Evenmere (The Evenmere Chronicles Book 3)

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Evenmere (The Evenmere Chronicles Book 3) Page 33

by Stoddard, James


  found, it fails. Because you are linked to The Book of Lore , it

  was able to reach you through the dream dimension.” The

  beast chuckled, a dry coughing noise. “One of the drawbacks

  of reading the book.”

  Armilus glanced down at the black-stoned ring welded to

  his finger. “There are more of those than I first imagined. I

  don’t like it one bit. On occasion the anarchists have been able

  to move physical objects through dreams. It takes time and

  incredible energy. Lord Anderson did it effortlessly, making

  me less than his pawn. How could the Word know I would

  help him? That almost suggests a controlling intellect.”

  “Of that, I know nothing.”

  “Besides,” Armilus grumbled, “if you wanted to kill him,

  why didn’t you? I doubt I could have stopped you.”

  The beast growled. “I do not understand what you mean,

  Doctor. Did you not summon me when you opened The Book

  of Lore ? Did I not tell you how to destroy the poet? Am I not

  yours to command?”

  So long as I am useful, Armilus thought. “As usual, you

  avoid answering the question. I don’t know what you are, or

  what you represent. Chaos, maybe. Entropy itself, perhaps.

  Why won’t you tell me?”

  The beast chuckled again. “I am the Thing of the Book.

  That is all I know.”

  “Hardly. You lie for pleasure. I wish I had something as

  grand as the Words of Power, instead of a smelly, dangerous

  dog. Let’s find a place to sit. I need to think.”

  “Of course you do,” the beast replied, its voice thick with

  irony.

  Does it know everything? Armilus wondered. In truth, he

  was going to faint unless he sat down. And the beast was

  beginning to terrify him. He could feel its will pressing against

  his mind, maybe reading his thoughts, perhaps even trying to

  control them. He had to learn what it was and how to

  command it before it was too late, or his plans would end in

  disaster.

  Carter woke soon after the doctor departed, knowing he

  should leave before more enemies appeared, but despite his

  intentions, his weariness kept him from rising. After a

  momentary struggle, he drew his Tawny Mantle over himself

  and fell into a dreamless sleep.

  The last rays of sunset shone through the windows at the

  far end of the room before he shouted and flung his eyes wide,

  deeply startled. The chamber lay empty, an ordinary drawing

  room save for the wet, charred carpet and the bullet-holes in

  the wall; but something was terribly wrong. Something in the

  Balance had just changed, something important and dreadful,

  but he could not pinpoint it.

  He ate enough from his dwindling supplies to give himself

  some strength. Despite sleeping through the day, he was still

  mentally and physically exhausted, but he had to enter the

  dream world and confer with Mr. Hope to find out what had

  happened.

  The Word Which Masters Dreams came with difficulty,

  rolling into his mind like a heavy stone, shedding nearly no

  light. He spoke it with an effort and passed into the land of

  slumber, where he found himself standing in the gray mist of

  the Long Corridor, facing the Green Door. He fumbled with

  the Master Keys, found the malachite key on the bronze ring,

  and unlocked the door.

  It opened onto moonlight. Carter faced the front of the

  house, looking out toward the driveway and the statue of the

  monk. The Inner Chambers was gone, winked out of

  existence, leaving only bare earth where it had been.

  The Long Way Down

  Three days had passed since Jonathan T. Bartholomew

  parted company with Master Anderson, and he had yet to

  reach his destination. When the winking of the Inner

  Chambers occurred, the shifting Balance had struck him as a

  physical agony, leaving him writhing and feverish, too

  incapacitated to travel for the better portion of a day. Better

  now, he was still unable to journey at his accustomed pace.

  Yet, when he wished, he could march at a tremendous speed,

  and his capacity to go without rest bordered on the

  superhuman, so that even in his impaired state, he was already

  in Aylyrium.

  His trek took him far north of the university, close to the

  border of Ooz, in an area of catacombed chambers where

  vagabonds and outlaws were known to hide. Few gas-jets

  burned along the gloom-shrouded corridors, which even the

  lack of shadows failed to make more definite; but as in so

  many of the halls throughout the centuries, Jonathan had

  walked here before, and he moved with assurance, not

  bothering to light his lamp.

  He entered a large, windowless chamber, empty now,

  though the scent of lilac and candle wax suggested recent

  occupation. He moved through the darkness to the far wall.

  Raising his hands to his chin, he closed his eyes. A grumble of

  pain escaped his lips as the wall abruptly opened, a narrow

  aperture just wide enough to allow passage into the next room.

  He stepped through. The chamber was well lit and in good

  order, with comfortable furnishings and a bottle of wine and

  loaf of bread on a linen tablecloth. Scarcely glancing around,

  Jonathan removed a heavy portrait of a silver-haired

  octogenarian from its place, disclosing a large wall-safe. He

  studied it, and with a smile of satisfaction, dialed the

  combination.

  From within, he withdrew The Book of Lore and set it on

  the table. Pulling a hunk of bread from the loaf, he took a bite

  and chewed it thoughtfully as he opened the volume. His eyes

  passed quickly over the pages, darkening occasionally as he

  read. After only a moment he looked up, forgetting to chew.

  “I’ve found it! And Lord Anderson doesn’t know. I’ll have

  to hurry to gain the advantage.”

  He shut the book and abruptly stiffened.

  “I have a gun and will use it,” a feminine voice behind him

  said.

  Jonathan turned to face a beautiful woman holding a small

  pistol.

  With a nodding bow, the minstrel said, “Contessa du

  Maurier? A pleasure.”

  The contessa lifted an eyebrow in surprise. “And you are?”

  “Jonathan T. Bartholomew, traveling singer and teller of

  tales.”

  “How did you unlock that safe?”

  “I am Storyteller, who sees to the heart, not just of people,

  but of other things, too. And you, once an urchin in Dumon

  with a drunken father and a cowed mother, don’t want to shoot

  me.”

  Her blue eyes sharpened. “Threatening to slander my

  reputation will get you nowhere. I won’t allow you to leave

  with that book.”

  “That’s right. It will stay.” He lifted the volume to return it

  to its place.

  “No,” she ordered. “Leave it on the table.”

  “You have great ambition, Countessa,” he said, ignoring

  her words and putting The Book of Lore back in the safe. “But

  it wouldn’t be good for you to
read this book. As like as not, it

  would kill you.” He shut the safe and locked it. “A lovely lady

  such as yourself—why, that would be a shame.”

  Without glancing her way, he moved back toward the

  opening through which he had come.

  “Stop!” the contessa cried. “You will remain here until I

  summon my associates.”

  “You don’t want me to do that, ma’am,” Jonathan called

  over his shoulder. “You have too many secrets, and Storyteller

  knows every one of them.”

  He stepped through the opening, which closed with a

  hissing sound, leaving du Maurier gaping.

  Jonathan hurried away, having already dismissed her from

  his mind.

  I’ve got to hurry, he thought. Or everything I’ve worked

  for will come to ruin.

  Carter made his way along a winding stair in the upper

  stories of the Opo, scarcely able to put one foot before the

  other, his heart dead within him. The Inner Chambers was

  gone, and with it Sarah and Jason and William Hope, all of

  them vanished—possibly annihilated—but if alive, perhaps

  forever unreachable.

  It was exactly as Jonathan had said; he had compromised

  his honor for nothing, and by so doing changed the Balance

  and brought disaster. He had been a traitor his whole life; he

  would probably die a traitor.

  He had only one prospect: a handwritten note penned in

  Mr. Hope’s neat hand, found lying at the entrance to

  Evenmere, as if he had left it outside the door in the final

  moment before his dissolution. Because Lord Anderson had

  been in the dream world when he read it, he was unable to

  retrieve it, but it contained only six words: Palace of Opo. Eye

  Gate below .

  Lord Anderson and the butler had last spoken just before

  the disaster at Shadow Valley, so Mr. Hope could not have

  known Carter was journeying through the Opo. Apparently,

  Hope’s research had uncovered Professor Shoemate’s route.

  Although he was already in the region of the ancient

  Opoian capitol, there was no one in that deserted country to

  give directions to the palace. He spent an hour tracing his way

  through his maps without knowing exactly what he was

  looking for, until he found a white edifice adorned with

  ancient, carved emblems, standing alone along a wide corridor.

  Throughout the day Carter traveled toward it, trying not to

  speculate on the fates of his loved ones. At eight o’clock that

  evening, within a mile of the building, he found his way

  blocked by an impenetrable wall of debris created by a

  collapse of the corridor. After consulting his maps again, he

  backtracked for an hour, descended a stair, and continued

  toward his goal, only to find his path again barred by rubble.

  He suspected the poets were intentionally obstructing his path.

  Four o’clock in the morning found him desperately

  seeking another route, hurrying though a carpeted corridor

  silent save for the whispering of an occasional gas-jet, his

  lantern lit to fill in the spaces of darkness between the sparse

  flames. His strength had flagged at midnight, forcing him to

  use the Word Which Gives Strength. Under its influence, he

  could go several more hours, but he dreaded how he would

  feel when its effect faded.

  His frustration had grown through the early morning hours.

  His maps were nearly useless; every path he tried met defeat.

  He found walls where none should be, stairs intended to

  ascend turning downward, hallways doubling on themselves.

  Evenmere shifted around him, causing havoc with his sense of

  the Balance. Despite his best efforts, he was siphoned always

  east, ever farther from his objective. The changes increased,

  doorways sealing themselves behind him, making retreat

  impossible.

  At last, weary beyond hope, certain he was being led to his

  destruction, he threw himself onto a low couch in a dreary

  side-chamber and fell into a bleak sleep.

  When the Winking came, Lizbeth and Sarah were in Mr.

  Hope’s office in the gentleman’s chamber, while Jason played

  beneath the billiards table. William sat behind his desk,

  studying a book. He murmured, almost to himself, “I think I

  have something.”

  “About the professor?” Sarah asked.

  “Not precisely. Did I tell you about the message Enoch

  sent yesterday?”

  “Not a word.” Sarah turned to her sister. “Did he mention

  it to you?”

  Lizbeth sat on the sofa, arms folded, looking down as if

  listening.

  “Lizbeth?”

  She raised her eyes, a bit startled. “What? I’m sorry. Were

  you speaking to me?”

  Sarah repeated her question and Lizbeth shook her head.

  “This is the first I’ve heard of it.”

  “Sloppy of me,” Mr. Hope said, rubbing his eyes. “None of

  us have slept much since the shadows vanished …” His voice

  trailed off, his gaze shifting across the stark, shadowless room.

  Carter had last been seen by the White Circle Guard just

  before he and Jonathan entered Shadow Valley.

  Sarah patted his arm. “He is made of stern materials. I

  refuse to believe he has come to harm.” But her voice

  quavered as she spoke. “Now what about Enoch?”

  “When he went to wind the Hundred Years Clock, he

  verified what he had already sensed: someone has snatched a

  second of time from Existence.”

  Sarah raised her eyebrows. “I doubt it will be missed.”

  Hope laughed wearily. “Enoch thinks otherwise, but it

  reminded me of the starlight Doctor Armilus took from the

  Tower of Astronomy, a similarly abstract artifact. Assuming it

  was he who stole the time, I asked myself what he wanted it

  for. Nothing came to mind, until I received this book from one

  of my agents.” He held up the worn leather volume he had

  been perusing. “I’ve had my people scouring the Mere for

  information about the Eye Gate and The Book of Verse .”

  “You know they call your emissaries Hope’s Minions

  now?” Sarah asked. “The rumor is you have an army of them

  traveling throughout the house, performing various arcane

  duties.”

  Mr. Hope frowned. “I fancy the name, though they’re

  hardly an army. Closer to a battalion, really. At any rate,

  hidden within these pages is a reference dating back seven

  hundred years to the destruction of ancient Opo. The Eye Gate

  stands blind, with none now left to watch. A single note, but it

  sent my minions, as you call them, seeking anything

  concerning Opo. An unusual description on an ancient vase

  led to a scroll in the Aylyrium Museum of Antiquities.

  According to it, the Gate of the Staring Eye was located

  beneath the Opoian palace, and was a portal leading to a world

  of elemental energies—Time and Dimension, Shadow and

  Light, Water and Fire, Earth and Air. The kinds of power the

  Poetry Men wield.”

  “And a connection with the items Armilus stole,” Sarah

&n
bsp; said.

  “Perhaps, though a tenuous one. Even if we are correct, the

  Opo covers miles, and we haven’t yet discovered where the

  ancient palace lay. I wish Carter would contact me. Shadow

  Valley was near Opo; maybe he can find out something on his

  end. I need to warn him as well; the scroll suggests dark

  danger to anyone entering the Eye Gate.”

  Throughout the conversation, Lizbeth had remained silent,

  listening with only half an ear, troubled by a vague unease, as

  if some peril were rising toward them. Now she gave a sudden

  start.

  “Something’s wrong!” she blurted, causing her friends to

  turn to her in surprise. “Something is coming!”

  “What do you mean?” Mr. Hope asked.

  “I don’t …” She struggled to put her feeling into words.

  “It’s like when I was imprisoned in the False House, when the

  rooms would unexpectedly change. It’s the same sensation.”

  Seeing Lizbeth’s urgency, Sarah rushed to Jason’s side and

  lifted him in her arms. “What must we do?”

  “We need to leave the Inner Chambers. We should—oh,

  there’s no time!”

  Leaping to her feet, Lizbeth fumbled across Mr. Hope’s

  desk and grabbed the paper where he had written the words

  Palace of Opo and Eye Gate below . Tearing away the rest of

  his scribblings, she rushed to the open window and threw the

  scrap out. Scarcely had it left her hand when the Winking

  occurred.

  The three friends gave an involuntary cry. Lizbeth felt

  herself being torn to pieces. Just like the paper , she thought.

  A darkness swept in from every side, enveloping her,

  destroying the room. She lost consciousness.

  Her first waking thought was surprise at being alive; she

  felt certain she had perished. She must have been thrown

  across the room, for she was lying with her head against a leg

  of the billiards table. It felt solid when she touched it, as if it

  had never been destroyed.

  “Yet it has,” she murmured, not really understanding what

  she meant. “We all have.”

  The room lay dark, the only illumination a twilight glow

  through the windows. Mr. Hope had collapsed at his desk;

  Sarah was pulling herself to her feet and Jason sat on the floor

  beside her, looking about with wide eyes. Lizbeth rushed to

  the side of the woman who had been both mother and sister to

  her, and helped her and the boy to a chair.

 

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