In that context, Gathrid reflected, their Games almost made sense. Human love could take ten thousand forms. These devils shattered every sort when allowed to run their course. In their grinding mills the Chosen of the Great Old Ones destroyed what men loved, leaving them only things to hate.
How much hating had he done himself, as the Instrument of Suchara? Too much. Far too much.
And Nieroda? She was, he suspected, herself the thing she hated most.
He reached down inside for memories of the Mindak. Ahlert had not been directly possessed by hatred. His demon had been a warped, obsessive love that had generated hatred wherever it touched.
Anyeck had been possessed of a towering hatred for things-as-they-are.
And Rogala? What of Theis? The dwarf remained a mystery. The puzzle box of eternity. Gathrid now doubted the dwarf was human. Since Ansorge he had suspected that Theis might be the last of the Night People.
He doubted that Rogala would ever be solved.
He whispered, “I think we’ve found a way to fight back.” He laughed. The sound caught in his throat. He remained unsure. A kiss seemed so little in the face of cruel, implacable powers like these.
“What we’ve found is damnation,” Nieroda replied. “Willingly or unwillingly, we’re in their web. They won’t let us escape. I’ve been trying for ages.” She despaired, but kept holding his hand. He drew a strange, almost motherly support from her.
“Once more,” he whispered. “For their apoplexy.”
She did not resist. Strange, he thought as he drew away. Nevenka Nieroda was as old as the hinges of time, yet was as unskilled as he.
As the thunders tramped and darkness marched like iron legions unleashed, he remembered Loida Huthsing. Sometimes it was not hard to hate.
Chapter Nineteen
Endgame
Gathrid reassumed physical reality. The Great Old Ones had spit him out like a sour plum. He found himself back in the remains of the Imperial Palace. The blood of Karkainen surrounded his soles. Daubendiek hung loosely in his right hand. Gerdes Mulenex sagged against his left arm. He staggered, went down.
Night had engulfed smoke-shrouded Sartain. It had brought no darkness, no relief for the eye. The great fires burned on.
He did not see a sign of Nieroda. She had not returned. Had he erred? Would she rise somewhere else now, and be lashed into another frenzy of destruction? He hoped not. He hoped she had seen the glimmer of hope, too.
But the Game was rigged. Of course. Even in defeat, the Great Old Ones had their way.
He waited an hour, till he was certain Nieroda would not return to the Mulenex clay. Satisfied, he finally strode from the wreckage of the great hall. The lone weapon he took was the blade he had obtained from Nieroda. He believed it free of any taint of control. The others, Sword and Shield, he left for whomever wanted them.
He did wish there were a way of disposing of them permanently. That was impossible. Even were they dumped into the ocean’s deeps, the Great Old Ones would find ways to bring them back to willing hands.
He hefted the Nieroda blade. It was an almost-Daubendiek. It might be of use to the Lady Mead. Or to the Contessa in her struggle to salvage the corpse of Anderle.
Could he bring the two women together? To scavenge a new, happier reality from the ruins of the old?
It seemed a goal worthy of his new life and blade. Perhaps, when faced by a champion as feared and deadly as he, the greedy, power-hungry Mulenexes could be cowed into building a world immune to such as Suchara.
Gathrid did not begin wondering about Theis Rogala till almost two months had passed. He was in Gudermuth, bound for Ventimiglia. Kacalief was not far away. He planned to stop and see what the Mindak had done for Loida and his sister. Curiosity began plaguing him when he passed the place where he and the dwarf had emerged from the caverns.
He strode to the nearest hilltop, slowly surveyed the naked landscape. He saw nothing. But the very fact that the dwarf had not entered his mind for so long seemed suggestive.
Was Suchara toying with him still? Was her agent stalking him with a hungry blade? Had he thought of the dwarf only because her attention had lapsed momentarily?
He finally shrugged, walked on. It did not matter. If the encounter was to come, it would come. He would not evade it. He would be prepared.
He went over the details with Ahlert, Count Cuneo and other wise and captive souls. A Theis so brazen as to bring the traditional dagger would be one surprised and short-lived dwarf.
Only a handful of the strongest minds had survived the passage through the realm of the Great Old Ones. He missed the others. His interior world had been his refuge from loneliness. As they had been for Tureck Aarant so long ago.
Funny. The best friend he had ever had was a man who had been dead a thousand years. A man who had died twice. He missed Tureck dearly.
The missing souls had left him much of their accumulated experience. He had learned to draw upon it as though it were his own. He had the knowledge to become an Ahlert or Eldracher had he the wish.
He felt as old as the time-worn hills of the Savard.
His birthday was approaching. He had overlooked his seventeenth in the chaos of the previous autumn. His eighteenth now approached more swiftly than seemed possible.
He had grown physically as well as mentally. He had confidence in himself. Reassurances would be pleasant, but he no longer needed outside support or direction. He could be his own creature and survive. In a few years he might fit the popular image of a hero.
He had been an introvert all his life. He remained one, but the impact of his adventures had shattered his fear of the world. He felt better about Gathrid of Kacalief. His shift in feelings about himself he saw clearly cast on the inside landscape of himself.
He had become a man.
His changes in attitude toward externals were more elusive and less satisfying. Mainly, he cared less.
The world’s agonies no longer pained him. He had little sympathy for its self-torment. It had become an irritation.
Yet his idealism had not vanished. He just seemed unable to apply it in any direct, specific fashion.
Grass and brambles infested Kacalief’s remains. Bones still lay heaped in monumental piles round the castle hill. Rusty weapons and armor could be found everywhere in the weedy fields.
A handful of stubborn, enterprising peasants had begun reclaiming the land. It was blood-enriched earth where plows more often turned on broken swords than stones. The peasants were collecting the iron in hopes of someday selling it.
Gathrid abandoned his eastward journey for a time. Some of the peasants remembered him from his youth. They were not thrilled with his return. They knew too much of his tale.
For days he prowled the ruins or sat staring at the mausoleum on the flank of the hill. He tried to wish back the dead.
They were gone from his mind as well as his world. He could find them only in his heart, in faint, sad echoes of feelings that once had been.
Sometimes he considered searching for Loida’s people. They would want to know what had become of her. He never got around to going.
He was sitting in the tall green grass, sword across his lap, sucking a sweet stalk and staring at the mausoleum, when he heard the soft brush of grass against stealthy legs. He listened carefully as the sound crept up behind him.
“Come on up and take a seat, Theis.”
He had not turned. The sound died. Nothing happened for several seconds. Then the dwarf moved up briskly and settled himself. “You’re learning.”
“Yes. I am.” The dwarf had healed as quickly as ever, except for his eyes. He remained blind. “And I’ve been expecting you.”
They stared at the gray stone mausoleum for a long while. The Mindak’s artisans had told the story of each girl in skillful bas-relief.
“Why?” Rogala asked.
“The dagger. It was time.”
“Suchara has lost you already.”
“I left,
Theis. She didn’t let me go. No more, I think, than she’d ever let you go. Her pride will compel her to try something.”
“You think she still rules me? I’m free, Gathrid.”
“I don’t hear your conviction, Theis. If you’re free, what’re you doing here with me?”
“Where else have I got to go? What else, whom else, do I know? They left me no options when they took my eyes. It’s go with you or become a beggar. The Esquire has his pride too.”
“Uhm.” That sounded as though it contained a grain of truth. Long life was a curse upon Rogala. It made him a time traveler marooned far from home. He had nothing in this world but his fragile association with the youth he was supposed to kill once Suchara had tired of him.
Was there anyone else with a use for the blind dwarf?
Perhaps someone who would use him as Ahlert had used the Toal.
“How did it begin, Theis? What are the Great Old Ones? Where did they come from?”
“I don’t know.”
“Really, Theis? Pardon me if I have trouble believing you. You’ve always known more than you were willing to tell.”
“Gathrid, I’m a tired old man. Rehashing the past, and my ignorance, won’t do any of us any good.”
“I want to understand, Theis. I’ve been a part of something. On a grand scale. I want to know what. I want to know what it means. And on a smaller scale, I’d like to unravel the mystery called Theis Rogala. You puzzle me more than the Great Old Ones.”
Rogala’s sightless eyes scanned the ruined land. He did not say a word.
“Who are you, Theis? What are you? Why do you live on and on? Even Nieroda has to change flesh. Where were you born? When? Were you born at all? What’s your real connection with Suchara?”
“That’s all long ago and far away, Gathrid. None of it matters anymore.”
“It matters to me. Tell me about Suchara. Is she real? Is she a goddess? Why does she torment humanity so?”
“Peace, I say!”
“No, Theis. Not anymore. Peace is dead. I’ve lost everything I value. I’ve had my life shaped and warped in a direction I would’ve rejected had I been able. I’ve seen my whole world destroyed. I want to know why!”
“It can’t be changed.”
“Tell me.”
“Damn it! Aarant was stubborn and nosy, but he wasn’t half the pest you are. Let it lie, I say.”
“Start with Suchara.”
Rogala sighed. “You win. Yes. She’s real. She does exist. She was a human woman once. One member of a family which delved deeper than even Nieroda. Farther and deeper than Nieroda could imagine, even as Queen of Sommerlath. And they went too far. They tempted fate too much. They outlasted most researchers, but they finally stumbled into the trap that takes them all. Now they lie caught in an endless sleep, hidden away somewhere. Sometimes they dream the shaping dreams. They touch the world with their minds. The world responds. They don’t know that what they touch is real. They think they’re playing on a game board with the scale of a world. After all, it isn’t the world in which they fell asleep.”
“I saw them awake, Theis.”
“No. They only dreamed. Only dreamed.”
“But... “
“Were Suchara here, Gathrid, you’d see nothing but a woman. A plain woman who clothes herself in gauzes of aquamarine to distract the eye from her homeliness. She uses perfumes that smell of the sea. She has eyes of green and, perhaps, a strand of seaweed threaded into her coppery hair. Her voice would be modulated to contain undertones reminding you of the whisper of the waves. She’s a dramatic, and a talent, but she’s just a woman.”
Gathrid watched the man while he talked, startled. This was his terse, insensitive companion, Theis Rogala? “It sounds like you knew her. Like you were maybe in love with her.”
“Perhaps.”
“And the others?”
“Chuchain. Her husband. Bachesta and Ulalia are daughter and son. Bachesta was a dark one. An evil one. The sleep may have been her doing. She wasn’t a patient woman. Ulalia was her antithesis. Pure, if you like. And slow, lazy, and easily fooled.”
Softly, Gathrid said, “I see why he attracted my sister. This family. Is their fighting for real? Are they just whiling the time?”
“It’s real. Endlessly, agonizingly real. They knew, as the sleep took them, that only one of them would ever come back out. Three must perish that one may waken. Or be wakened. It’ll take an outsider nearly as great as they. And in that aspect, they may unconsciously know what they’re doing to the world. They may be trying to create their deliverer.”
“Ahlert.... “
“He might have revived Chuchain. He came near succeeding without realizing what he was doing. For a while he had control of the dream, rather than the dream of him. The people of Ansorge had done most of the work for him. Had he found Daubendiek before Suchara quickened, and taken it to a certain place... “The dwarf shuddered.
“And what about Daubendiek? What is Daubendiek?”
“A sword. A trap. The Hell wherein Suchara’s soul is tormented. In those days it was the practice to hide part of one’s soul in some object. So with the Staff.”
“And the Shield?”
“Like your blade there, just a creation of Nieroda’s. No. Not ‘just.’ Bachesta nurtured Nieroda for ages. And, as she did with Ahlert, she turned on her master. She became capable of matching Bachesta evil for evil, on this plane.”
“She seemed more lonely and unhappy than evil.” Gathrid related his experiences before the Great Old Ones.
“What is evil but misery and loneliness?” Rogala muttered. “The child of those parents, surely.”
Gathrid frowned. Theis had taken quite a philosophical turn.
“Even Nieroda is human, Gathrid. Dead and immortal, but human. Loneliness is the price of power. Even Gerdes Mulenex had his good side. You saw that side in your sister so strongly you couldn’t see any other. So it goes. You should have learned that lesson by being Swordbearer. You tasted a lot of souls.”
“There was love in Anyeck, Theis. There was even a spark of it left in Nieroda.”
“That’s what I said.”
“There was no love in that place we went. Only hatred.”
“Hatred born of jealousy. Or envy. Or inability to handle love. Love makes a family. And love destroyed that one, yet binds them in their dreams. They don’t understand.”
“I’m not sure I do, either.”
“To be unable to comprehend love is human too, Gathrid. They still have love without knowing it. Only Bachesta has lost it entirely. Ulalia has lost care. His only desire is a peaceful, dreamless sleep.”
“And Theis Rogala? What is he in all of that?”
“Once upon a time there was a man named Theis Rogala who was Suchara’s lover. He was a whole man.... Now he guards the blade where a jealous Chuchain chained her soul. He brings it forth to do battle when he must. To protect its existence. To help Suchara defend herself. But what’s left of that man has grown weary of the whole mess. I owe, but must I pay forever?”
The dwarf seemed to be thinking aloud rather than speaking to his companion.
“Why slay the Swordbearers?”
“They become too enamored of their roles. They enjoy their might. And they grow too strong. And she grows fond of them, thinking they might set her free. She gives them knowledge and power they might wield against her. I can’t permit that. It has to be me. But I dare not use the blade myself. I’d become enslaved. She knows me too well, and her desperation is too great. So I wait till she chooses, and hope that someday all the right things happen at all the right times. But despair gnaws at me like the worms of the earth. I have so little left to give — unless I do take up the blade.”
Evening was coming on. Peasant women were at their cookfires. The aroma of woodsmoke teased Gathrid’s nose. Soon his stomach would compel him to go down and exchange another bit of Imperial silver for another bowl of burned stew. He would remain margi
nally acceptable as long as his money lasted.
He had become an outsider in his homeland.
“Finally, why did you follow me here?”
The dwarf did not respond.
“Theis?”
“To collect Daubendiek.”
“I left the Great Sword in Sartain, Theis. I put it aside. I bear only the blade born in Nieroda’s forge.”
“You left metal. Not the attachment. There’ll be a day when your path swings back to Sartain, whether you will it or not. She won’t let you scorn her.”
“It may have to be that only one of us will leave this hill, then, Theis.”
“Could be.”
“I wouldn’t like that. And, Theis? I don’t think I’d be the one staying. You’re fast, but I don’t think you’re fast enough.”
Rogala shrugged. “I’m getting older. Because I don’t care as much as I once did. And being blind won’t help, will it?”
“Does it always have to be this way?”
“I don’t know what else to do.”
Gathrid sighed. Silence stretched till it became oppressive.
Rogala coughed. “I like you, Gathrid. You’ve become like a son. I don’t want to.... Show the blind old man another way. I taught you the art of killing. Teach me the art of living.”
Gathrid could find no words. The silence stretched again. Finally, he tried, “You know the secrets of the greats and near-greats of a hundred ages, Theis.”
“You’ve looked into more souls than either of us can count, lad. I’ve seen them only from the outside.”
“There must be something in all that,” the youth agreed. Rogala was trying.
Every path led to the same destination. A death. More blood on this hill that had seen too much already. The limits seemed inflexible, the end assured.
The sun had declined almost to the horizon, growing bloated and red as it touched the distant earth. The night would be here soon, and with it, perhaps, a longer night. Rogala would sense the gathering darkness. He would move when the sight advantage had disappeared.
Gathrid thought, I should kill him now. Quick as he is, he can’t outdance this sword.