They were in the middle of the span. In the dark, distant sprawl of the gorge, the lights and flaring exhausts of some of the spires came up level with their eyes. More than a thousand feet below, Turgosheim’s depths were lost in dark velvet shadows. Maglore paused and drew his charge to him, and with an arm around his shoulder leaned out over the fretted cartilage wall to look down. Behind Nathan and Maglore, one of the mage’s vampire thralls waited silent but alert.
And: “About flying,” said Maglore quietly, huskily, with a scarlet, sideways glance at Nathan. “Can you imagine flying from here? To leap out upon the air, and form your flesh into stretchy scoops like the wings of a bat? To trap the currents rising out of Turgosheim, and so glide from peak to peak? Ah, but what an art that would be! Even though I’ve never used it, I have it, for I am Wamphyri. I probably could do it even now, despite the lack of that special strength which could only be mine by virtue of … a certain lifestyle. But you: you would fall like a stone, and splash like an egg …”
Maglore drew Nathan closer in an arm which contracted like a vice, crushing his shoulders. Nathan felt the other’s awesome strength, and for a moment thought it was his intention to lift him up and throw him down. For all his protestations about his “feeble body”, the vampire Lord could do it … just so easily. Nathan looked at his hideous face, so close—that long-lived, evil face, grooved as old leather; its white eyebrows tapering into veined temples under a lichen-furred dome of a skull; the crimson lamps of Maglore’s eyes, set deep in purple sockets—and tried not to be afraid. Perhaps Maglore sensed it: the bolstering of Nathan’s resolve, his determination, and perhaps he admired it. At any rate he released him, and said:
“Go on, cross the bridge and I shall follow on.” And as Nathan set out: “Aye, there’s a great art to flying,” Maglore repeated himself from close behind, but in a lighter tone now. “One of the more physical arts of the Wamphyri, called metamorphism. But there are arts and there are arts. Arts of the body, of the will, and of the mind. Indeed, for will and mind are not the same. I have known splendid minds with little or no will at all, and creatures with a rare and wilful tenacity but hardly anything of mind!”
Nathan walked on, across the bridge of bones, the fossilized cartilage of mutated men, and spied ahead at the end of the span a walled staircase carved from the face of the gorge itself. It went up a hundred, two hundred feet, to where Turgosheim’s rim had been notched and weathered into wind-, rain—and time-sculpted battlements. But there were landings, too, with dark-arched passageways leading off to rooms and regions within that vastly hollowed jut of rock, that massive promontory turret, Maglore’s manse over an abyss of air and darkness. And there were also gaunt windows—some of them aglow with fitfully flickering lights, and others dark as the orbits of a skull—which gloomed out from it.
“Runemanse!” Maglore whispered in Nathan’s ear, when his charge came to a stumbling halt. “In which I practise my arts. And where you will practise … yours?”
At the end of the bridge, as he stepped up into a walled landing or embrasure, Nathan turned to Maglore. “My arts?”
Peering at him through red-glowing, slitted eyes, Maglore grasped his shoulder in a hand like iron. “I have sensed arts in you, yes,” he said. “Undeveloped as yet … perhaps. Do you understand mentalism?”
Nathan was almost caught off guard. “Mentalism?”
“Call me master,” Maglore growled. “When you answer me, you must call me master. Here in Runemanse I have creatures, thralls, beings which are mine. I shall require of you what I require of them: obedience. If your ways are seen to be slack, so might theirs grow slack. Wherefore you will call me master. Do you understand?”
“Yes, master.”
“Good.” And returning to his previous subject: “Mentalism, aye. Telepathy. To read the secret minds—the thoughts—of others, and so discover their wily plots and devious devices.”
“I know nothing of it,” Nathan shook his head. His guard was solid now, or as near solid as he could make it. But Maglore’s eyes grew huge in a moment as for one last time he tried to enter his charge’s mind. Nathan could almost feel his disappointment as he failed and withdrew.
Then Maglore nodded, and: “Perhaps you don’t at that,” he said. “But you do have a capacity for strange arts, believe me. Yes, for I sense them in you. Perhaps we can develop them. One such is the opposite of mentalism: it is to create a wall which shields the user’s mind from outside interference. In some rare men it is a natural thing. One cannot read their minds, however crafty one’s skill.”
Nathan shrugged and tried to look bewildered. “I am trying to understand, master.”
Maglore relaxed, sighed, and said, “Let it be.” He indicated an arched entrance across the landing. “This is to be your home. Enter now and be with Runemanse as you have been with me: unafraid. For to walk with fear is to fail, especially here.”
Nathan held back a little, pausing there on the external landing. But in fact it wasn’t fear this time, more the oppressiveness of the place, like the pause before lowering oneself into some deep and lightless hole. Or perhaps it was the sigil carved in the virgin rock of the arch which held him back: the twisted loop which Nathan had known all his days, which indeed was part of him and was now to be even more a part of his life. And so he stood there, looking up at it; until, but impatiently now: “Enter!” Maglore commanded again. “Enter now, of your own free will, into Runemanse.”
Nathan could only obey, while in his secret mind he wondered: But at the end of the day, will it be so easy to leave, “of my own free will”? And as Maglore’s hand closed like a claw on his shoulder, guiding him forward into the perpetual gloom of Runemanse, he supposed that it would not…
PART EIGHT:
Runemanse—Flight—In the Blink of an Eye
I
Within, there was no lack of activity. Huge sighings (animal or mechanical, Nathan had no way of knowing) issued up from the bowels of the place; draughts of air, some warm and others bitterly cold, blew busily here and there as if out and about upon missions of their own; there were sounds of vast, animal exhalations, gasps and grunts, and other echoes which seemed of entirely human origin: voices and/or sounds of thrall work in progress. In the weird acoustics of the place it was difficult to locate any specific source; the sounds penetrated from above, below, around. Eerie snatches of conversation, the slap of sandalled feet on hollowed flags, the chink, chink chipping of cold stone, or the reverberating, nerve-shattering clanging of a door slammed shut. Occasionally, shadows would flit apace in parallel corridors, and Nathan would glimpse feral eyes turned in his direction. Once, a hulking lieutenant loomed large, only to shrink back as Maglore’s presence dwarfed him.
Extensive, Runemanse filled the honeycombed rock like a warren in a bank of earth. Innermost was a huge hall illumined by flaring gas jets, leading off from which were the rooms of Maglore’s various aides: his two lieutenants, his thralls and women. The vampire Lord’s own apartments were reached up steps which spiralled around a central core, and had balconies overlooking the hall as if it were an amphitheatre. At the foot of the steps a … Thing was chained, manacled to the natural pillar. Unseemly by any standards, it had its own place behind a curtain of ropes, out of sight in a small cave in the central stem. But as Nathan, a stranger, approached the foot of the stairs …
… It burst out, mewling, towering eight feet tall and shaped—very much like a man! Yet paradoxically and appallingly, not like a man at all. Not any longer. Nathan felt himself shrinking back, unable to proceed, and felt Maglore propelling him irresistibly forward. And as they went the Wamphyri Lord told his guardian creature: “This man is mine. Who harms him harms me, and will answer for it. Now begone, for you are ugly.” At which the awful thing fell to all fours and scurried backwards, grovellingly, through the curtain of ropes. Nathan could hear it panting and rumbling in there as they passed by and climbed the spiral staircase.
In Maglore’s roo
ms, food had been prepared. Nathan could scarcely contain his suspicion of the contents of the various platters. They looked innocent enough—steaming portions of rabbit and partridge, roasted vegetables, and bowls of fresh fruit—but on the other hand …
“What?” said Maglore, noting Nathan’s expression across the table, and chuckling darkly to himself as he dined delicately on thigh of rabbit and red wine. “And did you expect raw flesh, possibly Szgany, and perhaps still alive? Well, I have to admit that in certain spires and manses you would not be disappointed—but this is Runemanse. Certain of my thralls and creatures have their ‘requirements’, but in the main I’ve learned to curb my own appetites. You need not concern yourself, Nathan: your food will not disgust or harm you, nor will I give you cause to throw it up; not here at least. For when I have need of … coarser sustenance, I take it in private. And even then I’m no great glutton. So have no fear; for unlike the raw red regimen of some of Turgosheim’s Lords, you’ll not hear my food screaming!”
Despite the terrible pictures Maglore’s words conjured, Nathan tried the food and found it very good. And as his hunger took hold, so a little of his natural caution deserted him. “Aye,” Maglore nodded approvingly. “Eat, and when you’ve eaten explore the manse. Step boldly and no harm shall befall you. But before then and while you’re about your meal, we have a chance to talk.” He put aside his own plate. “On our way to Runemanse I asked you many things: your age, full name, birthplace; I inquired especially about the colours of your eyes, hair, skin, which seem scarcely Szgany colours at all, and yet are not so weak or freakish as the pallid pastels of an albino. Patently they are not the result of disease, deformity or experimentation, and so must be inherited. But from whom, mother or father? Your previous answers were vague at best.”
Nathan swallowed scooped-out oyster of partridge from his index finger, and washed it down with a sip of wine. “My mother was Nana, a Szgany woman of course, and my father was Hzak Kiklu, a common Traveller.” He shook his head. “I didn’t get my colours from them.”
Just looking at him, Maglore could see that he told the truth. He frowned and said, “Let it pass, for now.” But Nathan’s answer had prompted another question. “Your father was a … a “Traveller”, did you say?”
“I came out of the west,” Nathan answered, “which I also told you.” (No harm in it, since Iozel had probably told him the same thing in advance.) But remembering himself in time, Nathan quickly added, “Master.” And continued: “There in the west, the Szgany of Sunside don’t live in towns but travel by day and hide by night. The word ‘Szgany’ means, among other things, ‘Traveller’. Which is what my people are. Perhaps your own Szgany were Travellers, upon a time?”
“Oh, they were!” Maglore answered, “in those early days after Turgo Zolte brought his people here out of the west. Aye, they travelled, before the Wamphyri brought them to heel, as it were. Hmmm!” He stroked his chin. “How is it, then, that while your Szgany do not live in ‘towns’, still you know the word?”
Nathan shrugged, and thought quickly. “But I know it as in ‘Vladistown’, master,” he said. “Also as an old word of my own people. Though I was only a child of four or five years on the night of the burning clouds and the thunder over the barrier range—when the last of the Wamphyri were destroyed, or so it was supposed—I remember that some of our leaders said we should build ‘towns’ again. Others, however, were against it. No, they said, for the vampires would return one day, out of the swamps or from other places.” His answer was deliberately confused and confusing, to throw Maglore off the track. And to distract him even further, he scratched for a moment at the leather strap on his wrist, then took it off and placed it on the table where Maglore could not help but see it. And continuing to scratch at his imaginary itch, he watched the Seer Lord’s scarlet eyes grow large as he pounced.
“Aha!” Maglore cried, snatching up the strap. And just for once his telepathic mind was so open that Nathan clearly “heard” the thought: Just as that old Sunside fraud informed me! Why, I had almost forgotten—till now! Then, a moment later, his thoughts were guarded again. But not nearly as close as Nathan’s.
And: “What are we to make of this?” Maglore said.
“Where did you get it? And do you recognize it?”
“It is my wrist strap,” Nathan shrugged,”— master.”
“Of course it is!” Maglore shook his head—then glanced at Nathan sharply, suspiciously. “Do you play word games with me? If so you should know: I’m good at them.”
Nathan looked blank, and again Maglore grunted, “Hmmm!”
And: “Ah!” Nathan said after a moment. “The sign over your doors! I recognize it now: your sigil! And mine, it would seem. Except … it’s nothing but a strange coincidence, master.”
“Perhaps it is,” Maglore nodded. “And strange indeed—or would be, if I believed in coincidences. But on the other hand, I am fascinated by mysteries! So tell me now, how did you come by this thing?”
“But I’ve always had it,” Nathan answered truthfully. “I think I first remember it… on the night of the thunder over Starside, and the fire in the clouds.”
“How long ago?” Maglore hunched forward in his chair.
“Nearly sixteen years,” said Nathan.
“Ahhh!” Maglore sighed. And again his mind was open. The night of the Light-in-the-West, the tremors in the earth, when I dreamed of the sigil and found it potent, and took it for my own! This is a mystery; there is an affinity, between this man and myself!
Then … perhaps he knew he was read. At any rate he sat up straighter and glared at Nathan. “There are talents in you, hidden, I sense them,” he insisted for the third time. “When I have an hour or two to spare, we must dig them out. Perhaps we might even make a start now.”
Footsteps sounded at the top of the spiral staircase, and a hulking lieutenant appeared on the landing. He paused uncertainly. Maglore scowled at him. “Well? Is it urgent?”
“Your creature waxes in its vat, Lord,” the lieutenant reported. “Alas, it has wrenched loose the breathing tubes and so may drown in its fluids.”
“What!” Maglore sprang up. “Why did you not reconnect the tubes?”
“Go into the vat?” The lieutenant fell back. “But the creature is voracious, and ill-humoured!”
“Take me there, now!” Maglore shouted. “If aught befalls that construct of mine … by Turgosheim, you’ll know the meaning of ill-humour!”
Half-way across the floor he paused and looked back. “You, Nathan. Explore the manse. If you are weary, ask any thrall to show you your room. Nowhere is forbidden to you, but avoid the women … at least until I have spoken to them. Now I must go, but one last thing: I shall keep you as a friend, for I value you for yourself and not as a cringing vampire thrall. But let me make myself plain: I will take it very hard if you should try to run away. And always remember, a man without legs cannot run very far at all…”
He had made himself plain. In any case, Nathan couldn’t see where he might run. What, into Turgosheim? Or up on to the roof of the manse and the rim of the gorge, and so across the mountains to Sunside? To be picked up and brought back again? No, for his stay here was to be a long one. According to Thikkoul, anyway.
Nathan remembered Maglore’s words (it seemed as well to remember everything the Seer Lord said): “Nowhere is forbidden to you.” But did that include Maglore’s chambers? Whether or no, he explored his master’s rooms first. At least he felt comparatively safe here, which was probably more than could be said for the rest of the place.
As a powerful Lord of the Wamphyri, Maglore didn’t stint himself: his apartments were huge. While some of the rooms were natural caves, massive cysts in the volcanic wall of the gorge, others had been carved from the virgin rock. And above every doorway Maglore’s familiar sigil was plainly visible: the loop with a half-twist, chiselled in bas-relief into arch or lintel.
Maglore’s bedroom faced north, away from the sun. The
re Nathan looked out through narrow windows on the blue-glittering rim of the world, where strange auroras wove over a coldly distant horizon. But while the windows were wide enough to take a man, he made no attempt to step up and pass through the thick exterior wall; it was enough to simply put his head out. For out there where a precarious ledge or balcony clung to the face of the turret, and a low wall of grafted cartilage was the only protection against a fall of what must be at least twelve hundred feet … the whole affair seemed very unsafe! In any case, the view was mainly away from Turgosheim and so uninteresting. That was Nathan’s excuse, anyway …
As he explored Maglore’s kitchen, a vampire thrall came ghosting, making the place clean. Once-Szgany and male, he was small, thin, ghastly pale; only his eyes contained a spark, and they were yellow, feral, dangerous. When he saw Nathan he gave a start, and then was curious. “You’ll be the new one,” he nodded. “Well, and you’ve a lot to learn. For one thing, you’re in the wrong place. A room has been set aside for you. If Maglore were to find you here …”
“He left me here,” Nathan answered. “There are no restrictions upon me.”
“Oh?” The other raised an eyebrow, offered a half-sneer. “Then you must consider yourself fortunate—for now!” He busied himself about the room. “At any rate, you’ve been warned.”
Watching him at work (he worked hard, making the kitchen scrupulously clean), Nathan thought: This man was Szgany, like me. Now he’s a thrall, a vampire, the next step between Szgany and lieutenant. Except he’s reached his limit because he isn’t … the right stuff? In Settlement, Lardis Lidesci burned such as him, before they could head for Starside. Should I pity him, or should I be afraid of him?
“Why do you watch me?” Nostrils gaping, eyes glaring, the other rounded on him; and Nathan saw that he really should not pity him. It was much too late for that.
“You must know this place well,” he said, mainly for something to say.