Page 32 of Serpent Mage


  “It might not be the deal you imagine. Your talent is strong but undeveloped. We could help each other. Alone, I can create a suitable world... But together, the three of us can control Tarax’s ambitions and create a new Earth for all the races, or as many as will accept us.”

  “Three?”

  “You have a certain attraction to Tarax’s daughter. Her power can be useful if handled properly. And I can keep the worst from happening between the two of you, once you merge.” His eyes seemed to cloud. “Euphemisms. Once she seduces you, or you her.”

  What he had felt in Shiafa...Tonn’s wife on the Blasted Plain. Connected. Horribly connected. Those who aspire to become mages...

  “What about her loyalty to Tarax?”

  “I doubt she feels any loyalty.”

  Michael glanced down at the worn-smooth table top. “What kind of world would you make for all the races?”

  “World-building is relatively easy,” Clarkham said. “It’s control of the world’s inhabitants that causes trouble. Humans are especially difficult. They would likely start tinkering with the very foundations, unless they’re kept tightly reined in. Sidhe might be more manageable. At least the Sidhe have a sense of their limits.”

  “How would you control them?”

  “Rigidly,” Clarkham said, eyes narrowing. “They have opposed me. They must never be that strong or willful again.”

  “Isn’t there any other way?”

  Clarkham shook his head slowly. “If you think otherwise, you’re being foolish. Human history, Michael. Wars and exterminations and crimes and cruelty. Distorted minds and distorted societies. I doubt you have any idea of the depth of depravity humans are capable of.”

  “The Sidhe are responsible for many of our problems.”

  “Probably,” Clarkham conceded. “But the roots are still there The Sidhe merely tried to train the branches. And whoever caused the problems—as mage, I still have to solve them. Rigorous weeding and trimming. Could you face up to that?”

  Michael pushed his chair away from the table. The wine’s finish was losing definition. “If I cooperate and bring Shiafa’s power to you, will you free Kristine?”

  Clarkham made a magnanimous swing of one hand. “She is of no use to me except as a means to control you. I certainly do not lust after her.”

  “Nobody implied that you did,” Michael said.

  Clarkham stood and leaned across the table on his extended arms, fingers splayed against the dark wood. “Do not try to join this conflict, unless you join on my side. You have certain abilities but no sophistication. You do not know the potentials. Whatever you do, you must not oppose me. I’ve taken your measure, Michael Perrin. I know your weaknesses.”

  Michael nodded agreeably.

  “We cannot afford the virtues of patience and kindness and honor,” Clarkham continued, his eyes contemplating the distances beyond Michael. “If we are to be mages, that is.”

  Michael’s palms tingled. He lifted one hand as if to rub his nose and saw a pearly excrescence on his palm. “You’ve always wanted to be a mage, haven’t you?” he asked.

  “Yes.”

  “I didn’t,” Michael said. “I’ve never really had a choice.” That much had become quite clear to him. He rubbed his tongue against the back of his palate, drawing forth saliva to further dilute the taste of the wine.

  “Consider my offer seriously. The alternatives are not pleasant,” Clarkham said.

  The saloon darkened, and the walls of the basement returned. The bottle lay spilled on the floor, where it had slipped out of his hands. Michael bent to pick up the cork and reinsert it, but there was no liquid left.

  When he straightened, he saw a spot of color on the opposite wall. The wall itself seemed intensely grainy, detailed, every speck and shadow of it clear. Michael squinted, and the spot of color resolved itself into a sleeved arm and hand. As his eyes swept up the arm, he seemed to paint with his gaze a flat figure on the wall, dressed in white garments that partook, in their transparency, of some of the wall’s concrete gray. Still flat but now complete, the figure’s face became animated. Michael backed away; he dimly recognized the Sidhe.

  “You must think your house very full,” the Sidhe whispered, his voice a mere vibration of the wall.

  “Tonn,” Michael breathed.

  “I had hoped to bring you more, but even a mage cannot survive the forces I’ve faced. This is a very weak shadow to bring you, a weak bequest...” The figure smiled and seemed with that expression to almost lift from the concrete. Michael pressed close to the stair rail.

  “You cannot best the Isomage without far greater knowledge than you currently possess. There is only one place for you to gain this knowledge...the Serpent. This shadow cannot convey it to you. Adonna favored you for some time; you sensed that? You hold much promise, and the others...well, Adonna had reasons for being less fond of them. You must take what the Serpent has; he will not give it to you without his own freight of past evil. But take it you can, if you are careful, without breaking the Law of Mages. You must act soon... This is the last shadow the Realm can conjure. There is no forest with wood enough to contain a mage.”

  The shadow of Tonn faded until nothing but the grainy wall remained.

  Michael swallowed. Will I ever become as insubstantial as that?

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  On the first floor, Michael knelt before the mage of the Cledar. The bird regarded him straight on, drawing his milky nictitating membrane over white-rimmed eyes.

  “You brought me into this,” Michael said, half accusing.

  The bird abandoned spoken words, communicating with Michael by evisa. Better to be a part of change than to simply stand aside and react.

  “How much of Waltiri were you?”

  Enough to love Golda. This war has made strange demands on us all.

  “Did you know Tonn’s shadow was here?”

  Yes.

  “Were you cooperating with him all along?”

  Our goals evolved in the same direction, separately.

  “And why are you waiting here?”

  For the end, or for you to fulfill your promise.

  Michael stood and shook his head slowly. “I’m not the boy you lured into Clarkham’s house. I’ve lost so many selves since then, I hardly know who I am.”

  That is the curse of a leader.

  “I’ve never been a leader,” Michael said softly. His eyes misted over, and he looked around the living room, filled with birds of all kinds, from large white owls and red-tailed hawks to pigeons and sparrows “You’re much younger than the Serpent,” Michael said. “Are you as old as Tonn?”

  Older, now.

  “The writing on your wings...the terms of your curse?”

  The mage of a race must wear its shackles.

  Michael nodded, lips drawn together ruefully. “How long will the curse last?”

  Until we again have faces. The bird opened its beak and cocked its head to one side. The Serpent will soon be released. Tonn’s death and the end of continuity among the Sidhe mages will break his bonds. Those who were born in their present forms, however, will not be released. None of my people will be released.

  “The cockroaches won’t rise up to become Urges, and the Spryggla will not drown at sea...” Michael mused, smiling at his vision of the apocalypse avoided.

  Be warned about the Serpent.

  “I’m warned.”

  And accept my apologies.

  “I’ll consider it,” Michael said. “One last question. Is Shiafa a danger to me?”

  Either mortal danger, fatal diversion, or ultimate boon. Her fate is in your hands.

  “I’ve been led to believe it’s the other way around.”

  You can change. She cannot.

  “Tonn’s wife...”

  Adonna was a failure. His cruelties tainted all he did.

  Michael could not decide how to say good-bye to the mage of the birds, so he simply turned and walked out the fron
t door. Shiafa sat cross-legged on the lawn, surrounded by grass green-black and jewel-like under the bright nacreous morning sun. She watched him closely as he locked the door.

  “How long was I in there?” he asked, blinking in the daylight.

  “I am not well-acquainted with time,” Shiafa replied.

  “You and I are going to have to talk,” Michael said. “But first, we’re traveling.”

  “Where?”

  “To meet with the Serpent Mage.”

  Fear and horror crossed her face, but she did not protest.

  Michael drew aside a slice of air, revealing darkness and a spot of green, and beckoned Shiafa to pass through. She did, and he followed, closing the rent behind.

  Night lay like a cold black ceramic bowl over the grass fields surrounding the loch. The water sat still and silent and practically invisible; without a probe of his surroundings, he would have hardly known where the shore was. Deep in the lake, hundreds of feet below the surface and under a rocky overhang, the Serpent slumbered. Michael could not detect his Breed assistant anywhere.

  “Do you feel him?” he asked Shiafa, a patch of dark gray in the obscurity.

  “Yes,” she said, voice unsteady. “He stole our souls...”

  “Tit for tat,” Michael said, not entirely stifling the upwelling of crass levity again plaguing him. You do not know the perils...you do not feel the true danger. The voice in his head was his own, a part of himself having assumed the role of Clarkham, the Serpent, and the mage of the Cledar all at once. “He’s not going to hurt anybody now, least of all you.”

  “He makes me harm myself,” Shiafa said. “What my people feel...anger and horror weaken us. We cannot draw from the center. We become like hunted animals in our minds.”

  Michael walked down to the shore and held out his hands. The pearly excrescence still covered one palm; he had been at some pains to hide it from Shiafa, even from the bird mage. He did not know precisely what it meant now, and what few clues he did have did not comfort him.

  His function, he thought, was similar to that of an organ activated within a body during trauma. That would imply a connection between the worlds and their inhabitants that was completely beyond anything he had learned before, but it was not implausible. Perhaps even Clarkham knew such a “truth,” if it could be called that.

  At any rate, all questions of his own needs, his own decisions, might soon be swept completely away. In an emergency, his assignment might be predetermined, and if that was so, then very likely what remained of his individuality—all he had left to hold on to—would fall away like some bothersome hangnail.

  He hoped to find a way to avoid that.

  Kristine.

  He held back the anger and impatience. You must find her...soon... But first, he must keep hold of a world to bring her back to.

  l know your plans, Michael. The Serpent’s words came out of the loch as clearly as if they were side by side. You are Tonn’s final revenge.

  Shiafa groaned softly, hearing the words in her own head. Her disgust was almost palpable.

  “I have been told twice that I need what you have,” Michael said. “You told me so yourself.”

  It can be yours.

  “I don’t think you ever seriously intended me to have it. You would have fashioned me into a weapon. That shows how little you understand, after all.”

  You could have had my heritage.

  “I don’t think you would have given me all of it. You didn’t tell me your curse is soon done with.”

  The Serpent began a long, undulating rise to the surface. You make your way between worlds, and around this one, as if you were a mage. Your candidacy was only in doubt because you spurned what you most need.

  “I’m a flower,” Michael said. “I’ve had the relationship all wrong, all along. We don’t make worlds. Worlds make us. Or both. Or neither. There is no priority. I am a rose put forth by a bush grown by a world. So were you, once. But you rotted. Your whole generation...all the Sidhe and humans of your time...just rotted.”

  If you want what I have, you should come swim with me.

  Michael removed his shoes and shirt. He stepped down to the waterline in the tar-like darkness and hesitated. The water smelled of peat and age. Walking in up to his ankles, he considered the depth of the lake and how easy it would be for a body to be lost here forever—nibbled by the fish the Serpent fed upon, stripped until its tea-colored bones lay scattered on the silty bottom like so many pieces of broken crockery.

  Come live the life I’ve lived. Maybe then you’ll deserve to raid my memories.

  The Serpent swam several hundred feet below the surface, its watery darkness no more profound than the clouded night over the loch. Michael dived into the water, pulling himself toward the middle with the strokes he had learned in gym class. The icy water tasted sour. He drew more heat from his center and kept on swimming until he dog-paddled directly above the Serpent.

  My curse comes to an end soon. Adonna’s last power fades, and the words he wrote on my belly fade. I’ll stand beside the other candidates. No need for a feeble boy to carry on in my place.

  Michael could feel the pressure of the Serpent’s ascent beneath him. A harsh metal moon cast a weak gray light through a gap in the clouds and turned the water around him into shimmering mercury, rippling slowly around his stroking arms. “What in hell am I doing here?” Michael asked himself, spitting out water. The Serpent swam barely a hundred feet below him now, insinuating its coils through the murk. Sixty feet. Thirty. Twenty.

  Michael took a deep breath and sank, letting the water close over his head. His eyes stung, but he forced them open and stared down. Ten feet. Five feet. With the few scattered photons of filtered moonlight, he made out an oblong shape, now stationary beneath him.

  My world, the Serpent said. Have you earned what you wish to take?

  No, Michael responded. But I’ll try anyway. And if he succeeded, wouldn’t he, too, be breaking the law of mages? Adonna’s shadow had implied he would not, but that seemed most convenient.

  He set aside the confusion. That law, doubtless, had been devised during times of prosperity and calm, when transitions of mages could be leisurely and honorable. Such excuses, at least, came easily to his mind. He was still a thief. And if it all turned out well in the end—would it justify what he was about to try?

  Strong motivations. Even bravery.

  The Serpent’s head gave off its own light now. The small, clouded eyes and underslung scythe of a mouth, with two curves of tiny white teeth, were all too apparent. Michael felt as if his heart would stop. The Serpent could swallow him whole in a couple of bites, an act of topsy-turvy, turned-sidewise cannibalism...or simple survival.

  Then it’s a contest, the Serpent said. You’re worthy of a contest. See if you can take what you need.

  The Serpent broke the surface. Michael did likewise. At the same moment, the moon broke free of clouds and shed a rich, cold platinum light on the smooth loch. The beam drew a line down the Serpent’s wake, and Michael saw its skin glittering with jewels and the fresh strong arms it used along with its tail and thickened fins to propel itself through the water.

  “You really are part of the original sin, aren’t you?” Michael accused, his voice echoing from the hills and rocks of the opposite shore. He realized what he was doing. Despite everything, he had come away from his first meeting with the Serpent intensely impressed. He was shedding those last bits of regard; what he had to try now, he could not in all conscience do to something—someone—he respected.

  Michael swam to the shore. The Serpent followed, matching his pace, its blunt eel nose never more than three yards behind.

  Michael stood in the shallows. The Serpent relaxed in the sand and mud, quiet. It lay a few yards from the shore. Again the moonlight dimmed.

  Michael did not try to probe the Serpent’s thoughts; what coiled and tensed within him could be given away by that.

  My time has come around again, Mich
ael Perrin. My face returns.

  The Serpent humped and thrashed itself onto the pebbly beach. The moon glistened on its skin through random breaks in the black clouds. Michael’s palms tingled furiously now, making his arms ache. Shiafa—

  He touched her mind lightly. He still had not found sufficient strength within himself. Ashamed, he asked for her help—again—and felt a surge of sexual response, magical strength, intertwined. She did not know what to do with her power, but she knew what his “borrowing” meant. He could hardly avoid entanglement now.

  She nearly had him.

  The sadness that welled up in Michael was as painful as the feeling in his hands. Kristine.

  Sixty million years of mixed sanity and madness, dreaming and plotting. The Serpent, whatever he had done, deserved this coming moment of freedom from the Sidhe curse—

  Michael recognized the subtle wash of the Serpent’s persuasion and blocked it. His emotions were being played with on more levels than he could watch. The Serpent’s probes were incredibly subtle, undetected until now...

  It knew the danger Michael presented.

  Michael asked himself, What in God’s name are you

  The loch shore exploded, bushes and grass flaring for an instant into daylight brilliance, burning with a horrifying gasp of air that shook the waters and made them shrink back toward the center

  Who did that

  And the Serpent writhed on the shore, arms pulled from their grasp on the rocks, a face emerging from its carp-eyes and low, moon-shaped mouth, it is changing, now it has a face again, who is

  The horror of my people carried in this (Shiafa)

  mixing the fires, going out after such fury, the moon gone and the sky like a helmet

  Uncoil. Lunge. Who is

  Michael, not the Serpent, which seems stunned. Michael stands over it, the Serpent’s thickness rising to above his waist, the face coming out and a handsome face, not very unlike that of a Sidhe, the first face of ur-human seen on Earth for sixty million years, brother to Sidhe one would think.

  And within its mind Michael works his way rapidly, putting to work tools he did not know he had, tossing out the Serpent’s personality and thieving from those reserves of knowledge he knew he would need. Unable to avoid some aspects of becoming the Serpent, for knowledge is the man (and becoming more entwined with Shiafa with every instant of his use of her powers) and breathless above the Serpent watching