”

  “It would have to be; we’ve come the full length of the castle already. This must run across the front, directly above the gate, inside the thickness of the downstairs wall.”

  Peren nodded agreement, and held the torch out before him. The flame did not flicker; the air in the passageway was dead and still. “I’ll go first,” he said.

  “All right,” Tobas agreed. “I’ll be right behind you.”

  Chapter Seventeen

  The passageway sloped up across full width of the front of the castle, Tobas judged, and was unbroken by any windows or ornamentation at all. It consisted of bare stone walls and floor and a simple barrel-vaulted ceiling, and nothing more. It had originally been level, of course, and the angle was not particularly steep even now. The pitch from side to side was greater than along its length, so that Peren and Tobas hung close to the right-hand side, walking along the bottom edge.

  Despite the absolute simplicity of the corridor, or perhaps because of it, Tobas was certain that the entrance from the wizard’s study had once been concealed, though whether by shelves, draperies, or some other device he could not be sure amid the general ruin. Perhaps there had once been an illusion spell that had been dispersed when the castle’s magic ceased to function.

  The corridor was narrow; Tobas had to keep his elbows close to his sides to avoid bumping the walls. Peren, who was thinner, had an easier time of it.

  They were about two-thirds of the way along, Tobas judged
from his memory of the Great Hall’s width, when Peren stopped so abruptly that Tobas ran into him; both staggered on the sloping floor, and Peren had to fall to one knee to keep from losing his torch.

  “What is it?” Tobas hissed — speaking aloud in such a place was unthinkable.

  “Look for yourself!” Peren said, pointing.

  With the albino down on one knee Tobas was able to see over his shoulder; he took a good look at the end of the corridor.

  The right-hand wall continued unbroken for another forty or fifty feet, while the left-hand wall ended after thirty or so; from where they stood Tobas could not see any details of the wider area, or room, or whatever it was they were approaching.

  He could, however, see what Peren had seen, lying on the floor. He had never actually encountered one before, but there could be no mistaking it.

  It was a human skeleton, the bones of the legs and feet protruding out into the corridor, the rest still invisible around the corner — or at any rate, Tobas assumed that the rest was there, just around the corner. The tattered remnants of velvet slippers were tangled with the bones of the feet.

  A moment of unreasoning dread came and went, and he quickly recovered his calm. “What of it?” he said, doing his best to sound as if he had come across skeletons dozens of times before. “He’s dead. I want to see what’s up there. Let’s go on.”

  “What killed him?” Peren whispered, horror-stricken.

  “How should I know?” Tobas was quite uneasy enough without Peren adding to it; he was determined to move on before he lost his nerve, and was annoyed at the albino’s reluctance. “Probably he fell and hit his head when the castle crashed,” he guessed wildly.

  Peren glanced back at Tobas, then ahead again, gathered his nerve, and nodded. “You’re probably right. Or maybe he was a burglar, and the wizard caught him here, and the castle crashed before the body could be removed.” He rose to his feet and started forward again.

  Tobas followed, certain that something was wrong with Peren’s suggestion, and trying to figure out what it was; as they reached the corner he realized that the crash would not have prevented the survivors from removing bodies. There had undoubtedly been survivors, or else the castle would have been littered with corpses — or rather, by now, skeletons. If anyone had known this body was here it would have been removed despite the castle’s fall.

  He liked his own theory better, that the man — or woman — had died here in the crash, and none of the survivors had known this passage existed. Or if they had known about it, no one had thought to check it in the confusion and panic that must have ensued.

  When he passed the end of the left-hand wall into the room he paused and looked down at the skeleton first, while Peren held the torch close.

  It had been a man, plainly. He had worn leather breeches and a dark tunic with gold embroidery; the golden threads still gleamed in the dessicated and decayed remnants. An assortment of rings mingled with the outstretched fingerbones, ranging from a simple gold band to an ornate tangle of gems and metals that must have covered an entire joint, from knuckle to knuckle. A wide leather belt was now reduced to a few blackened strands and a tarnished silver buckle, and the purse that had hung from it had rotted and spilled forth an assortment of blackened silver and corroded green bronze. No gold coins, though; the two youths were disappointed in that.

  Beside the purse was a dagger, its sheath rotted; Tobas picked it up cautiously while Peren collected the coins.

  Hilt and blade were black, black as chimney-soot; there was no trace of the brown of rust. Fine detail-work was still sharp, in places where iron or steel would have lost its shape as it corroded.

  Tobas rubbed at the pommel with his tunic, and although he could not work down to a clean shine, he wiped off enough of the black to convince himself, by both look and feel, that the dagger was silver.

  Who would carry a silver dagger? Only a wizard. Steel held a better edge, barring enchantment, and was far cheaper.

  Forgetting for a moment that he was in a place where wizardry could not work, he drew his own athame and touched the points of the two blades together. Peren watched with interest.

  Nothing happened.

  Even as he completed the experiment, Tobas cursed himself for a fool. The dagger’s owner was long dead, and magic did not work here. He could not test his belief that this skeleton had belonged to the castle’s master. He sheathed his own blade and stood up.

  “I think that this was the wizard,” he said. “Or at any rate a wizard.”

  Peren nodded. “The rings — they look magical.”

  Tobas had hardly noticed the rings, but he nodded agreement all the same. He had almost forgotten that the athame’s nature was a closely-guarded secret, and that ordinary people had no idea a wizard’s dagger was anything especially important, until Peren had reminded him with his remark; he had been assuming that Peren would have recognized the knife’s peculiarities for himself.

  Peren raised the torch, which he had been holding down near the skeleton to aid Tobas’ investigation, and said, “I wonder what he was reaching for?”

  “Probably just trying to regain his balance,” Tobas said. The skeleton did appear to be reaching out into the darkness; the left arm was bent as if supporting the shoulders while the right was stretched out to its fullest extension, fingers spread.

  “I guess you were right,” Peren said as he leaned down near the skull. “The fall killed him. See? The bone is cracked.” He pointed to where the forehead had been split and almost caved in. “He must have hit hard; I think he was running.”

  The torch lit the domed skull an eerie orange-red, the cavities black with shadows that moved as the flame flickered. Tobas did not care to look at the dead man’s remains any longer; instead he looked around at the space they were in.

  The corridor opened out at this end into a room, almost twenty feet square, utterly bare and empty save for one wall. The floor was blank stone; there was no furniture nor debris. One side, to the right of the skeleton, was an extension of the right-hand wall of the corridor; on the wall opposite that hung the only adornment, a broad, dark tapestry.

  Tobas stared at it, unable to make out details in the gloom, but certain that there was something odd about it. “Bring that light here,” he said.

  Peren lifted the torch and rose from where he crouched by the broken skull. He took a few steps closer to the tapestry so that the torch lit the entire scene, and together the two adventurers stared at the hanging.

  It was unlike any tapestry either of them had ever seen; it was all a single scene, depicted in incredible detail and absolutely flawless perspective, showing a pathway leading across a narrow band of rough stone toward the gates of a castle.

  Above the pathway towered the castle itself, shown almost in its entirety, a very strange and forbidding castle, built of gray and black stone, its every available feature carved into a leering, demonic face. The main entryway was a gaping, spike-toothed mouth, and two windows above it served as eyes, so that the castle itself seemed to have a malignant face as well. A gargoyle perched atop each merlon in the battlements; each corner was decorated with fiends standing upon each other’s shoulders for the full height of the structure. Towers hung out at odd angles, cantilevered without any signs of buttressing, topped with battlements of jagged spikes or conical roofs made to resemble furled bat-wings. Inhuman, grinning faces, carved in black stone, peered over the tops of some of these, seeming to look straight out of the tapestry at the viewer.

  The base of the castle stood on a rounded mass of rock, like a weathered mountaintop, with a few feet of clearance on each side, and then cliffs dropping away out of sight, or even seeming to curl back under. It was separated from the pathway by a narrow bridge of ropes and planking that was stretched across a yawning chasm.

  To all sides of the castle and pathway, beyond a yard or so of stone, was simply space, limitless space, lit eerily from somewhere unseen with purple and crimson.
/>   Tobas stared at it, studying it. It had none of the fuzziness or texture of an ordinary tapestry, no single underlying background color; it looked almost like a painting, or even a window, rather than mere cloth. Furthermore, it showed no trace of decay at all. At the very least it was a truly fabulous work of art; he had never seen a tapestry so finely crafted and detailed.

  Peren turned away, a trifle unsteadily. “I don’t like it,” he said. “That thing is hideous! No place like that could possibly exist, with those cliffs, and that empty sky, and that foul light.”

  Tobas glanced at him, then back at the tapestry, still fascinated. “It’s beautifully done, though. Look at the detail! You can see a red highlight there on that gargoyle’s fang, and another here — that must be a spider-web, that shiny line there. I’ve never seen anything like that. And the colors would probably be better in daylight; you know torches make everything look reddish and bring out the shadows.”

  “I don’t like it,” Peren repeated, unswayed.

  Tobas ignored this complaint and said, “Bring that light closer. Notice how it isn’t faded, or worn? It looks brand-new.” Hesitantly, he reached out a finger and touched the cloth. It was cool and slick to the touch, a little like fine silk, with none of the warmth and give of the wool used in ordinary hangings.

  Peren reluctantly brought the torch nearer, so that Tobas could study the tapestry’s fabric more closely.

  “Look at this,” Tobas said. “The fabric’s partly made out of metallic threads — gold, I’d guess. And the colors — I think that red is some sort of powdered gemstone. It looks like ruby.”

  “That’s ridiculous,” Peren said. “Why would anyone make a tapestry out of gold and jewels? And if they did, why would they hide it up here?”

  “It must be magic of some sort,” Tobas said, studying the demonic figures.

  Peren took an involuntary step backward. “What sort?”

  “Oh, I don’t know; wizardry, probably, given where we are, but it could be something used in demonology, too, I suppose. If it’s wizardry, I can’t say what it was for; Roggit never mentioned anything like this. It might be something oracular, or maybe the wizard could use the tapestry to conjure up monsters. I don’t know; Roggit certainly didn’t have any magic of this sort.” He looked up to see how the tapestry was supported; it hung from loops around a metal bar. Tobas took the torch from Peren and held it up.

 

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