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Authors: Raymond E. Feist

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BOOK: Wrath of a Mad God
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Hundreds of Deathknights rode their huge varnin through the enclosed countryside, dragging nets filled with dead and dying Tsurani behind them. The vast pit that formed the tunnel to the second realm and the Dasati world of Omadrabar stayed a fixed distance from the edge of the sphere, so the Deathknights had only the same distance to cover as before it expanded. The pit was now vast, hundreds of miles across. And Pug sensed more than saw that something was moving inside.

 

Nakor watched, curiously detached. It occurred to him that being dead he had little interest in anything other than the matters at hand. He wondered if he should feel regret, because he remembered being very curious when he was alive, and then he realized he had no time for thought.

The Dreadlord was using his power to drain every living thing in the vicinity. Loyal Deathpriests and Temple Deathknights above all fell lifeless, their bodies descending the tunnel from Kelewan dead long before they reached him. The Dreadlord stood motionless, his figure fluid and vague, then suddenly he resolved himself into a thing of nightmare.

He was majestic, and now he looked as Nakor imagined a Dreadlord would. His body was massive, easily thirty feet tall, and shaped like a man’s, though the legs had a decidedly animal shape, like a goat’s or horse’s, with a stifle and hock, rather than with hip and knee. The head was featureless, save for a suggestion of ears when he moved in certain directions. Around his head hovered a tiny circlet of silver light punctuated with golden flames, forming a demonic crown. His eyes were two flaming coals.

Then from his back wings of shadow sprouted, and Nakor realized these mystical pinions were designed to carry him up through the tunnel to Kelewan. As the Dreadlord prepared to launch himself upward, Nakor stepped out from his concealed position behind the throne, stepping over the dead form of Leso Varen.

The Dreadlord launched himself up the tunnel, leaving the pit suddenly silent and empty. Then came a loud concussion, as if two massive things were colliding with each other through the tunnel. Nakor understood and made ready.

From above ten thousand black-armored figures descended, touching down on the cold stone floor where only moments before there had been a roiling sea of Dasati life energy. Ten thousand Dasati gods had returned home, and as each touched down, their armor erupted in a glow of light—silver, green, gold, every color imaginable—as the powers of the trapped gods were released. At one time Nakor would have felt awed by such a sight, but now he just watched, sensing that his role was at an end.

Knowing it was likely to be the last act of his existence, Nakor held the black jewel on the flat palm of his left hand, and with his right, flicked it, as a child might flick a pebble off his palm. It flew straight and followed the Dreadlord’s flight up the tunnel. As it rose up the tunnel, the Godkiller seemed to draw the tunnel’s energy into it, effectively sealing it off behind the Dreadlord. He could never return to Omadrabar that way. The Dreadlord was finally gone from the second plane of existence. To all intents and purposes, for the Dasati the Dark One was as good as dead.

Nakor sat down and felt his mind begin to drain away. His last thought was that it had been a very interesting life.

 

Something was coming!

Pug stared down into the Black Mount, focusing hard. Then he realized it was the Dreadlord. He was using this passage between the planes of existence to leave Omadrabar and come to Kelewan! Whatever time-scale Pug might have thought he faced was completely wrong. He didn’t have months or weeks, or even days, to prepare for this. The monster would arrive in moments…

Pug probed with every sense he possessed, looking for a weakness in the Black Mount. He could find none. Had he days or weeks to study it, with Miranda’s help using what she had learned from her escape from the first sphere, then perhaps he might have found a means to shut down this monstrous thing. But he knew in his heart he might study it for years and never find what he sought. He had only one choice, a choice he had denied since this situation had presented itself. He steeled himself and began to manipulate the energies around him.

Pug let his mind reach out, and in the vast distance of space he found what he sought. He conjured the single most powerful spell he had ever fashioned, one he had imagined, but never thought he would ever use. Circling Kelewan was a single moon, locked in a perfect orbit by the balance of forces exerted by both the sun and the planet. Pug tipped that balance.

Millions of miles away in space a massive rift appeared before the moon, and just inside the top of the dome of the Black Mount its twin manifested. Pug lowered himself down to a po
sition by the rift that led back home, and knew he had to be quick.

He could not leave this last rift open, for to do so would doom Midkemia to the same fate about to befall Kelewan.

Millions of miles away, the moon struck the rift gate. Only part of it was forced through, but its velocity was enough to drive an impossible amount of stone, equal to the tallest mountain on Kelewan, through it in scant seconds. Pug stepped inside the rift just as the moon’s vast shard appeared inside the Black Mount and slammed down at incalculable speed into the pit. The Dreadlord had only an instant to sense that something was terribly wrong. A massive increase in air pressure around the Dark One gripped the gigantic being as if an enormous hand squeezed him. Then for the briefest instant a wall of light fell upon him.

The moon shard and the black gem shard Nakor had released struck in the same instant. The Dreadlord was no mortal being; but in that instant he was crushed.

The universe began to tear.

No one on the planet’s surface felt pain. For one moment the world had been a landscape of terror, struggle, and death, and in the next moment, everything was gone. A cloud of hot gas traveled a path around a distant yellow-green sun where minutes before a world and its moon had existed.

 

Pug found himself in a gray nothingness, devoid of any sensation, light, dark, cold, or heat. He had experienced this once before, and then he had reached out with his mind to find his old teacher, Kulgan.

This time he had a more compelling target for his mind: his wife and sons. He gripped tightly the staff that was twin to the one at home. He let his magic senses run through the ancient wood and could feel Miranda, Caleb, and Magnus out there, the three people he loved more than anyone else in that world. He sensed them…somewhere…there! He could feel the echo of the staff in his hand and the touch of his loved ones on it, and reached for them. Then with a tearing pain, he was standing by them, shivering as if he had been exposed to the most profound cold possible.

He said, “It is done,” then collapsed into his sons’ arms.

I
t was a quiet afternoon lunch. Pug had slept the entire night and next day through, and deep into the morning before arising. He felt numb, and knew that the full weight of what had happened would not fall upon him for a few more days, or even weeks. He was old enough to understand that the mind and heart healed in their own good time and that when they were ready to deal with what he had done, they would.

Caleb, his wife Marie, and the boys, Jommy, Tad, and Zane, along with Magnus and Miranda, were quiet, lost in the gentle conversation of a family just pleased to be with one another. It was an overcast day outside, but somber weather seemed appropriate to Pug.

At last, he asked Miranda, “How many Great Ones got through in the end?”

Miranda stopped chewing for a moment, then swallowed. “I believe forty-one got through the rift to the Academy, and perhaps another hundred or so through the rift to the new world.”

Jommy said, “They’re going to have to come up with a name for the place. They can’t just keep calling it the ‘new world,’ now, can they?”

Pug smiled. He was very pleased that his three foster grandsons had survived.

“How about others?” he asked.

Miranda said, “We’ve no official tally. Maybe ten thousand Tsurani got through the rifts to here and that other one up in LaMut. Most of them want to go to the new world, to the King’s relief, I’m sure, though a few want to stay in LaMut. A lot of those who were with Kaspar are staying with him down in Novindus. He’s going to have quite an army when he arrives to take service with the Maharaja of Muboya.”

Magnus said, “Will we ever know, Father, how many…?”

Pug just shook his head briefly. “Died? No, we never will.”

The best estimate was that just over two million Tsurani had made it through to the new world, but that meant for each one who was saved, five had died at the hands of the Dasati or when the planet was vaporized. He looked at Miranda. “And the Thuril?”

Miranda forced a smile. “Apparently they’re a little more practical about things than we gave them credit for. Seems the majority of them got through in time. Given their culture, they’ll probably adapt to their new highlands faster than the Tsurani will to the rest of their continent.”

“What about the Thūn?”

“No one knows. We’ll have to send someone down there to see.”

Pug didn’t ask about the Cho-ja, for he already knew the answer. It saddened him greatly that such a majestic alien race had chosen to die with their world. He stared off through a rain-spattered window for a long time, then took a slow drink of wine and said, “I’m going to miss that little cheat.”

Caleb laughed. “Not when we’re playing cards, you’re not.”

“Or throwing dice,” said Jommy.

Pug sighed. “I know I lived almost fifty years before meeting him,” said Pug, “but it feels like he has always been around.”

Miranda reached out and squeezed her husband’s hand. “He still is, in a way.”

Pug lifted his mug. “To Nakor.”

“Nakor!” they all toasted.

Jommy said, “We lost two good friends that day.”

Pug said, “Nakor was Erik’s oldest surviving friend, did you know that?”

“No,” said Jommy. “I bet there were some stories about those two.”

“One or two,” said Pug, rising. “I have a couple of things I would like to take care of in my study, and then I think I’ll rest.” As others started to stand up, he motioned for them to stay where they were. “I’m tired, not injured. Finish your meal.”

He went up to his study and opened the door. Behind the desk, in his chair, sat a brown-haired man.

“Ban-ath!”

“Yes,” said the God of Thieves. “I felt you deserved to know one thing. The Dark One is destroyed, or at least as destroyed as a Dreadlord can be. He’s been cast back into the Void, so for all intents and purposes, he is gone.”

“How? Certainly not—”

“Your little trick with the flaming planet? Very unexpected, and I will confess I was impressed. I thought you’d try to open a fissure in the earth, having the Holy City fall into the molten core of the planet and take the Dreadlord with it, or drown it at the bottom of the sea, but turning the entire world into dust, that was…remarkable.”

“So we are at last safe?” asked Pug.

Ban-ath laughed. “Never,” he said, then vanished.

Pug stood there wishing he had the means to understand if what the God of Liars had said was true or not. Then he saw the box. He crossed to it, hesitated for a moment, then opened it.
Inside was a scroll. Feeling a sinking sensation in his stomach, he took it out and unrolled it.

In his own familiar handwriting was a message.

“So maybe you deserve to know two things,” it read. “You didn’t write these notes and send them back through time. I did.”

It was signed, “Kalkin.”

Pug sat down and tried not to laugh.

About the Author

R
AYMOND
E. F
RIST'S
previous novels include the first two volumes in the Darkwar Saga (
Flight of the Nighthawks
and
Into a Dark Realm
); the Conclave of Shadows (
Talon of the Silver Hawk, King of Foxes,
and
Exile’s Return
); the Riftwar Legacy (
Krondor: The Betrayal, Krondor: The Assassins,
and
Krondor: Tear of the Gods
); the Serpentwar Saga (
Shadow of a Dark Queen, Rise of a Merchant Prince, Rage of a Demon King,
and
Shards of a Broken Crown
); the Riftwar Saga (
Magician, Silverthorn,
and
A Darkness at Sethanon
);
Fairie Tale; The Prince of the Blood;
and
The King’s Buccaneer.
Feist, a
New York Times
bestselling author, lives in Southern California.

www.RaymondFeistBooks.com

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

ALSO BY RAYMOND E. FEIST

Into a Dark Realm

Flight of the Nighthawks

Jimmy the Hand
(with S.M. Stirling)

Murder in LaMut
(with Joel Rosenberg)

Honored Enemy
(with William R. Forstchen)

Exile’s Return

King of Foxes

Talon of the Silver Hawk

Magician

Silverthorn

A Darkness at Sethanon

Faerie Tale

Shadow of a Dark Queen

Rise of a Merchant Prince

Rage of a Demon King

Shards of a Broken Crown

Krondor: Tear of the Gods

Krondor: The Betrayal

Krondor: The Assassins

WITH JANNY WURTS

Daughter of Empire

Servant of Empire

Mistress of Empire

Credits

Map by Ralph M. Askren, D.V.M.

Jacket design by Richard L. Aquan

Jacket illustration by Steve Stone

BOOK: Wrath of a Mad God
4.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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