Five Senses Box Set

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Five Senses Box Set Page 67

by Andre Norton


  “Well come at last!”

  She who sat on the throne near the end of that chamber leaned a little forward. Her green robe was heavy with gems and silver lining; in fact, it seemed to weigh on her body, just as the youth she wore as a mask was beginning to crack.

  “What do you wish of us, Saylana?” Mahart’s voice did not falter. They had come to a pause a little way from the chair. Willadene could see now that there was a body lying limply on the floor on either side of that chair of state, and she recognized death—but death of a new kind which was more to be feared than any sword thrust or poison cup. Yet still she held, knowing that her strength added to Mahart’s, even as Mahart’s helped to root hers.

  “What do I wish of you—?” Saylana cackled. No silvery laughter this time. “Life, my sweet, life—yours—and it seems by the grace of the Dark Old Power, you have also brought with you another—this wench who has been given more than any human should rightfully have. Thus, my feasting shall be doubly sweet—” Once more she cackled and then suddenly she half turned her head as if she had heard her name called.

  It was at that moment that Willadene, who had been so overwrought by the pressures on her since her awakening, remembered Ssssaaa whom she had not seen since their awakening. However, it was not the Chancellor’s creature who had attracted Saylana’s attention.

  She turned back to them, grinning, showing blackened stubs of teeth.

  “By Drimon, all things come to them who wait. We shall indeed have a feasting!”

  Her right hand moved with a speed Willadene would not have thought possible. Out from her fingers slapped a length of green light. They did not have time to move, but at least this horror was not intended to really bring them down now. Instead, it formed a hoop which grew larger and larger in diameter as it whirled up into the air and then came down to ring them about, while Saylana nodded and grinned. Both girls could understand that for this moment she considered them safely captive.

  Nicolas roused before the first streaks of dawn light cut the sky. And he roused alertly as one battle ready, for he well knew that pinch of awareness which had so often saved him in the past, the premonition that danger waited ahead. He already had knife in hand when that dark line of fur came flowing fluidly among the tumbled debris to leap for him.

  “Ssssaaa!” He stroked that head which butted against his chin. He never knew where Vazul had found the creature or how the Chancellor had bonded with her. But her utter faithfulness to those she selected—and such were very few—as well as her service to Vazul Nicolas had understood from their first meeting.

  However, now Ssssaaa preceded others by only a few minutes, long enough for Nicolas to leave his improvised shelter. It was no surprise that Lorien led the short file of men along the same general trail he had taken. But the company was a small one, some half dozen of the Prince’s own men and three of the rangers. Catching sight of Nicolas, he joined him quickly.

  “There is some power,” he burst forth, “which I do not understand. We began the climb, only these—” he waved at his followers “—could make it. The others were as bound when they tried. If this is Ishbi then we deal with old evil awakened.”

  “We deal with those who have the High Lady,” Nicolas returned grimly, and then in a slightly different tone of voice, “also Willadene—”

  “But she chose—” the Prince began, and Nicolas laughed grimly.

  “Your Highness, no man controls such a woman. She has that in her to make her stand free and go the path she has chosen as rightfully hers. Look you"—he stroked Ssssaaa’s head—"here is one to tell us so. And what she seeks lies there"—he nodded toward the stands of fern, scowling, as it seemed to him the very air was rotten with their heavy scent.

  Making himself head boldly for that green growing wall was one of the hardest things Nicolas believed he had ever done. Yet there was no visible peril ahead. Only those cursed ferns and beyond them—somewhere—the two girls. For he was oath-certain that Willadene had somehow reached Mahart.

  “Lord—down with you!”

  That shout had come from one of the men slightly behind. The Prince took cover no more quickly than Nicolas, who was berating himself that another had picked up the danger he had not seen.

  Over their heads, as they pulled themselves among the scant protection of the crumbling walls, an arrow sang. But that had not been aimed in their direction, rather from behind, flying toward some mark among the ferns.

  For a long moment there was utter silence—no foot stumbled among the scattered stones. The ferns stood tall and untouched by any breeze.

  Nicolas put out his hand and touched Lorien’s forearm, nodding toward the wood. He did not doubt that the Prince had indeed a goodly store of woodlore, but this land was his own running place and he was sure no one could put its every advantage to use.

  Lorien stared at him fiercely, and Nicolas was sure that the Prince had no wish to surrender any scouting to him. Yet finally Lorien nodded and Nicolas swung to the left, making a bellywise crawl toward the nearest spur of the forest. He tried to shut down all thought, to concentrate only on what he must do. Let Prince Lorien advance as he pleased, he would find Nicolas before him.

  He had half expected to be met by a cloud of those tormenting midges which hung thick about normal forests, but there was nothing here. Only—

  He flattened himself to the ground, peering through the fingers he held up to shield his face. His black night-fitting suit had been so well grimed that it was the color of the stones about and he could play one of those rocks with ease.

  What he was watching was a man or else a body which had slipped down, half supported by the ferns around. The arrow? No, there was no sign of any shaft—still he was certain the man was dead.

  Had that stranger been alone—a solitary guard such as the mailed figure at the first valley entrance? This one wore no armor, and he was curiously drawn together, his knees up to his thin chest, as if he had been huddling hopelessly, waiting to be brought down.

  No sounds—just that bundle lying there. But they must learn who or what had killed him or they themsleves could go the same route. Nicolas crept on, the cursed fern scent almost stifling about him.

  But—he knew this victim! Not for nothing had he himself prowled the nightways and hidden places of Kronengred as well as the open lands beyond the city. The contorted face, expressing both fear and horror intermingled, he had last seen in the city. Willadene had spoken of him—Figis—a bit of refuse washed up by the plague, kinless and masterless— No! The fellow had been with Wyche when Nicolas had last caught a glimpse of the youth. And as far as they had been able to discover Wyche had disappeared out of Kronengred on the same night the High Lady had been abducted.

  Where there had been one man there well might be two. Ssssaaa flashed past Nicolas to the body, sniffed, hissed, and was back again. A promise of no danger here?

  However, caution had been too deeply bred into him for him to reveal himself more than he possibly had to. The longer he stared at the dead man’s face the more he was aware of a strangeness. Figis had died in great terror, of that Nicolas was sure, but he still could not see either the sign of a wound or of spilled blood.

  And the Figis he had seen before had been young, carrying several years fewer than his own. But in spite of the print of fear on that face there were other marks—deep-set wrinkles on either side of the nose, a shrinking about the mouth. And surely he had had a full head of hair then, much more than the scattered locks now covering part of his head. This was Figis, to that Nicolas would swear, but it was a Figis upon whom age had settled in a matter of a few days.

  Ssssaaa was weaving a path back and forth before him as if to urge him on. And one of those swings gave him a glimpse of another figure farther beyond. Nicolas froze. He could not control Ssssaaa as the Chancellor was able to, and she now changed course, heading toward that other shadowy blot. With all the precautions he could summon, Nicolas again followed.

  I
t was Wyche this time, caught among the trunks of the ferns. The huge bag of the man’s paunch and body were shrunken—he could have been a famine victim. Even as Figis, he too wore a look of terror. Death had come hard to Wyche, and perhaps not swiftly.

  Both men were clearly dead and their killer or killers made this territory theirs. If Prince Lorien were to come marching in unknowingly he would find no familiar outlaw den but a peril they could neither understand nor foresee.

  Yet—Willadene and the High Lady—or were those two already reduced to such papery shells as that which confronted him now? He could always remember the bite of anger, but he had learned early to make it serve his purpose and not lead him to open and unthinking action.

  Nicolas returned as quickly as he could and squatted down with Prince Lorien and the squad leader. The thought of a death which could suck a man dry was not encouraging, and he could see the shadows of doubt on the faces before him.

  Ssssaaa had followed him back and now gained his shoulder. As she so often did with the Chancellor she placed her sharp muzzle close to his ear and began a hissing near as low as a whistle. He was trying to guess what message she brought when Prince Lorien spoke.

  “We have already discovered something also, Bat. I alone can advance without danger to the edge of the forest; none of these others can.”

  “What hinders them?” Nicolas found this new item difficult to fit in with what he had seen—that the fern forest had been clearly penetrated.

  The Prince’s helm shadowed much of his face but did not hide the square determination of his jaw. “It is like a wall—just such as our larger party met with below. We are being whittled down. And unless you know some forest lore, we are to be deterred by thin air alone—or a wall no man can see.”

  He had hardly finished speaking when there came a sound from the forest—a scream of torment and fear. Nicolas was on his feet. The girls! If he were the only one who could enter there, so be it. But as he ran, Ssssaaa clinging to him, he saw that Lorien was drawing even with him and they both crashed through the first rank of ferns together. Nicolas fought for control even as a second cry sounded. To run headlong into the unknown was the mark of a fool—he had learned that lesson many seasons ago.

  He paused and caught at the Prince. “That way?” His forefinger pointed straight ahead. Lorien nodded, breathing hard. However, even as Nicolas he slowed his pace.

  For the third time that sound reached their ears; now it was hardly above a gurgling moan. It might well be bait in some trap, but they could not turn aside now.

  Through the ferns loomed up the remains of a building—roofless so that the green wands grew inside—still giving more light than within the forest itself. The ferns within the wall had recently been scythed after a fashion, so their fallen lengths made an irregular carpet for the place. In the middle of this there remained, still sturdy set on its base, a pillar of the green-veined stone. It had been put to use.

  The body roped to the pillar was still alive, twisting and turning, trying to find some small hope of a yielding bond. This was no stranger either as far as Nicolas was concerned. There were old slights and snubs he had taken impassively, taunts which had not drawn him to answer by brawling.

  Barbric might be out of the straight line to the throne as far as the law declared, but no one who knew Saylana’s son could think that he did not have some ideas of his own about who was to wear the ducal coronet.

  Only, his expression now was that of one near the edge of sanity, as if he had witnessed something none of his senses could accept.

  Directly before him stood that mailed figure who had denied Lorien passage through the gateway. Around one armored arm a green snake length coiled, but he now moved to attack.

  “For—for Star’s sake—!” Spittle exploded from Barbric’s lips as he made that plea. “Let her not feast on me! I am her son—or was her son—for I believe that she who bore me is long gone out of that body which has begun to fray about her like a too-worn dress. This was her place once—when men called her Nona—and she would have it back again.”

  Speech appeared to be giving him back a measure of control. “Don’t you understand? She sucks life from the living—and now she readies herself for a new body—Mahart’s—one young enough to give her many more years.”

  “You supported her,” Nicolas returned. He was keeping more than half his attention on the metal figure and that snake of light, not sure when either or both would attack.

  “I did not know what she would do. Take the throne from that bumbling old fool, yes, but that she had made a pact and then paid for it—that I learned too late.”

  “A pity we do not have more foresight,” remarked the Prince.

  Barbric showed him a snarling face. “Be not so bold, hero. Your strength will be an extra feeding for her, and do not doubt that she is waiting for you with those she has already gathered in.”

  “She has them—the girls—” That was no question but a statement from Nicolas.

  Barbric nodded. “Landed them as neatly as if she fished them forth from Gladden Stream. Nor, as you will now discover, can you return to save yourselves either!”

  Suddenly his scowl became sheer terror. A single fern which had escaped the massacre of its kind around the pillar bowed as if under a blast of wind. When it arose upright again there were filmy threads floating through the air, the green of the ferns and yet nearly invisible.

  Barbric screamed and screamed again. Ssssaaa jumped from Nicolas’s shoulder and hurled herself like a fur-coated arrow straight for the metal-clothed guard. The unexpectedness of such an attack from so small a creature appeared to completely master its reflexes for a moment. It took a ponderous step backward and stumbled over one of the cut ferns, crashing down on its back while the green thing it had nursed traveled up its arm and shoulder and seemed to pour itself into one of the dark eyeholes of the metal mask. The snake did not reappear, but Barbric was fast entangled by green ribbons which wound about him in spite of his frenzied struggles.

  Nicolas moved with his knife and the Prince with the sword he had taken from his squad leader. But those blades, keen as they were, simply rebounded from the heaviest blows the two could aim.

  Then the lines uncoiled and became a single ribbon heading on into the forest. The shell of Barbric hung as ancient bones against the pillar.

  Though they still went at a wary pace, Nicolas, at least, felt the necessity for charging ahead. What they had heard from Barbric was out of all reason—except they had seen what they had seen—that Saylana had somehow been possessed, her body worn as clothing by a sorceress out of legend was near past any serious belief.

  Still something had withered Figis and Wyche, sucking life from them, and had done so to Barbric. The collapse of the metal guard was as puzzling. Had he been punished in some manner for allowing Nicolas and Lorien to find Barbric and learn as much as they could of this tangled web?

  Once more the fern trees were thinning out, and not far ahead they could see open sky and a tall building which had all the austerity of a temple. Nicolas did not doubt that it was here Saylana, or she who seemed Saylana, now held court.

  25

  Neither girl had attempted to try fortune and strength against that green ring barrier. The light in this long hall appeared to surge and then fail a little. Willadene was intensely aware in a strange way of that seedpod she and Mahart clasped between them. Almost she could believe it was to be an aid, though the time was not yet.

  Saylana huddled back into her throne, her bulky shirts appearing now far too much for her slender body to support. Her eyes, sunken into caverns of her skull, were closed, and the withering of her face and now too-much-revealed shoulders continued before their eyes.

  Willadene did not believe this power was asleep, or even worn to exhaustion. It was rather as if that failing body had been left for a space while what animated it went elsewhere. Now would be their time to move, but in which direction and how the girl could not ha
ve answered.

  Mahart’s shoulder was against hers now. Instinctively they had drawn together as shield mates ready to meet an enemy charge. Fear, yes, there was the scent of that, and she believed that they shared that equally, but it did not rise to panic in them.

  The body on the throne gave a twitch of returning energy as a skeleton-thin hand arose to the wrinkled forehead. Loosened by its touch a long lock of dusty black hair separated from the skull and slipped along Saylana’s shoulder. But the age-puckered lips were smiling, and she opened her eyes to regard the two before her gloatingly.

  “A feast—by the very roots of Yaster, the ever-cursed, a feast!”

  She surveyed the two before her as one might face children who had repented of their naughtiness and now waited to be forgiven. Within their close-clasped hands the seed was warm. Willadene was aware that for an instant they stood in a place of cool, pleasant odors, a mixture of grass, flowers, sun-warmed earth—

  “You are Nona,” Mahart said as if some problem had been solved for her.

  That raw cackle of laughter answered her. “Nona? My girl, you reach back far in time for that one. I cannot remember well everyone who has provided me with proper clothing. I gather Nona left something of a memory here—think how much more your services will be marked.”

  Then that ghastly, tooth-baring smile was gone and she sank again to the back of the chair. Only this time there came a change. In their sight her flesh appeared to firm and the wearing of too many years was erased.

  When she addressed them again she was once more Saylana, but a Saylana who might have aged a score of years from the time Willadene had seen her dancing in the great ballroom.

  “Well, well,” she commented. “So dear Barbric did have unexpected strengths in him after all. Like a true son he is now with his mother.” She gave a pat to a breast which once more filled out the low-cut bodice properly.

 

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