Authors: John Dechancie
The strange light knew the way. Jacoby followed it.
He passed a pool of dark, smoking liquid, a large bubble erupting on its viscous surface. The bubble broke, splattering, and steam vented from the hole that had formed until the black substance seeped back to close it off.
He entered a narrow crypt, dark recesses cut into its walls. From them came rustling sounds, clicking sounds. A pair of red eyes regarded from a shadowy niche as he hurried through.
All around him was a sense of presence, of discreet movement, of waiting and watching. But nothing challenged him, no one bothered him.
Something multilegged with a pointed snout came scampering out of an intersecting tunnel. It saw Jacoby and stopped so abruptly that it nearly went tumbling. It did a hasty about-face and scuttled back into darkness.
Jacoby breathed again and put a hand over his thumping heart. “Good God,” he said quietly. He filled his lungs, exhaled, and moved on.
He came to an open area where a water-carved rock bridge arched over a deep chasm, at the bottom of which lay a phosphorescent yellow lakelet, concentric ripples crossing and recrossing its oily surface. Silence here, save for the echoing plop of dripping water. He crossed the span, not daring to get close enough to the edge to look over. On the other side the light led him to the left along a narrow ledge, and then into a short tunnel. He emerged into another enormous room. This one was many-leveled, with galleries high up in the walls. The way led across the main floor, winding among weird rock formations. The moving light made the twisted forms around him writhe with life. Malformed faces silently howled at him, bony hands reached out.
Jacoby was out of shape, and out of breath. “Please,” he said to anyone who would hear. “I must stop . . . I must rest. Just for a moment.”
The moving pool of light stopped.
“Thank you, Holy One, thank you.” He chose a flat stone ledge and seated himself. He rested for two minutes, trying to control his breathing. Then he got up and pushed on. Toward the end of the chamber he encountered a wide pit and had to walk around it. As he did so, he looked in. Foul-smelling currents of air washed over him. At the bottom lay an odd configuration of tissuelike material, and he was nearly past it when he realized what it was: a huge mouth, black inhuman lips parted to reveal the ragged stumps of mottled, yellow teeth. Jacoby gave a yell and dashed away. A rumbling, snarling sound came from deep within the cavity.
Another tunnel brought him into a vast open area through which an underground river flowed, its dark waters silent, deep, and inexorably moving. A little way upstream a stone pier jutted out from shore. Jacoby walked to its end and stood, listening. Silence, except for the faint suck and gurgle of shore-lapping water. Before him the river extended to outer darkness. He could not see the other side.
He let out a long, eschatological sigh. Choosing one of the cylindrical stone mooring posts, he sat down and awaited Charon's boat.
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Lower Levels
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Gene shook his head after hearing Osmirik's story. “So she means to loose the dragon and rule the world.”
“That is her mad plan, yes. But it is doomed to failure, and she well knows it.”
“Then what's her motive, besides madness?”
“Love.”
“Love?”
“And hate, its demon twin. Long ago she and Incarnadine were betrothed. He spurned her, returned her dowry, and paid breach-of-promise gold to her father. She has never forgotten the shame, nor has she forgiven Incarnadine.”
“And for that she'd destroy the world?”
“Years ago she would not have. She was a beautiful young woman, in love with life. But after her humiliation, she took to studying the Recondite Arts. Today she is still beautiful â ”
“But skinny, and her bust is nothing to write home about,” Linda said.
“I don't think they use brassieres in this culture,” Gene said.
“ â but her heart is a fist of stone, and she is possessed by madness. Therein lies the danger. She is, mayhap, the most powerful magician in the world.”
“Better than Incarnadine?” Gene asked.
“That may be.”
Gene shifted his weight on the plain stone bench they had found. The alcove it stood in was quiet, an island in the eye of the storm. Outside, strange forms moved in the air. “Things are getting increasingly crazy out there.”
Osmirik said, “Yes, and at some point every step will be taken at peril of one's life. We had best act before that point is reached.”
“We need a plan,” Gene said.
“First we have to find the Hall of the Brain,” Linda said. “We've tried everything, even cutting through walls, but nothing seems to get us there.”
“Let's teleport there,” Gene said. “We can all hang on to Snowy â ”
“Will that work?” Linda said.
“Only one way to find out,” Snowclaw said.
“Okay. When we get there, then what?”
Gene shrugged. “We take 'em. I mean, there's only one soldier left, and a couple of servants.”
“And the most powerful magician in the world,” Linda said. “This world, anyway.”
“Yeah. We've got no choice.”
Linda nodded grimly. “I know.”
They discussed strategy awhile, then fell silent. Each made his preparations.
“Methinks . . .” Osmirik began.
“What is it, Osmirik?” Gene said.
“Melydia has always resented her womanhood. Hers is a spirit that cannot be contained within the cramped boundaries of a woman's station. That men and men alone rule the world is to her an intolerable injustice. In order to right this wrong, she has devoted her life to the accumulation of brute power. In that, I think, lies her gravest error.”
Gene looked at Linda. “Who says this world is so different from ours?”
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High Above The Plains Of Baranthe
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He sprawled on his stomach and looked over the edge of the Oriental carpet. Far below, at the foot of the castle's citadel, the tents and shelters of the besieging army lay grouped in clots and bunches. Along the perimeter lay corrals and animal pens, supply tents, and other makeshift shelters. The encampment looked like a dirty patchwork cloth spread over the plain.
He turned over on his back and watched the sky. Clouds like obese sheep grazed in a field of blue. He let his eyes dwell on the blueness awhile.
At length he sat up and took in the world around him. The castle sat like a magistrate high on his bench, presiding over and delivering judgments to the plains and mountains. He surveyed its curtain walls and black towers, its high parapets braced against the wind. It had been his home for over three hundred years. This might be the last time his eyes beheld it.
He performed a short series of finger movements. The airborne throw rug on which he rode began its descent, banking in a wide turn back toward the castle. He felt no movement of the air, no wind, yet the carpet's velocity with respect to the ground was considerable.
An impish look came to his eyes. “Might as well have some fun,” he said. “While I can,” he added.
His fingers worked fast â the pattern was extensive and complex. When it was completed, the transmogrification took effect instantaneously.
He no longer sat on a flying carpet but in the cockpit of a high-tech jet fighter. Pushing the stick forward on a diagonal, he put the plane into a steep banking dive, heading for the enemy encampment. The needle of the machometer crept upwards and the airflow howled over the clear canopy. At a thousand feet he pulled out of the dive at four Gs. The enemy camp flashed past. He kicked in afterburners, yanked the stick back and stood the jet on its tail, sending it hurtling into the ethereal blue. The needle edged past Mach One.
“That should give them pause â or a case of the shits,” he said, chuckling.
With a pathetic whine the engine suddenly flamed out. Indicators fell off, and then the instrument panel went dark. He waited a few seconds for the speed to lessen, then worked his fingers quickly.
The plane now became a propeller-driven, single-engine fighter, specifically a Focke-Wulf 190 A-4, armed with two 7.92mm machine guns and four 20mm cannon, and having an operational range of 592 miles. Unfortunately, as in the case of the jet, mechanical contrivances did not work well in this world, and the antique warplane would probably not even make it back to the castle. He made a mental note to do more intensive research into the question of exactly why machines of any complexity, even magical ones, could not function here for any length of time beyond a few minutes. As he had been working on the problem off and on for over a century, he had little hope of immediate success, but he was determined to get to the bottom of it. Someday.
Or perhaps not. Perhaps he liked this world the way it was.
Banking steeply, he headed back toward the citadel. He briefly considered making a strafing run over the camp, but decided against it. It would not be sporting, and the fate of Vorn's men was sealed whether or not his plan was successful.
As he neared the castle, the engine sputtered and gave out. He dead-sticked in a little closer, then spelled the antiquated airplane away and replaced it with the carpet.
The roof of the keep came up, and he landed. Stepping off the carpet, he stooped and rolled it up. He tucked it under his arm and walked to a small building into which was set a pair of doors. He pressed the button on a panel next to them. The doors rolled apart, revealing an open shaft.
It was time for the final and inevitable confrontation.
“Basement,” he said, jumping off into darkness.
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Underworld
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Something brought Jacoby out of his meditation. He looked out over the river. A boat was approaching.
“Come, Charon,” he said, “and ferry me across.”
The long boat moved rapidly, yet no one was rowing. Standing at the stern and manning the tiller was a strange being, a black figure, immense and powerfully muscled, humanlike but not quite human, with red eyes that glowed like embers in a face like a bull's. The boatman deftly guided the craft into shore and brought it abreast of the pier, whereupon he moved to the bow and threw a loop-ended line over a mooring post. With a sinewy black arm he beckoned Jacoby to come aboard.
The fat man stepped down into the launch, made his way amidships and chose one of a number of wooden boards slung gunwale to gunwale. There were seats for perhaps two dozen souls. The boatman cast off and moved to the stern, taking his station at the tiller.
The journey downstream was uneventful. The boatman said nothing, and neither did Jacoby. Propelled by unseen forces, the boat parted the water gently with its blunt prow, leaving a wake of undulating ripples. The black waters of the river flowed quietly, inexorably. An occasional prismatic oil slick drifted by, faintly aglow in the passing light. The rest was darkness and quiet.
It could have been hours, it could have been days, or only a few minutes. Jacoby's sense of time had been left in the mortal world above. Eventually the boatman steered for the far shore and put in, docking at another stone wharf.
Jacoby disembarked, walked to the end of the pier and looked about. “What, no Cerberus at the gate? No Virgil to guide my way?”
The ebony boatman raised a thick arm and pointed to a flight of steps rising from the riverbank. He spoke in a voice as deep and as slow as the black waters he plied: “Go forth from this place. Go up into the light of day. Do not return.”
“I shan't, you needn't worry.”
Jacoby climbed the steps, which eventually led into a passage that cut through the rock, bearing ever upward.
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Hall Of The Brain â And Elsewhere
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“Ready, Linda?”
Perched on Snowclaw's mighty shoulders, Linda tucked her feet more tightly under his arms. “Yep,” she said. “Climb on, guys.”
Gene jumped up and locked his legs around the arctic beast's middle, couldn't hold on, and fell off.
“Let's make this simple,” Snowclaw said, grabbing him and lifting him up with one arm. He gathered in Osmirik with the other and hoisted the scribe up.
The four now looked like an odd circus act.
“Jesus, Snowy,” Gene said. “You sure you can hold us?”
“This ain't gonna take but a second.”
“You got a fix on the Brain room?”
“Yup. I been there, so I know where it is, so to speak.”
“Okay.”
“Ready?” Snowclaw asked.
Gene said, “We all know what to do, right?”
Nods all around, except for Snowclaw, who couldn't.
“Okay, gang,” Snowclaw said, “here goes.”
And suddenly they were there.
Gene jumped off Snowy, drew his sword and sized up the situation. It was just as Snowclaw had described it. There was one soldier and five servants. No, only four. Then Gene saw the young boy lying down in front of the kneeling Melydia. White, blood-daubed bandages were wrapped around both his wrists. Melydia was undoing one of them.
The soldier spun around. “Your Ladyship!”
Melydia turned her head. She did not seem in the least surprised.
“Okay, Super-Bitch,” Gene said, stepping down the last stone terrace onto the circular floor. “The game's over. Stop what you're doing.”
Sword drawn, the soldier stood his ground. His eyes were fixed fearfully on Snowclaw, who was rushing toward the cage. Nearby the battle-ax lay where Snowy had dropped it.
“Let me handle him, Snowy,” Gene called.
The servants, all of them unarmed, had jumped to their feet and were warily retreating in Melydia's direction. Then, suddenly, all halted to stare in wonder at the swords and shields that had materialized in their hands.
“On second thought, Snowy old buddy, old pal . . .”