Wolfar leaped for a sword. Gerin tackled him before he could reach it. They crashed to the floor in a rolling, cursing heap. Then, like a trap, two horn-edged hands were at the Fox’s throat. Almost of their own accord, his reached through Wolfar’s thick beard to find a similar grip. He felt Wolfar tense under it.
Gerin tightened his neck muscles as he had learned in the wrestling schools of the capital, tried to force breath after precious breath into his lungs. The world eddied toward blackness. In one of his last clear moments, he wondered again why no one was breaking up the fight. Then there was only the struggle to get the tiniest whisper of air and … keep … his … grip … tight …
After that, all he knew was the uprushing welcoming dark.
The first thing he realized when his senses returned was that he was no longer locked in that death embrace. His throat was on fire. Van and Schild Stout-staff bent over him, concern on their faces. He tried to speak. Nothing came from his mouth but a croak and a trickle of blood.
He signed for pen and parchment. After a moment’s incomrpehension, Van fetched them. Quill scratching, Gerin wrote, “What happened?”
As reading was not one of his many skills, Van held the scrap of parchment in some embarrassment. Seeing his plight, Schild took it from him. “‘What happened?’” he read. “My lord Gerin, you are the only man who knows that.”
Gerin looked a question at Van.
“Aye, Wolfar’s dead.” The outlander took up the tale. “When he and you went up to have your talk, the rest of us sat around the great hall wondering what would come of it. Then the racket started. We all looked at each other, hoping it was something simple, say a demon from one of the hells or Balamung back from the fire.
“But no, sure as sure, it was you two going at each other. We could have had a fight down there to match the one up here. If anybody had tried going up the stairs, that’s just what would have happened. So, though nobody said much, we figured whoever came out would rule here, and anyone who didn’t like it or couldn’t stand it would be free to go, no hard feelings. And we waited.
“And nobody came out.
“Finally we couldn’t stand it any longer. Schild and I came up together. When we saw you, we thought you were both dead. But you breathed when we pried Wolfar’s hands off your neck, and he’ll never breathe again—you’re stronger than I gave you credit for, captain.”
Gerin sat up, rubbing his bruised throat. Looking at Schild, he managed a thin whisper. “You knew Wolfar was tricking me with his talk of a keep he could go home to, and you helped him do it.”
Van barked a startled oath, but Schild only nodded. “Of course I did. He was my overlord; he always treated me fairly, harsh though he was. He was not altogether wrong, either—it’s long past time for us to break away from the Empire’s worthless rule, and I cannot blame him for wanting the power he saw here for the taking.”
Schild looked Gerin in the eye. “I would not have called you ‘my lord,’ though, did I not think you would do a better job with it.” Slowly and deliberately, he went to one knee before the Fox. Van followed, though his grin showed how little he thought of such ceremonies.
Dazed more ways than one, Gerin accepted their homage. He half-wished he could flee instead. All he’d ever wanted, he told himself, was to read and think and not be bothered. But when the responsibility for Castle Fox fell on him, he had not shirked it. No more could he evade this greater one now.
He looked at his books, wondering when he would find time to open them again. So much to be done: the Trokmoi ousted, keeps restored and manned, Elise wed (a solitary bright thought among the burdens), Duin’s stirrups investigated (which reminded him how few horses he had left), peasants brought back to the land … Dyaus above, where was there an unravaged crop within five days’ journey?
He climbed to his feet and walked toward the stairs. “Well,” he said hoarsely, “let’s get to work.”
AFTERWORD
When in the early 1970s Poul Anderson reissued The Broken Sword after it had been out of print for some years, he noted that, without changing the plot, he had cleaned up the writing. I didn’t fully understand when I read his afterword: he’d published The Broken Sword, hadn’t he? How could it need cleaning up?
Now the shoe is on the other foot. Werenight was written in bits and pieces from 1976 to 1978 (often in time stolen from my dissertation); it first appeared in 1979 broken into two parts, titled by the publisher Wereblood and Werenight. The same publisher also tagged me with the pseudonym Eric Iverson, on the assumption no one would believe Harry Turtledove, which is my real name.
And now it’s time for the book to see print again. When I looked over the manuscript, I discovered, as Anderson and no doubt many others had before me, that I’m a better craftsman than I used to be. Without interfering with the story or characters I invented in my younger days, I have taken this chance to cut adjectives, adverbs, and semicolons, and generally tighten things up, and I’ve changed a couple of bit-players’ names where I’d used others that struck me as too similar to them in later fiction. All in all, this is the book I would have written then if I’d been a better writer. I hope you enjoy it.
—Harry Turtledove
October 1992
Turn the page to continue reading from the Gerin the Fox series
I
Gerin the Fox eyed the new logs in the palisade of Fox Keep. Even after five years’ weathering, they were easy to pick out, for they’d never been painted with the greenish glop the wizard Siglorel had concocted to keep Balamung the Trokmê mage from burning the keep around him. The stuff worked, too, but Balamung had slain Siglorel even so. Gerin knew something of magecraft himself, but he’d never been able to match Siglorel’s formulation.
In front of those new logs, a handful of the Fox’s retainers sat on their haunches in a circle. Gerin’s four-year-old son Duren ran from one of them to the next, exclaiming, “Can I roll the dice? Will you let me roll them now?”
Drago the Bear held the carved cubes of bone. Rumbling laughter, he handed them to Duren, who threw them down in the middle of the gamblers’ circle. “Haw! Twelve! No one can beat that,” Drago said. He scooped up his winnings, then glanced toward Gerin. “The boy brings luck, lord.”
“Glad to hear it,” Gerin answered shortly. Whenever he looked at his son, he couldn’t help thinking of the boy’s mother. When he’d wed Elise, he’d been sure the gods had granted him everlasting bliss. He’d thought so right up to the day, three years ago now, when she’d run off with a traveling horseleech. Only the gods knew where in the shattered northlands she was these days, or how she fared.
The Fox kicked at the dirt. Maybe if he’d noticed she wasn’t happy, he could have done things to make her so. Or maybe she’d just tired of him. Women did that, and men, too. “The great god Dyaus knows it’s too late to do anything about it now,” he muttered.
“Too late to do anything about what, Captain?” Van of the Strong Arm boomed as he came out of the stables. The outlander overtopped Gerin’s six feet by as many inches, and was nearly twice as thick through the shoulders, too; the red-dyed horsehair plume that nodded above his helmet only made him seem taller. As usual, he kept his bronze corselet polished almost to mirror brilliance.
“Years too late for us to do anything about getting imperial troopers up here,” Gerin answered. He was the sort who guarded private thoughts even from his closest friends.
Van spat on the ground. “That for imperial troopers. It was too late for those buggers five years ago, when the carrion-stinking Empire of Elabon shut all the passes into the north sooner than help us keep the Trokmoi out.”
“Dyaus knows we could have used the imperials then,” Gerin said. “We could use them still, if they’d come and if—”
“If they’d keep their hands off what’s yours,” Van finished for him.
“Well, yes, there is that,” Gerin admitted: he was given to understatement.
Van wasn’t. He s
norted, back deep in his throat. “Honh! ‘There is that,’ he says. You think the Emperor of Elabon would be happy with the title you’ve gone and taken for yourself? You know what he’d do if ever he got his hands on somebody who styled himself the Prince of the North, don’t you? He’d nail you to the cross so the ravens could sit on your shoulders and pick out your eyes, that’s what.”
Since Van was undoubtedly right, Gerin shifted the terms of the argument. He did the same thing whenever he and his friend wrestled, using guile to beat strength and weight. In wrestling as in argument, sometimes it worked and sometimes it didn’t. He said, “I’m not the only one in the northlands with a fancy new title since Elabon abandoned us. I’d have company on the crucifying grounds.”
“Aye, so you would,” Van said. “What’s Aragis the Archer calling himself these days? Grand Duke, that’s it. Honh! He’s just a jumped-up baron, same as you. And there’s two or three others of your Elabonian blood, and as many Trokmoi who came south over the Niffet with Balamung and stayed even after the wizard failed.”
“I know.” Gerin didn’t like that. For a couple of centuries, the Niffet had been the boundary between the civilization of the Empire of Elabon—or a rough, frontier version of it, at any rate—on one side and woodsrunning barbarians on the other. Now the boundary was down, and Elabon’s abandoned northern province very much on its own.
Van tapped Gerin on the chest with a callused forefinger. “But I tell you this, Captain: you have the loftiest title, so he’d nail you highest.”
“An honor I could do without,” the Fox said. “Besides, it’s quarreling over shadows, anyhow. Elabon’s not coming back over the mountains. What I really need to worry about is the squabbles with my neighbors—especially Aragis. Of the lot of them, he’s the ablest one.”
“Aye, he’s near as good as you are, Captain, though not so sneaky.”
“Sneaky?” Since Gerin’s devious turn of mind was what had earned him his Fox sobriquet, he couldn’t even deny that. He changed the subject again: “You’re still calling me ‘Captain’ after all these years, too. Is that the sort of respect the Prince of the North deserves?”
“I’ll call you what I bloody well please,” Van retorted, “and if one fine day that doesn’t suit your high and mightiness, well, I’ll up and travel on. I sometimes think I should have done it years ago.” He shook his head, bemused that after a lifetime of wandering and adventure he should have begun to put down roots.
Gerin still did not know from what land his friend had sprung; Van never talked of his beginnings, though he had yarns uncounted of places he’d seen. Certainly he was no Elabonian. Gerin made a fair representative of that breed: on the swarthy side, long-nosed and long-faced, with brown eyes and black hair and beard (now beginning to be frosted with gray).
Van, by contrast, was blond and fair-skinned, though tan; his bright beard was that improbable color between yellow and orange. His nose had been short and straight. These days it was short and bent, with a scar across the bridge. His bright blue eyes commonly had mischief in them. Women found him fascinating and irresistible. The reverse also applied.
“Roll the dice?” Duren squealed. “Roll the dice?”
Van laughed to hear Gerin’s son say that. “Maybe we’ll roll the dice ourselves later on, eh, Captain? See who goes to Fand tonight?”
“Not so loud,” Gerin said, looking around to make sure their common mistress wasn’t in earshot. “She’ll throw things at both of us if she ever finds out we do that sometimes. That Trokmê temper of hers—” He shook his head.
Van laughed louder. “A dull wench is a boring wench. I expect that’s why I keep coming back to her.”
“After every new one, you mean. Sometimes I think there’s a billy goat under that cuirass, and no man at all,” Gerin said. Van might have settled in one place, but his affections flew wild and free as a gull.
“Well, what about you?” he said. “If her temper doesn’t suit you, why don’t you put her on a raft and ship her back over the Niffet to her clansfolk?”
“Dyaus knows I’ve thought about it often enough,” Gerin admitted. After Elise left him, he’d thought about swearing off women forever. No matter what his mind said, though, his body had other ideas. Now he laughed, ruefully. “If either of us truly fell in love with her, we’d be hard-pressed to stay friends.”
“Not so, Captain,” Van answered. “If one of us fell in love with her, the other would say take her and welcome. If we both did, now—”
“You have me,” Gerin admitted. He kicked at the dirt, annoyed at being outreasoned even in something as small as this. But if you couldn’t grant someone else’s reason superior when it plainly was, what point to reasoning at all?
Van said, “I think I’ll roll the dice myself for a while. Care to join?”
“No, I’m going to take another pass at my sorcery, if you know what I mean,” Gerin said.
“Have a care, now,” Van said. “You’re liable to end up in more trouble than you know how to get out of.”
“Hasn’t happened yet,” Gerin answered. “I have the measure of my own ignorance, I think.” He’d studied a bit of magic in the City of Elabon as a young man, back in the days when people could travel back and forth between the northlands and the heart of the Empire, but had to give up that and history both when the Trokmoi killed his father and elder brother and left him baron of Fox Keep.
“I hope you do,” Van said. Pulling broken bits of silver from a pouch he wore on his belt, he made for the dice game. Before he could sit down, Duren sprang at him like a starving longtooth. He laughed, grabbed the boy, and threw him high in the air three or four times. Duren squealed with glee.
Gerin made for a little shack he’d built over in a back corner of the courtyard. It was far enough from the palisade that, if it caught fire, it wouldn’t burn down the castle outwall along with itself. Thus far, he hadn’t even managed to set the shack ablaze.
“Maybe today,” he muttered. He was going to try a conjuration from a new grimoire he’d bought from a lordlet to the southwest whose grandfather might have been able to read but who was himself illiterate and proud of it. As with most spells in grimoires, it sounded wonderful. Whether results would match promises was another question altogether.
The codex of the grimoire had silverfish holes on several of its pages, and mice had nibbled its leather binding while it lay forgotten on a high shelf in a larder. The spell in which Gerin was interested, though, remained unmutilated. In a clear hand, the mage who’d composed it had written, “A CANTRIP WHICH YIELDETH A FLAMING SWORD.”
That yieldeth had made Gerin suspicious. Along with wizardry and history, he’d studied literature down in the City of Elabon. (And where, he wondered, will Duren be able to learn such things, if he should want to? The answer was mournfully clear: in the northlands, nowhere.) He knew Elabonian hadn’t used those archaic forms for hundreds of years, which meant the author was trying to make his work seem older than it was.
But a flaming sword … false antique or no, he reckoned that worth looking into. Not only would it make ferocious wounds, the mere sight of it should cast terror into the hearts of his foes.
He hefted the bronze blade he’d use. It was hacked and notched to the point where it would almost have made a better saw than sword. Bronze was the hardest, toughest metal anyone knew, but it wasn’t hard enough to hold an edge in continued tough use.
Gerin had the crushed wasps and bumblebees and the dried poison oak leaf he’d need for the symbolic element of the spell. Chanting as he worked (and wearing leather gauntlets), he ground them fine and stirred them into melted butter. The grimoire prescribed olive oil as the basis for the paste, but he’d made that substitution before and got by with it. It was necessary; the olive wouldn’t grow in the northlands, and supplies from south of the High Kirs had been cut off.
He was readying himself for the main conjuration when someone poked his head into the hut. “Great Dyaus above, are y
ou at it again?” Rihwin the Fox asked. His soft southern accent reminded Gerin of his student days in the City of Elabon every time he heard it.
“Aye, I am, and lucky for you at a place where I can pause,” Gerin answered. If anyone had to interrupt him, he preferred it to be Rihwin. The man who shared his ekename knew more magic than he did; Rihwin had been expelled from the Sorcerers’ Collegium just before his formal union with a familiar because of the outrageous prank he’d played on his mentor.
He walked into the hut, glanced at the sword and the preparations Gerin had made for it. He’d stopped shaving since he ended up in the northlands, but somehow still preserved a smooth, very southern handsomeness. Maybe the big gold hoop that glittered in his left ear had something to do with that.
Pointing to the wood-and-leather bucket full of water that stood next to the rude table where Gerin worked, he said, “Your precautions are thorough as usual.”
Gerin grunted. “You’d be working here beside me if you took them, too.” Rihwin had been rash enough to summon up Mavrix, the Sithonian god of wine also widely worshiped in Elabon, after Gerin had earned the temperamental deity’s wrath. In revenge, Mavrix robbed Rihwin of his ability to work magic, and left him thankful his punishment was no worse.
“Ah, well,” Rihwin said with an airy wave of his hand. “Dwelling on one’s misfortunes can hardly turn them to triumphs, now can it?”
“It might keep you from having more of them,” Gerin replied; he was as much given to brooding as Rihwin fought shy of it. He’d concluded, though, that Rihwin was almost immune to change, and so gave up the skirmish after the first arrow. Bending over the grimoire once more, he said, “Let’s find out what we have here.”
The spell was no easy one; it required him to use his right hand to paint the sword blade with his mixture while simultaneously making passes with his left and chanting the incantation proper, which was written in the same pseudoarchaic Elabonian as its title.
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