Lady led the way,
grim as ever when she donned the Lifetaker persona. I was not
pleased. Someone with more power ought to have been first down the
stair. But Tobo was sure he needed to go last. Otherwise the Howler
and the Voroshk might not feel motivated enough to participate. And
Howler would not go first because he had to manage his carpet until
everybody was off.
The stair was crowded. No one wanted to be there in that
darkness, though only Lady, Murgen and I were old enough to
remember when darkness was our determined foe. I tried to stay
close to Lady, my foolish mind somehow afflicted with the notion
that I had to protect her.
There went a joke of cosmic proportion.
We made it down the stairwell without mishap. And, despite a
horrendous racket, without causing any alarm. Lady murmured,
“Mogaba must be sleeping the sleep of the innocent. All that
noise should’ve raised the dead.”
“Uhn?”
“His quarters are straight ahead.”
I knew that. We had rehearsed this raid before we left. In a
half-ass sort of way. Which means not thoroughly enough to satisfy
me.
“He’s a heavy sleeper,” I said. That was one
of the few knocks against him before his defection. That and an
intensity even his brother Nar had found oppressive. But I was
speaking to the night. She was pulling ahead.
Someone generated a light, a feeble glowball that drifted above
our heads. It had an alien feel so I assume one of the Voroshk was
responsible. As the light grew so did a sense of relaxation, of
confidence.
Maybe one of those cranky old men was not as dim as he let
on.
“The light is my familiar,” someone murmured in one
of the dialects of Hsien. The phrase possessed the rhythm of
ritual. Later I would learn that it was part of an incantation
meant to repel the Unknown Shadows, those being disliked by
everyone but Tobo.
The hidden realm was there, too, all around us. And so troubled
that even I could feel it.
Tobo whispered, “There’s something strange here. I
had hundreds of the hidden folk put into the Palace. But none of
them are reporting. As far as I can tell they aren’t here
anymore.” He whispered to the creepy darkness. Things unseen
moved around us, jostling us from directions we were not looking.
Some of the stress oppressing me went away.
Lady beckoned soldiers forward. It was time to break into
Mogaba’s quarters. Though that implies more force than was
needed. His door was not locked. Nor had it ever been before,
according to Lady.
She and Shukrat took point. They knew their ways around. Unless
clever Mogaba had rearranged his furniture.
Soldiers followed. The Voroshk and Howler crept inside. Murgen
followed them. Lady and Shukrat began to argue sharply, in
whispers, about who should find a lamp. Somebody stumbled into
somebody else. Somebody fell down. Another somebody crashed into
something. Then somebody else stated categorically, “Oh,
shit!”
Arkana was just sliding into the room, a step ahead of me, when
Tobo echoed those sentiments from behind me. He started to push.
“Out of the way, damnit!”
A huge crash of breaking pottery. I had not known that Mogaba
was a collector, though there were some marvellous craftsmen in
this part of the world . . .
A man screamed.
Before his lungs were empty other screams joined his. And
fireballs leapt from small projectors. And I knew why so many men
were screaming and why they were so panicky they were blowing holes
through one another.
Shadows.
The old evil. Killer shadows.
Deadly shadows off the glittering plain. Shadows, the
exploitation of which had given the Shadowmasters their name.
Shadows of the sort Soulcatcher had used to prop up her
Protectorate until the coming of Tobo’s allies from the Land
of Unknown Shadows.
I had the answer to the question I had addressed to Lady and
Tobo.
People panicked completely. Fireballs flew everywhere, caused
far more carnage than mere starving mad shadows. One of those
ripped through my Voroshk cloak. The cloak seemed to whine but
pulled itself together around me. A shadow hit me. My apparel
repelled it, a fact I did not fail to note despite the rising
chaos. It also shed the next fireball that found me.
I saw Lady hit several times, rapidly. I saw one of the Voroshk
succumb to shadows.
I tried to bellow into the madness, to calm them down, but the
panic had them all. Even Howler and Lady caught it.
But Shukrat did keep her wits about her. She crouched in a
corner and let her cloak form a barrier impervious to fireballs and
shadows alike.
Men fought to get out the door. Howler loosed a spell that
flashed so brightly it blinded everyone not in Voroshk protective
clothing, including the little sorcerer himself. His effort did not
avail. A moment later he screamed with more enthusiasm than ever he
had before his cure.
“Get out of my way!” Tobo bellowed. He hurled me
aside. His father was inside that room.
Before I regained my feet the tower was creaking under the
psychic mass of Tobo’s unseen friends. Their battle with the
invisible killers was brief but belated. And, probably, needless,
because the fireballs ate shadows alive. Unknown
Shadows as well as the traditional lurkers in darkness.
I did not know if I wanted to get off the floor. It was very
still in that other room now, except for Arkana crying. But I had
to get up. We had to get moving. The rest of the palace was not
silent anymore. An alarm had been sounded. People with sharp
instruments would be coming to get us.
It was impossible to tell who was dead, who was dying, and who
was only mildly injured. For a while it was too dark.
I got Tobo to provide another light. Then I started getting the
fallen moved back to the tower top. Arkana and Shukrat and
Tobo’s hidden allies kept the Palace Guard at bay. I kept my
emotions turned off while I lugged bodies. At the moment I could
not afford to indulge.
“How are we going to get these posts and the carpet out of
here?” I demanded. Lady, both of the elder Voroshk, Howler,
Murgen were all out of action. So were most of the commandos.
“Shukrat and I can handle the carpet. You and Arkana will
have to tow the posts.”
“You hear that, new daughter?” Minutes earlier I had
been about to slap the girl around to crack her shock. But she had
solid stuff inside her. She was dragging the dead and injured now,
calmer than most of the others.
“I know. I’ll need something to use for
tethers.”
“Find it fast. I’ll lug bodies.”
A crossbow bolt buzzed past without doing any harm. An instant
later the section of wall whence it had come was shattered rock and
boiling flame.
Tobo was not in a kindly mood.
I told Arkana, “You get those posts out of here right now.
All but mine.” She had gotten some rope from aboard the
carpet.
Good girl, Arkana. She got busy. Like Shukrat, she focused on
the task at hand.
Funny, I thought, how the Company seemed to attract good
women.
The Palace Guards and a surprising number of Greys responded to
the alarm. And they refused to be intimidated by Tobo’s
violence and by Tobo’s half-seen friends. Brave men, they.
There are always brave and honorable men amongst one’s
enemies. Missiles filled the air. A few found targets.
I began to wonder if this would not be a good time to reconsider
my lifelong determination never to leave Company people behind.
But I was incapable of leaving without my wife. And I needed the
old Voroshk. Even if they were dead.
Lady led the way,
grim as ever when she donned the Lifetaker persona. I was not
pleased. Someone with more power ought to have been first down the
stair. But Tobo was sure he needed to go last. Otherwise the Howler
and the Voroshk might not feel motivated enough to participate. And
Howler would not go first because he had to manage his carpet until
everybody was off.
The stair was crowded. No one wanted to be there in that
darkness, though only Lady, Murgen and I were old enough to
remember when darkness was our determined foe. I tried to stay
close to Lady, my foolish mind somehow afflicted with the notion
that I had to protect her.
There went a joke of cosmic proportion.
We made it down the stairwell without mishap. And, despite a
horrendous racket, without causing any alarm. Lady murmured,
“Mogaba must be sleeping the sleep of the innocent. All that
noise should’ve raised the dead.”
“Uhn?”
“His quarters are straight ahead.”
I knew that. We had rehearsed this raid before we left. In a
half-ass sort of way. Which means not thoroughly enough to satisfy
me.
“He’s a heavy sleeper,” I said. That was one
of the few knocks against him before his defection. That and an
intensity even his brother Nar had found oppressive. But I was
speaking to the night. She was pulling ahead.
Someone generated a light, a feeble glowball that drifted above
our heads. It had an alien feel so I assume one of the Voroshk was
responsible. As the light grew so did a sense of relaxation, of
confidence.
Maybe one of those cranky old men was not as dim as he let
on.
“The light is my familiar,” someone murmured in one
of the dialects of Hsien. The phrase possessed the rhythm of
ritual. Later I would learn that it was part of an incantation
meant to repel the Unknown Shadows, those being disliked by
everyone but Tobo.
The hidden realm was there, too, all around us. And so troubled
that even I could feel it.
Tobo whispered, “There’s something strange here. I
had hundreds of the hidden folk put into the Palace. But none of
them are reporting. As far as I can tell they aren’t here
anymore.” He whispered to the creepy darkness. Things unseen
moved around us, jostling us from directions we were not looking.
Some of the stress oppressing me went away.
Lady beckoned soldiers forward. It was time to break into
Mogaba’s quarters. Though that implies more force than was
needed. His door was not locked. Nor had it ever been before,
according to Lady.
She and Shukrat took point. They knew their ways around. Unless
clever Mogaba had rearranged his furniture.
Soldiers followed. The Voroshk and Howler crept inside. Murgen
followed them. Lady and Shukrat began to argue sharply, in
whispers, about who should find a lamp. Somebody stumbled into
somebody else. Somebody fell down. Another somebody crashed into
something. Then somebody else stated categorically, “Oh,
shit!”
Arkana was just sliding into the room, a step ahead of me, when
Tobo echoed those sentiments from behind me. He started to push.
“Out of the way, damnit!”
A huge crash of breaking pottery. I had not known that Mogaba
was a collector, though there were some marvellous craftsmen in
this part of the world . . .
A man screamed.
Before his lungs were empty other screams joined his. And
fireballs leapt from small projectors. And I knew why so many men
were screaming and why they were so panicky they were blowing holes
through one another.
Shadows.
The old evil. Killer shadows.
Deadly shadows off the glittering plain. Shadows, the
exploitation of which had given the Shadowmasters their name.
Shadows of the sort Soulcatcher had used to prop up her
Protectorate until the coming of Tobo’s allies from the Land
of Unknown Shadows.
I had the answer to the question I had addressed to Lady and
Tobo.
People panicked completely. Fireballs flew everywhere, caused
far more carnage than mere starving mad shadows. One of those
ripped through my Voroshk cloak. The cloak seemed to whine but
pulled itself together around me. A shadow hit me. My apparel
repelled it, a fact I did not fail to note despite the rising
chaos. It also shed the next fireball that found me.
I saw Lady hit several times, rapidly. I saw one of the Voroshk
succumb to shadows.
I tried to bellow into the madness, to calm them down, but the
panic had them all. Even Howler and Lady caught it.
But Shukrat did keep her wits about her. She crouched in a
corner and let her cloak form a barrier impervious to fireballs and
shadows alike.
Men fought to get out the door. Howler loosed a spell that
flashed so brightly it blinded everyone not in Voroshk protective
clothing, including the little sorcerer himself. His effort did not
avail. A moment later he screamed with more enthusiasm than ever he
had before his cure.
“Get out of my way!” Tobo bellowed. He hurled me
aside. His father was inside that room.
Before I regained my feet the tower was creaking under the
psychic mass of Tobo’s unseen friends. Their battle with the
invisible killers was brief but belated. And, probably, needless,
because the fireballs ate shadows alive. Unknown
Shadows as well as the traditional lurkers in darkness.
I did not know if I wanted to get off the floor. It was very
still in that other room now, except for Arkana crying. But I had
to get up. We had to get moving. The rest of the palace was not
silent anymore. An alarm had been sounded. People with sharp
instruments would be coming to get us.
It was impossible to tell who was dead, who was dying, and who
was only mildly injured. For a while it was too dark.
I got Tobo to provide another light. Then I started getting the
fallen moved back to the tower top. Arkana and Shukrat and
Tobo’s hidden allies kept the Palace Guard at bay. I kept my
emotions turned off while I lugged bodies. At the moment I could
not afford to indulge.
“How are we going to get these posts and the carpet out of
here?” I demanded. Lady, both of the elder Voroshk, Howler,
Murgen were all out of action. So were most of the commandos.
“Shukrat and I can handle the carpet. You and Arkana will
have to tow the posts.”
“You hear that, new daughter?” Minutes earlier I had
been about to slap the girl around to crack her shock. But she had
solid stuff inside her. She was dragging the dead and injured now,
calmer than most of the others.
“I know. I’ll need something to use for
tethers.”
“Find it fast. I’ll lug bodies.”
A crossbow bolt buzzed past without doing any harm. An instant
later the section of wall whence it had come was shattered rock and
boiling flame.
Tobo was not in a kindly mood.
I told Arkana, “You get those posts out of here right now.
All but mine.” She had gotten some rope from aboard the
carpet.
Good girl, Arkana. She got busy. Like Shukrat, she focused on
the task at hand.
Funny, I thought, how the Company seemed to attract good
women.
The Palace Guards and a surprising number of Greys responded to
the alarm. And they refused to be intimidated by Tobo’s
violence and by Tobo’s half-seen friends. Brave men, they.
There are always brave and honorable men amongst one’s
enemies. Missiles filled the air. A few found targets.
I began to wonder if this would not be a good time to reconsider
my lifelong determination never to leave Company people behind.
But I was incapable of leaving without my wife. And I needed the
old Voroshk. Even if they were dead.