by Shannah Jay
THE MAGIC SWORD Shannah Jay 1
THE SWORD OF AZARAY
Shannah Jay
In Azaray a magic sword has sung all true Kings to the throne. But Pavros, a powerful wizard, has overcome the sword and killed the true king, whose brother now rules.
He cannot destroy the sword, so has scattered it across the ring of worlds. The hilt lies on one world, the scabbard on another and the blade on a third.
The true king’s three children, two boys and a girl were rescued from Pavros by the Halishi, a magical race working for peace. Ronan, Kerril and Shayla have been raised secretly, each on a different world but when they are 14, the Halishi have no choice but to make them aware of their destiny, which is to reunite the three parts of the sword and regain the throne for Ronan, the eldest.
This is the tale of that great and magical adventure, as the children cross from one world to the next to rescue the parts of the sword, avoiding magical traps and battling against fearsome enemies and the most powerful magician ever known.
Eventually they reunite the three parts of the sword and win through to Azaray, where they lead a successful rebellion against their wicked uncle.
Published by Shannah Jay
Copyright 2010 Shannah Jay
Cover Copyright 2010 David Jacobs
License Notes
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Three in one shall save the day
When danger threatens Azaray
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1 KERRIL
The serving boy stood with his back pressed against the wall, wishing he could slip through the big grey stones and vanish. He knew he hadn’t done anything wrong, but something had put his master into a towering rage and that was enough to make Kerril’s heart pound with fear. Someone would suffer for their lord’s rage. Someone always did. He prayed it wouldn’t be him.
In front of him stood Lord Bezroll, the scar on his cheek burning red and his whole body stiff with rage. He banged his massive right fist on the table and roared, ‘Fetch him in!’
The Sergeant at Arms repeated the command in a voice echoed round the huge hall. A minute later two men marched in, holding a third, who stumbled along between them, his face white.
Any servant who could do so had already crept out of the hall or hidden behind something, but Kerril was trapped behind the high table where his master sat, so could only stay where he was, trying desperately not to attract attention to himself.
Lord Bezroll beckoned. ‘Bring the fellow closer.’
The sergeant poked the prisoner in the ribs and the man took a reluctant step forward, shivering.
Bezroll strode round the high table, picked up the terrified prisoner by the scruff of his neck and shook him like a dog holding a rat. ‘No one is allowed to touch that sword! It belonged to my grandfather and is my most treasured possession.’
‘I just touched the hilt. It looked so beautiful. I’m truly sorry, my lord.’
Bezroll flung the man down on the floor at his feet, where he lay shaking with fear. ‘Had you not been new to my service, I would have wrung your neck for that.’
Behind them the boy closed his eyes in relief. It seemed the man would escape with his life. It made Kerril feel sick when people were killed.
The man risked a glance upwards. ‘Lord, I pray you have mercy on me. I meant no harm.’
Bezroll strode back to his great carved chair and sat down, frowning.
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It seemed to the terrified lad that silence now echoed round the hall as loudly as the lord’s voice had done a minute ago. Just as Kerril thought he would burst with trying to breathe quietly, Bezroll pointed one finger at the man.
‘Be out of this keep within the hour. The sergeant will see you through the gates and on the road to Azaray. You’ve time to get there by dusk if you hurry. Do not set so much as one toe off that road until you get to the city, if you value your life.’
It wasn’t necessary to say that, Kerril thought with a shiver. Everyone at the keep knew that if you stepped into the Shadows that lay between the worlds like clouds of dirty mist, you simply vanished, never to return.
‘Yes, lord. Thank you, lord.’ The man scrambled to his feet and ran from the hall.
At a nod from the sergeant, one of the other men-at-arms followed to see him on his way.
Bezroll gestured to his goblet. Kerril filled it carefully with wine and gave his best bow as he backed away. He looked round, desperate for something to take him out of the hall.
As he carried a pile of empty platters back to the kitchens, he exchanged glances with the scullery lad, but neither spoke. This was no time for chatting or loitering. Everyone at Sendalands Keep would be treading carefully for the rest of the day.
Later, when he served his lord with more wine, Kerril was cuffed about the head for filling the goblet too full.
In the evening, when he set down the lord’s platter of meat with hands that shook, he spilled a drop of gravy on the white tablecloth. A blow from one huge fist sent him spinning backwards into the wall. He slid helplessly to the floor, the breath thumped out of him by the impact.
‘Stay out of my sight, you dolt!’ roared Bezroll. He glared over his shoulder at the dazed lad. ‘You’re getting too big to be a page. I should send you to work in the mines.’ He picked up his goblet and muttered, ‘About time we did something about you, anyway.’
Kerril scrambled to his feet and fled, still gasping for breath and rubbing his bruised arm. What did his master mean by ‘about time we did something about you’?
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Oh, how he wished he could serve another lord! Anyone would be a better master than Bezroll. And even the meanest hut must surely be a happier place to live than this great stone keep.
Kerril knew that one day, when this new world had come fully out of the Shadows, people would settle on it and his master would rule it all. As he waited for that to happen, Bezroll made sure the only road through the Shadows was well guarded. But the mists were creeping back more slowly than expected and so far had revealed only barren mountains, with no animals to hunt. Everyone knew Lord Bezroll needed farming land if he was to attract folk from Azaray to settle here.
No wonder Kerril’s master was always angry. It must be costing him a great deal of money to keep control of this keep, because most of the provisions had to be brought in from Azaray.
The men who drove the big supply carts didn’t linger at Sendalands. They unloaded their goods quickly, satisfying their hunger as they worked, glancing uneasily over their shoulders, eager to get back through the Shadows before nightfall.
***
The next day the house steward was in a good mood, so Kerril asked him about Azaray.
‘I’d really like to see the city. Couldn’t I go back with the supply carts, just for a day or two?’
‘Certainly not. You’re needed here. Besides, it’s a crowded, dangerous place. You can’t turn round without tripping over somebody. Here at least you can breathe fresh mountain air and—’ the steward lowered his voice, ‘there are no wizards.’
‘Are wizards so bad?’
‘Pray you never find out. And be satisfied with this answer, because if you ask to go to Azaray again, lad, I will beat you until you can no longer stand.’ Cedrith leaned forward and poked Kerril in the chest to emphasize his point. ‘You’re getting too uppity lately. Leave thinking to yo
ur betters and concentrate on doing your duties quietly and well. That’s all we ask of you.’
Cedrith was like that, friendly one moment, sharp the next. But at least he had taught the serving lads to read and write, so that they could all read the lists of daily duties written on the big slates in the kitchen, lists which changed often when their master was in residence to suit his whims.
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Kerril loved reading because he liked to know why things were so. When the lord was away, he would go and read the books in the library, a place no one else used if they could help it, because it was so gloomy. They said they heard footsteps when they knew no one else was near, or sounds of voices in the distance. Kerril had never heard any such things. He always felt comfortable there.
Fortunately Lord Bezroll spent at least half his time in Azaray and when their lord was away life in the castle was easier.
Kerril had another worry now. Lord Bezroll had said, ‘About time we did something about you, anyway.’ What did he mean by it? What was he going to do?
Kerril couldn’t get the words out of his mind.
***
A messenger arrived the following afternoon from the King in Azaray, summoning Lord Bezroll to the royal palace on that world, a much older world, long settled. The lord left within the hour, and took half the inhabitants of the keep with him.
Now that Kerril had no pressing duties, he begged an hour’s leave from the steward, coaxed a hunk of bread from the cook and escaped through the small side gate to walk in the fresh air.
‘It’s not fair,’ he muttered as he walked up the rocky slope behind the keep. ‘Why do they never take me to Azaray? All the other servants have been there.’
He sighed, feeling miserable and alone. The steward said he was a foundling child, left at Lord Bezroll’s gate in Azaray. It was dreadful having no relatives. Even the kitchen lad had a mother and two older brothers, whom he was allowed to visit once a year. All Kerril knew was this keep and he’d never been allowed to leave it. He reckoned he knew it better than anyone else, for he’d played in its passages for as long as he could remember.
Well, he’d played everywhere except in the lord’s rooms. People only went there to serve Lord Bezroll.
From the hilltop Kerril could see the Shadows in the distance, grey, always shifting. They looked a bit like clouds but heavier and menacing, somehow. As if they had a life of their own. No one, not even the King, knew what lay inside the Shadows.
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Kerril felt happier when he arrived at the big black rock on top of the hill behind the castle. He sat down on it and clasped his arms round his knees. This was his special place and he felt safe here. No one else from the keep ever came up here. The other servants said ghosts haunted the hilltop and many claimed to have heard or seen them.
He smiled as he ran one fingertip over the surface. So smooth and glassy, and always slightly warm to the touch, whatever the weather. He’d been coming here ever since he was small, drawn to it by something he didn’t understand. He’d never seen any ghosts, but he wasn’t going to tell anyone else that.
He liked having the place to himself.
On a sudden whim, Kerril went to the edge of the cliff to the land behind the keep. In the rocky valley far below him a river tossed its way between huge boulders. There were no people down there, not yet.
He went back to the rock, stuck two fingers in his mouth and whistled. Within minutes the dog arrived, as she usually did, a large hunting hound whose head was as high as his shoulders. She must have escaped from the keep years ago and was clever enough to stay free. He envied her that.
She came right up to him, grinning and wagging her feathery, red-gold tail. He put his arms round her neck and buried his face in the long soft fur. Hallie was his only friend. He didn’t know why he’d chosen that name, it had just popped into his mind, but it seemed to suit her.
‘You’re beautiful,’ he whispered in her ear. But this time Hallie didn’t lick his nose and let him cuddle her. This time she threw back her head and howled—on and on, the cries becoming so shrill they hurt his ears.
Kerril found it hard to move, hard to think, even. Everything blurred around him, the sky grew dark as night and he cried out in fear as lightning split the clouds and thunder boomed across the valley.
He struggled to his feet but something seemed to snatch at his body and drag him down again.
Expecting to land on the rock, he yelled in terror and shock as he tumbled instead into a hole, then yelled again as the hole turned into a dark tunnel that went down and down, a tunnel that seemed to have no end.
***
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As the lad lost consciousness, Hallie floated down the tunnel beside him. Her paws turned into hands—
still covered in red-gold fur and having six fingers, but hands nonetheless. Her face and body changed shape too and she became—something else.
As the tunnel curved to an end, she gathered Kerril close and carried his limp body through the magic portal that barred the way into the True Vale, for none might enter this place without a guide.
After setting Kerril down gently on the soft, cushiony grass, she straightened up and stared down at him sadly. ‘You’re too young for this, child, but they’re plotting to kill you. This is your only chance of survival.’
She turned to leave the True Vale and go back to the shadow worlds to fetch the others who would share his quest. If she didn’t rescue them in time, they too would be killed.
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2 SHAYLA
‘Get that saddlebag packed quickly, you fool!’ Lady Alvyna’s voice sounded even shriller than usual. She set her hands on her plump hips and scowled at the girl, continuing to scold and making no effort to help.
‘Why are you always so slow? Stop staring around and hurry up with the packing!’
‘Yes, my lady.’ Shayla continued to roll the garments and push them carefully into the leather saddlebags. She was working as fast as anyone possibly could, but no matter what she did, she couldn’t please her foster mother and never had been able to. She’d learned when quite young to hide her feelings and keep a dull expression on her face as orders and complaints were tossed at her.
Why Lady Alvyna and Lord Beffris had fostered her in the first place, she had never been able to work out, though they said it was because they’d known her parents. She couldn’t remember her mother and father at all.
Her only happy memories were of the nursery here at Weyridge House. Her nursemaid had loved her, she knew, but after she turned five, Luanna had been put to other work and Shayla had been sent to do lessons with the servants’ brats. Since then, she and her nursemaid had only occasionally been able to catch a moment together in private, but it had helped to know that Luanna was nearby and still cared about her.
Two years ago, however, Lady Alvyna had caught them meeting and had immediately sent Luanna to work in the big town house in Azaray. Shayla missed her old nurse dreadfully.
When she was little, she’d tried to play with the servants’ children after lessons, but Lady Alvyna had forbidden that, so she’d made a pet of an old stable cat for a time. The cat had died, though, and the stable master had told her to leave the other cats alone or they wouldn’t do their job of keeping down the vermin.
Lady Alvyna’s own children lived in the city, not out here at the big rambling house which stood alone in its walled grounds on the edge of this new shadow world to which Lord Beffris and his wife had laid claim. Shayla had never even met their children, for she was not allowed to leave the estate. She heard about them sometimes though—heard too much, for her ladyship was always comparing her to them, saying she was such a fumblefingers that she’d never make a proper lady.
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It might be wicked to hate the people who had looked after you all your life, but Shayla did. One day she was going
to run away from Weyridge House—she was quite determined on that—but not till she was grown up. She’d started planning it already, because she was sure she would only have one chance of escape.
She’d go at night, disguised as an old woman, a time when other folk feared to travel anywhere near the Shadows. But how was she to get out of the grounds next to the road? The walls round them were high and topped by jagged spikes, and there were always armed men guarding the gates and patrolling the grounds.
The road led to Azaray, she knew, but on each side of it the Shadows twisted and writhed. Fearsome demons lived there, people said, or evil spirits which sucked the life from your body. Perhaps the dog would come with her. She’d feel less afraid then. Of course, dear Hallie might not alive by then, but she didn’t seem to be ageing as other animals did, so Shayla kept on hoping. She didn’t know why she’d called the dog Hallie. The name had just popped into her head. Perhaps she was a magic dog. Shayla didn’t care if she was.
No one at the house knew about Hallie or they’d have taken her away from Shayla, she was sure.
She was definitely going to escape from this unhappy house one day, even if she died trying. And where else should she go but Azaray? Easier to hide in a big city, she was sure.
***
Later that day Lady Alvyna and her husband left for the city and the house grew quiet again. Most of the servants went off for a snooze or sat about in the kitchen gossiping.
If only it were always as peaceful as this, Shayla thought, as she looked out of the window of the mending room.
After she’d finished her work she decided to go out for a walk and enjoy the late afternoon sunshine.