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    King's Blades 03 - Sky of Swords

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    unison.

      "Not nearly as well," Lothaire added.

      "They will answer a call from here when they might

      not--"

      "Besides," said Jongleur, "other people handling the

      swords will weaken the personality imprints."

      "Then start!" Audley shouted. "No

      arguments!" That command was directed at Malinda.

      It was crazy. The lancers might arrive before

      they had finished their first attempt, and a new

      invocation almost never worked on the first try. The

      Queen's Men would be trapped; she would be taken

      prisoner again or just quietly murdered. Flight

      was the only sane course. But Audley rushed

      her over to the center, where Savary and Charente were

      busily wrapping rope around the great anvil.

      She sat on it, then changed her mind and knelt

      instead. The conjurers wanted the swords upright; and

      as it was obviously not possible to plant them in the

      ground when the floor was solid rock, they set

      them in the rope binding. She sat back on her

      heels within a wall of steel: Sleight,

      Sorrow, Suasion, Leech, Farewell,

      Justice, Master, Inkling. She thought of

      Sword, which had been lost in the confusion and was

      probably somewhere at the bottom of the Gran. The

      men lined up as they had been rehearsed, one at

      each point; outside the octogram they should be

      relatively safe. Lothaire handed out the

      scripts. There was some cursing as the men peered at

      them in the uncertain, flickering light. For some

      clandestine reason, sorcerers always wrote

      spells on scrolls, which tended to roll up at

      inconvenient moments.

      "I will summon Bandit to Suasion,"

      Jongleur said. "Please read off the

      names you are assigned."

      "Sir Chandos to Master ..."

      "Sir Stalwart to Sleight ..."

      And so on around the octogram.

      "Thank you. Face toward me, if you please,

      Your Grace. This is death point. You have your

      lines ready?"

      She nodded. "Even if this doesn't work--and

      even more if it does ... Thank you all."

      "It is for us to thank you, Your Majesty,"

      Audley said. "We--"

      Jongleur cut him off, bellowing in a highly

      discordant voice. The s@eance had begun.

      Malinda had nothing to do until--unless--the

      dead appeared. Not being sensitive to spirits, she

      might have very little warning. The Forge was cold. Its

      bizarre acoustics sometimes made the eight

      voices reverberate and echo, and at others

      swallowed them like a winter's night. The men

      invoked time, revoked death. They summoned the

      dead by name, each in turn. They revoked death

      again, invoked air and fire to reassemble the souls.

      On and on, singly or in unison, back and forth

      across the octogram.

      She had memorized her invocation; it was very

      simple, little more than a plea to be taken back

      to the moment before the rampage began, before Radgar

      squeezed the trigger on the crossbow. That scene

      was burned into her memory--the Blades clustered

      around her father at the top of the steps, making him an

      impossible target, and then opening a way for her,

      exposing him. No one had thought of archery,

      Radgar had cleverly distracted all of them, as

      Durendal had pointed out.

      He had been a despot, King Ambrose, but

      Chivial had needed him, his iron will, his supple

      hand, his very devious mind. One word from her would

      save him and see Radgar sail away

      frustrated. Princess Dierda would become

      Queen Dierda and produce countless litters of

      princes to secure the succession, while she, the

      disgraced Malinda, rejected by a common pirate

      ... well she must just face a furious father and be

      married off to some other horror--not that Radgar had

      impressed her as a horror at all in the few

      minutes they had spoken. Queen Regent Martha

      had spoken very highly of him.

      The fires were dwindling. The Forge was growing

      darker and colder, very much colder. Goose bumps

      marched on her skin.

      The voices seemed locked in endless wheels of

      invocation, repeating and repeating the names: Chandos,

      come! Screwsley, come! Stalwart, come! Time

      had been revoked; perhaps it would never return.

      Heat had been revoked; she was freezing.

      The chanting had faded into the distance and the trickle

      of water had stopped. The glow of the fires had

      faded away, and yet the Forge was not dark, rather it

      seemed ... foggy? Was this what it was like to be blind?

      Even to recognize darkness must be a kind of

      seeing. Everything seemed hidden behind smoked

      glass, as if the very air were becoming opaque.

      She could not see the chanters, only ... only

      eyes looking down at her. Disembodied. A

      pair of eyes, a faint outline of a hand resting

      on Suasion's hilt ... More eyes, to right and

      left. Behind her? Yes, some there, also, staring down

      at her.

      Her mind went blank. She fumbled with the

      scroll with her invocation on it. Inevitably it

      rolled itself up; she unrolled it, and an icy

      breeze lifted it from her hand.

      Traitor! The voice was no more than a thought

      in her mind.

      "No!" she cried, struggling to remember what

      she must say. "Blades, you must save your

      ward--"

      This is the traitor.

      She betrayed us, said another.

      They were faint, insubstantial, no more than

      reflections on water, clustered menacingly all

      around her, hands on swords.

      Kill her. Take her mind. Twist,

      rend, scatter ...

      Icy touches, wind or fingers ...

      "No!" she screamed. "Save the King!

      Save your ward! There was a massacre. You

      died. Hundreds died." She had forgotten her

      text. She gabbled. "The baby prince died

      later and I was dispossessed." She wondered why

      the chanters were still wailing away in the distance. Could

      they not hear her screaming at the ghosts? "Take

      me back with you! Back to that moment and before. When

      I was walking back along the jetty--I will

      shout--"

      Traitor, traitor!

      Make her plead.

      Make her scream.

      She slew our ward. ...

      "I did not! I want to save him

      now, save you, all of you. Start again. I will shout

      a warning. You cannot shout, but I can. Take me

      back--"

      Make her suffer, suffer, suffer. ...

      "Sir Bandit!" she yelled. "Dian was

      left a widow. She wept for you, but she married

      another man."

      Dian? Must I remember Dian? That

      silent thought was Bandit's voice, all that was

      left of a fine man.

      "Take me back to the jetty! I will save you

      all."

      Ghostly anger.

      Brothers, she also was our ward, our ward's

      heir. That was Bandit. We swore,

      brothers.
    Let us trust her a little. If she

      fails us, we can still twist and rend.

      Ghostly murmurs of complaint ...

      "Yes, yes, please!" she shouted. "Quickly!

      To the jetty. The Usurper's men are coming."

      She betrayed Eagle! That was Chandos.

      "I didn't! Aid me and you will live again, the

      Blades will live again."

      Let us do what Leader says, brothers.

      ... That was young Stalwart. Remember our

      oaths.

      A surge of giddiness, of nausea ...

      Light? The fog brightened. A scent of water, the

      sea. A faint memory of rain. Grass under

      her feet.

      And screams, screaming people, screaming horses.

      "No!" she yelled. "This is too late. This

      is when you were dying."

      Ghostly moans and wails of despair:

      See, we fall! Madness! Shame! The

      eight wraiths were still with her, figures of mist

      around her, and apparently too engrossed in viewing

      their own deaths to heed her pleas.

      "Take me back! Back farther, before my

      father died. Back, farther back ..."

      Somewhere a new voice shouted, "Surrender in

      the name of King Neville!" and the distant chanting

      became shouting and clashing swords. The Yeomen

      had arrived at the Forge. More blood, more death.

      Malinda was in two places at once, two

      times at once. She was going to go mad. The

      conjurers had warned her. ...

      "Quickly!" she cried. "Spirits! Save the

      King! These are the last of your Order, save them.

      Take me back to give the warning!"

      Brothers, we must help her! Again, that was

      Bandit, and then she felt Chandos add his silent

      voice. And again Stalwart: She can save us.

      Another surge of giddiness, the anvil

      rocking, the grass moving under her feet, a misty

      rain in her face ... A smell of the sea

      filled her nostrils, and she stared up at two

      brilliantly green eyes.

      "How kind of him!" Radgar said angrily.

      "Such was not his opinion when we met twelve

      years ago. It seems he came very close

      to lying to you about our acquaintance. Would you agree that

      he was trying to deceive you?"

      Too soon! The spirits had placed her back

      on the longship as it still drifted aimlessly on the

      rain-speckled water. The crew sat in silence,

      watching their king interview his new bride. The

      oars were spread out like wings, motionless. She could not

      disembark yet.

      "An honest answer, my lady! Did your father

      deliberately hide from you the fact that he and I

      know each other personally?"

      She heard her own voice reply. "Perhaps he

      forgot--" In some far corner of her mind she could

      still register the screams and swords, back in ...

      in the Forge! Hard to relate to that and to this other

      place. Two places at once. Must not forget

      why she had come back. Soon she would disembark and

      warn her father that this green-eyed pirate was a

      monster. Must remember.

      The eight shades would be no further help--

      Killer! Monster! Oath breaker!

      Murderer! They were still there, but now their attention was

      all on the hated King of Baelmark. Liar!

      Deceiver! They flitted and flickered around him in

      frustrated, transparent fury, slashing at him

      with ghostly swords. Traitor! Traitor!

      Obviously neither Radgar himself nor any of the

      crew could see or hear them as Malinda could.

      Her mind was being ripped in pieces.

      "I am sure he did not!" Radgar

      snapped. "What other tricks did he use on

      you? What threats did he make to force you into this

      marriage?"

      Again her voice spoke for her--the other

      Malinda spoke for her. "Your Majesty, I

      wrote to you! I testified before the--"

      "Yes, you did, because I would not sign the

      treaty until I was given assurances that you were not

      being forced into a union you found distasteful.

      I must still hear it from your own lips."

      Thwack! Clang! Those were the terrible sound

      of crossbows. The Yeomen were shooting through the

      windows at the men trapped in the Forge and at

      Malinda herself. The quarrels rang from the stones.

      She was going to die there. The last of the Queen's

      Men were going to be picked off like fish in a

      barrel, dying around her corpse.

      "Your Grace ..." The multitude onshore

      had fallen silent, staring at the longship. They

      did not know what was going to happen, which was, er

      ... which was a murder. Someone, yes, her father ...

      "Why did you not wait for your two ladies

      to board?"

      "My lord husband, why don't we sail?"

      "Later!" he said angrily. "Because you knew

      they did not want to come? Because they had been forced

      into accompanying you? So what about you? You are

      happy at the prospect of spending the rest of your

      life in Baelmark bearing my children?"

      "I am honored to wed so fine a king!" Could this

      man really be as bad as he was painted? Yes,

      yes! That was why she had come back! Back from

      where? Remember! She was fading. The real

      Malinda was driving out the wraith from the

      octogram. She seemed to be losing power. She

      wanted to scream. Perhaps she was dead. Was that

      Audley screaming?

      "Oh, rubbish!" Radgar said. "You may be

      terrified or disgusted or shivering with excitement.

      You cannot possibly feel honored. I'm a

      slaver and a killer of thousands. But my mother was forced

      into her marriage, and I will not take you as my

      wife unless I am convinced that you are truly

      happy at the prospect. I think you were

      bludgeoned into it. Speak! Persuade me

      otherwise."

      He was bullying her, just like her father. "You

      call me a liar?" Without thinking, she swung.

      Her hand struck his cheek with a crack like an ax;

      with all her strength behind it, the blow made him

      stagger.

      The crew whooped and roared approval. The

      crowd ashore rumbled. She gasped with horror

      at her folly.

      The wraiths had gone.

      Radgar straightened up, rubbing his face, which was

      already turning pink. His eyes were wide with

      astonishment, and yet they shone with devilment. "Do

      that again!"

      The eight had gone; the chaos in the Forge

      continued. Yes, Audley screaming, and

      Lothaire ... and Malinda. Pain! ... More

      dead. And all of this was ultimately Radgar's

      fault--

      "Your Grace, I beg your--I can't

      imagine what--"

      "Do it again!" he said. "Go on, I dare you!"

      He offered his face.

      Dare her? How dare he dare her?

      Crack! Right hand last time, left hand this time.

      The sounds of the Forge stopped instantly, and she

      had a sudden vision of History like a huge

      rambunctious scroll breaking loose and rolling

      itself up. ...

     
    Radgar had been expecting the slap, but she was

      still fast enough to connect. He reeled back against the

      side of the ship. Her hand stung. Spirits! What

      would he do to her?

      The pirates cheered, howled, stamped feet, and

      shouted obviously lewd suggestions. The King

      reached out and gripped Malinda's shoulders. The

      marks of her fingers were clearly visible on his

      face, yet he was grinning widely, like a boy.

      "You have convinced me! No one bullies you

      into anything. Make a wake, helmsman! I have

      a bride to take home."

      Leofric yelled, "Yea, lord!" and something

      else in Baelish. His mallet hit the rail,

      the oars dipped and bit. The ship leaped forward.

      Malinda staggered. Radgar folded her into an

      embrace and kissed her. He was not Dog.

      The scroll, rolling faster, ever faster, ever

      shorter ...

      But the ship was moving! She had not done what she

      intended, but she had done enough. Radgar had

      discarded his planned assassination. SHE HAD

      WON! It was enough. Ambrose would live. There

      would be no Wetshore Massacre. The eight

      wraiths would live again. All of them would live.

      Dian would stay married to Bandit. There would be no

      massacre at Sycamore Square.

      Granville would never rule. Horrible

      Lambskin would never rise above Grand

      Inquisitor. Courtney would rot away in

      Mayshire. Neville would never rule.

      Malinda would never rule, but she had beaten them

      all in the end! TRIUMPH! Ambrose might

      go on for years. Dog would live again--she would

      never meet him and even if they did

      meet, they would mean nothing to each other, but he would

      not die for her. Take back your life,

      darling, and find happiness. ... The man kissing

      her was not Dog, but it was with a sense of farewell that

      she returned his embrace, putting fervor and her

      heart into it. Good-bye ...

      Click! The scroll closed.

      Radgar released her, eyes like green fire.

      "My lady, you honor me!"

      "Your Grace, I am so ashamed!" Surely

      ladies did not behave like that when they were being

      kissed? What an astonishing slobbery business!

      And her fingers digging into him like that! What must he

      think of her? "I swear I will never--"

      He misunderstood. "Don't swear! Any time

      you think I deserve a good whack, whack away!

      Always, always tell me when I am wrong, because that

      is what I need more than anything. Even the friends

      of my boyhood will not tell me what they really

      think now, because they all have too much to lose. Be

     


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