Read Treachery of Kings Online
Authors: Neal Barrett Jr
Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Fantasy, #Magic, #Kings and Rulers, #Fantasy Fiction, #General
“Where and what for? What new foolery is this? I have followed you before, and it always leads to trickery and deceit, lunch on a battleground, a cardiac attack.”
“I am appalled that you would think I do not hold you in the highest regard, Master Finn. I am deeply pained, sir.”
“I strongly doubt that.” Finn peered around the fellow, checking to see if any rogues or rascals were about.
“I don't believe I've ever seen you pained, Dostagio. Or, for that matter, delighted, saddened, concerned with anything at all.”
“Yes, sir. The King would like your presence at once. You are to bring your gift to His Grace, and the device you call your lizard. Do hurry, sir. The King is anxious to get to sleep. … “
A
FTER THE AWESOME SIGHT OF THE HOLY
Place of Emperors, Tyrants and Kings, the splendor of the Great Dining Hall, Finn was prepared for anything that might lie beyond the great oaken door. The portal was fully nine feet tall, and nearly twice as wide, intricately carved with legend and myth from Heldessia's ancient times.
He would have liked to study this fine example of talented artisans’ work, but there was clearly no time for that. Moreover, the door was guarded by seven green-robed Badgies, stout and grim-faced fellows at rigid attention, gripping enormous pikes. And, to Finn, they all looked closely related to the fiery, wild-eyed, Maddigern himself.
“Just go in, sir,” Dostagio said. “His Grace is expecting you.”
“So I do what? Bow, grovel, fall on my face? They always have rules about this sort of thing.”
“Oh, nothing like that tonight. Enjoy your visit, sir.”
“I'll do that,” Finn said, certain that would not be likely at all.
C
AKES AND SNAKES,” HE SAID ALOUD, SOMEWHAT
rooted in his tracks—certain, now, Dostagio for some bizarre reason had led him to the wrong door.
Instead of a great and vaulted chamber, a stately columned hall, he was facing a small, unimpressive room with bare, chiseled stone walls. The monarch himself was a spindly, ruddy-faced fellow in a pink-and-orange nightshirt that came to his knobby knees. Perched on his head was a tasseled cap to match.
So why am I surprised
? Finn wondered. The only time he'd seen King Llowenkeef-Grymm he was wearing tatters and rags, his features cold as the grave. If he was alive at the moment, why not look cheery and bright?
“Please,” said the King, in quite a pleasant tone, “sit, Master Finn, and pour yourself a cup of ale.”
“Why, thank you, sire, I will. And let me say I am grateful to be in your presence. It's an honor to meet Heldessia's King. I shall treasure this moment for the rest of my life.”
The King waved him off, for he heard this a hundred times a day.
The ale was very nice, much like the nutty brew Dostagio had brought to his room. He was greatly relieved to find there were comfortable, cushioned chairs in the King's small chamber, as well as a sturdy table and several frosty pewters, in case they ran low.
No grim, funereal vaults here, only the homey surroundings of a middle-aged fellow who liked a comfy chair instead of a miserable throne. And, wonder of wonders, Finn and the King were alone. There were no guards or toadies about, unless they were hiding somewhere.
“You're the fellow who brought me a present from that scoundrel, Aghen Aghenfleck. Would I be right in that?” “Yes, sire, you would indeed.”
“Nasty, witless boob is what he is. Nitwit, soft in the head. Useless lout. Scatterbrain. Dull, shallow, mean-spirited wretch. A scalawag, a sneak. Worthless, sniveling beggar, not fit to call himself a prince. Ought to be working
in a sewer, you ask me. I expect you'd agree, Master Finn.”
“Ah, well, sire… “
“Loyalty, that's the thing, boy.” The King shook a finger at Finn. “Never speak evil of your master, even if he's unworthy scum, which Aghenfleck surely is. That bundle there, that's for me?”
“Yes, Your Grace. It's a birthday present, I believe.”
“Don't believe in birthdays. Everyone's got one, what's the fun in that? I do not want the fellow's present, don't want to see it at all. Put it somewhere. That thing thrashing about beneath your cloak. That's this mechanical device you carry about. Let's have a look at that.”
At once, before the King's command was scarcely out of his mouth, Julia Jessica Slagg scrambled out of Finn's cloak, onto the floor, and up onto the table in front of Llowenkeef-Grymm.
“Well now, if that's not a splendid thing to see!”
The King leaned forward, hands on his knees, devouring every inch of Julia with his dark and penetrating eyes, taking her in from her spiny tail to her golden scales, iron teeth and shiny silver jaws.
He made no effort to hide his great delight. He clasped his hands together, and his face creased in a joyous smile.
“Amazing, I say. Astonishing device! Truly a work of art, something we appreciate here in Heldessia's halls, which I can't say for that uncultured, illiterate collection of louts in Aghenfleck's court. No offense, of course.”
“None taken, sire.”
“Yes, well. Ah, what
is
it?”
“It's a lizard, Your Grace.”
“A lizard.”
“Yes, sire.”
“And how did you come to call it that?”
“No reason I can name, sire. While I was working on it,
it simply seemed to fit. I liked the sound of it, and it stuck. I called them lizards from that day on.”
“Them?” The King raised a brow. “So you have crafted more than the one?”
“Oh, indeed, sire. It's my invention, and mine alone. I own and operate The Lizard Shoppe in Ulster-East. Lizards are my trade.
“I don't mind saying, in all modesty, sire, I come from good craftsman stock. My father worked in metals as well, and made a number of contributions to the common good. It was he who was responsible for the all-brass lice hammer used in households around the world today. He also did significant work at the Royal Fish Works, though he got little credit for that.
“Proud though I was of his accomplishments, I yearned to go out on my own. I began with a lizard that picks up debris about the house. I followed that with the lizard bellows, which works quite well, though small children are frightened by the noise.
“Then, there is the lizard cleaning rod for muskets of any bore. The special tongue gets in there and sucks out powder and soot that might cause a weapon to explode, resulting in bodily harm. And then—”
“Yes, fine,” said the King, who had little interest in bellows, lice or soot.
“And this model here, what does
it
do? Dostagio says it talks, but I can scarcely credit that.”
“It does, sire. Entirely too much, I'm bound to say.”
“What Master Finn means, Your Grace, is that my vocabulary is easily twice as extensive as his… “
“Ha! Wonderful!” The King slapped his knees twice. “Impertinent, too. I wouldn't stand for that, but apparently you do. So. How do you do it? How do you make it
think
? I find that most unique in a mechanical device.”
“It's really not as difficult as you'd imagine, sire.
Double wiring of futanic preen, a pair of copper doffits on the major boskin gear. Triple pankers, of course.”
“Of course, yes… “
The King looked thoughtful, and tapped the side of his nose. Finn took a care to show no expression at all. A bit of prattle on doffits and preens always did the trick. There was no way to ask any questions after that, for it all came out of Finn's head. The one thing he dared not discuss, of course, was the fact that Julia had a ferret's brain within her silver skull.
Tampering with life in any fashion was something one simply didn't do. No one had forgotten the sin of Shar and Dankermain, the seers who had brought about the Change. It had been three hundred years since Newlies appeared, but the fears and hatreds that awesome event had brought to bear were still very much alive.
And, if they didn't hang him for Julia, Finn knew, there was always Letitia Louise. Intimate relations with nonhu-man creatures was not unknown, and most people looked the other way. Still, it was against the laws of every land…
“May I say,” Finn said, for he knew his host had noticed his attention had strayed for a moment, which was not the thing to do with a king, “may I say this is the finest ale I have ever had the pleasure to drink. Such fullness, such exquisite taste.”
“Of course it is,” the King said, ruffled, peeved, slightly annoyed, “it damn well better be. Now, that infernal present you brought—which I will not accept, by the way—what is it, boy, what did you bring?”
“It's ah, a clock, Your Grace. It is known far and wide that King Llowenkeef-Grymm is the world's foremost collector of rare and unusual clocks. Prince Aghen Aghenfleck has—”
“Lummox! Blockhead!” The King slammed his mug on the table with such a fury, the creamy ale flew this way and that.
“Exactly what that fool would do. Send
me
a clock. As if he had the foggiest notion what a fine timepiece even looks like, what it—what it—”
The King stood abruptly, unfolding like a broken spring.
“This way, Finn. Hurry along, I can't stand a sluggard or a slouch. Get moving, boy!”
Without a word, Finn followed the King through a back door of his quarters, a door that led to a hall exactly like the halls he'd seen before.
“Stay here,” he told Julia. “I don't have any idea what this is all about.”
“Tell him
you
made the clock. See what he says about that.”
“Stay put and keep your snout shut, Julia. That's all I need from you.”
He pretended not to hear a rusty cackle as he bounded after the knobby-kneed fellow in gaudy nightshirt with tasseled cap to match. …
T
HE CORRIDOR WAS DARK, EXCEPT FOR A TORCH
now and then on a bracket in the wall. The walls, the ceiling and the floor, were standard Heldessia decor—great slabs of granite in colorful black.
Finn, young and strongly built, could scarcely keep up with the King, who bounded ahead like a boy on his way to the fair.
It took little thought to guess that the King was leading Finn to clocks. Finn didn't care about clocks, he could take them or leave them alone. The works, the cogs, the little gears and springs were of interest, of course, but he had gone far beyond such simple devices as that. He had stopped taking clocks apart when he was no more than a child.
“Which is not the point here,” he said to himself. “The point is that Julia, for once, is quite right. I made the clock the King despises, for it came from Aghenfleck, and what am I to do about that?”
Nothing, the answer came at once. If the King didn't look at that tasteless device, all would be well, and he and Letitia and Julia would soon be out of sight.
E
VEN BEFORE THE KING OPENED THE NARROW IRON
portal—with a key he kept under his tasseled cap—Finn
could
feel
the might, feel the beat, that lay just beyond that door. And, when it opened, when the heavy panel swung away, the shock, the power of the place nearly knocked him off his feet, nearly drove him back into the hall.
The strength, the energy behind this force was a thousand, ten times, twenty-, thirtyfold, a chaos, a din, an endless array of click-tick-clitter-clat clocks. Clocks that covered the walls and the ceiling, clocks that littered the floor. It was, as a matter, impossible to move, to take a step anywhere at all, without running into a hundred ticker-tocks.
They beggared description, these clocks of every sort. Great, enormous clocks, clocks big enough for a family, if, indeed, they could stand the horrid noise. Clocks so tiny you could scarcely see them at all. Clocks with rusty weights that swung ponderously about. Clocks that moved with such vigor they blurred before the eye. Clocks, Finn saw to his dismay, where little birds ran in and out. Clocks where woodsmen chased their wives, where their wives chased children dizzily around, then started all over again.