CHAPTER 17
ALONE IN HER cabin aboard
her father’s land ship, Marique knelt naked before a three-paneled
mirror. The warm golden light of the swaying oil lamps that hung
from the ceiling caressed her alabaster flesh. The woman staring
back at her from the mirrors would be judged flawless by any who
dared render judgment. Others would declare her perfect, and were
she to truly study her reflection, she might agree.
But those others used mirrors to reveal what
was. In them Marique sought what would be.
She never had a clear vision. Just as the voices that whispered to
her never made their messages distinct or crisp, so the shadows
reflected upon her by the future suggested
instead of proclaiming, hinted and seduced instead of explaining,
and coaxed instead of commanding. She watched, she took it all in,
every nuance, letting pleasure and fear mingle within her breast,
but never letting them overwhelm her.
Some of what she saw pleased her. Ghost images
matched the arcane tattoos which ran from shoulder to shoulder, up
her neck, past her ears, and along her high hairline. She’d only
seen bits and pieces of them before, but had tracked them down
through endless researches in tomes long thought lost by those who
should have known better. She’d drawn the images she wanted and
showed a legion of tattooists where to place each individual
design, then had her father’s men slay the tattooists so they could
never re-create the designs again.
As she transformed herself to match the spectral
visions, her power grew. A smart woman, she realized that she was
creating in her own flesh what Acheron’s long-dead priest-kings had
done in order to create her father’s obsession. She did not do this
out of greed or lust for power. She did not do it to harness the
sorcery that would allow her to rival her father. No, she did it
because Khalar Zym would need her if his own efforts failed. When
she could do for him what the mask could do, he would not longer
need it.
He will need no one but
me.
She smiled at that thought, her nipples stiffening,
but her smile did not carry to her further reflection. For a
heartbeat a dark line drew itself between her breasts. Marique
studied its strength and the way smaller, jagged lines shot out
from it. She wondered that she felt no pain, and then reminded
herself that the mirrors reflected what might be, not what would be.
She traced a finger over the shadow and it vanished
in the wake of her caress. This pleased her, and her smile did
shine in the mirror. She forgot herself for a moment, allowing
satisfaction to seize her. She reveled in it, throwing her head
back in a silent laugh, then she caught sight of it and turned slowly like a snake coiling.
The land ship rode on the backs of eight elephants
and rocked gently as it was carried along. Most assumed that her
father had ordered the titanic vehicle built as a gross display of
his power. That he had was true, in part. He also did it to fulfill
obscure prophecies—of which there were far more than there were
stars in sky. She always thought of the elephants as the elephant upon which the world rested, according
to countless faiths and creation stories. It meant her father would
be the master of this world, and perhaps more.
Silken curtains covered her cabin’s walls and one
had slipped to reveal a prize she had almost forgotten. She’d taken
it long ago in a Cimmerian village, from a smith and his
half-witted, feral child. She’d not thought of the two in many
years, and yet suddenly the taste of the child flooded back to her
tongue, salty and sharp. The voices had warned her against it, but
she’d licked him in defiance. It had been before she had learned
that the voices were not just her mother’s postmortem
mumblings.
Marique rose fluidly and crossed to where the sword
hung. Even as her hand approached, before she actually caressed the
cool metal, she sensed something. It was almost as if nettles had
stung her fingertips. She peered at them to see if her eyes would
confirm that explanation. They did not, and when she reached out
for the sword again, she encountered no resistance or
discomfort.
She was not so foolishly indulgent as to play a
finger along the edge. Crude and savage though the Cimmerians might
have been, they took pride in their steel and its manufacture.
Though she had not cared for the blade at all, it showed no sign of
tarnish or rust. She might have plucked it from the village ruins a
day ago, or ripped it newly born, directly from the hands of the
swordsmith himself.
She did not ask herself why she had taken the
sword. Her father—if he noticed at all—had not questioned her about
it. He hadn’t noticed, of course, since in Cimmeria he had found
the piece that completed the Mask of Acheron. At the time she stole
the sword, he was basking in the glory of his greatest
triumph.
A triumph that had tarnished
quickly, unlike the sword.
Reconstruction of the mask had been the goal upon
which her father had focused for two reasons. First, it had been an
obsession he had shared with Maliva, his wife and Marique’s mother.
Maliva had brought him knowledge of it through her studies of
Acheronian lore. She promised him that the mask, once
reconstructed, would provide power beyond imagining, allowing him
to raise long-dead legions that would again establish the reign of
Acheron upon the earth.
But barbarians akin to those who had created the
sword had shattered Acheron and its mask. They had caused the name
Acheron to be struck from every monument,
for Acheronian cities to be buried and their libraries burned.
Barbarians who had no use for sorcery did their utmost to make
certain no one else could use it. Had they
pursued that course for another year or decade, perhaps they would
have succeeded.
Maliva had collected many volumes of Acheronian
lore, copies of which traveled in the land ship’s hold, while the
originals resided at Khor Kalba. Had her mother been less of a
dreamer and more diligent a student, she would have understood that
gathering the pieces of the mask were not enough. If she did know that, she never communicated it to Khalar
Zym because, after Maliva had been burned as an Acheronian witch,
her husband had vowed to complete the mask and raise her from the
dead.
Marique still recalled the depths of her father’s
depression when fitting the last piece into the mask had failed to
activate it. She had already begun to study the books her mother
had so treasured, and was the first to confirm the necessity of a
blood infusion to waken the magick, not just, as her mother had
believed, enhance it. She’d told her father, and villages were
drained dry in the hopes that bathing the mask in gallons of blood
would revivify it. He preferentially sought those of Acheronian
blood, promising to raise them when he was a god, but it was to no
avail.
When that effort failed, her father sat slumped in
his throne, holding the mask in both hands, staring at it, asking
why it mocked him. Marique, who watched from the shadows, first
heard the whispers then. She furthered her studies, an innocent
drinking in knowledge so foul it had soured souls which were
already as black as night, and driven mad those who had only heard
rumors of such things. She pursued clues found in scrolls and by
fitting together shattered tablets. And finally she uncovered the
truth.
Yes, blood would reactivate the mask, but it had to
be specifically from the line of the last
priest-king to wear the mask and wield its fearsome power. This
knowledge seemed to have little effect on her father at first, but
over the weeks he returned to himself. He dismissed his armies,
promising to recall them when the portents were propitious, and
began his long search for the scion of the last Acheronian
priest-king.
“Marique. I need you! They have failed me again!”
The urgency in her father’s voice sped her heart.
She’d have run immediately to him, naked though she was, but it
would not do for her to appear so before subordinates. She sat and
drew on scarlet boots that covered her to her knees. Then she
selected a hooded cloak and closed the clasp at her throat. Its
silk lining felt cool against her flesh, while the scarlet wool
wrapped her in heavy warmth.
She tucked a short dagger into the top of the right
boot and prepared to leave her cabin. She glanced again in the
mirror and admired herself, then caught a distorted reflection in
the Cimmerian blade. She took it from the wall, holding it as she
might a short staff, and made her way onto the land ship’s main
deck.
Her father, tall and terrible, towered over two
half-naked men who groveled before him. Bloodstains marked where
they had clawed at the deck, and a pale rivulet of urine betrayed
the true depth of one’s terror.
Khalar Zym turned toward his daughter, his dark
eyes flashing. “They say they cannot find her. They claimed to be
the best, but they fail me.”
Marique moved to her father’s side and slipped a
hand from within the cloak to lay it on his sword arm. If any
glimpsed her nakedness within the shadows, none gave sign, not even
the mishappen wretch Remo, who had watched her for years when he
believed he was unwatched.
“It is not their fault, Father.” She smiled
carefully. “We know the trail is cold, two decades cold.”
“But they have come this far.”
“And now there are elements which work against
them.” She turned and made for the gangway. “Remo, bring
them.”
Her father’s subordinate grumbled, but did as he
was bidden. Guards hastened down the gangway ahead of Marique and
the elephant trainers calmed beasts as heavy, booted feet thundered
down the wooden planking. Marique made certain to step lightly and
to move carefully so it could seem as if all she did was float. Her
father, stern and strong, trailed behind her but stopped halfway
down, where the gangway twisted back. Arms folded tight to his
chest, he would watch from there, so Marique made certain to
position herself to great advantage.
Even before she reached the ground, she could feel
the magick. She had long since learned all her mother had known,
and had studied it all far more carefully than Maliva had been
capable of doing. She knew that was a harsh assessment, but she had
read her mother’s journals and seen her errors in translation and
transcription. Had her mother not been so careless, she would have
found other ways to grant Khalar Zym the power he sought, but
instead her mistakes had doomed his quest.
Marique stabbed the Cimmerian sword into the earth
and rested a hand on it. It would anchor her. Though she sensed no
immediate malice in the enchantments blanketing the Red Wastes,
many were the sorcerers who concealed the lethal in the benign, and
many more were the foolish who died because they failed to take
precautions. The Cimmerian steel would not ward her per se, but
could supply an element to her magick which she doubted another
sorcerer would have anticipated.
She crouched, allowing the cloak to puddle around
her. Cool air rushed in, exciting her flesh. She slowly reached out
with her right hand, fingers splayed, then tucked them in toward
her palm as if plucking the warp and weft of some arcane weaving.
She felt vibrations, and the voices began to whisper in her
head.
As always, they remained annoyingly vague, but none
hissed a warning about immediate danger. Marique did not take this
as a sign that she was safe, but more as a sign of the
enchantment’s beguiling nature. That it could fool the voices was
proof of its strength, and that others failed to notice it revealed
its subtlety.
She clutched the sword’s pommel with her left hand.
“She has protectors, Father, powerful
patrons who deny her to you.”
“I am not to be defied, Marique.” Khalar Zym raised
his face to the heavens. “Your mother has waited too long for her
resurrection. We can afford no further delays.”
“And you shall have none, Father.”
Again Marique played her fingers through the air
and encountered more strands of eldritch energy. Some swirled and
eddied, like currents in a stream that trapped debris in stagnating
pools. These numbered in the dozens, and were the most powerful.
She found them rather attractive. They beckoned her on like a
melody, to spin her about and out and away, without her ever
realizing she had not gone in the direction she desired.
But there were other strands, tiny strands, more
fragile than a whisper, as fleeting as a dream upon wakening, and
she found them, too. They shied away from her, recoiled, became
dead at her touch. The sharp scent of decay filled her head.
Only her grip on the sword prevented her from
falling over, nauseous and dizzy. She steadied herself, then
smiled. If this is the game you wish to
play. “We have them, Father.”
“Yes, child?”
“These patrons, they are fools. They help the one
you seek, and they help others. Had they barred the way to all, we
should have been reduced to a pack of curs howling beyond their
walls.” Marique reached down and gathered a handful of dust.
“Because they allow others to seek them, we may find them.”
She straightened up and spat into her hand. She
mixed the dust and spittle into a muddy paste, then shot a glance
at Remo. “Bring the scouts.”
The misshapen man wrestled them before her. She
dabbed a finger in the mud and used it to draw a sigil over each of
their closed eyelids. “If you open your eyes, the magick will be
broken. You will die. Do you understand?”
They both nodded.
She stepped between them and Remo and threw her
cloak back past her shoulders. She grasped the scouts and turned
each to face into the Waste, then smeared another sigil in mud
between their shoulder blades. She pressed a finger to the heart of
each design, right over the scouts’ spines, then whispered a word
which, when said louder and with malice, could age a man twenty
years before its echoes dwindled to silence.
“Eyes closed. Tell me what you see.”
One man shook his head, but the other pointed a
quivering finger toward the south. “There, it’s beckoning. Blue, a
soft blue, tendrils, weaving and flowing. Inviting.
Mingling.”
Marique lowered her arms, shrouding herself with
the cloak. “Do not look where they conjoin, but follow the lines.
Ignore the knots, do not get lost in the knots, follow the
skein.”
The scout who had spoken nodded and started
off.
The other, head bowed, half turned back toward her.
“But I see nothing.”
“I know.” Marique nodded solemnly. “One of you had
to be blinded so the other could see. Remo, kill him.”
Above, her father pointed south. “Do not lose him.
Before day flows again into night, we shall have our prize.”