At the Queen's Command (31 page)

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Authors: Michael A. Stackpole

Tags: #Fantasy, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Fiction - Fantasy, #Fiction

BOOK: At the Queen's Command
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The Deleon letter confirmed what had been suspected in the earlier two and expanded upon it. Du Malphias had indeed managed, somehow, to return a man to life. Ilsavont had been distant but clearly functional and the Prince was willing to assume the writer of the journal had been dead or dying or dying
again
as explanation for the journal’s deteriorating reports.

It was after the receipt of the second letter that the Prince had begun his examination of the issue of necromancy. His library, though one of the largest on the Continent, had surprisingly few references to it. They generally fell into three categories. The first explored such rumors as a matter of folktales. The second condemned practitioners as diabolists and promised them an eternity in lakes of burning brimstone. These books, all written by learned Church fathers, claimed that practitioners, liars that they were, grossly exaggerated their success.

The third category’s exemplars were the books on his desk. While the Prince confined his studies largely to those of the natural sciences, many reference books did touch upon the subject here and there. An anthropologist, in sorting a variety of avian bones found in a midden, used a magickal sense of which bones belonged to which grouping to help with his sorting. His subsequent reconstruction of the skeletons proved accurate. This was taken as a confirmation of the Law of Contagion, and the anthropologist went on to speculate, based on impressions he’d gotten from the bones, as to the life-cycle of extinct birds. He went so far as to suggest that someday magicks might be able to reanimate the skeleton and verify his theory about the birds’ locomotion.

Such was the nature of most mentions. No one claimed outright to have reanimated the dead, but they speculated that such a thing was possible. In other cases, certain magicks and magickally fashioned preparations had been effective in banishing ghosts and spirits from certain locations. If true, these reports suggested that magick could interact with the departed.

Had du Malphias dared do what others only speculated about?

Vlad steepled his fingers. Addressing that question would be the endpoint of an inquiry that had decidedly more humble beginnings. If reviving the dead were even possible, it would require great knowledge, great intelligence, and great power. There was no doubting du Malphias had the first two qualities, but great
power?
According to everything Prince Vlad had been taught about magick, such levels of power were simply unknown.

In the Old World.

The Shedashee were more adept at magick than any of the settlers. Whether or not they could raise the dead was a moot point. They were more skilled and powerful than Vlad had been led to believe was possible. That fact put the lie to that very proposition. Add to that the idea that the Crown granted charters for schools of magick, and anyone teaching outside the charter system would be decried by Crown and Church. Could it be that magicks more powerful than commonly believed were possible, and that the Crown was hiding this bit of reality from the people?

Vlad smiled. Though the peasantry might not think the Queen would ever lie, they were lied to every day. Official statements proclaimed the Villerupt campaign a victory for Norisle. Allies had been scapegoated for failures, every dead man had been declared a hero, and every officer had been elevated despite having had to retreat from the Continent. With so much ceremony attending the troops’ return, one could not help but think they had been the victors.

The Prince accepted that greater and more powerful magicks existed. He based this on the evidence of the Shedashee and the fact that when he’d been taught to shoot, his instructor praised him for having taken to it more quickly than Princess Margaret’s children had. “There will be more of this for the likes of you.”

But, in fact, there had not been. The King had died childless while fighting on the Continent. Margaret was elevated to the throne, bypassing his father who, at that time, served as Governor-General of Mystria. He’d later been recalled to Launston and reentered the monastery from which he’d been drawn to marry Vlad’s mother, and the Governor-Generalship fell to Vlad.

Whether or not du Malphias could raise the dead, heal those believed dead, or somehow cobble together bones and make them function, all three possibilities resulted in a single outcome. Du Malphias would have a superior supply of labor. Moreover, troops convinced of their functional immortality might abandon fear and good sense, fighting on in situations where they might otherwise flee. Such resolution would create an army that would deliver devastating casualties no matter how hopeless their situation.

He recognized, instantly, that his three conclusions amounted to the same thing: the balance of power in Mystria had shifted. While New Tharyngia had proved as wealthy a colony as Mystria, its smaller population and corresponding diminution of military power had curbed Tharyngian adventurism. More power, especially with du Malphias in charge of it, pointed to great trouble ahead.

Of course, anything wrought through magick could also be unmade by it. A spell could light brimstone afire. Another spell, applied quickly enough, could extinguish that fire. Granted, the mage would have to touch the fire to make the magick work—getting burned in the process—but the fire would go out. Touching a magickally enhanced soldier would likewise constitute a severe danger.

But iron is an anathema to all magick.

The Prince turned and snatched up the journal. He flipped halfway through, to where the pages became blank, and started making notes. He jotted a crude diagram and did some calculations. Then another idea popped into his head and he made another drawing.

He pushed his chair back and grabbed a measuring string. Looping it about his neck, he darted from his study and down across the lawn toward the wurmrest.

He never quite got there.

Nathaniel Woods waved from the shore as he pulled the canoe up. Kamiskwa jumped from the back and helped haul the canoe free of the water. Nathaniel produced a satchel and held it out to the Prince.

Vlad accepted it. “Where is Captain Strake? Is he?”

Nathaniel snarled. “He’s alive, or I’ll be killing him next I see him. These here are his journals. If you have some food, drink, and a place we can sleep for a bit, we’ll be heading back for him.”

The Prince nodded, relieved a bit, but still anxious. “Come with me, gentlemen. I shall see to your needs. You will tell me everything.”

Their story matched the letters up to and including the Deleon message. After they had escaped the Ryngians, that being a harrowing adventure in and of itself, they’d traveled directly to Saint Luke. They left Makepeace Bone there to be mended, then hurried directly to the Prince. A journey that had taken Jean Deleon two months, they had accomplished in five weeks and looked every bit as lean and exhausted as one might expect.

Nathaniel sliced an apple in half. “We would not have left Captain Strake, but it was an order. We had agreed. He said the journals was what you needed.”

“My friends, this is the fourth time you’ve mentioned that order. I understand your anger and anguish, but your actions have not dishonored you in the least. I think more of you now, knowing what you have done, than I did before a feat I would have believed, until this moment, well nigh impossible.”

The Prince rested his hand on the journals. “I will spend the night examining these journals and, in the morning…”

Nathaniel shook his head. “We’ll be gone by then.”

“You cannot go, Mr. Woods.”

“All due respect being yours, Highness, I ain’t one of your subjects to be ordered about.”

“Precisely, Mr. Woods, which is why I need you here. The both of you.” Prince Vlad looked from one man to the other. “Captain Strake was right. What you have uncovered is of more importance than you can even begin to imagine. What you have seen is critical if du Malphias is to be stopped. With your help I will construct a complete set of maps. We will work up plans and demands for troops. If that fortress stands, none of us are safe. Not Mystrians, not the Shedashee.”

“I ain’t leaving Captain Strake out there.”

“Nathaniel, please.” The Prince pressed his hands flat to the table. “If Captain Strake is alive, he is likely in du Malphias’ custody. If dead, I fear he is as well. If alive, he will be held as a prisoner or shot. In Temperance and just up the coast at Truth Bay, there are two Ryngian agents. I shall order their apprehension and draft a letter to Guy du Malphias offering a prisoner exchange. This is the best chance Owen has.”

Kamiskwa nodded. “Owen was shot in the leg. It needs time to heal. He could not escape for at least a month. And if they took his leg…”

Nathaniel hammered a fist against the table. “I know. I know. You’re both right. Don’t mean I like it.”

“Nathaniel, had you been shot, you would have ordered him away. You don’t like his having fallen and your still being alive.”

“Ain’t the first time I shouldered that burden, Highness. Don’t need another ghost behind me.” Nathaniel sighed. “Would you be letting me take that note to du Malphias?”

“I need you here. I’ll send Jean Deleon.” Vlad turned to Kamiskwa. “Prince Kamiskwa, how would the Confederation react if it is proved that du Malphias is creating
wendigo?”

“It is enough that they hold Aodaga. If my father were to call for warriors, two hundred would answer. Many with guns, more with arrows and warclubs.”

“That would be wonderful. I will have to raise what militia forces I can by next spring.”

Nathaniel glowered again. “We leave Owen there over the winter, we ain’t never getting him back.”

“Please, Nathaniel, if du Malphias is raising the dead, we have more pressing problems. We need to know everything about his creatures. We have to know how to kill them.”

“You shoot them.” Nathaniel smiled. “It worked on Ilsavont.”

“Yes, but
why
did it work? Was he bleeding? Did you hit a vital organ? Did you explode his heart? Did you shoot him in the head?”

Nathaniel looked at Kamiskwa, then back. “Caught him just above his paunch. Don’t recall too much blood.”

“And there was no sign of what had killed the one that possessed the journal, correct?”

Kamiskwa shook his head. “It looked as if he just lay down and died.”

“These, gentlemen, are the things we need to know. We need to know how to kill them. Yes, you burned Ilsavont’s head. This is good. But we do not know if the shot just rendered him unconscious and if he would have revived, or if your shot put him down.”

The hunter smiled. “Onliest way to find this all out, Highness. You need you some specimens.”

“Eventually, yes; and you’ll have that job, Nathaniel. What I need first is your knowledge. I will go through these journals and the maps. I will need you to verify the maps, then I shall build a miniature.” Vlad remembered the idea he’d just scratched into his journal. “Yes, I shall also need you to test something else. Perhaps not tomorrow, but soon, very soon.”

“We will do that, Highness, but you’ll be having to work with Kamiskwa tomorrow. And I’ll need the lend of a horse.”

“For?”

Nathaniel glanced down at a bone-strewn plate. “I reckon someone needs to ride into Temperance and tell the Frosts what happened. Since I know the blame will be settling on me, I might as well deliver the news.”

Vlad slowly nodded. “Yes, of course. I should have thought of them first. I shall write a note. If you would deliver it for me, I should be most grateful.”

“As you wish, Highness.”

The Prince himself showed his guests to their quarters. He gave them rooms facing south with doors that opened onto a balcony. From previous experience he expected they would choose to sleep out there under the stars rather than in the beds.

He returned to his laboratory and began his study of the maps. Owen Strake had done a wonderful job, indicating heights and slopes as best possible, even sketching in little men to act as a scale. The Prince meticulously measured and transferred information from the journals to a larger sheet. With every wall and obstacle he increased the number of men that would be required to reduce the fort. He also increased his estimates of casualties.

At the end he made the final calculations and his stomach soured.
So many dead, and that is just if we are truly facing what I see here
.

He shook his head.

With du Malphias in charge, hidden horrors awaited. No man laying siege to that fortress would escape unharmed.

Chapter Thirty-Two

August 15, 1763

Anvil Lake, New Tharyngia

 

O
wen ducked his head, shying from sunlight hitting him in the face. He wavered for a moment, taking enough weight on his right leg that he didn’t topple over. He inched his left crutch forward, then the left foot, becoming steady again. His arms trembled. The crutches dug deep into his armpits, but he refused to fall or turn back.

But I would not be allowed to fall.
Quarante-neuf hovered behind him, ready to catch him. Du Malphias had tasked the
pasmorte
to see to his every need. To the best of Owen’s knowledge the creature never slumbered and, at least while he was awake, had never been far away. And whenever Owen had awakened from fever-dreams, Quarante-neuf had been there with cool compresses and gentle words.

The thin blouse Owen had been given did nothing to cushion the crutches. Du Malphias dictated he wear the loincloth he’d received from the Altashee, less as an honor, then it made inspecting the bandaged wounds much easier. The moccasins had likewise been returned to him and this was the first time he had worn them.

The gunshot to his right thigh had not opened so grievous a wound as the musket. The ball had been smaller and it missed the bone entirely. This did not please du Malphias. The lack of symmetry between the two wounds somehow ruined his experiment. So, with Quarante-neuf holding the leg steady, the Tharyngian used his hammer and chisel to break the femur.

When Owen resumed consciousness the Tharyngian was engaged in measuring both wounds by every means possible. He would call out numbers and comments, which another one of the
pasmortes
scribbled down. Then, apparently satisfied, du Malphias applied five drops of his
vivalius
along the length of the wound, and proceeded to stitch it up. He then closed the other wound and draped the first with a leather sheet so none of the dripping Shedashee potion would splash onto it.

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