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"In your case, you need only conquer this bezander with your caitiff, then march the arch-priestess forward to confront the serpent, and the game is yours."
"Never mind all that!" snapped Vuwas. "How might I win?"
"Is it not obvious? These mord.y.k.es stand in your way. Strike them aside with your ghost, like this, whereupon your caitiffs have the freedom of the board."
"Ingenious," said Vus the mottled green gryph. "Those moves, however, are considered improper on the world Pharsad. Further, you have called the pieces by their wrong names, and also you have disarranged the board!"
"No matter," said Shimrod. "Simply replay the game, and now I must be on my way."
"Not so fast!" cried out Vuwas. "There is still a small task to be accomplished!"
"We were not born yesterday," stated Vus. "Prepare for death."
Shimrod put the reed baskets on the table. Vuwas the dark red gryph asked suspiciously: "What is in the baskets?"
"They contain honeycakes," said Shimrod. "One of the cakes is somewhat larger and more tasty then the other."
"Aha!" said Vus. "Which is which?"
"You must open the baskets," said Shimrod. "The larger cake is for whichever of you is the most deserving."
"Indeed!"
Shimrod sauntered off across the forecourt. For a moment there was silence behind him, then a mutter, then a sharp remark, an equally sharp retort, followed by a sudden outburst of horrid snarls, bellows, thuds and tearing sounds.
Traversing the forecourt, Shimrod climbed three steps to a stone porch. Stone columns framed an alcove and a ponderous black iron door, twice his height and wider than his arms could span. Black iron faces looked through festoons of black iron vines; black iron eyes watched Shimrod with sardonic curiosity. Shimrod touched a stud; the door swung open to the grinding of iron on iron. He stepped through the opening, into a high-ceilinged entry hail. To right and left pedestals supported a pair of stone statues, of exaggerated attenuation, robed and cowled so that the gaunt faces remained in shadow. No servitor appeared; Shimrod expected none. Murgen's servitors were more often than not invisible.
The way was familiar to Shimrod. He pa.s.sed through the entry hall into a long gallery. At regular intervals, tail portals opened into chambers serving a variety of functions. There was no one to be seen nor any sound to be heard; an almost unnatural stillness held Swer Smod.
Shimrod walked along the gallery without haste, looking into the chambers on either side to discover what changes had been made since his last visit. Often the chambers were dark, and usually empty. Some served conventional purposes; others were dedicated to a use less ordinary. In one of these chambers Shimrod discovered a tall woman standing before an easel, back turned to the doorway. She wore a long gown of gray-blue linen; cloud-white hair was gathered at the nape of her neck by a ribbon, then hung down her back. The easel supported a panel; using brushes and pigments from a dozen clay pots, the woman worked to create an image on the surface of the panel.
Shimrod watched a moment, but could not clearly define the nature of the image. He entered the chamber, that he might observe at closer range and perhaps with better understanding, but had no great success. The pigments looked to be an identical heavy black, allowing the woman small scope for contrast, or so it seemed to Shimrod. He moved a step closer, then another. At last he was able to perceive that each pigment, anomalous and strange to his eyes, quivered with a particular subtle l.u.s.ter unique to itself. He studied the panel; the shapes formed by the black oozes swam before his vision; neither their definition nor their pattern were at all obvious.
The woman turned her head; with blank white eyes she looked at Shimrod. Her expression remained vague; Shimrod was not sure that she saw him, but it could not be that she was blind! The case would be self-contradictory!
Shimrod smiled politely. "It is an interesting work that you do," he said. "The composition, however, is not quite clear to me."
The woman made no response, and Shimrod wondered if she might also be deaf. In a somber mood he left the chamber and continued along the gallery to the Great Hall. Again, no foot man or other servitor stood on hand to announce him; Shimrod pa.s.sed through the portal, into a chamber so high that the ceiling was lost among the shadows. A line of narrow windows halfway down one of the walls admitted pale light from the north; flames in the fireplace provided a more cheerful illumination. The walls were panelled with oak but bare of decoration. A heavy table occupied the center of the room. Cabinets along the far wall displayed books, curios and miscellaneous oddments; to the side of the mantelpiece a gla.s.s globe, charged with glowing green plasma, hung by a silver wire from the ceiling; within huddled the curled skeleton of a weasel, skull peering through high haunches.
Murgen stood by the table, looking down into the fire: a man of early maturity, well-proportioned but of no particular distinction. Such was his ordinary semblance, in which he felt most comfortable. He acknowledged Shimrod's presence with a glance and casual wave of the hand.
"Sit," said Murgen. "I am glad that you are here; in fact, I was about to summon you, that you might deal with a moth."
Shimrod seated himself by the fire. He looked around the chamber. "I am here, but I see no moth."
"It has disappeared," said Murgen. "How was your journey?"
"Well enough. I came by way of Castle Sarris and Lyonesse Town, in company with Prince Dhrun."
Murgen settled into a chair beside Shimrod. "Will you eat or drink?"
"A goblet of wine might calm my nerves. Your devils are more horrid than ever. You must curb their truculence."
Murgen made an indifferent gesture. "They serve their purpose."
"Far too well, in my opinion," said Shimrod. "Should one of your honoured guests be late in arrival, do not be offended; it is likely that the devils have torn him to bits."
"I entertain seldom," said Murgen. "Still, since you are so definite, I will suggest that Vus and Vuwas moderate their vigilance."
A silver-haired sylph, barelegged, drifted into the hall. She carried a tray on which rested a blue gla.s.s flask and a pair of goblets, twisted and worked into quaint shapes. She placed the tray on the table, turned Shimrod a quick sideglance and decanted two goblets of dark red wine. One of these she offered to Shimrod, the other to Murgen, then drifted from the hall as silently as she had come.
For a moment the two drank wine from the blue gla.s.s goblets in silence. Shimrod studied the suspended green-glowing globe. Black glittery beads in the small skull seemed to return his scrutiny. Shimrod asked: "Is it yet alive?"
Murgen looked over his shoulder. The black beads again appeared to shift to meet Murgen's gaze. "The dregs of Tamurello perhaps still exist: his tincture so to speak, or perhaps the verve of the green gas itself is responsible."
"Why do you not destroy the globe, gas and all, and be done with it?"
Murgen made a sound of amus.e.m.e.nt. "If I knew all there was to be known, I might do so. Or, on the other hand, I might not do so. Consequently, I delay. I am both wary and chary of disturbing what seems a stasis."
"But it is not truly a stasis?"
"There is never a stasis."
Shimrod made no comment. Murgen continued. "I am warned by my instincts. They tell me of movement, furtive and slow. Someone wishes to catch me as I drowse, complacent and bloated with power. The possibility is real; I cannot look in all directions at once."
"But who has the will to work such a strategy? Surely not Tamurello!"
"Perhaps not Tamurello."
"Who else, then?"
"There is a recurrent question which troubles me. At least once each day I ask myself: where is Desmei?"
"She disappeared, after creating Carfilhiot and Melancthe; that is the general understanding."
Murgen's mouth took on a wry twist. "Was it all so simple?
Did Desmei truly entrust her revenge to the likes of Carfilhiot and Melancthe-the one a monster, the other an unhappy dreamer?"
"Desmei's motives have always been a puzzle," said Shimrod. "Admittedly, I have never studied them in depth."
Murgen gazed into the fire. "From nothing came much. Her malice was kindled by what seems a trivial impulse: Tamurello's rejection of her erotic urge. Why, then, the elaborations? Why did she not simply revenge herself upon Tamurello? Was Melancthe intended to serve as her instrument of vengeance? If so, her plans went awry. Carfilhiot ingested the green fume, while Melancthe barely sensed its odor."
"Still, the memory seems to fascinate her," said Shimrod.
"It would seem a most seductive stuff. Tamurello consumed the green pearl; now he crouches in the globe, and the green suffusion surrounds him to a surfeit. He gives no evidence of Joy."
"This in itself might be considered the vengeance of Desmei."