Treachery of Kings (36 page)

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Authors: Neal Barrett Jr

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Fantasy, #Magic, #Kings and Rulers, #Fantasy Fiction, #General

BOOK: Treachery of Kings
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“It is a peculiarity of Newlies and humankind,” said Julia, who had mostly kept her silence during the recent dread events, “one I can somewhat understand, since I, too, possess an animal brain. When the situation is totally hopeless, as it clearly is now, reason says ‘quit, give up, yield, resign one's self to one's fate.’

“Yet, does that foolish gray organ in our heads desist, surrender, throw in the trowel—whatever that means— does it submit, capitulate, bend? Does it—”

“Stop that thing from squawking, or by damn I'll toss it over the side!”

Oberbyght, the princess flailing about in his iron grip, was kicking at a Badgie who had suddenly appeared at the entry hole. The seer stomped on his hand and the Badgie cried out and let go.

“I don't suppose you could give me a hand over here, Finn. As you can possibly see, I
don't
have one free.”

“Sorry, be right with you.” Finn left Letitia and joined the seer, whose chubby features had now turned a startling shade of red. As another green-robed warrior scrambled for a hold, Finn kicked him squarely in the face, where the white streak of hair angled sharply at his brow. The soldier howled, and tumbled back below.

Still, it was only a matter of minutes before another, then another, surged up through the hole.

“I don't see how we can keep this up,” Finn said. “I think Maddigern has an endless supply of these brutes.”

“Won't have to,” said the seer. “We can stop this nonsense soon.”

“Wait, now,” Finn protested, “I never said I'd quit. I certainly don't intend to give in.”

“Didn't say you would. Said you wouldn't
have
to.”

Oberbyght glanced over his shoulder with a grin.

“You think I'm an idiot, boy? That I climbed up here for the view?”

Finn turned, then, just as Letitia Louise cried out, leaping for joy, and waving at the sky.

“Hooks and Crooks!” Finn could scarcely believe his eyes, but it was clearly no illusion floating majestically overhead, blotting out the afternoon sky.

“Bucerius!” Finn shouted, cupping his hands about his face. “I never saw a sight more pleasing to the eye!”

“I told you one has to do business with all sorts of rogues in my trade,” said the seer. “You've got to learn to listen to your betters, Master Finn. …”

 
FIFTY-FIVE
 

F
INN AND LETITIA DASHED ABOUT THE TOP OF
the tower, chasing the tangle of ropes that dangled from the bloated craft overhead. The ropes snapped and whipped in the wind, close at hand one instant, hanging over nothing the next.

Bucerius cursed and shouted, bringing the worst of seven languages to bear, as he struggled to keep the balloon from drifting away or plummeting down to crush the creatures scurrying about below.

Obern Oberbyght did all he could, kicking angry Badgies down the hole, keeping the screaming princess intact.

The balloon dipped low, the wicker basket knocking loose stones off the wall. Letitia leaped, caught a rope and held on. Finn heard her triumphant shout, then heard it turn to a fearsome wail, as the rope yanked her off the tower and over the abyss.

Finn's heart nearly stopped. Letitia swung back, past the tower wall, just out of Finn's reach. He could see her hands slipping, quickly losing their grip. Her Mycer eyes mirrored her fear for she was clearly terrified.

Finn didn't dare stop to think. He scrambled up the wall, jumped, caught the rope just above Letitia's grip, scissored his legs about her and swung back from the dizzying heights below.

The balloon sagged beneath their weight and began to tip dangerously to one side. Bucerius bellowed, and yanked frantically on his cords. The swollen craft surged up again, and this time the Bullie's skill dropped the pair safely on the tower floor again.

Finn struggled with the rope and tied it securely through a hole in the stony wall. Bucerius tossed down two more lines, and, in a moment, the craft was riding balanced and secure, straining against the wind.

Finn lifted Letitia up, and the Bullie pulled her aboard. Finn handed Julia up next, then went to help the seer.

DeFloraine-Marie knew exactly what was coming. She screamed like a banshee, and managed to sink her teeth into Oberbyght's arm. She kicked out with her legs and struck Finn in the head.

“Enough of that, Princess, I'm losing my patience with you.” Oberbyght slung her over his shoulder, stomped over to the balloon, gripped her like a sack of meal, and tossed her to Bucerius waiting there.

The Bullie caught her and dumped her to the wicker floor. In her sheltered life, DeFloraine-Marie had had little to do with Bullies. Bullies were merely Newlies who carried heavy things about. At the sight of this great, powerful creature she backed away into a corner of the basket and loosed a pitiful wail.

“Go on, get aboard,” Finn shouted at the seer. “I'll finish up here.”

Oberbyght paused, then nodded, and made his way up to the balloon. Bucerius flipped a short-bladed knife to Finn, and Finn began to slice the restraining ropes, one by one.

Left unchecked, the Badgies swarmed like angry hornets onto the tower floor, a blur of broad shoulders, stumpy legs and bristling jaws, silver mail and flashing blades.

With a fierce battle cry, Maddigern swept his Guards
men aside and came at Finn, his sword cutting deadly arcs at Finn's heels, forcing him back against the tower wall.

Letitia shouted a warning, but Finn didn't hear. He knew he was but a breath away from losing it all, that everything he'd been through, everything he'd dared, could come to naught if the Badgie caught him here with nothing but the Bullie's short blade.

If he turned, and made a leap for the balloon, Maddigern would surely plunge his weapon into his back. If he stood his ground another moment, though, he could slice the final rope and let the others go.

“Don't, Finn, you cannot!” Letitia knew full well the path he would choose, knew what he had to do.

Finn didn't hesitate. He sawed frantically at the rope, slicing one layer then the next. The rope creaked and strained as each strand sprang free.

Maddigern's dark eyes glowed, for he saw his triumph near. With a growl of victory he raised his blade shoulder high and slammed one boot against the ground.

“Go on, have at it,” Oberbyght shouted. “I care nothing for the wretched fellow, and you clearly have no concern for this baggage here”

Maddigern stopped, his stout frame suddenly rigid, as he stared at the hovering balloon. The seer stood at the basket's edge, his hands grasping the princess’ ankles as she swung precariously over nothing but a great deal of air. She shrieked and flailed about. The most frightening moment in her life before this was when a bee stung her toe when she was twelve.

Maddigern didn't move. He glared at the seer with rage uncontained, no longer mindful that Finn was there.

Oberbyght smiled. “What does it take to get your attention, Badgie? I've got an idea, see what you think of this?”

With that, the sorcerer let go of one of the princess’ an
kles, holding her weight with a single hand. DeFloraine-Marie cried out, a most frightening sound that was heard by many citizens far below.

Maddigern stared, his blade still poised above his head. Finn could see a tremor, a shudder, as the fury of indecision swept the Badgie's stout frame. For a moment that seemed to last forever, he stood his ground, as rigid as the cold, fossilized rulers in the Holy Place of Emperors, Tyrants and Kings.

Then, he took a step back, lowered his blade, and turned away from the princess, gazing at nothing at all.

Finn didn't hesitate an instant. He grabbed the nearly severed rope and swung from the tower wall. The cord snapped beneath his grip and the balloon jerked free, moving swiftly in the strong evening breeze.

Bucerius hauled him in and dumped him roughly on the wicker basket's floor.

“Finn, I wish you wouldn't do things like that,” Letitia said, as a single tear trickled down her cheek. “I will be severely upset if you ever leap off over nothing again.”

“I think I can promise I will avoid such antics, my dear.”

“Where have I heard
that
before,” said Julia Jessica Slagg. …

 
FIFTY-SIX
 

F
INN MARVELED AT HOW SWIFTLY THE GREAT
palace of Heldessia's King shrank to a speck he could hide behind his thumb. He had forgotten the perversity of balloons, which will hang without moving, and refuse to go anywhere at all, then rush through the clouds with a speed impossible for any conveyance on the ground.

Before they had drifted too far, he had seen Maddigern and his Badgies crowded on the top of the tower, watching in silence as their prey moved farther and farther away.

Finn was still watching when the great bell pealed again, its solemn tones resounding through the ‘rip in the cosmic trousers,’ as the seer liked to say, from the world of illusions to the deepening afternoon where the Bullie's balloon rushed away toward the west.

Either that
, Finn said to himself,
or this is the illusion, and the real world's somewhere past the bell.

And, indeed, if that were so, who could ever tell?

“If you've nothing to do,” Bucerius said, “you can get your head back where it belongs and be helpin’ me with them lines. You didn't learn much on the way in here, but you might be better'n some.”

Finn felt a small, but honest moment of pride at the Bullie's words, for he knew this was as close as the fellow would come to granting him some station as the crewman of a balloon.

“This is really a difficult craft to master,” he told Letitia Louise. “It takes enormous skill to learn the order of cords, the drift, the height, the strength of the winds, the correct amount of ballast to loose to gain the proper altitude.

“When I can find time from my work, I would like to learn more about the fascinating world of vessels of the air.”

“That's wonderful, dear,” Letitia said, with a sweet and haughty smile she'd learned from DeFloraine-Marie. “When you do, just give me time to pack my bags, for I'll not be living with a man who's hanging from a bag of gas, worrying me sick, instead of minding his business on the ground.”

Nothing more was said on the subject after that.

P
RINCESS DEFLORAINE-MARIE KEPT VERY MUCH TO
herselfafter the craft was under way. Letitia tried to speak to her once, for she wished to thank her for doing her part in breaking through to Oberbyght's lair.

Letitia had been quite surprised to find that within that slim, near-perfect frame there was strength enough to crack stone and plaster and help bring down the ancient wall.

Still, the princess clearly didn't wish for company at all. She stayed by herself and looked wistfully back at the quickly receding hills of Heldessia Land.

“You're free to leap anytime you wish,” the seer told her. “I'd not interfere with your efforts now.”

Finn watched her from the far side of the basket, which was not that far away in the Bullie's craft. Bucerius had given her a blanket against the cooling afternoon, but the wrap did little to hide her lithe and graceful form.

Finn had had no chance to tell Letitia what he'd seen in the chamber of the Deeply Entombed, or, indeed, the
other startling sight he'd witnessed there, though Letitia could guess some of the story herself.

Maddigern, and the daughter of the King. There was no doubt of the intimacy between them. No doubt of the look in the Badgie's eyes when he stepped back and let them all go to save the princess’ life.

This enchanting, willful beauty, and the fierce, bloody-minded Badgie—a human and a Newlie who had somehow found one another despite the differences that lay between them.

Much like another odd pairing I could name. One Finn of Fyxedia, and a Mycer named Letitia Louise….

Though he could not see how one of these couplings could possibly relate to the other, he could not deny that the other was there. And there were more such unions in the world this day—some, he imagined, stranger than he knew

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