Mercedes Lackey - Bard's Tale 03 - Prison of Souls.rtf

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PRISON OF SOULS

This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in

this book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or

incidents is purely coincidental.

Copyright © 1993 by Mercedes Lackey and Mark Shepherd

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or

portions thereof in any form.

A Baen Books Original

The Bard's Tale characters and descriptions are the sole property

of Electronic Arts and are used by permission. The Bard's Tale is a

registered trademark of Electronic Arts.

Baen Publishing Enterprises

P.O. Box 1403

Riverdale, NY 10471

ISBN: 0-671-72193-3

Cover art by Larry Elmore

First printing, November 1993

Distributed by Simon & Schuster

1230 Avenue of the Americas

New York, NY 10020

Printed in the United States of America

 

 

 

Chapter I

"Let's begin," Naitachal said, casting his black cloak to

one side and raising his practice sword in salute. "And

see if you can get through this drill without tripping

over yourself." He smiled, softening the sarcasm just a

little. Few ever saw a Dark Elf smile and survived to

tell about it; but Naitachal's smile meant only what

any human's would, and it warmed his cold blue eyes

in a way that no other Dark Elf could match.

His apprentice Alaire returned the salute with his

practice sword, and stifled a sardonic reply.

This time, Master Naitachal, you'd better watch out,

Alaire thought as he checked his footing on the coarse

gravel. I've been practicing while you were away!

They faced each other on the small practice field of

the Dark Elf's modest estate. Alaire was a head taller

than his mentor, but Naitachal had decades of experi-

ence. Both were slender, rather than heavily muscled.

At high noon the sun shone directly from above, a dis-

advantage to neither swordsmen.

The contest began, a graceful dance of flesh and

wood, their oak swords clacking away in the bright

sun. Alaire lunged early, catching Naitachal by sur-

prise. But the elf parried and thrust easily, slipping out

of the trap the youth was setting up, trying to pin the

elf against a tree. Alaire charged, using his blade like a

broadsword, and using his greater reach to force his

Master to the edge of the field. Naitachal tucked and

rolled, becoming a blur of black motion that vanished

behind Alaire before he turned, then reappeared at

the periphery of Alaire's vision.

"I thought you said no magic!" Alaire protested,

fielding a counterattack with difficulty.

"None used," Naitachal said smoothly. "Pay atten-

tion to the sword, lad."

Alaire yielded to Naitachal's powerful, but meas-

ured thrusts, hoping to gain control of the contest. The

Dark Elf tripped and wavered momentarily as he lost

his balance, but gained it back quickly.

"Good move," Naitachal said, as their weapons

clacked; the contest fell into a mesmerizing rhythm as

Alaire probed for a weakness in the Dark Elf's

defense. 'Ten more of those and we might come out

even."

The bardling grinned; he Liked how his teacher

turned praise into a demand for more and better

effort. It kept the game interesting.

Alaire sensed that the Dark Elf was intentionally

ignoring his weaker left side. Only yesterday Naitachal

had drilled him endlessly, attacking on his left, until

that side ached. Now... nothing. Even as he consid-

ered this, Naitachal sidestepped off the field, ducked

behind a tree and came out on the weaker left.

Alaire was ready. Instead of backpedaling he lunged

again. The tip of the sword touched the edge of Nai-

tachal's black tunic, but no more; the elf had

sidestepped. Alaire cursed softly, catching a glint of

amusement in Naitachal's dark blue eyes.

Anger surged briefly over him as the swords clashed,

though Naitachal was only doing what any Master

should. The pace of the combat increased. The two

moved back towards the center of the practice field,

kicking up dust in the process. Naitachal was not going

to relinquish his control of the combat that easily. The

Dark Elf's breathing was a little more labored now.

After first faking high to lure Alaire's point away from

his intended target, the elf came in low with his sword.

Alaire deflected it, knocking the elf's swordtip into the

dirt. If he'd parried a little harder, he might have

disarmed his Master, and that would have been a first.

Too easy. Far too easy, Alaire thought, wondering

what distracted his mentor today. Normally he would

have landed me on my backside by now. He knew he

was an average swordsman; Naitachal was a master,

with uncounted years of practice behind him. Was

something wrong? Had the elf learned something on

his last journey to cause him worry?

The bardlings thoughts wandered slightly, enough

to give the Dark Elf an advantage.

"Look!" Naitachal shouted, pointing with his free

hand. "A comet!"

Alaire looked without thinking, following Nai-

tachal's gaze and pointing finger, to something above

and behind him. As his attention wavered, Naitachal

dropped his own blade to the side and shouldered into

him. The next second, he was sitting in the dust in an

undignified heap.

Naitachal regarded him calmly with disappoint-

ment and faint, elven amusement. "I can't believe you

fell for that, bardling."

"Not fair!" Alaire protested weakly, somehow man-

aging to laugh at himself. Boy, was that stupid. Fell, or

rather stepped, right into that one. "I was winning and

you cheated."

"If you were really winning you wouldn't be sitting

there like that," Naitachal said. "We're getting to the

point in your training when almost anything is fair.

The real world is like that. Assassins," he added, his

sword waving in the sunlight as if to punctuate the

sentence, "will go to any lengths to kill their mark."

"What would an assassin want with me?" he replied,

but only half seriously. Someone might want me dead,

if only to get at my father. Being the eighth son of the

King put him in an awkward position. Derek, the first

born and oldest brother, would almost certainly

become king one day. The other brothers were train-

ing for important government or military positions.

Yet, the King had never planned on having so many

sons. As he once half-complained to the Queen, any

other woman would have produced at least a few

daughters along the way. Eventually he ran out of

things to do with them.

Alaire, being the eighth and youngest son, enjoyed

the rare luxury of choosing his life's work. He had been

a very precocious child, and at six, he had decided to

become a Bard. Fortunately, Naitachal was an old

friend of the King as well as a loyal friend to many

generations of the family. No one questioned who his

Master would be.

This had not been a childish whim, but a real voca-

tion. Naitachal had been able to assure the King that

his son's talent was considerable, and that all would be

well.

In many ways, his choice of lifework made him a

less likely mark. The older brothers would certainly

make better targets than he would. However, Alaire

could not ignore the possibility that he could be sin-

gled out by young toughs looking for a fight Naitachal

had often pointed this out when he was sitting in the

dust after a thorough trouncing.

For a year Alaire had trained under the King's Bard

Laureate, Gawaine, and under his guidance convinced

everyone that he had an exceptional degree of musi-

cal, and magical, talent. However, Gawaine was

getting no younger; he had other students besides

Alaire, as well as the enormous burden demanded by

his office of Laureate. Gawaine eventually found it

increasingly difficult to keep up with the workload.

Since Alaire was hardly an ordinary, common student,

Gawaine had known he ran the risk of favoring him

over the other bardlings. It would have been a situ-

ation fraught with trouble for a younger man than

Gawaine; for the Laureate, it was something he simply

did not have the strength to deal with.

By this time Alaire was eight, and he had heard

enough tales about Naitachal to be both excited and

alarmed by having him as his Master. Though he had

"always" assumed Naitachal would be his teacher, he

certainly didn't know what to expect from the mysteri-

ous elf; the Necromancers becoming a Bard was

bizarre enough. He had never seen a Dark Elf before;

he'd had no notion that his father had used the name

"Dark Elf" so literally.

In the bright, airy colors of the court, Naitachal had

stood out like a drop of ink on a white lace tablecloth.

The black cloak he wore habitually flowed about him

as if it were liquid, and the tunic, hose and boots

seemed to absorb whatever light hit them, as if the

Bard's body was a place that canceled daylight. Top-

ping the darkness was his straight, silver hair that hung

down his back, long as all elves wore it, and swept

gracefully from side to side as he turned. His brilliant

blue eyes, twin pools of color in the smooth black skin

of that ageless face, burned right through Alaire when

they first met. They distracted him, even now, during

sword practice. Alaire soon found out Naitachal was

no ordinary Dark Elf, if there could be such a thing.

The somber darkness that seemed to follow him wher-

ever he went was only deceptive camouflage; within

lurked an absurdly cheerful Bard, a master of his

trade, as well as a teacher of other, more practical

skills.

Naitachal had often reminded him of his royal obli-

gations and duties, and the possibility that one day he

might be nearer the throne than he was now. How-

ever, this was the first time Naitachal had mentioned

assassins.

It disturbed him at first, but after a moment of

reflection, he shrugged it off. Sometimes the meaning

of the elf's words didn't become clear for days or even

weeks.

He's probably talking about years from now, when I

join Fathers court. Right now, the prospect of Alaire's

ever having to deal with an assassin seemed vague.

How would an assassin get out here near Fenrich, this

remote village on the northeast coast? And once here,

how could he ever be less than conspicuous?

Alaire loved this place, its peace and quiet, although

he knew it would probably drive his brothers mad with

boredom to stay here for more than a day. It seemed

the ideal location to learn Bardic skills as well as

magic; after all, there were few distractions here to

speak of.

Naitachal had chosen this location to settle, in part

because of the isolation, but also because the village

folk readily accepted him as himself. His money was

good, after all. In times of trouble Naitachal had gen-

erously given his time and magical expertise, winning

considerable popularity among the townsfolk.

Alaire stood and brushed the dust off his breeches,

nursing some pride back into his damaged ego.

"Living out here on the edge of the kingdom

doesn't change your lineage," Naitachal reminded

him. "There's always the chance some enemy of your

father's may want to kidnap you and hold you for ran-

som. This is more likely to happen, though the same

people often kidnap or kill with equal indifference."

"Perhaps," he said, acknowledging Naitachal's

warning, but not really believing he could ever be a

target. At least, not while he was a mere bardling, and

under Naitachal's supervision. First, so few people

knew he even existed, and even fewer knew he was

way out here, Next Door to Nowhere. He didn't like

the sudden serious turn the conversation had taken,

but then what could one expect from a Dark Elf ?

Despite Naitachal's cheer he sometimes lapsed into

the gloom and doom of his own kind. The bardling

had met only a few Dark Elves, who were far more

morbid than his Master had ever been.

No, it was probably just that Naitachal was having

one of those relapses into depression. Probably no one

remembered his existence, outside his own family.

Alaire could almost forget his royal blood out here on

the outskirts of the kingdom.

It's a good thing I'm the eighth son. I know I could

never handle being king. Lucky Derek, he has the

throne and all its responsibilities to look forward to.

By now he must feel like an actor in a play, with all his

lines and actions written out for him.

Alaire struggled to his feet and answered Nai-

tachal's salute with one of his own.

"We aren't finished yet," the Dark Elf said.

As if I was worried we might not be, Alaire thought,

heeding the challenge nevertheless.

Naitachal struck with a vengeance, taking Alaire by

surprise. What's gotten into him? The boy thought as

he frantically defended himself. The elf was attacking

his left side, just as he had the day before.

He did his best, but it became painfully evident that

either Naitachal had been toying with him earlier, or

else he had been distracted by something and was

now leveling his full concentration on the bout. Within

moments, Alaire was struggling just to keep from

being scored on.

Within a few breaths, it was obvious that he was not

going to manage even that.

"Hit," Naitachal declared; the swordpoint wavered

just above his heart. "You're dead."

Alaire froze, then dropped his swordpoint to the

ground.

They both bowed, formally, as the etiquette of

Swordmaster and pupil demanded. Then both

grinned, and Alaire wiped sweat from his forehead

with his sleeve.

"Let's take a break," Naitachal said, "then back to

work."

"I was about ready for a breather," Alaire admitted,

omitting the real reason he wanted to stop: he wanted

a drink to wash away the dust he'd eaten.

They set their wooden swords on a small rack near

the practice field and went to the well beside the front

door. Dipping a ladle into the bucket of ice-cold water,

Alaire drank deeply, clearing his mouth of the dirt.

Naitachal drank too, though he didn't seem winded

or even truly tired. His folk have a constitution we

humans can only dream of, the bardling thought with

envy, at the same time uttering a brief prayer to the

gods that be that he would never have to fight an elf

for real. The practices are hell enough!

Naitachal's age was as much an enigma now as it

had been when Alaire first met him. From some of the

old songs and tales, Alaire learned that he had been

around in King Amber's time. Even then he was old by

human standards.

Now's a good time to ask him again, Alaire thought.

He might even answer. He'd met only with annoying

silence every other time he'd inquired.

"You know, you seem to be holding up well for

someone as, well, old as you," Alaire ventured, cau-

tiously. Naitachal frowned; but then, he usually did

when that question came up. The bardling's words still

came out wrong, as if his mouth assumed a will of its

own whenever he asked something personal about his

Master. Inwardly, Alaire winced. He didn't want to

annoy the elf, particularly when the swords were

within reach. The next bout might be even harder!

"How old are you, Master?"

The elf took his time answering. Alaire wondered if

he had ignored what had become a rather rude ques-

tion, or had chosen not to hear it.

"You're all of nineteen years old, young bardling,"

Naitachal began softly, after drinking from the ladle.

His eyes softened, and Alaire sighed in relief. "A mere

infant. A toddler. At best, a child." He smiled wistfully,

as if considering a secret, amusing thought. "I am old

by your standards."

Alaire waited, but the elf did not answer.

"Well?" Alaire asked.

"Older than you think," he said, "and not as old as

the hills or the trees." That seemed to be the end of

that.

The boy shrugged, deciding to drop that particular

line of questioning, but his curiosity still burned. Nai-

tachal served King Amber. From what Father told me,

he was quite the hero. He mentioned that he was

involved with doing away with Carlotta. He shivered

whenever he thought of the evil princess who had

tried to seize the throne by kidnapping the rightful

heir, Prince Amber. The story had real meaning in his

family. His descent from Amber gave it more impact

than "just a tale." This particular bedtime story had

places where Father would say, "And then Amber

used to say..." or "Gawaine told me that Kevin ..."

Carlotta failed, and then vanished. Years later she

reappeared and hatched a plot involving Count Vol-

mar and a book of Bardic spells. Gawaine's own

teacher, Kevin, had searched for the book in Volmar's

library, found it, and used it to defeat her.

That was all Alaire knew about the incident. The

royal family seldom discussed it, even among relatives,

and kept the details to themselves. Alaire knew there

was some kind of scandal the royal family wanted to

keep hushed up, but he didn't know the details.

Perhaps Naitachal knows.

"I feel more comfortable with the sword now, Mas-

ter Naitachal," Alaire ventured. "It's becoming a part

of me, as you said it would, I'm sorry I came to you

with such holes in my education. My brother Grant

promised me training, but he became so involved with

his own he must have forgotten."

Naitachal ignored him. Alaire knew from experi-

ence, however, that he wasn't missing anything.

Alaire scratched his head a little; his hair was

sweat-damp and his scalp itched. "Still, I never expected

weapons training when Father sent me here. Is this the

kind of fighting you used when you defeated Carlotta?"

At the mention of the evil princess, Naitachal

turned slowly. The look he gave Alaire turned the boy's

sp...

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