Spellsinger 02 - The Hour of the Gate

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by Foster, Alan Dean;


  little while earlier.

  "put out the word to all the ends of the scuttleteau, to the

  uppermost flanks of the mountains and the bottoms of the

  rivers, to all the believers in the weave and to all who would

  defend their webs against the plated folk, that a temporary

  alliance has been struck with the people of the warmlands to

  help them drive the plated beasts back into their putrid hole of

  a homeland once and for all!"

  "it shall be done, my lady," said the herald quickly. She

  dismissed him with a wave of one leg and he hurried away to

  do the bidding.

  "we will move as soon as we have word from your

  messenger ananthos," she told them. "we will go hopefully

  with a known route and will try our best if none such is

  available, but i will not send the best of the weave over the

  high snows to a cold death."

  "We know that," said Clothahump gratefully. "You can't

  be expected to sacrifice yourselves to no purpose. But don't

  worry. We'll convince these people to show us a way."

  Jon-Tom did not think it a judicial time to mention the

  possibility that such a path might not exist.

  "it is in your claws now. i will have this ananthos found

  and will give him my personal instructions and the scarf of

  ambassadorial rank. will you require an escort?"

  "We've gotten this far on our own," Talea pointed out.

  "From what you say these Ironclouders aren't hostile, just

  stubborn." She patted the sword at her hip. "We can take

  care of ourselves."

  "i did not mean to imply otherwise, i will see that you are

  well supplied with food and—" She broke off at the twisted

  expression on Flor's face, one that was sufficiently intense

  and abrupt to transcend interspecies differences, "perhaps

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  you had best see to your own provisioning, at that. list what

  you wish and i will see it is provided, i had forgotten for a

  moment that you partake of nourishment in a fashion some-

  what different from ours."

  "Our marital habits are a little different, too." Jon-Tom

  glanced significantly toward the bejeweled boudoir.

  "so i have heard, honor is a strange thing, sometimes it is

  better to die happy and honored than to live miserably and

  unrespected. and you do not consider the effects such repeat-

  ed matings have on my own mind. a burdensome thing, i am

  not permitted a lifetime of happiness but instead short periods

  followed by regretful melancholy, tradition must be upheld,

  however." She waved a leg magnanimously.

  "all that is required will be provided, i only hope that we

  have sufficient time to prepare and that we are granted a path

  by which to proceed."

  "We are most grateful," said Clothahump, bowing slightly.

  "You are a Grand Webmistress indeed."

  "it is no compliment to say that one can see the truth."

  She waved several legs. "good fortune to you, newfound

  friends."

  The visitors began to file out of the chamber. Jon-Tom go

  halfway to the portal, then turned and walked back to her.

  "the audience is at an end," Oil told him somewhat less

  than politely.

  "I'm sorry. But I have to know something. Then I'll leav<

  you to your privacy."

  Fathomless eyes regarded him quietly, "ask then."

  "Why did you single me out to talk with, instead o

  Clothahump or Caz or one of the others?"

  "why? oh, because of your delightful and inspiring selec

  tion of garb. it marks you clearly as a superior being to your

  companions, wizardly talents notwithstanding."

  Turning, she walked rhythmically back to stand below the

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  THE HOUR OF THE GATE

  royal bower. Reattaching fresh silk to the dangling cable, she

  promptly climbed up and disappeared behind the barrier of

  gems and silken embroidery.

  Jon-Tom was left to consider his bright black leathern

  pants, the matching boots and dark shirt.

  It was only much later, as they were departing Gossameringue

  with Ananthos in the lead, that Jon-Tom had the startling and

  unsettling thought that the Grand Webmistress might have

  been considering him as material for something besides

  conversation....

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  XI

  It was terrible in the mountains.

  Higher peaks towered to east and west, but as they moved

  south they were traversing the wmdswept flanks of Zaryt's

  Teeth, where they merged with the lower but still impres-

  sive mountains from which the greater heights sprang. It

  was bitingly cold. Soon they were walking not on rock or

  earth but on snow so dry and fresh it crunched like sugar

  underfoot.

  On the third day after leaving the Scuttleteau and its gentle

  rivers and warm forests they encountered snow flumes. The

  day after that they were stumbling through a modest blizzard.

  Oil's fears that the southern range might prove unnegotiable

  seemed well founded.

  Mudge and Caz suffered least of all, in contrast to their

  companions who did not enjoy the benefits of a personal far

  coat.

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  Alan Dean Poster

  Everyone profited from the example set by the stoic

  Bribbens. Though highly susceptible to the cold he trudged

  patiently along, silent and uncomplaining. Oftentimes his

  bulbous eyes were all that could be seen outside the thick

  clothing the Weavers had provided. He kept his discom-

  forts to himself, and so his companions were shamed into

  doing the same.

  Working with only rumor and supposition, the least reliable

  of guides, Ananthos somehow managed to pick a path

  southward.

  They had made little progress in five days of hard marching

  when Jon-Tom had his idea. A temporary camp was estab-

  lished in the shelter of a small cave. Jon-Tom and Plor led the

  others in the hunt for suitable saplings and green vines. These

  were then woven together with spider silk dispensed by

  Ananthos.

  With the aid of the new snowshoes their pace improved

  considerably. So did their spirits, boosted not only by their

  improved method of travel but by the hysterical image Ananthos

  presented as he shuffled along on six of the carefully wrought

  shoes, picking his way as uncertainly and carefully as a water

  sender trying to cross a pool of mud.

  They also improved Bribbens' morale. While they kept him

  no warmer, the enormous shoes on his webbed feet gave him

  tremendous stability.

  Jon-Tom moved up to march alongside Ananthos. It was

  the morning of their eighth day in the mountains.

  "Could we have missed it?" His breath made a cloud in

  front of his face. The cold fought implacably for a rout&

  through his clothes. The crude parka hastily fashioned by the

  Weavers was no substitute for a goose-down jacket. There

  was a real danger of freezing to death if they didn't find

  warmer country soon.

  "i don't think so." An
anthos indicated the precious scroll

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  THE HOUR OF THK GATE

  he kept in a protective, watertight tube strapped to his rear

  left leg. "i can only rely on the chart the court historians

  made for us. no weaver has been this far south in many

  years, there was no reason for doing so and, for obvious

  reasons, no desire to do so."

  "Then how can you be so sure we haven't passed it?"

  "i can be only as sure as the charts, but the tales say if one

  but continues south, as we have, following the lowest route

  through the mountains, he will come upon the iron cloud, that

  is, if the tales are true."

  "And if there is an iron cloud at all," Jon-Tom mumbled.

  A leg touched his waist, but Ananthos' reassurances were

  stolen by the wind.

  Despair is sometimes the preface to hope. On the ninth

  day the weather took pity on them. The snow ceased, the

  storm clouds betook themselves elsewhere, and the temper-

  ature wanned considerably, though it did not rise above

  freezing.

  As if to compensate they were confronted with another

  danger: snow blindness. The brilliant Alpine sun ricochetted

  off snowbanks and glacier fronts, turning everything to shock-

  ing, adamantine white.

  They managed to fashion crude shades from Ananthos'

  supply of scarves. Even so they were forced to keep their

  gaze to the ground and their senses at highest alert, lest the

  next snowbank turn out to be just the fatal side of some nearly

  hidden chasm.

  Another day and they started downward.

  Two weeks after departing Gossameringue they found the

  iron cloud.

  They were climbing a slight rise, bisecting a saddle be-

  tween two slopes. For days they had seen little color but

  varying shades of white, so the highly reflective black that

  suddenly confronted them was physically shocking.

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  Alan Dean Foster

  Across a rocky slope of crumbled granite patched with

  snow was a mountainside that appeared to have been deluged

  with frozen tar. It was encrusted with ice and snow in

  occasional crevices.

  Clearly the immense, smooth masses of black which

  jutted like an oily waterfall from the flank of the mountain-

  side were composed of material much tougher than tar.

  They resembled a succession of monstrous bubbles piled

  one atop another without bursting. Holes pockmarked the

  blackness.

  It was the metallic luster that led Flor to exclaim in

  surprise, "Por dios, es hematite."

  "What?" Jon-Tom turned a puzzled expression on her.

  "Hematite, Jon-Tom. It's an iron ore that occurs naturally

  in formations like that," and she pointed to the mountainside,

  "though I never learned of any approaching such size. The

  formation is called mammary, or reniform, I think."

  "What is she saying?" asked Clothahump with interest.

  "That the 'iron' part of the name Ironcloud is taken from

  reality and not poetry. Come on!"

  They descended the gentle slope on the other side of the

  saddle and made their way across the stony plateau. The huge

  black extrusion hung above them, millions of tons of near-

  iron as secure as the mountain itself. Viewed against the

  surrounding snow and sky, it did indeed look much like a

  cloud.

  But where were the fabled inhabitants, he wondered? What

  could they be like? The holes which pierced the masses

  overhead hinted at their possible abode, but though the party

  surveyed them intently there was no hint of motion from

  within.

  "It looks abandoned," said Talea, staring upward.

  "Don't see a soul," Pog commented from nearby.

  They slid their burdensome backpacks off while examining

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  THE HOUK Of THE GATE

  the inaccessible caves above. Climbing the granite wall was

  out of the question. Not only did the massive formation

  overhang but the smooth iron offered little purchase. Without

  sophisticated mountaineering gear there was no way they

  could reach even the lowest of the caves.

  It was clear enough how the invisible inhabitants managed

  the feat, however. From the rim of each cave opening hung a

  long vine. Knots were tied in each roughly six inches apart.

  The profusion of dangling vines, swaying gently in the

  mountain breeze, gave the formation the look of a dark man

  with a beard.

  The problem arose from the fact that the shortest cable-vine

  was a good two hundred feet long. No one thought themself

  capable of the combination of strength and dexterity neces-

  sary to make the climb. Talea considered it, but the thinness

  of the vine precluded the attempt. Whoever used the vines

  weighed a good deal less than any in the frustrated party of

  visitors.

  Mudge was agile, but he wasn't fond of climbing. Ananthos

  was clearly too large to enter the hole, though he stood the

  best chance of rising to the height.

  "We waste time on peripheral argument," Clothahump

  finally snorted at them, when he was at last able to get a word

  in. "Pog!"

  Everyone looked around, but the bat was nowhere to be

  seen.

  " 'Ere 'e is!" Mudge pointed toward a large boulder.

  They ran to the spot to find the bat squatting resolutely on

  the gravel behind the rock. He looked up at them with

  determined bat eyes. „

  "No way am I going up dere and sticking my nose in one

  of dose black pits. No telling what might take a notion to bite

  it off."

  "Come now, mate," said Mudge reasonably, adjusting his

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  Alan Dean Foster

  parka top, "be sensible. You're the only arboreal among us.

  If I didn't think that vine'd bust under me weight, I'd give a

  climb a good try. But why the 'ell should one o' us 'ave t'

  risk that, when you could be up there and back in a bloody

  minute or two without so much as strainin' your wings?"

  "An accurate evaluation of our situation." Caz positioned

  his monocle tighter over his left eye. He'd steadfastly refused

  to surrender the affectation, even at the risk of losing the

  monocle in the snow. "You know, you really should have

  been up there and back already, on your own initiative."

  "Initiative, hell!" Pog flapped his wings angrily. "One

  more display of 'initiative' from dis crazy bunch and we'll

  find ourselves meat on somebody's table."

  "Now Pog," Clothahump began wamingly.

  "Yeah, I know, I know, boss. Go to it or ya'll turn me into

  a human or worse." He sighed, unfurled his wings experi-

  mentally.

  "perhaps i could get up there—at least if i can't fit inside,

  i could attach to a hole above and hang down to, look in."

  Ananthos sounded awkward, wanting to contribute.

  "You know that surface is too slick for you to get a hold

  on, and if you could you probably couldn't get in and move

  around in there. Your leg span is too wide. Besides, I think

  Pog should have a
chance at this." Clothahump was firm.

  "A chance at what? Meeting my maker in a cold hole in da

  sky?"

  Ananthos looked pained, but Jon-Tom gave Pog encour-

  agement with his eyes.

  "If you're all determined den to see poor Pog get his throat

  laid open, I expect I'll have ta be about da business. I warn

  ya, dough, if I don't come back alive I'll come back dead and

  haunt ya all to an early grave."

  "Don't take any chances, Pog," Jon-Tom advised him.

  "Probably you won't find anything, or anyone. Just fly up

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  TBE HOUR OF THE GATE

  and check out one or two caves, see if this place is really as

  deserted as it looks. If it is, maybe you'll leam the reason

  why."

  "Maybe one of da reasons is hiding in one of dose caves!"

  snapped the worried bat, gesturing upward with a wing

  thumb.

  "If so then don't hang around to argue with it," said

  Talea. "You're going up to look, not to fight. Get your butt

  back down here as fast as you can."

  Pog hovered just above the ground, lit on top of the boulder

  he'd been hiding behind. "No need ta worry 'bout that, Talea

  lady." He pulled his knife from its back sheath and slipped it

  between his jaws.

  "Wish me luck," he mumbled around the blade.

  "There is no need for luck when intelligence and good

  judgment are exercised," said Clothahump.

  Pog made a rude noise, flapped his wings, and launched

  himself from the crest of the rock. He dropped, skimmed

  inches above sharp gravel, and then began to climb, using the

  warm currents rising from the bare plateau to ascend in a

  steady spiral.

  "You think he'll be okay?" Flor shielded her eyes from the

  glare and squinted at the sky where a black shape was

  growing gradually smaller. Pog now looked like a toy kite

  against the pure blue curtain overhead.

  "Instinct is a powerful aid to self-preservation."

  "Oh?" she said with just a hint of sarcasm. "What book

  did that come out of?"

  Jon-Tom was also leaning back and looking toward the lip

  of the iron cloud. He just swallowed Flor's remark.

  Hemarist, da tall human lady had called it. No, dat

  wasn't right. Hema... Hematite. Like in a tight spot, which

  is what you gots yourself into, Pog thought to himself. He

  was high above the rocky plain now. The figures of his

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  Alan Dean Foster

  companions were sharp and distinct against the gray gravel. He

  could tell they were watching him.

 

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