Before anyone except Myste realized what he meant to do, his suit produced a burst of power that enabled him to leap past the dire fangs straight down the beast’s throat.
FIFTY-ONE: THE THINGS MEN DO WITH MIRRORS
Facing Gart’s sword in the stone-walled corridor, Artagel felt that he was looking down the throat of death.
The High King’s Monomach had recovered from the fire of the lamp, and from the first extremity of Artagel’s attack; now he had his balance again, his command of steel and weight. Moment by moment, he seemed to grow stronger.
The lanterns which lit the passage made his eyes yellow; they gleamed like a beast’s. His hatchet-nose faced his opponent, keen for blood. The scars on his cheeks, the initiation-marks of his craft, were pale streaks against the bronze hue of his skin. Though he was assailed by the best swordsman in Mordant, he wasn’t even sweating. His blade moved like a live thing: as protective as a lover, it caught and countered every blow for him, as if to spare him the effort of defending himself.
His teeth showed, white and malign, between his lips; loathing stretched all the mercy out of his features. Yet Artagel felt sure that Gart’s abhorrence had nothing personal to do with him. It involved no resentment of Artagel’s reputation, no envy of his position, no particular desire to see him dead. In Gart, the lust for killing was a professional characteristic untainted by individual emotions.
Artagel had heard rumors about the training undergone by Apts of the High King’s Monomach, the privations and hurts and dangers imposed on small boys to make them sure of what they were doing, sure of themselves; to harden their loathing. That was what gave Gart strength: his detachment; the impersonality of his passion. His heart held nothing which might confuse him.
Artagel, on the other hand, was sweating.
His hands were slick with moisture; under his mail, his jerkin clung to his skin. His sword had gone dead in his grasp, and his chest heaved with the exertion of swinging the blade. The tightness in his side had become a band of hot iron, fired to agony, and that pain seemed to sap the resilience from his legs, the quick tension from his wrists, the life from his weapon.
A flurry of blows, as loud as forgework, bright with sparks. A measuring pause. Another flurry.
There was no question about it: Gart was going to kill him.
Artagel didn’t face this prospect with quite the same approval Lebbick had felt.
He couldn’t afford to be beaten, absolutely could not afford to fail. If he went down, Gart would go after Terisa and Geraden. He would go after Nyle. They would all die, and King Joyse himself wouldn’t stand a chance—
But when he thought about Nyle, remembered what had been done to his brother, his heart filled up with darkness, and he flung himself at Gart wildly, inexpertly. Only the sheer fury of his attack saved him from immediate death. Fury was all that kept him going; nothing but fury gave strength to his limbs, air to his lungs, life to his steel.
A quick, slicing pain brought him back to himself – a cut along the bunched muscle of his left shoulder. He recoiled from suicide as blood welled out of the wound. A minor injury: he knew that instinctively. Nevertheless it hurt—It hurt enough to restore his reason.
Not this way. He was never going to beat Gart this way. The truth was obvious in the effortless action of Gart’s blade, the feral smirk on his face; it was unmistakable in the glint of his yellow eyes.
In fact, Artagel was barely able to keep Gart’s sword point out of his chest as he retreated down the corridor, gasping for breath, battling to recover his balance. The Monomach’s blade wove gleams and flashes of lantern-light as if his steel were somehow miraculous, like a mirror.
All right. Artagel couldn’t beat Gart this way. Actually, he couldn’t beat Gart at all. But he had to prolong the struggle as much as possible, had to buy time. Time was vital. So he needed some other way to fight. He had to start thinking like Geraden or Terisa, but not about Nyle, no, don’t think about Nyle, don’t give in to the darkness. He had to do something unexpected.
Something to ruffle Gart’s detachment.
Down in the depths of Artagel’s belly, a knot loosened, and he began to grin.
Geraden wasn’t grinning.
When Master Gilbur didn’t follow him, he wasn’t surprised. Just disappointed. He had no idea in the world what he would have done if the Master had chased him. Gilbur knew the stronghold, after all, and Geraden could never hope to beat him in a test of violence. But at least the hunchbacked Imager would have been away from the mirrors, unable for the moment to do King Joyse any more damage.
That hope had failed, of course. Instead of drawing Master Gilbur away, Geraden had in effect abandoned Terisa, left her to contend with Master Gilbur and Master Eremis and the arch-Imager alone.
Wonderful. The perfect climax to a perfect life. Now all he had to do was blunder into a squad of guards somewhere and get himself uselessly killed, and the story of his life would be complete.
Now it’s your turn, the Domne had said. Make us proud of you. Make what we’re doing worthwhile.
Geraden had succeeded brilliantly.
He couldn’t resist thinking like that. He had suffered too many accidents; the logic of mishap seemed irrefutable. Nevertheless he was too stubborn to accept defeat. He loved Terisa too much, and his brothers, and the King—
In the name of sanity, remember to call me “Da”.
As soon as he was sure Master Gilbur had given up the chase, he turned down a side passage and began to double back toward the Image-room.
Unacquainted with the stronghold, he spent several maddening moments hunting his way. Where were the guards? Surely Master Eremis had guards, servants of the High King if not of Eremis himself? Why hadn’t he encountered them already? At last, however, he reached another of the entrances to the Image-room.
From the entryway, he saw that Master Gilbur was the only one there.
Just for a moment, while his heart lurched in his chest and a cry struggled in his throat, he thought, Terisa Terisa! Master Eremis and Vagel had taken her to rape and torture her, just like Nyle, just like Nyle. He had to go after her, he had to find her, help her, he absolutely and utterly could not bear to let them destroy her.
At the same time, unfortunately, he noticed what Master Gilbur was doing.
The Imager had his back to Geraden. That was fortuitous. Plainly, he didn’t know or care what Geraden might do. He was carrying a glass out of the center of the ring of mirrors.
The flat mirror which showed Esmerel’s valley.
He was carrying it toward a mirror which stood in the direct, clean light from one of the windows. Sunshine illuminated the Image vividly.
The scene which the glass reflected swarmed with cockroaches.
Geraden remembered those creatures. They had nearly killed him, and Terisa, and Artagel. Nevertheless the horror of that memory gave way at once to a new dismay when Master Gilbur set the flat glass down before the other mirror and stepped back to consider his intentions.
In the flat mirror, Geraden saw King Joyse and Prince Kragen directly under the rearing jaws of the slug-beast.
They were engaged in a desperate struggle against huge numbers of red-furred creatures with too many arms holding too many scimitars.
The King and Prince Kragen weren’t alone: the Termigan was with them, and his men. They were covered with blood, battling furiously. Yet they couldn’t expect to survive against so many alien warriors. And if the red-furred creatures didn’t get them, the slug-beast would.
And Master Gilbur planned to translate a new threat into the fray. He was considering the focus of his mirrors so that he could move his flat glass in among the swarming cockroaches and translate them straight onto King Joyse’s head.
Lord of the Demesne. Sovereign of Mordant. And Geraden’s father’s friend.
Remember to call me “Da.”
Terisa needed him. He let her go. Once, hard, with both fists, he punched himself in the forehe
ad.
Then he moved.
Swallowing panic and love and regret, he left the entryway and crept toward the ring of mirrors.
If Terisa could have seen him then, she would have recognized the iron in his face, the look of despair – and of brutal determination.
He was quiet; but he went quickly. To the mirrors he and Terisa had broken, to the cot leg he had dropped. Snatching up the club from a pool of splinters, he threw it with all his strength at the flat glass.
Unluckily, his boots crunched a warning among the shards and slivers; and Master Gilbur heard it. With astonishing swiftness, the Imager spun around, flung up his arm—
—deflected the cot leg.
It skimmed past the top of the mirror’s frame and skittered away across the stone, out of reach.
“Balls of a dog!” Gilbur spat. Already, he had his dagger in his fist; his face was a clench of darkness. “Do you never give up?”
Geraden heard the cot leg knock against the wall as if that sound were the last thud of his heart. Another failure: his last chance gone wrong. Now he wouldn’t be able to help King Joyse or Terisa, and they would both be lost. And if he didn’t escape now, his own death was inevitable. No matter what happened, he would never be able to outfight Master Gilbur.
Nevertheless the augury drew him. This was his fate, his doom. Instead of fleeing, he stepped forward, into the ring of mirrors, until he was surrounded entirely by mirrors, all of them reflecting scenes of violence and destruction against him.
There he stopped.
“Why should I give up?” he asked as if he were just making conversation. “Why should I want to make it easy for you?”
Master Gilbur snarled an obscenity. Cocking his dagger, he prepared to charge.
At once, Geraden barked, “I wouldn’t do that if I were you.”
In surprise, the Master paused.
“I don’t have anywhere else to go,” Geraden explained. “I don’t have anything else to hope for. Oh, I suppose I could run away. I could try to hide somewhere. You don’t seem to have any guards. I might be able to stay alive for a while. But I’ll never escape. I’ll never find Terisa.
“If you chase me, I’ll just break as many mirrors as I can before I die. You’ve already lost four. How many more are you willing to risk? Do you think there’s a chance I might be able to get them all?”
Obviously, Gilbur’s first impulse was to attack: that was plain in the way his teeth showed through his beard, the way his knuckles whitened on his dagger. Almost immediately, however, he appeared to grasp the other side of the situation. Someone was bound to come soon, and then Geraden was lost. In the meantime, why risk damage to years of powerful work?
Instead of charging, he lowered his blade.
“You are wrong, puppy,” he rasped. “We have guards. They will be here in a moment.”
“Oh, I don’t think so.” Geraden fought to keep any hint of relief out of his voice. Time: that was all he wanted. A respite for King Joyse. A chance for something to happen. “I’m sure you have them, plenty of them. But I’ll bet they’re all outside, protecting this place just in case someone tries a sneak attack. Watching the defile. You and Eremis and Vagel are so stupidly sure of yourselves, you never expected to be attacked from inside.”
Then, because he wanted to see how far he could goad the Imager, he asked, “Where’s Gart?”
Master Gilbur’s eyebrows knotted involuntarily. “Do not look behind you, pigshit boy. He may be there already. He has gone to fetch your dear brother Nyle – who, I may say, has given me considerable pleasure during his visit here.”
The flat mirror’s Image showed the great monster writhing in a paroxysm of rage and hunger.
“I don’t think so,” Geraden repeated. Nyle. He wanted to laugh so that he wouldn’t do anything foolish, wouldn’t go mad and try to attack the Imager; but he could barely keep himself from snarling. “Terisa and I already rescued Nyle. We did that first. If Gart isn’t here, the men we brought with us must have got him.” If Gart isn’t here, Artagel must still be alive, still be fighting. “Or else High King Festten has plans he hasn’t told you about. You must have noticed that his reputation for treachery is older than you are.”
Unfortunately, Master Gilbur was able to laugh. “Pure vapor,” he rasped with a guttural chuckle. “Mist and moonshine.” He took a couple of nonthreatening steps, not toward Geraden, but to the side, away from the flat glass and the cockroaches. “You have not rescued Nyle – you do not know where he is. The room where I have enjoyed him is kept dark. You have never seen it. Therefore you could not find it, or translate him away.
“Gart will join us soon.”
“Believe that if you can,” retorted Geraden. He believed it; and the thought made all his muscles feel as weak as water. Yet he kept his gaze and his voice steady. “Just tell me one thing. Those red-furred creatures.” They continued pouring around King Joyse and the Prince, hacking savagely. The Termigan’s men and Norge’s appeared vastly outnumbered. And the slug-beast—“You didn’t just translate them this morning, did you? How did you get them mounted? How did you get them to serve you?”
The slug-beast had reared up as if it strove to stand on its tail.
“No, we did not,” conceded Master Gilbur maliciously. “In that, at least, you are right. Those things – they call themselves callat. Eremis has worked with them at some length. They have become what you might consider his ‘personal guard.’ A complex and difficult negotiation was required before he agreed to commit his callat to Festten’s support.”
Too late, Geraden realized what the Imager was doing.
In the flat mirror, the rearing monster came down like a tower, crashed straight and limp to the ground. Its maw seemed to miss King Joyse and Prince Kragen; some of the callat were caught by its weight and crushed. But through the glass the reverberation of impact had no sound. And the beast made no effort to surge forward, devour more prey. It lay still with a strange curl of smoke rising between its teeth.
Master Gilbur reached one of the other mirrors in the ring.
He grasped its frame with his free hand, began snarling nonsense.
Out of the glass, like shot from a catapult, came hurtling a gnarled, black shape, no larger than a small dog, with claws like hooks at the ends of its four limbs and terrible jaws which filled half its body.
Master Eremis did like surprises. In a sense, he even liked unpleasant surprises. They raised the stakes, increased the challenge: they made him show what he could do. But there was nothing unpleasant about Terisa’s unexpected arrival – or Geraden’s either, for that matter. Master Gilbur could handle Geraden. And Terisa was beaten. He had seen her defeat in her eyes, had seen the light of intelligence and determination start to fade. She was his at last, his, and every spark of resistance left to her would only increase the fun of possessing her.
As he directed her toward his private quarters, watching from behind the way her hips moved inside her uncomplimentary garments, remembering the sweet shape and curve of her breasts, and the particular silken sensation between her legs, he thought that she would be more satisfying than any woman he had ever destroyed.
Saddith’s death had been satisfying, of course: deft, inescapable, and almost infinitely clever. Nevertheless it had lacked the personal touch. He hadn’t destroyed her himself; he had only arranged events so that she would suffer and die. On the unfortunately frequent occasions when he had found it necessary to make love to her, the exigencies of his plans had required him to treat her gently, almost kindly, so that she would believe he might help further her social ambitions. He was man enough, however, to meet even her boring tastes in fornication. And with Terisa there would be no limits—Nothing would inhibit the extravagant flavors of pain and debasement he meant to elicit from her.
He felt so primed and poised that he could hardly refrain from dancing as he followed her toward his rooms.
Obedient to his will, she entered his quarters and s
topped in the center of the one, big chamber where he had his bed, his instruments of enjoyment, and his copy of the flat mirror which showed how matters progressed in the valley of Esmerel.
There King Joyse and Prince Kragen were about to go down under a tide of callat. Or they would be driven within reach of the monster rearing impressively over them.
Good. In fact, perfect. Eremis would like watching his enemies die while Terisa wept and wailed.
“Remove your clothes,” he told her, enjoying the harshness of his tone. “You have evaded me too long, and the recompense I demand has grown correspondingly large.” If he took off his own clothes, she would see just how large it was. “Nakedness is the very least of the gifts your fine body will give me today.”
Sunlight came from a series of windows along one wall, where he occasionally let men stand to observe his exercises. Today, of course, everyone was busy with battle or guard duty; but he was glad to have his victory to himself. Outside was only a rugged hillside, a freedom Terisa would never reach. The whole stronghold was austere, and he hadn’t had time to procure rugs. But the sun warmed the chill of the stone floors, shedding brightness over his victim and the mirror.
She didn’t obey. And she didn’t pay any attention to the windows; as far as he could tell, she didn’t notice them at all. Instead, she turned to the glass, as if it had more power over her than anything else did.
For the first time since they had left the Image-room, he saw her face.
Perhaps she wasn’t beaten after all. Something in her conveyed a definite sense of evaporation, as if she were on the borderline of disappearing. Her expression was slack; her eyes, vaguely focused. And yet he also seemed to see something else, something secretive and wonderfully enticing. It may have been a covert hope: the hope, perhaps, that she could shift the Image in the mirror (but of course that wouldn’t do anything to help either her or King Joyse); or the hope that Eremis would foolishly give her the chance to translate him away (but to do that she would have to physically thrust him toward the glass, and he was stronger than she was, much stronger); or the hope that she could use the mirror to escape herself (but he had no intention of giving her the opportunity).