Authors: Marion Zimmer Bradley
The Shadow Matrix
A Novel of Darkover
Marion Zimmer Bradley
DAW BOOKS, INC.
DONALD A. WOLLHEIM, FOUNDER
375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014
ELIZABETH R. WOLLHEIM
SHEILA E. GILBERT
PUBLISHERS
Copyright © 1997 by Marion Zimmer Bradley and Adrienne Marline-Barnes.
All Rights Reserved. Cover art by Romas Kukalis. DAW Book Collectors No. 1065. DAW Books are distributed
by Penguin Putnam, Inc.
Book designed by Stanley S. Drate/Folio Graphics Co. Inc.
All characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly
coincidental.
First Paperback Printing, January 1999 56789
ISBN: 0886778123
DAW TRADEMARK REGISTERED U.S. PAT. OFF. AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES —MARCA REGISTRADA
HECHO EN U.S.A.
PRINTED IN THE
U.S.A.
To Susan Rich who read all the drafts and asked for more
PROLOGUE
Tell me again why we came out here to visit Priscilla Elhalyn," Dyan Ardais muttered
as he went down the staircase ahead of Mikhail. "And why we agreed to attend this ...
thing?"
Mikhail Lanart-Hastur looked at his companion, at his dark hair and fair complexion in
the flickering light of lampions and started to reply. A flash of lightning illuminated the
worn carpet beneath his feet as a boom of thunder rattled the walls of Elhalyn Castle.
There was a rush of rain against the panes of the windows
"We were a little drunk at the time," he finally said, when the noise abated. "And there
were all those girls in Thendara, making themselves pretty for us."
"Well, we aren't drunk now, and going to a séance is not my idea of a good time!"
"How do you know? How many séances have you been to?"
"None! I think talking to dead people, or trying to, is a perverse idea."
Mikhail laughed softly. Young Dyan Ardais, whose paxman he was, was a rather
nervous man of eighteen. "What? Are you afraid that medium of Priscilla's will conjure
up your father?"
"Gods! I hadn't even thought of that! I never knew him when he was alive, and I don't
want to make his acquaintance now!"
Mikhail had had several days to regret the impulse that had brought them to the
decaying pile that was Elhalyn Castle. He knew he was old enough not to do such
things, and that Dyan was his responsibility, his charge. If only they had not both been
so bored, and ripe for mischief. Well, there was no help for it. They were the guests of
Priscilla Elhalyn, the sister of Derik Elhalyn, the last king of Darkover, and they could
hardly get on their horses and ride off into the storm.
"Most likely it will be a total failure, Dyan, and they will not bring the ghost of Derik
Elhalyn down from the overworld. Or her father, or my grandmother Alanna Elhalyn
either. Although I wouldn't mind seeing her. She died a long time ago, and I have
always been a little curious about her. I'll bet we won't even have a good tale to tell
when we get back."
"That would be fine with me." Dyan sounded less fretful, calmed by Mikhail's good
humor. "So far it has been a pretty dreary time, hasn't it—unless you count meeting
those retainers of hers. I never knew that anyone gave houseroom to bonereaders and
mediums before."
"The Elhalyn have always been rather eccentric."
"What you mean is that Priscilla is only slightly less crazy than her mad brother, don't
you? That Burl fellow gives me the creeps, and I am sure it is his doing that we have to
attend this ghost-calling."
Mikhail laughed again, but he shared Dyan's opinion of the bone-reader. It was an
activity that was found in the marketplaces of any of the cities of Darkover, but not one
normally encountered in the home of a
comynara.
Still, he knew that trying to see into
the future was a perfectly human desire, and he suspected that Burl merely possessed a
small talent, a
laran
not unlike the Aldaran Gift of foreseeing.
The other of Priscilla's confidants, the woman Ysaba, was, in his opinion, the stranger
of the two. Mikhail had seen bone-readers and other diviners before, but a medium was
beyond his experience. He sensed she had
laran,
but it was not of a kind he had ever
encountered before, and he suspected the woman had never trained in any Tower. He
wished he could ask her outright, but that would have been very impolite.
The two young men walked through a dusty corridor, and were met by Duncan
MacLeod, who was in charge of the stables but did duty as
condom
as well. He was a
grizzled fellow, his face weathered, and his eyes sharp with suspicion. Still, the stables
were in good repair—better than the castle itself, which had been let go to ruin under
Priscil-
la's careless stewardship. Priscilla's staff was old, and few in number. There were no
young maids to keep up the rooms, and no lads learning to manage the stables, which
was puzzling as well. Elhalyn Castle was nearly empty of people, with a hollow
quality that was unnerving.
In fact, it was the most peculiar household Mikhail had ever seen. Priscilla had lived
there, alone except for her children and her few servants, for the years since the Sharra
Rebellion, and the unfortunate events which had left so many members of the Comyn
either dead or insane. She seemed perfectly happy in her solitude, a little vague at
times, but not obviously mad as her brother had been. The Elhalyns were often
unbalanced, he knew.
Mikhail had a good many questions that he could not ask without appearing rude, not
the least of which was the parentage of Priscilla's five children. There was Alain, who
was nearly fifteen, Vincent at thirteen, and Emun ten, as well as two daughters,
Miralys and Valenta, shy girls of nine and eight. Priscilla had never married, and
whatever lovers she had taken over the years remained unnamed and unknown. Since
the Elhalyn women had
comynara
status, they had a freedom of choice not permitted
to most females, but he still found the whole thing rather unsettling. He had never
thought of himself as stuffy, but he nonetheless found himself unsettled by her
irregular style of living.
Duncan led them through a narrow passage which connected the main portion of the
castle to the narrow dungeon that was the remnant of a much earlier time in Darkovan
history, when the land-holding families waged terrible wars with one another. It
smelled of age, of old stones and the bones of the earth beneath it, and he tried to shake
off the feeling of oppression it gave him.
At last Duncan opened a heavily timbered door, and a gust of cold air billowed out.
Just then there was another shock of thunder, and the roof of the passage trembled,
shedding a fine rain of rotted wood and flakes of whitewash down onto the sleeves of
his tunic. Dyan made a disgusted noise and ran nervous fingers through his hair, then
brushed the litter away.
They followed Duncan into a round room that would have been almost cozy if it had
not been quite so chilly. There was a small fireplace, and it was lit, giving off the
smell of balsam logs, though it was not enough to warm the room. The walls were
stone, and they were damp with moisture. Mikhail could see patches of mold on their
faces, and the pleasant scent of the logs barely concealed .their musty odor. A few
sputtering candles were set on a small table in the center of the room, making eerie
shadows on the walls and the decaying tapestries that were hanging there.
Mikhail tried to imagine the room during the past, with long dead Elhalyn sheltering
there, under siege from their foes. But the room was too shabby, too cold, and too
dreary for any romantic notions. The place was just a relic of another time, and one
that he was glad was gone.
Priscilla and her medium, Ysaba, entered the room, interrupting his reverie. The little
Elhalyn woman seemed more excited than Mikhail had seen her before, her golden
eyes gleaming in the nickering light. There was an air of anticipation about her; she
seemed to be expecting something wonderful to occur. Her hair was the color of
apricots, and her skin seemed nearly golden in the light. No one would ever have
called her a beauty, but she seemed quite pretty in her undisguised eagerness.
"Please, sit at the table," she invited, gesturing gracefully.
Mindful of his manners, Mikhail held a chair for her, and saw that Dyan was
performing the same office for the medium, his distaste for the task apparent. They
took the remaining seats, and he wondered where Burl, the bone-reader, was.
The table had been polished recently, and it shone in the golden light, the smell of
beeswax rising pleasantly beneath his forearms. Mikhail turned his attention to a large
globe of quartz sitting in the middle of it. It had a faint bluish cast, but it was not the
intense blue of a matrix crystal. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Duncan throw
something into the fireplace, and there was a brief flare as it began to burn. A thick,
flowery scent began to fill the room, something similar to the incenses his sister Liriel
used, but heavier and not as pleasant. It made his eyes prickle, and his fingers started to
feel rather numb.
Ysaba gazed into the globe, her pale eyes vacant. She was a plain woman, with the
very fair coloring of the Dry Towns, and he was not sure of her age. There was
thunder,
and a flash of lightning shone through the high, narrow windows, blinding him for a
second. The wind gusted against the walls of the ancient dungeon, but the structure
barely trembled under the fury of the storm.
The chamber was silent, except for the crackle of the fire, and the sobbing of the wind
outside. Mikhail felt a draft along the floor, from the door behind him, and wriggled
his toes in his boots. He hoped this was not going to take very long. The somewhat
shabby room he and Dyan were sharing was at least warm, and he wanted to return to
it, and go to bed!
"Join hands, please," Priscilla said, interrupting his thoughts.
Dyan gave a little start, then reluctantly slipped his hand into Mikhail's right one. He
extended his free hand reluctantly, and Ysaba clasped it. Mikhail felt Priscilla take his
left hand, and put her other hand into that of the medium. It was surprisingly warm and
soft.
"You' must not break the circle," the medium said quietly.
Why did I let you talk me into agreeing to this, Mik?
We could hardly deny Priscilla's request, could we?
If either of us had any spine, we certainly would have!
Mikhail could sense the younger man almost squirming with discomfort. Although he
was mildly uneasy, he did not share Dyan's emotions, for his ever-lively curiosity was
now fully engaged., This was going to make a wonderful tale to tell!
There was a moaning sound, and after a moment Mikhail realized it was not the wind,
but the medium. It was a very strange noise, something he could hardly believe was
coming from a human body. The thick, acrid odor from the fireplace seemed to