Part 3 (1/2)
They were bunched together in a wide stone corridor apparently hewn from solid rock. The pa.s.sage was wider and taller than any he remembered seeing in the dungeons and the walls were worked smooth instead of being left uneven and scarred with the marks of the hewers' tools.
The place seems different,a he said, running his hand along the stone. aAs if someone's been working on it.
aProbably,a Malkin said as she looked around appraisingly.
Glandurg kept his hand on the hilt of Blind Fury and sniffed the stale air in great wheezing breaths. June stayed close to Danny, her head swiveling this way and that. Clearly she didn't like what she was seeing. That was all right, Wiz didn't like what he saw either.
aWell, which way?a Malkin asked. She seemed as calm as if they were out for a stroll in the castle rose garden, but Wiz noticed her hand stayed near the cup hilt of her rapier.
Wiz consulted the amulet around his neck. The amulet looked like an ordinary lensatic compa.s.s. The first time he came here he had used a seeker globe that floated ahead to show him the way to where Moira was held captive. That had proved less than ideal when the globe blithely floated into a guardroom full of goblin warriors with Wiz and his party close behind. If the compa.s.s was more prosaic it was also not as likely to get them in trouble.
Danny lifted a similar device hung around his neck and turned this way and that. aNo sign of hostile magic,a he said.
The one thing they didn't have was a map. The magical forces around this place were too strong for the wizards of the North to get the lay of the land and there were no pre-existing maps of the place. Wiz suspected that even the wizards of the Dark League, who had delved this place, hadn't had a complete map. He suspected even more strongly that the dungeons' new tenant had done some major remodeling.
aOff in this direction.a Then,a said Glandurg, striding to the front, alet us away.a The dwarf took the lead with Malkin following, then Wiz, then June and then Danny. It wasn't an ideal formation out it did mean that if Glandurg started swinging that sword the others would be able to get clear.
The tunnel led slightly off to the right and down. Here and there the old dirt walls or rough stone showed through, as if whatever was working on the dungeons hadn't finished yet. Wiz found the thought comforting and he tried to hold onto it Every hundred feet or so the tunnel would branch, sometimes into three or four directions. But the directional amulet kept pointing straight ahead. At last they came to a branching where the amulet told them to go right. Right through a large iron-bound door of age-darkened wood.
Malkin studied the door in the light of the magic globe. aNo obvious lock,a she said more to herself than the others. She ran her fingers over the rough iron surface, pressing experimentally here and there.
Glandurg reached for his sword.
aWith a single blow of Bund Fury I shall cleave it asunder.a Danny and Wiz edged away from the door.
aUh, we're not to that stage vet,a Wiz said a trifle desperately. aJust keep watch, okay?a Malkin nodded and bent before the door. She ran her hands over the lock plate like a pianist touching her instrument She tapped on the door frame in two or three places and then turned her attention to the iron plate set in the stone to take the lock's bolt.
aEasiest to take that off,a she muttered and produced a set of tools from somewhere about her person. aBring that light over here will you?a As Wiz moved to comply she began to work on the plate in the wall It was held in place with three large and quite rusty nuts, he saw, with the bolt ends peened over them to prevent their removal. For some reason that bothered him, but he couldn't quite understand why.
Malkin produced something that looked like a surgeons scalpel and applied it to the peened-over part of the bolts. The rusty iron cut like cheese under the pressure of the magical knife. Next she produced a small bottle and put several drops of an oily liquid on each bolt. The liquid seemed to soak into the joint between the nuts and bolts. Then she held up a tuning fork and struck it against the wall. A pure clear tone at the edge of human hearing filled the tunnel and Malkin applied the base of the fork to the first nut. There was a fine s.h.i.+fting of powder from the nut and bolt as the rust fell away under the influence of the vibrations.
She applied the tuning fork to each of the other bolts and then reached into the tool roll for something else. Then she stopped very deliberately, exhaled and stood up.
aSomeone told me I shouldn't rush these things,a she explained. The next step is to remove those fasteners.a aThen we take the plate off and open the door,a Danny said.
Malkin looked at him. aThen we see. Best not to antic.i.p.ate what you'll find on a job like this. Too much chance of missing something important.a With that she turned back and knelt again before the iron plate. She took the first nut between her thumb and forefinger and carefully, delicately, turned it. The rusty nut came off as if it was on only finger tight.
While the others watched Malkin moved to the center nut. She grasped it, moved as if to turn it and then stopped dead. Then slowly, ever so slowly, she began to turn the nut the other way.
That's tightening it,a Danny said, but the nut backed off and fell into Malkin's hand. She shot Danny a raised-eyebrow look over her shoulder and went back to the third nut, which came off in the conventional direction.
Wiz picked up the second nut and looked at it. aA dummy thread,a he said. The first few turns are cut right-handed, but the bearing threads are actually left-handeda By this time Malkin had the plate off and the door open and while Wiz looked at the nut the others started filing through.
aCome here and look at this,a Danny said from the other side of the door. Wiz followed him through. There, behind the now-open door was an evil-looking black sphere cradled like a nut in a nutcracker between a lever and the wall. One end of the lever was pivoted in place and the other end was fastened to the bolt with the backwards nut.
aTurn that thing the wrong way and you break the sphere,a Danny told him.
Suddenly Wiz felt very cold. aNasty.a aI wonder what's in that sphere anyway?a aDanny.a aYeah, Wiz?a aNever ask questions you don't want to know the answer to.a aHow did you know how to open that door?a Wiz asked as he caught up with Malkin at the head of the party.
aWizard, your problem is you're too trusting,a Malkin told him. aIf it looks like it is supposed to open by turning deosil, then obviously it opens by turning widders.h.i.+ns.a aThanks,a Wiz mumbled and dropped back beside Danny, lost in thought.
aWhat's wrong?a Danny asked.
aMalkin opened the door by turning the bolt clockwise.a aJust the opposite of what you'd expect. It was a trap.a aHow many bolts have you seen since you got here with right-hand threads, like the ones in our world?a The younger programmer stopped and looked at him. aI can't remember seeing any boltsa”except for the stuff we've made. Here they use pins or wedges.a aExactly. They don't use bobs, right-hand or left-hand. But that door was gimmicked to trap someone who expected a right-handed thread. What we'd expect.a aYou mean this place is full of traps designed just for us?a aEither that or the traps were designed by people who think like us. People from our world.a Danny let out a low whistle. aJeez, I don't know which is worse.a aLet me know when you decide,a Wiz told him. aBecause chances are whichever one is worse, that's the one it is.a The evening came on dark and full of dirty fog. There was no sunset that day at the Wizards' Keep, only the dank fog and the wind keening about the towers where lamps burned late as wizards labored over their spells. Here and there a guardsman paced the battlements, cloak drawn tight against the growing chill.
aWhat is the time?a Bal-Simba asked as he stared out the window, straining to make out the castle curtain wall.
Arianne glanced at the magic sundial sitting on her work table. aBarely the seventh day-tenth.a She paused. aDark, is it not?a aToo dark,a Bal-Simba agreed. aUnnaturally so, I think.a Arianne's eyes flicked to the window but saw only Bal-Simba's reflection against the darkness. aOur enemy's work?a aPerhaps.a He turned from the window. aAsk Juvian to examine this fog for signs of magic.a His a.s.sistant nodded and spoke into a communications crystal.
So cold, Shauna thought, even for winter. She picked up the wrought iron poker and stirred up the fire. Listen to yourself. Like someone's old grandmother. Still she stirred the fire, seeking comfort from the renewed flames.
Normally the apartment in the guardsmens' quarters was snug enough, with whitewashed walls and comfortable furniture enlivened with polished copper pots and examples of Shaunaas needlework But tonight it seemed chill and dank, oppressed by the air that had settled over the Wizards' Keep.
She returned to the high-backed bench and Ian and Caitlin pressed back against her, seeking their own comfort. This deep in the castle they could not hear the keen of the wind, but they felt it just the same.
As she settled her bulk onto the bench she sighed and the children pressed closer. She put an arm around each and pulled them closer yet.
Shauna was a guardsman's daughter and a guardsman's wife and she had lived through the evil days of the Dark League's ascendancy when human magic was puny and the Council of the North had faced constant ruin at the hands of foes human and non-human. For all that, she could not remember a more bleak evening.
Malcolm, her husband, was eating soldier's stew, taking the common meal in the guard room. Supper was done, the dishes washed and put away. Normally she would be gently hinting about bedtime by now, but no one was sleepy and, truth to tell, Shauna preferred their company.
aI wish daddy was here,a Caitlin said without raising her head.
aYour daddy's got duty,a Shauna told her daughter, aspecial duty like half of 'em tonight.a aI want my daddy too,a Ian added.
She stroked the boy's ash-blond hair. aHush. It will be all right. You'll see. The Sparrow and your daddy and mommy have gone off to fix everything.a Neither child said anything, but both seemed to snuggle even closer.
For a bit they watched the flames in silence. aI wish Fluffy was here,a Ian said finally.
aYou'll see him soon enough,a she said. aMoira promised to stop by later.a Ian looked up at her as if he would cry. aWe can't see Fluffy.a aHe's not Fluffy any more,a Caitlin explained sadly into her mother's bosom. aHe's Moira.a aYou were right, My Lord,a the middle-aged man in the crystal sphere said to Bal-Simba. aThe fog is not natural and it bears the mark of the Enemy's magic.a aIs it dangerous?a Bal-Simba asked Juvian's image.
The wizard frowned until the lines of his forehead nearly matched the angle of his widow's peak aNot now.
But there are stirrings within. Perhaps it builds toward something. Shall I attempt to disperse it?a It was Bal-Simba's turn to frown. aI think not yet. Make sure that we are protected against it and continue to watch it carefully. Meanwhile, prepare spells to disperse it if need be. And report any changes to me.a aI shall, My Lord. I am not sure we can disperse it, but we will begin work on spells immediately. Merry part.a aMerry meet again,a Bal-Simba replied and the image blinked out.
aOn our very doorstep,a Arianne said over Bal-Simba's shoulder.
The big wizard turned to face his a.s.sistant. aOur enemy grows ever bolder ever more quickly. A bad sign, I think.a aPerhaps he will overreach himself.a Bal-Simba looked over at the dark window. aPerhaps. And if he does we must be ready.a Halfway down this stretch of tunnel there was a branch that ended after barely a dozen paces. Wiz sent the light globe floating in and examined it carefully before he motioned the others forward.
aOkay people, rest period.a Glandurg looked at him as though he was crazy. aWe have barely begun.a True,a Malkin said, aI do not think any of us are tired.a 'The idea is not to get tired,a Wiz told them. aWe don't want to be worn out if we run into something nasty. Besides,a he added, seeing Malkin's hesitation, awe can cover more ground if we rest regularly.a Malkin grunted and sank down next to the others. Glandurg ostentatiously remained standing, guarding the entrance.
Wiz sighed as the pack's weight came off his shoulders. He wasn't tired, exactly, but he found he was glad for the break. None of them was hungry, but they all took sips of water from their canteens.
aWell,a Danny asked after several minutes. aNow what?a Wiz s.h.i.+fted his pack. aNow we check in.a aAre you sure that's safe?a aNo, but Bal-Simba insisted on regular reports or he'd have a gang of wizards haul us out of here.a aIf we are to be scouts we must needs report,a Malkin said quietly. Wiz noticed that even when she talked her eyes kept searching up and down the tunnel.
He hefted the special communications crystal. aBesides there's no sign our enemy understands spread demon communications, much less knows bow to tap into the signal.a This guy seems to understand an awful lot we didn't think he does,a Danny pointed out.
Wiz ignored him and whispered into the crystal. The crystal glowed more brightly as the spell within it came alive. Suddenly there were twenty small demons floating in the air in two ranks before them. They hung silent and motionless. Wiz paused, c.o.c.ked his head and whispered into the crystal again. Again the crystal glowed but the demons did nothing. Wiz frowned and tried a third time.
aWhat's wrong?a Danny asked.