“What do you—”
The blare of a horn blowing from somewhere outside the guildhall reached them, followed by the distant beat of drums.
“What’s happening?” Hadrian asked, returning with Arista to the front of the hall, where Alric was once again at the windows. He carried the armor in a bundle and the shield over his back.
Alric shrugged. “I don’t know. I can’t see a thing out there. Did you find an exit?”
“No, everything is sealed by rubble. So on the one hand, we’re safe, but on the other, trapped.”
“I think more are arriving out there,” Alric mentioned.
“Get your head back from the window before you catch an arrow,” Royce told him, returning from a side hall Arista had not taken.
She knelt down beside Gaunt and looked over his wound. The bleeding had finally stopped, but his face was still moist despite the chill in the air.
“Anything?” Hadrian asked.
Royce shook his head; then he looked around, concerned. “Where’s Myron and Mauvin?”
“This is the Teshlor Guild,” Alric said. “Mauvin has wanted to explore this since he was ten.”
“And Myron?”
Alric glanced at Gaunt, who looked up painfully, blinking. Then all of them turned to Magnus.
“Don’t look at me like that. I don’t know where he went. He wandered off.”
“I’ll look for him,” Royce said.
“Wait.” Alric stopped him. “How are we going to get out of here?”
“Don’t know,” Royce replied.
Alric slumped against the front wall with a miserable look on his face. “He’s not serious, is he?”
“You’re the king,” Gaunt said. “You tell us. You wanted to be in charge. What does your family heritage and blue-blood breeding say now? What insight has it provided you that we commoners can’t see?”
“Shut it, Gaunt,” Mauvin ordered, trotting down the stairs.
“There you are,” Royce said.
“I’m just saying that he’s the king,” Gaunt went on. “He’s in charge. So far all that he’s managed is to get me bleeding to death and all of us trapped. This is a perfect chance for him to shine and prove his worth. All the other teams that came in here didn’t have a noble king to lead them. Surely he will not leave us to the same fate as they. Isn’t that right, Your Majesty?”
“I said, shut it,” Mauvin repeated in a lower, more threatening voice. “Have you forgotten he just risked his life to help save yours?”
Alric looked at each of them as they sat around the entrance hall in the flickering light of four lanterns, each casting four separate shadows of everything.
“I don’t know,” he said. He peeked back out the window. “You heard the horn and the drums. There could be dozens of goblins out there by now.”
“I doubt that,” Hadrian replied, and Alric looked hopefully at him. “I would say there were hundreds by now. Ghazel prefer uneven battles, the more one-sided, the better, as long as it is in their favor. Those horns and drums are calling all goblins within earshot. Yeah, I would say a couple hundred at least are gathering.”
Alric stared at him, shocked. “But… how are we going to get out, then?”
No one replied.
Even Gaunt gave up his taunting and lay back down. “And I was going to be emperor.”
“The imperial hunts were massive.” They heard Myron’s voice echo as Royce led him back. “You can see by that tapestry. Hundreds participated—thousands of animals must have been killed, and did you see the chariots?”
“He was looking at the art,” Royce told them.
“They were master bronze craftsmen, did you see?” the monk asked. “And this building, this is the guildhall, the knights’ guildhall. This is the very place mentioned in hundreds of books of lore, often thought to be a myth—the Hall of Techylor—and isn’t that amazing—not Teshlor at all.
“It’s astounding, really, in all the years of reading about the Old Empire I never found anything about it, but clearly it was true. Techylor is not a combat discipline or martial art any more than Cenzlyor is a discipline of mystical arts. They’re names. Names! Techylor and Cenzlyor were the names of people who were with Novron at the first battle of the Great Elven War. The Teshlor Knights were literally the knights trained by Teshlor, or actually Techylor.”
“This is hardly the time for studying history!” Alric snapped. “We need to find a way out, before they find a way in!”
“I see a light,” Mauvin announced. “There’s a fire, or a torch, or some—Uh-oh.”
“What?” Gaunt asked.
“Well, two things, really,” the young count Pickering began. “Hadrian was right. I can only see silhouettes but—oh yeah—there’s a lot out there now—a whole lot.”
“Second?” Hadrian asked.
“Second, it looks like they’re setting up for flaming arrows.”
“What good is that?” Alric asked. “This place is stone. There’s nothing to burn.”
“Smoke,” Hadrian replied. “They’ll smoke us out.”
“That doesn’t sound good,” Gaunt said.
“Another locked room,” Hadrian said to Royce. “How many is this? I’ve lost track.”
“Too many, really.”
“Ideas?”
“Only one,” the thief said, and then looked directly at Arista.
She watched Hadrian nod.
“No,” she said instantly. She stood up and backed away from them. “I can’t.”
“You have to,” Royce told her.
She was shaking her head so that her hair whipped her face, her breath short and rapid and her stomach tightening, starting to churn. “I can’t,” she insisted.
Hadrian moved toward her slowly, as if he were trying to catch a spooked horse.
Her hands were starting to shake. “You saw—you know what happened last time. I can’t control it.”
“Maybe,” Hadrian told her, “but outside that door are anywhere from, I’m guessing, fifty to a few hundred Ba Ran Ghazel. All the bedtime stories, legends, and fables are true. I know firsthand, and actually, they don’t tell even half the story—no one would dare tell the real stories to children.
“I served as a mercenary for several years in Calis. I fought for warlords in the Gur Em Dal—the jungle on the eastern end of the peninsula that the goblins took back. I’ve never spoken about what happened there, and I won’t now—honestly, I work very hard not to think about it. Those days that I lived under the jungle canopy were a nightmare.
“The Ghazel are stronger than men, faster too, and they can see in the dark. They have sharp teeth and, if they get the chance, will hold you down and rip into the flesh of your throat or stomach. The Ghazel want nothing better than a meal of human meat. Not only are we a delicacy to them, but they also use their victims as part of their religious ceremonies. They will make a ritual out of killing us, take us alive if they can—eat us while we still breathe. They’ll drink their black cups of gurlin bog and smoke tulan leaves while we scream.
“That door is the only way out of here. We can’t sneak out, we can’t create a diversion and hope to catch them off guard, we can’t hope for a rescue. Either you do something or we all die. It’s as simple as that.”
“You don’t know what you’re asking me to do. You don’t know what it’s like. I can’t control it. I—I don’t know what will happen. The power is—it’s—I don’t know how to describe it, but I could kill everyone. It just gets out of control, it just runs away.”
“You can handle it.”
“I can’t. I can’t.”
“You can. It caught you off guard before. You know what to expect now.”
“Hadrian, if I go too far—” She tried to imagine and realized she did not want to. There was an excitement in the thought of the power, a thrill like standing on the edge of a cliff, or playing with a sharp knife; the exhilaration came from the risk, the very real fear that she could step t
oo far. It lured her like the still beauty of a deep lake. Even as she spoke about it, she remembered how it felt, the desire, the hunger. It called to her. “If I reach beyond—if I go too far—I might not come back.” She looked at Hadrian. “I’m scared what would happen. I don’t think I would be human anymore. I’d be lost forever.”
He took her hands. Until he touched her, she had not realized she was shaking. His hands felt warm, strong. “You can do it,” he told her firmly. He stared into her eyes and she could not help looking back. There was peace there, a gentle understanding familiar to her now, comforting, reassuring.
How does he do it?
Her hands stopped shaking.
An arrow whizzed through Mauvin’s window, just missing him. It streaked a thick dark smoke that stank of sulfur. It flew to the far wall and bounced off the stone, continuing to smolder and burn. Two more managed to find their way into the narrow slits while outside it sounded as if it were raining. Then a line of smoke began to leak in through the cracks of the door.
“You have to try,” Hadrian told her.
She nodded. “But I want you with me. Don’t leave me… no matter what happens.”
“I swear I will not leave you.” His voice and the look in his eyes were so sincere, so resolute.
Degan began to cough, and Mauvin and Alric climbed down from the stairs.
“Everyone gather,” she told them in a soft voice, trying to keep her eyes on Hadrian. “I don’t know exactly what’s going to happen. Just try and stay as close as you can, and don’t you let go of me, Hadrian.”
CHAPTER 18
DUST AND STONE
The smoke was growing thick and it was becoming hard to breathe as Arista remained standing still, muttering, her eyes closed, her hands twitching.
“Is she going to do something?” Gaunt asked, and followed this with a series of coughs.
“Give her a second,” Hadrian told him.
As if in response, a light breeze moved within the room. Where it came from Hadrian could not tell, but it moved around the chamber, swirling and stealing away the smoke. The wind grew stronger and soon it ruffled the edges of their cloaks, slapping their hoods and spinning the dust into little whirlwinds that twirled, dancing about. All at once, the flames in the lanterns went out and the wind stopped. Everything was deathly still for a heartbeat.
Then the front wall of the guildhall exploded.
Arista’s robe flared brilliantly as from beyond the missing wall, Hadrian heard the cries of goblins, like a million squealing rats. The square cast in darkness for a thousand years lay revealed, illuminated as if the sun had returned to the Grand Mar. They could finally see the beauty that once had been, the city of Novron, the city of Percepliquis, the city of light.
“Gather your things,” Arista shouted, opening her eyes, but Hadrian could tell she was not fully with them. She was breathing deep and slow, her eyes never focusing, as if blind to what was around her. She was not seeing with her eyes anymore.
Mauvin and Alric hoisted Gaunt between them. He grunted but said nothing as he hopped on his good leg.
“Come,” she told them, and began to walk toward the collapsed pile that had once been a palace.
“You’re doing great,” Hadrian told her. She showed no sign of hearing him.
The goblins stayed back. Whether they retreated from the explosion of stone, the harsh light, or some invisible sorcery that Arista was manifesting, all Hadrian could tell was that they refused to approach.
The party walked as a group clustered around Arista.
“This is crazy,” Gaunt said, his voice quavering. “They’ll kill us.”
“Don’t leave the group,” Hadrian told them.
“They’re fitting arrows,” Mauvin announced.
“Stay together.”
Struggling to shield their eyes as they bent their bows, the Ghazel launched a barrage. All of the party flinched except Arista. A hundred dark shafts flew into the air, burst into flame, and vanished into streaks of smoke. More howls arose from the Ghazels’ ranks, but no more arrows flew, and now more than ever, the goblins showed no willingness to advance.
“Find the opening!” she shouted, sounding out of breath, her tone impatient, like someone holding up heavy furniture.
“Magnus, try and find the hollow corridor,” Hadrian barked.
“To the left, up there, a gap. No over farther—there!”
Royce was on it, throwing rocks back. “He’s right—there’s an opening here.”
“Of course I’m right!” Magnus shouted.
“Something…” Arista said dreamily.
“What was that, Arista?” Hadrian asked. She mumbled and he did not catch the last few words. He kept his hands on her shoulders, squeezing slightly, although he was not certain if by doing so he was reassuring her or himself.
“Something… I feel something—something fighting me.”
Hadrian looked up and stared out over the Grand Mar at the colony of goblins, a writhing mass of insidiously twisted bodies, with dripping teeth and brilliant claws clacking along the length of spears and swords. He spotted what he looked for beyond them, moving in a ring around the Ulurium Fountain. The small, slim figure of the oberdaza, dressed in a skirt and headdress of feathers, shaking a tulan staff and dancing his methodic steps. He spotted two more joining the first.
“We need to get in now!” Hadrian shouted.
Royce threw Myron and a lantern inside the dark hole and then shoved Magnus after him before following them inside. Gaunt, Mauvin, and Alric followed.
“We need to go,” Hadrian told Arista.
Across the span of the square, he could hear chanting as two more witch doctors joined in the dance.
“Something,” Arista muttered again. “Something taking shape, something growing.”
“That’s why we need to get moving.”
A light appeared in the center of the square. No more than a candle flame, it wavered, hovering in midair; then it began to grow. The light swirled, flared, popped, and grew to the size of an apple. The host of the Ghazel army joined in the chant of the three oberdaza as the hovering ball of fire continued to grow and take shape. Hadrian began to see what looked like limbs and a head emerging from the withering fire.
“Okay, we really have to go,” Hadrian said, and grabbed hold of the princess. The moment he did, she staggered back, looking shocked and frightened. The glow of her robe went out.
“What’s happening?” Arista asked.
He did not answer but merely grabbed her tightly by the wrist and drew her up the rubble to the opening, where he shoved her headfirst into the hole. Behind him he heard the thrum of a hundred arrows taking to the air and dove into the hole after her.
“Go! Crawl!” he shouted to Arista as he did his best to shove rocks up against the opening. She obeyed and somewhere in the darkness he heard her scream.
“Arista!” He turned and scrambled forward, only to fall.
Dropping ten feet, he landed next to her, and the two found themselves lying in a corridor illuminated by a lantern in Myron’s hand.
“You two all right?” Royce asked. “That drop is a bit of a surprise.”
“I’m sorry,” Arista was saying, rubbing her back. “I couldn’t hold them. There was something fighting me, something I’ve never felt before, another power.”
“It’s okay,” Hadrian told her. “You did great. We’re in.”
“We are?” the princess asked, looking around, surprised.
“What about getting back out?” Gaunt asked.
“I’d be more concerned about them following us right now,” Hadrian told him. “The narrow passage will slow their progress, but they’ll be coming.”
“Talk as you walk,” Royce said. “Or run if you’re up to it. Give me the lantern, Myron. I don’t want to fall into any more holes.”
“Maybe we should stay behind and kill them as they come down,” Mauvin said to Hadrian.
“You’ll ru
n out of strength before they run out of goblins,” Hadrian told him. “And then there’s that—that thing the oberdaza were making.”
“Thing?” Arista asked.
They jogged down the corridor with Royce out front holding the lantern high. To either side were white marble walls, and beneath them, a dark polished floor of beautiful mosaic design.
“I don’t suppose you saw a map of this place,” Royce said to Myron.
“Actually, yes, but it was very old, and parts were missing.”
“Better than nothing. Any idea where we are?”
“Not yet.”
At first Hadrian thought they stumbled into a room—a great hall, by the size of it—but soon it became clear that it was a corridor, but far larger than any Hadrian had ever before seen. Suits of armor, each similar to the one he had found in Jerish’s room, stood on either side. The walls were sculptured relief images of men, scenes of battles, scenes of remembrance; they flashed, frame by frame, as the party raced past.
Hadrian saw a long succession of men being crowned, with the cityscape in the background; in each one the city was smaller, the crowning ceremony less lavish. Two things caught his notice as they ran. The first was that in every instance, the head of the man being crowned was scratched out, deliberately chipped away. The second was that in each depiction, although the crowd always appeared different, Hadrian could swear the artist used the same model for one figure—a tall, slender man—who appeared in the forefront in each scene. And while in the dim fluttering lantern light it was difficult to tell, Hadrian was certain he had seen the man before.
They came to a four-way intersection. To the left was an incredible door, five stories tall, made completely of gold and inlaid with stunning geometric designs of such artistry each of them expelled a sound of awe.
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