Read The First Book of Lost Swords - Woundhealer's Story Online
Authors: Fred Saberhagen
Then the wizard turned his head, suddenly taking notice of the girl on the far bank. He snapped his fingers at her, and she vanished, splashing into the water with a movement more fishlike than human.
And then the wizard himself was gone, without a splash, without a sound of any kind. Zoltan was alone.
He waited for one of the strange presences to return, but none of them did. It was as if they had all forgotten him. The moon looked down, the water gurgled endlessly around his ankles. He stood there like a statue and could not fall, but he could grow tired. His injured leg, with his weight steadily on it, hurt like a sore tooth. His ribs stabbed him with every shallow breath.
* * *
The moon was down, and dawn was approaching, and he had begun almost to hope that he had been forgotten, before the magician returned, as silently and inexplicably as he had gone.
Burslem stood again on the riverbank, looking more ordinary now in the light of the new day, but not less terrible. Now for the first time the magician’s face was clearly visible to Zoltan, and it was startlingly human, only the face of a man.
Zoltan tried to say something, but he could not speak. Now he thought it was magic that sealed his tongue, though by all the gods his fear was great enough.
The other smiled at him. “Well. So, you must be kept in storage, somewhere, somehow. For some undetermined time. How shall it be done?”
Still Zoltan could not answer. At some moment soon, surely, he would wake up. Suddenly tears were running down his cheeks.
The wizard paid no attention to any of this, but stood back, making controlled, decisive gestures. Zoltan’s legs, abruptly moving again, though still under alien control, turned him around and marched him through the water to the high bank that ran along the other side of the river. Able to look at that bank for the first time in twelve hours, the boy could see that there was a deep hollow there, really a cave. The entrance to the recess was curtained naturally by a growth of vines that hung over it from above, and screened by tall reeds that grew from below.
His own muscles moving him like alien hands, Zoltan was turned around, then cast down inside the muddy, shallow cave like a discarded doll. Then his position was rearranged, once, from the unbearable to the merely uncomfortable.
“Might want those joints to work when I take you out again.” The magician’s voice was genial. “Of course, on the other hand, I might never take you out.”
There was a silent arpeggio of magic. Mercifully Zoltan was allowed to sleep.
* * *
Zoltan awoke, suddenly, to a realization of his physical surroundings, which were apparently unchanged.
It was late at night. The moon was high, and there was something strange about it. Eventually he understood that it had waned for several days from full. He stared at the gibbous shape for a while, trying to comprehend the implications. But in a moment the moonlight falling on the earth outside his cave showed Zoltan something that distracted him from other thoughts.
The same figure he had seen before as a silent listener, that of a little old man, a caricature of a wizard, was standing on the far side of the stream. But this time, after the first moment of confrontation, the witness was far from silent.
Speech burst from the little old man, a torrent of childish abuse that seemed in a way the maddest thing that Zoltan had experienced yet. “What are you doing in there, you stupid? You shouldn’t be there at all. Come out!” The tone was one of anger and relief combined.
The man came closer, and as he neared the stream his aged, dried-apple face was plainly visible in the moonlight. Zoltan could not recognize it, but for a moment he thought that he should.
“Come out of there! Out of there, out of there! Ooooh! Why are you in there at all? There, now you can talk, answer me!” The voice was gravelly and phlegmy most of the time, but on some words it squealed and squawked. In general it was hard to understand.
“I want to come out,” croaked Zoltan, suddenly discovering that he was able to talk again. His own voice, after a week of silence, sounded not much better than the old man’s. “I can’t move, though. Help!”
“Help? Help? I’ve been trying to come back here and help. You think it’s easy?” the aged wizard-figure shrieked like a madman. The body in the strange robe bent and twisted, gesturing. Now he seemed to have hold of the landscape, and twitched and tugged at it, heaving until the land, stream and all, was shaking like a rug. Water rose up in a thin, foaming wall, and for a moment Zoltan feared that he was going to be drowned.
Not only the mundane landscape was affected. Invisible walls went shattering, impalpable bonds were torn apart. It was a painful, fumbling process, but Zoltan at last popped out of his cave, like a bug shaken from a carpet, to splash into the stream again. The water was a cold shock that assured him he was at least fully awake. Moving again, he felt amazingly better than he had feared he would. His arms and legs were full of pins and needles, but they were functioning. And his ribs were only lightly sore, as if the long enforced rest had healed them.
The world was quiet after its purging. The new wizard stood on the riverbank, bent over with hands on knees, peering at him.
Zoltan cleared his throat and demanded, almost prayerfully: “Who are you?”
The other straightened up and answered in a rapid voice that sounded stranger and stranger the more it chattered: “Names are magic. Names are magic. That one who flies would like to grab my name and bonk me, but he can’t. He knows your name already, but not mine. Couldn’t even see me when I was here before, so there, ha ha!” And the old man laughed. It was a mad and disconnected sound that wandered up and down the scale of human voice-tones.
With something of a chill, Zoltan realized that he could see moonlight through the edges of the figure, as if it were not really, solidly, there at all.
But after everything else that had happened, he wasn’t going to quibble about that. “I still need help, sir. Can you help me get home?”
The wizened wizard shook his head. “No, no, no! You are supposed to be out adventuring, Zoltan. You’re big, you’re all grown up, and you can’t go home yet.”
That was a shock. “Why can’t I?” He wiped his eyes, his face. He was almost sniveling.
“Why? Don’t you know? I turned the words around so you could understand them, when those two were talking. Your—your uncle Mark needs help.” The wizard stood with fists on hips and glared.
“Oh.” Zoltan, feeling shamed, squelched his way out of the water and sat down on the bank. “How can I help him? What can I do?” Then, without waiting for an answer, he jumped up again. “Uncle Mark or whatever, I’ve got to get out of here before they come back—and how did you do that, just now? Get me loose, I mean?”
“I know tricks. I found out some pretty good tricks, to get things loose. Good old Karel, he put together some great elementals.” The wizard chuckled and slapped his bony thigh. Mere image or not, the impact sounded solidly.
“Are you a friend of his, sir?”
There was a pause. “We’ve met a few times.” And the old man, mouth slightly open on his snaggled teeth, squinted sharply at Zoltan, as if to see whether Zoltan had got the joke.
Zoltan, who could see no joke, once more asked for help.
“You’ve got to go and help your uncle first,” his rescuer repeated relentlessly.
“If—if Uncle Mark really needs me, I’ll do what I can.” Zoltan swallowed. “I’ll help. But you’ve got to tell me where to go, and what to do, and—and how to do it.”
The other stood with his fists on his hips, nodding his head sharply. But his speech, just at first, did not sound all that confident. “I don’t know if I can tell you all that. But I think I know what I can do—I think. Oh, fuddle-duddle, I can do it. Tell you what, Zoltan. Right now you look very tired, so why don’t you go to sleep?”
That was alarming. “I’ve been asleep. Don’t make me go back again. I thought you were going to help me.”
“You are tired. Good sleep this time. Go back to sleep.”
And Zoltan did.
* * *
When he awakened again he had no idea of how much time had passed, but he could see that it was still night—or maybe it was night again. This time he could not find the moon.
At least he had not been stuffed back into the cave. He was in motion—somehow. He was in a sitting position, and his legs were resting, floating, with his knees bent and raised to the level of his chin. He was sitting on something—or in something—but he was moving.
He was really moving. That brought him fully awake. He was in the stream, submerged in water with only his head and shoulders and knees above the surface, but he was not cold or wet.
When he looked down to see what was carrying him, Zoltan discovered that, as far as he could tell, he was being borne up and along by the river itself. Bits of small driftwood ringed him around almost like a gentle fist, urged by some invisible power to offer him support, but it wasn’t the wood that kept him floating. It had to be some invisible power because there wasn’t enough wood. In this stream there should hardly be enough water.
And when he looked ahead he saw that the land itself was making way for him, trees nodding and swaying as if they walked, rocks bending out of his path where the rapids ordinarily ran swift.
He was borne upstream, through the rapids, easily and safely.
Then came a long stretch of almost level flow. He felt no fear. He was beyond fear now.
A giant fish came to splash beside him, and leap, and splash again. The reality of the night supported him, and once more he slept.
Chapter Nine
Mark kept a log of distance traveled every day, and after several weeks of the journey he began to watch for certain landmarks, hills of a peculiar configuration that had been described to him in Sarykam. The borders between Tasavalta and the land of Sibi were as a rule not defended, or even sharply defined, but at length he was satisfied that he had crossed them. The clothing of the few people who came into sight was different from that of Tasavaltan villagers, and the only dwellings now in sight were of inferior construction.
When the landmark hills at last came into sight, the Prince felt sure that he was near the Temple that he sought, and he sent a human scout ahead as a routine precaution. His beast master of course had birds in the air already—they made faster scouts than human riders, particularly where the terrain was difficult, and often brought back vital information. But there were relative subtleties in things observed, sometimes even things as important as the color of uniforms, which remained beyond the capabilities of the birds to perceive and describe.
The scout received his orders and cantered off, soon leaving behind the main Tasavaltan body that continued to travel at a more modest pace.
Within an hour after he had disappeared the lone rider was in sight again, coming back at a gallop.
Barking orders, the Prince had his small force ready for action well before the scout had come close enough to shout his news, whatever it might be. The ranks had closed around the litter—in which Prince Adrian was now spending almost all his time—and the Master of the Beasts had sent all but one of his flying creatures into the air, where they circled, keeping a high lookout.
The rider, clattering up at last to the head of the column, delivered his message out of breath.
“I found the Temple, and there’s been some kind of trouble there, Your Highness. They’ve scraped up some kind of extra barricade at the front gate, and there’s what looks like a triple funeral in progress. There were three coffins. If three people have died suddenly in a Temple that holds Woundhealer, well, I thought something strange must be happening. I didn’t go in, just took a look and came right back.”
“A wise decision. Any signs of fighting?”
“No sir. Nothing I could see. But I thought you’d best know as soon as possible what’s going on.”
Mark nodded, and considered. “All right. We’ll go on to the Temple. But with double outriders, on alert.”
With the scout leading the way, the column proceeded at the same pace as before. Within the hour the Prince had come near enough to the Temple, which lay in a small flat valley, to see the signs of trouble for himself. The funeral was over now, but the black bands that meant White Temple mourning were still in evidence, stretched across buildings and strung between them. And there, as the scout had described it, was the extra barricade built from piled-up timbers and sandbags, and even furniture, and looking more a sign of panic than of determination. The space inside the Temple’s outer wall was thick with people, standing or sitting or milling about, but there was no sign of military activity.