Night of Madness (42 page)

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Authors: Lawrence Watt-Evans

BOOK: Night of Madness
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“How do we do
that?
” Yorn called. “What are we going to say?”

“We'll just tell them the truth,” Manrin said. “Eventually maybe it will sink in.”

“But how can we advertise?” Kirsha asked. “We can't just hang out a signboard!”

“Not here, no,” Manrin agreed. “We'll need to rely on word of mouth. Those of us who have friends and family should let them know. The word will spread.”

“Do you really think anyone will hire us?” Kirsha asked.

Before Manrin could reply, Zarek asked, “Can we still stay here? If Lord Faran is dead, who owns this house?”

Manrin had been about to answer Kirsha, but now he stopped dead, mouth open.

“I don't know,” he said at last. “Did Lord Faran have any children? Or perhaps Lord Hanner's parents?”

“Our parents are both dead,” Lady Alris said from the parlor door. “If Uncle Faran ever acknowledged any children, I don't know about it. I think Hanner and Nerra and I were his closest kin.”

“Thank you, Lady Alris,” Manrin said. “Then unless there's a settlement we don't know about, Lord Hanner would now own the estate, with an obligation to provide for his sisters.”

“Is Bern here?” Alris asked. “He should know.”

“Here he is,” Shella called, leading Bern by the hand through the crowd at the dining-hall door.

“Good!” Manrin said. “Bern, Lady Alris, if the three of us could speak somewhere…” When neither of them protested, Manrin smiled and said, “Good! All of you, we have seen that confrontation with the overlord and his guards is not going to get us anywhere. Lord Faran meant well, and he did a good thing gathering us here and teaching us what we are, but trying to conquer the city is not for us. What we need to do is make a place for ourselves, a place that the rest of the city will accept. While I speak with Lady Alris and Bern, I want the rest of you to think about what we can do to fit in, to make ourselves useful and welcome. For now, it appears we are still welcome here—Lord Hanner has not come and ordered us to leave—but we have to consider the possibility that we will need to leave and go elsewhere. If you have any suggestions or questions, find me later and we'll discuss them.”

With that, he beckoned to Alris and Bern, then turned and headed back up the stairs.

The two followed him up to a study on the third floor, where they settled in for a long discussion of household affairs and Lord Faran's family history.

The news, Manrin thought, was mixed. It did indeed appear that Lord Faran had no family except his sister's children, and so far as anyone knew none of his many women could claim to carry his child or even to have married him. If Lord Hanner was Faran's heir that was good—an actual warlock would have been better, but Lord Hanner had certainly appeared sympathetic enough.

The bad news came from Bern. The household supplies were running low. He could get to market only when one of the more powerful warlocks got him safely past the thugs in the street. And worst of all, the household funds were exhausted—he was operating on credit. Lord Faran's credit had already become questionable, and when word got out that he was dead it would be cut off completely.

The warlocks needed to find another source of income immediately; that need was rather more urgent than Manrin had realized.

Of course, he had his own money, back in Ethshar of the Sands, and some of the other warlocks presumably had full purses, but even so, they really needed to start earning.

There were half a dozen bloodstones in one of the hundreds of drawers of wizard's supplies that Lord Faran had collected, and those could be enchanted with the Spell of Sustenance so that whoever carried them would need no food or drink, but even though many of the warlocks who had accompanied Lord Faran on the march to the Palace had not returned, there were far more than half a dozen people in the house. Besides, the bloodstone spell was not healthy if used for too long. A sixnight or two would be no problem, but if the days turned into months …

It was hard to believe how much his life had changed in just three days. He had been a respected and wealthy wizard, a Guildmaster, with friends and family, and now he was an outlaw, a warlock, worrying about paying for his next meal.

Manrin shook his head at the thought. He really was too old for this sort of thing.

After several minutes of conversation Bern insisted on leaving to prepare supper—he had been starting on that when Shella had fetched him from the kitchens. That left Manrin and Alris alone in the study. Manrin tried to question Alris about her uncle's plans and what her brother might do, but Alris was hardly brimming over with information or enthusiasm.

And after all, why should she be? She wasn't a warlock, just an ordinary girl, and her uncle had just died, which had to be a blow even though she hadn't appeared to like him much. She probably just wanted to go home to the Palace, to see her sibs and resume her former life.

All the same, Manrin kept her there talking until Shella came upstairs to call them to supper.

At the meal Alris sat in sullen silence while the warlocks talked about what they should do. She should be taken home to the Palace at the first opportunity, Manrin decided as he pretended to listen to Othisen's schemes for using warlockry on his father's farm.

And Othisen should go home, as well, he thought.

In fact,
all
the warlocks probably ought to return to their old homes, Manrin thought—at least, those who had homes. Surely, most people would accept them back. They could claim that Lord Faran had gone mad and led them astray.

But those who were still in the house did not seem ready to go, and Manrin saw no need to chase them out hastily.

Some, like Zarek, had no homes to return to.

And Manrin himself—what good would it do him to go home, to a wizard's house, when he could no longer function as a proper wizard? What good would it do Ulpen or Shella to go back to an apprenticeship he or she could never complete?

No, there were still reasons for some of them to stay.

The discussion of what they were to do dragged on long after the meal was over, with no signs of ending anytime soon, until finally Manrin yawned widely, picked up a candle, and announced he was going to bed.

At the top of the first flight of stairs he hesitated; he and Ulpen had shared a room, but he was now the leader in Lord Faran's place; shouldn't he take the master's bed? He walked down the passageway to the north end and through the double doors into the great bedchamber.

Yes, he thought, as he stood in the doorway and looked wryly at the sculpture and other furnishings, he really ought to spend at least one night here, just so he could someday tell his grandchildren about it. He set the candle on the nearer nightstand and prepared for bed.

Tired as he was, he had no trouble falling asleep despite the unfamiliar surroundings.

Chapter Thirty-eight

Manrin had no idea how long he had been asleep when the dream began. He knew at once it was a magical dream, and after all he had heard about the Calling that afternoon he was relieved to see that it was wizardly in nature, and not his first warlock's nightmare.

He found himself standing in a bare stone room he did not recognize, facing Ithinia of the Isle, senior Guildmaster of Ethshar of the Spices and rumored member of the Inner Circle of the Wizards' Guild. The clarity of details and Ithinia's awkward behavior convinced him that this was no ordinary nighttime fantasy, but a sending.

“The Spell of Invaded Dreams, eh?” he asked when Ithinia seemed to be in no hurry to speak. “The Lesser or the Greater? Can you hear me?”

“I can hear you,” the dream Ithinia said. “This is the Greater Spell of Invaded Dreams, and we can speak freely.”

That was reassuring. The Greater Spell took significantly more effort; if the Guild had simply wanted to send him a message they would have used the Lesser, which only communicated in one direction, from wizard to dreamer. The Greater Spell, which allowed communication in both directions, indicated that they wanted to talk.

“I take it that the Guild has something to discuss with me?” Manrin said.

“Indeed,” Ithinia agreed. “We are aware that you, and the apprentice Ulpen, are now warlocks, as are some fifty-six other wizards of varying experience and power throughout the Hegemony of the Three Ethshars.”

Manrin's dream-self blinked in surprise. He had had no idea there were others besides Ulpen and himself. “Fifty-six others?” he said. “Where?”

“Scattered,” Ithinia told him. “Fourteen are within the walls of Ethshar of the Spices.”

“In this house?”

“No, in their own homes. That doesn't matter. Guildmaster Manrin, I am not here to discuss others; I am here to discuss
you.

“Ah. And what is it you wish to discuss?”

“Guildmaster, you know the Guild's rules. Wizards are not to meddle in other forms of magic.”

“I didn't meddle in anything,” Manrin said. “I had it thrust upon me, just like all the others.”

“Yes, we know. Nonetheless, you are now both a warlock and a wizard, and the Guild does not permit this. There are too many unknowns, too many risks. Warlockry and wizardry interfere with each other in too many ways.”

“So what am I to do, then? I can't stop being a warlock, can I? Have you found a way to reverse whatever it is that did this to me?”

“No,” Ithinia said. “You can't stop being a warlock. The change appears to be irreversible. However, the power you now wield does not derive from you, but from an outside source. It would be enough if you were cut off from that source. You would still be a warlock, but you would be completely powerless to use your warlockry.”

“Can that be done?” Manrin asked, startled.

“Not while you remain in the World. However, the Guild has access to places outside the World. If you choose, you can be exiled to such a place.”

Manrin considered that, but only briefly. “I wouldn't accept exile from Lord Azrad,” he said. “Why should I accept it from you?”

“You did not swear to obey Lord Azrad. You did swear an oath, when you were accepted as an apprentice, to obey the rules of the Wizards' Guild.”

That was undeniably true, but Manrin was not ready to yield. “To leave the world … I assume that these places you describe are magical creations?”

“Yes.”

“Small places, then? Not so much as a village?”

“Yes.”

“I would be choosing to spend the rest of my life in prison.”

“Yes.”

“And you think I'll agree to this?”

“If you choose to remain a wizard, yes.”

“Well, how could I not…”

He stopped, and even in the dream he could feel his face turn pale.

“Oh, no,” he said.

“You can stop being a wizard,” Ithinia said. She pointed at Manrin's belt.

In the dream his dagger, his athame, slid from its sheath and hovered before his eyes, seeming to fill his field of vision. The image of Ithinia seemed to recede into the distance, though he and she were both still in a small stone room.

“Without the athame you are no longer a wizard,” Ithinia's voice said, though he could no longer see her speak. “Break it, and we will let you remain alive in the World.”

“But part of my
soul
is in it!” Manrin protested. “I wouldn't be whole!”

“Nevertheless, you must choose,” Ithinia insisted. “Warlock or wizard.”

“If I had a choice, I'd rather be a wizard,” Manrin said. “But I
don't
have a choice—I'm both!”

“The Guild cannot permit you to be both and go free,” Ithinia said. “You must break your athame, accept magical exile, or die.”

Manrin stared miserably at the floating knife. “I've lived in the World as a wizard, bound to this dagger, for ninety-eight years,” he said.

“And you are forbidden to remain a wizard so bound, and living in the World. You swore obedience.”

His dream-self reached up to touch the dagger; it vibrated as his fingers neared it.

“If I break it, you'll let me live and remain free?” he said. “Then the Guild has decided not to exterminate the warlocks?”

Ithinia hesitated. “If you break it, we will not kill you now,” she said.

Manrin closed his eyes wearily. “But you might later,” he said. “The Inner Circle has not yet decided on what to do about the warlocks, then?”

“We have not yet decided,” Ithinia admitted.

He opened his eyes again, grabbed the athame, and thrust it back in its sheath on his belt.

“I won't do it,” he said. “I ask you to reconsider.”

“We
have
considered this,” Ithinia said. “We have debated it for days, and while we have not yet decided about
all
warlocks, we have decided to enforce the existing rules. All nobles who have become warlocks must renounce their titles or die; all wizards must destroy their athames, or accept eternal exile from the World, or die. We leave the other magicians to their own people, but we know that warlocks cannot summon either gods or demons, so we have no fear of warlock theurgists or demonologists.”

“I won't do it,” Manrin said. “I won't throw away my freedom, nor a century's experience.”

“Then we have no choice but to kill you.”

“You can try,” Manrin said, “but I am the leader of a band of warlocks, and I still retain many of my old protections—not least this athame you want me to destroy! I may not be so easy a target as you think, and you may not be pleased with the results if you antagonize the warlocks. We aren't as weak as the witches or sorcerers. Remember that Lord Faran took his executioner with him!”

“We remember,” Ithinia said.

And then she was gone, and Manrin woke up in Faran's gigantic bed, staring up into the darkness.

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