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    A Flame in Hali


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      Table of Contents

      Title Page

      Copyright Page

      Dedication

      Acknowledgements

      AUTHOR’S NOTE

      BOOK I

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      BOOK II

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Chapter 12

      Chapter 13

      BOOK III

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      Chapter 18

      Chapter 19

      Chapter 20

      Chapter 21

      Chapter 22

      Chapter 23

      BOOK IV

      Chapter 24

      Chapter 25

      Chapter 26

      Chapter 27

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      Chapter 32

      Chapter 33

      BOOK V

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      Chapter 43

      Chapter 44

      Chapter 45

      EPILOGUE

      Clingfire Attack!

      Dyannis threw her head back to see the third aircar bearing down on them.

      NO!

      She trembled with the power coursing through her. Memory stirred, branded into the very core of her laran. A dragon, a creature of frozen unholy fire, bent over a crowd of lawless men and turned their resolution into groveling terror. The dragon was inside her—it was her—

      It was their only chance. It was the one thing she swore she would never do again.

      Oh, sweet mother, Blessed Cassilda—help me!

      As if in answer to her prayer, Dyannis sensed her brother’s steadfast presence, the strength and complexity of his trained talent, and something beyond him, a luminous pressure. For an instant out of time, her fear disappeared. She soared upon a current of purest light, utterly at peace.

      Varzil dropped the shield.

      MARION ZIMMER BRADLEY From DAW Books:

      SWORD AND SORCERESS I-XXI

      THE NOVELS OF DARKOVER

      EXILE’S SONG

      THE SHADOW MATRIX

      TRAITOR’S SUN

      The Clingfire Trilogy

      (With Deborah J. Ross)

      THE FALL OF NESKAYA

      ZANDRU’S FORGE

      A FLAME IN HALI

      Special omnibus editions:

      HERITAGE AND EXILE

      The Heritage of Hastur | Sharra’s Exile

      THE AGES OF CHAOS

      Stormqueen! | Hawkmistress!

      THE SAGA OF THE RENUNCIATES

      The Shattered Chain | Thendara House

      City of Sorcery

      THE FORBIDDEN CIRCLE

      The Spell Sword | The Forbidden Tower

      A WORLD DIVIDED

      The Bloody Sun | The Winds of Darkover

      Star of Danger

      DARKOVER: FIRST CONTACT

      Darkover Landfall | The Forbidden Tower

      TO SAVE A WORLD

      The World Wreckers | The Planet Savers

      Copyright © 2004 by The Marion Zimmer Bradley Literary Works Trust

      All rights reserved.

      DAW Books Collectors No. 1299.

      DAW Books are distributed by Penguin Group (USA).

      All characters in this book are fictitious.

      Any resemblance to persons living or dead is coincidental.

      The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal, and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

      eISBN : 978-1-101-11814-6

      First printing, August

      http://us.penguingroup.com

      To Ben and Trude Burke,

      visionaries for peace

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      Special thanks, once again, to my editor, Betsy Wollheim, to Ann Sharp of The Marion Zimmer Bradley Literary Trust, to Sherwood Smith, and to a multitude of others who have shown me how life can be lived with dignity, respect, and serenity.

      DISCLAIMER

      The observant reader may note discrepancies in some details from more contemporary tales. This is undoubtedly due to the fragmentary histories which survive to the present day. Many records were lost during the years following the Ages of Chaos and Hundred Kingdoms and others distorted by oral tradition.

      AUTHOR’S NOTE

      Immensely generous with “her special world” of Darkover, Marion loved encouraging new writers. We were already friends when she began editing the DARKOVER and SWORD & SORCERESS anthologies. The match between my natural literary “voice” and what she was looking for was extraordinary. She loved to read what I loved to write, and she often cited “The Death of Brendan Ensolare” (FOUR MOONS OF DARKOVER, DAW, 1988) as one of her favorites.

      As Marion’s health declined, I was invited to work with her on one or more Darkover novels. We decided that rather than extend the story of “modern” Darkover, we would return to the Ages of Chaos. Marion envisioned a trilogy beginning with the Hastur Rebellion and A FLAME IN HALI, the enduring friendship between Varzil the Good and Carolin Hastur, culminating in the signing of the Compact. While I scribbled notes as fast as I could, she would sit back, eyes alight, and begin a story with, “Now, the Hasturs tried to control the worst excesses of laran weapons, but there were always others under development . . .” or “Of course, Varzil and Carolin had been brought up on tales of star-crossed lovers who perished in the destruction of Neskaya . . .”

      Here is that tale.

      Deborah J. Ross

      PROLOGUE

      Rumail Deslucido had cheated death before, but now it had come for him at last. He lay on a cot, as sagging and creaking as his failing body, in the dingy room that had been his refuge and his prison, and waited. Each breath had become a battle to suck air into his scarred lungs. With each passing moment, his heart stuttered as if it, too, trembled with the exhaustion of having lived too long.

      The door opened and the girl from the village stepped in, carrying a basket of bread and an earthenware jar. He sipped the broth as she spooned it for him, then lay back. She spoke to him, things of little consequence, not worth the effort of listening. Her voice faded, mingling with the memories of other voices. Sometimes he spoke with men long dead—his royal brother . . .

      Ah! There was the unbowed golden head, the eyes brimming with fire and victory. Once again, they stood together on a balcony while below them, the white-and-black-diamond-patterned banners of Deslucido rippled in the breeze. The morning sun burnished the King’s hair to a natural crown. He spoke, and his words painted visions in Rumail’s mind, hope for a time when these Hundred Kingdoms might be united into a single harmonious realm. No more incessant warfare, no more petty bickering while men bled out their lives upon the ruined fields. Rumail’s laran talents would be celebrated, his place as Keeper of his own Tower, so long denied by those head-blind purists, secure. . . .

      The bright sky darkened, the vision blew away like winter-dried leaves, and now Rumail stood on the battlefield at Drycreek, where his brother’s army had clashed with that of King Rafael Hastur. His brother’s soldiers paused to gaze skyward. Hov
    ering above the enemy, Rumail’s mechanical birds released showers of glowing green particles, as eerily beautiful as they were deadly: bonewater dust, forged by the concentrated power of Gifted minds, bought at great cost from a renegade circle.

      Even as Rumail watched the luminous poison drift toward the unsuspecting enemy, he wished there had been some other way to stop the Hastur King and his witch-born niece, Taniquel Hastur-Acosta. By treachery and psi-wielding servants of their own, they had turned the tide of battle.

      I had no choice. None of us had a choice.

      Rumail had relived the scene a thousand times, from the first moment victory slipped away with the sudden shift of the wind that blew the bonewater dust back upon their own forces. As if it were yesterday, he remembered that mad scramble of retreat, men and beasts perishing within a heartbeat, with thousands more doomed to a lingering death. He himself had narrowly escaped. Wounded, barely able to maintain a psychic shield against the toxic dust, he had clung to the merest shred of hope.

      He should have perished there, immobilized and helpless. But he did not. He had escaped death then, as he had before, as he would again. The gods had another destiny for him, not as one more nameless body on a field no one dared cross for a generation or more.

      Now, in his memory, he stood high upon a Tower balcony, wrapped in the crimson robes of a Keeper. At last, he commanded a circle of his own, and no matter how its workers might despise him, they would obey. Their Tower was sworn to his brother the King, and it was by his orders they now mounted their attack upon a Hastur Tower.

      Screams echoed through the caverns of Rumail’s mind. Around him, walls shuddered under blasts of psychic lightning as each Tower unleashed its terrible weapons upon the other. Stones burst into unnatural flame. He sensed the dying minds of his own workers and, echoed from afar, those of their enemies. Blue flames shot skyward, rocking the foundations.

      Rumail remembered stumbling from the ruined Tower, wandering in a daze, now a disembodied spirit in the Overworld, now ragged and half-starved, through the wild lands where none knew him.

      Now the memories flickered through his mind like candles guttering in a winter wind. He looked upon the homely village woman he had taken to wife, gazed down upon the rounded face of a newborn son, then another and another. The years blurred together. He looked upon the bright eyes of his sons and his own vengeance mirrored in them. Felt a distant wrench as his oldest son’s mind flared and fell into silence. Saw the weathered face of a traveling tinker, bringing news that King Rafael Hastur had died under mysterious circumstances.

      Heard the voice of his second son: “Father, Felix Hastur of Carcosa has claimed the throne and he has a healthy heir, his nephew Carolin.”

      “Then Carolin, too, must die,” Rumail had said, “so that their line be obliterated. I will send my youngest son, my Eduin, to Arilinn Tower, there to train as a laranzu, the perfect weapon against this Hastur Prince.”

      Eduin . . .

      “La! There!” said the village girl, smoothing the hair back from Rumail’s forehead. “Feeling better, are we?” He had no energy to favor her with a response, for the past pressed even closer now.

      The face of his youngest son drifted behind Rumail’s closed eyelids and it seemed that once more he wandered in delirium, his body racked to the core with lung fever, his lungs weakened by his battlefield ordeal. When word reached Arilinn of his illness, Eduin had rushed to his side. Rumail felt the touch of his son’s trained laran.

      Father, please! You must live, if only to see yourself avenged upon the Hasturs!

      Live . . . he heard his own mental voice, dim and far off. Yes, I must live. And make sure that next time, you do not fail me.

      Eduin had cringed under the mental onslaught. His weakness, his guilt shone through. Rumail stormed through each memory, each moment of betrayal. When Carolin spent a season training at Arilinn Tower, Eduin had a dozen chances to strike—a slip of the knife, a fall from a balcony, a heart suddenly stopped as his fingers closed around Carolin’s starstone. . . . At each crucial moment, however, something had stayed his hand.

      It wasn’t my fault! Eduin had cried. Always, Varzil Ridenow interfered, suspected me, protected Carolin. . . .

      No excuses! With all the force of his Tower-trained mind, Rumail struck. Eduin, caught between desperation and hope, was without defense. Rumail penetrated his son’s mind, deep into the core of his laran talent, grasped and twisted. . . .

      You will know no rest or joy until Carolin Hastur and everyone who aided him is dead.

      When the deed was done, Rumail had opened his eyes to see his two remaining sons, Eduin the laranzu and Gwynn the assassin. Eduin had become his instrument, wedded utterly to his purpose.

      Rumail sent his sons back into the world. “Find the child of Taniquel! Kill Carolin Hastur and anyone who stands in your way!

      Fragments of laran memories rose in Rumail’s memory, things he had sensed from afar, linked to the minds of his sons. Gwynn struggled on a muddy riverbank with Carolin, then locked in a psychic battle with Varzil Ridenow, who had foiled the assassination attempt. Varzil’s mind pressed against his: Who sent you? Who?

      Even now, Rumail heard the echoes of Gwynn’s final, anguished thoughts: WE WILL BE AVENGED!

      From afar, Eduin surged with triumph as he uncovered the identity of Felicia Hastur-Acosta; his hands moved, setting a deadly trap-matrix; he fled the ruins of Hestral Tower, hunted . . . outlawed . . . Rumail could no longer tell whether these memories were Eduin’s or his own—the cold, the fear, the constant need to hide, to keep moving. . . .

      Father, I am here . . . waiting for you. . . .

      Rumail blinked, as one vision overlapped another. Gwynn beckoned to him, and behind that ghostly form stood another, the sons he had lost in his quest for vengeance. In each face, he saw the light of recognition and welcome. There his brother stood, golden and kingly, beside his own son and heir . . . there the general who had led them . . . there the men fallen under the bonewater dust. Waiting, all waiting for him to join them.

      I cannot die, not yet, not while Carolin Hastur still sits on his throne! What accursed sorcery guards him?

      Eduin’s shadowy form shimmered in the old man’s sight.

      You were right, my son. Without Varzil Ridenow, you would have succeeded.

      With the dregs of his strength, Rumail struggled for speech, but could not form the words. His vocal cords, like his body, had gone numb. Grayness lapped at him, hungering.

      We are waiting for you. . . .

      “Sir, you must rest.” A light voice, girlish.

      Rest. Soon enough. Rumail closed his eyes, summoning the laran that had once been his in full measure. He had trained at Neskaya Tower before its fall, before Varzil the Good had rebuilt it with the help of Carolin Hastur. He could have been a Keeper in his own right. Should have.

      No time for that now. His thoughts were becoming disjointed, falling into rust.

      The Hasturs. Must be destroyed, he sent. Kill them . . . kill them all! Across the leagues, he sensed Eduin’s response.

      Varzil Ridenow, Rumail insisted, even as his thoughts frayed into tatters. He is the key to Carolin’s power. Without his strength . . . Hastur will fall. . . .

      Yes, Eduin replied, with a hatred that mirrored Rumail’s own.

      Avenge us . . . the ghostly figures pressed even closer now, their voices growing as strong as if they stood before him. Join us . . .

      “Swear—” Rumail could not be sure whether he projected the command mentally or spoke it aloud. His breath whispered through his throat, the faintest of sighs. “Swear it will be done!”

      The grayness rose about him and the faces grew clearer, their skin and clothing as colorless as the landscape beyond. The Overworld closed its jaws about him, and this time there would be no return.

      I . . . swear . . .

      BOOK I

      1

      That year, the long Darkovan winter seemed to last forever. Month after month, ice clouds masked
    the swollen Bloody Sun. Snow fell, hardened like glass, and then fell again, until the compacted layers encased the land in armor. The passes through the Venza Hills above Thendara closed. Even traders, whose livelihood depended upon travel, lost all desire to venture beyond the city walls. Comyn lords and commoners alike barricaded themselves behind their doors, hunkering down for the season.

      Midwinter Festival came, and with it, a flurry of merrymaking. King Carolin Hastur threw open the doors of his great hall for a tenday, with music and feasting enough to lift the heart of the meanest street beggar. He had but lately moved his seat from Hali, where his grandfather had ruled, to the larger metropolis of Thendara. Hastur Kings had lived here, too, the last being Rafael II at the time of the Hastur Rebellion. By moving his court to Thendara, Carolin let the people know that he meant to rule all of Hastur. He was no longer Hastur of Carcosa or Hastur of Hali, but High King in Thendara. To celebrate his new seat, he distributed holiday largesse with a generosity that inspired thanksgiving in some quarters and suspicion in others. When he appeared in public, whether addressing Comyn lords or commoners, he spoke of the Compact that would bring about a new age of peace and honor for all of Darkover.

      The traffic of carts and wagons through the traders’ gates dwindled. Grain merchants raised their prices, hoarding their shrinking supplies. One bleak gray tenday followed another, and the festivities blurred into memory, pale against the unrelenting cold. King Carolin established a series of shelters, much like those maintained along mountain trails for travelers, where poor people might find refuge in the bitter nights.

     


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