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The Sword of Bheleu

Page 21

by Lawrence Watt-Evans


  He called aloud another strange name, “Kewerro!” The wind howled down out of the north, and the storm became a snowstorm, then a raging blizzard.

  He was drunk and staggering with the power of the sword, and still the gem glowed as brightly as ever, the blade as gleaming white as the moon.

  He sent the snow away again, turning the north wind back, and allowed the south wind to bring rain in its place. The sky was black, the sun buried in thunderheads; only lightning and the light of the sword lessened the gloom.

  He drew the storm around him, whipped it into a howling maelstrom, and forced its winds to whirl faster, until his cloak was flapping with a sound like the breaking of stone; still the gem remained undimmed. Maintaining the roaring hurricane, he moved the earth as well, rippling it around him like a lake in a breeze. He pulled the rain from the sky in sheets, in streams, and pounded lightning on the shifting ground, surrounding himself in a halo of crawling electric fire.

  Finally, he could stand no more; he fell to his knees. The earth stilled. One hand fell from the sword’s hilt; the lightning stopped, and the wind dropped. In the sudden silence after the final thunderclap, he closed his eyes and heard the beating of the rain soften to a gentle patter.

  He opened his eyes and looked hopelessly at the sword. His fingers adhered to the hilt as firmly as ever.

  The gem glowed fiery red, and he thought he heard mocking laughter, his own voice laughing at his despair.

  Chapter Twenty

  The twenty-first councilor and Derelind’s report from Mormoreth arrived almost simultaneously.

  It was the Seer of Weideth, uncomfortable on a borrowed horse, who completed the Council’s quorum; he arrived late in the evening while a light, chilling drizzle blew down out of the north, and his calls to the castle’s gatekeeper went unheeded for fully fifteen minutes, unheard over the hiss of the rain and the mutter of the wind. There was only a single guard posted at the gate after dark and he was huddled well away from the window, drawing what warmth he could from his shuttered lantern and a skin of cheap red wine; finally, though, he heard something worth checking on and peered down to discover the Seer, shivering at the gate, wrapped in an immense gray cloak.

  The gatekeeper was an honest man and not inconsiderate; he hurried to his winch and called down an apology as he cranked open the portcullis. That done, he rushed down the tower steps, stumbling in the dark and very nearly sending himself falling head-first, and opened the Lesser Portal. In daylight there would have been two other guards to share the task.

  “My lord, I am very sorry, truly I am! I had not thought any would be out in such dreary weather!”

  The Seer nodded, but did not manage to say anything. His home village was kept perpetually warm and dry by the heat of the neighboring volcanoes, and he was not accustomed to the damp chill of autumn rains.

  “I should have known better, though, with all of you folk arriving for these past several days; I don’t suppose you’re the last, either. I guess the rain caught you already on the road, and you didn’t wish to waste money on an inn with the castle so close; I’d do the same myself. It’s damnably strange weather for this early in the year, too, my lord—far colder than any year in my memory.”

  The Seer looked at the gatekeeper and realized that he was a very lonely man, spending his nights sitting alone at the gate. He was unmarried, with no children, and his most recent woman had left him a few days earlier.

  That was not his business, the Seer told himself. His gift sometimes told him more than he wanted to know—and then other times it wouldn’t tell him anything. He wished it were more reliable. He didn’t particularly care if he were ever a great prophet, but it would be pleasant, he mused, at least to be a competent one, rather than having erratic flashes of insight and foreknowledge.

  It was the guard’s loneliness, combined with his genuine contrition, that had brought on his little speech. He would go on talking until he got an answer.

  “Oh, I’m all right,” the Seer managed. “You mustn’t trouble yourself.”

  “That’s kind of you, my lord. Is there anything I can do for you?”

  “Where can I put my horse?”

  The gatekeeper replied with directions to the stable, instructions on whom to rouse and how, and warnings against trusting the worthless grooms.

  “Thank you,” the Seer replied. He rode on as directed, before the man could begin another speech.

  At the stable he obtained directions to a hall where he might find someone who would know where he was supposed to be; following them, he got lost briefly in the maze of stone corridors. Eventually, though, by asking whomever he chanced to meet, he found his way to the upper gallery where the Council was gathering.

  Chalkara noticed him as he reached the top of the stairs and recognized him immediately from his sending. “Greetings, O Seer,” she said. “I hadn’t known you were here. When did you arrive?”

  The Seer held out a flap of his cloak so that she could see that it was still wet and answered, “Just now. What’s going on?”

  A stranger in a gaudy robe of purple velvet pushed past him and entered the gallery as Chalkara answered, “It’s rather complicated to explain, and the meeting is about to start. Why don’t you just come in, sit down, and warm up? If you have any questions, ask them as they come up.”

  Confused, the Seer let Chalkara shove him through the door. There were chairs inside, arranged around a row of three long tables; he was tired, and sank into one gratefully.

  The room was lighted by several dozen candles in hanging chandeliers and standing candelabra, and a dozen or so men and women were already seated around the tables. Others were arriving as he took this in. Shandiph was seated at the head of the table he had chosen; none of the others were immediately recognizable. There was a tiny old woman seated at Shandiph’s right.

  A stout man not quite into middle age seated himself at the Seer’s right and remarked without preamble, “You’re wet.”

  “It’s raining,” he answered.

  “Have you just arrived, then?”

  “Yes.”

  “Who are you?”

  “I am the Seer of Weideth.”

  “Ah, then it’s you who started all this!”

  “I suppose it is. Who are you, then?”

  “You don’t know me? I am Deriam of Ur-Dormulk, and probably the only wizard here who knows what he’s doing.” He gestured to take in the entire assembly.

  The Seer decided that he didn’t care for Deriam of Ur-Dormulk. He was trying to think of a polite way to break off the conversation when Shandiph rose and broke it off for him by calling the meeting to order.

  “I see that we now have the necessary numbers,” he said when the entire group was seated and silent, “counting Derelind. With this quorum, then, we are constituted an official gathering of the Council of the Most High, empowered to take action on behalf of the entire membership. I think that you will all agree shortly that some action must be taken, and quickly.”

  He paused dramatically, and someone in his audience snorted derisively. Shandiph ignored it.

  “We have just received word, through the offices of the sorceress Zhinza, from Derelind the Hermit, who was earlier sent to the city of Mormoreth in Orûn to ascertain the status of our comrade Shang and the basilisk which had been placed in his keeping. I now yield to Zhinza, so that she may give Derelind’s message herself.” He gestured toward the ancient woman and then sank into his chair.

  Zhinza rose and proclaimed, “Shang is dead. I was right.”

  Deriam muttered something into his beard.

  “Tell them what Derelind said,” Shandiph reminded her.

  “Derelind said,” she went on, “that he arrived safely and found that Mormoreth is now inhabited by the bandit tribe that formerly roamed the Plain of Derbarok. Being a wizard, he was easily able to c
onvince the bandits to talk to him and tell him how this came about. They claim the city was given to them as a gift by the person who killed Shang, as a blood-price for several tribesmen he killed as well.”

  “All right, woman, who was it killed him?” Karag demanded.

  “Shang was killed by an overman named Garth.”

  There was a moment of stunned silence as this news sank in.

  “What about the basilisk?” someone called.

  There was a hush as Zhinza looked about for the speaker and failed to locate her. Finally, addressing the group at large, she said, “Garth took it with him.”

  The ensuing silence was brief and followed by a babble of many voices. Shandiph let it go on for several minutes before demanding order be restored.

  “You mean,” Karag of Sland said, when he was reasonably sure he could be heard, “that our greatest weapon has fallen into the hands of the enemy even before we have begun to fight him?”

  “That would appear to be the case,” Shandiph said. “Before we begin debate, however, I would like to have all the available information laid out. We are fortunate in that Kala of Mara thought to bring with her a good scrying glass. At my request, she has been studying this overman. At this time, I would like to ask her what she has learned.”

  Kala was a young woman in a simple brown robe; she stood and said, “I haven’t learned much, I’m afraid. It’s very hard to use the glass on Garth of Ordunin; the sword resists the presence of all other magic, and he is never apart from the sword.”

  “Have you seen the basilisk?” asked Thetheru.

  “No, I haven’t. I haven’t seen any trace of it anywhere in Skelleth. I don’t know what happened to it, but I don’t think it’s there.”

  “That’s good,” Deriam said.

  “What I have seen, though, is enough to frighten me badly. I cannot look at Garth directly; the sword will not allow it. When I attempt to force it, it retaliates by filling my crystal with its own hideous light, so that I can see nothing. I haven’t the strength of will to fight it. However, I have watched the village of Skelleth and places around the overman. There have of late been several great storms in that area, as well as earthquakes; they have had snow and hail, as well as the rain and sleet that might be expected in this season, and winds sufficient to tear apart thatched roofs. I have glimpsed lightning storms that lit the night sky as if it were day. I think that Garth is somehow using the sword to create or summon these storms.”

  “You say that you haven’t been able to watch the overman himself?” Karag asked.

  “No, I haven’t. I have also been unable to see inside the local tavern he frequents, whether he is there or not; I have no idea what this might mean.”

  “These storms,” Karag asked. “Are you sure he’s causing them? I’ve never heard of any such magic.”

  “I am not certain, but they are like no natural storms I have ever seen.”

  There was a moment of silence; then Thetheru of Amag said quietly, “Do we have any chance of stopping such power?”

  “He has already taken our greatest weapon,” Herina the Stargazer observed.

  “Well, no,” Shandiph said, “he hasn’t, really.”

  There was another moment of silence; then Miloshir the Theurgist asked, “Are you referring to the Ring of P’hul?”

  “Among other things, yes.”

  The Seer was confused. He had never heard of the Ring of P’hul. He looked about for Chalkara, but she was seated well down the table on the opposite side.

  “What other things?” Karag demanded.

  Shandiph sighed. “I was afraid this would happen sometime. A need was bound to arise.”

  “What in the name of the seven Lords of Eir are you talking about?” someone asked. The Seer was surprised to see that it was Chalkara; he would have guessed that she was privy to all the Chairman’s secrets.

  “Have none of you ever wondered at how little power our magic has? Haven’t you all heard the tales of the great magicks used in the wars of the Twelfth Age and wondered what became of them?”

  The other magicians were all staring at Shandiph now.

  “They’re just stories,” someone said.

  “No, I’m afraid they aren’t.”

  “You mean that Llarimuir the Great really did move mountains? That he created the overmen on a whim? That Quellimour raised a city overnight and then sent it sailing in the clouds?” Karag’s voice was openly sarcastic.

  “Yes, they probably did just what you say,” Shandiph replied mildly.

  “Then what happened?” Miloshir asked.

  “It was at the end of the Twelfth Age,” Shandiph explained. “The world had been in a constant state of war for over a thousand years, probably more than two thousand—the wars destroyed all the records, so we can’t be sure. The wizards of that age fought in those wars, using all the magic at their command; reading their descriptions, I find it miraculous that anyone survived at all. The seers and oracles helped by giving military counsel to the generals and warlords.”

  “But that’s forbidden!” the Seer burst out.

  “It is now, yes; it wasn’t then. As I was saying, magicks mightier than any we can imagine were common and were employed without any compunction, not only in genuine wars, but in looting and pillaging at whim. The wizards themselves were among the most feared of the warlords. It was only the balance of power, the fact that each side could recruit and use equal amounts of magic, that kept the wars going-and it was probably that balance that kept most of the population alive. Each wizard, you see, defended his subjects, and there were protective spells as powerful as the destructive spells.

  “At any rate, this continued throughout the Twelfth Age; but about three centuries ago, the surviving wizards grew tired of the constant conflict and gathered in council to arrange a peace. That was the beginning of the Council of the Most High. You’ve all probably heard that the wizards were advisors to the warlords, and some were, but most were the warlords themselves. It was agreed that all wars would stop at once, whether the other lords wanted them to or not; the Ring of P’hul was used to end the Orûnian War and the Racial Wars, and lesser magicks dealt with the lesser conflicts. It was then decided, when it was seen what the Ring and the other spells had done, that such powers were too dangerous to keep in use, and they were sealed away in a spot known only to the first Chairman of the Council.”

  “And I suppose the secret has been passed on from chairman to chairman, down to you?” Karag said.

  “No, not exactly; not the secret itself, but only the means of obtaining it. I didn’t know until an hour ago where the great magicks were, only that a certain spell would inform me. I used it when I first heard Derelind’s message, before calling this meeting. The old magicks, those that survived, are in the crypts beneath Ur-Dormulk.”

  “They are?” Deriam exclaimed.

  “Yes, they are,” Shandiph replied.

  “What of it?” Karag asked.

  “Comrades, I think we could debate on this for hours or even days, but Miloshir tells us that time is precious, that the overman draws greater power from the Sword of Bheleu with every passing moment. Therefore, I would like to put this proposal to an immediate vote: that we should without any further delay send a party to Ur-Dormulk to acquire these ancient powers, whatever they may include, and then use them to end the threat posed by Garth of Ordunin and the Sword of Bheleu, thereby averting the coming Age of Destruction. If the vote does not show a clear consensus, I will open debate, but I hope that it won’t be necessary.”

  It wasn’t. There were three dissenting voices, for a total of only four votes.

  Chapter Twenty-One

  For three days Garth had tried to burn out the sword’s power with storms and earthquakes, but had succeeded only in exhausting himself and disrupting the reconstruction of Skelleth. Finally, whe
n the gem still glowed as brightly as ever at the end of the third day, he admitted defeat.

  At least, he admitted temporary defeat; he had not yet abandoned hope, but only convinced himself that he could not exhaust the sword in such displays. He suspected that he might manage to free himself by allowing the sword a surfeit of killing, but that was not a method he cared to employ; it was to avoid unnecessary killing that he wanted to dispose of the thing.

  He spent the following day sitting in the King’s Inn, drinking and talking with Scram. The reconstruction was continuing, but only slowly; the cold had made work difficult, and materials were running low—stone excepted. The embassy had been sent to Kholis, as planned. The petrified thief had been set up in the center of the marketplace on an elaborate pedestal of stone blocks from the Baron’s dungeon. Galt, Garth, and the other overmen considered this to be a mistake, but Saram and Frima insisted that the pitiful figure was appropriate and admirable.

  Another petrified villager had been found in a ruin nearby; apparently someone had had the misfortune to look out a window while the basilisk was being moved through the streets. This figure was not to become a public statue; even had it not broken in half when the house it was in collapsed in flames around it, it was much less attractive. The person in question had been a plump matron, bent over to peer around a shutter.

  No one had known that this second petrification had occurred until the rubble had been cleared from the house. The victim had been a recluse, little liked by those who knew her at all. Garth still thought it odd that her absence could have gone unnoticed for the intervening months.

  “I had hoped,” he remarked to Saram, “that the death of the basilisk would remove the spell that it had cast upon its victims.”

  “It would seem that magic is not as transitory as some tales would have it,” Saram replied.

  “I suppose that if it were, then Shang’s death would have ended the usefulness of his charms, and thereby freed the basilisk from my control.”

 

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