Roger Zelazny
The Hand Of Oberon
CHAPTER 1
A bright flash of insight, to match
that peculiar sun...
There it was... Displayed within
that light, a thing I had only seen self-illuminated in darkness up until then:
the Pattern, the great Pattern of Amber cast upon an oval shelf beneath/above a
strange sky-sea.
...And I knew, perhaps by that
within me which bound us, that this had to be the real one. Which meant that
the Pattern in Amber was but its first shadow. Which meant
Which meant that Amber itself was
not carried over into places beyond the realm of Amber, Rebma, and Tir-na
Nog'th. Meaning, then, that this place to which we had come was, by the law of
precedence and configuration, the real Amber.
I turned to a smiling Ganelon, his
beard and wild hair molten in the merciless light.
How did you know? I asked him.
You know I am a very good guesser,
Corwin, he replied, and I recall everything you ever told me about how things
work in Amber: how its shadow and those of your struggles are cast across the
worlds. I often wondered, in thinking of the black road, whether anything could
have cast such a shadow into Amber itself. And I imagined that such a something
would have to be extremely basic, powerful, and secret. He gestured at the
scene before us. Like that.
Continue, I said.
His expression changed and he
shrugged.
So there had to be a layer of
reality deeper than your Amber, he explained, where the dirty work was done. Your
patron beast led us to what seems to be such a place, and that blot on the
Pattern looks to be the dirty work. You agreed.
I nodded.
It was your perceptiveness rather
than the conclusion itself which stunned me so, I said.
You beat me to it, admitted
Random, off to my right, but the feeling has found its way into my
intestines-to put it delicately. I do believe that somehow that is the basis of
our world down there.
An outsider can sometimes see
things better than one who is part of them, Ganelon offered.
Random glanced at me and returned
his attention to the spectacle.
Do you think things will change
any more, he asked, if we go down for a closer look?
Only one way to find out, I said.
Single file, then, Random agreed.
I'll lead.
All right.
Random guided his mount to the
right, the left, the right, in a long series of switchbacks which zigged us and
zagged us across most of the face of the wall. Continuing in the order we had
maintained all day, I followed him and Ganelon came last.
Seems stable enough now, Random
called back.
So far, I said.
Some sort of opening in the rocks
below.
I leaned forward. There was a cave
mouth back to the right, on level with the oval plain. Its situation was such
that it had been hidden from sight when we had occupied our higher position.
We pass fairly near it, I said.
-quickly, cautiously, and
silently, Random added, drawing his blade.
I unsheathed Grayswandir, and one
turn back above me Ganelon drew his own weapon.
We did not pass the opening, but
turned leftward once more before we came to it. We moved within ten or fifteen
feet of it, however, and I detected an unpleasant odor which I could not
identify. The horses must have done a better job of it, though, or been
pessimists by nature, because they flattened their ears, widened their
nostrils, and made alarmed noises while turning against the reins. They calmed,
however, as soon as we had made the turn and begun moving away once again. They
did not suffer a relapse until we reached the end of our descent and moved to
approach the damaged Pattern. They refused to go near it.
Random dismounted. He advanced to
the edge of the design, paused and stared. After a time, he spoke without
looking back.
It follows that the damage was
deliberate, he said, from everything else that we know.
It seems to follow, I said.
It is also obvious that we were
brought here for a reason.
I'd say so.
Then it does not take too much
imagination to conlude that our purpose for being here is to determine how the
Pattern was damaged and what might be done to repair it.
Possibly. What is your diagnosis?
Nothing yet.
He moved along the perimeter of the
figure, off to the right where the smear-effect began. I resheathed my blade
and prepared to dismount. Ganelon reached over and took hold of my shoulder.
I can make it myself I began.
But, Corwin, he said, ignoring my
words, there does appear to be a small irregularity out toward the middle of
the Pattern. It does not look like something that belongs...
Where?
He pointed and I followed the
gesture.
There was some foreign object near
the center. A stick? A stone? A stray bit of paper..? It was impossible to tell
from this distance.
I see it, I said.
We dismounted and headed toward
Random, who by then was crouched at the extreme right of the figure, examining
the discoloration.
Ganelon's spotted something out
toward the center, I said.
Random nodded.
I've noticed it, he replied. I
was just trying to decide on the best way to head out for a better look. I do
not relish the notion of walking a broken Pattern. On the other hand, I was
wondering what I would be laying myself open to if I tried heading in across
the blackened area. What do you think?
Walking what there is of the
Pattern would take some time, I said, if the resistance is on par with what
it is at home. Also, we have been taught that it is death to stray from it-and
this setup would force me to leave it when I reach the blot. On the other hand,
as you say, I might be alerting our enemies by treading on the black. So
So neither of you is going to do
it, Ganelon interrupted. I am.
Then, without waiting for a reply,
he took a running leap into the black sector, raced along it toward the center,
paused long enough to pick up some small object, turned and headed back. Moments
later, he stood before us.
That was a risky thing to do,
Random said. He nodded.
But you two would still be
debating it if I hadn't.
He raised his hand and extended it.
Now, what do you make of this?
He was holding a dagger. Impaled on
it was a rectangle of stained pasteboard. I took them from him.
Looks like a Trump, Random said.
Yes.
I worked the card loose, smoothed
down the torn sections. The man I regarded upon it was half familiar-meaning of
course that he was also half strange. Light, straight hair, a trifle
sharp-featured, a small smile, somewhat slight of build.
I shook my head.
I do not know him, I said.
Let me see. Random took the card
from me, frowned at it.
No, he said after a time. I
don't either. It almost seems as though I should, but...No.
At that moment, the horses renewed
their complaints much more forcefully. And we needed but turn part way to learn
the cause of their discomfort, in that it had chosen that moment to emerge from
the cave.
Damn, said Random. I agreed with
him.
Ganelon cleared his throat, took
forth his blade.
Anyone know what it is? he asked
quietly.
My first impression of the beast
was that it was snakelike, both from its movements and because of the fact that
its long thick tail seemed more a continuation of its long thin body than a
mere appendage. It moved on four double-jointed legs, however, large-footed and
wickedly clawed. Its narrow head was beaked, and it swung from side to side as
it advanced, showing us one pale blue eye and then the other. Large wings were
folded against its sides, purple and leathery. It possessed neither hair nor feathers,
though there were scaled areas across its breast, shoulders, back, and along
the length of its tail. From beak-bayonet to twisting tail-tip it seemed a
little over three meters. There was a small tinkling sound as it moved, and I
caught a flash of something bright at its throat.
Closest thing I know, said
Random, is a heraldic beast-the griffin. Only this one is bald and purple.
Definitely not our national bird,
I added, drawing Grayswandir and swinging its point into line with the
creature's head.
The beast darted a red, forked
tongue. It raised its wings a few inches, then let them fall. When its head
swung to the right its tail moved to the left, then left and right, right and
left-producing a near-hypnotic, flowing effect as it advanced.
It seemed more concerned with the
horses than with us, however, for its course was directed well past us toward
the spot where our mounts stood quivering and stamping. I moved to interpose
myself. At that point, it reared.
Its wings went up and out, spreading
like a pair of slack sails suddenly caught by a gust of wind. It was back on
its hind legs and towering above us, seeming to occupy at least four times the
space it had previously. And then it shrieked, a god-awful, hunting scream or
challenge that left my ears ringing. With that, it snapped those wings downward
and sprang, becoming temporarily airborne.
The horses bolted and ran. The
beast was beyond our reach. It was only then that I realized what the bright
flash and the tinkling had represented. The thing was tethered, by means of a
long chain running back into the cave. The exact length of its leash was
immediately a question of more than academic interest.
I turned as it passed, hissing,
flapping, and falling, beyond us. It had not possessed sufficient momentum to
obtain true flight in that brief rush upward. I saw that Star and Firedrake
were retreating toward the far end of the oval. Random's mount lago, on the
other hand, had bolted in the direction of the Pattern.
The beast touched ground again,
turned, as if to pursue Iago, appeared to study us once more, and froze. It was
much nearer this time-under four meters-and it cocked its head, showing us its
right eye, then opened its beak and made a soft cawing noise.
What say we rush it now? said Random.
No. Wait. There is something
peculiar about its behavior.
It had dropped its head while I was
speaking, spreading its wings downward. It struck the ground three times with
its beak and looked up again. Then it drew its wings part way back toward its
body. Its tail twitched once, then swing more vigorously from side to side. It
opened its beak and repeated the cawing sound.
At that moment we were distracted.
Iago had entered the Pattern, well
to the side of the darkened area. Five or six meters into it, standing
obliquely across the lines of power, he was caught near one of the Veil points
like an insect on a piece of flypaper. He cried loudly as the sparks came up
about him and his mane rose and stood erect.
Immediately, the sky began to
darken directly overhead. But it was no cloud of water vapor which had begun to
coalesce. Rather, it was a perfectly circular formation which had appeared, red
at the center, yellow nearer the edges, turning in a clockwise direction. A
sound like a single bell chime followed by the growl of a bull-roarer suddenly
came to our ears.
Iago continued his struggles, first
freeing his right front foot, then entangling it again as he freed the left,
neighing wildly the while. The sparks were up to his shoulders by then, and he
shook them like raindrops from his body and neck, his entire form taking on a
soft, buttery glow.
The roaring increased in volume and
small lightnings began to play at the heart of the red thing above us. A
rattling noise caught my attention at that moment, and I glanced downward to
discover that the purple griffin had slithered past and moved to interpose
itself between us and the loud red phenomenon. It crouched like a gargoyle,
facing away from us, watching the spectacle.
Just then, lago freed both front
feet and reared. There was something insubstantial about him by then, what with
his brightness and the spark-shot indistinctness of his outline. He might have
neighed at that moment, but all other sounds were submerged by the incessant
roar from above.
A funnel descended from the noisy
formation-bright, flashing, wailing now, and tremendously fast. It touched the
rearing horse, and for a moment his outline expanded enormously, becoming
increasingly tenuous in direct proportion to this effect. And then he was gone.
For a brief interval, the funnel remained stationary, like a perfectly balanced
top. Then the sound began to diminish.
The trunk raised itself, slowly, to
a point but a small distance-perhaps the height of a man-above the Pattern. Then
it snapped upward as quickly as it had descended.
The wailing ceased. The roaring
began to subside. The miniature lightnings faded within the circle. The entire
formation began to pale and slow. A moment later, it was but a bit of darkness;
another moment and it was gone.
No trace of lago remained anywhere
that I could see.
Don't ask me, I said when Random
turned toward me. I don't know either.
He nodded, then directed his
attention toward our purple companion, who was just then rattling his chain.
What about Charlie here? he
asked, fingering his blade.
I had the distinct impression he
was trying to protect us, I said, taking a step forward. Cover me. I want to
try something.
You sure you can move fast
enough? he asked. With that side...
Don't worry, I said, a trifle
more heartily than necessary, and I kept moving.
He was correct about my left side,
where the healing knife wound still ached dully and seemed to exercise a drag
on my movements. But Grayswandir was still in my right hand and this was one of
those occasions when my trust in my instincts was running high. I had relied on
this feeling in the past with good results. There are times when such gambles
just seem to be in order.
Random moved ahead and to the
right. I turned sidewise and extended my left hand as you would in introducing
yourself to a strange dog, slowly. Our heraldic companion had risen from its
crouch and was turning.
It faced us again and studied
Ganelon, off to my left. Then it regarded my hand. It lowered its head and
repeated the ground-striking movement, cawed very softly-a small, bubbling
sound-raised its head and slowly extended it. It wagged its great tail, touched
my fingers with its beak, then repeated the performance. Carefully, I placed my
hand on its head. The wagging increased; its head remained motionless. I
scratched it gently about the neck and it turned its head slowly then, as if
enjoying it. I withdrew my hand and dropped back a pace.
I think we're friends, I said
softly. Now you try it. Random.
Are you kidding?
No, I'm sure you're safe. Try it.
What will you do if you are
wrong?
Apologize.
Great.
He advanced and offered his hand. The
beast remained friendly.
All right, he said half a minute
or so later, still stroking its neck, what have we proved?
That he is a watchdog.
What is he watching?
The Pattern, apparently.
Offhand then, said Random, moving
back, I would say that his work leaves something to be desired. He gestured
at the dark area. Which is understandable, if he is this friendly to anyone
who doesn't eat oats and whinny.
My guess is that he is quite
selective. It is also possible that he was set here after the damage was done,
to defend against further unappreciated activity.
Who set him?
I'd like to know myself. Someone
on our side, apparently.
You can now test your theory
further by letting Ganelon approach him.
Ganelon did not move.
It may be you have a family smell
about you, he finally said, and he only favors Amberites. So I will pass,
thank you.
All right. It is not that
important. Your guesses have been good so far. How do you interpret events?
Of the two factions out for the
throne, he said, that composed of Brand, Fiona, and Bleys was, as you said,
more aware of the nature of the forces that play about Amber. Brand did not
supply you with particulars-unless you omitted some incidents he might have related-but
my guess is that this damage to the Pattern represents the means by which their
allies gained access to your realm. One or more of them did that damage, which
provided the dark route. If the watchdog here responds to a family smell or
some other identifying information you all possess, then he could actually have
been here all along and not seen fit to move against the despoilers.
Possibly, Random observed. Any
idea how it was accomplished?
Perhaps, he replied. I will let
you demonstrate it for me, if you are willing.
What does it involve?
Come this way, he said, turning
and heading over to the edge of the Pattern.
I followed him. Random did the
same. The watchgriffin slunk at my side. Ganelon turned and extended his hand.
Corwin, may I trouble you for that
dagger I fetched us?
Here, I said, drawing it from my
belt and passing it over.
I repeat, what does it involve? Random
inquired.
The blood of Amber, Ganelon
replied.
I am not so sure I like this
idea, Random said.
All you have to do is prick your
finger with it, he said, extending the blade, and let a drop fall upon the
Pattern.
What will happen?
Let's try it and see.
Random looked at me.
What do you say? he asked.
Go ahead. Let's find out. I'm
intrigued.
He nodded.
Okay.
He received the blade from Ganelon
and nicked the tip of his left little finger. He squeezed the finger then,
holding it above the Pattern. A tiny red bead appeared, grew larger, quivered,
fell.
Immediately, a wisp of smoke rose
from the spot where it struck, accompanied by a tiny crackling noise.
I'll be damned! said Random,
apparently fascinated.
A tiny stain had come into being,
gradually spreading to about the size of a half dollar.
There you are, said Ganelon. That
is how it was done.
The stain was indeed a miniature
counterpart of the massive blot further to our right. The watchgrifiin gave
forth a small shriek and drew back, rapidly turning his head from one of us to
the other.
Easy, fellow. Easy, I said,
reaching out and calming him once more.
But what could have caused such a
large Random began, and then he nodded slowly.
What indeed? said Ganelon. I see
no mark to show where your horse was destroyed.
The blood of Amber, Random said. You
are just full of insights today, aren't you?
Ask Corwin to tell you of
Lorraine, the place where I dwelled for so long, he said, the place where the
dark circle grew. I am alert to the effects of those powers, though I knew them
then only at a distance. These matters have become clearer to me with each new
thing I have learned from you. Yes, I have insights now that I know more of
these workings. Ask Corwin of the mind of his general.
Corwin, Random said, give me the
pierced Trump.
I withdrew it from my pocket and
smoothed it. The stains seemed more ominous now. Another thing also struck me.
I did not believe that it had been executed by Dworkin, sage, mage, artist, and
one-time mentor to the children of Oberon. It had not occurred to me until that
moment that anyone else might be capable of producing one. While the style of
this one did seem somehow familiar, it was not his work. Where had I seen that
deliberate line before, less spontaneous than the master's, as though every movement
had been totally intellectualized before the pen touched the paper? And there
was something else wrong with it-a quality of idealization of a different order
from that of our own Trumps, almost as if the artist had been working with old
memories, glimpses, or descriptions rather than a living subject.
The Trump, Corwin. If you please,
Random said.
There was that about the way in
which he said it to make me hesitate. It gave rise to the feeling that he was
somehow a jump ahead of me on something important, a feeling which I did not
like at all.
I've petted old ugly here for you,
and I've just bled for the cause, Corwin. Now let's have it.
I handed it over, my uneasiness
increasing as he held it in his hand and furrowed his brow. Why was I suddenly
the stupid one? Does a night in Tir-na Nog'th slow cerebration? Why
Random began to curse, a string of
profanities unsurpassed by anything encountered in my long military career.
Then, What is it? I said. I
don't understand.
The blood of Amber, he finally
said. Whoever did it walked the Pattern first, you see. Then they stood there
at the center and contacted him via this Trump. When he responded and a firm
contact was achieved, they stabbed him. His blood flowed upon the Pattern,
obliterating that part of it, as mine did here.
He was silent for the space of
several deep breaths.
It smacks of a ritual, I said.
Damn rituals! he said. Damn all
of them! One of them is going to die, Corwin. I am going to kill him-or her.
I still do not
I am a fool, he said, for not
seeing it right away. Look! Look closely!
He thrust the pierced Trump at me. I
stared. I still did not see.
Now look at me! he said. See
me!
I did. Then I looked back at the
card. I realized what he meant.
I was never anything to him but a
whisper of life in the darkness. But they used my son for this, he said.
That has to be a picture of
Martin.
CHAPTER 2
Standing there beside the broken
Pattern, regarding a picture of the man who may or may not have been Random's
son, who may or may not have died of a knife wound received from a point within
the Pattern, I turned and took a giant step back within my mind for an instant
replay of the events which had brought me to this point of peculiar revelation.
I had learned so many new things recently that the occurrences of the past few
years seemed almost to constitute a different story than they had while I was
living them. Now this new possibility and a number of things it implied had
just shifted the perspective again.
I had not even been aware of my
name when I had awakened in Greenwood, that private hospital in upstate New
York where I had spent two totally blank weeks subsequent to my accident. It
was only recently that I had been told that the accident itself had been
engineered by my brother Bleys, immediately following my escape from the Porter
Sanitarium in Albany. I got this story from my brother Brand, who had
railroaded me into Porter in the first place, by means of fake psychiatric
evidence. At Porter, I had been subjected to electroshock therapy over the span
of several days, results ambiguous but presumably involving the return of a few
memories. Apparently, this was what had scared Bleys into making the attempt on
my life at the time of my escape, shooting out a couple of my tires on a curve
above a lake. This doubtless would have resulted in my death, had Brand not
been a step behind Bleys and out to protect his insurance investment, me. He
said he had gotten word to the cops, dragged me out of the lake, and
administered first aid until help arrived. Shortly after that, he was captured
by his former partners-Bleys and our sister Fiona-who confined him in a guarded
tower in a distant place in Shadow.
There had been two cabals, plotting
and counterplotting after the throne, treading on one another's heels,
breathing down one another's necks, and doing anything else to one another that
might suggest itself at that range. Our brother Eric, backed by brothers Julian
and Caine, had been preparing to take the throne, long left vacant by the
unexplained absence of our father, Oberon. Unexplained to Eric, Julian, and
Caine, that is. To the other group, consisting of Bleys, Fiona,
and-formerly-Brand, it was not unexplained because they were responsible for
it. They had arranged for this state of affairs to come into being in order to
open the way for Bleys's accession to the throne. But Brand had committed a
tactical error in attempting to obtain Caine's assistance in their play for the
throne, in that Caine decided a better deal obtained in upholding Eric's part. This
left Brand under close scrutiny, but did not immediately result in the betrayal
of his partners' identities. At about that time, Bleys and Fiona decided to
employ their secret allies against Eric. Brand had demurred in this, fearing
the strength of those forces, and as a result had been rejected by Bleys and
Fiona. With everyone on his back then, he had sought to upset the balance of
powers completely by journeying to the shadow Earth where Eric had left me to
die centuries before. It was only later that Eric had learned that I had not
died but was possessed of total amnesia, which was almost as good, had set
sister Flora to watch over my exile, and hoped that that was the last of it. Brand
later told me he had gotten me committed to Porter in a desperate move to
restore my memory as a preliminary to my return to Amber.
While Fiona and Bleys had been
dealing with Brand, Eric had been in touch with Flora. She had arranged for my
transfer to Greenwood from the clinic to which the police had taken me, with
instructions to keep me narcotized, while Eric began arrangements for his
coronation in Amber. Shortly thereafter, our brother Random's idyllic existence
in Texorami was broken when Brand managed to send him a message outside the
normal family channels-i. e., the Trumps-requesting deliverance. While Random,
who was blissfully nonpartisan in the power struggle, was about this business,
I managed to deliver myself from Greenwood, still relatively unmemoried. Having
obtained Flora's address from Greenwood's frightened director, I betook myself
to her place in Westchester, engaged in some elaborate bluffing, and moved in
as a house guest. Random, in the meantime, had been less than successful in his
attempt to rescue Brand. Slaying the snaky warden of the tower, he had had to
flee its inner guards, utilizing one of the region's strangely mobile rocks. The
guards, a hardy band of not quite human guys, had succeeded in pursuing him
through Shadow, however, a feat normally impossible for most nonAmberites. Random
had fled then to the shadow Earth where I was guiding Flora along the paths of
misunderstanding while attempting to locate the proper route to enlightenment
as to my own circumstances. Crossing the continent in response to my assurance
that he would be under my protection. Random had come believing that his
pursuers were my own creatures. When I helped him destroy them he was puzzled
but unwilling to raise the issue while I seemed engaged in some private
maneuver throneward. In fact, he had easily been tricked into conveying me back
to Amber through Shadow.
This venture had proved beneficial
in some respects while much less satisfactory in others. When I had finally
revealed the true state of my personal situation, Random and our sister
Deirdre, whom we had encountered along the way, conducted me to Amber's mirror
city within the sea, Rebma. There I had walked the image of the Pattern and
recovered the bulk of my memories as a result-thereby also settling the issue
as to whether I was the real Corwin or merely one of his shadows. From Rebma I
had traveled into Amber, utilizing the power of the Pattern to effect an instantaneous
journey home. After fighting an inconclusive duel with Eric, I had fled via the
Trumps into the keeping of my beloved brother and would-be assassin, Bleys.
I joined with Bleys in an attack on
Amber, a mismanaged affair which we had lost. Bleys vanished during the final
engagement, under circumstances which looked likely to prove fatal but, the
more that I learned and thought about it, probably had not. This left me to
become Eric's prisoner and an unwilling party to his coronation, after which he
had had me blinded and locked away. A few years in the dungeons of Amber had
seen a regeneration of my eyes, in direct proportion to the deterioration of my
state of mind. It was only the accidental appearance of Dad's old adviser
Dworkin, worse off mentally than myself, which had led to a way of escape.
After that, I set about recovering
and I resolved to be more prudent the next time I went after Eric. I journeyed
through Shadow toward an old land where I had once reigned-Avalon-with plans to
obtain there a substance of which I alone among Amberites was aware, a chemical
unique in its ability to undergo detonation in Amber. En route, I had passed
through the land of Lorraine, there encountering my old exiled Avalonian
general Ganelon, or someone very much like him. I remained because of a wounded
knight, a girl, and a local menace peculiarly similar to a thing occurring in
the vicinity of Amber herself-a growing black circle somehow related to the
black road our enemies traveled, a thing for which I held myself partly
responsible because of a curse I had pronounced at the time of my blinding. I
won the battle, lost the girl, and traveled on to Avalon with Ganelon.
The Avalon we reached, we quickly
learned, was under the protection of my brother Benedict, who had been having
troubles of his own with a situation possibly akin to the black circle/black
road menaces. Benedict had lost his right arm in the final engagement, but had
been victorious in his battle with the hellmaids. He had warned me to keep my intentions
toward Amber and Eric pure, and had then allowed us the hospitality of his
manor while he remained for a few days more in the field. It was at his place
that I met Dara.
Dara told me she was Benedict's
great-granddaughter, whose existence had been kept secret from Amber. She drew
me out as far as she could on Amber, the Pattern, the Trumps, and our ability
to walk in Shadow. She was also an extremely skilled fencer. We indulged in a
bit of casual lovemaking on my return from a hellride to a place where I
obtained a sufficient quantity of rough diamonds to pay for the things I was
going to need for my assault on Amber. The following day, Ganelon and I picked
up our supply of the necessary chemicals and departed for the shadow Earth
where I had spent my exile, there to obtain automatic weapons and ammunition
manufactured to my specifications.
En route, we had some difficulties
along the black road, which seemed to have extended its scope of influence
among the worlds of Shadow. We were equal to the troubles it presented, but I
almost perished in a duel with Benedict, who had pursued us through a wild
hellride. Too angry for argument, he had fought me through a small wood-still a
better man than I, even wielding his blade left-handed. I had only managed to
best him by means of a trick involving a property of the black road of which he
was unaware. I had been convinced that he wanted my blood because of the affair
with Dara. But no. In the few words that passed between us he denied any
knowledge of the existence of such a person. Instead, he had come after us
convinced that I had murdered his servants. Now, Ganelon had indeed located
some fresh corpses in the wood at Benedict's place, but we had agreed to forget
about them, having no idea as to their identities and no desire to complicate
our existence any further.
Leaving Benedict in the care of
brother Gerard, whom I had summoned via his Trump from Amber, Ganelon and I
proceeded to the shadow Earth, armed ourselves, recruited a strike force in
Shadow, and headed off to attack Amber. But upon our arrival we discovered that
Amber was already under attack by creatures which had come in along the black
road. My new weapons quickly turned the tide in Amber's favor, and my brother
Eric died in that battle, leaving me his problems, his ill will, and the Jewel
of Judgment-a weather-controlling weapon he had used against me when Bleys and
I had attacked Amber.
At that point, Dara showed up,
swept on by us, rode into Amber, found her way to the Pattern, and proceeded to
walk it-prima-facie evidence that we were indeed somehow related. During the
course of this ordeal, however, she had exhibited what appeared to be peculiar
physical transformations. Upon completion of the Pattern, she announced that
Amber would be destroyed. Then she had vanished.
About a week later, brother Caine
was murdered, under conditions arranged to show me as the culprit. The fact
that I had slain his slayer was hardly satisfactory evidence of my innocence,
in that the guy was necessarily in no condition to talk about it. Realizing,
however, that I had seen his like before, in the persons of those creatures who
had pursued Random into Flora's home, I finally found time to sit down with
Random and hear the story of his unsuccessful attempt to rescue Brand from his
tower.
Random, subsequent to my leaving
him in Rebma years before, when I had journeyed to Amber to fight my duel with
Eric, had been forced by Rebma's queen, Moire, to marry a woman of her court:
Vialle, a lovely blind girl. This was partly intended as a punishment for
Random, who years before had left Moire's late daughter Morganthe pregnant with
Martin, the apparent subject of the damaged Trump Random now held in his hands.
Strangely, for Random, he appeared to have fallen in love with Vialle, and he
now resided legendary unicorn of Amber.
After I left Random, I fetched the
Jewel of Judgment and took it down to the chamber of the Pattern. There, I
followed the partial instructions I had received for purposes of attuning it to
my use. I underwent some unusual sensations during the process and was
successful in obtaining control of its most obvious function: the ability to
direct meteorological phenomena. After that, I questioned Flora concerning my
exile. Her story seemed reasonable and jibed with those facts I did possess,
although I had the feeling she was holding back somewhat on events at the time
of my accident. She did promise to identify Caine's slayer as one of the same
sort as those individuals Random and I had fought at her home in Westchester,
however, and she assured me of her support in anything I might currently be
about.
At the time I had heard Random's
story, I was still unaware of the two factions and their machinations. I
decided then that if Brand were still living, his rescue was of first
importance, if for no other reason than the fact that he obviously possessed
information that someone did not want circulated. I hit on a scheme for
achieving this, the trial of which was only postponed for the time required by
Gerard and myself for returning Caine's body to Amber. Part of this time,
however, was appropriated by Gerard for purposes of beating me unconscious,
just in case I had forgotten he was capable of the feat, to add weight to his
words when he informed me that he would personally kill me should it turn out
that I was the author of Amber's present woes. It was the most exclusive closed
circuit fight I knew of, viewed by the family via Gerard's Trump-an act of
insurance should I actually be the culprit and have a mind to erase his name
from the list of the living because of his threat. We journeyed on to the Grove
of the Unicorn then and exhumed Caine. At that time, we actually caught a brief
glimpse of the legendary unicorm of Amber.
That evening we met in the library
of the palace in Amber-we being Random, Gerard, Benedict, Julian, Deirdre,
Fiona, Flora, Llewella, and myself. There, we tested my idea for finding Brand.
It amounted to all nine of us simultaneously attempting to reach him via his
Trump. And we succeeded.
We contacted him and were
successful in transporting him back to Amber. In the midst of the excitement,
however, with all of us crowded about as Gerard bore him through, someone
planted a dagger in Brand's side. Gerard immediately elected himself attending physician
and cleared the room.
The rest of us moved to a
downstairs sitting room, there to backbite and discuss events. During this
time, Fiona advised me that the Jewel of Judgment might represent a hazard in
situations of prolonged exposure, suggesting the possibilty that it, rather
than his wounds, might have been the cause of Eric's death. One of the first
signs, she believed, was a distortion of one's time-sense-an apparent slowdown
of temporal sequence, actually representing a speed-up of physiological events.
I resolved to be more cautious with it, in that she was more conversant with
these matters than the rest of us, having once been an advanced pupil of
Dworkin's.
And perhaps she was correct. Perhaps
there was such an effect in operation later that evening when I returned to my
own quarters. At least, it seemed as if the person who attempted to kill me was
moving a trifle more slowly than I would have myself under similar
circumstances. At that, the stroke was almost successful. The blade caught me
in the side and the world went away.
Leaking life, I awoke in my old bed
in my old home on the shadow Earth where I had dwelled for so long as Carl
Corey. How I had been returned, I had no idea. I crawled outside and into a
blizzard. Clinging precariously to consciousness, I cached the Jewel of
Judgment in my old compost heap, for the world did indeed seem to be slowing
down about me. Then I made it to the road, to try flagging down a passing
motorist.
It was a friend and former
neighbor. Bill Roth, who found me there and drove me to the nearest clinic. There,
I was treated by the same doctor who had attended me years before, at the time
of my accident. He suspected I might be a psychiatric case, as the old record
did reflect that faked state of affairs.
Bill showed up later, however, and
set a number of things right. An attorney, he had grown curious at the time of
my disappearance and done some investigating. He had learned about my fake
certification and my successive escapes. He even possessed details on these
matters and on the accident itself. He still felt there was something strange
about me, but it did not really bother him that much.
Later, Random contacted me via my
Trump and advised me that Brand had come around and was asking for me. With
Random's assistance, I returned to Amber. I went to see Brand. It was then that
I learned of the nature of the power struggle which had been going on about me,
and the identities of the participants. His story, together with what Bill had
told me back on the shadow Earth, finally brought some sense and coherence to
occurrences of the past several years. He also told me more concerning the
nature of the danger we currently faced.
I did nothing the following day,
ostensibly for purposes of preparing myself for a visit to Tir-na Nog'th,
actually to buy additional time in which to recover from my injury. This
commitment made, however, it had to be kept. I did journey to the city in the
sky that night, encountering a confusing collection of signs and portents,
signifying perhaps nothing, and collecting a peculiar mechanical arm from the
ghost of my brother Benedict while I was about it.
Returned from this excursion on
high, I breakfasted with Random and Ganelon before setting out across Kolvir to
return home. Slowly, bewilderingly, the trail began to change about us. It was
as though we were walking in Shadow, a well-nigh impossible feat this near to
Amber. When we reached this conclusion, we tried to alter our course, but
neither Random nor I was able to affect the changing scene. About that time,
the unicorn put in an appearance. It seemed to want us to follow it. We did.
It had led us through a
kaleidoscopic series of changes, until finally we arrived at this pace, where
it abandoned us to our present devices.
Now, with this entire sequence of
events tumbling through my head, my mind moved about the peripheries, pushed
its way forward, returned to the words Random had just spoken. I felt that I
was slightly ahead of him once more. For how long this state of affairs might
last, I did not know, but I realized where I had seen work by the same hand
which had executed the pierced Trump.
Brand had often painted when he was
entering one of his melancholy periods, and his favorite techniques came to
mind as I recalled canvas after canvas he had brightened or darkened. Add to
this his campaign of years before to obtain recollections and descriptions from
everyone who had known Martin. While Random had not recognized his style, I
wondered how long it might be before he began thinking as I just had about the
possible ends of Brand's information gathering. Even if his hand had not
actually propelled the blade, Brand was party to the act by providing the
means. I knew Random well enough to know that he meant what he had said. He
would try to kill Brand as soon as he saw the connection. This was going to be
more than awkward.
It had nothing to do with the fact
that Brand had probably saved my life. I figured I had squared accounts with
him by getting him out of that damned tower. No. It was neither indebtedness
nor sentiment that caused me to cast about for ways to mislead Random or slow
him down. It was the naked, frigid fact that I needed Brand. He had seen to
that. My reason for saving him was no more altruistic than his had been in
dragging me out of the lake. He possessed something I needed now: information.
He had realized this immediately and he was rationing it-his life's union dues.
I do see the resemblance, I said
to Random, and you may well be right about what happened.
Of course I am right.
It is the card that was pierced,
I said.
Obviously. I don't
He was not brought through on the
Trump, then. The person who did it therefore made contact, but was unable to
persuade him to come across.
So? The contact had progressed to
a point of sufficient solidity and proximity that he was able to stab him
anyway. He was probably even able to achieve a mental lock and hold him where
he was while he bled. The kid probably hadn't had much experience with the
Trumps.
Maybe yes, maybe no, I said. Llewella
or Moire might be able to tell us how much he knew about the Trumps. But what I
was getting at was the possibility that contact could have been broken before
death. If he inherited your regenerative abilities he might have survived.
Might have? I don't want guesses! I
want answers!
I commenced a balancing act within my
mind. I believed I knew something that he did not, but then my source was not
the best. Also, I wanted to keep quiet about the possibility because I had not
had a chance to discuss it with Benedict. On the other hand, Martin was
Random's son, and I did want to direct his attention away from Brand.
Random, I may have something, I
said.
What?
Right after Brand was stabbed, I
said, when we were talking together in the sitting room, do you remember when
the conversation turned to the subject of Martin?
Yes. Nothing new came up.
I had something I might have added
at that time, but I restrained myself because everyone was there. Also, because
I wanted to pursue it in private with the party concerned.
Who?
Benedict.
Benedict? What has he to do with
Martin?
I do not know. That is why I
wanted to keep it quiet until I found out. And my source of information was a
touchy one, at that
Go ahead.
Dara. Benedict gets mad as hell
whenever I mention her name, but so far a number of things she told me have
proved correct-things like the journey of Julian and Gerard along the black
road, their injury, their stay in Avalon. Benedict admitted these things had
happened.
What did she say about Martin?
Indeed. How to phrase it without
giving away the show on Brand ..? Dara had said that Brand had visited Benedict
a number of times in Avalon, over a span of years. The time differential
between Amber and Avalon is such that it seemed likely, now that I thought
about it, that the visits fell into the period when Brand was so actively
seeking information on Martin. I had wondered what kept drawing him back there,
since he and Benedict had never been especially chummy.
Only that Benedict had had a
vistor named Martin, whom she thought was from Amber, I lied.
When?
Some while back. I'm not sure.
Why didn't you tell me this
before?
It is not really very much-and
besides, you had never seemed especially interested in Martin.
Random shifted his gaze to the
griffin, crouched and gurgling on my right, then nodded.
I am now, he said. Things
change. If he is still alive, I would like to get to know him. If he is not...
Okay, I said. The best way to be
about either one is to start figuring a way to get home. I believe we have seen
what we were supposed to see and I would like to clear out.
I was thinking about that, he
said, and it occurred to me that we could probably use this Pattern for that
purpose. Just head out to the center and transfer back.
Going in along the dark area? I
asked.
Why not? Ganelon has already tried
it and he's okay.
A moment, said Ganelon. I did
not say that it was easy, and I am positive you could not get the horses to go
that route.
What do you mean? I said.
Do you remember that place where
we crossed the black road-back when we were fleeing Avalon?
Of course.
Well, the sensations I experienced
in retrieving the card and the dagger were not unlike the upset that came over
us at that time. It is one of the reasons I was running so fast. I would favor
trying the Trumps again first, under the theory that this point is congruent
with Amber.
I nodded.
All right. We might as well try
making it as easy as we can. Let's collect the horses first.
We did this, learning the length of
the griffin's leash while we were about it. He was drawn up short about thirty
meters from the cave mouth, and immediately set up a bieating complaint. This
did not make the job of pacifying the horses any easier, but it did give rise
to a peculiar notion which I decided to keep to myself.
Once we had things under control. Random
located his Trumps and I brought out my own.
Let's try for Benedict, he said.
All right. Any time now.
I noticed immediately that the
cards felt cold again, a good sign. I shuffled out Benedict's and began the
preliminaries. Beside me, Random did the same. Contact came almost at once.
What is the occasion? Benedict
asked, his eyes moving over Random, Ganelon, and the horses, then meeting with
my own.
Will you bring us throngh? I
said.
Horses, too?
The works.
Come ahead.
He extended his hand and I touched
it. We all moved toward him. Moments later, we stood with him in a high, rocky
place, a chill wind ruffling our garments, the sun of Amber past midday in a
sky full of clouds. Benedict wore a stiff leather jacket and buckskin leggings.
His shirt was a faded yellow. An orange cloak concealed the stump of his right
arm. He tightened his long jaw and peered down at me.
Interesting spot you hie from, he
said. I glimpsed something of the background.
I nodded.
Interesting view from this height,
also, I said, noting the spyglass at his belt at the same time that I realized
we stood on the wide ledge of rock from which Eric had commanded battle on the
day of his death and my return. I moved to regard the dark swath through
Garnath, far below and stretching off to the horizon.
Yes, he said. The black road
appears to have stabilized its boundaries at most points. At a few others
though, it is still widening. It is almost as if it is nearing a final
conformity with some-pattern... Now tell me, from what point have you
journeyed?
I spent last night in Tir-na
Nog'th, I said, and this morning we went astray in crossing Kolvir.
Not an easy thing to do, he said.
Getting lost on your own mountain. You keep heading east, you know. That is
the direction from which the sun has been known to take its course.
I felt my face flush.
There was an accident, I said,
looking away. We lost a horse.
What sort of accident?
A serious one-for the horse.
Benedict, said Random, suddenly
looking up from what I realized to be the pierced Trump, what can you tell me
concerning my son Martin?
Benedict studied him for several
moments before he spoke. Then, Why the sudden interest? he asked.
Because I have reason to believe
he may be dead, he said. If that is the case, I want to avenge it. If it is
not the case-well, the thought that it might be has caused me some upset. If he
is still living, I would like to meet him and talk with him.
What makes you think he might be
dead?
Random glanced at me. I nodded.
Start with breakfast, I said.
While he is doing that, I'll find
us lunch, said Ganelon, rummaging in one of the bags.
The unicorn showed us the way... Random
began.
CHAPTER 3
We sat in silence. Random had
finished speaking and Benedict was staring skyward over Gamath. His face
betrayed nothing. I had long ago learned to respect his silence.
At length, he nodded, once,
sharply, and turned to regard Random.
I have long suspected something of
this order, he stated, from things that Dad and Dworkin let fall over the
years. I had the impression there was a primal Pattern which they had either
located or created, situating our Amber but a shadow away to draw upon its
forces. I never obtained any notion as to how one might travel to that place,
however. He turned back toward Gamath, gesturing with his chin. And that, you
tell me, corresponds to what was done there?
It seems to, Random replied.
...Brought about by the shedding
of Martin's blood?
I think so
Benedict raised the Trump Random
had passed him during his narration. At that time, Benedict had made no
comment.
Yes, he said now, this is
Martin. He came to me after he departed Rebma. He stayed with me a long while
Why did he go to you? Random
asked.
Benedict smiled faintly.
He had to go somewhere, you know,
he said. He was sick of his position in Rebma, ambivalent toward Amber, young,
free, and just come into his power through the Pattern. He wanted to get away,
see new things, travel in Shadow-as we all did. I had taken him to Avalon once
when he was a small boy, to let him walk on dry land of a summer, to teach him
to ride a horse, to have him see a crop harvested. When he was suddenly in a
position to go anywhere he would in an instant, his choices were still
restricted to the few places of which he had knowledge. True, he might have dreamed
up a place in that instant and gone there-creating it, as it were. But he was
also aware that he still had many things to learn, to ensure his safety in
Shadow. So he elected to come to me, to ask me to teach him. And I did. He
spent the better part of a year at my place. I taught him to fight, taught him
of the ways of the Trumps and of Shadow, instructed him in those things an
Amberite must know if he is to survive.
Why did you do all these things? Random
asked.
Someone had to. It was me that he
came to, so it was mine to do, Benedict replied. It was not as if I were not
very fond of the boy, though, he added. Random nodded.
You say that he was with you for
almost a year. What became of him after that?
That wanderlust you know as well
as I. Once he had obtained some confidence in his abilities, he wanted to
exercise them. In the course of instructing him, I had taken him on journeys in
Shadow myself, had introduced him to people of my acquaintance at various
places. But there came a time when he wanted to make his own way. One day then,
he bade me good-by and fared forth.
Have you seen him since? Random
asked.
Yes. He returned periodically,
staying with me for a time, to tell me of his adventures, his discoveries. It
was always clear that it was just a visit. After a time, he would get restless
and depart again.
When was the last time you saw
him?
Several years ago, Avalon time,
under the usual circumstances. He showed up one morning, stayed for perhaps two
weeks, told me of the things he had seen and done, talked of the many things he
wanted to do. Later, he set off once more.
And you never heard from him
again?
On the contrary. There were
messages left with mutual friends when he would pass their way. Occasionally,
he would even contact me via my Trump
He had a set of the Trumps? I
broke in.
Yes, I made him a gift of one of
my extra decks.
Did you have a Trump for him? He
shook his head.
I was not even aware that such a
Trump existed, until I saw this one, he said, raising the card, glancing at
it, and passing it back to Random. I haven't the art to prepare one. Random,
have you tried reaching him with this Trump?
Yes, any number of times since we
came across it. Just a few minutes ago, as a matter of fact. Nothing.
Of course that proves nothing. If
everything occurred as you guessed and he did survive it, he may have resolved
to block any future attempts at contact. He does know how to do that.
Did it occur as I guessed? Do you
know more about it?
I have an idea, Benedict said. You
see, he did show up injured at a friend's place-off in Shadow some years ago. It
was a body wound, caused by the thrust of a blade. They said he came to them in
very bad shape and did not go into details as to what had occurred. He remained
for a few days-until he was able to get around again-and departed before he was
really fully recovered. That was the last they heard of him. The last that I
did, also.
Weren't you curious? Random
asked. Didn't you go looking for him?
Of course I was curious. I still
am. But a man should have the right to lead his own life without the meddling
of relatives, no matter how well-intentioned. He had pulled through the crisis
and he did not attempt to contact me. He apparently knew what he wanted to do.
He did leave a message for me with the Tecys, saying that when I learned of
what had happened I was not to worry, that he knew what he was about.
The Tecys? I said.
That's right. Friends of mine off
in Shadow.
I refrained from saying the things
that I might. I had thought them just another part of Dara's story, for she had
so twisted the truth in other areas. She had mentioned the Tecys to me as if
she knew them, as if she had stayed with them-all with Benedict's knowledge. The
moment did not seem appropriate, however, to tell him of my previous night's
vision in Tir-na Nog'th and the things it had indicated concerning his
relationship to the girl. I had not yet had sufficient time to ponder the
matter and all that it implied.
Random stood, paced, paused near
the ledge, his back to us, fingers knotted behind him. After a moment, he
turned and stalked back.
How can we get in touch with the
Tecys? he asked Benedict.
No way, said Benedict, except to
go and see them.
Random turned to me.
Corwin, I need a horse. You say
that Star's been through a number of hellrides...
He's had a busy morning.
It wasn't that strenuous. It was
mostly fright, and he seems okay now. May I borrow him?
Before I could answer, he turned
toward Benedict.
You'll take me, won't you? he
said.
Benedict hesitated.
I do not know what more there is
to learn he began.
Anything! Anything at all they
might remember-possibly something that did not really seem important at the
time but is now, knowing what we know.
Benedict looked to me. I nodded.
He can ride Star, if you are
willing to take him.
All right, Benedict said, getting
to his feet. I'll fetch my mount.
He turned and headed off toward the
place where the great striped beast was tethered.
Thanks, Corwin, Random said.
I'll let you do me a favor in
return.
What?
Let me borrow Martin's Trump.
What for?
An idea just hit me. It is too
complicated to get into if you want to get moving. No harm should come of it,
though.
He chewed his lip.
Okay. I want it back when you are
done with it.
Of course.
Will it help find him?
Maybe.
He passed me the card.
You heading back to the palace
now? he asked.
Yes.
Would you tell Vialle what has
happened and where I have gone? She worries.
Sure. I'll do that.
I'll take good care of Star.
I know that. Good luck.
Thanks.
I rode Firedrake. Ganelon walked. He
had insisted. We followed the route I had taken in pursuing Dara on the day of
the battle. Along with recent developments, that is probably what made me think
of her again. I dusted off my feelings and examined them carefully. I realized
then that despite the games she had played with me, the killings she had
doubtless been privy or party to, and her stated designs upon the realm, I was
still attracted to her by something more than curiosity. I was not really
surprised to discover this. Things had looked pretty much the same the last
time I had pulled a surprise inspection in the emotional barracks. I wondered
then how much of truth there might have been to my final vision of the previous
night, wherein her possible line of descent from Benedict had been stated. There
was indeed a physical resemblance, and I was more than half-convinced. In the
ghost city, of course, the shade of Benedict had conceded as much, raising his
new, strange arm in her defense...
What's funny? Ganelon asked, from
where he strode to my left.
The arm, I said, that came to me
from Tir-na Nog'th-I had worried over some hidden import, some unforeseen force
of destiny to the thing, coming as it had into our world from that place of mystery
and dream. Yet it did not even last the day. Nothing remained when the Pattern
destroyed lago. The entire evening's visions come to nothing.
Ganelon cleared his throat.
Well, it wasn't exactly the way
you seem to think, he said.
What do you mean?
That arm device was not in Iago's
saddlebag. Random stowed it in your bag. That's where the food was, and after
we had eaten he returned the utensils to where they had been in his own bag,
but not the arm. There was no space.
Oh, I said. Then
Ganelon nodded. -So he has it with
him now, he finished.
The arm and Benedict both. Damn!
I've small liking for that thing. It tried to kill me. No one has ever been
attacked in Tir-na Nog'th before.
But Benedict, Benedict's okay.
He's on our side, even if you have some differences at the moment. Right?
I did not answer him.
He reached up and took Firedrake's
reins, drawing him to a halt. He stared up then, studying my face.
Corwin, what happened up there,
anyway? What did you learn?
I hesitated. In truth, what had I
learned in the city in the sky? No one was certain as to the mechanism behind
the visions of Tir-na Nog'th. It could well be, as we have sometimes suspected,
that the place simply served to objectify one's unspoken fears and desires,
mixing them perhaps with unconscious guesswork. Sharing conclusions and
reasonably based conjectures was one thing. Suspicions engendered by something
unknown were likely better retained than given currency. Still, that arm was
solid enough...
I told you, I said, that I had
knocked that arm off the ghost of Benedict. Obviously, we were fighting.
You see it then as an omen that
you and Benedict will eventually be in conflict?
Perhaps.
You were shown a reason for it,
weren't you?
Okay, I said, finding a sigh
without trying.
Yes. It was indicated that Dara
was indeed related to Benedict-a thing which may well be correct. It is also
quite possible, if it is true, that he is unaware of it. Therefore, we keep
quiet about it until we can verify it or discount it. Understood?
Of course. But how could this
thing be?
Just as she said.
Great-granddaughter?
I nodded.
By whom?
The hellmaid we knew only by
reputation-Lintra, the lady who cost him his arm.
But that battle was only a recent
thing.
Time flows differently in
different realms of Shadow, Ganelon. In the farther reaches-It would not be
impossible.
He shook his head and relaxed his
grip on the reins.
Corwin, I really think Benedict
should know aboat this, he said. If it is true, you ought to give him a
chance to prepare himself rather than let him discover it of a sudden. You
people are such an infertile lot that paternity seems to hit you harder than it
does others. Look at Random. For years, he had disowned his son, and now-I've a
feeling he'd risk his life for him.
So do I, I said. Now forget the
first part but carry the second one a step farther in the case of Benedict.
You think he would take Dara's
side against Amber?
I would rather avoid presenting
him with the choice by not letting him know that it exists-if it exists.
I think you do him a disservice. He
is hardly an emotional infant. Get hold of him on the Trump and tell him your
suspicions. That way, at least, he can be thinking about it, rather than have
him risk some sudden confrontation unprepared.
He would not believe me. You have
seen how he gets whenever I mention Dara.
That in itself may say something. Possibly
he suspects what might have happened and rejects it so vehemently because he
would have it otherwise.
Right now it would just widen a
rift I am trying to heal.
Your holding back on him now may
serve to rupture it completely when he finds out.
No. I believe I know my brother
better than you do.
He released the reins.
Very well, he said. I hope you
are right.
I did not answer, but started
Firedrake to moving once more. There was an unspoken understanding between us
that Ganelon could ask me anything he wanted, and it also went without saying
that I would listen to any advice he had to offer me. This was partly because
his position was unique. We were not related. He was no Amberite. The struggles
and problems of Amber were his only by choice. We had been friends and then
enemies long ago, and finally, more recently, friends again and allies in a
battle in his adopted land. That matter concluded, he had asked to come with
me, to help me deal with my own affairs and those of Amber. As I saw it, he
owed me nothing now, nor I him-if one keeps a scoreboard tally on such matters.
Therefore, it was friendship alone that bound us, a stronger thing than bygone
debts and points of honor: in other words, a thing which gave him the right to
bug me on matters such as this, where I might have told even Random to go to
hell once I had made up my mind. I realized I should not be irritated when
everything that he said was tendered in good faith. Most likely it was an old
military feeling, going back to our earliest relationship as well as being tied
in with the present state of affairs: I do not like having my decisions and
orders questioned. Probably, I decided, I was irritated even more by the fact
that he had made some shrewd guesses of late, and some fairly sound suggestions
based upon them-things I felt I ought to have caught myself. No one likes to
admit to a resentment based on something like that. Still ...was that all? A
simple projection of dissatisfaction over a few instances of personal
inadequacy? An old army reflex as to the sanctity of my decisions? Or was it
something deeper that had been bothering me and was just now coming to the
surface?
Corwin, Ganelon said, I've been
doing some thinking...
I sighed.
Yes?
...about Random's son. The way
your crowd heals, I suppose it is possible that he might have survived and
still be about.
I would like to think so.
Do not be too hasty.
What do you mean?
I gather he had very little
contact with Amber and the rest of the family, growing up in Rebma the way that
he did.
That is the way I understand it,
too.
In fact, outside of Benedict-and
Llewella, back in Rebma-the only other one he apparently had contact with would
have been the one who stabbed him-Bleys, Brand, or Fiona. It has occurred to me
that he probably has a pretty distorted view of the family.
Distorted, I said, but maybe not
unwarranted, if I see what you are getting at.
I think you do. It seems
conceivable that he is not only afraid of the family, but may have it in for
the lot of you.
It is possible, I said.
Do you think he could have thrown
in with the enemy?
I shook my head.
Not if he knows they are the tools
of the crowd that tried to kill him.
But are they? I wonder ..? You say
Brand got scared and tried to back out of whatever arrangement they had with
the black road gang. If they are that strong, I wonder whether Fiona and Bleys
might not have become their tools? If this were the case, I could see Martin
angling for something which gave him power over them.
Too elaborate a structure of
guesses, I said.
The enemy seems to know a lot
about you.
True, but they had a couple
traitors to give them lessons.
Could they have given them
everything you say Dara knew?
That is a good point, I said,
but it is hard to say.
Except for the business about the
Tecys, which occurred to me immediately. I decided to keep that to myself for
the moment though, to find out what he was leading up to, rather than going off
on a tangent. So, Martin was hardly in a position to tell them much about
Amber, I said.
Ganelon was silent for a moment. Then,
Have you had a chance to check on the business I asked you about that night at
your tomb? he said.
What business?
Whether the Trumps could be
bugged, he said. Now that we know Martin had a deck...
It was my turn to be silent while a
small family of moments crossed my path, single file, from the left, sticking
their tongues out at me.
No, I said then. I haven't had a
chance.
We proceeded on for quite a
distance before he said, Corwin, the night you brought Brand back..?
Yes?
You say you accounted for everyone
later, in trying to figure out who it was that stabbed you, and that any of
them would have been hard put to pull the stunt in the time involved.
Oh, I said, and oh.
He nodded.
Now you have another relative to
think about. He may lack the family finesse only because he is young and
unpracticed.
Sitting there in my mind, I
gestured back at the silent parade of moments that crossed between Amber and
then.
CHAPTER 4
She asked who it was when I knocked
and I told her.
Just a moment
I heard her footsteps and then the
door swung in. Vialle is only a little over five feet tall and quite slim. Brunette,
fine-featured, very soft-spoken. She was wearing red. Her sightless eyes looked
through me, reminding me of darkness past, of pain.
Random, I said, asked me to tell
you that he would be delayed a little longer, but that there was nothing to worry
about.
Please come in, she said,
stepping aside and drawing the door the rest of the way open.
I did. I did not want to, but I
did. I had not intended to take Random's request literally-that I tell her what
had happened and where he had gone. I had meant simply to tell her what I had
already said, nothing more. It was not until we had ridden our separate ways
that I realized exactly what Random's request had amounted to: He had just
asked me to go tell bis wife, to whom I had never spoken more than half a dozen
words, that he had taken off to go looking for his illegitimate son-the lad
whose mother, Morganthe, had committed suicide, a thing for which Random had
been punished by being forced to marry Vialle. The fact that the marriage had
somehow worked beautifully was something which still amazed me. I had no desire
to dispense a load of awkward tidings, and as I moved into the room I sought
alternatives.
I passed a bust of Random set on a
high shelf on the wall to my left. I had actually gone by before it registered
that my brother was indeed the subject. Across the room, I saw her workbench.
Turning back, I studied the bust.
I did not realize that you sculpted,
I said.
Yes.
Casting my gaze about the
apartment, I quickly located other examples of her work. Quite good, I said.
Thank you. Won't you sit down?
I lowered myself into a large,
high-armed chair, which proved more comfortable than it had looked. She seated
herself on a low divan to my right, curling her legs beneath her.
May I get you something to eat, or
to drink?
No thanks. I can only stay a short
while. What it is, is that Random, Ganelon, and I had gotten a bit sidetracked
on the way home, and after that delay we met with Benedict for a time. The
upshot of it was that Random and Benedict had to make another small journey.
How long will he be away?
Probably overnight. Maybe a bit
longer. If it is going to be much longer he will probably call back on
someone's Trump, and we'll let you know.
My side began to throb and I rested
my hand upon it, massaging it gently.
Random has told me many things
about you, she said.
I chuckled.
Are you certain you would not care
for something to eat? It would be no trouble.
Did he tell you that I am always
hungry?
She laughed.
No. But if you have been as active
as you say, I would guess that you did not take time for lunch.
In that you would be only
half-correct. All right. If you've a spare piece of bread lying about it might
do me some good to gnaw on it.
Fine. Just a moment.
She rose and departed into the next
room. I took the opportunity to scratch heartily all about my wound where it
was suddenly itching fit to kill. I had accepted her hospitality partly for
this reason and partly because of the realization that I actually was hungry. Only
a little later it struck me that she could not have seen me attacking my side
as I was. Her sure movements, her confident manner, had relaxed my awareness of
her blindness. Good. It pleased me that she was able to carry it so well.
I heard her humming a tune: The
Ballad of the Water Crossers, the song of Amber's great merchant navy. Amber
is not noted for manufacture, and agriculture has never been our forte. But our
ships sail the shadows, plying between anywhere and anywhere, dealing in
anything. Just about every male Amberite, noble or otherwise, spends some time
in the fleet. Those of the blood laid down the trade routes long ago that other
vessels might follow, the seas of a double dozen worlds in every captain's
head. I had assisted in this in times gone by, and though my involvement had
never been so deep as Gerard's or Caine's, I had been mightily moved by the
forces of the deep and the spirit of the men who crossed it.
After a while, Vialle came in
bearing a tray heavy with bread, meat, cheese, fruit, and a flask of wine. She
set it upon a table near at hand.
You mean to feed a regiment? I
asked.
Best to be safe.
Thanks. Won't you join me?
A piece of fruit, perhaps, she
said.
Her fingers sought for a second,
located an apple. She returned to the divan.
Random tells me you wrote that
song, she said.
That was a very long time ago,
Vialle.
Have you composed any recently?
I began to shake my head, caught
myself, said, No. That part of me is... resting.
Pity. It is lovely.
Random is the real musician in the
family.
Yes, he is very good. But
performance and composition are two different things.
True. One day when things have
eased up ...Tell me, are you happy here in Amber? Is everything to your liking?
Is there anything that you need?
She smiled. All that I need is
Random. He is a good man.
I was strangely moved to hear her
speak of him in this fashion.
Then I am happy for you, I said. And,
Younger, smaller ...he might have had it a bit rougher than the rest of us, I
went on. Nothing quite as useless as another prince when there is already a
crowd of them about. I was as guilty as the rest. Bleys and I once stranded him
for two days on an islet to the south of here...
...And Gerard went and got him
when he learned of it, she said. Yes, he told me. It must bother you if you
remember it after all this time.
It must have made an impression on
him, too.
No, he forgave you long ago. He
told it as a joke. Also, he drove a spike through the heel of your boot-pierced
your foot when you put it on.
Then it was Random! I'll be
damned! I had always blamed Julian for that one.
That one bothers Random.
How long ago all of this was... I
said.
I shook my head and continued
eating. Hunger seized me and she gave me several minutes of silence in which to
get the upper hand on it. When I had, I felt compelled to say something.
That is better. Much better, I
began. It was a peculiar and trying night that I spent in the skycity.
Did you receive omens of a useful
nature?
I do not know how useful they
might prove. On the other hand, I suppose I'd rather have had them than not. Have
there been any interesting happenings hereabouts?
A servant tells me your brother
Brand continues to rally. He ate well this morning, which is encouranging.
True, I said. True. It would
seem he is out of danger.
Likely. It-it is a terrible series
of happenings to which you have all been subjected. I am sorry. I was hoping
you might obtain some indication of an upturn in your affairs during the night
you spent in Tir-na Nog'th.
It does not matter, I said. I am
not that sure of the value of the thing.
Then why-Oh.
I studied her with renewed
interest. Her face still betrayed nothing, but her right hand twitched, tapping
and plucking at the material of the divan. Then, as with a sudden awareness of
its eloquence, she stilled it. She was obviously a person who had answered her
own question and wished now she had done it in silence.
Yes, I said, I was stalling. You
are aware of my injury.
She nodded.
I am not angry with Random for
having told you, I said. His judgment has always been acute and geared to
defense. I see no reason not to rely on it myself. I must inquire as to how
much he has told you, however, both for your own safety and my peace of mind. For
there are things I suspect but have not yet spoken.
I understand. It is difficult to
assess a negative-the things he might have left out, I mean-but he tells me
most things. I know your story and most of the others. He keeps me aware of
events, suspicions, conjectures.
Thank you, I said, taking a sip
of. the wine. It makes it easier for me to speak then, seeing how things are
with you. I am going to tell you everything that happened from breakfast till
now...
So I did.
She smiled occasionally as I spoke,
but she did not interrupt. When I had finished, she asked, You thought that
mention of Martin would upset me?
It seemed possible, I told her.
No, she said. You see, I knew
Martin in Rebma, when he was but a small boy. I was there while he was growing
up. I liked him then. Even if he were not Random's son he would still be dear
to me. I can only be pleased with Random's concern and hope that it has come in
time to benefit them both.
I shook my head.
I do not meet people like you too
often, I said. I am glad that I finally have.
She laughed, then said, You were
without sight for a long while.
Yes.
It can embitter a person, or it
can give him a greater joy in those things which he does have.
I did not have to think back over
my feelings from those days of blindness to know that I was a person of the
first sort, even discounting the circumstances under which I had suffered it. I
am sorry, but that is the way that I am, and I am sorry.
True, I said. You are
fortunate.
It is really only a state of
mind-a thing a Lord of Shadow can easily appreciate.
She rose.
I have always wondered as to your
appearance, she said. Random has described you, but that is different. May
I?
Of course.
She approached and placed her
finger tips upon my face. Delicately, she traced my features.
Yes, she said, you are much as I
had thought you would be. And I feel the tension in you. It has been there for
a long while, has it not?
In some form or other, I suppose,
ever since my return to Amber.
I wonder, she said, whether you
might have been happier before you regained your memory.
It is one of those impossible
questions, I said. I might also be dead if I had not. But putting that part
aside for a moment, in those times there was still a thing that drove me, that
troubled me every day. I was constantly looking for ways to discover who I
really was, what I was.
But were you happier, or less
happy, than you are now?
Neither, I said. Things balance
out. It is, as you suggested, a state of mind. And even if it were not so, I
could never go back to that other life, now that I know who I am, now that I
have found Amber.
Why not?
Why do you ask me these things?
I want to understand you, she
said. Ever since I first heard of you back in Rebma, even before Random told
me stories, I wondered what it was that drove you. Now I've the opportunity-no
right, of course, just the opportunity-I felt it worth speaking out of turn and
order beyond my station simply to ask you.
A half-chuckle caught me.
Fairly taken, I said. I will see
whether I can be honest. Hatred drove me at first-hatred for my brother
Eric-and my desire for the throne. Had you asked me on my return which was the
stronger, I would have said that it was the summons of the throne. Now, though
...now I would have to admit that it was actually the other way around. I had
not realized it until this moment, but it is true. But Eric is dead and there
is nothing left of what I felt then. The throne remains, but now I find that my
feelings toward it are mixed. There is a possibility that none of us has a
right to it under present circumstances, and even if all family objections were
removed I would not take it at this time. I would have to see stability
restored to the realm and a number of questions answered first.
Even if these things showed that
you may not have the throne?
Even so.
Then I begin to understand.
What? What is there to
understand?
Lord Corwin, my knowledge of the
philosophical basis of these things is limited, but it is my understanding that
you are able to find anything you wish within Shadow. This has troubled me for
a long while, and I never fully understood Random's explanations. If you
wished, could not each of you walk in Shadow and find yourself another
Amber-like this one in all respects, save that you ruled there or enjoyed
whatever other status you might desire?
Yes, we can locate such places, I
said.
Then why is this not done, to have
an end of strife?
It is because a place could be
found which seemed to be the same-but that would be all. We are a part of this
Amber as surely as it is a part of us. Any shadow of Amber would have to be
populated with shadows of ourselves to seem worth while. We could even except
the shadow of our own person should we choose to move into a ready realm. However,
the shadow folk would not be exactly like the other people here. A shadow is
never precisely like that which casts it. These little differences add up. They
are actually worse than major ones. It would amount to entering a nation of
strangers. The best mundane comparison which occurs to me is an encounter with
a person who strongly resembles another person you know. You keep expecting him
to act like your acquaintance; worse yet, you have a tendency to act toward him
as you would toward that other. You face him with a certain mask and his
responses are not appropriate. It is an uncomfortable feeling. I never enjoy
meeting people who remind me of other people. Personality is the one thing we
cannot control in our manipulations of Shadow. In fact, it is the means by
which we can tell one another from shadows of ourselves. This is why Flora
could not decide about me for so long, back on the shadow Earth: my new
personality was sufficiently different.
I begin to understand, she said. It
is not just Amber for you. It is the place plus everything else.
The place plus everything else
...That is Amber, I agreed.
You say that your hate died with
Eric and your desire for the throne has been tempered by the consideration of
new things you have learned.
That is so.
Then I think I do understand what
it is that moves you.
The desire for stability moves
me, I said, and something of curiosity-and revenge on our enemies...
Duty, she said. Of course.
I snorted.
It would be comforting to put such
a face on it, I said. As it is, however, I will not be a hypocrite. I am
hardly a dutiful son of Amber or of Oberon.
Your voice makes it plain that you
do not wish to be considered one.
I closed my eyes, closed them to
join her in darkness, to recall for a brief while the world where other
messages than light waves took precedence. I knew then that she had been right
about my voice. Why had I trodden so heavily on the idea of duty as soon as it
was suggested? I like credit for being good and clean and noble and high-minded
when I have it coming, even sometimes when I do not-the same as the next
person. What bothered me about the notion of duty to Amber? Nothing. What was
it then? Dad.
I no longer owed him anything,
least of all duty. Ultimately, he was responsible for the present state of
affairs. He had fathered a great brood of us without providing for a proper
succession, he had been less than kind to all of our mothers and he then
expected our devotion and support. He played favorites and, in fact, it even
seemed he played us off against one another. He then got suckered into
something he could not handle and left the kingdom in a mess. Sigmund Freud had
long ago anesthetized me to any normal, generalized feelings of resentment
which might operate within the family unit. I have no quarrel on those grounds.
Facts are another matter. I did not dislike my father simply because he had
given me no reason to like him; in truth, it seemed that he had labored in the
other direction. Enough. I realized what it was that bothered me about the
notion of duty: its object
You are right, I said, opening my
eyes, regarding her, and I am glad that you told me of it.
I rose.
Give me your hand, I said.
She extended her right hand and I
raised it to my lips.
Thank you, I said. It was a good
lunch.
I turned and made my way to the
door. When I looked back she had blushed and was smiling, her hand still partly
raised, and I began to understand the change in Random.
Good luck to you, she said, the
moment my footsteps ceased.
...And you, I said, and went out
quickly.
I had been planning to see Brand
next, but just could not bring myself to do it. For one thing, I did not want
to encounter him with my wits dulled by fatigue. For another, talking with
Vialle was the first pleasant thing which had happened to me in some time, and
just this once I was going to quit while I was ahead.
I mounted the stairs and walked the
corridor to my room, thinking, of course, of the night of the knifings as I
fitted my new key to my new lock. In my bedchamber, I drew the drapes against
the afternoon's light, undressed, and got into bed. As on other occasions of
rest after stress with more stress pending, sleep eluded me for a time. For a
long while I tossed and twisted, reliving events of the past several days and
some from even farther back. When finally I slept, my dreams were an amalgam of
the same material, including a spell in my old cell, scraping away at the door.
It was dark when I awoke and I
actually felt rested. The tension gone out of me, my reverie was much more
peaceful. In fact, there was a tiny charge of pleasant excitement dancing through
the back of my head. It was a tip-of-the-tongue imperative, a buried notion
that-Yes!
I sat up. I reached for my clothes,
began to dress. I buckled on Grayswandir. I folded a blanket and tucked it
under my arm. Of course...
My mind felt clear and my side had
stopped throbbing. I had no idea how long I had slept, and it was hardly worth
checking at this point. I had something far more important to look into,
something which should have occurred to me a long while agohad occurred, as a
matter of fact. I had actually been staring right at it once, but the crush of
time and events had ground it from my mind. Until now.
I locked my room behind me and
headed for the stairs. Candles flickered, and the faded stag who had been dying
for centuries on the tapestry to my right looked back on the faded dogs who had
been pursuing him for approximately as long. Sometimes my sympathies are with
the stag; usually though, I am all dog. Have to have the thing restored one of
these days.
The stairs and down. No sounds from
below. Late, then. Good. Another day and we're still alive. Maybe even a trifle
wiser. Wise enough to realize there are many more things we still need to know.
Hope, though. There's that. A thing I lacked when I squatted in that damned
cell, hands pressed against my ruined eyes, howling. Vialle ...I wish I could
have spoken with you for a few moments in those days. But I learned what I
learned in a nasty school, and even a milder curriculum would probably not have
given me your grace. Still ...hard to say. I have always felt I am more dog
than stag, more hunter than victim. you might have taught me something that
would have blunted the bitterness, tempered the hate. But would that have been
for the best? The hate died with its object and the bitterness, too, has
passed-but looking back, I wonder whether I would have made it without them to
sustain me. I am not at all certain that I would have survived my internment
without my ugly companions to drag me back to life and sanity time and again. Now
I can afford the luxury of an occasional stag thought, but then it might have
been fatal. I do not truly know, kind lady, and I doubt that I ever will.
Stillness on the second floor. A
few noises from below. Sleep well, lady. Around, and down again. I wondered
whether Random had uncovered anything of great moment. Probably not, or he or
Benedict should have contacted me by now. Unless there was trouble. But no. It
is ridiculous to shop for worries. The real thing makes itself felt in due
course, and I'd more than enough to go around. The ground floor.
Will, I said, and, Rolf.
Lord Corwin.
The two guards had assumed
professional stances on hearing my footsteps. Their faces told me that all was
well, but I asked for the sake of form.
Quiet, Lord. Quiet, replied the senior.
Very good, I said, and I
continued on, entering and crossing the marble dining hall.
It would work, I was sure of that,
if time and moisture had not totally effaced it. And then...
I entered the long corridor, where
the dusty walls pressed close on either side. Darkness, shadows, my
footsteps...
I came to the door at the end,
opened it, stepped out onto the platform. Then down once more, that spiraling
way, a light here, a light there, into the caverns of Kolvir. Random had been
right, I decided then. If you had gouged out everything, down to the level of
that distant floor, there would be a close correspondence between what was left
and the place of that primal Pattern we had visited this morning.
...On down. Twisting and winding
through the gloom. The torch and lantern-lit guard station was theatrically
stark within it. I reached the floor and headed that way.
Good evening. Lord Corwin, said
the lean, cadaverous figure who rested against a storage rack, smoking his
pipe, grinning around it.
Good evening, Roger. How are
things in the nether world?
A rat, a bat, a spider. Nothing
much else astir. Peaceful.
You enjoy this duty?
He nodded.
I am writing a philosophical
romance shot through with elements of horror and morbidity. I work on those parts
down here.
Fitting, fitting, I said.
I'll be needing a lantern.
He took one from the rack, brought
it to flame from his candle.
Will it have a happy ending? I
inquired.
He shrugged.
I'll be happy.
I mean, does good triumph and hero
bed heroine? Or do you kill everybody off?
That's hardly fair, he said.
Never mind. Maybe I'll read it one
day.
Maybe, he said.
I took the lantern and turned away,
heading in a direction I had not taken in a long while. I discovered that I
could still measure the echoes in my mind.
Before too long, I neared the wall,
sighted the proper corridor, entered it. It was simply a matter of counting my
paces then. My feet knew the way.
The door to my old cell stood
partly ajar. I set down the lantern and used both hands to open it fully. It
gave way grudgingly, moaning as it moved. Then I raised the lantern, held it
high, and entered.
My flesh tingled and my stomach
clenched itself within me. I began to shiver. I had to fight down a strong
impulse to bolt and run. I had not anticipated such a reaction. I did not want
to step away from that heavy brassbonnd door for fear that it would be slammed
and bolted behind me. It was an instant close to pure terror that the small
dirty cell had aroused in me. I forced myself to dwell on particulars-the hole
which had been my latrine, the blackened spot where I had built my fire on that
final day. I ran my left hand over the inner surface of the door, finding and
tracing there the grooves I had worn while scraping away with my spoon. I
remembered what the activity had done to my hands. I stooped to examine the
gouging. Not nearly so deep as it had seemed at the time, not when compared to
the total thickness of the door. I realized how much I had exaggerated the
effects of that feeble effort toward freedom. I stepped past it and regarded
the wall.
Faint. Dust and moisture had worked
to undo it. But I could still discern the outlines of the lighthouse of Cabra,
bordered by four slashes of my old spoon handle. The magic was still there,
that force which had finally transported me to freedom. I felt it without
calling upon it.
I turned and faced the other wall.
The sketch which I now regarded had
fared less well than that of the lighthouse, but then it had been executed with
extreme haste by the light of my last few matches. I could not even make out
all of the details, though my memory furnished a few of those which were
hidden: It was a view of a den or library, bookshelves lining the walls, a desk
in the foreground, a globe beside the desk. I wondered whether I should risk
wiping it clean.
I set my lantern on the floor,
returned to the sketch on the other wall. With a corner of my blanket, I gently
wiped some dust from a point near the base of the lighthouse. The line grew
clearer. I wiped it again, exerting a little more pressure. Unfortunate. I
destroyed an inch or so of outline.
I stepped back and tore a wide
strip from the edge of the blanket. I folded what remained into a pad and
seated myself on it. Slowly, carefully then, I set to work on the lighthouse. I
had to get an exact feeling for the work before I tried cleaning the other one.
Half an hour later I stood up and
stretched, bent and massaged life back into my legs. What remained of the
lighthouse was clean. Unfortunately, I had destroyed about 20 per cent of the
sketch before I developed a sense of the wall's texture and an appropriate
stroke across it. I doubted that I was going to improve any further.
The lantern sputtered as I moved
it. I unfolded the blanket, shook it out, tore off a fresh strip. Making up a
new pad, I knelt before the other sketch and set to work.
A while later I had uncovered what
remained of it. I had forgotten the skull on the desk until a careful stroke
revealed it once again-and the angle of the far wall, and a tall candlestick...
I drew back. It would be risky to do any more rubbing. Probably unnecessary,
also. It seemed about as entire as it had been.
The lantern was flickering once
again. Cursing Roger for not checking the kerosene level, I stood and held the
light at shoulder level off to my left. I put everything from my mind but the
scene before me.
It gained something of perspective
as I stared. A moment later and it was totally three-dimensional and had
expanded to fill my entire field of vision. I stepped forward then and rested
the lantern on the edge of the desk.
I cast my eyes about the place. There
were bookshelves on all four walls. No windows. Two doors at the far end of the
room, right and left, across from one another, one closed, the other partly
ajar. There was a long, low table covered with books and papers beside the
opened door. Bizarre curios occupied open spaces on the shelves and odd niches
and recesses in the walls-bones, stones, pottery, inscribed tablets, lenses,
wands, instruments of unknown function. The huge rug resembled an Ardebil I
took a step toward that end of the room and the lantern sputtered again. I
turned and reached for it. At that moment, it failed.
I growled an obscenity and lowered
my hand. Then I turned, slowly, to check for any possible light sources. Something
resembling a branch of coral shone faintly on a shelf across the room and a
pale line of illumination occurred at the base of the closed door. I abandoned
the lantern and crossed the room.
I opened the door as quietly as I
could. The room it let upon was deserted, a small, windowless living place
faintly lit by the still smoldering embers in its single, recessed hearth. The
room's walls were of stone and they arched above me. The fireplace was a
possibly natural niche in the wall to my left. A large, armored door was set in
the far wall, a big key partly turned in its lock.
I entered, taking a candle from a
nearby table, and moved toward the fireplace to give it a light. As I knelt and
sought a flame among the embers, I heard a soft footfall in the vicinity of the
doorway.
Turning, I saw him just beyond the
threshold. About five feet in height, hunchbacked. His hair and beard were even
longer than I remembered. Dworkin wore a nightshirt which reached to his
ankles. He carried an oil lamp, his dark eyes peering across its sooty chimney.
Oberon he said, is it finally
time?
What time is that? I asked
softly.
He chuckled.
What other? Time to destroy the
world, of course!
CHAPTER 5
I kept the light away from my face,
kept my voice low.
Not quite, I said. Not quite.
He sighed.
You remain unconvinced.
He looked forward and cocked his
head, peering down at me.
Why must you spoil things? he
said.
I've spoiled nothing.
He lowered the lamp. I turned my
head again, but he finally got a good look at my face. He laughed.
Funny. Funny, funny, funny, he said.
you come as the young Lord Corwin, thinking to sway me with family sentiment. Why
did you not choose Brand or Bleys? It was Clarissa's lot served us best.
I shrugged and stood.
Yes and no, I said, determined
now to feed him ambiguities for so long as he'd accept them and respond. Something
of value might emerge, and it seemed an easy way to keep him in a good humor.
And yourself? I continued. What
face would you put on things?
Why, to win your good will I'll
match you, he said, and then he began to laugh.
He threw his head back, and as his
laughter rang about me a change came over him. His stature seemed to increase,
and his face luffed like a sail cut too close to the wind. The hump on his back
was diminished as he straightened and stood taller. His features rearranged
themselves and his beard darkened. By then it was obvious that he was somehow
redistributing his body mass, for the nightshirt which had reached his ankles
was now midway up his shins. He breathed deeply and his shoulders widened. His
arms lengthened, his bulging abdomen narrowed, tapered. He reached shoulder
height on me, then higher. He looked me in the eye. His garment reached only to
his knees. His hump was totally resorbed. His face gave a final twist, his
features steadied, were reset. His laughter fell to a chuckle, faded, closed
with a smirk. I regarded a slightly slimmer version of myself.
Sufficient? he inquired.
Not half bad, I said.
Wait till I toss a couple logs on
the fire.
I will help you.
That's all right.
I drew some wood from a rack to the
right. Any stall served me somewhat, buying reactions for my study. As I was
about the work, he crossed to a chair and seated himself. When I glanced at him
I saw that he was not looking at me, but staring into the shadows. I drew out
the fire-building, hoping that he would say something, anything. Eventually, he
did.
Whatever became of the grand
design? he asked.
I did not know whether he was
speaking of the Pattern or of some master plan of Dad's to which he had been
privy. So, You tell me, I said. He chuckled again.
Why not? You changed your mind,
that is what happened, he said.
From what to what-as you see it?
Don't mock me. Even you have no
right to mock me, he said. Least of all, you.
I got to my feet.
I was not mocking you, I said.
I crossed the room to another chair
and carried it over to a position near the fire, across from Dworkin. I seated
myself.
How did you recognize me? I
asked.
My whereabouts are hardly common
knowledge.
That is true.
Do many in Amber think me dead?
Yes, and others suppose you might
be traveling off in Shadow.
I see.
How have you been feeling?
He gave me an evil grin.
Do you mean am I still mad?
You put it more bluntly than I
care to.
There is a fading, there is an
intensifying, he said. It comes to me and it departs again. For the moment I
am almost myself-almost, I say. The shock of your visit, perhaps ...Something
is broken in my mind. You know that. It cannot be otherwise, though. You know
that, too.
I suppose that I do, I said. Why
don't you tell me all about it, all over again? Just the business of talking
might make you feel better, might give me something I've missed. Tell me a
story.
Another laugh.
Anything you like. Have you any
preferences? My flight from Chaos to this small sudden island in the sea of
night? My meditations upon the abyss? The revelation of the Pattern in a jewel
hung round the neck of a unicorn? My transcription of the design by lightning,
blood, and lyre while our fathers raged baffled, too late come to call me back
while the poem of fire ran that first route in my brain, infecting me with the
will to form? Too late! Too late ...Possessed of the abominations born of the
disease, beyond their aid, their power, I planned and built, captive of my new
self. Is that the tale you'd hear again? Or rather I tell you of its cure?
My mind spun at the implications he
had just scattered by the fistful. I could not tell whether he spoke literally
or metaphorically or was simply sharing paranoid delusions, but the things that
I wanted to hear, had to hear, were things closer to the moment. So, regarding
the shadowy image of myself from which that ancient voice emerged, Tell me of
its cure, I said.
He braced his finger tips together
and spoke through them.
I am the Pattern, he said, in a
very real sense. In passing through my mind to achieve the form it now holds,
the foundation of Amber, it marked me as surely as I marked it. I realized one
day that I am both the Pattern and myself, and it was forced to become Dworkin
in the process of becoming itself. There were mutual modifications in the
birthing of this place and this time, and therein lay our weakness as well as
our strength. For it occurred to me that damage to the Pattern would be damage
to myself, and damage to myself would be reflected within the Pattern. Yet I
could not be truly banned because the Pattern protects me, and who but I could
harm the Pattern? A beautiful closed system, it seemed, its weakness totally
shielded by its strength.
He fell silent. I listened to the
fire. I do not know what he listened to.
Then, I was wrong, he said. Such
a simple matter, too ...My blood, with which I drew it, could deface it. But it
took me ages to realize that the blood of my blood could also do this thing. You
could use it, you could also change it-yea, unto the third generation.
It did not come to me as a
surprise, learning that he was grandsire to us all. Somehow, it seemed that I
had known all along, had known but never voiced it. Yet ...if anything, this
raised more questions than it answered. Collect one generation of ancestry.
Proceed to confusion. I had less idea now than ever before as to what Dworkin
really was. Add to this the fact which even he acknowledged: It was a tale told
by a madman.
But to repair it..? I said.
He smirked, my own face twisting
before me.
Have you lost your taste to be a
lord of the living void, a king of chaos? he asked.
Mayhap, I replied.
By the Unicorn, thy mother, I knew
it would come to this! The Pattern is as strong in you as is the greater realm.
What then is your desire?
To preserve the realm.
He shook his/my head.
'Twould be simpler to destroy
everything and try a new start-as I have told you so often before.
I'm stubborn. So tell me again, I
said, attempting to simulate Dad's gruffness.
He shrugged.
Destroy the Pattern and we destroy
Amber-and all of the shadows in polar array about it. Give me leave to destroy
myself in the midst of the Pattern and we will obliterate it. Give me leave by
giving me your word that you will then take the Jewel which contains the
essence of order and use it to create a new Pattern, bright and pure,
untainted, drawing upon the stuff of your own being while the legions of chaos
attempt to distract you on every side. Promise me that and let me end it, for
broken as I am, I would rather die for order than live for it. What say you
now?
Would it not be better to try
mending the one we've got than to undo the work of eons?
Coward! he cried, leaping to his
feet. I knew you would say that again!
Well, wouldn't it?
He began to pace.
How many times have we been
through this? he asked. Nothing has changed! You are afraid to try it!
Perhaps, I said. But do you not
feel that something for which you have given so much is worth some effort-some
additional sacrifice-if there is even a possibility of saving it?
You still do not understand, he
said. I cannot but think that a damaged thing should be destroyed-and
hopefully replaced. The nature of my personal injury is such that I cannot
envision repair. I am damaged in just this fashion. My feelings are
foreordained.
If the Jewel can create a new
Pattern, why will it not serve to repair the old one, end our troubles, heal
your spirit?
He approached and stood before me.
Where is your memory? he said. You
know that it would be infinitely more difficult to repair the damage than it
would be to start over again. Even the Jewel could more easily destroy it than
repair it. Have your forgotten what it is like out there? He gestured toward
the wall behind him. Do you want to go and look at it again?
Yes, I said. I would like that. Let's
go.
I rose and looked down at him. His
control over his form had begun slipping when he had grown angry. He had
already lost three or four inches in height, the image of my face was melting
back into his gnomelike features, and a noticeable bulge was growing between
his shoulders, had already been visible when he had gestured.
His eyes widened and he studied my
face.
You really mean it, he said after
a moment. All right, then. Let us go.
He turned and moved toward the big
metal door. I followed him. He used both hands to turn the key. Then he threw
his weight against it. I moved to help him, but he brushed me aside with
extraordinary strength before giving the door a final shove. It made a grating
noise and moved outward into a fully opened position. I was immediately struck
by a strange, somehow familiar odor.
Dworkin stepped through and paused.
He located what looked to be a long staff leaning against the wall off to his
right. He struck it several times against the ground and its upper end began to
glow. It lit up the area fairly well, revealing a narrow tunnel into which he
now advanced. I followed him and it widened before too long, so that I was able
to come abreast of him. The odor grew stronger, and I could almost place it. It
had been something fairly recent...
It was close to eighty paces before
our way took a turn to the left and upward. We passed then through a little
appendix like area. It was strewn with broken bones, and a large metal ring was
set in the rock a couple of feet above the floor. Affixed thereto was a
glittering chain, which fell to the floor and trailed on ahead like a line of
molten droplets cooling in the gloom.
Our way narrowed again after that
and Dworkin took the lead once more. After a brief time, he turned an abrupt
corner and I heard him muttering. I nearly ran into him when I made the turn
myself. He was crouched down and groping with his left hand inside a shadowy
cleft. When I heard the soft cawing noise and saw that the chain vanished into
the opening I realized what it was and where we were.
Good Wixer, I heard him say. I
am not going far. It is all right, good Wixer. Here is something to chew on.
From where he had fetched whatever
he tossed the beast, I do not know. But the purple griffin, which I had now
advanced far enough to glimpse as it stirred within its lair, accepted the
offering with a toss of its head and a series of crunching noises. Dworkin
grinned up at me.
Surprised? he asked.
At what?
You thought I was afraid of him. You
thought I would never make friends with him. You set him out here to keep me in
there-away from the Pattern.
Did I ever say that?
You did not have to. I am not a
fool.
Have it your way, I said.
He chuckled, rose, and continued on
along the passageway.
I followed and it grew level
underfoot once again. The ceiling rose and the way widened. At length, we came
to the cave mouth. Dworkin stood for a moment silhouetted, staff raised before
him. It was night outside, and a clean salt smell swept the musk from my
nostrils.
Another moment, and he moved
forward once more, passing into a world of sky-candles and blue velours. Continuing
after him, I had gasped briefly at that amazing view. It was not simply that
the stars in the moonless, cloudless sky blazed with a preternatural
brilliance, nor that the distinction between sky and sea had once again been
totally obliterated. It was that the Pattern glowed an almost acetylene blue by
that skysea, and all of the stars above, beside, and below were arrayed with a
geometric precision, forming a fantastic, oblique latticework which, more than
anything else, gave the impression that we hung in the midst of a cosmic web
where the Pattern was the true center, the rest of the radiant meshwork a
precise consequence of its existence, configuration, position.
Dworkin continued on down to the
Pattern, right up to the edge beside the darkened area. He waved his staff over
it and turned to look at me just as I came near.
There you are, he announced, the
hole in my mind. I can no longer think through it, only around it. I no longer
know what must be done to repair something I now lack. If you think that you
can do it, you must be willing to lay yourself open to instant destruction each
time you depart the Pattern to cross the break. Not destruction by the dark
portion. Destruction by the Pattern itself when you break the circuit. The
Jewel may or may not sustain you. I do not know. But it will not grow easier.
It will become more difficult with each circuit, and your strength will be
lessening all the while. The last time we discussed it you were afraid. Do you
mean to say you have grown bolder since then?
Perhaps, I said. You see no
other way?
I know it can be done starting
with a clean slate, because once I did it so. Beyond that, I see no other way.
The longer you wait the more the situation worsens. Why not fetch the Jewel and
lend me your blade, son? I see no better way.
No, I said. I must know more. Tell
me again how the damage was done.
I still do not know which of your
children shed our blood on this spot, if this is what you mean. It was done.
Let it go at that. Our darker natures came forth strongly in them. It must be
that they are too close to the chaos from which we sprang, growing without the
exercises of will we endured in defeating it. I had thought that the ritual of
traveling the Pattern might suffice for them. I could think of nothing
stronger. Yet it failed. They strike out against everything. They seek to
destroy the Pattern itself.
If we succeed in making a fresh
start, might not these events simply repeat themselves?
I do not know. But what choice
have we other than failure and a return to chaos?
What will become of them if we try
for a new beginning?
He was silent for a long while. Then
he shrugged. I cannot tell.
What would another generation have
been like?
He chuckled.
How can such a question be
answered? I have no idea.
I withdrew the mutilated Trump and
passed it to him. He regarded it near the blaze of his staff.
I believe it is Random's son
Martin, I said, he whose blood was spilled here. I have no idea whether he
still lives. What do you think he might have amounted to?
He looked back out over the
Pattern.
So this is the object which
decorated it, he said. How did you fetch it forth?
It was gotten, I said. It is not
your work, is it?
Of course not. I have never set
eyes on the boy. But this answers your question, does it not? If there is
another generation, your children will destroy it.
As we would destroy them?
He met my eyes and peered.
Is it that you are suddenly
becoming a doting father? he asked.
If you did not prepare that Trump,
who did?
He glanced down and flicked it with
his fingernail.
My best pupil. Your son Brand. That
is his style. See what they do as soon as they gain a little power? Would any
of them offer their lives to preserve the realm, to restore the Pattern?
Probably, I said. Probably
Benedict, Gerard, Random, Corwin...
Benedict has the mark of doom upon
him, Gerard possesses the will but not the wit, Random lacks courage and
determination. Corwin ...Is he not out of favor and out of sight?
My thoughts returned to our last
meeting, when he had helped me to escape from my cell to Cabra. It occurred to
me that he might have had second thoughts concerning that, not having been
aware of the circumstances which had put me there.
Is that why you have taken his
form? he went on. Is this some manner of rebuke? Are you testing me again?
He is neither out of favor nor
sight, I said, though he has enemies among the family and elsewhere. He would
attempt anything to preserve the realm. How do you see his chances?
Has he not been away for a long
while?
Yes.
Then he might have changed. I do
not know.
I believe he is changed. I know
that he is willing to try.
He stared at me again, and he kept
staring.
You are not Oberon, he said at
length.
No.
You are he whom I see before me.
No more, no less.
I see... I did not realize that
you knew of this place.
I didn't, until recently. The
first time that I came here I was led by the unicorn.
His eyes widened.
That is-very-interesting, he said.
It has been so long...
What of my question?
Eh? Question? What question?
My chances. Do you think I might
be able to repair the Pattern?
He advanced slowly, and reaching
up, placed his right hand on my shoulder. The staff tilled in is other hand as
he did so; its blue light flared within a foot of my face, but I felt no heat. He
looked into my eyes.
You have changed, he said, after
a time.
Enough, I asked, to do the job?
He looked away.
Perhaps enough to make it worth
trying, he said, even if we are foredoomed to failure.
Will you help me?
I do not know, he said, that I
will be able. This thing with my moods, my thoughts-it comes and it goes. Even
now, I feel some of my control slipping away. The excitement, perhaps... We had
best get back inside.
I heard a clinking noise at my
back. When I turned, the griffin was there, his head swinging slowly from left
to right, his tail from right to left, his tongue darting. He began to circle
us, halting when he came to a position between Dworkin and the Pattern.
He knows, Dworkin said. He can
sense it when I begin to change. He will not let me near the Pattern then...
Good Wixer. We are returning now. It is all right... Come, Corwin.
We headed back toward the cave
mouth and Wixer followed, a clink for every pace.
The Jewel, I said, the Jewel of
Judgment ...you say that it is necessary for the repair of the Pattern?
Yes, he said. It would have to
be borne the entire distance through the Pattern, reinscribing the original
design in the places where it has been broken. This could only be done by one
who is attuned to the Jewel, though.
I am attuned to the Jewel, I
said.
How? he asked, halting.
Wixer made a cackling noise behind
us, and we resumed walking.
I followed your written
instructions-and Eric's verbal ones, I said. I took it with me to the center
of the Pattern and projected myself through it.
I see, he said. How did you
obtain it?
From Eric, on his deathbed.
We entered the cave.
You have it now?
I was forced to cache it in a
place off in Shadow.
I would suggest you retrieve it
quickly and bring it here or take it back to the palace. It is best kept near
the center of things.
Why is that?
It tends to have a distorting
effect on shadows if it lies too long among them.
Distorting? In what fashion?
There is no way to tell, in
advance. It depends entirely upon the locale.
We rounded a corner, continued on
back through the gloom.
What does it mean, I said, when
you are wearing the Jewel and everything begins to slow down about you? Fiona
warned me that this was dangerous, but she was not certain why.
It means that you have reached the
bounds of your own existence, that your energies will shortly be exhausted,
that you will die unless you do something quickly.
What is that?
Begin to draw power from the
Pattern itself-the primal Pattern within the Jewel.
How is this achieved?
You must surrender to it, release
yourself, blot out your identity, erase the bounds which separate you from
everything else.
It sounds easier said than done.
But it can be done, and it is the
only way.
I shook my head. We moved on,
coming at last to the big door. Dworkin extinguished the staff and leaned it
against the wall. We entered and he secured the door. Wixer had stationed
himself just outside.
You will have to leave now,
Dworkin said.
But there are many more things
that I must ask you, and some that I would like to tell you.
My thoughts grow meaningless, and
your words would be wasted. Tomorrow night, or the next, or the next. Hurry!
Go!
Why the rush?
I may harm you when the change
comes over me. I am holding it back by main will now. Depart!
I do not know how. I know how to
get here, but
There are all manner of special
Trumps in the desk in the next room. Take the light! Go anywhere! Get out of here!
I was about to protest that I
hardly feared any physical violence he could muster, when his features began to
flow like melting wax and he somehow seemed much larger and longer-limbed than
he had been. Seizing the light, I fled the room, a sudden chill upon me.
...To the desk. I tore open the
drawer and snatched at some Trumps which lay scattered within it. I heard
footsteps then, of something entering the room behind me, coming from the
chamber I had just departed. They did not seem like the footsteps of a man. I
did not look back. Instead, I raised the cards before me and regarded the one
on top. It was an unfamiliar scene, but I opened my mind immediately and
reached for it. A mountain crag, something indistinct beyond it, a strangely
stippled sky, a scattering of stars to the left
...The card was alternately hot and
cold to my touch, and a heavy wind seemed to come blowing through it as I
stared, somehow rearranging the prospect.
From right behind me then, the
heavily altered but still recognizable voice of Dworkin spoke: Fool! You have
chosen the land of your doom!
A great clawlike hand-black,
leathery, gnarled-reached over my shoulder, as if to snatch the card away. But
the vision seemed ready, and I rushed forward into it, turning the card from me
as soon as I realized I had made my escape. Then I halted and stood stockstill,
to let my senses adjust to the new locale.
I knew. From snatches of legend,
bits of family gossip, and from a general feeling which came over me, I knew
the place to which I had come. It was with full certainty as to identity that I
raised my eyes to look upon the Courts of Chaos.
CHAPTER 6
Where? The senses are such
uncertain things, and now mine were strained beyond their limits. The rock on
which I stood... If I attempted to fix my gaze upon it, it took on the aspect
of a pavement on a hot afternoon. It seemed to shift and waver, though my
footing was undisturbed. And it was undecided as to the portion of the spectrum
it might call home. It pulsated and flashed like the skin of an iguana. Looking
upward, I beheld a sky such as I had never before set eyes upon. At the moment,
it was split down the middle-half of it of deepest night-black, and the stars
danced within it. When I say danced, I do not mean twinkled; they cavorted and
they shifted magnitudes; they darted and they circled; they flared to nova
brilliance, then faded to nothing. It was a frightening spectacle to behold,
and my stomach tightened within me as I experienced a profound acrophobia. Yet,
shifting my gaze did little to improve the situation. The other half of the sky
was like a bottle of colored sands, continuously shaken; belts of orange,
yellow, red, blue, brown, and purple turned and twisted; patches of green,
mauve, gray, and dead white came and went, sometimes snaking into belthood,
replacing or joining the other writhing entities. And these, too, shimmered and
wavered, creating impossible sensations of distance and nearness. At times,
some or all seemed literally sky-high, and then again they came to fill the air
before me, gauzy, transparent mists, translucent swaths or solid tentacles of
color. It was not until later that I realized that the line which separated the
black from the color was advancing slowly from my right while retreating to my
left. It was as if the entire celestial mandala were rotating about a point
directly overhead. As to the light source of the brighter half, it simply could
not be determined. Standing there, I looked down upon what at first seemed a
valley filled with countless explosions of color; but when the advancing
darkness faced this display away the stars danced and burned within its depths
as well as above, giving them the impression of a bottomless chasm. It was as
if I stood at the end of the world, the end of the universe, the end of
everything. But far, far out from where I stood, something hovered on a mount
of sheerest black-a blackness itself, but edged and tempered with barely
perceptible flashes of light. I could not guess at its size, for distance,
depth, perspective, were absent here. A single edifice? A group? A city? Or
simply a place? The outline varied each time that it fell upon my retina. Now
faint and misty sheets drifted slowly between us, twisting, as if long strands
of gauze were buoyed by heated air. The mandala ceased its turning when it had
exactly reversed itself. The colors were behind me now, and imperceptible
unless I turned my head, an action I had no desire to take. It was pleasant
standing there, staring at the formlessness from which all things eventually
emerged... Before the Pattern, even, this thing was. I knew this, dimly but
purely, at the very center of my consciousness. I knew this, because I was
certain that I had been here before. Child of the man I had become, it seemed
that I had been brought here in some distant day-whether by Dad or Dworkin, I
could not now recall-and had stood or been held in this place or one very near
to it, looking out upon the same scene with, I am certain, a similar lack of
comprehension, a similar sense of apprehension. My pleasure was tinged with a
nervous excitement, a sense of the forbidden, a feeling of dubious
anticipation. Peculiarly, at that moment, there rose in me a longing for the
Jewel I had had to abandon in my compost heap on the shadow Earth, the thing
Dworkin had made so much of. Could it be that some part of me sought a defense
or at least a symbol of resistance against whatever was out there? Probably.
As I continued to stare,
fascinated, across the chasm, it was as if my eyes adjusted or the prospect
shifted once again, subtly. For now I discerned tiny, ghostly forms moving
within that place, like slow motion meteors along the gauzy strands. I waited,
regarding them carefully, courting some small understanding of the actions in
which they were engaged. At length, one of the strands drifted very near.
Shortly thereafter I had my answer.
There was a movement. One of the
rushing forms grew larger, and I realized that it was following the twisting
way that led toward me. In only a few moments, it took on the proportions of a
horseman. As it came on, it assumed a semblance of solidity without losing that
ghostly quality which seemed to cling to everything which lay before me. A
moment later, I beheld a naked rider on a hairless horse, both deathly pale,
rushing in my direction. The rider brandished a bone-white blade; bis eyes and
the eyes of the horse both flashed red. I did not really know whether he saw
me, whether we existed on the same plane of reality, so unnatural was his mien.
Yet I unsheathed Grayswandir and took a step backward as he approached.
His long white hair shed tiny
sparkling motes, and when he turned his head I knew that he was coming for me,
for then I felt his gaze like a cold pressure across the front of my body. I
turned sidewise and raised my blade to guard.
He continued, and I realized that
both he and the horse were big, bigger even than I had thought. They came on.
When they reached the point nearest me-some ten meters, perhaps-the horse
reared as the rider drew it to a halt. They regarded me then, bobbing and
swaying as if on a raft in a gently swelling sea.
Your name! the rider demanded. Give
me your name, who comes to this place!
His voice produced a crackling
sensation in my ears. It was all of one sound level, loud and without
inflection.
I shook my head.
I give my name when I choose, not
when I am ordered to, I said. Who are you?
He gave three short barks, which I
took to be a laugh.
I will hale you down and about,
where you will cry it out forever.
I pointed Grayswandir at his eyes.
Talk is cheap, I said. Whisky
costs money.
I felt a faint cool sensation just
then, as if someone were toying with my Trump, thinking of me. But it was dim,
weak, and I had no attention to spare, for the rider had passed some signal to
his mount and the beast reared. The distance is too great, I decided. But this
thought belonged to another shadow. The beast plunged ahead toward me,
departing the tenuous roadway that had been its course.
Its leap bore it to a point far
short of my position. But it did not fall from there and vanish, as I had
hoped. It resumed the motions of galloping, and although its progress was not
fully commensurate with the action, it continued to advance across the abyss at
about half-speed.
While this was occurring, I saw
that in the distance from which it had come another figure appeared to be
headed my way. Nothing to do but stand my ground, fight, and hope that I could
dispatch this attacker before the other was upon me.
As the rider advanced, his ruddy
gaze flicked over my person and halted when it fell upon Grayswandir. Whatever
the nature of the mad illumination at my back, it had tricked the delicate
tracery on my blade to life once more, so that that portion of the Pattern it
bore swam and sparkled along its length. The horseman was very near by then,
but he drew back on the reins and his eyes leaped upward, meeting my own. His
nasty grin vanished.
I know you! he said. You are the
one called Corwin!
But we had him, me and my ally momentum.
His mount's front hoofs fell upon
the ledge and I rushed forward. The beast's reflexes caused it to seek equal
footing for its hind legs despite the drawn reins. The rider swung his blade
into a guard position as I came on, but I cross-stepped and attacked from his
left. As he moved his blade cross-body, I was already lunging. Grayswandir
sheared through his pale hide, entering beneath the sternum and above the guts.
I wrenched my blade free and gouts
of fire poured like blood from his wound. His sword arm sagged and his mount
uttered a shriek that was almost a whistle as the blazing stream fell upon its
neck. I danced back as the rider slumped forward and the beast, now fully
footed, plunged on toward me, kicking. I cut again, reflexively, defensively.
My blade nicked its left foreleg, and it, too, began to burn.
I side-stepped once again as it
turned and made for me a second time. At that moment, the rider erupted into a
pillar of light. The beast bellowed, wheeled, and rushed away. Without pausing,
it plunged over the edge and vanished into the abyss, leaving me with the
memory of the smoldering head of a cat which had addressed me long ago and the
chill which always accompanied the recollection.
I was backed against rock, panting.
The wispy road had drifted nearer-ten feet, perhaps, from the ledge. I had
developed a cramp in my left side. The second rider was rapidly approaching. He
was not pale like the first. His hair was dark and there was color in his face.
His mount was a properly maned sorrel. He bore a cocked and bolted crossbow. I
glanced behind me and there was no retreat, no crevice into which I might back.
I wiped my palm on my trousers and
gripped Grayswandir by the forte of the blade. I turned sideways, so as to
present the narrowest target possible. I raised my blade between us, hilt level
with my head, point toward the ground, the only shield I possessed.
The rider came abreast of me and
halted at the nearest point on the gauzy strip. He raised the crossbow slowly,
knowing that if he did not drop me instantly with his single shot, I might be
able to hurl my blade like a spear. Our eyes met.
He was beardless, slim. Possibly
light-eyed within the squint of his aim. He managed his mount well, with just
the pressure of his legs. His hands were big, steady. Capable. A peculiar
feeling passed over me as I beheld him.
The moment stretched beyond the
point of action. He rocked backward and lowered the weapon slightly, though
none of the tension left his stance.
You, he called out. Is that the blade
Grayswandir?
Yes, I answered, it is.
He continued his appraisal, and
something within me looked for words to wear, failed, ran naked away through
the night.
What do you want here? he asked.
To depart, I said.
There was a chish-chd, as his bolt
struck the rock far ahead and to the left of me.
Go then, he said. This is a
dangerous place for you.
He turned his mount back in the
direction from which he had come.
I lowered Grayswandir.
I won't forget you, I said.
No, he answered. Do not.
Then he galloped away, and moments
later the gauze drifted off also.
I resheathed Grayswandir and took a
step forward. The world was beginning to turn about me again, the light
advancing on my right, the dark retreating to my left. I looked about for some
way to scale the rocky prominence at my back. It seemed to rise only thirty or
forty feet higher, and I wanted the view that might be available from its
summit. My ledge extended to both my right and my left. On inspection, the way
to the right narrowed quickly, however, without affording a suitable ascent. I
turned and made my way to the left.
I came upon a rougher spot in a
narrow place beyond a rocky shoulder. Running my gaze up its height, an ascent
seemed possible. I checked behind me after the approach of additional threats. The
ghostly roadway had drifted farther away; no new riders advanced. I commenced
climbing.
The going was not difficult, though
the height proved greater than it had seemed from below. Likely a symptom of
the spatial distortion which seemed to have affected my sight of so much else
in this place. After a time, I hauled myself up and stood erect at a point
which afforded a better view in the direction opposite the abyss.
Once again, I beheld the chaotic
colors. From my right, the darkness herded them. The land they danced above was
rock-cropped and cratered, no sign of any life within it. Passing through its
midst, however, from the far horizon to a point in the mountains somewhere to
the right, inky and serpentine, ran what could only be the black road.
Another ten minutes of climbing and
maneuvering, and I had positioned myself to view its terminus. It swept through
a broad pass in the mountains and ran right to the very edge of the abyss. There,
its blackness merged with that which filled the place, noticeable now only by
virtue of the fact that no stars shone through it. Using this occlusion to
gauge it, I obtained the impression that it continued on to the dark eminence
about which the misty strips drifted.
I stretched out on my belly, so as
to disturb the outline of the low crest as little as possible to whatever
unseen eyes might flick across it. Lying there, I thought upon the opening of
this way. The damage to the Pattern had laid Amber open to this access, and I
believed that my curse had provided the precipitating element. I felt now that
it would have come to pass without me, but I was certain that I had done my
part. The guilt was still partly mine though no longer entirely so, as I had
once believed. I thought then of Eric, as he lay dying on Kolvir. He had said
that as much as he hated me, he was saving his dying curse for the enemies of
Amber. In other words, this, and these. Ironic. My efforts were now entirely
directed toward making good on my least-liked brother's dying wish. His curse
to cancel my curse, me as the agent. Fitting though, perhaps, in some larger
sense.
I sought, and was pleased not to
discover, ranks of glowing riders setting forth or assembling upon that road. Unless
another raiding party was already under way Amber was still temporarily safe. A
number of things immediately troubled me, however. Mainly, if time did indeed
behave as peculiarly in that place as Dara's possible origin indicated, then
why had there not been another attack? They had certainly had ample time in
which to recover and prepare for another assault. Had something occurred
recently, by Amber's time, that is, to alter the nature of their strategy? If
so, what? My weapons? Brand's recovery? Or something else? I wondered, too, how
far Benedict's outposts reached. Certainly not this far, or I should have been
informed. Had he ever been to this place? Had any of the others, within recent
memory, stood where I had just stood, looking upon the Courts of Chaos, knowing
something that I did not know? I resolved to question Brand and Benedict in
this regard as soon as I returned.
All of which led me to wonder how
time was behaving with me, at that moment. Better not to spend any more time
here than I had to, I decided. I scanned the other Trumps I had removed from
Dworkin's desk. While they were all of them interesting, I was familiar with
none of the scenes depicted. I slipped my own case then and riffled through to
Random's Trump. Perhaps he was the one who had tried to contact me earlier. I
raised his card and regarded it.
Shortly, it swam before my eyes and
I looked upon a blurred kaleidoscope of images, the impression of Random in
their midst. Motion, and twisting perspectives...
Random, I said. This is Corwin.
I felt his mind, but there was no
response from it. It struck me then that he was in the middle of a hellride,
all his concentration bent on wrapping the stuff of Shadow about him. He could
not respond without losing control. I blocked the Trump with my hand, breaking
the contact.
I cut to Gerard's card. Moments
later, there was contact. I stood.
Corwin, where are you? he
inquired.
At the end of the world, I said. I
want to come home.
Come ahead.
He extended his hand. I reached out
and clasped it, stepped forward.
We were on the ground floor of the
palace in Amber, in the sitting room to which we had all adjourned on the night
of Brand's return. It seemed to be early morning. There was a fire going on the
grate. No one else was present.
I tried to reach you earlier, he
said. I think Brand did, too. But I can't be sure.
How long have I been away?
Eight days, he said.
Glad I hurried. What's happening?
Nothing untoward, he said. I do
not know what Brand wants. He kept asking for you, and I could not reach you. Finally,
I gave him a deck and told him to see whether he could do any better. Apparently,
he could not.
I was distracted, I said, and
the time-flow differential was bad.
He nodded.
I have been avoiding him now that
he is out of danger. He is in one of his black moods again, and he insists he
can take care of himself. He is right, in that, and it is just as well.
Where is he now?
Back in his own quarters, and he
was still there as of perhaps an hour ago-brooding.
Has he been out at all?
A few brief walks. But not for the
past several days.
I guess I had best go see him
then. Any word on Random?
Yes, he said. Benedict returned
several days ago. He said they had found a number of leads concerning Random's
son. He helped him check on a couple of them. One led further, but Benedict
felt he had best not be away from Amber for too long, things being as uncertain
as they are. So he left Random to continue the search on his own. He gained
something in the venture, though. He came back sporting an artificial arm-a
beautiful piece of work. He can do anything with it that he could before.
Really? I said. It sounds
strangely familiar.
He smiled, nodded.
He told me you had brought it back
for him from Tir-na Nog'th. In fact, he wants to speak with you about it as
soon as possible.
I'll bet, I said. Where is he
now?
At one of the outposts he has
established along the black road. You would have to reach him by Trump.
Thanks, I said. Anything further
on Julian or Fiona?
He shook his head.
All right, I said, turning toward
the door. I guess I will go see Brand first.
I am curious to know what it is
that he wants, he said.
I will remember that, I told him.
I left the room and headed for the stairs.
CHAPTER 7
I rapped on Brand's door.
Come in, Corwin, he said.
I did, deciding as I crossed the
threshold that I would not ask him how he had known who it was. His room was a
gloomy place, candles burning despite the fact that it was daytime and he had
four windows. The shutters were closed on three of them. The fourth was only
part way open. Brand stood beside this one, staring out toward the sea. He was
dressed all in black velvet with a silver chain about his neck. His belt was
also of silver-a fine, linked affair. He played with a small dagger, and did
not look at me as I entered. He was still pale, but his beard was neatly
trimmed and he looked well scrubbed and a bit heavier than he had when last I
had seen him.
You are looking better, I said. How
are you feeling?
He turned and regarded me,
expressionless, his eyes half-closed.
Where the hell have you been? he
said.
Hither and yon. What did you want
to see me about?
I asked you where you've been.
And I heard you, I said,
reopening the door behind me. Now I am going to go out and come back in. Supposing
we start this conversation over again?
He sighed.
Wait a minute. I am sorry, he
said. Why are we all so thin-skinned? I do not know... All right. It may be
better if I do start over again.
He sheathed his dagger and crossed
to sit in a heavy chair of black wood and leather.
I got to worrying about all the
things we had discussed, he said, and some that we had not. I waited what
seemed an appropriate time for you to have concluded your business in Tir-na
Nog'th and returned. I then inquired after you and was told you had not yet
come back. I waited longer. First I was impatient, and then I grew concerned
that you might have been ambushed by our enemies. When I inquired again later,
I learned that you had been back only long enough to speak with Random's
wife-it must have been a conversation of great moment-and then to take a nap. You
then departed once more. I was irritated that you had not seen fit to keep me
posted as to events, but I resolved to wait a bit longer. Finally, I asked
Gerard to get hold of you with your Trump. When he failed, I was quite
concerned. I tried it myself then, and while it seemed that I touched you on
several occasions I could not get through. I feared for you, and now I see that
I had nothing to fear all along. Hence, I was abrupt.
I see, I said, taking a seat off
to his right.
Actually, time was running faster
for me than it was for you, so from where I am sitting I have hardly been away.
You are probably further recuperated from your puncture than I am from mine.
He smiled faintly and nodded.
That is something, anyway, he
said, for my pains.
I have had a few pains myself, I
said, so don't give me any more. You wanted me for something. Let's have it.
Something is bothering you, he
said. Perhaps we ought to discuss that first.
All right, I said. Let's.
I turned and looked at the painting
on the wall beside the door. An oil, a rather somber rendering of the well at
Mirata, two men standing beside their horses nearby, talking.
You've a distinctive style, I
said.
In all things, he replied.
You stole my next sentence, I
said, locating Martin's Trump and passing it to him.
He remained expressionless as he
examined it, gave me one brief, sidelong look and then nodded.
I cannot deny my hand, he said.
It executed more than that card,
your hand. Didn't it?
He traced his upper lip with the
tip of his tongue.
Where did you find it? he asked.
Right where you left it, at the
heart of things-in the real Amber.
So... he said, rising from the
chair and returning to the window, holding up the card as if to study it in a
better light. So, he repeated, you are aware of more than I had guessed. How
did you learn of the primal Pattern?
I shook my head.
You answer my question first: Did
you stab Martin?
He turned toward me once again,
stared a moment, then nodded sharply. His eyes continued to search my face
Why? I asked.
Someone had to, he explained, to
open the way for the powers we needed. We drew straws.
And you won.
Won? Lost? He shrugged. What
does any of this matter now? Things did not come about as we had intended. I am
a different person now than I was then.
Did you kill him?
What?
Martin, Random's son. Did he die
as a result of the wound you inflicted?
He turned his hands palms upward.
I do not know, he said. If he
did not, it was not because I did not try. You need look no further. You have
found your guilty party. Now that you have, what are you going to do?
I shook my head.
I? Nothing. For all I know, the
lad may still be living.
Then let us move on to matters of
greater moment. For how long have you known of the existence of the true
Pattern?
Long enough, I said. Its origin,
its functions, the effect of the blood of Amber upon it-long enough. I paid
more attention to Dworkin than you might have thought. I saw no gain to be had
in damaging the fabric of existence, though. So I let Rover lie sleeping for a
long, long while. It did not even occur to me until I spoke with you recently
that the black road might have been connected with such foolishness. When I
went to inspect the Pattern I found Martin's Trump and all the rest.
I was not aware that you were
acquainted with Martin.
I have never set eyes on him.
Then how were you aware he was the
subject of the Trump?
I was not alone in that place.
Who was with you?
I smiled.
No, Brand. It is still your turn. You
told me when last we talked that the enemies of Amber hied all the way from the
Courts of Chaos, that they have access to the realm via the black road because
of something you and Bleys and Fiona had done back when you were of one mind as
to the best way to take the throne. Now I know what it is that you did. Yet
Benedict has been watching the black road and I have just looked upon the
Courts of Chaos. There is no new massing of forces, no movement toward us upon
that road. I know that time flows differently in that place. They should have
had more than enough time to ready a new assault. I want to know what is
holding them back. Why have they not moved? What are they waiting for, Brand?
You credit me with more knowledge
than I possess.
I don't think so. You are the
resident expert on the subject. You have dealt with them. That Trump is
evidence that you have been holding back on other matters. Don't weasel, just
talk.
The Courts... he said. You have
been busy. Eric was a fool not to have killed you immediately-if he was aware
you had knowledge of these things.
Eric was a fool, I acknowledged. You
are not. Now talk.
But I am a fool, he said, a
sentimental one, at that. Do you recall the day of our last argument, here in
Amber, so long ago?
Somewhat.
I was sitting on the edge of my
bed. You were standing by my writing desk. As you turned away and headed toward
the door, I resolved to kill you. I reached beneath my bed, where I keep a
cocked crossbow with a bolt in it. I actually had my hand on it and was about
to raise it when I realized something which stopped me.
He paused.
What was that? I asked.
Look over there by the door.
I looked, I saw nothing special. I
began to shake my head, just as he said, On the floor.
Then I realized what it was-russet
and olive and brown and green, with a small geometric pattern. He nodded.
You were standing on my favorite
rug. I did not want to get blood on it. Later, my anger passed. So I, too, am a
victim of emotion and circumstance.
Lovely story I began.
-but now you want me to stop
stalling. I was not stalling, however. I was attempting to make a point. We are
all of us alive by one another's sufferance and an occasional fortunate
accident. I am going to propose suspending that sufferance and eliminating the
possibility of accident in a couple of very important cases. First though, to
answer your question, while I do not know for certain what is holding them
back, I can venture a very good guess. Bleys has assembled a large strike force
for an attack on Amber. It will be nowhere near the scale of the one on which
you accompanied him, however. You see, he will be counting on the memory of
that last attack to have conditioned the response to this one. It will probably
also be preceded by attempts to assassinate Benedict and yourself. The entire
affair will be a feint, though. I would guess that Fiona has contacted the
Courts of Chaos-may even be there right now-and has prepared them for the real
attack, which might be expected any time after Bleys's diversionary foray. Therefore
You say this is a very good
guess, I interrupted. But we do not even know for certain that Bleys is still
living.
Bleys is alive, he said. I was
able to ascertain his existence via his Trump-even a brief assessment of his
current activities-before he became aware of my presence and blocked me out. He
is very sensitive to such surveillance. I found him in the field with troops he
intends to employ against Amber.
And Fiona?
No, he said, I did no
experimenting with her Trump, and I would advise you not to either. She is
extremely dangerous, and I did not want to lay my self open to her influence. My
estimate of her current situation is based on deduction rather than direct
knowledge. I would be willing to rely on it, though.
I see, I said.
I have a plan.
Go ahead.
The manner in which you retrieved
me from durance was quite inspired, combining the forces of everyone's
concentration as you did. The same principle could be utilized again, to a
different end. A force such as that would break through a person's defense fairly
easily-even someone like Fiona, if the effort is properly directed.
That is to say, directed by
yourself?
Of course. I propose that we
assemble the family and force our way through to Bleys and Fiona, wherever they
may be. We hold them, locked in the full, in the flesh, just for a moment or
so. Just long enough for me to strike.
As you did Martin?
Better, I trust. Martin was able
to break free at the last moment. That should not occur this time, with all of
you helping. Even three or four would probably be sufficient.
You really think you can pull it
off that easily?
I know we had better try. Time is
running. You will be one of the ones executed when they take Amber. So will I.
What do you say?
If I become convinced that it is
necessary. Then I would have no choice but to go along with it.
It is necessary, believe me. The
next thing is that I will need the Jewel of Judgment.
What for?
If Fiona is truly in the Courts of
Chaos, the Trump alone will probably be insufficient to reach her and hold
her-even with all of us behind it. In her case, I will require the Jewel to
focus our energies.
I suppose that could be arranged.
Then the sooner we are about it
the better. Can you set things up for tonight? I am sufficiently recovered to handle
my end of it.
Hell, no, I said, standing.
What do you mean? He clenched the
arms of the chair, half-rising. Why not?
I said I would go along with it if
I became convinced that it was necessary. You have admitted that a lot of this
is conjecture. That alone is sufficient to keep me from being convinced.
Forget about being convinced then.
Can you afford to take the chance? The next attack is going to be a lot
stronger than the last, Corwin. They are aware of your new weapons. They are
going to allow for this in their planning.
Even if I agreed with you Brand, I
am certain I could not convince the others that the executions are necessary.
Convince them? Just tell them! You've
got them all by the throat, Corwin! You are on top right now. You want to stay
there, don't you?
I smiled and moved toward the door.
I will, too, I said, by doing
things my way. I will keep your suggestion on file.
Your way is going to get you dead.
Sooner than you think.
I am standing on your rug again,
I said.
He laughed.
Very good. But I was not
threatening you. You know what I meant. You are responsible for all of Amber
now. You have to do the right thing.
And you know what I meant. I am
not going to kill a couple more of us because of your suspicions. I would need
more than that.
When you get it, it may be too
late.
I shrugged.
We'll see. I reached toward the
door.
What are you going to do now?
I shook my head.
I don't tell anybody everything
that I know, Brand. It is a kind of insurance.
I can appreciate that. I only hope
that you know enough.
Or perhaps you fear that I know
too much, I said.
For a moment a wary look danced on
the muscles beneath his eyes. Then he smiled. I am not afraid of you,
brother, he said.
It is good to have nothing to
fear, I said. I opened the door.
Wait, he said.
Yes?
You neglected to tell me who was
with you when you discovered Martin's Trump, in the place where I had left it.
Why, it was Random, I said.
Oh. Is he aware of the
particulars?
If you mean, does he know that you
stabbed his son, I said, the answer is no, not yet.
I see. And of Benedict's new arm? I
understand that you somehow got it for him in Tir-na Nog'th. I would like to
know more about this.
Not now, I said. Let's save something
for our next get-together. It won't be all that long.
I went on out and closed the door,
my silent regards to the rug.
CHAPTER 8
After visiting the kitchens,
compiling an enormous meal and demolishing it, I headed for the stables, where
I located a handsome young sorrel which had once belonged to Eric. I made
friends with him in spite of this, and a short while later we were moving
toward the trail down Kolvir which would take us to the camp of my Shadow
forces. As I rode and digested, I tried to sort out the events and revelations
of what, to me, had been the past few hours. If Amber had indeed arisen as the
result of Dworkin's act of rebellion within the Courts of Chaos, then it
followed that we were all of us related to the very forces which now threatened
us. It was, of course, difficult to decide how far anything Dworkin said might
now be trusted. Yet, the black road did run to the Courts of Chaos, apparently
as a direct result of Brand's ritual, a thing which he had based on principles
learned from Dworkin. Fortunately, for now, the parts of Dworkin's narrative
which required the greatest credulity were those things which were not of any
great moment, from an immediate, practical standpoint. Still, I had mixed
feelings about being descended from a unicorn
Corwin!
I drew rein. I opened my mind to
the sending and the image of Ganelon appeared.
I am here, I said. Where did you
get hold of a set of Trumps? And learn how to use them?
I picked up a pack from the case
in the library a while back. Thought it a good idea to have a way of getting in
touch with you in a hurry. As for using them, I just did what you and the
others seem to do-study the Trump, think about it, concentrate on getting in
touch with the person.
I should have gotten you a pack
long ago, I said. It was an oversight on my part which I am glad you've
remedied. Are you just testing them now, or did something come up?
Something, he said. Where are
you?
As chance would have it, I am on
my way down to see you.
You are all right?
Yes.
Fine. Come ahead then. I'd rather
not try bringing you through this thing, the way you people do. It is not that
urgent. I will see you by and by.
Yes.
He broke the contact and I rustled
the reins and continued on. For a moment, I had been irritated that he had not
simply asked me for a deck. Then I recalled that I had been away for over a
week, by Amber's time. He had probably been getting worried, didn't trust any
of the others to do it for him. Perhaps rightly so.
The descent went quickly, as did
the balance of the journey to the camp. The horse-whose name, by the way, was
Drum-seemed happy to be going somewhere and had a tendency to pull away at the
least excuse. I gave him his head at one point to tire him a bit, and it was
not too long afterward that I sighted the camp. I realized at about that time
that I missed Star.
I was the subject of stares and
salutes as I rode into camp. A silence followed me and all activity ceased as I
passed. I wondered whether they believed I had come to deliver a battle order.
Ganelon emerged from his tent
before I had dismounted.
Fast, he observed, clasping my
hand as I came down. Pretty horse, that.
Yes, I agreed, turning the reins
over to his orderly. What news have you?
Well... he said. I've been
talking to Benedict ...
Something stirring on the black
road?
No, no. Nothing like that. He came
to see me after he returned from those friends of his-the Tecys-to tell me that
Random was all right, that he was following a lead as to Martin's whereabouts. We
got to talking of other matters after that, and finally he asked me to tell him
everything I knew about Dara. Random had told him about her walking the Pattern,
and he had decided then that too many people other than yourself were aware of
her existence.
So what did you tell him?
Everything.
Including the guesswork, the
speculation after Tirna Nog'th?
Just so.
I see. How did he take this?
He seemed excited about it. Happy,
I'd even say. Come talk with him yourself.
I nodded and he turned toward his
tent. He pushed back the flap and stepped aside. I entered.
Benedict was seated on a low stool
beside a foot locker atop which a map had been spread. He was tracing something
on the map with the long metal finger of the glinting, skeletal hand attached
to the deadly, silver-cabled, firepinned mechanical arm I had brought back from
the city in the sky, the entire device now attached to the stump of his right
arm a little below the point where the sleeve had been cut away from his brown
shirt, a transformation which halted me with a momentary shudder, so much did
he resemble the ghost I had encountered. His eyes rose to meet my own and he
raised the hand in greeting, a casual, perfectly executed gesture, and he
smiled the broadest smile I had ever seen crease his face.
Corwin! he said, and then he rose
and extended that hand.
I had to force myself to clasp the
device which had almost killed me. But Benedict looked more kindly disposed
toward me than he had in a long while. I shook the new hand and its pressures
were perfect. I tried to disregard its coldness and angularity and almost
succeeded, in my amazement at the control he had acquired over it in such a brief
time.
I owe you an apology, he said. I
have wronged you. I am very sorry.
It's all right, I said. I
understand.
He clasped me for a moment, and my
belief that things had apparently been set right between us was darkened only
by the grip of those precise and deadly fingers on my shoulder.
Ganelon chuckled and brought up
another stool, which he set at the other end of the locker. My irritation at
his having aired the subject I had not wanted mentioned, whatever the
circumstances, was submerged by the sight of its effects. I could not remember
having seen Benedict in better spirits; Ganelon was obviously pleased at having
effected the resolution of our differences.
I smiled myself and accepted a
seat, unbuckling my sword belt and hanging Grayswandir on the tent pole. Ganelon
produced three glasses and a bottle of wine. As he set the glasses before us
and poured, he remarked, To return the hospitality of your tent, that night,
back in Avalon.
Benedict took up his glass with but
the faintest of clicks.
There is more ease in this tent,
he said. Is that not so, Corwin?
I nodded and raised my glass.
To that ease. May it always
prevail.
I have had my first opportunity in
a long while, he said, to talk with Random at some length. He has changed
quite a bit.
Yes, I agreed.
I am more inclined to trust him
now than I was in days gone by. We had the time to talk after we left the
Tecys.
Where were you headed?
Some comments Martin had made to
his host seemed to indicate that he was going to a place I knew of further off
in Shadow-the block city of Heerat. We journeyed there and found this to be
correct. He had passed that way.
I am not familiar with Heerat, I
said.
A place of adobe and stone-a
commercial center at the junction of several trade routes. There, Random found
news which took him eastward and probably deeper into Shadow. We parted company
at Heerat, for I did not want to be away from Amber overlong. Also, there was a
personal matter I was anxious to pursue. He told me how he had seen Dara walk
the Pattern on the day of the battle.
That's right, I said. She did. I
was there, too.
He nodded.
As I said. Random had impressed
me. I was inclined to believe he was telling the truth. If this were so, then
it was possible that you were also. Granting this, I had to pursue the matter
of the girl's allegations. You were not available, so I came to Ganelon-this
was several days ago-and had him tell me everything he knew about Dara.
I glanced at Ganelon, who inclined
his head slightly.
So you now believe you have
uncovered a new relative, I said, a mendacious one, to be sure, and quite
possibly an enemy-but a relative, nevertheless. What is your next move?
He took a sip of wine.
I would like to believe in the
relationship, he said. The notion somehow pleases me. So I would like to
establish it or negate it to a certainty. If it turns out that we are indeed
related, then I would like to understand the motives behind her actions. And I
would like to learn why she never made her existence known to me directly.
He put down his glass, raised his
new hand and flexed the fingers.
So I would like to begin, he
continued, by learning of those things you experienced in Tir-na Nog'th which
apply to me and to Dara. I am also extremely curious about this hand, which
behaves as if it were made for me. I have never heard of a physical object
being obtained in the city in the sky.
He made a fist, unclenched it,
rotated the wrist, extended the arm, raised it, lowered it gently to his knee.
Random performed a very effective
piece of surgery, don't you think? he concluded.
Very, I agreed.
So, will you tell me the story?
I nodded and took a sip of my wine.
It was in the palace in the sky
that it occurred, I said. The place was filled with inky, shifting shadows. I
felt impelled to visit the throne room. I did this, and when the shadows moved
aside, I saw you standing to the right of the throne, wearing that arm. When
things cleared further, I saw Dara seated upon the throne. I advanced and
touched her with Grayswandir, which made me visible to her. She declared me
dead these several centuries and bade me return to my grave. When I demanded
her lineage, she said she was descended of you and of the hellmaid Lintra.
Benedict drew a deep breath but
said nothing. I continued:
Time, she said, moved at such a
different rate in the place of her birth, that several generations had passed
there. She was the first of them possessed of regular human attributes. She
again bade me depart. During this time, you had been studying Grayswandir. You
struck then to remove her from danger, and we fought. My blade could reach you
and your hand could reach me. That was all. Otherwise, it was a confrontation
of ghosts. As the sun began to rise and the city to fade, you had me in a grip
with that hand. I struck it free of the arm with Grayswandir and escaped. It
was returned with me because it was still clasping my shoulder.
Curious, Benedict said. I have
known that place to render false prophecies-the fears and hidden desires of the
visitor, rather than a true picture of what is to be. But then, it often
reveals unknown truths as well. And as in most other things, it is difficult to
separate the valid from the spurious. How did you read it?
Benedict, I said, I am inclined
to believe the story of her origin. You have never seen her, but I have. She
does resemble you in some ways. As for the rest ...it is doubtless as you
said-that which is left after the truth has been separated out.
He nodded slowly, and I could tell
that he was not convinced but did not want to push the matter. He knew as well
as I did what the rest implied. If he were to pursue his claim to the throne
and succeed in achieving it, it was possible that he might one day step aside
in favor of his only descendant.
What are you going to do? I asked
him.
Do? he said. What is Random now
doing about Martin? I shall seek her, find her, have the story from her own
lips, and then decide for myself. This will have to wait, however, until the
matter of the black road is settled. That is another matter I wish to discuss
with you.
Yes?
If time moves so differently in
their stronghold, they have had more than they need in which to mount another
attack. I do not want to keep waiting to meet them in indecisive encounters. I
am contemplating following the black road back to its source and attacking them
on their home ground. I would like to do it with your concurrence.
Benedict, I said, have you ever
looked upon the Courts of Chaos?
He raised his head and stared at
the blank wall of the tent.
Ages ago, when I was young, he
said, I hellrode as far as I might go, to the end of everything. There,
beneath a divided sky, I looked upon an awesome abyss. I do not know if the
place lies there or if the road runs that far, but I am prepared to take that
way again, if such is the case.
Such is the case, I said.
How can you be certain?
I am just returned from that land.
A dark citadel hovers within it. The road goes to it.
How difficult was the way?
Here, I said, taking out the
Trump and passing it to him.
This was Dworkin's. I found it
among his things. I only just tried it. It took me there. Time is already rapid
at that point. I was attacked by a rider on a drifting roadway, of a sort not
shown on the card. Trump contact is difficult there, perhaps because of the
time differential. Gerard brought me back.
He studied the card.
It seems the place I saw that
time, he said at length. This solves our logistics problems. With one of us
on either end of a Trump connection we can transport the troops right through,
as we did that day from Kolvir to Gamath.
I nodded.
That is one of the reasons I
showed it to you, to indicate my good faith. There may be another way,
involving less risk than running our forces into the unknown. I want you to
hold off on this venture until I have explored my way further.
I will have to hold off in any
event, to obtain some intelligence concerning that place. We do not even know
whether your automatic weapons will function there, do we?
No, I did not have one along to
test.
He pursed his lips.
You really should have thought to
take one and try it.
The circumstances of my departure
did not permit this.
Circumstances?
Another time. It is not relevant
here. You spoke of following the black road to its source...
Yes?
That is not its true source. Its
real source lies in the true Amber, in the defect in the primal Pattern.
Yes, I understand that. Both
Random and Ganelon have described your journey to the place of the true
Pattern, and the damage you discovered there. I see the analogy, the possible
connection
Do you recall my flight from
Avalon, and your pursuit?
In answer, he only smiled faintly.
There was a point where we crossed
the black road, I said. Do you recall it?
He narrowed his eyes.
Yes, he said. You cut a path
through it. The world had returned to normal at that point. I had forgotten.
It was an effect of the Pattern
upon it, I said, one which I believe can be employed upon a much larger
scale.
How much larger?
To wipe out the entire thing.
He leaned back and studied my face.
Then why are you not about it?
There are a few preliminaries I
must undertake.
How much time will they involve?
Not too much. Possibly as little
as a few days. Perhaps a few weeks.
Why didn't you mention all of this
sooner?
I only learned how to go about it
recently.
How do you go about it?
Basically, it amounts to repairing
the Pattern.
All right, he said. Say you
succeed. The enemy will still be out there.
He gestured toward Garnath and the
black road.
Someone gave them passage once.
The enemy has always been out
there, I said. And it will be up to us to see that they are not given passage
again-by dealing properly with those who provided it in the first place.
I go along with you on that, he
said, but that is not what I meant. They require a lesson, Corwin. I want to
teach them a proper respect for Amber, such a respect that even if the way is
opened again they will fear to use it. That is what I meant. It is necessary.
You do not know what it would be
like to carry a battle to that place, Benedict. It is-literally-indescribable.
He smiled and stood.
Then I guess I had best go see for
myself, he said. I will keep this card for a time, if you don't mind.
I don't mind.
Good. Then you be on with your
business about the Pattern, Corwin, and I will be about my own. This will take
me some time, too. I must go give my commanders orders concerning my absence
now. Let us agree that neither of us commence anything of a final nature
without checking first with the other.
Agreed, I said.
We finished our wine.
I will be under way myself, very
soon now, I said. So, good luck.
To you, also. He smiled again.
Things are better, he said, and he clasped my shoulder as he passed to the
entrance. We followed him outside.
Bring Benedict's horse, Ganelon
directed the orderly who stood beneath a nearby tree; and turning, he offered
Benedict his hand.
I, too, want to wish you luck, he
said.
Benedict nodded and shook his hand.
Thank you, Ganelon. For many
things.
Benedict withdrew his Trumps.
I can bring Gerard up to date, he
said, before my horse arrives.
He riffled through them, withdrew
one, studied it.
How do you go about repairing the
Pattern? Ganelon asked me.
I have to get hold of the Jewel of
Judgment again, I said. With it, I can reinscribe the damaged area.
Is this dangerous?
Yes.
Where is the Jewel?
Back on the shadow Earth, where I
left it.
Why did you abandon it?
I feared that it was killing me.
He contorted his features into a
near-impossible grimace.
I don't like the sound of this,
Corwin. There must be another way.
If I knew a better way, I'd take
it.
Supposing you just followed
Benedict's plan and took them all on? You said yourself that he could raise
infinite legions in Shadow. You also said that he is the best man there is in
the field.
Yet the damage would remain in the
Pattern, and something else would come to fill it. Always. The enemy of the
moment is not as important as our own inner weakness. If this is not mended we
are already defeated, though no foreign conqueror stands within our walls.
He turned away.
I cannot argue with you. You know
your own realm, he said. But I still feel you may be making a grave mistake
by risking yourself on what may prove unnecessary at a time when you are very
much needed.
I chuckled, for it was Vialle's
word and I had not wanted to call it my own when she had said it.
It is my duty, I told him.
He did not reply.
Benedict, a dozen paces away, had
apparently reached Gerard, for he would mutter something, then pause and
listen. We stood there, waiting for him to conclude his conversation so that we
could see him off.
...Yes, he is here now, I heard
him say. No, I doubt that very much. But
Benedict glanced at me several
times and shook his head.
No, I do not think so, he said. Then,
All right, come ahead.
He extended his new hand, and
Gerard stepped into being, clasping it. Gerard turned his head, saw me, and
immediately moved in my direction.
He ran his eyes up and down and
back and forth across my entire person, as if searching for something.
What is the matter? I said.
Brand, he replied. He is no
longer in his quarters. At least, most of him isn't. He left some blood behind.
The place is also broken up enough to show there had been a fight.
I glanced down at my shirt front
and trousers.
And you are looking for
bloodstains? As you can see, these are the same things I had on earlier. They
may be dirty and wrinkled, but that's all.
That does not really prove
anything, he said.
It was your idea to look. Not
mine. What makes you think I
You were the last one to see him,
he said.
Except for the person be had a
fight with-if he really did.
What do you mean by that?
You know his temper, his moods. We
had a small argument. He might have started breaking things up after I left,
maybe cut himself, gotten disgusted, trumped out for a change of scene-Wait! His
rug! Was there any blood on that small, fancy rug before his door?
I am not sure-no, I don't think
so. Why?
Circumstantial evidence that he
did it himself. He was very fond of that rug. He avoided messing it.
I don't buy it, Gerard said, and
Caine's death still looks peculiar-and Benedict's servants, who could have
found out you wanted gunpowder. Now Brand
This could well be another attempt
to frame me, I said, and Benedict and I have come to better terms.
He turned toward Benedict, who had
not moved from where he stood a dozen paces away, regarding us without
expression, listening.
Has he explained away those
deaths? Gerard asked him.
Not directly, Benedict answered,
but much of the rest of the story now stands in a better light. So much so,
that I am inclined to believe all of it.
Gerard shook his head and glared
down at me again.
Still unsettled, he said. What
were you and Brand arguing about?
Gerard, I said, that is our
business, till Brand and I decide otherwise.
I dragged him back to life and
watched over him, Corwin. I didn't do it just to see him killed in a squabble.
Use your brains, I told him. Whose
idea was it to search for him the way that we did? To bring him back?
You wanted something from him, he
said. You finally got it. Then he became an impediment.
No. But even if that were the
case, do you think I would be so damned obvious about it? If he has been
killed, then it is on the same order as Caine's death-an attempt to frame me.
You used the obviousness excuse
with Caine, too. It seems to me it could be a kind of subtlety-a thing you are
good at.
We have been through this before,
Gerard...
...And you know what I told you
then.
It would be difficult to have
forgotten.
He reached forward and seized my
right shoulder. I immediately drove my left hand into his stomach and pulled
away. It occurred to me then that perhaps I should have told him what Brand and
I had been talking about. But I didn't like the way he had asked me.
He came at me again. I side-stepped
and caught him with a light left near the right eye. I kept jabbing after that,
mainly to keep his head back. I was in no real shape to fight him again, and
Grayswandir was back in the tent. I had no other weapon with me.
I kept circling him. My side hurt
if I kicked with my left leg. I caught him once on the thigh with my right, but
I was slow and off-balance and could not really follow through. I continued to
jab.
Finally, he blocked my left and
managed to drop his hand on my biceps. I should have pulled away then, but he
was open. I stepped in with a heavy right to his stomach, all of my strength
behind it. It bent him forward with a gasp, but his grip tightened on my arm. He
blocked my attempted uppercut with his left, continuing its forward motion
until the heel of his hand slammed against my chest, at the same time jerking
my left arm backward and to the side with such force that I was thrown to the
ground. If he came down on me, that was it.
He dropped to one knee and reached
for my throat.
CHAPTER 9
I moved to block his hand, but it
halted in midreach. Turning my head, I saw that another hand had fallen upon
Gerard's arm, was now grasping it, was holding it back.
I rolled away. When I looked up
again, I saw that Ganelon had caught hold of him. Gerard jerked his arm
forward, but it did not come free.
Stay out of this, Ganelon, he
said.
Get going, Corwin! Ganelon said. Get
the Jewel!
Even as he called out, Gerard was
beginning to rise. Ganelon crossed with his left and connected with Gerard's
jaw. Gerard sprawled at his feet. Ganelon moved in and swung a kick toward his
kidney, but Gerard caught his foot and heaved him over backward. I scrambled
back into a crouch, supporting myself with one hand.
Gerard came up off the ground and
rushed Ganelon, who was just recovering his feet. As he was almost upon him,
Ganelon came up with a double-fisted blow to Guard's midsection, which halted
him in his tracks. Instantly, Ganelon's fists were moving like pistons against
Gerard's abdomen. For several moments, Gerard seemed too dazed to protect
himself, and when he finally bent and brought his arms in, Ganelon caught him
with a right to the jaw that staggered him backward. Ganelon immediately rushed
forward, throwing his arms about Gerard as he slammed into him and hooking his
right leg behind Gerard's own. Gerard toppled and Ganelon fell upon him. He
straddled Gerard then and drove his right fist against his jaw. When Gerard's
head rolled back, Ganelon crossed with his left.
Benedict suddenly moved to
intervene, but Ganelon chose that moment to rise to his feet. Gerard lay
unconscious, bleeding from his mouth and nose. I got shakily to my own feet,
dusted myself off. Ganelon grinned at me.
Don't stay around, he said. I
don't know how I would do in a rematch. Go find the trinket.
I glanced at Benedict and he
nodded. I returned to the tent for Grayswandir.
When I emerged, Gerard still had
not moved, but Benedict stood before me.
Remember, he said, you've my
Trump and I've yours. Nothing final without a conference.
I nodded. I was going to ask him
why he had seemed willing to help Gerard, but not me. But second thoughts had
me and I decided against spoiling our fresh-minted amity.
Okay.
I headed toward the horses. Ganelon
clapped me on the shoulder as I came up to him.
Good luck, he said. I'd go with
you, but I am needed here-especially with Benedict trumping off to Chaos.
Good show, I said. I shouldn't
have any trouble. Don't worry.
I went off to the paddock. Shortly,
I was mounted and moving. Ganelon threw me a salute as I passed and I returned
it. Benedict was kneeling beside Gerard.
I headed for the nearest trail into
Arden. The sea lay at my back, Gamath and the black road to the left, Kolvir to
my right. I had to gain some distance before I could work with the stuff of
Shadow. The day lay clean once Gamath was lost to sight, several rises and dips
later. I struck the trail and followed its long curve into the wood, where
moist shadows and distant bird songs reminded me of the long periods of peace
we had known of old and the silken, gleaming presence of the maternal uuicorn.
My aches faded into the rhythm of
the ride, and I thought once again of the encounter I had departed. It was not
difficult to understand Gerard's attitude, since he had already told me of his
suspicions and issued me a warning. Still, it was such bad timing for whatever
had happened with Brand that I could not but see it as another action intended
either to slow me or to stop me entirely. It was fortunate that Ganelon had
been on hand, in good shape, and able to put his fists in the right places at
the proper times. I wondered what Benedict would have done if there had only
been the three of us present. I'd a feeling he would have waited and intervened
only at the very last moment, to stop Gerard from killing me. I was still not
happy with our accord, though it was certainly an improvement over the previous
state of affairs.
All of which made me wonder again
what had become of Brand. Had Fiona or Bleys finally gotten to him? Had he
attempted his proposed assassinations singlehanded and been met with a
counterthrust, then dragged through his intended victim's Trump? Had his old
allies from the Courts of Chaos somehow gotten through to him? Had one of his
homy-handed guardians from the tower finally been able to reach him? Or had it
been as I had suggested to Gerardan accidental self-injury in a fit of rage,
followed by an ill tempered flight from Amber to do his brooding and plotting
elsewhere?
When that many questions arise from
a single event the answer is seldom obtainable by pure logic. I had to sort out
the possibilities though, to have something to reach for when more facts did
turn up. In the meantime, I thought carefully over everything he had told me,
regarding his allegations in light of those things which I now knew. With one
exception, I did not doubt most of the facts. He had built too cleverly to have
the edifice simply toppled-but then, he had had a lot of time to think these
things over. No, it was in his manner of presenting events that something had
been hidden by misdirection. His recent proposal practically assured me of that.
The old trail twisted, widened, narrowed again, swung to the northwest
and downward, into the thickening wood. The forest had changed very little. It
seemed almost the same trail a young man had ridden centuries before, riding
for the sheer pleasure of it, riding to explore that vast green realm which
extended over most of the continent, if he did not stray into Shadow. It would
be good to be doing it again for no reason other than this.
After perhaps an hour, I had worked my way well back into the forest,
where the trees were great dark towers, what sunlight I glimpsed caught like
phoenix nests in their highest branches, an always moist, twilight softness
smoothing the outlines of stumps and boles, logs and mossy rocks. A deer
bounded across my path, not trusting to the excellent concealment of a thicket
at the right of the trail. Bird notes sounded about me, never too near.
Occasionally, I crossed the tracks of other horsemen. Some of these were quite
fresh, but they did not stay long with the trail. Kolvir was well out of sight,
had been for some time.
The trail rose again, and I knew that I would shortly reach the top of
a small ridge, pass among rocks, and head downward once more. The trees thinned
somewhat as we climbed, until finally I was afforded a partial view of the sky.
It was enlarged as I continued, and when I came to the summit I heard the
distant cry of a hunting bird.
Glancing upward, I saw a great dark shape, circling and circling, high
above me. I hurried past the boulders and shook the reins for a burst of speed
as soon as the way was clear. We plunged downward, racing to get under cover of
the larger trees once again.
The bird cried out as we did this, but we won to the shade, to the
dimness, without incident. I slowed gradually after that and continued to
listen, but there were no untoward sounds on the air. This part of the forest
was pretty much the same as that we had left beyond the ridge, save for a small
stream we picked up and paralleled for a time, finally crossing it at a shallow
ford. Beyond, the trail widened and a little more light leaked through and
flowed with us for half a league. We had almost come a sufficient distance for
me to begin those small manipulations of Shadow which would bear me to the
pathway back to the shadow Earth of my former exile. Yet, it would be difficult
to begin here, easier farther along. I resolved to save the strain on myself
and my mount by continuing to a better beginning. Nothing of a threatening
nature had really occurred. The bird could be a wild hunter, probably was.
Only one thought nagged at me as I rode.
Julian...
Arden was Julian's preserve, patrolled by his rangers, sheltering
several encampments of his troops at all times-Amber's inland border guard,
both against incursions natural and against those things which might appear at
the boundaries of Shadow.
Where did Julian go when he had departed the palace so suddenly on the
night of Brand's stabbing? If he wished simply to hide, there was no necessity
for him to flee farther than this. Here he was strong, backed by his own men,
moving in a realm he knew far better than the rest of us. It was quite possible
that he was not, right now, too far away. Also, he liked to hunt. He had his
hellhounds, he had his birds ...A half mile, a mile...
Just then, I heard the sound that I feared most. Piercing the green and
the shade, there came the notes of a hunting horn. They came from some distance
behind me, and I think from the left of the trail.
I urged my mount to a gallop and the trees rushed to a blur on either
side. The trail was straight and level here. We took advantage of this.
Then from behind, I heard a roar-a kind of deepchested coughing,
growling sound backed by a lot of resonant lung space. I did not know what it
was that had littered it, but it was no dog. Not even a hellhound sounded like
that. I glanced back, but there was no pursuit in sight. So I kept low and
talked to Drum a bit.
After a time, I heard a crashing noise in the woods off to my right,
but the roar was not repeated just then. I looked again, several times, but I
was unable to make out what it was that was causing the disturbance. Shortly
thereafter, I heard the horn once more, much nearer, and this time it was
answered by the barks and the baying which I could not mistake. The hellhounds
were coming-swift, powerful, vicious beasts Julian had found in some shadow and
trained to the hunt.
It was time, I decided, to begin the shift. Amber was still strong
about me, but I laid hold of Shadow as best I could and started the movement.
The trail began to curve to the left, and as we raced along it the
trees at either hand diminished in size, fell back. Another curve, and the
trail led us through a clearing, perhaps two hundred meters across. I glanced
up then and saw that that damned bird was still circling, much nearer now,
close enough to be dragged with me through Shadow.
This was more complicated than I had intended. I wanted an open space
in which to wheel my mount and swing a blade freely if it came to that. The
occurrence of such a place, however, revealed my position quite clearly to the
bird, whom it was proving difficult to lose.
All right. We came to a low hill, mounted it, started downward, passing
a lone, lightning-blasted tree as we did. On its nearest branch sat a hawk of
gray and silver and black. I whistled to it as we passed, and it leaped into
the air, shrieking a savage battle cry.
Hurrying on, I heard the individual voices of the dogs clearly now, and
the thud of the horses' hoofs. Mixed in with these sounds there was something
else, more a vibration, a shuddering of the ground. I looked back again, but
none of my pursuit had yet topped the hill. I bent my mind toward the way away
and clouds occluded the sun. Strange flowers appeared along the trail-green and
yellow and purple-and there came a rumble of distant thunders. The clearing
widened, lengthened. It became completely level.
I heard once again the sound of the horn. I turned for another look.
It bounded into view then, and I realized at that instant that I was
not the object of the hunt, that the riders, the dogs, the bird, were pursuing
the thing that ran behind me. Of course, this was a rather academic
distinction, in that I was in front, and quite possibly the object of its hunt.
I leaned forward, shouting to Drum and digging in with my knees, realizing even
as I did that the abomination was moving faster than we could. It was a panic
reaction. I was being pursued by a manticora.
The last time I had seen its like was on the day before the battle in
which Eric died. As I had led my troops up the rearward slopes of Kolvir, it
had appeared to tear a man named Rail in half. We had dispatched it with
automatic weapons. The thing proved twelve feet in length, and like this one it
had worn a human face on the head and shoulders of a lion; it, too, had had a
pair of eaglelike wings folded against its sides and the long pointed tail of a
scorpion curving in the air above it. A number of them had somehow wandered in
from Shadow to devil our steps as we headed for that battle. There was no
reason to believe all of them had been accounted for, save that none had been
reported since that time and no evidence of their continued existence in the
vicinity of Amber had come to light. Apparently, this one had wandered down
into Arden and been living in the forest since that time.
A final glance showed me that I might be pulled down in moments if I
did not make a stand. It also showed me a dark avalanche of dogs rushing down
the hill. I did not know the intelligence or psychology of the manticora. Most
fleeing beasts will not stop to attack something which is not bothering them.
Self-preservation is generally foremost in their minds. On the other hand, I
was not certain that the manticora even realized that it was being pursued. It
might have started out on my trail and only had its own picked up afterward. It
might have only the one thing on its mind. It was hardly a time to pause and
reflect on all the possibilities.
I drew Grayswandir and turned my mount to the left, pulling back on the
reins immediately as he made the turn.
Drum screamed and rose high onto his hind legs. I felt myself sliding
backward, so I jumped to the ground and leaped to the side.
But I had, for the moment, forgotten the speed of the storm-hounds, had
also forgotten how easily they had once overtaken Random and myself in Flora's
Mercedes, had also forgotten that unlike ordinary dogs chasing cars, they had
begun tearing the vehicle apart.
Suddenly, they were all over the manticora, a dozen or more dogs,
leaping and biting. The beast threw back its head and uttered another cry as
they struck at it. It swept that vicious tail through them, sending one flying,
stunning or killing two others. It reared then and turned, striking out with
its forelegs as it descended.
But even as it did this, a hound attached itself to its left foreleg,
two more were at its haunches and one had scrambled onto its back, biting at
its shoulder and neck. The others were circling it now. As soon as it would go
after one, the others would dart in and slash at it.
It finally caught the one on its back with its scorpion sting and
disembowled the one gnawing at its leg. However, it was running blood from a
double dozen wounds by then. Shortly, it became apparent that the leg was
giving it trouble, both for striking purposes and for bearing its weight when
it struck with the others. In the meantime, another dog had mounted its back
and was tearing at its neck. It seemed to be having a more difficult time
getting at this one. Another came in from its right and shredded its ear. Two
more plied its haunches, and when it reared again one rushed in and tore at its
belly. Their barks and growls also seemed to be confusing it somewhat, and it
began striking wildly at the ever-moving gray shapes.
I had caught hold of Drum's bridle and was trying to calm him
sufficiently to remount and get the hell out of there. He kept trying to rear
and pull away, and it took considerable persuasion even to hold him in place.
In the meantime, the manticora let out a bitter, wailing cry. It had struck
wildly at the dog on its back and driven its sting into its own shoulder. The
dogs took advantage of this distraction and rushed in wherever there was an
opening, snapping and tearing.
I am certain the dogs would have finished it, but at that moment the
riders topped the hill and descended. There were five of them, Julian in the
lead. He had on his scaled white armor and his hunting horn hung about his
neck. He rode his gigantic steed Morgenstem, a beast which has always hated me.
He raised the long lance that he bore and saluted with it in my direction. Then
he lowered it and shouted orders to the dogs.
Grudgingly, they dropped away from the prey. Even the dog on the
manticora's back loosened its grip and leaped to the ground. All of them drew
back as Julian couched the lance and touched his spurs to Morgenstern's sides.
The beast turned toward him, gave a final cry of defiance, and leaped
ahead, fangs bared. They came together, and for a moment my view was blocked by
Morgenstern's shoulder. Another moment, however, and I knew from the horse's
behavior that the blow had been a true one.
A turning, and I saw the beast stretched out, great gouts of blood upon
its breast, flowering about the dark stem of the lance.
Julian dismounted. He said something to the other riders which I did
not overhear. They remained mounted. He regarded the still-twitching manticora,
then looked at me and smiled. He crossed and placed his foot upon the beast,
seized the lance with one hand, and wrenched it from the carcass. Then he drove
it into the ground and tethered Morgenstem to its shaft. He reached up and
patted the horse's shoulder, looked back at me, turned, and headed in my
direction.
When he came up before me he said, I wish you hadn't killed Bela.
Bela? I repeated.
He glanced at the sky. I followed his gaze. Neither bird was now in
sight.
He was one of my favorites.
I am sorry, I said. I misunderstood what was going on.
He nodded.
All right. I've done something for you. Now you can tell me what
happened after I left the palace. Did Brand make it?
Yes, I said, and you're off the hook on that. He claimed Fiona
stabbed him. And she was not around to question either. She departed during the
night, also. It's a wonder you didn't bump into one another.
He smiled.
I'd have guessed as much, he said.
Why did you flee under such suspicious circumstances? I asked. It
made it look bad for you.
He shrugged.
It would not be the first time I've been falsely accused, suspected.
And for that matter, if intent counts for anything, I am as guilty as our
little sister. I'd have done it myself if I could. In fact, I'd a blade ready
the night we fetched him back. Only, I was crowded aside.
But why? I asked.
He laughed.
Why? I am afraid of the bastard, that's why. For a long while, I had
thought he was dead, and certainly hoped so-finally claimed by the dark powers
he dealt with. How much do you really know about him, Corwin?
We had a long talk.
And ..?
He admitted that he and Bleys and Fiona had formed a plan to claim the
throne. They would see Bleys crowned, but each would share the real power. They
had used the forces you referred to, to assure Dad's absence. Brand said that
he had attempted to win Caine to their cause, but that Caine had instead gone
to you and to Eric. The three of you then formed a similar cabal to seize power
before they could, by placing Eric on the throne.
He nodded.
The events are in order, but the reason is not. We did not want the
throne, at least not that abruptly, nor at that time. We formed our group to
oppose their group, because it had to be opposed to protect the throne. At
first, the most we could persuade Eric to do was to assume a Protectorship. He
was afraid he would quickly turn up dead if he saw himself crowned under those conditions.
Then you turned up, with your very legitimate claim. We could not afford to let
you press it at that time, because Brand's crowd was threatening out-and-out
war. We felt they would be less inclined to make this move if the throne were
already occupied. We could not have seated you, because you would have refused
to be a puppet, a role you would have had to play since the game was already in
progress and you were ignorant on too many fronts. So we persuaded Eric to take
the risk and be crowned. That was how it happened.
So when I did arrive he put out my eyes and threw me in the dungeon
for laughs.
Julian turned away and looked back at the dead manticora.
You are a fool, he finally said. You were a tool from the very
beginning. They used you to force our hand, and either way you lost. If that
half-assed attack of Bleys's had somehow succeeded, you wouldn't have lasted
long enough to draw a deep breath. If it failed, as it did, Bleys disappeared,
as he did, leaving you with your life forfeit for attempted usurpation. You had
served your purpose and you had to die. They left us small choice m the matter.
By rights, we should have killed you-and you know it.
I bit my lip. There were many things I might say. But if he was telling
something approximating the truth, he did have a point. And I did want to hear
more.
Eric, he said, figured that your eyesight might eventually be
restored-knowing the way we regenerate-given time. It was a very delicate
situation. If Dad were to return, Eric could step down and justify all of his
actions to anyone's satisfaction-except for killing you. That would have been
too patent a move to ensure his own continued reign beyond the troubles of the
moment. And I will tell you frankly that he simply wanted to imprison you and
forget you.
Then whose idea was the blinding?
He was silent again for a long while. Then he spoke very softly, almost
a whisper: Hear me out, please. It was mine, and it may have saved your life.
Any action taken against you had to be tantamount to death, or their faction
would have tried for the real thing. You were no longer of any use to them, but
alive and about you possessed the potentiality of becoming a danger at some
future time. They could have used your Trump to contact you and kill you, or
they could have used it to free you in order to sacrifice you in yet another
move against Eric. Blinded, however, there was no need to slay you and you were
of no use for anything else they might have in mind. It saved you by taking you
out of the picture for a time, and it saved us from a more egregious act which
might one day be held against us. As we saw it, there was no choice. It was the
only thing we could do. There could be no show of leniency either, or we might
be suspected of having some use for you ourselves. The moment you assumed any
such semblance of value you would have been a dead man. The most we could do
was look the other way whenever Lord Rein contrived to comfort you. That was
all that could be done.
I see, I said.
Yes, he agreed, you saw too soon. No one had guessed you would
recover your sight that quickly, nor that you would be able to escape once you
did. How did you manage it?
Does Macy's tell Gimbel's? I said.
Beg pardon?
I said-never mind. What do you know of Brand's imprisonment, then?
He regarded me once more.
All I know is that there was some sort of falling out within his
group. I lack the particulars. For some reason, Bleys and Fiona were afraid to
kill him and afraid to let him run loose. When we freed him from their
compromise-imprisonment-Fiona was apparently more afraid of having him free.
And you said you feared him enough to have made ready to kill him. Why
now, after all this time, when all of this is history and the power has shifted
again? He was weak, virtually helpless. What harm could he do now?
He sighed.
I do not understand the power that he possesses, he said, but it is
considerable. I know that he can travel through Shadow with his mind, that he
can sit in a chair, locate what he seeks in Shadow, and then bring it to him by
an act of will without moving from the chair; and he can travel through Shadow
physically in a somewhat similar fashion. He lays his mind upon the place he
would visit, forms a kind of mental doorway, and simply steps through. For that
matter, I believe he can sometimes tell what people are thinking. It is almost
as if he has himself become some sort of living Trump. I know these things
because I have seen him do them. Near the end, when we had him under
surveillance in the palace he had eluded us once in this fashion. This was the
time he traveled to the shadow Earth and had you placed in Bedlam. After his
recapture, one of us remained with him at all times. We did not yet know that
he could summon things through Shadow, however. When he became aware that you
had escaped your confinement, he summoned a horrid beast which attacked Caine,
who was then his bodyguard. Then he went to you once again. Bleys and Fiona
apparently got hold of him shortly after that, before we could, and I did not
see him again until that night in the library when we brought him back. I fear
him because he has deadly powers which I do not understand.
In such a case, I wonder how they managed to confine him at all?
Fiona has similar strengths, and I believe Bleys did also. Between the
two of them, they could apparently annul most of Brand's power while they
created a place where it would be inoperative.
Not totally, I said. He got a message to Random. In fact, he reached
me once, weakly.
Obviously not totally, then, he said. Sufficiently, however. Until
we broke through the defenses.
What do you know of all their byplay with me-confining me, trying to
kill me, saving me.
That I do not understand, he said, except that it was part of the
power struggle within their own group. They had had a falling out amongst
themselves, and one side or the other had some use for you. So, naturally, one
side was trying to kill you while the other fought to preserve you. Ultimately,
of course, Bleys got the most mileage out of you, in that attack he launched.
But he was the one who tried to kill me, back on the shadow Earth, I
said. He was the one who shot out my tires.
Oh?
Well, that is what Brand told me, but it jibes with all sorts of
secondary evidence.
He shrugged.
I cannot help you on that, he said. I simply do not know what was
going on among them at that time.
Yet you countenance Fiona in Amber, I said. In fact, you are more
than a little cordial to her whenever she is about.
Of course, he said, smiling. I have always been very fond of Fiona.
She is certainly the loveliest, most civilized of us all. Pity Dad was always
so dead-set against brother-sister marriages, as well you know. It bothered me
that we had to be adversaries for so long as we were. Things returned pretty
much to normal after Bleys's death, your imprisonment, and Eric's coronation,
though. She accepted their defeat gracefully, and that was that. She was
obviously as frightened at the prospect of Brand's return as I was.
Brand told things differently, I said, but then, of course, he
would. For one thing, he claims that Bleys is still living, that he hunted him
down with his Trump and knows that he is off in Shadow, training another force
for another strike at Amber.
I suppose this is possible, Julian said. But we are more than
adequately prepared, are we not?
He claims further that the strike will be a feint, I continued, and
that the real attack will then come direct from the Courts of Chaos, over the
black road. He says that Fiona is off preparing the way for this right now.
He scowled.
I hope he was simply lying, he said. I would hate to see their group
resurrected and at us again, this time with help from the dark direction. And I
would hate to see Fiona involved.
Brand claimed he was out of it himself, that he had seen the error of
his ways-and suchlike penitent noises.
Ha! I'd sooner trust that beast I just slew than take Brand at his
word. I hope you've had the sense to keep him well guarded-though this might
not be of much avail if he has his old powers back.
But what game could he be playing now?
Either he has revived the old triumvirate, a thought I like not at
all, or he has a new plan all his own. But mark me, he has a plan. He has never
been satisfied to be a mere spectator at anything. He is always scheming. I'd
take an oath he even plots in his sleep.
Perhaps you are right, I said. You see, there has been a new
development, whether for good or ill, I cannot yet tell. I just had a fight
with Gerard. He thinks I have done Brand some mischief. This is not the case,
but I was in no position to prove my innocence. I was the last person I know of
to see Brand, earlier today. Gerard visited his quarters a short time ago. He
says the place is broken up, there are blood smears here and there, and Brand
is missing. I don't know what to make of it.
Neither do I. But I hope it means someone has done the job properly
this time.
Lord, I said, it's tangled. I wish I had known all of these things
before.
There was never a proper time to tell you, he said, until now.
Certainly not when you were a prisoner and could still be reached, and after
that you were gone for a long while. When you returned with your troops and
your new weapons, I was uncertain as to your full intentions. Then things
happened quickly and Brand was back again. It was too late. I had to get out to
save my skin. I am strong here in Arden. Here, I can take anything he can throw
at me. I have been maintaining the patrols at full battle force and awaiting
word of Brand's death. I wanted to inquire of one of you whether he was still
around. But I could not decide whom to ask, thinking myself still suspect
should he have died. As soon as I did get word, though, should it prove he was
still living, I was resolved to have a try at him myself. Now this ...state of
affairs ...What are you going to do now, Corwin?
I am off to fetch the Jewel of Judgment from a place where I cached it
in Shadow. There is a way it can be used to destory the black road. I intend to
try it.
How can this be done?
That is too long a story, for a horrible thought has just occurred to
me.
What is that?
Brand wants the Jewel. He was asking about it, and now-This power of
his to find things in Shadow and fetch them back. How good is it?
Julian looked thoughtful.
He is hardly omniscient, if that is what you mean. You can find
anything you want in Shadow the normal way we go about it-by traveling to it.
According to Fiona, he just cuts out the footwork. It is therefore an object,
not a particular object that he summons. Besides, that Jewel is a very strange
item from everything Eric told me about it. I think Brand would have to go
after it in person, once he finds out where it is.
Then I must get on with my hellride. I have to beat him to it.
I see you are riding Drum, Julian observed. He is a good beast, a
sturdy fellow. Been through many a hellride.
Glad to hear that, I said. What are you going to do now?
Get in touch with someone in Amber and get up to date on everything we
haven't had a chance to talk about-Benedict, probably.
No good, I said. You will not be able to reach him. He is off to the
Courts of Chaos. Try Gerard, and convince him I am an honorable man while you
are about it.
The redheads are the only magicians in this family, but I will try...
You did say the Courts of Chaos?
Yes, but again, the time is too valuable now.
Of course. Get you gone. We will have our leisure later-I trust.
He reached out and clasped my arm. I glanced at the manticora, at the
dogs seated in a circle about it.
Thanks, Julian. I-You are a difficult man to understand.
Not so. I think the Corwin I hated must have died centuries ago. Ride
now, man! If Brand shows up around here, I'll nail his hide to a tree!
He shouted an order to his dogs as I mounted, and they fell upon the
carcass of the manticora, lapping at its blood and tearing out huge chunks and
strips of flesh. As I rode past that strange, massive, manlike face, I saw that
its eyes were still open, though glazed. They were blue, and death had not
robbed them of a certain preternatural innocence. Either that, or the look was
death's final gift-a senseless way of passing out ironies, if it was.
I took Drum back to the trail and began my hellride.
CHAPTER 10
Moving along the trail at a gentle pace, clouds darkening the sky and
Drum's whinny of memory or anticipation... A turn to the left, and uphill...
The ground is brown, yellow, back to brown again... The trees squat down, draw
apart... Grasses wave between them in the cool and rising breeze... A quick
fire in the sky... A rumble shakes loose raindrops...
Steep and rocky now... The wind tugs at my cloak... Up... Up to where
the rocks are streaked with silver and the trees have drawn their line... The
grasses, green fires, die down in the rain... Up, to the craggy, sparkling,
rain-washed heights, where the clouds rush and boil like a mud-gorged river at
flood crest... The rain stings like buckshot and the wind clears its throat to
sing... We rise and rise and the crest comes into view, like the head of a
startled bull, horns guarding the trail... Lightnings twist about their tips,
dance between them... The smell of ozone as we reach that place and rush on through,
the rain suddenly blocked, the wind shunted away...
Emerging on the farther side... There is no rain, the air is still, the
sky smoothed and darkened to a proper star-filled black... Meteors cut and
burn, cut and burn, cauterizing to afterimage scars, fading, fading... Moons,
cast like a handful of coins... Three bright dimes, a dull quarter, a pair of
pennies, one of them tarnished and scarred... Down then, that long, winding
way... Hoof clops clear and metallic in the night air... Somewhere, a catlike
cough... A dark shape crossing a lesser moon, ragged and swift...
Downward... The land drops away at either hand... Darkness below...
Moving along the top of an infinitely high, curved wall, the way itself bright
with moonlight... The trail buckles, folds, grows transparent... Soon it
drifts, gauzy, filamentous, stars beneath as well as above... Stars below on
either side... There is no land... There is only the night, night and the thin,
translucent trail I had to try to ride, to learn how it felt, against some
future use...
It is absolutely silent now, and the illusion of slowness attaches to
every movement... Shortly, the trail falls away, and we move as if swimming
underwater at some enormous depth, the stars bright fish... It is freedom, it
is the power of the hellride that brings an elation, like yet unlike the
recklessness that sometimes comes in battle, the boldness of a risky feat well
learned, the rush of rightness following the finding of the poem's proper
word... It is these and the prospect itself, riding, riding, riding, from
nowhere to nowhere perhaps, across and among the minerals and fires of the
void, free of earth and air and water...
We race a great meteor, we touch upon its bulk... Speeding across its
pitted surface, down, around, then up again... It stretches into a great plain,
it lightens, it yellows...
It is sand, sand now beneath our movement... The stars fade out as the
darkness is diluted to a morning full of sunrise... Swaths of shade ahead,
desert trees within them... Ride for the dark... Crashing through... Bright
birds burst forth, complain, resettle...
Among the thickening trees... Darker the ground, narrower the way...
Palm fronds shrink to hand size, barks darken... A twist to the right, a
widening of the way... Our hoofs striking sparks from cobblestones... The lane
enlarges, becomes a tree-lined street... Tiny row houses flash by... Bright
shutters, marble steps, painted screens, set back beyond flagged walks...
Passing, a horse-drawn cart, loaded with fresh vegetables... Human pedestrians
turning to stare... A small buzz of voices...
On... Passing beneath a bridge... Coursing the stream till it widens to
river, taking it down to the sea...
Thudding along the beach beneath a lemon sky, blue clouds scudding...
The salt, the wrack, the shells, the smooth anatomy of driftwood... White spray
off the lime-colored sea...
Racing, to where the place of waters ends at a terrace... Mounting,
each step crumbling and roaring down behind, losing its identity, joined with
the boom of the surf... Up, up to the flattopped, tree-grown plain, a golden
city shimmering, miragelike, at its end...
The city grows, darkens beneath a shadowy umbrella, its gray towers
stretch upward, glass and metal flashing light through the murk... The towers
begin to sway...
The city falls in upon itself, soundlessly, as we pass... Towers
topple, dust boils, rises, is pinked by some lower glow... A gentle noise, as
of a snuffed candle, drifting by...
A dust storm, quickly falling, giving place to fog... Through it, the
sounds of automobile horns... A drift, a brief lift, a break in the gray-white,
pearlwhite, shifting... Our hoofprints on a shoulder of highway... To the
right, endless rows of unmoving vehicles... Pearl-white, gray-white, drifting
again...
Directionless shrieks and wailings... Random flashes of light...
Rising once more... The fogs lower and ebb... Grass, grass, grass...
Clear now the sky, and delicate blue... A sun racing to set... Birds... A cow
in the field, chewing, staring and chewing...
Leaping a wooden fence to ride a country road... A sudden chill beyond
the hill... The grasses are dry and snow's on the ground... Tin-roofed
farmhouse atop a rise, curl of smoke above it...
On... The hills grow up, the sun rolls down, darkness dragged behind...
A sprinkle of stars... Here a house, set far back... There another, long
driveway wound among old trees... Headlights...
Off to the side of the road... Draw rein and let it pass...
I wiped my brow, dusted my shirt front and sleeves. I patted Drum's
neck. The oncoming vehicle slowed as it neared me, and I could see the driver
staring. I gave the reins a gentle movement and Drum began walking. The car
braked to a halt and the driver called something after me, but I kept going.
Moments later, I heard him drive off.
It was country road for a time after that. I traveled at an easy pace,
passing familiar landmarks, recalling other times. A few miles later and I came
to another road, wider and better. I turned there, staying off on the shoulder
to the right. The temperature continued to drop, but the cold air had a good
clean taste to it. A sliced moon shone above the hills to my left. There were a
few small clouds passing overhead, touched to the moon's quarter with a soft,
dusty light. There was very little wind; an occasional stirring of branches, no
more. After a time, I came to a series of dips in the road, telling me I was
almost there.
A curve and a couple more dips... I saw the boulder beside the
driveway, I read my address upon it.
I drew rein then and looked up the hill. There was a station wagon in
the driveway and a light on inside the house. I guided Drum off the road and
across a field into a stand of trees. I tethered him behind a pair of
evergreens, rubbed his neck, and told him I would not be long.
I returned to the road. No cars in sight. I crossed over and walked up
the far side of the driveway, passing behind the station wagon. The only light
in the house was in the living room, off to the right. I made my way around the
left side of the house to the rear.
I halted when I reached the patio, looking around. Something was wrong.
The back yard was changed. A pair of decaying lawn chairs which had
been leaning against a dilapidated chicken coop I had never bothered to remove
were gone. So, for that matter, was the chicken coop. They had been present the
last time I had passed this way. All of the dead tree limbs which had
previously been strewn about, as well as a rotting mass of them I had long ago
heaped to cut for firewood, were also gone.
The comoost heap was missing.
I moved to the space where it had been. All that was there was an
irregular patch of bare earth of the approximate shape of the heap itself.
But I had discovered in attuning myself to the Jewel that I could make
myself feel its presence. I closed my eyes for a moment and tried to do so.
Nothing.
I looked again, searching carefully, but there was no tell-tale glitter
anywhere in sight. Not that I had really expected to see anything, not if I
could not feel it nearby.
There had been no curtains in the lighted room. Studying the house now,
I saw that none of the windows had curtains, shades, shutters, or blinds.
Therefore...
I passed around the other end of the house. Approaching the first
lighted window, I glanced in quickly. Dropcloths covered much of the floor. A
man in cap and coveralls was painting the far wall. Of course.
I had asked Bill to sell the place. I had signed the necessary papers
while a patient in the local clinic, when I had been projected back to my old
home-probably bv some action of the Jewel-on the occasion of my stabbing. That
would have been several weeks ago, local time, using the Amber to shadow Earth
conversion factor of approximately two and a half to one and allowing for the
eight days the Courts of Chaos had cost me in Amber. Bill, of course, had gone
ahead on my request. But the place had been in bad shape, abandoned as it had
been for a number of years, vandalized... It needed some new windowpanes, some
roofing work, new guttering, painting, sanding, buffing. And there had been a
lot of trash to haul away. outside as well as inside...
I turned away and walked down the front slope to the road, recalling my
last passage this way, half delirious. on mv hands and knees, blood leaking
from my side. It had been much colder that night and there had been snow on the
ground and in the air. I passed near the rocK where I'd sat, trying to flag
down a car with a pillow case. The memory was slightly blurred, but I still
recalled the ones that had passed me by.
I crossed the road. made my way through the field to the trees.
Unhitching Drum, I mounted.
We've some more riding ahead, I told him. Not too far this time.
We headed back to the road and started along it, continuing on past my
house. If I had not told Bill to go ahead and sell the place, the compost heap
would still have been there, the Jewel would still have been there. I could be
on my way back to Amber with the ruddy stone hung about my neck, ready to have
a try at what had to be done. Now, now I had to go looking for it, when I'd a
feeling time was beginning to press once again. At least, I had a favorable
ratio here with respect to its passage in Amber. I clucked at Drum and shook
the reins. No sense wasting it, even so.
A half hour, and I was into town, riding down a quiet street in a
residential area, houses all about me. The lights were on at Bill's place. I
turned up his driveway. I left Drum in his back yard.
Alice answered my knock, stared a moment, then said. My God! Carl!
Minutes later, I was seated in the living room with Bill, a drink on
the table to my right. Alice was out in the kitchen, having made the mistake of
asking me whether I wanted something to eat.
Bill studied me as he lit his pipe.
Your ways of coming and going still tend to be colorful. he said. I
smiled.
Expediency is all, I said.
That nurse at the clinic ...scarcely anyone believed her story.
Scarcely anyone?
The minority I refer to is, of course, myself.
What was her story?
She claimed that you walked to the center of the room, became
two-dimensional, and just faded away, like the old soldier that you are, with a
rainbowlike accomnaniment.
Glaucoma can cause the rainbow symptom. She ought to have her eyes
checked.
She did, he said. Nothing wrong.
Oh. Too bad. The next thing that comes to mind is neurological.
Come on, Carl. She's all right. You know that.
I smiled and took a sip of my drink.
And you, he said, you look like a certain playing card I once
commented on. Complete with sword. What's going on, Carl?
It's still comnlicated, I said. Even more than the last time we
talked.
Which means you can't give me that explanation yet?
I shook my head.
You have won an all-expense tour of my homeland, when this is over, I
said, if I still have a homeland then. Right now, time is doing terrible
things.
What can I do to help you?
Information, please. My old house. Who is the guy you have fixing the
place up?
Ed Wellen. Local contractor. You know him, I think. Didn't he put in a
shower for you, or something?
Yes, yes he did... I remember.
He's expanded quite a bit. Bought some heavy equipment. Has a number
of fellows working for him now. I handled his incorporation.
Do you know who he's got working at my place-now?
Offhand, no. But I can find out in just a minute. He moved his hand
to rest on the telephone on the side table. Shall I give him a ring?
Yes, I said, but there is a little more to it than that. There is
only one thing in which I am really interested. There was a compost heap in the
back yard. It was there the last time I passed this way. It is gone now. I have
to find out what became of it.
He cocked his head to the right and grinned around his pipe.
You serious? he finally said.
Sure as death, I said. I hid something in that heap when I crawled
by, decorating the snow with my precious bodily fluids. I've got to have it
back now.
Just what is it?
A ruby pendant.
Priceless, I suppose.
You're right.
He nodded, slowly.
If it were anyone else, I would suspect a practical joke, he said. A
treasure in a compost heap... Family heirloom?
Yes. Forty or fifty carats. Simple setting. Heavy chain.
He removed his pipe and whistled softly.
Mind if I ask why you put it there?
I'd be dead now if I hadn't.
Pretty good reason.
He reached for the phone again.
We've had some action on the house already, he remarked. Pretty
good, since I haven't advertised yet. Fellow'd heard from someone who'd heard
from someone else. I took him over this morning. He's thinking about it. We may
move it pretty quick.
He began to dial.
Wait, I said. Tell me about him.
He cradled the phone, looked up.
Thin guy, he said. Redhead. Had a beard. Said he was an artist.
Wants a place in the country.
Son of a bitch! I said, just as Alice came into the room with a tray.
She made a tsking sound and smiled as she delivered it to me.
Just a couple hamburgers and some leftover salad, she said. Nothing
to get excited about.
Thank you. I was getting ready to eat my horse. I'd have felt bad
afterward.
I don't imagine he'd have been too happy about it himself. Enjoy, she
said, and returned to the kitchen.
Was the compost heap still there when you took him over? I asked.
He closed his eyes and furrowed his brow.
No, he said after a moment. The yard was already clear.
That's something, anyway, I said, and I began eating.
He made the call, and he talked for several minutes. I got the drift of
things from his end of the conversation, but I listened to the entire thing
after he had hung up, while I finished the food and washed it down with what
was left in my glass.
He hated to see good compost go to waste, Bill said. So he pitched
the heap into his pickup just the other day and took it out to his farm. He
dumped it next to a plot he intends to cultivate, and he has not had a chance
to spread it yet. Says he did not notice any jewelry, but then he could easily
have missed it.
I nodded.
If I can borrow a flashlight, I had better get moving.
Sure. I will drive you out, he said.
I do not want to be parted from my horse at this point.
Well, you will probably want a rake, and a shovel or a pitchfork. I
can drive them out and meet you there, if you know where the place is.
I know where Ed's place is. He must have tools, though.
Bill shrugged and smiled.
All right, I said. Let me use your bathroom, and then we had better
get moving.
You seemed as if you knew the prospective buyer.
I put the tray aside and rose to my feet.
You heard of him last as Brandon Corey.
The guy who pretended to be your brother and got you committed?
'Pretended' hell! He is my brother. No fault of mine, though. Excuse
me.
He was there.
Where?
Ed's place, this afternoon. At least a bearded redhead was.
Doing what?
Said he was an artist. Said he wanted permission to set up his easel
and paint in one of the fields.
And Ed let him?
Yes, of course. Thought it was a great idea. That is why he told me
about it. Wanted to brag.
Get the stuff. I will meet you there.
Right.
The second thing I took out in the bathroom was my Trumps. I had to
reach someone in Amber soonest, someone strong enough to stop him. But who?
Benedict was on his way to the Courts at Chaos, Random was off looking for his
son, I had just parted with Gerard on somewhat less than amicable terms. I
wished that I had a Trump for Ganelon. I decided that I would have to try
Gerard.
I drew forth his card, performed the proper mental maneuvers. Moments
later, I had contact.
Corwin!
Just listen, Gerard! Brand is alive, if that is any consolation. I'm
damn sure of that. This is important. Life and death. You've got to do
something fast!
His expressions had changed rapidly while I had spoken-anger, surprise,
interest...
Go ahead, he said.
Brand could be coming back very soon. In fact, he may already be in
Amber. You haven't seen him yet, have you?
No.
He must be stopped from walking the Pattern.
I do not understand. But I can post a guard outside the chamber of the
Pattern.
Put the guard inside the chamber. He has strange ways of coming and
going now. Terrible things may happen if he walks the Pattern.
I will watch it personally then. What is happening?
No time now. Here is the next thing: Is Llewella back in Rebma?
Yes, she is.
Get hold of her with her Trump. She's got to warn Moire that the
Pattern in Rebma has to be guarded also.
How serious is this, Corwin?
It could be the end of everything, I said. I have to go now.
I broke the contact and headed for the kitchen and the back door,
stopping only long enough to thank Alice and say good night. If Brand had got
hold of the Jewel and attuned himself to it, I was not certain what he would
do, but I had a pretty strong hunch.
I mounted Drum and turned him toward the road. Bill was already backing
out of the driveway.
CHAPTER 11
I cut through fields in many places where Bill had to follow the roads,
so I was not all that far behind him. When I drew up, he was talking with Ed,
who was gesturing toward the southwest. As I dismounted, Ed was studying Drum.
Nice horse, that, he said.
Thanks.
You've been away.
Yes.
We shook hands.
Good to see you again. I was just telling Bill that I don't really
know how long that artist stayed around. I just figured he would go away when
it got dark, and I didn't pay too much attention. Now, if he was really looking
for something of yours and knew about the compost heap, he could still be out
there for all I know. I'll get my shotgun, if you like, and go with you.
No, I said, thanks. I think I know who it was. The gun will not be
necessary. We'll just walk over and do a little poking around.
Okay, he said. Let me come along and give you a hand.
You don't have to do that, I said.
How about your horse, then? What say I give him a drink and something
to eat, clean him up a bit?
I'm sure he'd be grateful. I know I would.
What's his name?
Drum.
He approached Drum and began making friends with him.
Okay, he said. I'll be back in the barn for a while. If you need me
for anything, just holier.
Thanks.
I got the tools out of Bill's car and he carried the electric lantern,
leading me off to the southwest where Ed had been pointing earlier.
As we crossed the field, I followed the beam of Bill's light, searching
for the heap. When I saw what might be the remains of one, I drew a deep
breath, involuntarily. Someone must have been at it, the way the clods were
strewn about. The mass would not have been dumped from a truck to fall in such
a dispersed fashion.
Still ...the fact that someone had looked did not mean he had located
what he had been seeking.
What do you think? Bill said.
I don't know, I told him, lowering the tools to the ground and
approaching the largest aggregate in sight. Give me some light here.
I scanned what remained of the heap, then fetched a rake and began
taking it apart. I broke each clod and spread it upon the ground, running the
tines through it. After a time. Bill set the lantern at a good angle and moved
to help me.
I've got a funny feeling... he said.
So do I.
...that we may be too late.
We kept pulverizing and spreading, pulverizing and spreading...
I felt the tingle of a familiar presence. I straightened and waited.
Contact came moments later.
Corwin!
Here, Gerard.
What'd you say? said Bill.
I raised my hand to silence him and gave my attention to Gerard. He
stood in shadow at the bright beginning of the Pattern, leaning upon his great
blade.
You were right, he said. Brand did show up here, just a moment ago.
I am not sure how he got in. He stepped out of the shadows off to the left,
there. He gestured. He looked at me for a moment, then turned around and
walked back. He did not answer when I hailed him. So I turned up the lantern,
but he was nowhere in sight. He just disappeared. What do you want me to do
now?
Was he wearing the lewel of Judgment?
I could not tell. I only had sight of him for a moment, in this bad
light.
Are they watching the Pattern in Rebma now?
Yes. Llewella's alerted them.
Good. Stay on guard, then. I will be in touch again.
All right. Corwin-about what happened earlier...
Forget it.
Thanks. That Ganelon is one tough fellow.
Indeed, I said. Stay awake.
His image faded as I released the contact, but a strange thing happened
then. The sense of contact, the path, remained with me, objectless, open, like
a switched on radio not tuned to anything. Bill was looking at me peculiarly.
Carl, what is happening?
I don't know. Wait a minute.
Suddenly, there was contact again, though not with Gerard. She must
have been trying to reach me while my attention was diverted.
Corwin, it is important...
Go ahead, Fi.
You will not find what you are looking for there. Brand has it.
I was beginning to suspect as much.
We have to stop him. I do not know how much you know
Neither do I any more, I said, but I have the Pattern in Amber and
the one in Rebma under guard. Gerard just told me that Brand appeared at the
one in Amber, but was scared off.
She nodded her small, fine-featured face. Her red tresses were
unusually disarrayed. She looked tired.
I am aware of this, she said. I have him under surveillance. But you
have forgotten another possibility.
No, I said. According to my calculations, Tir-na Nog'th should not
be attamable yet
That is not what I was referring to. He is headed for the primal
Pattern itself.
To attune the Jewel?
The first time through, she said.
To walk it, he would have to pass through the damaged area. I gather
that is more than a little difficult.
So you do know about it, she said. Good. That saves time. The dark
area would not trouble him the way it would another of us. He has come to terms
with that darkness. We must stop him, now.
Do you know any short cuts to that place?
Yes. Come to me. I will take you there.
Just a minute. I want Drum with me.
What for?
No telling. That is why I want him.
Very well. Then bring me through. We can as easily depart from there
as from here.
I extended my hand. In a moment, I held hers. She stepped forward.
Lord! said Bill, drawing back. You were giving me doubts about your
sanity, Carl. Now it's mine I wonder about. She-she's on one of the cards, too,
isn't she?
Yes. Bill, this is my sister Fiona. Fiona, this is Bill Roth, a very
good friend.
Fi extended her hand and smiled, and I left them there while I went
back to fetch Drum. A few minutes later, I led him forth.
Bill, I said, I am sorry to have wasted your time. My brother has
the thing. We are going after him now. Thanks for helping me.
I shook his hand.
He said, Corwin. I smiled.
Yes, that is my name.
We have been talking, your sister and I. Not much I could learn in a
few minutes, but I know it is dangerous. So good luck. I still want the whole
story one day.
Thanks, I said. I will try to see that you get it.
I mounted, leaned down, and drew Fiona up before me.
Good night, Mr. Roth, she said. Then, to me, Start riding, slowly,
across the field.
I did.
Brand says you are the one who stabbed him, I said, as soon as we had
gone far enough to feel alone.
That's right.
Why?
To avoid all this.
I talked with him for a long while. He claimed it was originally you,
Bleys, and himself, together in a scheme to seize power.
That is correct.
He told me he had approached Caine, trying to win him to your side,
but that Caine would have none of it, that Caine had passed the word along to
Eric and Julian. And this led to their forming their own group, to block your
way to the throne.
That is basically correct. Caine had ambitions of his own-long-term
ones-but ambitions nevertheless. He was in no position to pursue them, however.
So he decided that if his lot was to be a lesser one, he would rather serve it
under Eric than under Bleys. I can see his point, too.
He also claimed that the three of you had a deal going with the powers
at the end of the black road, in the Courts of Chaos.
Yes, she said, we did.
You use the past tense.
For myself and for Bleys, yes.
That is not the way Brand tells it.
He wouldn't.
He said you and Bleys wanted to continue exploiting that alliance, but
that he had had a change of heart. Because of this, he claims you turned on him
and imprisoned him in that tower.
Why didn't we just kill him?
I give up. Tell me.
He was too dangerous to be allowed his freedom, but we could not kill
him either because he held something vital.
What?
With Dworkin gone. Brand was the only one who knew how to undo the
damage he had done to the primal Pattern.
You had a long time to get that information out of him.
He possesses unbelievable resources.
Then why did you stab him?
I repeat, to avoid all this. If it became a question of his freedom or
his death, it were better he died. We would have to take our chances on
figuring the method of repairing the Pattern.
This being the case, why did you consent to cooperate in bringing him
back?
First, I was not co-operating, I was trying to impede the attempt. But
there were too many trying too hard. You got through to him in spite of me.
Second, I had to be on hand to try to kill him in the event you succeeded. Too
bad things worked out the way they did.
You say that you and Bleys had second thoughts about the alliance, but
that Brand did not?
Yes.
How did your second thoughts affect your desire for the throne?
We thought we coald manage it without any additional outside help.
I see.
Do you believe me?
I'm afraid that I am beginning to.
Turn here.
I entered a cleft in a hillside. The way was narrow and very dark, with
only a small band of stars above us. Fiona had been manipulating Shadow while
we had talked, leading us from Ed's field downward, into a misty, moorlike
place, then up again, to a clear and rocky trail among mountains. Now, as we
moved through the dark defile, I felt her working with Shadow again. The air
was cool but not cold. The blackness to our left and our right was absolute,
giving the illusion of enormous depths, rather than nearby rock cloaked in
shadow. This impression was reinforced, I suddenly realized, by the fact that
Drum's hoofbeats were not producing any echoes, aftersounds, overtones.
What can I do to gain your trust? she said.
That's asking quite a bit.
She laughed.
Let me rephrase it. What can I do to convince you I am telling the
truth?
Just answer one question.
What?
Who shot out my tires?
She laughed again.
You've figured it out, haven't you?
Maybe. You tell me.
Brand, she said. He had failed in his effort to destroy your memory,
so he decided he had better do a more thorough job.
The version I had of the story was that Bleys had done the shooting
and left me in the lake, that Brand had arrived in time to drag me out and save
my life. In fact, the police report seemed to indicate something to that
effect.
Who called the police? she asked.
They had it listed as an anonymous call, but
Bleys called them. He couldn't reach you in time to save you, once he
realized what was happening. He hoped that they could. Fortunately, they did.
What do you mean?
Brand did not drag you out of the wreck. You did it yourself. He
waited around to be certain you were dead, and you surfaced and pulled yourself
ashore. He went down and was checking you over, to decide whether you would die
if he just left you there or whether he should throw you back in again. The
police arrived about then and he had to clear out. We caught up with him
shortly afterward and were able to subdue him and imprison him in the tower. That
took a lot of doing. Later, I contacted Eric and told him what had happened. He
then ordered Flora to put you in the other place and see that you were held
until after his coronation.
It fits, I said. Thanks.
What does it fit?
I was only a small-town GP in simpler times than these, and I never
had much to do with psychiatric cases. But I do know that you don't give a
person electroshock therapy to restore memories. EST generally does just the
opposite. It destroys some of the shortterm ones. My suspicions began to stir
when I learned that that was what Brand had had done to me. So I came up with
my own hypothesis. The auto wreck did not restore my memories, and neither did
the EST. I had finally begun recovering them naturally, not as the result of
any particular trauma. I must have done something or said something to indicate
that this was occurring. Word of it somehow got to Brand and he decided that
this would not be a good thing to have happen at that time. So he journeyed to
my shadow and managed to get me committed and subjected to treatment which he
hoped would wipe out those things I had recently recovered. This was just
partly successful, in that its only lasting effect was to fuzz me up for the
few days surrounding the sessions. The accident may have contributed, too. But
when I escaped from Porter and lived through his attempt to kill me, the
process of recovery continued after I regained consciousness in Greenwood and
left the place. I was remembering more and more when I was staying at Flora's.
The recovery was accelerated by Random's taking me to Rebma, where I walked the
Pattern. If this had not occurred, however, I am convinced now that it would
all have come back, anyway. It might have taken somewhat longer, but I had
broken through and the remembering was an ongoing process, coming faster and
faster near the end. So I concluded that Brand was trying to sabotage me, and
that is what fits the things you just told me.
The band of stars had narrowed, and it finally vanished above us. We
advanced through what seemed a totally black tunnel now, with perhaps the
tiniest flickering of light a great distance ahead of us.
Yes, she said in the darkness before me, you guessed correctly.
Brand was afraid of you. He claimed he had seen your return one night in Tir-na
Nog'th, to the undoing of all our plans. I paid him no heed at the time, for I
was not even aware you still lived. It must have been then that he set out to
find you. Whether he divined your whereabouts by some arcane means or simply
saw it in Eric's mind, I do not know. Probably the latter. He is occasionally
capable of such a feat. However he located you, you now know the rest.
It was Flora's presence in that place and her strange liasion with
Eric that first made him suspicious. Or so he said. Not that it matters, now.
What do you propose doing with him if we get our hands on him?
She chuckled.
You are wearing your blade, she said.
Brand told me, not all that long ago, that Bleys is still alive. Is
this true?
Yes.
Then why am I here, rather than Bleys?
Bleys is not attuned to the Jewel. You are. You interact with it at
near distances, and it will attempt to preserve your life if you are in
imminent danger of losing it. The risk, therefore, is not as great, she said.
Then, moments later, Don't take it for granted, though. A swift stroke
can still beat its reaction. You can die in its presence.
The light ahead grew larger, brighter, but there were no drafts,
sounds, or smells from that direction. Advancing, I thought of the layers upon
layers of explanations I had received since my return, each with its own
complex of motivations, justifications for what had happened while I was away,
for what had happened since, for what was happening now. The emotions, the plans,
the feelings, the objectives I had seen swirled like floodwater through the
city of facts I was slowly erecting on the grave of my other self, and though
an act is an act, in the best Steinian tradition, each wave of interpretation
that broke upon me shifted the position of one or more things I had thought
safely anchored, and by this brought about an alteration of the whole, to the
extent that all of life seemed almost a shifting interplay of Shadow about the
Amber of some never to be attained truth. Still, I could not deny that I knew
more now than I had several years earlier, that I was closer to the heart of
matters than I had been before, that the entire action in which I had been
caught up upon my return seemed now to be sweeping toward some final resolution.
And what did I want? A chance to find out what was right and a chance to act on
it! I laughed. Who is ever granted the first, let alone the second of these? A
workable appromixation of truth, then. That would be enough... And a chance to
swing my blade a few times in the right direction: The highest compensation I
could receive from a one o'clock world for the changes wrought since noon. I
laughed again and made sure my blade was loose in the sheath.
Brand said that Bleys had raised another army I began.
Later, she said, later. There is no more time.
And she was right. The light had grown large, become a circular
opening. It had approached at a rate out of proportion to our advance, as
though the tunnel itself were contracting. It seemed to be daylight that was
rushing in through what I chose to regard as the cave mouth.
All right, I said, and moments later we reached the opening and
passed through it.
I blinked my eyes as we emerged. To my left was the sea, which seemed
to merge with the same-colored sky. The golden sun which floated/hung
above/within it, bounced beams of brilliance from all directions. Behind me,
now, there was nothing but rock. Our passage to this place had vanished without
a sign. Not too far below and before me-perhaps a hundred feet distant-lay the
primal Pattern. A figure was negotiating the second of its outer arcs, his
attention so confined by this activity that he had apparently not yet noted our
presence. A flash of red as he took a turn: the Jewel, hanging now from his
neck as it had hung from mine, from Eric's, from Dad's. The figure, of course,
was Brand's.
I dismounted. I looked up at Fiona, small and distraught, and I placed
Drum's reins in her hand.
Any advice, other than to go after him? I whispered.
She shook her head.
Turning then, I drew Grayswandir and strode forward.
Good luck, she said softly.
As I walked toward the Pattern, I saw the long chain leading from the
cave mouth to the now still form of the griffin Wixer. Wixer's head lay on the
ground several paces to the left of his body. Body and head both leaked a
normal-colored blood upon the stone.
As I approached the beginning of the Pattern, I did a quick
calculation. Brand had already taken several turns about the general spiral of
the design. He was approximately two and a half laps into it. If we were only
separated by one winding, I could reach him with my blade once I achieved a
position paralleling his own. The going, however, got rougher the further one
penetrated the design. Consequently, Brand was moving at a steadily decreasing
pace. So it would be close. I did not have to catch him. I just had to pick up
a lap and a half and obtain a position across from him.
I placed my foot upon the Pattern and moved forward, as fast as I was
able. The blue sparks began about my feet as I rushed through the first curve
against the rising resistance. The sparks grew quickly. My hair was beginning
to rise when I hit the First Veil, and the crackling of the sparks was quite
audible now. I pushed on against the pressure of the Veil, wondering whether
Brand had noticed me yet, unable to afford the distraction of a glance in his
direction just then. I met the resistance with increased force, and several
steps later I was through the Veil and moving more easily again.
I looked up. Brand was just emerging from the terrible Second Veil,
blue sparks as high as his waist. He was grinning a grin of resolve and triumph
as he pulled free and took a clear step forward. Then he saw me.
The grin went away and he hesitated, a point in my favor. You never
stop on the Pattern if you can help it. If you do, it costs a lot of extra
energy to get moving again.
You are too late! he called out.
I did not answer him. I just kept going. Blue fires fell from the
Pattern tracery along Grayswandir's length.
You will not make it through the black, he said.
I kept going. The dark area was just ahead of me now. I was glad that
it had not occurred over one of the more difficult portions of the Pattern this
time around. Brand moved forward and slowly began his movement toward the Grand
Curve. If I could catch him there, it would be no contest. He would not have
the strength or the speed to defend himself.
As I approached the damaged portion of the Pattern, I recalled the
means by which Ganelon and I had cut the black road on our flight from Avalon.
I had succeeded in breaking the power of the road by holding the image of the
Pattern in my mind as we had gone across. Now, of course, I had the Pattern
itself all around me, and the distance was not nearly so great. While my first
thought had been that Brand was simply trying to rattle me with his threat, it
occurred to me that the force of the dark place might well be much stronger
here at its source. As I came up to it, Grayswandir blazed with a sudden
intensity which outshone its previous light. On an impulse, I touched its point
to the edge of the blackness, at the place where the Pattern ended.
Grayswandir clove to the blackness and could not be raised above it. I
continued forward, and my blade sliced the area before me, sliding ahead in
what seemed an approximation of the original tracery. I followed. The sun
seemed to darken as I trod the dark ground. I was suddenly conscious of my
heartbeat, and perspiration formed on my brow. A grayish cast fell over
everything. The world seemed to dim, the Pattern to fade. It seemed it would be
easy to step amiss in this place, and I was not certain whether the result
would be the same as a misstep within the intact portions of the Pattern. I did
not want to find out.
I kept my eyes low, following the line Grayswandir was inscribing
before me, the blade's blue fire now the only thing of color left to the world.
Right foot, left foot...
Then suddenly I was out of it and Grayswandir swung free in my hand
once again, the fires partly diminished, whether by contrast with the
reilluminated prospect or for some other reasons I did not know.
Looking about, I saw that Brand was approaching the Grand Curve. As for
me, I was working my way toward the Second Veil. We would both be involved in
the strenuous efforts these entailed in a few more minutes. The Grand Curve is
more difficult, more prolonged than the Second Veil, however. I should be free
and moving more quickly again before he worked his way through his barrier.
Then I would have to cross the damaged area another time. He might be free by
then, but he would be moving more slowly than I would, for he would be into the
area where the going becomes even more difficult.
A steady static arose with each step that I took, and a tingling
sensation permeated my entire body. The sparks rose to midthigh as I moved. It
was like striding through a field of electric wheat. My hair was at least
partly risen bv then. I could feel its stirring. I glanced back once to see
Fiona, still mounted, unmoving, watching.
I pressed ahead to the Second Veil.
Angles ...short, sharp turns... The force rose and rose against me, so
that all of my attention, all of my strength, was now occupied in striving
against it. There came again that familiar sense of timelessness, as though
this was all I had ever done, all that I ever would do. And will ...a focusing
of desire to such an intensity that everything else was excluded ...Brand,
Fiona, Amber, my own identity... The sparks rose to even greater heights as I
struggled, turned, labored, each step requiring more effort than the previous
one.
I pushed through. Right into the black area again.
Reflexively, I moved Grayswandir down and ahead once more. Again, the
grayness, the monochrome fog, cut by the blue of my blade opening the way
before me like a surgical incision.
When I emerged into normal light, I sought Brand. He was still in the
western quadrant, struggling with the Grand Curve, about two thirds of the way
through it. If I pushed hard, I might be able to catch him just as he was
coming out of it. I threw all of my strength into moving as quickly as
possible.
As I made it to the north end of the Pattern and into the curve leading
back, it struck me suddenly what I was about to do.
I was rushing to spill more blood upon the Pattern.
If it came to a simple choice between further damage to the Pattern and
Brand's destroying it utterly, then I knew what I had to do. Yet, I felt there
had to be another way. Yes...
I slowed my pace iust a trifle. It was going to be a matter of timing,
his passage was a lot rougher than mine just then, so I had an edge in that
respect. My entire new strategy involved arranging our encounter at just the
right point. Ironically, at that moment, I recalled Brand's concern for his
rug. The problem of keeping this place clean was a lot trickier, though.
He was nearing the end of the Grand Curve, and I paced him while
calculating the distance to the blackness. I had decided to let him do his
bleeding over the area which had already been damaged. The only disadvantage I
seemed to possess was that I would be situated to Brand's right. To minimize
the benefit this would give him when we crossed blades, I would have to remain
somewhat to the rear.
Brand struggled and advanced, all of his movements in slow motion. I
struggled too, but not as hard. I kept the pace. I wondered as I went, about
the Jewel, about the affinity we had shared since the attunement. I could feel
its presence, there to my left and ahead, even though I could not see it now
upon Brand's breast. Would it really act to save me across that distance should
Brand gain the upper hand in our coming conflict? Feeling its presence, I could
almost believe that it would. It had torn me from one assailant and found,
somehow, within my mind, a traditional place of safety-my own bed-and had
transported me there. Feeling it now, almost seeing the way before Brand
through it, I felt some assurance that it would attempt to function on my
behalf once again. Recalling Fiona's words, however, I was determined not to
rely on it. Still, I considered its other functions, speculated upon my ability
to operate it without contact...
Brand had almost completed the Grand Curve. I reached out from some
level of my being and made contact with the Jewel. Laying my will upon it, I
called for a storm of the red tornado variety which had destroyed Iago. I did
not know whether I could control that particular phenomenon in this particular
place, but I called for it nevertheless and directed it toward Brand. Nothing
happened immediately, though I felt the Jewel functioning to achieve something.
Brand came to the end, offered a final exertion, and passed from the Grand
Curve.
I was right there behind him.
He knew it, too-somehow. His blade was out the instant the pressure was
off. He gained a couple feet faster than I thought he could, got his left foot
ahead of him, turned his body, and met my gaze over the lines of our blades.
Damned if you didn't make it. he said, touching the tip of my blade
with his own.
You would never have gotten here this soon if it weren't for the bitch
on the horse, though.
Nice way to talk about our sister, I said, feinting and watching him
move to parry.
We were hampered, in that neither of us could lunge without departing
the Pattern. I was further hampered in not wanting to make him bleed, yet. I
faked a stop thrust and he drew back, sliding his left foot along the design to
his rear. He withdrew his right then, stamped it, and tried a head cut without
preliminaries. Damn it! I parried and then riposted by pure reflex. I did not
want to catch him with the chest cut I had thrown back at him, but the tip of
Grayswandir traced an arc beneath his sternum. I heard a humming in the air
above us. I could not afford to take my eyes off Brand, though. He glanced
downward and backed some more. Good. A red line now decorated his shirt front
where my cut had taken him. So far, the material seemed to be absorbing it. I
stamped, feinted, thrust, parried, stop thrust, bound, and unbound-everything I
could think of to keep him retreating. I had the psychological edge on him in
that I had the greater reach and we both knew I could do more things with it,
more quickly. Brand was nearing the dark area. Just a few more paces... I heard
a sound like a single bell chime, followed by a great roaring. A shadow
suddenly fell upon us, as though a cloud had just occluded the sun.
Brand glanced up. I think I could have gotten him just then, but he was
still a couple of feet too far from the target area.
He recovered immediately and glared at me.
Damn you, Corwin! That's yours, isn't it? he cried, and then he
attacked, discarding what caution he still possessed.
Unfortunately, I was in a bad position, as I had been edging up on him,
preparing to press him the rest of the way back. I was exposed and slightly
off-balance. Even as I parried, I realized it would not be sufficient, and I
twisted and fell back.
I struggled to keep my feet in place as I went down. I caught myself
with my right elbow and my left hand. I cursed, as the pain was too much and my
elbow slid to the side, dropping me to my right shoulder.
But Brand's thrust had gone by me, and within blue halos my feet still
touched the line. I was out of Brand's reach for a death thrust, though he
could still hamstring me.
I raised my right arm, still clutching Grayswandir, before me. I began
to sit up. As I did, I saw that the red formation, yellow about the edges, was
now spinning directly above Brand, crackling with sparks and small lightnings,
its roar now changed to a wailing.
Brand took hold of his blade by the forte and raised it above his
shoulder like a spear, pointed in my direction. I knew that I could not parry
it, that I could not dodge it.
With my mind, I reached out to the Jewel and up to the formation in the
sky...
There came a bright flash as a small finger of lightning reached down
and touched his blade...
The weapon fell from his hand and his hand flew to his mouth. With his
left hand, he clutched at the Jewel of Judgment, as if he realized what I was
doing and sought to nullify it by covering the stone. Sucking his fingers, he
looked upward, all of the anger draining from his face to be replaced by a look
of fear verging on terror.
The cone was beginning to descend.
Turning then, he stepped onto the blackened area, faced south, raised
both his arms and cried out something I could not hear above the wailing.
The cone fell toward him, but he seemed to grow two-dimensional as it
approached. His outline wavered. He began to shrink-but it did not seem a
function of actual size, so much as an effect of distancing. He dwindled,
dwindled, was gone, a bare instant before the cone licked across the area he
had occupied.
With him went the Jewel, so that I was left with no way of controlling
the thing above me. I did not know whether it was better to maintain a low
profile or to resume a normal stance on the Pattern. I decided on the latter,
because the whirlwind seemed to go for things which broke the normal sequence.
I got back into a sitting position and edged over to the line. Then I leaned
forward into a crouch, by which time the cone began to rise. The wailing retreated
down the scale as it withdrew. The blue fires about my boots had subsided
completely. I turned and looked at Fiona. She motioned me to get up and go on.
So I rose slowly, seeing that the vortex above me continued to
dissipate as I moved. Advancing upon the area where Brand had so recently
stood, I once again used Grayswandir to guide me through. The twisted remains
of Brand's blade lay near the far edge of the dim place.
I wished there were some easy way out of the Pattern. It seemed
pointless to complete it now. But there is no turning back once you have set
foot upon it, and I was extremely leery of trying the dark route out. So I
headed on toward the Grand Curve. To what place, I wondered, had Brand taken
himself? If I knew, I could command the Pattern to send me after him, once I
reached the center. Perhaps Fiona had an idea. Still, he would probably head
for a place where he had allies. It would be senseless to pursue him alone.
At least I had stopped the attunement, I consoled myself.
Then I entered the Grand Curve. The sparks shot up about me.
CHAPTER 12
Late afternoon on a mountain: the westering sun shone full on the rocks
to my left, tailored long shadows for those to the right; it filtered through
the foilage about my tomb; it countered to some extent the chill winds of
Kolvir. I released Random's hand and turned to regard the man who sat on the
bench before the mausoleum.
It was the face of the youth on the pierced Trump, lines now drawn
above the mouth, brow heavier, a general weariness in eye movement and set of
jaw which had not been apparent on the card.
So I knew it before Random said, This is my son Martin.
Martin rose as I approached him, clasped my hand, said, Uncle Corwin.
His expression changed but slightly as he said it. He scrutinized me.
He was several inches taller than Random, but of the same light build.
His chin and cheekbones had the same general cut to them, his hair was of a
similar texture.
I smiled.
You have been away a long while, I said. So was I.
He nodded.
But I have never really been in Amber proper, he said. I grew up in
Rebma-and other places.
Then let me welcome you, nephew. You come at an interesting time.
Random must have told you about it.
Yes, he said. That is why I asked to meet you here, rather than
there.
I glanced at Random.
The last uncle he met was Brand, Random said, and under very nasty
circumstances. Do you blame him?
Hardly. I ran into him myself a bit earlier. Can't say it was the most
rewarding encounter.
Ran into him? said Random. You've lost me.
He has left Amber and he has the Jewel of Judgment with him. If I had
known earlier what I know now, he would still be in the tower. He is our man,
and he is very dangerous.
Random nodded.
I know, he said. Martin confirmed all our suspicions on the
stabbing-and it was Brand. But what is this about the Jewel?
He beat me to the place where I had left it on the shadow Earth. He
has to walk the Pattern with it and project himself through it, though, to
attune it to his use. I just stopped him from doing that on the primal Pattern
in the real Amber. He escaped, however. I was just over the hill with Gerard,
sending a squad of guards through to Fiona in that place, to prevent his
returning and trying again. Our own Pattern and that in Rebma are also under
guard because of him.
Why does he want so badly to attune it? So he can raise a few storms?
Hell, he could take a walk in Shadow and make all the weather he wants.
A person attuned to the Jewel could use it to erase the Pattern.
Oh? What happens then?
The world as we know it comes to an end.
Oh, Random said again. Then, How the hell do you know?
It is a long story and I haven't the time, but I had it from Dworkin
and I believe that much of what he said.
He's still around?
Later, I said.
Okay. But Brand would have to be mad to do something like that.
I nodded.
I believe he thinks he could then cast a new Pattern, redesign the
universe with himself as chief executive.
Could this be done?
Theoretically, perhaps. But even Dworkin has certain doubts that the
feat could be repeated effectively now. The combination of factors was
unique... Yes, I believe Brand is somewhat mad. Looking back over the years,
recalling his personality changes, his cycles of moods, it seems there was
something of a schizoid pattern there. I do not know whether the deal he made
with the enemy pushed him over the edge or not. It does not really matter. I
wish he were back in his tower. I wish Gerard were a worse physician.
Do you know who stabbed him?
Fiona. You can get the story from her, though.
He leaned against my epitaph and shook his head.
Brand, he said. Damn him. Any one of us might have killed him on a
number of occasions-in the old days. Just when he would get you mad enough,
though, he would change. After a while, you would get to thinking he wasn't
such a bad guy after all. Too bad he didn't push one of us just a little harder
at the wrong time...
Then I take it he is now fair game? said Martin.
I looked at him. The muscles in his jaws had tightened and his eyes
narrowed. For a moment, all of our faces fled across his, like a riffling of
the family cards. All of our egoism, hatred, envy, pride, and abuse seemed to
flow by in that instant-and he had not even set foot in Amber yet. Something
snapped inside me and I reached out and seized him by the shoulders.
You have good reason to hate him, I said, and the answer to your
question is 'yes. ' The hunting season is open. I see no way to deal with him
other than to destroy him. I hated him myself for so long as he remained an
abstraction. But-now-it is different. Yes, he must be killed. But do not let
that hatred be your baptism into our company. There has been too much of it
among us. I look at your face-I don't know... I am sorry, Martin. Too much is
going on right now. You are young. I have seen more things. Some of them bother
me-differently. That's all.
I released my grip and stepped back.
Tell me about yourself, I said.
I was afraid of Amber for a long while, he began, and I guess that I
still am. Ever since he attacked me, I have been wondering whether Brand might
catch up with me again. I have been looking over my shoulder for years. I have
been afraid of all of you, I suppose. I knew most of you as pictures on
cards-with bad reputations attached. I told Random-Dad-that I did not want to
meet you all at once, and he suggested that I see you first. Neither of us
realized at the time that you would be particularly interested in certain
things that I know. After I mentioned them though. Dad said I had to see you as
soon as possible. He has been telling me all about what has been going on
and-you see, I know something about it.
I had a feeling that you might-when a certain name cropped up not too
long ago.
The Tecys? Random said.
The same.
It is difficult, deciding where to start... Martin said.
I know that you grew up in Rebma, walked the Pattern, and then used
your power over Shadow to visit Benedict in Avalon, I said. Benedict told you
more about Amber and Shadow, taught you the use of the Trumps, coached you in
weaponry. Later, you departed to walk in Shadow by yourself. And I know what
Brand did to you. That is the sum of my knowledge.
He nodded, stared off into the west.
After I left Benedict's, I traveled for years in Shadow, he said.
Those were the happiest times I have known. Adventure, excitement, new things
to see, to do... In the back of my mind, I always had it that one day when I
was smarter and tougher-more experienced-I would journey to Amber and meet my
other relatives. Then Brand caught up with me. I was camped on a little hillside,
just resting from a long ride and taking my lunch, on my way to visit my
friends the Tecys. Brand contacted me then. I had reached Benedict with his
Trump, when he was teaching me how to use them, and other times when I had
traveled. He had even transported me through occasionally, so I knew what it
felt like, knew what it was all about. This felt the same way, and for a
moment, I thought that somehow it was Benedict calling me. But no. It was
Brand-I recognized him from his picture in the deck. He was standing in the
midst of what seemed to be the Pattern. I was curious. I did not know how he
had reached me. So far as I knew, there was no Trump for me. He talked for a
minute-I forget what he said-and when everything was firm and clear, he-he stabbed
me. I pushed him and pulled away then. He held the contact somehow. It was hard
for me to break it-and when I did, he tried to reach me again. But I was able
to block him. Benedict had taught me that. He tried again, several times, but I
kept blocking. Finally, he stopped. I was near to the Tecys. I managed to get
onto my horse and make it to their place. I thought I was going to die, because
I had never been hurt that badly before. But after a time, I began to recover.
Then I grew afraid once again, afraid that Brand would find me and finish what
he had begun.
Why didn't you contact Benedict, I asked him, and tell him what had
happened, tell him of your fears?
I thought of that, he said, and I also thought of the possibility
that Brand believed he had succeeded, that I was indeed dead. I did not know
what sort of power struggle was going on in Amber, but I decided that the
attempt on my life was probably part of such a thing. Benedict had told me
enough about the family that this was one of the first things to come to mind.
So I decided that perhaps it would be better to remain dead. I left the Tecys
before I was completely recovered and rode off to lose myself in Shadow.
I happened upon a strange thing then, he continued, a thing I had
never before encountered, but which now seemed virtually omnipresent: In nearly
all of the shadows through which I passed, there was a peculiar black road
existing in some form or other. I did not understand it, but since it was the
only thing I had come across which seemed to traverse Shadow itself, my
curiosity was aroused. I resolved to follow it and learn more about it. It was
dangerous. I learned very quickly not to tread the thing. Strange shapes seemed
to travel it at night. Natural creatures which ventured upon it sickened and
died. So I was careful. I went no nearer than was necessary to keep it in
sight. I followed it through many places. I quickly learned that everywhere it
ran there was death, desolation, or trouble nearby. I did not know what to make
of it.
I was still weak from my wound, he went on, and I made the mistake
of pressing myself, of riding too far, too fast, in a day's time. That evening,
I fell ill and I lay shivering in my blanket through the night and much of the
next day. I was into and out of delirium during this time, so I do not know
exactly when she appeared. She seemed like part of my dream much of the while.
A young girl. Pretty. She took care of me while I recovered. Her name was Dara.
We talked interminably. It was very pleasant. Having someone to talk with like
that ...I must have told her my whole life story. Then she told me something of
herself. She was not a native of the area in which I had collapsed. She said
that she had traveled there through Shadow. She could not yet walk through it
as we do, though she felt she could learn to do this, as she claimed descent
from the House of Amber through Benedict. In fact, she wanted very badly to
learn how it was done. Her means of travel then was the black road itself. She
was immune to its noxious effects, she said, because she was also related to
the dwellers at its farther end, in the Courts of Chaos. She wanted to learn
our ways though, so I did my best to instruct her in those things that I did
know. I told her of the Pattern, even sketched it for her. I showed her my
Trumps-Benedict had given me a deck-to show her the appearance of her other
relatives. She was particularly interested in yours.
I begin to understand, I said. Go on.
She told me that Amber, in the fullness of its corruption and
presumption, had upset a kind of metaphysical balance between itself and the
Courts of Chaos. Her people now had the job of redressing the matter by laying
waste to Amber. Their own place is not a shadow of Amber, but a solid entity in
its own right. In the meantime, all of the intervening shadows are suffering
because of the black road. My knowledge of Amber being what it was, I could
only listen. At first, I accepted everything that she said. Brand, to me,
certainly fit her description of evil in Amber. But when I mentioned him, she
said no. He was some sort of hero back where she hied from. She was uncertain
as to the particulars, but it did not trouble her all that much. It was then
that I realized how oversure she seemed about everything-there was a ring of
the fanatic when she talked. Almost unwillingly, I found myself trying to
defend Amber. I thought of Llewella and of Benedict-and of Gerard, whom I had
met a few times. She was eager to learn of Benedict, I discovered. That proved
the soft spot in her armor. Here I could speak with some knowledge, and here
she was willing to believe the good things I had to say. So, I do not know what
the ultimate effect of all this talk was, except that she seemed somewhat less
sure of herself near the end...
The end? I said. What do you mean? How long was she with you?
Almost a week, he replied. She had said she would take care of me
until I was recovered, and she did. Actually, she remained several days longer.
She said that was just to be sure, but I think it was really that she wanted to
continue our conversations. Finally though, she said that she had to be moving
on. I asked her to stay with me, but she said no. I offered to go with her, but
she said no to that, too. She must have realized that I planned to follow her
then, because she slipped away during the night. I could not ride the black
road, and I had no idea what shadow she would travel to next on her way to
Amber. When I awoke in the morning and realized she had gone, I thought for a
time of visiting Amber myself. But I was still afraid. Perhaps some of the
things she had said had reinforced my own fears. Whatever, I decided to remain
in Shadow. And so I traveled on, seeing things, trying to learn things-until
Random found me and told me he wanted me to come home. He brought me here first
though, to meet you, because he wanted you to hear my story before any of the
others. He said that you knew Dara, that you wanted to learn more about her. I
hope that I have helped.
Yes, I said. Thank you.
I understand that she did finally walk the Pattern.
Yes, she succeeded in that.
And afterward declared herself an enemy of Amber.
That, too.
I hope, he said, that she comes to no harm from all this. She was
kind to me.
She seems quite able to take care of herself, I said. But ...yes,
she is a likable girl. I cannot promise you anything concerning her safety,
because I still know so little about her, so little of her part in everything
that is going on. Yet, what you have told me has been helpful. It makes her
someone I would still like to grant doubt's benefit, as far as I can.
He smiled.
I am glad to hear that.
I shrugged.
What are you going to do now? I asked.
I am taking him to see Vialle, Random said, and then to meet the
others, as time and opportunity permit. Unless, of course, something new has
developed and you need me now.
There have been new developments, I said, but I do not really need
you now. I had better bring you up to date, though. I still have a little
time.
As I filled Random in on events since his departure, I thought about
Martin. He was still an unknown quantity so far as I was concerned. His story
might be perfectly true. In fact, I felt that it was. On the other hand, I had
a feeling that it was not complete, that he was intentionally leaving something
out. Maybe something harmless. Then again, maybe not. He had no real reason to
love us. Quite the contrary. And Random could be bringing home a Trojan Horse.
Probably though, it was nothing like that. It is just that I never trust anyone
if there is an alternative available.
Still, nothing that I was telling Random could really be used against
us, and I strongly doubted that Martin could do us much damage if that was his
intention. No, more likely he was being as cagey as the rest of us, and for
pretty much the same reasons: fear and self preservation. On a sudden
inspiration, I asked him, Did you ever run into Dara again after that?
He flushed.
No, he said, too quickly.
Just that time. That's all.
I see, I said, and Random was too good a poker player not to have
noticed; so I had just bought us a piece of instant insurance at the small
price of putting a father on guard against his long-lost son.
I quickly shifted our talk back to Brand. It was while we were
comparing notes on psychopathology that I felt the tiny tingle and the sense of
presence which heralds a Trump contact. I raised my hand and turned aside.
In a moment the contact was clear and Ganelon and I regarded one
another.
Corwin, he said, I decided it was time to check. By now, you have
the Jewel, Brand has the Jewel, or you are both still looking. Which one is
it?
Brand has the Jewel, I said.
More's the pity, he said. Tell me about it.
So I did.
Then Gerard had the story right, he said.
He's already told you all this?
Not in such detail, Ganelon replied, and I wanted to be sure I was
getting it straight. I just finished speaking with him.
He glanced upward.
It would seem you had best be moving then, if my memories of moonrise
serve me right.
I nodded.
Yes, I will be heading for the stairway shortly. It is not all that
far from here.
Good. Now here is what you must be ready to do
I know what I have to do, I said. I have to get up to Tir-na Nog'th
before Brand does and block his way to the Pattern. Failing that, I have to
chase him through it again.
That is not the way to go about it, he said.
You have a better idea?
Yes, I do. You have your Trumps with you?
Yes.
Good. First, you would not be able to get up there in time to block
his way to the Pattern
Why not?
You have to make the ascension, then you have to walk to the palace
and make your way down to the Pattern. That takes time, even in Tir-na
Nog'th-especially in Tir-na Nog'th, where time tends to play tricks anyway. For
all you know, you may have a hidden death wish slowing you down. I don't know.
Whatever the case, he would have commenced walking the Pattern by the time you
arrived. It may well be that he would be too far into it for you to reach him
this time.
He will probably be tired. That should slow him some.
No. Put yourself in his place. If you were Brand, wouldn't you have
headed for some shadow where the time flow was different? Instead of an
afternoon, he could well have taken several days to rest up for this evening's
ordeal. It is safest to assume that he will be in good shape.
You are right, I said. I can't count on it. Okay. An alternative I
had entertained but would rather not try if it could be avoided, would be to
kill him at a distance. Take along a crossbow or one of our rifles and simply
shoot him in the midst of the Pattern. The thing that bothers me about it is
the effect of our blood on the Pattern. It may be that it is only the primal Pattern
that suffers from it, but I don't know.
That's right. You do not know, he said. Also, I would not want you
to rely on normal weapons up there. That is a peculiar place. You said yourself
it is like a strange piece of Shadow drifting in the sky. While you figured how
to make a rifle fire in Amber, the same rules may not apply up there.
It is a risk, I acknowledged.
As for the crossbow-supposing a sudden gust of wind deflected the bolt
each time you shot one?
I am afraid I do not follow you.
The Jewel. He walked it part way through the primal Pattern, and he
has had some time to experiment with it since then. Do you think it possible
that he is partly attuned to it now?
I do not know. I am not at all that sure how the process works.
I just wanted to point out that if it does work that way, he may be
able to use it to defend himself. The Jewel may even have other properties you
are not aware of. So what I am saying is that I would not want you to count on
being able to kill him at a distance. And I would not even want you to rely on
being able to pull the trick you did with the Jewel again-not if he may have
gained some measure of control over it.
You do make things look a little bleaker than I had them.
But possibly more realistic, he said.
Conceded. Go on. You said you had a plan.
That is correct. My thinking is that Brand must not be allowed to
reach the Pattern at all, that once he sets foot upon it the probability of
disaster goes way up.
And you do not think I can get there in time to block him?
Not if he can really transport himself around almost instantaneously
while you have to take a long walk. My bet is that he is just waiting for
moonrise, and as soon as the city takes form he will be inside, right next to
the Pattern.
I see the point, but not the answer.
The answer is that you are not going to set foot in Tir-na Nog'th
tonight.
Hold on a minute!
Hold on, hell! You imported a master strategist, you'd better listen
to what he has to say.
Okay, I am listening.
You have agreed that you probably cannot reach the place in time. But
someone else can.
Who and how?
All right. I have been in touch with Benedict. He has returned. At
this moment, he is in Amber, down in the chamber of the Pattern. By now, he
should have finished walking it and be standing there at its center, waiting.
You proceed to the foot of the stairs to the sky-city. There you await the
rising of the moon. As soon as Tir-na Nog'th takes form, you will contact
Benedict via his Trump. You tell him that all is ready, and he will use the
power of the Pattern in Amber to transport himself to the place of the Pattern
in Tir-na Nog'th. No matter how fast Brand travels, he cannot gain much on
that.
I see the advantages, I said. That is the fastest way to get a man
up there and Benedict is certainly a good man. He should have no trouble
dealing with Brand.
Do you really think Brand will make no other preparations? Ganelon
said.
From everything I've heard about the man, he's smart even if he is
daft. He just may anticipate something like this.
Possibly. Any idea what he might do?
He made a sweeping gesture with one hand, slapped his neck and smiled.
A bug, he said. Pardon me. Pesky little things.
You still think
I think you had better remain in contact with Benedict the entire time
he is up there, that is what I think. If Brand gets the upper hand, you may
need to pull Benedict back immediately to save his life.
Of course. But then
But then we would have lost a round. Admitted. But not the game. Even
with the Jewel fully attuned, he would have to get to the primal Pattern to do
his real damage with it-and you have that under guard.
Yes, I said. You seem to have everything figured. You surprised me,
moving so fast.
I've had a lot of time on my hands recently, which can be a bad thing
unless you use it for thinking. So I did. What I think now is that you had best
move fast. The day isn't getting any longer.
Agreed, I said. Thanks for the good counsel.
Save your thanks till we see what comes of it, he said, and then he
broke the contact.
That one sounded important, Random said. What's up?
Appropriate question, I answered, but I am all out of time now. You
will have to wait till morning for the story.
Is there anything I can do to help?
As a matter of fact, I said, yes, if you'll either ride double or go
back to Amber on a Trump. I need Star.
Sure, Random said. No trouble. Is that all?
Yes. Haste is all.
We moved toward the horses.
I patted Star a few times and then mounted.
We'll see you in Amber, Random said. Good luck.
In Amber, I said. Thanks.
I turned and headed toward the place of the stairway, treading my
tomb's lengthening shadow eastward.
CHAPTER 13
On the highest ridge of Kolvir there is a formation which resembles
three steps. I sat on the lowest of these and waited for more to occur above
me. It takes night and moonlight to do this, so half of the requirements had
been met.
There were clouds to the west and northeast. I was leery of those
clouds. If they massed sufficiently to block all moonlight, Tir-na Nog'th faded
back to nothingness. This was one reason why it was always advisable to have a
backup man on the ground, to Trump you to safety should the city vanish about
you.
The sky overhead was clear, however, and filled with familiar stars.
When the moon came up and its light fell upon the stone at which I rested, the
stairway in the sky would come into being, sweeping upward to a great height,
taking its way to Tir-na Nog'th, the image of Amber that rode the night's
middle air.
I was weary. Too much had occurred in too brief a time. Suddenly to be
at rest, to remove my boots and rub my feet, to lean back and rest my head,
even against stone, was a luxury, a pure animal pleasure. I drew my cloak
together before me against the growing chill. A hot bath, a full meal, a bed
would be very good things. But these assumed an almost mythic quality from that
vantage. It was more than sufficient simply to rest as I was, to let my
thoughts move more slowly, drifting, spectatorlike, back over the day's
happenings.
So much ...but now, at least, I had some answers to some of my
questions. Not all of them, certainly. But enough to slake my mind's thirst for
the moment ...I now had some idea as to what had been going on during my
absence, a better understanding of what was happening now, a knowledge of some
of the things that had to be done, of what I had to do... And I felt, somehow,
that I knew more than I realized, consciously, that I already possessed pieces
that would fit the growing picture before me, if I were only to jiggle them,
flip them, rotate them properly. The pace of recent events, particularly
today's, had not allowed me a moment's reflection. Now, though, some of the
pieces seemed to be turning at odd angles...
I was distracted by a stirring above my shoulder, a tiny effect of
brightening in the higher air. Turning, then standing, I regarded the horizon.
A preliminary glow had occurred out over the sea at the point where the moon
would ascend. As I watched, a minute arc of light came into view. The clouds
had shifted slightly also, though not enough to cause concern. I glanced up
then, but the overhead phenomenon had not yet begun. I withdrew my Trumps,
however, riffled them, and cut out Benedict's.
Lethargy forgotten, I stared, watching the moon expand above the water,
casting a trail of light over the waves. A faint form was suddenly hovering on
the threshold of visibility high overhead. As the light grew, a spark limned it
here and there. The first lines, faint as spider webbing, appeared above the
rock. I studied Benedict's card, I reached for contact...
His cold image came alive. I saw him in the chamber of the Pattern,
standing at the designs' center. A lighted lantern glowed beside his left foot.
He became aware of my presence.
Corwin, he said, is it time?
Not quite, I told him. The moon is rising. The city is just
beginning to take form. So it will only be a little longer. I wanted to be
certain you were ready.
I am ready, he said.
It is good that you came back when you did. Did you learn anything of
interest?
Ganelon called me back, he said, as soon as he learned what had
happened. His plan seemed a good one, which is why I am here. As for the Courts
of Chaos, yes. I believe I have learned a few things
A moment, I said.
The moonbeam strands had assumed a more tangible appearance. The city
overhead was now clear in outline. The stairway was visible in its entirety,
though fainter in some places than in others. I stretched forth enough to slake
my mind's thirst for the moment...
Cool, soft, I encountered the fourth stair. It seemed to give somewhat
beneath my push, however.
Almost, I said to Benedict. I am going to try the stairs. Be ready.
He nodded.
I mounted the stone stairs, one, two, three. I raised my foot then and
lowered it upon the fourth, ghostly one. It yielded gently to my weight. I was
afraid to raise my other foot, so I waited, watching the moon. I breathed the
cool air as the brightness increased, as the path in the waters widened.
Glancing upward, I saw Tir-na Nog'th lose something of its transparency. The
stars behind it grew dimmer. As this occurred, the stair became firmer beneath
my foot. All resiliency went out of it. I felt that it might bear my full
weight. Casting my eyes along its length, I now saw it in its entirety, here
translucent, there transparent, sparkling, but continuous all the way up to the
silent city that drifted above the sea. I raised my other foot and stood on the
fourth stair. If I'd the mind, a few more steps would send me along that
celestial escalator into the place of dreams made real, walking neuroses and
dubious prophecy, into a moonlit city of ambiguous wish fulfillment, twisted
time, and pallid beauty. I stepped back down and glanced at the moon, now
balanced on the world's wet rim. I regarded Benedict's Trump in its silvery
glow.
The stair is solid, the moon is up, I said.
All right. I am going.
I watched him there at the center of the Pattern. He raised the lantern
in his left hand and for a moment stood unmoving. An instant later he was gone,
and so was Pattern. Another instant, and he stood within a similar chamber,
this time outside the Pattern, next to the point where it begins. He raised the
lantern high and looked all around the room. He was alone.
He turned, walked to the wall, set the lantern beside it. His shadow
stretched toward the Pattern, changed shape as he turned on his heel, moved
back to his first position.
This Pattern, I noted, glowed with a paler light than the one in
Amber-silvery white, without the hint of blue with which I-was familiar. Its
configuration was the same, but the ghost city played strange tricks with
perspective. There were distortions-narrowings, wideningswhich seemed to shift
for no particular reason across its surface, as though I viewed the entire
tableau through an irregular lens rather than Benedict's Trump.
I retreated down the stairs, settled once again on the lowest step. I
continued to observe.
Benedict loosened his blade in its scabbard.
You know about the possible effect of blood on the Pattern? I asked.
Yes. Ganelon told me.
Did you ever suspect-any of this?
I never trusted Brand, he told me.
What of your journey to the Courts of Chaos? What did you learn?
Later, Corwin. He could come any time now.
I hope no distracting visions show up, I said, recalling my own
journey to Tir-na Nog'th and his own part in my final adventure there.
He shrugged.
One gives them power by paying them heed. My attention is reserved for
one matter tonight.
He turned through a full circle, regarding every part of the chamber,
halted when he had finished.
I wonder if he knows you are there? I said.
Perhaps. It does not matter.
I nodded. If Brand did not show np, we had gained a day. The guards
would ward the other Patterns, Fiona would have a chance to demonstrate her own
skill in matters arcane by locating Brand for us. We would then pursue him. She
and Bleys had been able to stop him once before. Could she do it alone now? Or
would we have to find Bleys and try to convince him to help? Had Brand found
Bleys? What the hell did Brand want this kind of power for anyhow? A desire for
the throne I could understand. Yet...The man was mad, leave it at that. Too
bad, but that's the way it was. Heredity or environment? I wondered wryly. We
were all of us, to some degree, mad after his fashion. To be honest, it had to
be a form of madness, to have so much and to strive so bitterly for just a
little more, for a bit of an edge over the others. He carried this tendency to
its extreme, that is all. He was a caricature of this mania in all of us. In
this sense, did it really matter which of us was the traitor?
Yes, it did. He was the one who had acted. Mad or not, he had gone too
far. He had done things Eric, Julian, and I would not have done. Bleys and
Fiona had finally backed away from his thickening plot. Gerard and Benedict
were a notch above the rest of us-moral, mature, whatever-for they had exempted
themselves from the zero-sum power game. Random had changed, quite a bit, in
recent years. Could it be that the children of the unicorn took ages in which
to mature, that it was slowly happening to the rest of us but had somehow
passed Brand by? Or could it be that by his actions Brand was causing it in the
rest of us? Like most such questions, the benefit of these was in the asking,
not the answering. We were enough like Brand that I knew a particular species
of fear nothing else could so provoke. But yes, it did matter. Whatever the
reason, he was the one who had acted.
The moon was higher now, its vision superimposed upon my inward viewing
of the chamber of the Pattern. The clouds continued to shift, to boil nearer
the moon. I thought of advising Benedict, but it would serve no other end than
distraction. Above me, Tir-na Nog'th rode like some supernatural ark upon the
seas of night
...And suddenly Brand was there.
Reflexively, my hand went to Grayswandir's hilt, despite the fact that
a part of me realized from the very first that he stood across the Pattern from
Benedict in a dark chamber high in the sky.
My hand fell again. Benedict had become aware of the intruding presence
immediately, and he turned to face him. He made no move toward his weapon, but
simply stared across the Pattern at our brother.
My earliest fear had been that Brand would contrive to arrive directly
behind Benedict and stab him in the back. I would not have tried that though,
because even in death Benedict's reflexes might have been sufficient to
dispatch his assailant Apparently, Brand wasn't that crazy either.
Brand smiled.
Benedict, he said. Fancy... You... Here.
The Jewel of Judgment hung fiery upon his breast.
Brand, Benedict said, don't try it.
Still smiling. Brand unclasped his sword belt and let his weapon fall
to the floor. When the echoes died, he said, I am not a fool, Benedict. The
man hasn't been born who can go up against you with a blade.
I don't need the blade, Brand.
Brand began walking, slowly, about the edge of the Pattern.
Yet you wear it as a servant of the throne, when you could have been
king.
That has never been high on my list of ambitions.
That is right. He paused, only part way about the Pattern.
Loyal, self-effacing. You have not changed at all. Pity Dad
conditioned you so well. You could have gone so much further.
I have everything that I want, Benedict said.
...To have been stifled, cut off, so early.
You cannot talk your way past me either, Brand. Do not make me hurt
you.
The smile still on his face. Brand began moving again, slowly. What was
it he was trying to do? I could not figure his strategy.
You know I can do certain things the others cannot, Brand said. If
there is anything at all that you want and think that you cannot have, now is
your chance to name it and learn how wrong you were. I have learned things you
would scarcely believe.
Benedict smiled one of his rare smiles.
You have chosen the wrong line, he said. I can walk to anything that
I want.
Shadows! Brand snorted, halting again. Any of the others can clutch
a phantom! I am talking of reality! Amber! Power! Chaos! Not daydreams made
solid! Not second best!
If I had wanted more than I have, I knew what to do. I did not do it.
Brand laughed, began walking again. He had come a quarter of the way
about the Pattern's periphery. The Jewel burned more brightly. His voice rang.
You are a fool, to wear your chains willingly! But if things do not
call out to you to possess them and if power holds no attraction, what of
knowledge? I learned the last of Dworkin's lore. I have gone on since then and
paid dark prices for greater insight into the workings of the universe. This
you could have without that price tag.
There would be a price, Benedict said, one that I will not pay.
Brand shook his head and tossed his hair. The image of the Pattern
wavered for a moment then, as a wisp of cloud crossed the moon. Tir-na Nog'th
faded slightly, returned to normal focus.
You mean it, you really mean it, Brand said, apparently not aware of
the moment of fading.
I shan't test you further then. I had to try.
He halted again, staring.
You are too good a man to waste yourself on that mess in Amber,
defending something that is obviously falling apart. I am going to win,
Benedict. I am going to erase Amber and build it anew. I am going to rub out
the old Pattern and draw my own. You can be with me. I want you on my side. I
am going to raise up a perfect world, one with more direct access to and from
Shadow. I am going to merge Amber with the Courts of Chaos. I am going to
extend this realm directly through all of Shadow. You will command our legions,
the mightiest military forces ever assembled. You
If your new world would be as perfect as you say, Brand, there would
be no need for legions. If, on the other hand, it is to reflect the mind of its
creator, then I see it as something less than an improvement over the present
state of affairs. Thank you for your offer, but I hold with the Amber which
already exists.
You are a fool, Benedict. A well-meaning one, but a fool
nevertheless.
He began to move again, casually. He was within forty feet of Benedict.
Thirty... He kept moving. He finally paused about twenty feet away, hooked his
thumbs behind his belt, and simply stared. Benedict met his gaze. I checked the
clouds again. A long mass of them continued a moonward slide. I could pull
Benedict out at any time, though. It was hardly worth disturbing him at the
moment.
Why don't you come and cut me down then? Brand finally said. Unarmed
as I am, it should not be difficult. The fact that the same blood flows in both
our veins makes no difference, does it? What are you waiting for?
I already told you that I do not wish to hurt you, Benedict said.
Yet you stand ready to, if I attempt to pass your way.
Benedict simply nodded.
Admit that you fear me, Benedict. All of you are afraid of me. Even
when I approach you weaponless like this, something mast be twisting your guts.
You see my confidence and you do not understand it. You must be afraid.
Benedict did not reply.
...And you fear my blood on your hands, Brand went on, you fear my
death curse.
Did you fear Martin's blood on your own? Benedict asked.
That bastard puppy! Brand said. He was not truly one of us. He was
only a tool.
Brand, I have no desire to kill a brother. Give me that trinket you
wear about your neck and come back with me now to Amber. It is not too late to
set matters right.
Brand threw back his head and laughed.
Oh, nobly spoken! Nobly spoken, Benedict! Like a true lord of the
realm! You would shame me with your excessive virtue! And what is the sticking
point of this all?
He reached down and stroked the Jewel of Judgment.
This?
He laughed again and strode forward.
This bauble? Would its surrender buy us peace, amity, order? Would it
ransom my life?
He halted once more, ten feet from Benedict now. He raised the Jewel
between his fingers and looked down at it.
Do you realize the full powers of this thing? he asked.
Enough of th Benedict began, and his voice cracked in his throat.
Brand hurriedly took another step forward. The Jewel was bright before
him. Benedict's hand had begun to move toward his blade, but it did not reach
it. He stood stiffly now, as if suddenly transformed into a statue. Then I
began to understand, but by then it was too late.
Nothing that Brand had been saying had really mattered. It had simply
been a running line of patter, a distraction thrown up before him while he
sought cautiously after the proper range. He was indeed partly attuned to the
Jewel, and the limited control this gave him was still sufficient to enable him
to produce effects with it, effects which I was unaware it could produce, but
of which he had known all along.
Brand had carefully contrived his arrival a good distance from
Benedict, tried the Jewel, moved a little nearer, tried again, kept up this
movement, this testing, until he found the point where it could affect
Benedict's nervous system.
Benedict, I said, you had better come to me now, and I exerted my
will, but he did not budge nor did he reply.
His Trump was still functioning, I felt his presence, I observed events
because of it, but I could not reach him. The Jewel was obviously affecting
more than his motor system.
I looked to the clouds again. They were still growing, they were
reaching for the moon. It seemed they might come across it soon. If I could not
pull Benedict out when it happened, he would fall to the sea as soon as the
light was fully blocked, the city disrupted. Brand! If he became aware of it,
he might be able to use the Jewel to dissipate the clouds. But to do that, he
would probably have to release Benedict. I did not think he would do it. Still
...The clouds seemed to be slowing now. This entire line of reasoning could
become unnecessary. I thumbed out Brand's Trump though, and set it aside.
Benedict, Benedict, said Brand, smiling, of what use is the finest
swordsman alive if he cannot move to take up his blade? I told you that you
were a fool. Did you think I would walk willingly to my slaughter? You should
have trusted the fear you must have felt. You should have known that I would
not enter this place helpless. I meant it when I said that I was going to win.
You were a good choice though, because you are the best. I really wish that you
had accepted my offer. But it is not that important now. I cannot be stopped.
None of the others has a chance, and with you gone things are going to be much
easier.
He reached beneath his cloak and produced a dagger.
Bring me through, Benedict! I cried, but it was no use. There was no
response, no strength to trump me up there.
I seized Brand's Trump. I recalled my Trump battle with Eric. If I
could hit Brand through his Trump, I might be able to break his concentration
sufficiently for Benedict to come free. I turned all of my faculties upon the
card, preparing for a massive mental assault. But nothing. The way was frozen
and dark.
It had to be that his concentration on the task at hand, his mental
involvement with the Jewel, was so complete that I simply could not reach him.
I was blocked at every turn.
Suddenly, the stairway grew paler above me and I cast a quick glance at
the moon. A limb of cumulus now covered a portion of its face. Damn!
I returned my attention to Benedict's Trump. It seemed slow, but I did
recover the contact, indicating that somewhere, inside it all, Benedict was
still conscious. Brand had moved a pace nearer and was still taunting him. The
Jewel on its heavy chain burned with the light of its use. They stood perhaps
three paces apart now. Brand toyed with the dagger.
...Yes, Benedict, he was saying, you probably would have preferred
to die in battle. On the other hand, you might look upon this as a kind of
honor-a signal honor. In a way, your death will allow the birth of a new
order...
For a moment, the Pattern faded behind them. I could not tear my eyes
from the scene to examine the moon, however. There, within the shadows and the
flickering light, his back to the Pattern, Brand did not seem to notice. He
took another step forward.
But enough of this, he said. There are things to be done, and the
night grows no younger.
He stepped nearer and lowered the blade.
Good night, sweet Prince, he said, and he moved to close with him.
At that instant, Benedict's strange mechanical right arm, torn from
this place of shadow and silver and moonlight, moved with the speed of a
striking snake. Thing of glinting, metallic planes like the facets of a gem,
wrist a wondrous weave of silver cable, pinned with flecks of fire, stylized,
skeletal, a Swiss toy, a mechanical insect, functional, deadly, beautiful in
its way, it shot forward with a speed that I could not follow, while the rest
of his body remained steady, a statue.
The mechanical fingers caught the Jewel's chain about Brand's neck.
Immediately, the arm moved upward, raising Brand high above the floor. Brand
dropped the dagger and clutched at his throat with both hands.
Behind him, the Pattern faded once again. It returned with a much paler
glow. Brand's face in the lantern light was a ghastly, twisted apparition.
Benedict remained frozen, holding him on high, unmoving, a human gallows.
The Pattern grew dimmer. Above me, the steps began to recede. The moon
was half-occluded.
Writhing, Brand raised his arms above his head, catching at the chain
on either side of the metal hand that held it. He was strong, as all of us are.
I saw his muscles bunch and harden. By then, his face was dark and his neck a
mass of straining cables. He bit his lip; the blood ran into his beard as he
drew upon the chain.
With a sharp snap followed by a rattling, the chain parted and Brand
fell to the floor gasping. He rolled over once, clutching at his throat with
both hands.
Slowly, very slowly, Benedict lowered his strange arm. He still held
the chain and the Jewel. He flexed his other arm. He sighed deeply.
The Pattern grew even dimmer. Above me, Tir-na Nog'th became
transparent. The moon was almost gone.
Benedict! I cried. Can you hear me?
Yes, he said, very softly, and he began to sink through the floor.
The city is fading! You've got to come to me right away!
I extended my hand.
Brand... he said, turning.
But Brand was sinking also, and I saw that Benedict could not reach
him. I clasped Benedict's left hand and jerked. Both of us fell to the ground
beside the high outcrop.
I helped him to his feet. Then we both seated ourselves on the stone.
For a long while, we did not say anything. I looked again and Tir-na Nog'th was
gone.
I thought back over everything that had happened, so fast, so sudden,
that day. A great weight of weariness lay upon me now, and I felt that my
energies must be at their end, that shortly I must sleep. I could scarcely
think straight. Life had simply been too crowded recently. I leaned my back
against the stone once more, regarding cloud and star. The pieces ...the pieces
which it seemed should fit, if only the proper jiggle, twist, or flip were
applied... They were jiggling, twisting, and flipping now, almost of their own
accord...
Is he dead, do you think? Benedict asked, pulling me back from a
half-dream of emerging forms.
Probably, I said. He was in bad shape when things fell apart.
It was a long way down. He might have had time to work some escape
along the lines of his arrival.
Right now it, does not really matter, I said. You've drawn his
fangs.
Benedict grunted. He was still holding the Jewel, a much dimmer red
than it had been so recently.
True, he finally said. The Pattern is safe now. I wish ...I wish
that some time, long ago, something had not been said that was said, or
something done that was not done. Something, had we known, which might have let
him grow differently, something which would have seen him become another man
than the bitter, bent thing I saw up there. It is best now if he is dead. But
it is a waste of something that might have been.
I did not answer him. What he had said might or might not be right. It
did not matter. Brand might have been borderline psychotic, whatever that
means, and then again maybe not. There is always a reason. Whenever anything
has been mucked up, whenever anthing outrageous happens, there is a reason for
it. you still have a mucked-up, outrageous situation on your hands, however,
and explaining it does not alleviate it one bit. If someone does something
really rotten, there is a reason for it. Learn it, if you care, and you learn
why he is a son of a bitch. The fact is the thing that remains, though. Brand
had acted. It changed nothing to run a posthumous psychoanalysis. Acts and
their consequences are the things by which our fellows judge us. Anything else,
and all that you get is a cheap feeling of moral superiority by thinking how
you would have done something nicer if it had been you. So as for the rest,
leave it to heaven. I'm not qualified.
We had best get back to Amber, Benedict said, There are a great
number of things that must be done.
Wait, I said.
Why?
I've been thinking.
When I did not elaborate, he finally said, And..?
I riffled slowly through my Trumps, replacing his, replacing Brand's.
Haven't you wondered yet about the new arm you wear? I asked him.
Of course. You brought it from Tir-na Nog'th, under unusual
circumstances. It fits. It works. It proved itself tonight.
Exactly. Isn't the last a lot of weight to dump on poor coincidence?
The one weapon that gave you a chance up there, against the Jewel. And it just
happened to be a part of you-and you just happened to be the person who was up
there, to use it? Trace things back and trace them forward again. Isn't there
an extraordinary-no, preposterous-chain of coincidences involved?
When you put it that way... he said.
I do. And you must realize as well as I do that there has to be more
to it than that.
All right. Say that. But how? How was it done?
I have no idea, I said, withdrawing the card I had not looked upon in
a long, long while, feeling its coldness beneath my finger tips, but the
method is not important. You asked the wrong question.
What should I have asked?
Not 'How?' but 'Who?'
You think that a human agency arranged that entire chain of events, up
through the recovery of the Jewel?
I don't know about that. What's human? But I do think that someone we
both know has returned and is behind it all.
All right. Who?
I showed him the Trump that I held.
Dad? That is ridiculous? He must be dead. It's been so long.
You know he could have engineered it. He's that devious. We never
understood all of his powers.
Benedict rose to his feet. He stretched. He shook his head.
I think you have been out in the cold too long, Corwin. Let's go home
now.
Without testing my guess? Come on! That is hardly sporting. Sit down
and give me a minute. Let's try his Trump.
He would have contacted someone by now.
I don't think so. In fact-Come on. Humor me. What have we got to
lose?
All right. Why not?
He sat down beside me. I held the Trump where both of us could make it
out. We stared at it. I relaxed my mind, I reached for contact. It came almost
immediately.
He was smiling as he regarded as.
Good evening. That was a fine
piece of work, Ganeton said. I am pleased that you brought back my trinket. I'll be needing
it soon. "