Zelazny, Roger - Amber Chronicles, The 09 - Knight of Shadows.txt

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     Roger Zelazny. Knight of Shadows

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 Roger Zelazny
 THE AMBER CHRONICLES  -- BOOK NINE
 KNIGHT OF SHADOWS
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     I

     Her name was Julia, and I'd been damn certain  she  was  dead  back  on
April 30 when it all began. My finding her grisly remains and destroying the
doglike  creature  which I'd thought had killed her were pretty much the way
it started. And we had been lovers, which  I  suppose  was  how  things  had
really commenced. Long before.
     Perhaps  I  could  have  trusted  her more. Perhaps I should never have
taken hex on that shadow-walls which led to denials that took her away  from
me, down dark ways and into the studio of Victor Melman, a nasty occultist I
later  had  to  kill-the same Victor Melman who was himself the dupe of Luke
and Jasra. But now, perhaps-just barely-I might have been in a  position  to
forgive  myself  for  what I'd thought I'd done, for it seemed that I hadn't
really done it after all. Almost.
     That is to say, I learned that I hadn't been responsible for it while I
was in the act of doing it. It was when I drove my knife into  the  side  of
the mysterious sorcerer
     Mask,  who  had  been  on my case for some time, that I discovered that
Mask was really Julia. My half brother Jurt, who's been trying  to  kill  me
longer  than  anyone  else  in  the  business,  snatched  her away, and they
vanished then, immediately following  his  transformation  into  a  kind  of
living Trump.
     As  I fled the burning, crumbling Keep there at the Citadel of the Four
Worlds, a falling timber caused me to dodge to my right, trapping  me  in  a
cul-de-sac  of  crashed masonry and burning beams. A dark metal ball flashed
past me then, seeming to grow as it moved. It struck  the  wall  and  passed
through  it,  leaving a hole one could dive through-a hint I was not slow in
taking. Outside I jumped the moat, using my Logrus extensions to knock aside
a section of fence and a score of troops, before I turned back and  shouted,
"Mandor!"
     "Right here," came his soft voice from behind my left shoulder.
     I  turned  in  time  to  see him catch a metal ball, which bounced once
before us and dropped into his extended hand.
     He brushed ashes from his black vest and ran a hand through  his  hair.
Then he smiled and turned back toward the burning Keep.
     "You've  kept  your  promise  to  the Quecn," he remarked, "and I don't
believe there's anything more for you here. Shall we go now?"
     "Jasra's still inside," I answered, "having it out with Sharu."
     "I thought you were done with her."
     I shook my head.
     "She still knows a lot of things I don't. Things I'll be needing."
     A tower of flame began to  rear  itself  above  the  Keep,  halted  and
hovered a moment, heaved itself higher.
     "I  didn't  realize,"  he  said. "She does seem to want control of that
fountain fairly badly. If we were to snatch her away now, that fellow  Sharu
will claim it. Does that matter?"
     "If we don't snatch her away, he may kill her." Mandor shrugged.
     "I've  a  feeling  she'll  take  him.  Would  you care to place a small
wager?"
     "Could be you're right," I said, watching  the  fountain  continue  its
climb  skyward,  following another pause. I gestured toward it. "Thing looks
like an oil gusher. I hope the winner knows how to  cap  it-if  there  is  a
winner.  Neither  one  of  them  may  last much longer, the way the place is
coming apart."
     He chuckled.
     "You underestimate the forces they've generated to protect themselves,"
he said. And you know it isn't all that easy  for  one  sorcerer  to  do  in
another  by  sorcerous means. However, you've a point there when it comes to
the inertia of the mundane. With your permission . . . ?"
     I nodded.
     With a quick underhand toss he cast the metal  ball  across  the  ditch
toward  the  burning  building.  It  struck  the ground and with each bounce
thereafrer it seemed to increase in size. It  produced  a  cymballike  crash
each  time  it  hit,  entirely  out of proportion with its apparent mass and
velocity, and this sound increased in volume on each successive  bounce.  It
passed  then  into  the burning, tottering ruin that was the near end of the
Keep and for several moments was gone from sight.
     I was about to ask him what was going on when I saw  the  shadow  of  a
large ball pass before the opening through which I had fled. The flames-save
for  the  central  tower  from the broken Fount-began to subside, and a deep
rumbling sound came from within.  Moments  later  an  even  larger  circular
shadow  passed,  and  I  began  to feel the rumbling through the soles of my
boots.
     A wall tumbled. Shortly thereafter part of another wall fell.  I  could
see  inside fairly clearly Through the dust and smoke the image of the giant
ball passed again. The flames were snuffed. My Logrus vision  still  granted
me  glimpses  of  the shifting lines of power which flowed between Jasra and
Sharu.
     Mandor extended a hand. A minute or so later a small  metal  ball  came
bouncing our way, and he caught it. "Let's head back," he said. "It would be
a shame to miss the end."
     We  passed  through  one  of the many gaps in the fence, and sufficient
rubble filled the ditch at one point for us to walk across on it. I spent  a
barrier spell then, to keep the re-forming troops of the prenuses and out of
our way for a time.
     Entering  through the broken wall, I saw that Jasra stood with her back
to the tower of fire, her arms upraised. Streaks of  sweat  lined  her  face
zebra  through  a  mask  of soot, and I could feel the pulsing of the forces
which passed through her body. About ten feet above  her,  face  purple  and
head  twisted  to  one  side  as  if his neck were broken, Sharu hung in the
middle of  the  air.  To  the  untutored  he  might  have  seemed  magically
levitated.  My  Logrus sight gave me view of the line of force from which he
hung suspended, however, victim of  what  might,  I  suppose,  be  termed  a
magical lynching.
     "Bravo,"  Mandor stated, clapping his hands slowly and softly together.
"You see, Merlin? I'd have won that bet."
     "You always were a better judge of talent than I was," I acknowledged.
     ". . . and swear to serve me," I overheard Jasra saying.  Sharu's  lips
moved.
     "And swear to serve you," he gasped.
     She lowered her arms slowly, and the line of force which held him began
to lengthen.  As he descended toward the Keep's cracked floor; her left hand
executed a gesture similar to one I had once  seen  an  orchestra  conductor
employ  in  encouraging  the  woodwinds, and a great gout of fire came loose
from the Fountain, fell upon him, washed over him, and passed on  down  into
the ground. Flashy, though I didn't quite see the point . . .
     His  slow descent continued, as if someone in the sky were trolling for
crocodiles. I discovered myself holding my breath as  his  feet  neared  the
ground, in sympathetic anticipation of the eased pressure on his neck. This,
however, did not come to pass. When his feet reached the ground, they passed
on  into  it, and his descent continued, as if he were an occulted hologram.
He sank past his ankles and up to his knees  and  kept  going.  I  could  no
longer  tell whether he was breathing. A soft litany of commands rolled from
Jasra's lips, and sheets of flame periodically separated themselves from the
Fountain and splashed over him. He  sank  past  his  waist  and  up  to  his
shoulders  and  slightly  beyond.  When only his head remained visible, eyes
open but unfocused, she executed another hand move. went,  and  his  journey
into the earth was halted.
     "You  are  now the guardian of the Fount," she stated, "answerable only
to me. Do you acknowledge this?"
     The darkened lips writhed.
     "Yes," came a whispered reply.
     "Go now and bank the fires," she ordered. "Commence your tenure."
     The head seemed to nod at the same time it began sinking again. After a
moment only a cottony tuft of hair remained, and an instant later the ground
swallowed this, too. The line of force vanished.
     I cleared my throat. At the sound Jasra let her arms  fall  and  turned
toward me. She was smiling faintly.
     "Is he alive or dead?" I asked, and then added, "Academic curiosity."
     "I'm  not  really  certain,"  she  responded.  "But a little of both, I
think. Like the rest of us."
     " `Guardian of the Fount,' " I reflected. "Interesting existence."
     "Beats being a coatrack," she observed. "I daresay."
     "I suppose you feel I owe you some gratitude now, for - my restoratin,"
she stated.
     I shrugged.
     "To tell you the truth, I've other things to think about," I said.
     "You wanted an end to the feud," she said, "and  I  wanted  this  place
back.  I  still  have no kind thoughts toward Amber, but I am willing to say
we're even."
     "I'll settle for that," I told her. "And there is a small loyalty I may
share with you."
     She studied me through narrowed eyes for a moment, then smiled.
     "Don't worry about Luke," she said.
     "But I must. That son of a bitch Daft-"
     She continued to smile.
     "Do you know something I don't?" I asked.
     "Many things," she replied.
     "Anything you'd care to share?"
     "Knowledge is a marketable commodity,"  she  observed,  as  the  ground
shook  slightly  and  the fiery tower swayed. "I'm offering to help your son
and you're offering to sell me the information on how to  go  ab...
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