The little king fellow was, Bane decided, just a bit too shrewd. He was very respectful and polite, but the boy saw that when he wasn’t looking, the Geg was scrutinizing him with a gaze that was sharp and penetrating. Walking along on the prince’s right, however, was another Geg who reminded the child of a performing monkey he’d seen once at court. Bane guessed from what he’d heard that the beruffled, beribboned, velvet-lined Geg had something to do with the religion in which the boy had suddenly found himself so intimately involved. This Geg didn’t appear to be all that bright, and the prince decided to turn to him for answers.
“Pardon me,” said the boy with a charming smile for the Head Clark, “but I didn’t catch your name.”
“Wes Wrenchwranger, Your Wurship,” said the Geg, bowing as best he could for his stoutness, and nearly tripping on his long beard. “I have the honor to be Your Wurship’s Head Clark.”
Whatever that is, Bane muttered to himself. Outwardly he smiled and nodded and gave every indication that nowhere else on Drevlin could he have found a Geg more suited for that position.
Sidling close to the Head Clark, Bane slipped his hand into the Geg’s hand-a proceeding which caused the Head Clark to swell rather alarmingly and cast a glance of supreme self-satisfaction at his brother-in-law, the High Froman.
Darral paid little attention. The crowds lining the streets to see them were getting unruly. He was glad to see the coppers reacting to it. For the moment they appeared to have matters under control, but he knew he would need to keep a watchful eye on things. He only hoped the child-god couldn’t understand what some of the Gegs were shouting. Damn that Limbeck anyway!
Fortunately for Darral, the child-god was completely absorbed in his own problems.
“Perhaps you could help me, Head Clark,” said Bane, flushing shyly and very prettily.
“I would be honored, Your Wurship!”
“You know, it’s been an awfully long time since we-your gods … Uh, what did you call us?”
“The Mangers, Your Wurship. That is what you call yourselves, isn’t it?”
“Yes, oh, yes! Mangers. It’s just that, well, as I was saying, we Mangers have been away an awfully long time-“
“-many centuries, Your Wurship,” said the Head Clark.
“Yes, many centuries, and we’ve noticed that quite a few things have changed since we were away.” Bane drew a deep breath. This was coming easier all the time. “Therefore we’ve decided that this judgment-thing should be changed as well.”
The Head Clark felt some of his smugness begin to drain from him. He glanced uneasily at the High Froman. If he, the Head Clark, screwed up the Judgment, it would be the last screw he ever turned.
“I’m not quite certain what you mean, Your Wurship.”
“Modernize it, bring it up-to-date,” suggested Bane.
The Head Clark appeared terribly confused. How could you change something that had never before happened? Still, he supposed that the gods must have had it planned out. “I guess it would be all right-“
“Never mind. I can see you’re uncomfortable with the idea,” said the prince, patting the Head Clark on his velvet-covered arm. “I’ve got a suggestion. You tell me the way you want me to handle it and I’ll do it just like you say.”
The Head Clark’s face brightened. “You can’t believe how wonderful this moment is for me, Your Wurship! I’ve dreamed of it for so long. And now, to have the Judgment go just as I’ve always imagined …” He wiped tears from his eyes.
“Yes, yes,” said Bane. He noted that the High Froman was watching them with narrowed eyes and edging nearer all the time. He might have stopped their conversation before this except that it was undoubtedly considered bad manners to interrupt a god in confidential conference. “Go on.”
“Well, I always pictured all the Gegs-or at least as many as we could get in there-dressed in their very best clothes, standing in the Factree. You would be there, seated in the Manger’s Chair, of course.”
“Of course, and-“
“And I would be there, standing before the crowd in my new Head Cark suit that I would have made specially for the occasion. White, I think, would be proper, with black bows at the knees, nothing too overdone-“
“Very tasteful. And then-“
“The High Froman would be standing there with us too, I suppose, Your Wurship? That is, unless we could find something else for him to do. You see, Your Wurship, what he’ll find fit to wear is going to be a problem. Perhaps, with this modernization you were discussing, we might dispense with him.”
“I’ll think about it.” Bane gripped the feather amulet and tried very hard to be patient. “Go on. We’re all up in front of the crowd. I stand up and I …” He looked expectantly at the Head Clark.
“Why, you judge us, Your Wurship.”
The prince had the sudden satisfying vision of sinking his teeth into the Geg’s velvet arm. Reluctantly banishing the thought, he drew a deep breath. “Fine. I judge you. And then what happens? I know! We’ll declare a holiday!”
“I don’t really think there’ll be time for that, do you, Your Wurship?” said the Geg, looking at Bane with a puzzled expression.
“P-perhaps not,” stammered the prince. “I forgot about … the other. When we’re all . . ” Slipping his hand from the hand of the Head Clark, the boy wiped his sweating forehead. It was certainly hot inside the machine. Hot and noisy. His throat was getting sore from shouting. “What is it we’re all doing now, after I’ve judged you?”
“Why, that depends on whether or not you’ve found us worthy, Your Wurship.”
“Let’s say I find you worthy,” Bane said, gritting his teeth. “Then what?”
“Then we ascend, Your Wurship.”
“Ascend?” The prince looked at the catwalks running hither and thither above him.
The Head Clark, misunderstanding his gaze, sighed with happiness. His face glowing beatifically, he lifted his hands.
“Yes, Your Wurship. Right straight up into heaven!”
Marching along behind Bane and his adoring Gegs, Hugh devoted one eye to his surroundings and the other to the prince. He soon ceased to try to keep track of where they were, admitting to himself that he could never find his way out of the insides of the machine without help. News of their coming had apparently rushed on ahead of them. Thousands of Gegs lined the halls and corridors of the machine, staring, shouting, and pointing. Gegs busy with their work actually turned their heads, bestowing on Hugh and his companions-had they known it-a high honor by forgetting their tasks for a few seconds. The reaction of the Gegs, however, was mixed. Some were cheering with enthusiasm, but others appeared to be angry.
Hugh was more interested in Prince Bane and what he was doing in such close confab with the ruffled Geg. Silently cursing himself for never having bothered to learn any of the Geg language when he was with the elves, Hugh felt a tug on his sleeve and turned his attention to Alfred.
“Sir,” said Alfred, “have you noticed what the crowd is yelling?”
“Gibberish, as far as I’m concerned. But you understand it, don’t you, Alfred?”
Alfred flushed deeply. “I am sorry I had to conceal my knowledge from you, Sir Hugh. But I believed it important that I conceal it from another.” He glanced at the prince. “When you asked me that question, it was just possible that he could have heard my answer, and so I felt I had no choice-“
Hugh made a deprecating motion with his hand. Alfred had a point. It had been the Hand who had made the mistake. He should have realized what Alfred was doing and never spoken up. It was just that never in Hugh’s life had he felt so damn helpless!
“Where did you learn to speak Geg?”
“The study of the Gegs and the Low Realm has been a hobby of mine, sir,” answered Alfred with the shy, proud consciousness of a true enthusiast. “I daresay I have one of the finest collections of books written about their culture in the Mid Realm. If you would be interested, when we return, I’ll be
happy to show you-“
“If you left those books in the palace, you can forget them. Unless you plan on asking Stephen to give you leave to run back in and pick up your things.”
“You’re right, sir, of course. How stupid of me.” Alfred’s shoulders sagged. “All my books … I don’t suppose I’ll ever see them again.”
“What were you saying about the crowd?”
“Oh, yes.” The chamberlain glanced around at the cheering and occasionally jeering Gegs. “Some are calling out, ‘Down with the Froman’s god!’ and ‘We want Limbeck’s god!’ “
“Limbeck? What does that mean?”
“It’s a Geg name, I believe, sir. It means ‘to distill or extract.’ If I might make a suggestion? I think …” Instinctively he lowered his voice, and in the noise and commotion, Hugh lost his words.
“Talk louder. No one can understand us, can they?”
“Oh, I suppose not,” said Alfred, light dawning. “That hadn’t occurred to me. I was saying, sir, that there might be another human such as ourselves down here.”
“Or an elf. That’s more likely. Either way, odds are they’ve got a ship we can use to get out of here!”
“Yes, sir. I thought that might be the case.”
“We’ve got to see this Limbeck and his god or whatever.”
“That shouldn’t be difficult, sir. Not if our little ‘god’ commands it.”
“Our little ‘god’ seems to have gotten himself in some sort of trouble,” said Hugh, his gaze going to the prince. “Look at his face.”
“Oh, dear,” murmured Alfred.
Bane had twisted his head back to search for his companions. His cheeks were pale, his blue eyes wide. Biting his lip, he made a hurried motion for them to come up to him.
An entire squadron of armed Gegs marched between them and the prince. Hugh shook his head. Bane gazed at him pleadingly. Alfred, looking sympathetic, gestured at the crowd. Bane was a prince. He knew what was due an audience. Sighing, he turned around and began to wave his small hand feebly and without enthusiasm.
“I was afraid of this,” said Alfred.
“What do you think’s happened?”
“The boy said something about the Gegs thinking he was the god who had come to ‘judge’ them. He spoke about it glibly, but it is very serious to the Gegs. According to their legends, it was the Mangers who built the great machine. The Gegs were to serve it until the Day of Judgment, when they would be rewarded and carried up into the higher realms. That was how the isle Geg’s Hope came by its name.”
“Mangers. Who are these Mangers?”
“The Sartan.”
“Devil take us!” the Hand swore. “You mean they think the kid is one of the Sartan?”
“It would seem so, sir.”
“I don’t suppose he could fake it, with help from daddy?”
“No, sir. Not even a mysteriarch of the Seventh House, such as his father, possesses magical powers compared to those of the Sartan. After all,” said Alfred, gesturing, “they built all this.”
Hugh cared little about that now. “Great! Just great! And what do you think they’ll do when they find out we’re impostors?”
“I couldn’t say, sir. Ordinarily, the Gegs are peaceful, gentle people. But then, I don’t suppose they’ve ever had anyone pretend to be one of their gods before. In addition, they seem to be in a turmoil over something.” Alfred, looking at the crowds growing increasingly hostile, shook his head. “I would say, sir, that we’ve come at rather a bad time.”
CHAPTER 32
WOMBE, DREVLIN, LOW REALM
THE GEGS TOOK THE “GODS” TO THE FACTREE-THE SAME PLACE WHERE Limbeck had been given his trial. They had some difficulty entering, due to the crowds of milling Gegs massed outside. Hugh couldn’t understand a word they were shouting; despite that, it was obvious to him that the populace was divided into two distinct and highly vocal factions, with a large segment who seemed unable to make up their minds. The two factions appeared to feel strongly about their beliefs, because Hugh saw fights break out on several occasions. He remembered what Alfred had said about the Gegs being ordinarily peaceful and gentle.
We’ve come at rather a bad time. No kidding. It looked to be in the middle of a revolution of some sort!
The coppers kept back the crowd, and the prince and his companions managed to squeeze through the stout bodies into the relative quiet of the Factree-relative to the fact that the whanging and banging of the Kicksey-Winsey was constantly in the background.
Once inside, the High Froman held a hasty meeting with the coppers. The little king’s face was grave and Hugh observed several times that he shook his head. The Hand didn’t give a half-barl for the Gegs, but he had lived long enough to know that being caught in a country undergoing political upheaval was not conducive to a long and healthy life.
“Excuse us.” He approached the Head Clark, who bowed and stared at him with the blank, bright smile of one who doesn’t understand a word that is being said to him but who is trying to appear as if he did, in order not to be rude. “We have to have a little talk with your god.”
Gripping Bane firmly by the shoulder, ignoring the boy’s yelps and squirming, Hugh marched the prince across the vast empty floor, over to where Alfred stood gazing up at a statue of a hooded man holding what appeared to be an eyeball in his hand.
“Do you know what they expect me to do?” Bane demanded of Alfred as soon as they neared him. “They expect me to transport them up into heaven!”
“May I remind His Highness that he brought this on himself by telling them he was a god?”
The child’s head drooped. He stole up to Alfred’s side and slipped a hand in the chamberlain’s. Lower lip quivering, Bane said softly, “I’m sorry, Alfred. I was afraid they were going to hurt you and Sir Hugh, and it was the only thing I could think of to do.”
Strong hands jerked Bane around, rough fingers bit into his shoulders. Hugh knelt down and looked straight into the child’s eyes, behind which he wanted to see cunning and malevolent purpose. All he saw were the eyes of a frightened kid. It angered him.
“All right, Your Highness, you go on fooling the Gegs as long as you can-anything to get us out of here. But we just want to make it plain that you don’t fool us one bit, not anymore. Those phony tears better dry up and you better listen-you and daddy both.” He glanced at the feather as he spoke, and the boy’s hand closed over it protectively. “Unless you can hoist these dwarves into the skies, you better be prepared to do some fast thinking. I don’t suppose these people will take kindly to being hoodwinked.”
“Sir Hugh,” warned Alfred, “we’re being watched.”
The Hand looked over to the High Froman, who was observing the proceedings with interest. Releasing the boy, patting him on the shoulders, Hugh smiled.
“What is it you plan to do, Your Highness?” he muttered in an undertone.
Bane gulped back his tears. Fortunately there was no need to keep their voices lowered. The rhythmic pounding and thumping of the machine muffled everything, including thought.
“I’ve decided I’ll tell them I’ve judged them and found them wanting. They haven’t earned the right to go up to heaven.”
Hugh glanced at Alfred. The man shook his head. “It would be very dangerous, Your Highness. If you said such a thing, in the state of turmoil that seems to have gripped the realm, the Gegs might well turn on us.”
The child’s eyes blinked rapidly, their gaze shifting quickly from Alfred to Hugh and back again. Bane was obviously frightened. He had plunged in over his head and felt himself sinking. Worse still, he must know that the only two who could save him had very good reasons for letting him drown.
“What do we do?”
We Hugh would have liked nothing better than to leave the changeling on this storm-swept patch of rock. He knew he wouldn’t, however. Enchantment? Or did he just feel sorry for the brat? Neither, he assured himself, still planning to use the kid to make his fortu
ne.
“There’s talk of another god down here. ‘Limbeck’s god,’ ” said Alfred.
“How did you know that?” Bane flared. “You can’t understand what they’re saying!”
“Yes, I can, Your Highness. I speak some Geg-“
“You lied!” The child gazed at him in shock. “How could you, Alfred? I trusted you!”
The chamberlain shook his head. “I think it best for all of us to admit that none of us trusts the others.”
“Who can blame me?” cried Bane with glittering innocence. “This man tried to kill me, and for all I know, Alfred, you were helping him!”
“That is not true, Your Highness, yet I can understand how you might come to think so. But I had not meant to make accusations. I think it behooves us to realize that, though we do not trust each other, our lives in total now depend on each other individually. I think-“
“-too much!” Hugh broke in. “The kid understands, don’t you, Bane? And drop the babe-lost-in-the-woods act. We both know who and what you are. I presume that you want to get out of here, go up and pay dad a visit. The only way you’re going to get off this rock is with a ship, and I’m the only pilot you’ve got. Alfred, here, knows something about these people and how they think-at least he claims he does. He’s right when he says we’re each other’s only chance in this game, so I suggest that you and daddy there play along nicely.”
Bane stared at him. His eyes were no longer the eyes of a child who is eagerly studying the world; they were the eyes of one who knows all about it. Hugh saw himself reflected in those eyes; saw a chill, unloved childhood; saw a child who had unwrapped all of life’s pretty presents and discovered the boxes contained filth.
Like me, Hugh thought, he no longer believes in the bright, the shining, the beautiful. He knows what’s underneath.
“You’re not treating me like a kid,” said Bane, wary and cautious.
Dragon Wing (The Death Gate Cycle #1) Page 26