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As he got painfully to his feet, Kethol used the toe of his boot to turn the crazy over, after stabbing the corpse a couple of times with his own sword, just to be on the safe side.
That's all it was, just a crazy. It happened in Ehvenor. Spending too much time around faerie was very bad for some humans, turning them violently, self-destructively insane. It didn't affect manya"perhaps no more than one in five hundred, perhaps lessa"but that was enough.
Above, the faerie lights pulsed more brightly, echoing Karl's pulse.
Walk this way. Come to me.
Kethol muttered a startled cry. Durine brought up his shotgun. Pirojil spun his horse around.
Walk this way. Come to me. The voice was directionless, and quiet.
Karl started. "Who is it? Pirojila"douse the light."
Walk this way. Come to me. As Pirojil tucked his glowsteel away, the faerie lights hovered over the alley, pulsing even more intensely, the speed of the pulsations become an urgent staccato. Strangely, though, they didn't make the alley any brighter.
Walk this way. Come to me.
Karl retrieved his amulet from his saddlebag and slipped the thong over his head. It should provide some protection from whoever it was that wasa"
Walk this way. Come to me. The faerie lights descended to line up over the alley, a path in the air that wound toward the faerie emba.s.sy.
Emba.s.sy is such a silly word. "Finger" is better. Walk this way. Come to me.
"Are you for me or against me?" Not that he could trust an affirmative answer, but perhaps a negative one would make his decision easy.
No. Walk this way. Come to me.
He decided not to, and was turning to tell the others that they were moving out when the universe twisted.
When it untwisted again, they were all standing in front of the faerie emba.s.sy, squinting at the uncertain shapes.
"What do we do now, sir?" Kethol asked.
Durine's beefy face was sweat-sheened in the harsh white light; he raised a flipper of a hand to his forehead to wipe away beading sweat. "I don't want to go inside."
Distant memories returned to Karl, of himself ordering the others to follow him, and of them following the path of light to the emba.s.sy.
But the memories were flat, emotionless, unconvincing.
True. I warped things. I can do that in Faerie. I find it convenient.
"But this isn't Faerie."
That's a matter of opinion, in Ehvenor. My opinion differs, Karl Cullinane. In Ehvenor, in Faerie, my opinion is what matters. It's my opinion that you and I area"
The world twisted yet again, and he was alone in the glow. It wasn't exactly a room, he decided. More of a place.
a"in the same place.
While it didn't look like it, it felt like nothing so much as the room where he'd last encountered Deighton. Or Arta Myrdhyn, or whatever name was really his.
"Both are, actually," a nearby voice said.
"Deighton?"
"Is his name. Oh, you think I'm him? Hardly." The voice took on color and tone. "He is human, of a sort."
"And you're not?"
"Good guess, Karl Cullinane."
"Who are you?"
"My name? Oh, anything will do." There was a distant chuckle that became distinctly feminine. "t.i.tania might be best, all things considered. If you can do that. Or even if you can't."
"Queen of the faeries?"
"Quite."
He forced himself to speak calmly. "I take it you're not after the guild reward."
Another chuckle. "You take it correctly."
She appeared in a blink: an immensely ugly, remarkably fat woman, reclining on a tattered purple couch. She played with a gilt ta.s.sel on her shiny red silk vest with one hand, while another reached out to grab the greasy leg of mutton lying on the mist next to the couch. She took a hefty bite. "Or would you prefer another form? It's not important. I'll change the rule a little for you." The immense fat woman stretched broadly on her side. The leg of mutton disappeared.
He must have blinked, because he didn't see the change. And while the couch was the same, as she finished her stretch, she was different, and so beautiful that he had trouble swallowing; her high, firm b.r.e.a.s.t.s threatened to rupture the mist that barely contained them as it swept down her torso, leaving her long, lovely legs completely bare.
"Is this better, Karl Cullinane?" she asked in a warm contralto. She propped her chin on the palm of one hand and eyed him levelly. The face said that no worry had ever crossed her mind; it was smooth, the high cheekbones touched with pink. Alien eyes stared at him unblinkingly from beneath long lashes. Ruby lips parted for a momentary grin, revealing sparkling white teeth, and a tongue that momentarily peeked out, then hid.
"Do you like what you see?" She rose and stood in front of him, the mist clinging to her like something live, swirling about its tight confines.
She was beautiful, like a combination of all that was supposed to be lovely in a woman, but the effect was chilling. It wasn't real; it was only for display.
You've got a staple in your navel, lady.
A real woman's b.r.e.a.s.t.s moved and sagged with gravity; when standing, a real woman didn't float above the ground to point the toes of both feet in order to emphasize the curve of her legs. Flesh was soft and real, not a sterile illusion.
He closed his eyes as longing for Andy cut into him. G.o.d, Lady, I miss you.
"I'm sorry, Karl Cullinane," t.i.tania said. "I don't mean to tease you. I just wanted to meet you and maybe send you on your way. Think of it as an idle impulse." She laughed, her laughter distant silver bells. "Ia"we? they?a"I have many idle impulses. Like this."
He opened his eyes again, and Andy-Andy stood in front of him, dressed only in a silken robe. She shook her head, sending her hair flying.
"Andy?" Karl Cullinane didn't question his fortune; he took a step toward her.
"No," she said, in t.i.tania's voice. She shook her head and stood back, the features melting. "And it seems I've hurt you again. You humans are so . . . delicate, aren't you? Is this better?"
Again, he must have blinked; she had become some sort of compromise between Andy and the beautiful woman she had been moments before: Andy, but without the wear that the years had laid upon her; no bend in the nose, no laugh lines around the eyes, none of the scattered gray hairs.
Andy. He missed her so much. They had been together ever since the Hand tabernacle, and in that time he had never had another woman. It wasn't that there hadn't been opportunities, it wasn't that he hadn't been tempted, it was something very simple: She could chase away the darkness, if only for a while.
And this creature had the gall to mock her form. He let a distant coldness sweep over him. "That will be enough of that, faerie."
"It wasn't mockery. Maybe this would be best," t.i.tania said, the voice now issuing from a dark patch in a ma.s.s of mist. "I do have something to show you."
"Why?"
"Because I'm bored, and you're entertaining. Be nice to me and I might even have an offer to make you."
The air in front of him shimmered, and then solidified into an aerial view of a sh.o.r.eline. The viewpoint had to be at least a thousand feet up; Karl couldn't make out any of the individuals below, although he could see a dozen or so Mel outriggers on the sands below, and a two-masted ship of some sort bobbing in the waves offsh.o.r.e.
"Ahrmin," t.i.tania said, "is there. Waiting for you. You've now distracted him sufficiently. Were your son wandering loose around Pandathaway, he would remain safe; the guild's attention is elsewhere."
And I get to be elsewhere. That was good, if true; things were going according to plan. "Why are you showing me this?"
"This was beginning to bore me; you didn't have a chance."
He kept his voice slow and steady. "You think this is all a game, Lady?"
"Don't be silly; threatening me is nothing better than absurd. Your sword can't cut mist.
"Besides, I didn't mean it that way. What I mean is that by the time you and your friends arrive, the slavers will have you. One ship is out at sea to cut off escape that way; the populace of village Eriksen has been driven away. Most of them.
"Karl Cullinane, if you wait for a ship heading toward Melawei, by the time you get there, the trap will have already been laid out. Ahrmin will simply take you, either dead or alive. I offer you two choices. Turn around here, and ride back. Or . . ."
"Or?"
"Or I will weave mist and light and air, make you a boat, and send that boat to Melawei. Just you and a few knapsacks, no more." She laughed again. "You will arrive stark naked."
"Why?" He didn't understand any of this. It was as though she was playing with him. But why?
"Amus.e.m.e.nt. Don't look for deep motivations, Karl Cullinane. You will find none in me. All I offer you is a little chance to escape alive, but more chance to save those you care for." The mist grew firmer. "Choose."
"Why?"
"Why do I help you? Beyond the fact that I'm bored and you're fun?" The mist swirled. "If you need a reasona"your kind always needs these reasons, don't you?a"then think that I'm doing it because the guild is of Pandathaway, and Pandathaway is human magic, while I am faerie magic. The two are not the same, nor particularly friendly."
That wasn't news. "But why help me?"
"Reasons, reasons, reasons. You want a reason? Because I owe it to Arta Myrdhyn for all the amus.e.m.e.nt he and you have provided me."
Anger rose. "I take no favors from Arta Myrdhyn. And I'm not going to abandon my men."
"As to your second point, they will think that you ordered them home. As to your first, it is not a favor from Arta Myrdhyn. It is the gamble of a powerful and weary creature to prolong a game she finds entertaining. Even if you, Karl Cullinane, are now beginning to bore me."
The world twisted, again, and all of the gear that Kethol, Pirojil, Durine, and he had brought was in front of him.
"Choose."
He pointed to his sword, to the bag of explosives, to the . . .
"Enough. I see your method. Very well." Again, the world twisted.
Karl Cullinane found himself stark naked beside the Ehvenor dock, the pile of goods he would have selected in front of him.
Beside the dock . . . he was on a five-meter-square platform woven of light, mist, and air. It was solid, but not persuasively so; it stretched and gave, threatening at any moment to give way beneath his feet.
Soundlessly, the raft pulled away from the pier, accelerating smoothly, evenly as it pa.s.sed into the bay.
Even in the darkness, he could see three figures on the sh.o.r.e, spurring their horses toward the dock, calling to him. Kethol, Pirojil, and Durine.
He lifted his arm and waved a goodbye as the accelerating raft left the docks far behind.
"Better see to your gear, Karl Cullinane. You'll be in Melawei by morning. Farewell." The voice went convincingly silent.
"f.u.c.k," he said. "What have I gotten myself into now?"
Mmmm . . . perhaps it was just as well. Karl didn't need the others to draw Ahrmin away from chasing Jason. In fact, he had already drawn Ahrmin away.
Now it was time to make the distraction permanent.
There is a notion, he had said, many times, called the last run. The idea is this: None of our lives are taken cheaply.
He swallowed three times, hard. None of our lives are taken cheaply.
h.e.l.l, he even had an outside chance to survive. Whatever the slavers were looking for, it wasn't going to be Karl Cullinane arriving on a faerie raft. They'd probably be expecting him to arrive on dragonback. But if Ahrmin's spies knew that Ellegon couldn't leave the Middle Lands nowa"or if Ahrmin had helped to arrange events so that Ellegon was needed in Holtun-Bieme or to resupply Daven's teama"the slavers would be expecting him by some overland route or, more likely, via ship.
But if they were following his path, via magic, they'd see that he was moving, even if they couldn't triangulate on his exact location.
His hand fell to his knapsack and brought out his amulet. He could even put it on and sneak up on them.
No. Not yet, he decided. It was important to keep the slavers chasing him, not giving up on a wild goose chase. He would put the amulet on when he reached Melawei, not before. If Ahrmin couldn't locate Karl, he'd a.s.sume that Karl had backed off, and might divert his men and his attention toward finding Jason.
He clutched the amulet tightly, then shrugged his shoulders and tucked it back in his pouch.
What next?
Better check the gear, he decided.
His sword and his Nehera-made bowie were both fine. He eyed the Damascus striations on the knife.
The knife had never been blooded. That was about to change.
His four pistols were laid out in a row next to his rifle and shotgun, his repair kit and powder horns beside them.