Part 35 (2/2)

Rumors of unrest in Kavelin were thick. Less daring traders were staying put till they knew what was happening.

Ravelin's army turned north twenty miles short of the town, following a side valley. It debouched on the plains away from routes frequented by caravans. A screening force broke contact and began herding cognizant caravaneers westward.Ragnarson tightened his formation. He allowed his light horse troops to roam only a few miles. Marco would watch the plains nomads. Bragi increased the pace, and turned away whenever Marco reported riders approaching.

Marco also patrolled their back trail, to frighten off any nomads threatening to discover it.

A hundred miles east of the ruins of Shemerkhan, following marches of forty miles per day, the Power rea.s.serted itself. The wizards scrambled to take advantage, but it faded before they could get organized.

The Power quickened again next afternoon, and again it faded rapidly.

The sorcerers debated its meaning for hours.

Ragnarson suspected that little man on the winged horse. In the lonely, quiet hours of riding he tried to think of ways to capture the man, to find out who he was and what he was up to. If legends were to be believed, that would be impossible. It had been tried a thousand times. Anyone who attempted it came to grief.

Nearing lands tributary to Necremnos, the army turned south. Bragi took Varthlokkur, Prataxis, Trebilc.o.c.k, Dantice, and Ragnar into the city. He left Haaken with orders to move to the Roe halfway between Necremnos and Argon, in the narrow zone beholden to neither city.

People lived there. He counted on Marco and the hors.e.m.e.n to cut their communication with Argon.

He didn't plan on staying long. Just while he visited an acquaintance, a Necremnen wizard named Arist.i.thorn.

He wasn't sure the man still lived. His own wizards had heard no reports of Arist.i.thorn's death, though the man had seemed on his last legs back when Bragi had helped him make Itaskia's King Norton honor a debt.

Necremnos hadn't changed in twenty-some years. Varthlokkur said it hadn't since his own last visit, centuries earlier. Old buildings came down and new ones arose, but the stubborn Necremnens refused to borrow from foreigners. New buildings were indistinguishable from those demolished.

Arist.i.thorn maintained a small estate outside the city proper. A miniature castle graced its heart. Continuous moans and wails echoed from within.

”He's very dramatic,” Bragi told Varthlokkur. The wizard didn't know Arist.i.thorn.

Arist.i.thorn's door was tall and ma.s.sive. Upon it hung a knocker of gargantuan proportions. It struck with a deep-voiced boom. That was followed by a sound like the groan of a giant in torment.

”Is this the man who married that princess?” Ragnar asked. ”The one that you....”

”Tch-tch,” Bragi said. ”You forget I told you that story. He's old and retired, but he's still a wizard. And a cranky one.”

The ma.s.sive door swung inward. A voice which could have been that of the tormented giant boomed, ”Enter!”

”He's changed the place some,” Ragnarson observed.

They stood in a long, pillared chamber done in marbles. The only furnis.h.i.+ngs were several dozen suits of armor. Even whispers echoed there, playing around the chuckling of a fountain at the center of the hall.Varthlokkur stood at Ragnarson's left. Trebilc.o.c.k and Dantice remained a step behind, to either flank, facing the walls, their hands on their weapons. Prataxis and Ragnar tucked themselves into the pocket thus formed. The place was intimidating.

”Cut the clowning and get your a.s.s out here,” Bragi yelled. ”That'll get him in here,” he whispered. ”He's got this this about scaring people. Bet you he runs a bluff about turning us into frogs.”

He was right, though newts were the creatures mentioned. Decades had pa.s.sed, but Arist.i.thorn hadn't changed. He had become more of what he had always been. Older, meaner, crankier. He didn't recognize Ragnarson till the third time Bragi interrupted to explain who he was.

And then Arist.i.thorn wasn't pleased. ”Back to haunt me, eh? Ye young ingrate.

Thought ye got away with it, didn't ye? I tell ye, I knew it all along....” He was speaking of a woman. One of his wives.

Ragnarson had had even less sense about women when he was twenty.

”Let me introduce my companions. Michael Trebilc.o.c.k. Aral Dantice. Soldiers of fortune. Derel Prataxis, a don of the Rebsamen. Ragnar, my son. And a colleague, Varthlokkur.”

”... saw ye two and yere wickedness.... Eh?”

”Varthlokkur. Also called The Silent One Who Walks With Grief and Empire Destroyer.”

Varthlokkur met Arist.i.thorn's gaze. He smiled a smile like the one worn by the mongoose before kissing a cobra.

”Eh? Oh, my. Oh. Oh my G.o.d. Pthothor preserve us. Now we know. The visitation of h.e.l.l. I recant. I plead. Give me back my soul. I should have known when the Power failed me....”

”Was he always like this?” Trebilc.o.c.k asked. ”How'd he stand up to that King Norton?”

”Don't pay any mind. It's all act. Come on, you old fraud. We're not here to hurt you. We want your help. And we'll pay.” To the others, ”He's got a lot of pull here. I don't know why. Guess they haven't figured out he's ninety percent fake.”

”Fake? You.... You.... Young man, I'll show you who's fake. Don't come croaking in my pond when you're a frog.”

”You admitted the Power deserted you.”

”Ha! Don't you believe it!”

Varthlokkur interrupted. ”Marshall, can we get to the point? Seconds could be critical now. You! Be silent!”

Arist.i.thorn's lips kept moving but no sound came forth. He was doing as directed while indulging an old vice. He had to talk, Out didn't have to say anything.

”Old friend,” said Ragnarson, ”I've risen in the world since our adventure. I'm Marshall and Regent of Ravelin in the Lesser Kingdoms now. I'm marching to war. My army lies just beyond Necremnen territory. No. No worry. Necremnos isn't my target. I'm going to Argon. Yes. I know. Argon hasn't been invaded since Ilkazar managed it. But n.o.body has gone about it seriously.... Why? Because they attacked me. On orders froms.h.i.+nsan. They murdered my wife, two of my kids, some of my friends. And they kidnapped a friend of mine's wife and son. And maybe the friend, too. They're locked up in Argon's Royal Palace. I'm going to punish Argon.”

Arist.i.thorn's gaze flitted to Varthlokkur whenever the urge to verbalize became strong. Varthlokkur merely stared.

Arist.i.thorn seemed a mouse, but that was pure show. He was a mortal danger to his enemies.

”What I want is boats. All the boats I can lay hands on. And don't forget, we'll be in your debt. Varthlokkur's ability to meet his obligations has never been questioned.”

Ragnarson smiled to himself, pleased with his double entendre. A threat and a promise in one simple declarative sentence-which meant little. Varthlokkur was accepting no obligations himself. This wriggling in the worm pile of politics was making a politician of him too.

Arist.i.thorn changed. He sloughed the pretense, stood tall and arrogant. ”You say s.h.i.+nsan has its hooks in the Fadem? That would explain some strange things.”

”Fadem?” Bragi asked.

”What they call their Royal Palace in Argon,” Trebilc.o.c.k reminded.

”Yes,” Arist.i.thorn continued, ”Argon has behaved oddly the past few years. And I've heard that a man resembling a Tervola visits there frequently, and came here once.

Pthothor gave him short shrift, the story goes. This's bad-if it's true. This's a sad enough earth without s.h.i.+nsan creeping into its palaces like some night cancer. Yes.

This explains things that puzzle the wise. Particularly about the Fadema.”

”Queen of Argon,” said Trebilc.o.c.k.

<script>