Mazes of Scorpio
Page 15
And Seg put his arms about the lady Milsi, and comforted her.
Kalu and his people came in then to report that nothing stirred in the chamber. We had seven doors from which to make a choice. Which would it be?
“My lady,” said Seg, and I marveled at the gentleness of his voice in these horrific surroundings. “You have knowledge of this place? This maze of the Coup Blag?”
She pulled back a little from him and looked up, and the tears stood in her eyes. “No. No, I do not know — I know only that we must find the king — and the queen — and leave with our lives — if we can.”
“We must do more than that,” put in Kalu, with his usual cheerfulness. He appeared undaunted by the terrors through which we had gone. “I, for one, do not intend to leave without my fair share of treasure.”
“But — your life—?”
“I have risked it many times, my lady. It is a habit.”
About to turn away and make a start on the next door, I swung back as Seg spoke. He spoke to the lady Milsi.
“Lady. Your life will be mine — while I live no harm shall come to you if I can prevent it. That I swear.”
Abruptly, like lightning striking through thunderclouds, she smiled. She was splendid in that moment. “You will be my Jikai, Seg the Horkandur?”
“If you wish it, lady.”
They stood, looking one at the other, and I knew they did not see and were not aware of anyone else. Softly, she said, “I wish it.”
Chapter seventeen
Milsi
We stood before the seven doors and Exandu said, “You choose red again, Bogandur? After the travails we suffered because of that red door at the head of the staircase?” He cocked his head at me, his nose red as the door before which we stood. “Blue or green are the colors of Pandahem.”
“As they are of Hamal, master Exandu.”
“That I grant you. But red — I do not think my aching bones, my head, my feet, my heart or liver will stand any further torments.”
“There will be more, Exandu,” said Kalu. “Never fear.”
The lady Milsi stood close by Seg. She said. “He is mightily cheerful.” She turned to Kalu. “Why is that, Pachak?”
“My lady?” Kalu Na-Fre looked perplexed. “Why should one be concerned over death? Papachak has all mortals in his hands. There is treasure here, and my bonny fellows will bring it out.”
“Or die in the attempt?”
“If that is willed.” Kalu gestured at the doors. “I have followed pantor Dray and with him Exandu and pantor Seg. I do not think I shall change now. They have brought me luck.”
“Luck!” burst out Exandu. Shanli soothed him, and Hop the Intemperate let out a gusty kind of laughing groan.
“Certainly. I have not lost a single one of my fine fellows since we left that Strom Ornol.”
The lady Milsi put a hand to her face. Seg instantly put his arm about her waist to support her. She was a splendid woman, her body, although grimed with dirt, glowing through the rents in her clothes, full and firm and voluptuous. She was of an age with Seg, I judged, probably a few seasons younger, given that Seg had bathed in the River of Baptism in far Aphrasöe, and therefore one must judge his age not by chronology but by his appearance when he bathed in that magical stream.
“Very well, then,” spoke out Exandu, and he drew himself up. “Red it is.” Then he said, “It will bring back the memories.”
Using the skills we had acquired to stay living people in this place, this abode of horrors called the Coup Blag, we pushed the door open. Only a stone-walled corridor showed before us, ten feet high and broad, stretching some fifty feet to the corner, unbroken by doors. We entered and, prodding and watching, went on.
We found a few traps, things of swinging flagstones in the floor, and spyholes with crossbow bolts fixed to loose at anyone passing, and a metal mirror fixed at forty-five degrees so that what we thought was the end of the tunnel was a pit filled with acid. These traps we negotiated, and pressed on. The sound of voices, and singing, and the clink of bottles and glasses reached us from around the next bend.
“Anyone for the Cabaret?” said Seg, and he laughed.
The lady Milsi walked now with her arm about his waist, and he assisted her along with great solicitude.
I stuck my head around the corner.
The chamber was large, filled with light. There were tables laid for a feast. They were there, sprawled out, eating and drinking and singing. Chests stood ranked and broken open and a profusion of treasures had been pulled out and lay scattered on the marble flooring. The smells of food and wine struck us shrewdly.
Strom Ornol looked up. His pallid face showed a flush along the cheekbones and he waved a golden goblet high.
“So there you are! We thought you were all dead.”
We walked forward.
Fregeff and Rik Razortooth were drinking, one a good rosé and the other a silver dish of blood. I could not see Skort the Clawsang.
“Skort?” said Ornol. “Oh, he disappeared some time ago. We had a wonderful time in a valley choked with fruit trees and filled with flowers. Then we came in here and have been feasting ever since. We move on soon. You are only just in time.” He saw the lady Milsi.
“Oh?”
The pappattu was made. Milsi was seated next to the lady Ilsa, and we men heard words concerning fresh clothes.
“It is rest we need!” declared Seg hotly.
“Well, that is your fault for not following me. We have had a splendid time, and we think we know the way out.”
“Bogandur!” cried Exandu, collapsing into a chair. “What have you done to me!”
“We will be happy to go with you, Strom Ornol,” I said. “After we have eaten and taken our rest.”
Fregeff ostentatiously reached for a fresh dish of blood.
Kalu said, “Where is the way out?” He stared at the treasures scattered about. “There is some treasure here. But we have not had a hard time yet, and the end of this is not yet in sight.”
“Not had a hard time!” exclaimed Shanli. “Look at my poor master! Shame on you, master Kalu!”
And the Pachak laughed, and swirled his tail hand, and went off with his people to eat and drink.
“The way out lies the way we entered,” said Ornol.
“Perhaps,” said Kalu, and took up a golden goblet and drank deeply.
Ornol transferred his attention to Milsi, and her story was soon told. Ornol sneered. “Serving a king or queen is a poor man’s game. There is no real reward in that.”
Seg stiffened. “At least, when they kick out ne’er-do-wells, they usually have their reasons.”
There would have been a fight, there and then, if we others had not intervened. Ornol didn’t know how lucky he was.
Sucking at a honeyed wine, Exandu moaned as Shanli wiped his brow. “If only we’d gone with Ornol through the green door, think of the misery and terror we would have been spared!”
“Yes,” I said. “Perhaps I did not choose wisely — save in one thing.”
“Aye,” said Seg, with a snap in his voice. “Had we gone through the green door, we would never have—”
Milsi laid her hand on his arm. He turned, at once, looking at her. She smiled. “I will go with the lady Ilsa and make myself presentable. I have much to thank you and Dray the Bogandur for, Seg the Horkandur, Jikai.”
Seg rolled his shoulders most uncomfortably under that.
“My lady...” was all he could find to say.
“Anyway,” Kalu was saying between mouthfuls to Hop, “where I come from the hellhounds breathe fire. They’ll crisp you up like a vosk rasher.”
“That is sorcery, Kalu, I daresay.”
“Ask Fregeff.”
I walked along and took up a piece of meat and ate, what it was I’ve no idea, and regarded Ornol from the corner of my eye. If the idiot insisted on rushing off at once, I did not think the party with me was in fit state to follow. And, the lady Ilsa provided a pret
ty problem, too...
Kalu laughed, and so drew my attention. “Very well, Hop the Intemperate. When we all get out of here, I’ll make an assignation with you at The Sign of the Jolly Puddler in Mahendrasmot. Is it a bargain?”
“If we get out—”
“You stick with me and my fine fellows. No fear of that.”
Some of the warriors were singing “My Love is like a Moon Bloom.” A rival party at the other table struck up with “The Two-Tailed Kataki,” which made Seg glance quickly down the chamber to where the ladies were fussing over chests of gorgeous raiment.
“She’s a grown-up girl,” I said to Seg.
He did not flush; but he looked decidedly off key.
“You — like her, Dray?”
“Yes.”
“Since I lost Thelda, I’ve not really bothered to look at another woman. But I’m over Thelda now. She is a part of the past. I shan’t forget her; but—”
“Milsi is a splendid woman, Seg. By Vox! She’s been through a few horrors down here. Yet she’s — well, she’s—”
“Aye!”
“All the same. She has a past, too.”
“I know. I think she is in much the same case as I am.”
I put a hand on Seg’s shoulder. This was an unusual and gratuitous gesture between us; but I was deeply moved. He smiled that smile of his, and his fey blue eyes challenged me. “All right, my old dom. I do not forget you owe me a faceful of dungy straw.”
“Two!” I said. “Two, by Zair!”
And we both recalled that fraught day in The Eye of the World when the Sorzarts raided the farm and we first met.
The merriment thundered on. These people were reacting to moments of horror, snatching a few balancing moments of boisterous pleasure before plunging once more into the terrors of the Coup Blag. We set about filling our bellies and of finding fresh clothing and weaponry.
Needless to say, Seg and I found some scarlet cloth, and so fashioned ourselves breechclouts in the color that — well, that might this time just have proved itself once again.
Among the merrymakers the absence of decomposing corpse-faces was marked. We asked questions, and learned that Skort and his people, with some of the porters, had been bringing up the rear guard when a stone block had fallen across the corridor. The delayed-action trap had squashed only two poor fellows, a Rapa and a Moltingur; but it had isolated Skort from the rest.
“This is a maze,” declared Fregeff. “Doubtless we will come upon them again.”
“I sincerely hope so,” I said, munching on a hunk of roast vosk leg. “The Clawsangs are bonny fighters.”
The pressure Exandu could bring to bear on Ornol must now be lessened, at least in the young dandy’s eyes, by reason of the treasure here. He could be free of what he owed. All the same, Exandu managed to persuade the strom to wait until we were in better shape to march with him.
At last, fully kitted out and feeling rested, we took up our bundles of loot and started out.
Up ahead along a corridor, and nastily soon after we started, we heard Ornol’s strident voice.
“By the Furnace Fires of Inshurfraz!” he screamed. “Is there no way out of this maze?”
We were back in the room of the feast from which we had started.
“We try another door, pantor,” said Kalu, equably.
So we did. This time we followed on into corridors we had not penetrated before. The little mark of the heart had long since petered out. Whoever had made it had not ventured these halls and passages of dread.
When we came across levers and buttons and tripwires we left them severely alone. We halted, as our way was impeded by a simple tilting flagstone trap. A prod from a pole dipped the near edge down without effort. It swung lazily back into place. The stone was too wide to clear with a jump. To balance two men would be exceptionally tricky.
Standing in a niche cut from the rock stood the armored skeleton of a Chulik. He looked ferocious, pared to the bone. If he was touched, warned Fregeff, who could guess the magic there, he would probably come to life and we’d have an unwanted fight on our hands with a fearsome representative of the Kaotim, the Undead, who are well known on Kregen.
Kalu stepped forward. “I am not so sure,” said the Pachak. “Pantor Dray, would you stand ready to cut his legs away from under him? And, Pantor Seg—?”
We, with others, poised our weapons ready to slash the skeleton to pieces the instant it moved.
Kalu reached out with his sword and, delicately, pushed the skeleton’s skull. The jawbone clicked up into place.
Nothing else happened.
“There!” cried Kalu, and his tail hand pointed at the swinging stone trap. “Try it now!”
We did. The flagstone held firmly for us all to cross.
We crossed that trap in safety, but others caught us and men died. I misliked this greatly, but after another blazing row with Ornol over directions, we all went along a smoothly paved and open passageway and I trailed on after.
Seg said, “Should we cut off on our own?”
“Safety in numbers. Anyway — apart from Milsi — he was right about the large green and small red doors.”
Around about then the passageway opened into a chamber robed in yellow silk, with an ebon throne surrounded by skulls and with tall candles burning. Kalu looked around and yawned.
When a horned and hoofed demon, of the horrific Kregan variety, appeared from nowhere on that ebon throne, Kalu took a little more interest in the proceedings.
Being of Kregen, the demon was hooved of rear feet, clawed of third feet, tentacled of second feet and bore human hands on his forearms. His horns emitted sparks of light. His tongue licked out like a rattlesnake. Everyone screamed and crowded for the door by which we had entered — everyone save Fregeff, the Fristle sorcerer.
He lifted his bronzen flail and shook it and the demon struck with a twinned bolt of fire from his eyes and poor Fregeff went thump head over heels into the corner.
The pandemonium at the door sorted itself out as the crazed mob fled. More than one wretch fell and was trampled.
Fregeff crawled painfully to his feet. His eyes streamed blood. But he lifted the flail, and shook it.
The twin blue bolts of fire hurled him flat again.
Seg loosed a shaft. It caromed off the demon, who took no notice.
I said, “You’d best take the lady Milsi out, Seg.”
“And leave you?”
“Oh, I’ll run with the best of you. But — Fregeff—”
“He has met his match.”
“I am not so sure — look!”
For the Fristle gathered himself together. His arm lifted. He released the bronzen chain attached to the collar about the reptile’s neck. The volschrin on his shoulder spread his wings. Rik Razortooth swooped up in a sudden gusting of membranous wings.
As Fregeff shook his flail for the third time, the demon uttered a screech of pure rage. The twin blue bolts of devil fire slashed from his eyes, burned across the chamber. The sorcerer flopped over, his lozenged robes flapping. He twitched an arm. Again the bolts of fire flew from the demon’s lambent eyes. But this time they struck for the volschrin. Rik swerved in midair, dived and weaved and the hissing blue bolts of lethal fire missed. Fregeff shook his flail weakly.
Rik dodged the last outpouring of malevolent energy and then — and then! The reptile simply flew straight at the demon’s face. Sharp fangs slashed. First one eye and then the other shredded. They did not bleed. They exploded into blue flame and Rik somersaulted away, wing over wing, to gain his balance in the air and so volplane easily to Fregeff’s shoulder.
The Fristle reached up his left hand and caressed the little winged reptile.
The demon stood up. Now blood, blue, smoking blood, poured down his cheeks from his ruined eyes. He shrieked. He tried to fly away with jagged wings and crashed into the throne and darts of glittering steel sliced from the sides of the throne and impaled him. The defense of the throne slew its o
ccupant.
The demon collapsed like a slashed wine sack.
The seven hoops of steel, razor-sharp, met through his gross body.
Fregeff stood up.
Seg, Milsi, and I ran to him.
“San! San — you are unharmed?”
“As well as can be expected.” And the Fristle laughed.
The laugh bordered on hysteria; but Rik flapped his wings and Fregeff was instantly himself. His face with its fierce whiskers looked drawn. His hands shook.
“The little volschrin,” said Seg, “he is a marvel.”
Because wizards, even good wizards, are not all sweetness and light, it was perfectly natural for Fregeff to say, “Yes. Beware lest he take your eyes.”
We heard the hiss of indrawn breath at our backs, and, instantly, Seg and I whirled, swords snouting. Kalu stood there, his own weapons raised. His Pachak face, hard, dedicated, revealed more emotion than any we had so far seen him express.
“Demons!” he said. Had the thought not been incongruous, I would have thought he spoke with joy. “Now that is more like an adventure!”
His own people had remained with him; now they began to retire through the doorway. Fregeff shook himself, refastened the bronze linked chain to Rik’s collar, and, with the reptile flappingly settling back onto his shoulder, nodded to us and went out. Seg took Milsi’s arm.
“Time to go—”
“Yes. A moment, Seg. Those guards, those malkos, down in the cells. They were — different — from the rest of this infernal maze.” I faced the lady Milsi. “Were they the bandits, do you know, my lady?”
“I — I do not know. My party was set on and my people were killed, or ran. I was taken up, prisoner, and conducted to that awful place.”
“So you cannot know anything of the maze. No, I see that. Still, I wonder why they imprisoned you—”
“I serve the queen—”
“No good will come of this now, Dray! Come on, my old dom. Let’s get out of this place and see about looking for the way out. There has to be one, somewhere.”
“You are right. Lead on.”
I turned toward the doorway and followed Seg and Milsi as they left. A movement caught at the corner of my left eye, and I looked that way, ready for a sudden treacherous onslaught.