Page 22 of October's Baby


  They knew they were close when they reached caverns where the walls had been regularized by tools. Those would be passages worked during the wars, when the Captal’s fortress had had to have space for thousands of soldiers.

  Then they came on a large “chamber occupied by Kaveliners who supported the Captal’s pretender. Those who were awake were bored. Their conversation orbited round women and a desire to be elsewhere. Nobody challenged the brothers as they passed through.

  “That was the worst,” Turran said afterward. “Now we take a side tunnel to the Captal’s laboratories and get into his private ways.”

  Valther nodded, caressed the hilt of his sword.

  It was strange, Turran thought, that their coming hadn’t been sensed or forseen. But, then, their weak plan had been predicated on inattention by the enemy.

  In the laboratories, in a dark and misty chamber they recognized as one where transfers were made, they encountered trouble.

  It came in the form of an owl-faced creature guarding the transfer pentagrams. He was asleep when they spotted him, but wakened as they tried slipping past. They had to silence him.

  “Have to hurry now,” Turran said. The thing’s disappearance would raise an alarm.

  Because they followed secret stairs they reached the Captal’s chambers before they encountered second trouble. And this came as a total surprise.

  They pushed through a secret panel into a room full of murder. It had been a library or study, but now it resembled a paper-maker’s dump. Against one wall an evil-faced, one-eyed man, unarmed, struggled with a woman. He had the heel of one hand jammed firmly into her mouth.

  An old man lay unconscious and bleeding on the floor. Now, with a pair of long daggers, a second killer stalked two weird creatures guarding a child. One creature was a frail winged thing defending himself with a blazing crystal dagger, the other an apelike dwarf wielding a short, weighted club.

  All eyes turned to the brothers. The failure of hope in the winged man and ape-thing spurred Kerth. One of his blades shattered the crystal dagger while the other turned the dwarf’s club. Then the first arced over into thedwarf’s throat. He went down with a squeal.

  “Burla!” the child screeched, falling on him. “No. Don’t die.”

  Workmanlike, Kerth wheeled and dispatched the winged man.

  When Kerth wheeled on the child, Valther said, “No.” He said it flatly, without the least apparent emotion. The assassin froze.

  Kerth and Derran exchanged glances. Kerth shrugged, stepped away from the girl.

  Sudden as lightning, a dagger was in the air, hurtling toward Valther. The man got his sword up in time to deflect it. It had been a gut-throw.

  And a feint. The second dagger followed by two yards, bit deep into Valther’s right shoulder. Turran jabbed with his own blade, missed the block.

  There was a crack from Derran’s direction. Mist sagged in semi-consciousness. The One-Eye blew on his knuckles.

  Turran charged Kerth, who had already armed himself with the Captal’s weapon...

  The universe turned red.

  Mist forced herself up on her hands, stared through an open window. In the starkest terror Turran had ever witnessed, she croaked, “O Shing. He’s raised the Gosik of Aubochon!”

  None knew the name, but each knew Mist. Their conflict ceased. In moments all crowded the window, staring up at a pillar of red horror.

  “The portal!” Mist cried. “He’ll try the portal while we’re distracted. We’ve got to destroy it.”

  Too late. The clack of armor echoed up the same stair Turran and Valther had used.

  II) Approaching storm

  March sagged toward April. Spring came to the lowlands. The days of reckoning drew rapidly closer. Ragnarsongrew ever more dour and pessimistic. Things were going too well. The censuses were in. Crops had suffered less than anticipated. In areas where there had been little fighting there had been surpluses. Only the Nordmen, it seemed, were suffering.

  Volstokin hadn’t been as lucky. Ambassadors from the Queen Mother were pleading credit and grain in both Kavelin and Altea.

  Favorable weather permitted early plowing. This, to Ragnarson’s delight, meant more men for summer service. Hedging against the chance they would be in the field at harvest, the Queen was buying grain futures in Altea, a traditional exporter.

  The winter had caused changes at every level. Kavelin had shaken her lice out. As the kingdom settled down and vast properties changed hands, the citizens looked forward to a prosperous future. Because good fortune attended the Queen’s supporters, her strength waxed. Feelers drifted in from provinces still in rebellion.

  With the exception of Ragnarson and his aides, no one seemed worried about the summer.

  Bragi never eased the pressure on the rebels. After Forbeck and Fahrig, he launched expeditions into Orthwein and Uhlmansiek, using the campaigns to temper his growing army. He suffered few setbacks. Each victory made the next easier.

  Anticipating fat looting in the Galmiches and Lon-caric, squads, companies, and battalions poured into the capital. From the Guild-Masters in their fortress-aerie, High Crag, on the seacoast north of Dunno Scuttari, came congratulations, word that Ragnarson had received nominatory votes for promotion to Guild General, and an offer of three regiments on partial advance against a percentage of booty...

  On Royal instructions Ragnarson accepted the merce-nary regiments. He dreaded leading so many men. What would happen when they learned the real nature of the enemy?

  Tents dotted the roadsides and woods of the Siege. Long wagon trains bearing supplies rumbled toward the city. Dust raised by moving soldiery hung like a vaporousriver over the caravan route. Ragnarson was awed by their numbers, almost as many as Kavelin had raised during the El Murid Wars. His original mercenary command now seemed an amusingly small force. But it still formed the core of his army.

  The more he thought about controlling so many men, the more nervous he became.

  Nights the worries slid away in the magic of the Queen’s arms. No one yet seemed suspicious.

  In late March Sir Andvbur went over to the Captal. What negotiations had passed between the two Ragnarson never learned, but he suspected Sir Andvbur’s idealism had motivated his treachery.

  The knight’s coup failed. Having foreseen trouble, and having gotten the man away from the center of power, Ragnarson then had surrounded him with trustworthy staffers. Few men joined Sir Andvbur when, after brief skirmishing, he fled across Low Galmiche toward

  Savernake.

  Loncaric and Savernake remained in the grip of unnatural winter. Ragnarson took the opportunity to pinch off the depending finger of Low Galmiche and eliminate the last rebel bastions near the Siege.

  When he could find nothing else, he wondered what had become of Mocker, Haroun, Turran, and Valther. And worried about Rolf. Though Preshka hadn’t been injured in the dungeon confrontation, the exertion had excacerbated his lung troubles.

  Yet everything went so well that he received the bad news from Itaskia with relief.

  Greyfells partisans had driven the Trolledyngjan families over the Porthune into Kendel. Kendel’s military ran hand in glove with Itaskia’s. A light horse company had swum the river and slaughtered the raiders. Kendel had decided to send the families on to Kavelin.

  What, Ragnarson sometimes wondered, was Elana doing? She wasn’t the sort to sit and wait.

  On the last evening of March, Ragnarson gathered his commanders to discuss the summer campaign. Meticu-lously prepared maps were examined. Where to meet the enemy became the point of contention. Ragnarsonlistened, remembering an area he had seen the previous fall.

  “Here, at Baxendala,” he said suddenly, jabbing a map with a forefinger. “We’ll meet them with every man we have. Talk to the Marena Dimura. Learn everything you can.”

  Before the inevitable arguments began, he strode from the room.

  The die had been cast. All time was an arrow hurtling toward the decision at the
caravan town of Baxendala.

  He went walking the castle’s outer wall, to bask in the peace of what would soon be a chill April Fool’s morning.

  Soon, in the white gown she had worn the morning they had first locked eyes, the Queen joined him. Moonlight like trickles of silver ran through her hair, gayly. But her eyes were sad. Ignoring the sentries, she held his hand.

  “This is the last night,” she whispered, after a long silence. She stopped, pushed her arm around his waist, stared at the moon over the Kapenrungs. “The last time. You’ll leave tomorrow. Win or lose, you won’t come back.” Her voice quavered.

  Ragnarson scanned the black teeth of the enemy mountains. Was it really still winter there? He wanted to tell her he would return, but could not. That would be a blemish on his memory.

  She had sensed that he would always go back to Elana. Their relationship, though as intense and fiery as a volcanic eruption, was pure romance. Romance de-manded a special breed of shared deception, of reality suspended by mutual consent...

  So he said nothing, just pulled her against his side.

  “Just one thing I ask,” she said, softly, sadly. “In the dark tonight, in bed, say my name. Whisper it to me.”

  He frowned her way, puzzled.

  “You don’t realize, do you? In all the time you’ve been here you’ve used it only once. When you announced me to Sir Farace. Her Majesty. Her Majesty. Her Highness. The Queen. Sometimes, in the night, Darling. But never Fiana. I’m real... Make me real.”

  Yes, he thought. Even when she had been no more thanaconception spawned by Tarlson’s characterizations, he had felt an attraction that he had pushed off withformalities.

  “Gods!” a nearby sentry muttered. “What’s that?” Ragnarson’s gaze returned to the mountains. Beneath the moon, over a notch marking the approximate location of Maisak, stood a pillar of reddish I coruscation. It coalesced into a scarlet tower.

  The world grew silent, as if momentarily becalmed in the eye of a storm.

  The pillar intensified till all the east was aflame. A flower formed at its top. The trunk bifurcated, took on a horrible anthropomorphism. The flower became a head. Where eyes should have been there were two vast Stygian pools. The head was far too large for the malformed body that bore it up. Its horns seemed to scrape the moon as it turned slowly, glaring malevolently into the west.

  The thing’s brilliance intensified till all the world seemed painted in harsh strokes of red and black. A great dark gulf of a mouth opened in silent, evil laughter. Then the thing faded as it had come, dying into a coruscation that reminded Bragi of the auroras of his childhood homeland.

  “Come,” he said to the Queen when he could speak again. “You may be right. It may be the last time either of us gives ourself freely.”

  Deep in the night he spoke her name. And she, shaking as much as he, whispered from beneath him, “Bragi, I love you.”

  III) Elana and Nepanthe

  On the Auszura Littoral, Elana and Nepanthe, up late after a day of increasing, undirected tension, released sharp cries when the Tear of Mimizan took on a sudden, fiery life that was reflected in crimson on the eastern horizon.

  IV) King Shanight

  From the Mericic Hills, at Skmon on the Anstokin-Volstokin border, Shanight of Anstokin, restless before the dawn of attack, watched the scarlet rise in the east, a head with its chin on the horizon. After meeting those midnight eyes he returned to his pavilion, called off the war.

  V) Mocker

  In Rohrhaste, near the site of Vodicka’s defeat, Mocker suddenly erupted from an uneasy sleep, saw scarlet beneath the moon. For one of the few times in his life he was stricken dumb. In lieu he loaded his donkey and hurried toward Vorgreberg.

  VI) Sir Andvbur Kimberlin of Karadja

  Sir Andvbur and two hundred supporters, traveling by night to evade loyalist patrols, paused to watch the demon coalesce over the Gap. Before it faded, half turned back, preferring the Royal mercy. Kimberlin continued, not out of conviction, but for fear of appearing weak before his companions.

  VII) The Disciple

  In the acres-vast tent-Temple of the Disciple at Al Rhemish, a sleepy fat man moaned, staggered to the Portalof the North. This gross, jeweled El Murid bore no resemblance to the pale, bony, ascetic fanatic whose angry sword had scourged the temples and reddened the sands in earlier decades. Nor was his insanity as limited. The red sorcery stirred a mad rage. He collapsed, thrashing and foaming at the mouth.

  VIII) Visigodred

  At Castle Mendalayas in north Itaskia a tall, lean insomniac paced a vast and incredibly cluttered library. Before a fireplace a pair of leopards also paced. From a ceiling beam a monkey watched and muttered. Between the pacer and leopards, on a luxurious divan, a dwarf and a young beauty cuddled.

  The lean old man, sporting a long gray beard, suddenly faced south southeast, his nose thrusting like that of a dog on point. His face became a mask of stone. “Marco!” he snapped. “Wake up. Call the bird.”

  IX) Zindahjira

  In the Mountains of M’Hand, above the shores of the Seydar Sea, lay a cave in which dwelt the being called Zindahjira the Silent. Zindahjira was anything but silent now. The mountains shook with his rage. He did not appreciate being involved in intrigues not his own. But by his own twisted logic he had a responsibility to right matters in the south. When his rage settled, he called for his messenger owls.

  X) Varthlokkur

  Fangdred was an ancient fortress poised precariously atop Mount El Kabar in the Dragon’s Teeth. There, in a windowless room, tiny silver bells tinkled. A black arrow inlaid with silver runes turned southward. In moments a tall young man, frowning, hurried in. His haunted eyes momentarily fixed on arrow and bells.

  He was Varthlokkur, the Silent One Who Walks With Grief, sometimes called the Empire Destroyer or the Death of Ilkazar. He was the man who had ended thereign of the Princes Thaumaturge of Shinsan. Those

  Princes remained like trophies in an impenetrablechamber atop Fangdred’s Wind Tower. Kings trembledat the mention of Varthlokkur’s name.

  He was old, this apparent young man. Centuries old, and burdened heavily with the knowledge of the Power, with his guilt over what he had wrought with the Empire. He spoke a Word. A quicksilver pool in a shallow, widebasin ground into the top of a table of granite shivered.

  Iridescences fluttered across its face. A portrait appeared. Varthlokkur stared at a gargantuan, megacephalicdemon whose ravenlike feet clutched the feet ofmountains.

  This manifestation couldn’t be ignored. He began his preparations.

  XI) Haroun bin Yousif

  The long, cautious cavalry column was less than thirty miles from Al Rhemish when the northern sky went scarlet. Filtering four thousand Royalists through the Lesser Kingdoms and the Kapenrungs undetected hadbeen a military feat which, meeting success, had astonished even its planner.

  The demon head loomed. Haroun gave the order to turn back.

  XII) The Star Rider

  On the flank of a snow-deep peak high in the Kapenrungs, on a glacier that creaked and groaned day and night, one surprised and angry old man stood between gigantic pillars of legs and stared miles upward at scarlet horror. He spat, cursed, turned to his winged horse. From its back he unlashed the thing known as Windmjirnerhorn, or the Horn of the Star Rider. He caressed it, spoke to it, glanced, nodded. The demon began to fade.

  He then sat and pondered what to do about these dangerous ad libs. O Shing was getting out of hand.

  XIII) King Vodicka

  Half an hour after the night had regained its natural darkness Volstokin’s King concluded that he had been used by greater, darker powers to play attention-grabber while Evil slithered in to gnaw at the underbelly of the

  West.

  After writing brief letters to Kavelin’s Queen, his mother, and his brother, he threw himself from the parapet of his prison tower.

  FIFTEEN: Baxendala

  I) The site

  Baxendala was
a prosperous town of two thousand twenty-five miles west of Maisak. Its prosperity was due to its being the last or first chance for commerical vices for the caravans. The mountain passage was long and trying. Ragnarson had chosen to fight there because of topography.

  The townsite had once marked the western limit of the huge glacier that had cut the pass. The valley, that became the Gap, there narrowed to a two-mile-wide, steep-sided canyon, the floor of which, near the town, was piled with glacial leavings.

  Baxendala itself was built against the north flank of a sugarloaf hill half a mile wide, two long, and two hundred feet high, astride a low ridge that ran to the flank of Seidentop, a steep, brush-wooly mountain constricting the north wall of the canyon. The River Ebeler ran around the south side of the loaf where the valley, in a long, lazy curve, had been dug a bit deeper, and, because of barriers a dozen miles farther west, had formed a shallow marsh three-quarters of a mile wide. The marsh lay hard against both the sugarloaf and the steep southernwall of the valley. A narrow strip of brushy, firm ground ran below the southern face. It could be easily held by a small force.

  Atop the sugarloaf, commanding a good eastern view, stood a small fortress, Karak Strabger. From it Ragnarson could follow every detail of battle. By anchoring his flanks on Seidentop and Baxendala, along the ridge, he could defend a space little more than half a mile wide. There was no more defensible site to the west, and but one equaling it farther east. And Sir Andvbur, having fought there last autumn, knew that ground betterthan he.

  Ragnarson descended on the town two weeks after the night of the demon. The Strabger family fled so hurriedly they left breakfast half-cooked in the castle kitchen. The rebel forces were training farther east, near the snow line. Three days after Bragi’s arrival an attempt was made to dislodge him. Baron Berlich led the rebel knights into another Lieneke. His attack collapsed under a shower of Itaskian arrows. Berlich himself was slain.