Nightlord: Shadows (63 page)

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Authors: Garon Whited

Tags: #Parody, #Fiction, #Fantasy

BOOK: Nightlord: Shadows
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I discovered through experimentation that simply pouring a soul into an empty body like water into a wineskin isn’t the way to go about it. You can’t just pump energy into the body like power into a battery. The matrix of the entity tends to disintegrate quickly, too quickly for it to come to grips with its new container. It has to be fitted into the new body and tied into it. So, putting in a new heart is probably a good metaphor; souls just require less mopping if you botch it.

Again, the trick is
seeing
the soul so you can tell what you’re doing. For most people, it’s like doing that heart transplant operation blindfolded. It probably isn’t even going to be a case of, “The operation was a success, but the patient died.” It’s more likely to be, “Did anyone hear where that landed? Feel around and see if you can find it.” Of course, if it comes to that point, you probably need a new patient.

“These three,” I said, indicating two
orku
and a
galgar
embedded in the wall, “are my two best cases. The
orku
has the
galgar
’s soul in it; the
galgar
has an
orku
soul in it, and the empty
orku
was the donor for the
galgar
. A little bit of musical chairs, there, I’m afraid.”

“Musical chairs?” Tort asked. “Chairs can be instruments? Like bells?”

“Not what I meant. It’s a sort of children’s game. I’ll show it to you, sometime. But it takes an empty body to move the others around, that’s what I’m getting at.”

“I see. Like pouring water from one glass to another, you always need an empty glass.”

“Yeeeeeees… but more complicated.”

“Naturally.” She examined my work. “I do not see how they are any different,” she admitted. “I suppose I should not expect to.”

“Oh, they’ve been switched,” I assured her. “They seem to be having some trouble adapting to their new bodies, though. All they do is scream and gurgle and try to thrash about, but part of that is their terror; they were awake for the transfer, and it’s apparently somewhat painful. Hopefully, it’ll be painless for T’yl, since he’s in some kind of stasis, rather than in a living body.”

“I am certain he will appreciate that.”

“No doubt, if it works. Now, let’s interrogate some elves. Then we can see about finding T’yl a new home.”

“As you wish, my angel.”

I kept Tort up past her bedtime, but she didn’t complain. I think she rather enjoyed sitting back and watching, plying her spells to poke and pry at the subjects while I did the questioning. I woke them up, one at a time, and had a series of little chats.

It is utterly amazing how cooperative people can be when you put a pointy fingernail in front of one of their eyes and ask if that’s the one they want gouged out.

We took notes for each interview. Afterward, we settled down to compare them. They mostly agreed, with a few minor discrepancies—opinions differed, as well as what rumors each one had heard. Overall, they seem to have believed me implicitly about suffering horribly if they lied.

I wonder if they could tell if I was telling the truth.

Queen Keria, the Empress of the Undermountains, was definitely having some troubles with her titles. Being Queen wasn’t the problem; ruling the entirety of the Undermountains was. While the average unpleasant individual was definitely willing to bend the knee to a stronger power, they had a nasty habit of needing constant reminding. A community of rugged, barbaric individualists would start eating representatives of the Crown instead of sending back tribute with them. Which, of course, required an expedition-in-force to re-convince the locals that they were, yes, in fact, part of her empire.

It was a constant struggle.

Yet, despite this, she seemed to have a personal beef with me. Rumor had it that we were once lovers and I broke her black little heart. Other rumors included that I’d stolen something valuable from her—a magic cup, an enchanted ring, or some such; stories varied. Another said that I had her heart in a jar, hidden away, and she wanted it back.

The fundamental point, that she was after me on a personal level, was supported by the way she reacted to news of my presence. She set her elven forces to crafting specialized magical weapons for the troops and called together a sizable portion of her standing army. Several days later, she sent representatives to try and lure me into a trap; when that didn’t work, she came after me.

Other things we discovered:

Firebrand was apparently happy as a fiery clam in a lava flow; killing things was its chief delight. It spent a lot of time in the northern reaches of the Undermountains as a symbol of the new imperial law and as a weapon of moderately-massive destruction. It cut down on the local rebelliousness. Recently, though, it had been recalled to Vathula. They had no reason for it, only speculation that it involved me, somehow.

The elven forces at Keria’s command were mostly here, my captives. She had about thirty more in her service, but they were assigned to population centers, acting as governors and representatives of the Queen.

Her armies were, potentially, quite formidable. Her elite troops—the regular troops, the veterans with discipline and training—were mostly dead, however. Another eight to ten thousand might be available, but they were the garrisons left behind to maintain the stability of her empire. She could still raise a militia of many thousands more, but it would be somewhat inexperienced and unwieldy, as well as prone to desertion.

She was also courting some of the Rethven realms, possibly for an alliance to expand her power on the surface, possibly to get trade opportunities. My informants weren’t in the loop on that.

One of the things they did know, however, was that Keria had at least three magicians in her service. There were also a few shaman-like wizards for spells and elves for magical craft-work, but that was all.

That struck me as peculiar. I asked each of them about Keria, herself. After all, she was once a magician of Arondael, even if she did quit to join a coven of vampiric immortality-seekers. The answer was pretty much the same all the way around: Maybe she was, but she doesn’t do that sort of thing anymore. No one knows why. Her prerogative, of course, as Queen, if she wanted to delegate all that.

Which reminded me. People had spied on me almost from the moment I woke up. If Keria was short on magical muscle, who did it? My prisoners didn’t know, but the numbers involved implied that, while Keria might have people trying to watch me, someone else was also interested. And Keria could spy on me easily; elves can make magic mirrors, scrying bowls, crystal balls, and so on. She didn’t have enough of them, though, to account for all the ones I’d seen in use at the same time.

They did recognize the guy in the blue robes, the one I bashed in the face with some superheated metal. His name was Tyrecan, and he was a scrying specialist. They didn’t know what happened, though; they hadn’t been in contact since the attack.

They did confirm that Keria was probably the one watching during the incident at the bridge; she has a flat, hexagonal crystal that will work for both sight and sound with whomever she chooses. That was the scrying distortion behind Zaraneth. The rest of the scrying distortions were other people, probably trying to hide their observation in a convenient thicket of troops.

As for how long it would take for her to assemble another attack force, their guesses varied from two weeks to ten weeks, depending on how big a force she wanted to field. They all doubted that it would be anytime soon, if at all. The total loss of an entire army was regarded as impossible, and therefore worthy of considerable deliberation before facing the cause.

I plugged each of them back into the scryshield spell when I was done with them and let them sleep.

“What do you think?” I asked Tort.

“I believe them. They were beyond terrified and barely holding their poise. If you had so much as raised your voice, they would have lost control of their bowels.”

“Yeah, I got that impression. And, since they all pretty much verified each other’s story on most points, I think we can assume that not only do they believe what they’re saying, it’s probably close enough to the truth to give it some weight.”

“I agree, my angel.”

“Good. Now, do me a favor?”

“Anything.”

“Pick out an elf for T’yl. I don’t know what he’d like.”

“My angel?” she asked, puzzled.

“If I’m going to put him into a new body, it ought to be one he likes. Since I can’t actually ask, and I’m not going to do this sort of thing twice just for aesthetic reasons, I’d like you to pick out an elf body that you think he would feel comfortable occupying. I never knew him well enough to judge, but you’ve known him for decades. Surely you can guess at what he’d like.”

“Anything that isn’t a female,” she promptly replied. “He spent much of his early life in Kamshasa.”

“So?”

“It is a matriarchy. He was not well-treated as a young boy, despite his talent for magic. Perhaps because of it; only women are permitted the study of magic, or even of writing. His talent was exceptional, however, and he learned many things before he escaped across the western deserts to the kingdom of Praeteyn. He has not been fond of any females, except, possibly, for me.”

“Ah. But, among the male elven bodies… the tallest? The shortest? The one with the violet eyes? What would he like?”

“They are all immortal?”

“As far as I know. They’re
elves
, Tort.”

“Then I would select the tallest. I doubt he will care too much about the details of the appearance.”

“Got it.” I started un-cementing the victim. “Do you want to watch?”

“Not especially,” she admitted. “You are working directly with soul-stuff, as I understand the process. I will see very little of it, even if I do observe. True?”

“You have a point.”

“Then, by your leave, I will retire for the night.”

“Sure.”

She walked over and tapped me on the shoulder to turn me around. When I did, she hugged me and laid her head against my chest. I put my arms around her and stroked her hair.

“Please, my angel, remember that you are loved.”

“I’ll remember,” I promised. I didn’t promise to believe it, just remember it. That was enough. She let me go and breezed out.

I shut the door and told the mountain I didn’t want to be disturbed. The crack around the door went away. Then I took T’yl’s crystal out of its case and regarded it.

This was going to be tricky.

Friday, May 21
st

I rubbed my eyes and stretched. Dawn doesn’t feel any better buried under a mountain, but at least I wasn’t hungry.

To get T’yl a body, I removed an elf from stone storage, laid him out comfortably, disconnected him from the spell that sucked the vitality out of him, and magically started marking off the points where I would need to connect a soul. True, there was one in the way, but I wanted to get ahead of the game and be prepared.

When my donor body woke up, I reached in past the animal vitality, deep beyond the flesh. I wanted the body to have all the vitality and energy it could; I just wanted it unoccupied. If it was a car, I’d want it fully fueled and running perfectly before I put it in Park and yanked out the driver.

It takes a while to really eat an elf-soul. They can have hundreds, even thousands of years of experiences and memories. Also, I wanted to make sure I got every last bit of it—to clean the body out completely—like licking the bowl clean after Mom finishes frosting the cake. I took my time and did it right, going over it thoroughly, then back again.

Putting T’yl into the empty vessel was still a challenging operation. Unlike a living being, the crystal didn’t allow me to transfer connection points one at a time. If I plugged him in, connecting various energy conduits in sequence, his essence would fragment. As each point came on-line, it would try to move in time with the rhythms of the flesh. Since the rest of the soul was held in stasis inside a crystal, that was a problem.

I worked around it by treating a tendril like a piece of string. I ran one tendril through an anchor point in the flesh, like a shoelace through an eyelet, and attached the end to a connector in T’yl’s soul that corresponded to that “eyelet.” I repeated that process over a hundred times, until T’yl’s crystal had a whole web of tendrils stretched between it and various points throughout the elf-body.

Once I had the major points connected that way, I gently pulled T’yl’s soul out of the crystal, handling it carefully to avoid accidentally gulping it down. In many ways, it was like taking a mouthful of something and just moving it without actually swallowing it.

As I pulled my tendrils back, they slid through the anchor points in the flesh and drew the soul into alignment, pulling the energy centers into the anchor points all at the same time. With those held in place, I worked quickly to, well, tack them down, sort of—think of it as a few quick stitches to stop the bleeding. That was the tricky part of the operation. With over a hundred individual places where T’yl’s weakened, immobile soul needed to fix to flesh, it bled energy rather rapidly and disastrously. I’ve never moved faster in a fight than I did then.
Connect here
, I told it, again and again.
Lock to this place. Fasten on to this energy center. Flow into and out of the flesh, like so…

With the initial stitches in place, I went back and carefully worked over each one to connect it properly. I spent the rest of the night going through the body, making sure it was running and in balance, finding places where minor connections should go, even things that should naturally find their own way. I wanted this to go as easily and comfortably as possible for him. I even juiced the body with some extra vitality, just to make sure it wasn’t going to expire from exhaustion.

Now, he’s floating comfortably in my gate pool—it’s still just a pool of water, after all; my effort has been on the archway—and seems to be sleeping. It looks as though he’ll be all right, but I won’t know for sure until he wakes up. If he wakes up. I know I performed the operation correctly, but I don’t know what effect occupying the crystal may have had, if any.

I guess we’ll find out.

I had a couple of the guys get a stretcher; we’ve relocated T’yl to better quarters in the upper mountain. I’ve put Tort in charge of nursing him back to health while I’m out. And, for her safety, I’ve assigned a pair of cadet knights to guard duty. I’m concerned that he might have some brain/mind interface problems and be confused about who he is; elves do have long memories. I have personal experience on the subject of too much in the memory bank.

My next plan was to head down to Mochara and see Flim, as well as take along a sack of gold and silver to buy more stuff. The diamonds are still growing; even my best crystallization spell takes time.

Oddly enough, the larger the diamond is, the faster it grows. More surface area for binding carbon into the crystalline matrix, I think. I’ve pushed several of them together to start forming one big diamond; it should grow faster, allowing me to simply take a chunk off whenever I need a bit. That should actually be quicker than growing lots of small ones. Well, unless I want to grow a
lot
of little ones, but there’s only so much effort I want to go to in the diamond department.

As I walked out the door in the throne room, I saw the line of light from the morning sun and the shadow of the doorway tunnel. That’s when the idea struck me. Light that hits the ground is, effectively, wasted. Why not use it? A magical version of a fiber optic conduit, conducting light from somewhere—the courtyard floor, the outer wall of the courtyard, or even the face of the mountain itself—anywhere the light was hitting something, rather than illuminating… if I add in a frequency-shifter to move all the non-visible stuff into the visible range, there should be enough light hitting the ground to shed light through all the layers of the undercity.

True, it’ll wax and wane along with the sunlight, but that just means we’ll have day and night like regular people. Moonlight will still provide a sort of night-light underground… maybe I can tap into the waste heat coming out of the forge chimney to enhance the nightlight, too…

It’ll be a big project. I’ll need to bring back the whole wizards’ guild, I think, to get this done in any reasonable amount of time. But the individual spells aren’t complex, aren’t even energy-intensive. We can
do
this!

Bronze and I headed down the mountain. I asked her to take the zig-zag way down, rather than take the big spiral, to see if it was faster. Sure, we can run at full speed if we take the gentle curve of the spiral street down to the gate; our speed is limited by cornering repeatedly if we head “straight” for a gate. But the long way around is a
lot
longer…

I think she goes the long way around because she likes to run. If I want to get in or out in a hurry, I may have to include one long, straight street from the base of the central rise to a gate. We can take a short spiral down from the inner courtyard, corner once, and hit a straightaway all through town. I can call it the Kingsway and make sure everyone knows the clanging sound has the right-of-way. She’ll like that.

I took the opportunity to check on the outer wall progress. The northeast gate was still the same; nothing was going to change there until we had other gates already created and working. The other three were still coming along; the seams in the wall were all the way through, but the outer pits were still forming. Maybe another two days and it should be ready for us to install winches and locking bolts.

More stuff I’ll have to remember to get. You never know how much stuff you need until you move into your own place…

While I was meditating on this fact of life, Bronze carried me southward along the canal road. I was jarred out of my preoccupation by the sight of an approaching knight.

He was a big man and wore some of the shiniest armor I’ve seen. Even his beer-wagon horse had shiny armor. He had a body shield on his left arm, decorated with a coat of arms; I couldn’t make it out because of the angle. Behind him, he had a squire with a mule-drawn cart and another horse following the cart on a lead-line They were traveling at a walking pace. Whoever he was, he was traveling in style.

I also thought he was traveling in a semi-portable oven. The sun was out, the morning warm, and he was probably sweating like a cheating husband in divorce court. I was in regular clothes, but dressed warmly because Bronze creates a major headwind. I planned to lose a layer or two of outerwear once I got into town.

His visor was open, so I could see he was smiling as he raised a gleaming hand to hail me. We thundered and clanged to a stop.

“Well-met, traveler!” he greeted me. “Are you about the King’s business?”

“Well-met,” I replied. “Yes, I am.”

“I thought so, for you ride his infernal steed. Does the King reside in yonder mountain?”

“Yes, he does. May I ask whom I have the honor of addressing?” I inquired, politely.

“I am the Hero, Sir Sedrick, third son of the Prince of Riverpool!” he announced, proudly.

Riverpool… I remembered a bit about it from talks with Raeth and Bouger. It was near the middle of Rethven, where the Dormer river split into the Dormer and the Mirenn rivers. It had a large river harbor, hence the name. It was a trading town, really, and quite prosperous, way back when. It didn’t hold a lot of land; it didn’t need to. It was one of the crossroads for the kingdom. I wondered if it was still as prosperous after the Balkanization of the kingdom.

“It is my honor and privilege to make your acquaintance, noble knight,” I told him. I didn’t mention that he was a long way from home. Doubtless he knew.

“Indeed. Now, hurry back and tell your master that I have come to challenge his evil.”

I blinked at him for a moment. How do you respond to something like that?

“I’m sorry,” I told him, “but I can’t really do that—I’m on an errand. But!” I hurried, holding up a hand to cut him off, “I can give you a token that will assure you entry into the city, so you may meet him directly, rather than deal only with his people.”

He looked thoughtful for a moment, then agreed. I dug into my pouch and pulled out a silver coin. We don’t have stamping mills in Karvalen—not yet, not yet!—so we only have coin blanks. We stepped closer, to sit side-by-side; his horse stood perfectly still while Bronze stepped up beside it. I handed him one of my coins. As he reached to take it I noted that, yes, the device on his shield might belong to a younger son of Riverpool.

“This?” he asked, dubiously, turning the coin in his fingers.

“I promise you, on my honor, that if you present this at the gate, they will listen to you when you explain where you got it. They will then allow you into the city, even accord you all the honors of a guest.”

He frowned, but he kept the coin.

“Before you go,” I said, “if I may make so bold as to ask a question?”

“You have done me a service, so I will permit it.”

“How did you know I was not the King?” I asked.

“You are tiny,” he replied. “That giant beast of dark magic could be no other than his legendary steed, yet you are dwarfed by it.”

“Ah. Of course. They do say size matters.”

“Indeed. Fare you well,” he bade me. I returned his farewell and watched as he and his goods walked past me and away. When they were a good fifty yards or so down the road, I looked at Bronze. She turned her head to regard me with one eye.

“What do you think, infernal beast of dark magic? Should I be seven or eight feet tall?” I asked. She flicked an ear:
You seem a good size to me.

“Typical: A girl trying to reassure my masculine ego.” She snorted fire and her version of laughter.

I took a moment to get out my small steel mirror and look in on Tort. She felt the presence of the scrying spell and drew out a clear crystal to return it.

“Yes, my angel?”

I explained about Sir Sedrick. She frowned.

“Shall I have him killed?” she asked.

“No, absolutely not! Please accord him all the honors of a visiting knight. Show him around, feed him well, put him up for the night, whatever it takes. Be nice to him.”

“But… my angel, consider. From what you describe, I do not doubt that when word finally reached him, somewhere in Rethven, of the risen King of Karvalen he set out immediately. Heroes do go a-questing, and you are the object of his. Other heroes will seek the same; do you want to set this as a precedent? He is here to kill you!”

“Well, he can’t do it
there
while I’m in Mochara, now can he? But if he’s comfortable there, he’ll stay until I get back, rather than riding all over trying to catch up with me. Besides, I want to ask him why he wants me dead.”

“My angel, he sounds like a Hero. Does he need a better reason?”

“Probably not. I still want to ask him why
he
thinks I should be destroyed. If it’s a good reason, I’ll have to take steps to guard against other Heroes.”

“Very well; I shall send word.”

“Thank you. How’s T’yl doing?”

“I am not sure. There has been no change.”

“I see. Well, we’ll just have to hope. If there’s still no change when I get back, I’ll look inside him and see if I can spot any mistakes.”

“As you will.”

“See you later.”

“Farewell.”

I cut the connection and we set out for Mochara again.

My first stop was to see Thomen. We halted in front of the guildhall and I went in. The receptionists were still there.

“Good morning, sir,” one of them said.

“Good morning. Is Thomen available?”

“May we ask the nature of your business with the guildmaster?” the other asked. I had a terrible feeling of déjà vu.

“I’m the King of Karvalen, and I would like to hire the guild.”

“Hire…?”

“The guild. As a whole. Everybody in it.”

They looked at each other.

“You’re the King?” the first one asked. I smoothed my tabard deliberately to display the symbol.

“Yes, I am; I just shrank in the wash. Hot baths, you know. Now please go let Thomen know I’m here.”

The first girl made a very low curtsey and hurried through the left door. The other offered refreshments, boasting that they had
ice
if I cared for a cold drink. I declined politely.

The first girl returned quickly and showed me up to the second floor. Thomen’s office, or workroom, was on the corner and overlooked two streets through windows made of real, clear glass. The girl vanished back downstairs.

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