The Orb And The Spectre (Book 2) (11 page)

BOOK: The Orb And The Spectre (Book 2)
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   "I am sorry I do not. But it would interest me to know what this man tells you."

   "When I have done I will return here and tell you. But let me be clear on something. You and your kind are unable to exist outside of Enchantment, if you wish to retain your powers. How is it then that you survive, and more importantly, how does the woman who travels with the Karai prince survive?"

   "For my part, I am deprived of my powers, and I exist only inasmuch as I am here, within my own world. I am my own world also - a vital point to consider - and am endeavouring to develop, but that is another issue. Orbelon could not survive without the Orb, that is, the blue casket as you perceive it, for the Orb is what he is. As for the woman, I have already told you that she must be a sorcerous projection or fabrication. Even so, her powers will wane the further she travels outside Enchantment and the longer she remains. Your land, Enchantment's Reach, is not as enfeebling to us as the Mondane kingdoms and the further lands. It is imbued with a residual magic of Enchantment and hence allows us a semblance of life. So here is something you may find useful: almost certainly Anzejarl's consort will have with her, close upon her person, a magical artifact of some kind which renews her essence, enabling her to persist without enfeeblement. I think she must carry something else, too, something which gives her control of Anzejarl and allows him to command the Enchantment-creatures he sets against you."

   "You should have told me of this before!"

   "Had you told me of her before, I would have done so."

   Leth swallowed the rebuke. "These artifacts - how would I know them?"

  
"Ah, that I can’t say. They might take any form. But they would probably be exotic or fabulous, even alien, to your eyes. The only sure way to know them is to see them used."

   "What of the Orb's Soul? How might that be known?"

   "The Orb's Soul?" Orbelon's voice took on a timbre of distance. "Again, it might be in any form, or have no perceivable form. Bring it to me and I would know it. It would know me."

   "It is a living thing?"

   "Of course. It is my soul."

   "But were I to seek it, how would I find it?"

   "Leth, you cannot find it. I have told you, it is within Enchantment."

   "But if I could send someone?"

   "Who could you send?"

   "I don’t know, but please answer my question."

   "I could teach you how to recognize it, but you would still have to search all of Enchantment unless you were able to persuade my enemies to reveal its whereabouts."

   "Perhaps that’s not so far-fetched."

   "Leth, is there something you have not told me?"

   "No. My imagination plays me like a marionette. I’m keeping nothing from you except fantastic dreams, absurd hopes and desperate aspirations."

   "The stuff of which universes are made."

   "And for that reason I can’t abandon them. But I must go now and prepare myself for my meeting."

   "I wish you success. Before you leave, I have a favour to ask. Would you take the knife that hangs at your belt and cut for me a small section from your trousers? A few threads will suffice."

   Leth had grown used to Orbelon's odd requests. Even so he could not resist commenting as he cut the threads from his trousers, "I am intrigued. Over many months I have brought you a variety of articles: cheese, wood, metal, water, stone. . . . Many times I have wondered what these things are for."

   "There is little I can tell you. I seek to slowly introduce new elements to this world that is the Orb, that is also me. The laws here are precisely and delicately balanced, and I must take care. But over time I find that I am able to introduce tiny but significant changes. Do return and let me know what you discover of the Legendary Child."

 

III

 

   Leth quickly left his study and, on the way to his office, was met by Master Briano, Mawnie's head valet.

   "Sire, the Duchess has asked for you," said Briano in excruciation, wringing his hands and writhing heels against ankles.

   Leth heaved a sigh. Mawnie's condition had not improved. On those occasions when, looking in upon her, Leth had found her awake, she had been either raving or in ecstatic transport. Doctor Melropius reported infrequent periods of relative lucidity, during which she was generally subdued and melancholic.

   "Is she sensible?" Leth demanded.

   Master Briano lifted his eyes to the fan-vault ceiling, puckering his lips, and nodded. "She has been asking for you repeatedly, Majesty."

   Leth changed his direction and made rapidly for Mawnie's chambers, Master Briano a respectful distance behind, scurrying on tip-toes to keep up.

   Mawnie was seated in a chair beside the window when Leth arrived, a small china cup of green tea held lightly in the fingers of both hands. She wore a simple green robe, her light brown hair loose and somewhat lank about her shoulders. She was pale and thin and there was a haunted look in her eyes.

   "Leth," she gave a flickering smile and put aside her cup.

   "How are you, Mawnie?"

   "There is something I must tell you." Her look was penetrating, hopeful, diffident. Then it was disconsolate. "Oh."

   "What is it, Mawnie?"

   "Where is my sister?"

   "Issul? She has had to go away for a while."

  
"Iss. Yes. I felt, I thought, something bad had happened to her. I would like to see her."

   “I’ll send her to you the moment she returns."

   "Not
the moment
she returns, dear Leth. You will want to take her to your bed and love her first, won't you."

   "Well, I suppose, yes, that’s
a likelihood. Immediately after, then."

   "Do you miss her?"

   "Very much."

   Mawnie turned to the window. "How fortunate dear Iss is, having someone who misses her."

   "Mawnie, you said you had something to tell me."

  
"Hmm? Oh. Yes. Now, what was it? Yes, Leth, something terrible has happened. To me." She turned, her eyes strained and brimming, and took his hands. "Leth, I do not think I should live any longer."

   "What? Mawnie, that is absurd. Why do you say such a thing?"

   "Because of what happened, Leth, dear Leth. In the woods. In the woods."

   Leth concealed his impatience. He knew of the attack upon Ressa and Mawnie on Sentinel's Peak, the wooded promontory behind the three sisters' family home, Saroon. He knew that Mawnie's twin, Ressa, had died as a result. But neither he nor anyone else save Issul knew of the child that had been born to Ressa after her death. "Mawnie, you are not to blame for what happened in the woods. It was a long time ago. You must put it from your mind."

   "But I have to tell you. I wanted to tell Issul, but she is not here, so I must tell you. You see, it spoke."

   Leth frowned.
"Who? What?"

   Mawnie suddenly
froze, her eyes wide with fear. "The- the thing. It told me. It told Ressa."

   "What did it tell you, Mawnie?" Leth held her cold hands. She was beginning to shake.
Beginning to whimper.

   "Oh, it told us it was going to destroy us all. Destroy us all. It said it had come from Enchantment and that the world would soon know why. Oh Leth, I was so
frightened!
It killed Ressa. It killed sweet Ressa. It should have been me. Oh, why, why wasn't it me?"

   She was distraught, drained, limp with sorrow, then suddenly rigid, trying to turn away from something only she could see, her body making spasmodic jerks, her mouth wide in a rictus of terror. An anguished, gasping scream was squeezed from the back of her throat. She drew back, then tore her hands free and began to fight.

   Leth held her. She fought against him, but he held her so that she could not move. She bit his neck. He cried out in pain. A nurse came to his assistance and they wrestled Mawnie to the bed as she struggled and howled.

 

*

 

   Doctor Melropius applied a salve to the wound on Leth's neck and the King departed. Mawnie's words had made no sense to him. Her assailant on Sentinel's Peak, whatever it was that had caused Ressa's subsequent death, had never been found, and the incident had faded from most people's minds. Leth could conceive of no reason why it should resurface now, other than that it had plainly left a painful and indelible scar upon Mawnie's memory. Except. . . Mawnie's statement that it claimed to have come from Enchantment made him uneasy. But he put the matter from his mind, the better that he might concentrate upon his meeting with Grey Venger.

   In the middle of the evening, a couple of hours after darkness had descended upon Enchantment's Reach, Lord Fectur announced that Grey Venger was safely within his custody.

   "Did it go smoothly?" asked Leth.

   "Perfectly, Sire. We established that we would await him outside the inn of the Tinted Domes, close upon the edge of Overlip. A password was agreed and passed to him via an intermediary, calling himself Iklar, who is also the man with whom the Queen made contact in the Tavern of the Veiled Light. By this means we were identified by Venger's followers. Venger emerged from a nearby house and gave himself over. The house is now under surveillance."

   "Hardly necessary at this juncture, I would have thought"

   Fectur shrugged.

   "Were you present when Venger gave himself over?"

   "On an issue so important I deemed my attendance as your official representative imperative," replied Fectur coldly.

   Leth wondered at that, wondered whether words had passed between the two. There was no point in asking. Neither Fectur or Grey Venger could be relied upon to give an honest reply.

   "Where is he now?"

   "Under guard in my guest's quarters."

   "But not under restraint."

   "None. Of course, he is confined to his chamber. He has dined - with some relish - and now reclines in comfort, awaiting your summons."

   "Did he drink?"

   "He did. Good Aucos red, in some quantity. He seemed to lack concern for the effect it might have upon his tongue."

   Leth breathed deeply. Venger wanted to talk! "Bring him here, then, Fectur."

   "Here? Do you intend to interrogate him in your private apartments?"

   "It’s a meeting of minds, not an interrogation."

   "But would a more formal environment not be more appropriate?"

   "Informality will be more conducive."

   "But Sire, there are no guards here."

   "Quite."

   "I will substitute your house-servants with my own men."

   "You will not, Fectur. I am dismissing the servants."

   "You cannot intend to seclude yourself here alone with Grey Venger!"

   "That is precisely what I do intend. Venger will do me no harm."

   "No! No! Sire, if you will permit no guards I must insist upon being present myself."

  
"Certainly not!"

   "My lord, I have the right to insist. Your welfare is my concern."

   Leth stared him in the eye. Fectur was unflinching. "Fectur, you jeopardize everything!"

   "Your life is in my hands," said Fectur, with weight.

   "Do not overstep yourself. The future of Enchantment's Reach quite possibly rests upon the outcome of this meeting."

   "The Lord High Invigilate is charged with the well-being of the sovereign in order to protect the welfare of the kingdom. To leave you alone with this man would be an indefensible dereliction of my duties."

   Leth fumed silently to himself. "Bring him here."

 

 

 

 

IV

 

   "We were to speak alone,
Leth
. That was my understanding," declared Grey Venger, turning daggered eyes to Fectur.

   "The Lord High Invigilate insists, against my wishes, that he must be present," Leth replied.

   "I have nothing to say in his presence."

   "Master Venger--" Fectur began.

   Grey Venger, garbed in his customary grey, turned away, his arms folded. "You have broken the terms of our agreement, King Leth. I will say nothing if we are not alone."

   "It is not I, Venger," said Leth.

   "You are King and sovereign."

   "Even so. . . . You are aware of the circumstances that press upon me."

   Venger addressed Fectur. "You may escort me back."

   "Master Venger, I--"

   "
You may escort me back!
"

   Fectur stiffened in inexpressible fury, red welts appearing about his temples and jaw.

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