Authors: David Eddings
Khalad shrugged. âPractice,' he replied. Then his head came up sharply. âCompany coming.' He pointed toward the road with his knife.
âArjuni,' Berit noted, squinting at the approaching riders.
âNot all of them,' Khalad disagreed. âThe one in front's an Elene â an Edomishman, judging from his clothes.' Khalad wiped his bloody hands on the long grass, picked up his crossbow and re-cocked it. âJust to be on the safe side,' he explained. âThey
do
know who we really are, after all.'
Berit nodded bleakly and loosened his sword in its scabbard.
The riders reined in about fifty yards away. âSir sparhawk?' the Edomishman called out in Elenic.
âMaybe,' Berit called back. âWhat can I do for you, neighbor?'
âI have a message for you.'
âI'm touched. Bring it on in.'
âCome alone,' Khalad added. âYou won't need your bodyguards.'
âI've heard about what you did to the last messenger.'
âGood,' Khalad replied. âWe sort of intended for word of that to get around. The fellow had a little trouble being civil, but I'm sure you have better manners. Come ahead. You're safe â as long as you're polite.'
The Edomishman still hesitated.
âFriend,' Khalad said pointedly, âYou're well within
range of my crossbow, so you'd better do as I tell you. Just come on in alone. We'll conduct our business, and then you and your Arjuni friends can be on your way. Otherwise, this might turn unpleasant.'
The Edomishman conferred briefly with his bodyguards and then rode cautiously forward, holding a folded parchment above his head. âI'm not armed,' he announced.
âThat's not very prudent, neighbor,' Berit told him. âThese are troubled times. Let's have the note.'
The messenger lowered his arm slowly and extended the parchment. âThe plans have changed, Sir Sparhawk,' he said politely.
âAstonishing.' Berit opened the parchment and gently took out the lock of identifying hair. âThis is only about the third time. You fellows seem to be having some difficulty making up your minds.' He looked at the parchment. âThat's accommodating. Somebody even drew a map this time.'
âThe village isn't really very well-known,' the Edomishman explained. âIt's a tiny place that wouldn't even be there if it weren't for the slave-trade.'
âYou're a very good messenger, friend,' Khalad told him. âWould you like to carry a word back to Krager for me?'
âI'll try, young Master.'
âGood. Tell him that I'm coming after him. He should probably start looking back over his shoulder, because no matter how this turns out, one day I'll be there.'
The Edomishman swallowed hard. âI'll tell him, young Master.'
âI'd appreciate it.'
The messenger carefully backed his horse off a few yards and then rode off to rejoin his Arjuni escort.
âWell?' Khalad asked.
âVigayo â over in Cynesga.'
âIt's not much of a town.'
âYou've been there?'
âBriefly. Bhelliom took us there by mistake when Sparhawk was practicing with it.'
âHow far is it from here?'
âAbout a hundred leagues. It's in the right direction, though. Aphrael said that Zalasta's taking the Queen to Cyrga, so Vigayo's got to be closer than Arjun. Pass the word, Berit. Tell Aphrael that we'll start out first thing in the morning. Then you can come and help me cut up this deer. It's ten days to Vigayo, so we're probably going to need the meat.'
âHe hath been there,' Xanetia told them. âHis memories of the Hidden City are vivid, but his recollection of the route is imprecise. I could glean no more than disconnected impressions of the journey. His madness hath bereft his thought of coherence, and his mind doth flit from reality to illusion and back without purpose or direction.'
âI'd say we got us a problem,' Caalador drawled. âOl' Krager, he don't know th' way on accounta he wuz too drunk t' pay attention when Zalasta wuz a-talkin' âbout how t' git t' Cyrga, an' Scorpa's too crazy t' remember how he got thar.' His eyes narrowed, and he discarded the dialect. âWhat about Cyzada?' he asked Xanetia.
She shuddered. âIt is not madness nor drunkenness which doth bar my way into the thought of Cyzada of Esos,' she replied in a voice filled with revulsion. âDeeply hath he reached into the darkness that was Azash, and the creatures of the nether-world have possessed him so utterly that his thought is no longer human. His spells at first did in some measure control those horrid demons, but then he did summon Klæl, and in that act was all unloosed. Prithee, do not send
me again into that seething chaos. He doth indeed know a route to Cyrga, but we could in no wise follow
that
path, for it doth lie through the realm of flame and darkness and unspeakable horror.'
âThat more or less exhausts the possibilities of this place then, doesn't it?' They all turned quickly at the sound of the familiar voice. The Child Goddess sat demurely on a window-ledge holding her pipes in her hands.
âIs this wise, Divine One?' Bevier asked her. âWon't our enemies sense your presence?'
âThere's no one left here who can do that, Bevier,' she replied. âZalasta's gone. I just stopped by to tell you that Berit's received new instructions. He and Khalad are going to Vigayo, a village just on the other side of the Cynesgan border. As soon as you're ready, I'll take you there.'
âWhat good will that do?' Kalten asked.
âI need to get Xanetia close to the next messenger,' she replied. âCyrga's completely concealed â even from me. There's a key to that illusion, and
that's
what we have to find. Without that key, we could all grow old wandering around out in that wasteland and still not find the city.'
âI suppose you're right,' Sparhawk conceded. He looked directly at her. âCan you arrange another meeting? We're getting close to the end of this, and I need to talk with the others â Vanion and Bergsten in particular, and probably with Betuana and Kring as well. We've got armies at our disposal, but they won't be much use if they're running off in three different directions or attacking Cyrga piecemeal. We've got a general idea of where the place is, and I'd like to put a ring of steel around it, but I
don't
want anybody to go blundering in there until we get Ehlana and Alean safely out.'
âYou're going to get me in trouble, Sparhawk,' she
said tartly. âDo you have any idea of the kinds of promises I'll have to make to get permission for that kind of gathering? â and I'll have to
keep
all those promises too.'
âIt's really very important, Aphrael.'
She stuck her tongue out at him, and then she wavered and vanished.
âDomi Tikume sent orders, your Reverence,' the shaved-headed Peloi advised Patriarch Bergsten when they met in the churchman's tent just outside the town of Pela in central Astel. âWe're to provide whatever assistance we can.'
âYour Domi's a good man, friend Daiya,' the armored Patriarch replied.
âHis orders stirred up a hornet's nest,' Daiya said wryly. âThe idea of an alliance with the Church Knights set off a theological debate that went on for days. Most people here in Astel believe that the Church Knights were born and raised in Hell. A fair number of the debaters are currently taking the matter up with God in person.'
âI gather that religious disputes among the Peloi are quite spirited.'
âOh, yes,' Daiya agreed. âThe message from Archimandrite Monsel helped to quiet things, though. Peloi religious thought isn't really all that profound, your Reverence. We trust God and leave the theology to the churchmen. If the Archimandrite approves, that's good enough for us. If he's wrong,
he's
the one who'll burn in Hell for it.'
âHow far is it from here to Cynestra?' Bergsten asked him.
âAbout a hundred and seventy-five leagues, your Reverence.'
âThree weeks,' Bergsten muttered sourly. âWell,
there's not much we can do about that, I suppose. We'll start out first thing in the morning. Tell your men to get some sleep, friend Daiya. It's probably going to be in short supply for the next month or so.'
âBergsten.' The voice crooning his name was light and musical.
The Thalesian Patriarch sat up quickly, reaching for his axe.
âOh, don't do that, Bergsten. I'm not going to hurt you.'
âWho's there?' he demanded, fumbling for his candle and his flint and steel.
âHere.' A small hand emerged from the darkness with a tongue of flame dancing on its palm.
Bergsten blinked. His midnight visitor was a little girl â Styric, he guessed. She was a beautiful child with long hair and large eyes as dark as night. Bergsten's hands started to tremble. âYou're Aphrael, aren't you?' he choked.
âKeen observation, your Grace. Sparhawk wants to see you.'
He drew back from this personage that standard Church doctrine told him did not â could not â exist.
âYou're being silly, your Grace,' she told him. âYou know that I couldn't even be talking to you if I didn't have permission from your God, don't you? I can't even come near you without permission.'
âWell, theoretically,' he reluctantly conceded. âYou
could
be a demon, though, and the rules don't apply to them.'
âDo I
look
like a demon?'
âAppearance and reality are two different things,' he insisted.
She looked into his eyes and pronounced the true name of the Elene God, one of the most closely-kept
secrets of the Church. âA demon couldn't say that name, could it, your Grace?'
âWell, I suppose not.'
âWe'll get along well, Bergsten,' she smiled, kissing him lightly on the cheek. âOrtzel would have argued that point for weeks. Leave your axe here, please. Steel makes my flesh crawl.'
âWhere are we going?'
âTo meet with Sparhawk. I already told you that.'
âIs it far?'
âNot really.' She smiled, opening the tent flap.
It was still night in Pela, but it was broad daylight beyond the tent flap â a strange sort of daylight. A pristine white beach stretched down to a sapphire sea all under a rainbow-colored sky, and a small green eyot surmounted by a gleaming alabaster temple rose from that incredibly blue sea about a half-mile from the beach.
âWhat place is this?' Bergsten asked, poking his head out of the tent and looking around in amazement.
âI suppose you could call it Heaven, your Grace,' the Child Goddess replied, blowing out the flame dancing on her palm. âIt's mine, anyway. There are others, but this one's mine.'
âWhere is it?'
âEverywhere and anywhere. All the Heavens are everyplace all at once. So are all the Hells, of course -but that's another story. Shall we go?'
Cordz of Nelan was the perfect man. That realization had not come easily to the devout Edomishman. It had only been after extended soul-searching and a meticulous examination of the sacred texts of his faith that he had arrived at the inescapable conclusion. He was perfect. He obeyed all of God's commandments, he did what he was supposed to do, and he did not do the things that were forbidden. Isn't that what perfection is all about?
It was a comfort to be perfect, but Cordz was not one to rest on his laurels. Now that
he
had achieved perfection in the eyes of God, it was time to turn his attention to the faults of his neighbors. Sinners, however, seldom sin openly, so Cordz was obliged to resort to subterfuge. He peeked through windows late at night; he eavesdropped on private conversations; and, when his sinful neighbors cleverly concealed their wrongdoing from him, he imagined the sins they
might
be committing. The Sabbath was a very special day for Cordz, but not for the sermons. After all, what need had a perfect man for sermons? It was on the Sabbath that he was able to rise to his feet and denounce the sins of his neighbors, both the sins they
had
committed and the sins they
might
be committing.
He probably irritated the Devil. God knows he irritated his neighbors.
But then a crisis had arisen in Edom. The debauched and heretical Church of Chyrellos, after two eons of plotting and scheming, was finally preparing to make
her move against the righteous. The Church Knights were on the march, and horrors beyond imagining marched with them.
Cordz was among the first to enlist in Rebal's army, the perfect man abandoned his neighbors to their sinful ways to join a holier cause. He became Rebal's most trusted messenger, killing horses by the dozen as he rushed about the Elene kingdoms of western Tamuli carrying the dispatches so vital to the cause.
On this particular day Cordz was flogging his exhausted horse southward toward the corrupt cities of southern Daconia, cesspools of sin and licentiousness, if the truth were to be known, where the citizens not only did not
know
that they were sinners, they did not even
care.
Worse yet, an obscure and probably heretical tradition of the Dacite Church prevented laymen from speaking aloud during Sabbath services. Thus, God's very own spokesman, the perfect man, was not permitted to expose and denounce the sins he saw all around him. The frustration of it sometimes made him want to just scream.
He had been riding hard for the past week, and he was very tired. Thus it was with some relief that he finally crested the hill that overlooked the port city of Melek.
Then all thoughts of the sins of others vanished. Cordz reined in his staggering horse and gaped in horror at what he saw.
There on a sea sparkling in the winter sun was a vast armada, ships beyond counting, sailing majestically down the coast under the red and gold banners of the Church of Chyrellos!