“I'd love to see Amber,” he replied. “But that pleasure will have to await another occasion. We are somewhat occupied at the moment.”
“You've discovered the cause of the disturbances?” I asked.
He glanced at Fiona, then back at me.
“Yes and no,” he said. “We've some interesting leads but no certainty at the moment.”
“Uh, what can I do for you then?” I asked.
Fiona extended her index finger and suddenly became much clearer. I realized that she must have reached out and touched my Trump for better contact.
“We've had an encounter with a manifestation of that machine you built,” she said. “Ghostwheel.”
“Yes?” I said.
“You're right, it's sentient-social AI as well as technical.”
“I was already certain it could pass the Turing test.”
“Oh, no doubt about that,” she responded, “since by definition the Turing test requires a machine capable of lying to people and misleading them.”
“What are you getting at, Fiona?” I asked.
“It's not just social AI. It's downright antisocial,” she replied. “I think your machine is crazy.”
“What did it do?” I asked. “Attack you?”
“No, nothing physical. It's wacky and mendacious and insulting, and we're too busy to go into details right now. I'm not saying it couldn't get nasty, though. I don't know. We just wanted to warn you not to trust it.”
I smiled.
“That's it? End of message?” I said.
“For now,” she answered, lowering her finger and growing dim.
I shifted my gaze to Mandor and was about to explain that I had built a host of safeguards into the thing, so that not just anybody could access it. Mainly, though, I wanted to tell him about Jurt. But our communication was suddenly severed, as I felt another presence reaching toward me.
I was intrigued by the sensation. I had occasionally wondered what would occur if someone tried for a Trump contact when I was already in touch with someone else via a Trump. Would it turn into a conference call? Would someone get a busy signal? Would it put the other party on hold? I'd doubted I'd ever find out, though. It just seemed statistically unlikely. However...
“Merlin, baby. I'm okay.”
“Luke!”
Mandor and Fiona were definitely gone. “I'm really okay now, Merle.”
“You sure?”
“Yeah, as soon as I started coming down I switched to a fast lane. In this shadow it's been several days since I've seen you.”
He was wearing sunglasses and green swim trunks. He was seated at a small table beside a swimming pool in the shade of a great umbrella, the remains of a large lunch spread before. him. A lady in a blue bikini dived into the pool and passed from my line of sight.
“Well, I'm glad to hear about that and—”
“So what happened to me, anyhow? I remember you said something about someone slipping me some acid when I was a prisoner back at the Keep. Is that how it went?”
“It seems very likely.”
“I guess that's what happens when you drink the water,” he mused. “Okay. What's been going on while I've been out of it?”
Knowing how much to tell him was always a problem. So, “Where do we stand?” I asked.
“Oh. That,” he said.
“Yeah.”
“Well, I've had a chance to do a lot of thinking,” he replied, “and I'm going to call it quits. Honor has been satisfied. It's pointless to keep pushing this thing against everybody else. But I'm not about to put myself in Random's hands for a kangaroo trial. Now it's your turn: Where do I stand so far as Amber's concerned? Should I be looking over my shoulder?”
“Nobody's said anything yet, one way or the other. But Random is out of town now and I just got back myself. '' I haven't really had a chance to learn what the others' feelings might be on this thing.”
He removed his sunglasses and studied me. “The fact that Random's out of town...”
“No, I know he's not after you,” I said, “because he's in Kash—” `and I tried to stop it just a syllable too late.
“Kashfa?”
“So I understand.”
“What the hell's he doing there? Amber was never interested in the place before.”
“There's been a... death,” I explained. “Some kind of shake-up going on.”
“Ha!” Luke remarked. “That bastard finally bought it. Good! But... Hey! Why's Amber moving in so suddenlike, huh?”
“Don't know,” I said.
He chuckled. “Rhetorical question,” he said. “I can see what's going on. I've got to admit Random's got style. Listen, when you find out who he puts on the throne let me know, will you? I like to keep abreast of doings in the old hometown.”
“Oh, sure,” I said, trying unsuccessfully to determine whether such information could be harmful. It would become public knowledge very soon, if it wasn't already.
“So what else is going on? That other person who was Vinta Bayle..?”
“Gone,” I said. “I don't know where.”
“Very strange,” he mused. “I don't think we've seen the last of her. She was Gail, too. I'm sure. Let me know if she comes back, will you?”
“Okay. You want to ask her out again?”
He shrugged, then smiled. “I could think of worse ways to spend some time.”
“You're lucky she didn't try to take you out, literally.”
“I'm not so sure she would've,” he replied. “We always got along pretty well. Anyhow, none of this is the main reason I called...”
I nodded, having already guessed as much.
“How's my mother doing?” he asked.
“Hasn't stirred,” I answered. “She's safe.”
“That's something,” he said. “You know, it's kind of undignified for a queen to be in that position. A coatrack. Jeez!”
“I agree,” I agreed. “But what's the alternative?”
“Well, I'd sort of like to... get her freed,” he said.
“What'll it take?”
“You raise a very thorny issue,” I stated.
“I sort of figured that.”
“I've a strong feeling she's the one behind this revenge business, Luke, that she's the one who put you up to going after everybody. Like with that bomb. Like encouraging you to set up that private army with modern weapons, to use against Amber. Like trying for a hit on me every spring. Like—”
“Okay, okay. You're right. I don't deny it. But things have changed—”
“Yeah. Her plans fell through and we've got her.”
“That's not what I meant. I'm changed. I understand her now, and I understand myself better. She can't push me around that way anymore.”
“Why is that?”
“That trip I was on... It shook loose my thinking quite a bit. About her and me. I've had several days now to mull over what some of it meant, and I don't think she can pull the same crap on me that she used to.”
I recalled the red-haired woman tied to the stake, tormented by demons. There was a resemblance, now I thought of it.
“But she's still my mother,” he went on, “and I don't like leaving her in the position she's in. What kind of deal; might be possible for turning her loose?”
“I don't know, Luke.” I answered. “The matter hasn't come up yet.” .
“Well, she's your prisoner, actually.”
“But her plans were directed against all of us.”
“True, but I won't be helping her with them anymore.
She really needs someone like me for carrying them out.”
“Right. And if she doesn't have you to help, what's to prevent her from finding someone like you, as you put it? She'd still be dangerous if we let her go.”
“But you know about her now. That would crimp her style quite a bit.”
“It might just make her more devious.”
He sighed. “I suppose there's some truth in that,” he admitt
ed. “But she's as venal as most people. It's just a matter of finding the right price.”
“I can't see Amber buying someone off that way.”
“I can.”
“Not when that person is already a prisoner here.”
“That does complicate matters a little,” he acknowledged. “But I hardly think it's an insurmountable barrier. Not if she's more useful to you free than as a piece of furniture.”
“You've lost me,” I said. “What are you proposing?”
“Nothing yet. I'm just sounding you out.”
“Fair enough. But offhand, I can't see a situation such as you describe arising. More valuable to us free than a prisoner... I guess we'd go where the value lies: But these are just words.”
“Just trying to plant a seed or two while I work on it. What is your greatest concern right now?”
“Me? Personally? You really want to know?”
“You bet.”
“Okay. My mad brother Jurt has apparently allied himself with the sorcerer Mask back at the Keep. The two of them are out to get me. Jurt made an attempt just this afternoon, but I can see it's really a challenge from Mask. I'm going to take them on soon.”
“Hey, I didn't know you had a brother!”
“Half brother. I have a couple of others, too. But I can get along with them. Jurt's been after me for a long time.”
“That's really something. You never mentioned them.”
“We never talked family. Remember?”
“Yeah. But you've got me puzzled now. Who's this Mask? I seem to remember your mentioning him before. It's really Sharu Garrul, isn't it?”
I shook my head.
“When I brought your mother out of the citadel she left the company of a similarly stricken old guy with RINALDO carved on his leg. I was trading spells with Mask at the time.”
“Most strange,” Luke said. “'Then he's a usurper. And he's the one slipped me the acid?”
“That seems most likely.”
“Then I have a score to settle with him, too-apart from what he did to my mother. How tough is Jurt?”
“Well, he's nasty. But he's kind of clumsy, too. At least, he's screwed up whenever we've, fought and left; a piece of himself behind.”
“He could also be learning from his mistakes, you know.”
“That's true. And he said something kind of cryptic today, now you mention it. He talked as if he were about to become very powerful.”
“Uh-oh,” Luke said. “Sounds as if this Mask is using him as a guinea pig.”
“For what?”
“The Fount of Power, man. There's a steady, pulsing source of pure energy inside the Citadel, you know. Inter-Shadow stuff. Comes from the four worlds jamming together there.”
“I know. I've seen it in action.”
“I've got a feeling that this Mask is still in the process of getting a handle on it.”
“He had a pretty good grip when we met.”
“Yeah, but there's more to it than plugging into a wall outlet. There are all sorts of subtleties he's probably just becoming aware of and exploring.”
“Such as?”
“Bathing a person in it will, if he's properly protected, do wonders for strength, stamina, and magical abilities. That part's easy for a person with some training to learn. I've been through it myself. But old Sharu's notes were in his lab, and there was something more in them – way of replacing part of the body with energy, really packing it in. Very dangerous. Easily fatal. But if it works you get something special, a kind of superman, a sort of living Trump.”
“I've heard that term before, Luke...”
“Probably,” he replied. “My father undertook the process, with himself as the subject—”
“That's it!” I said. “Corwin claimed that Brand had become some sort of living Trump. Made it almost impossible to nail him.”
Luke gritted his teeth.
“Sorry,” I said. “But that's where I heard about it. So that was the secret of Brand's power...”
Luke nodded.
“I get the impression this Mask thinks he knows how it was done and is getting ready to try it on your brother.”
“Shit!” I observed. “That's all I need. Jurt as a magical being or a natural force-or whatever the hell. This is serious. How much do you know about the process?”
“Oh, I know most of it, in theory. I wouldn't mess with it, though. I think it takes away something of your humanity. You don't much give a shit about other people or human values afterward. I think that's part of what happened to my father.”
What could I say? Maybe that part was true and maybe it wasn't. I was sure Luke wanted to believe in some external cause for his father's treachery. I knew I'd never contradict him on it, even if I learned differently. And so I laughed.
“With Jurt,” I said, “there'd be no way of telling the difference.”
Luke smiled. Then, “You could get dead going up against a guy like that, along with a sorcerer, on their own turf.”
“What choice have I got?” I asked. “They're after me. Better to move now. Jurt hasn't had the treatment yet. Does it take long?”
“Well, there are fairly elaborate preliminaries, but the subject doesn't have to be present for some of them. It all depends on how far along Mask is with the work.”
“I'd better move pretty fast then.”
“I won't have you going in there alone,” he said. “It could be suicide. I know the place. I also have a small force of mercs bivouacked in Shadow and ready for action on short notice. If we can get them in, they can hold off the guards, maybe even take them out.”
“Will that fancy ammo work there?”
“No. We tried it when I pulled the glider attack. It'll have to be hand to hand. Body armor and machetes, maybe. I'll have to work it out.”
“We could use the Pattern to get in, but the troop can't... and Trumps aren't reliable for that place.”
“I know. I'll have to work on that, too.”
“Then it would be you and me against Jurt and Mask. If I tell any of the others here, they'll try to stop me till Random gets back, and that may be too late”.
He smiled. “You know, my mother would really be useful in there,” he said. “She knows more about the Fount than I do.”
“No!” I said. “She tried, to kill me. “.
“Easy, man. Easy,” he said. “Hear me out.”
“Besides, she lost to Mask last time they met. That's why she's a coatrack.”
“All the more reason for her to be wary now. Anyway, it had to be trickery, not skill. She's good. Mask must have surprised her. She'd be a real asset, Merle.”
“No! She wants all of us dead!”
“Details,” he explained. “After Caine, the rest of you are just symbolic enemies. Mask is a real one, who took something away from her and still has it. Given the choice, she'll go after Mask.”
“And if we're successful, she'll turn on Amber afterward.”
“Not at all,” he said. “That's the beauty of my plan.”
“I don't want to hear about it.”
“Because you already know you'll agree, right? I just figured a way to solve all your problems. Give her the Keep after it's liberated, as a kind of peace offering, to forget her differences with you guys.”
“Just hand her this terrible power?”
“If she were going to use it against you, she'd have done it a long time ago. She's afraid to employ it in the extreme. With Kashfa down the tubes, she'll grab at the chance to salvage something. That's where the value lies.”
“You really think so?”
“Better Queen of the Keep than a coatrack in Amber.”
“Damn you, Luke. You always make the stupidest things sound sort of attractive.”
“It's an art,” he replied. “What do you say?”
“I've got to think about it,” I said.
“Better think fast, then. Jurt may be bathing in that glow right now.”
 
; “Don't pressure me, man. I said I'll think about it. This is only one of my problems. I'm going to eat dinner now and mull things over.”
“Want to tell me about your other problems, too? Maybe I can work them into the package some way.”
“No, damn it! I'll call you back... soon. Okay?”
“Okay. But I'd better be around when you snap Mom out of it, to kind of smooth things over. You have figured out how to break the spell, haven't you?”
“Yes.”
“Glad to know that. I wasn't sure how to do it, and I can stop working on it now. I'm going to finish here and go shape up the troops,” he said, eyeing the lady in the bikini who had just emerged from the pool. “Call me.”
“Okay,” I said, and he was gone.
Damn. Amazing. No wonder Luke kept winning those sales awards. I had to admit it was a good pitch, despite my feelings about Jasra. And Random had not ordered me to keep her a prisoner. Of course, he had not had much opportunity to tell me anything the last time we had been together. Would she really behave as Luke said, though? It made a sort of sense, but then people seldom keep company with rationality at times when they should.
I passed along the hallway and decided to use the back stair. As I made the turn, I saw that there was a figure standing near the top. It was a woman, and she was looking the other way. She had on a full-length red-and yellow gown. Her hair was very dark and she had lovely shoulders...
She turned when she heard my tread, and I saw that it was Nayda. She studied my face.
“Lord Merlin,” she said, “can you tell me where my sister is? I understand she went off with you earlier.”
“She was admiring some art, and then she had a little errand she wanted to run afterward,” I replied. “I'm not sure exactly where she was going, but she gave the impression she'd be back pretty soon.”
“All right,” she said. “It's just that it's getting near to dinnertime, and we'd expected her to be joining us. Did she enjoy her afternoon?”
“I believe she did,” I said.
“She's been a bit moody recently. We were hoping this trip would cheer her up. She was looking forward to it quite a bit.”
“She seemed pretty cheerfulll when I left her,” I admitted.
“Oh, where was that?”
The Great Book of Amber Page 135