A Warrior of Dreams (9 page)

Read A Warrior of Dreams Online

Authors: Richard Parks

Tags: #Fantasy, #Fiction

BOOK: A Warrior of Dreams
6.55Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Ter looked sick. "No, Master! We'll try harder

"

"To try harder in this is to ensure failure. Be brave! I only ask a week. You may serve your time with your sister, if you like."

Ter nodded, resigned. "Yes, Master," he hesitated, then added, "Thank you."

The Dream Master rose and escorted Ter to the door, his arm about the boy's shoulders. He gave him over to one of the White Robes standing guard in the hall and watched until the pair disappeared around a corner. He returned to his seat looking thoughtful. "Belor?"

A shriveled little gnome of a man in the robes of a priest stepped from behind a curtained alcove. His movements were stiff and precise, like a soldier on slow march. A few strands of wispy white hair framed his face beneath the cowl. His voice was the whisper of a razor on the strop. "Here, Most Beloved of Somna."

"You heard?"

Belor nodded. "Certainly. It is most disturbing."

The Dream Master held his wand in one hand and slowly tapped the palm of the other. "There could be other explanations. Some Nightsouls have all the fire and presence of a cart-nag."

"Which makes them difficult to read," Belor conceded, "but not to find. I'll admit the Supplicant isn't the first to try to hide his identity from us, but his Nightsoul cannot be found in simple dream by two competent

if uninspired

dreamers. And you and I both know that the true name belongs as much to the Nightsoul, two parts incomplete without the other. I'll wager this 'Ghost' didn't tell us his true name because he doesn't know it himself."

Tagramon rose and began to pace about the chamber. A statue of the Dreamer gazed down on him through gilded eyelids tightly closed, one exquisite arm raised in blessing. Agmen stopped pacing and contemplated the image for a moment. "You play your part well, Belor, but I think I can make the rest of the journey myself: He's one of the Chosen Ones."

"I believe so, Master. And he knows what has happened to him. More, he's held enough will together to try to do something about it. That makes him a danger to everything we've worked for, but there's much we don't know. The best way to deal with him, for instance. And we have to know, Master."

"Then how may we learn?"

"I have given that some thought, and believe I have a solution. But it will take time to prepare."

"We have time. The man has requested another augury. I'm sure he'll remain till he hears it."

"Another? Doesn't he know the first two failed?"

Tagramon poured wine from a crystal bottle. "He does. But he listened serenely while Alyssa and Ter in turn spouted their nonsense, and each time requested another augury. Not a repeat, mind you

another. With a new Temple Dreamer. No indignation, no protests. He knows what he's after, and he knows he hasn't gotten it, yet."

Belor bowed low. "Your command, Master?"

Tagramon took a long lingering sip. "A Supplicant has petitioned the Temple for augury. He shall have it."

*

Joslyn moved with cautious speed along the corridor near the dreamers' quarters. It had taken far longer to sneak back into the Temple that she expected, and now acolytes were lighting the evening lamps and Joslyn had no intention of being seen so far from her rooms alone. It wasn't forbidden, exactly, but it would raise questions she didn't trust herself to answer with the calm of innocence.

She passed a statue of the Reclining Dreamer and curtsied, absently.

She stopped.

The statue was set in a niche between two narrow doors with tiny barred windows. A yellow light shone through the bars of the leftmost door. Joslyn crept to the window and peered through.

A girl about Joslyn's age and a younger boy sat at a game of chess in a room with no beds. there was a pitcher of water, and bread and cheese on a small table by the near wall, and a curtained garderobe in back.

"Alyssa!"

The girl turned toward the door. Her blue eyes were reddened and dull. "You shouldn't be here," she said.

"Why not? What is this place?"

"Where the Dreamer is not," sighed Alyssa, "We have offended her."

"There is no such place," Joslyn said, "and if you've offended anyone I'll wager it's the Master. What have

"

Ter rushed up and pressed his face against the bars. "Be careful what you say! Be careful..." His voice was slurred like a drunkard's, and there was an odd light in his eyes. Alyssa joined him at the door.

"What's wrong with you?" Joslyn asked.

Alyssa blinked several times, and her eyes seemed to focus a little better. "We failed an augury. There was a man... at least, it looked like a man. It walked like a man, talked and slept like one. It slept, I slept. I came to the Nightstage. He did not."

"If he was asleep then he came to the Nightstage," Joslyn said. "Perhaps... perhaps he doesn't dream."

"Everyone dreams," said Alyssa.

Joslyn said nothing, waiting.

"Perhaps we dreamed he wasn't there," Ter said at last. "It's possible. I like to dream..." He sounded like an even younger boy talking about a sweet.

Alyssa put an arm around him. "I don't know what happened. All I know is that we failed, and the Dream Master has decreed a week of rest. Do you know what that means?"

Joslyn nodded, unhappy. "No dreams," she said.

"No dreams," confirmed Alyssa. "We've been given a drug; we will not sleep... yet I don't think we're truly awake. I don't know if I'm making sense. You mustn't let anyone see you here, Joslyn. We'll be all right; I'll talk to you when this is over, but for now please go!"

Reluctantly, Joslyn turned away from the door and her friend and there was the Dreamer in marble, smiling as she dreamed the dream that was the world.

Omen of Fair Dreams
. Joslyn knew the inscription; she didn't have to look. Her smile was a rueful parody of Somna's own.

Liar
.

*

In the center of the Chamber of True Dreaming sat two ornate gilded couches marked with the sigil of the Closed Eye, and there stood Joslyn, yawning, two White Robes flanking her like bookends bracing a sagging parchment.

The acolytes had come for her in her rooms, and Joslyn knew that, with the excitement of the day, there was no chance that even Temple training would get her to sleep on demand. She pleaded a moment of privacy to get into her blue ceremonial robe and used most of the time to mix Musa's herb potion. Now the robe hung on her slim frame like a cloth thrown over a chair, and the drug was slow fire spreading through her veins. She kept her eyes open by will alone.

Someone struck a gong, but it didn't help much.

The White Robes bowed low, and Joslyn didn't so much copy the reverence as follow them down. the Dream Master entered, closely followed by the High Priest. They stopped in front of Joslyn and her escort.

"You may go, My Sons," Belor said. The two acolytes bowed even lower and hurried away. Joslyn's rise was slow and sluggish. Tagramon and Belor regarded her with twin expressions more than a little disturbing. The Dream Master was saying something and she tried to listen.

"... unusually difficult. I'm afraid this supplicant may sorely test your skill."

Joslyn bowed low again to cover a yawn. "I'll try not to disappoint you."

"Still, there's the possibility you might," said Belor. "And if that happens under no circumstances are you to let the client know. Do you understand?"

"What... what shall I tell him?"

Tagramon smiled. It wasn't reassuring. "Whatever you like, Joslyn. We just can't have it getting about that the Dreamer of All has forsaken us. Unless she has in truth, but it's far too early to chisel
that
into the mountain. I've trained you well, and I trust your tact and discretion."

As you trusted Alyssa and Ter
. Joslyn wanted to be angry, but lacked the concentration. The gong sounded again.

"He's here."

Joslyn watched another pair of acolytes escort the client into the chamber. He wore a simple brown robe, but he paid no attention at all to the marvelous chamber. Perhaps it was because he had already made the trip twice before. Or perhaps he was more familiar with such sights than his clothing implied.

Joslyn frowned. What made her think that? But the thought held on, making itself known through the haze settling on her brain. It was true, the thing Tagramon said about the man without actually forming the words

there was something strange about him. He stopped by the Dream Master and bowed. It was little more than a nod. Tagramon waved Joslyn forward.

"This is Joslyn. Will you meet her in the domain of Somna?"

The man's bland expression didn't change by so much as a flicker. "Perhaps."

It wasn't the correct response. Tagramon's face clouded but he said nothing. Joslyn shrugged, stumbled through a curtsy, and took her place on the rightmost couch as the petitioner stretched out on the other. Joslyn's eyelids seemed to carry the weight of the world, but there was a moment in the ritual that she refused to miss. The Dream Master gave the signal and all the tapers in the chamber were snuffed at once. Darkness flooded everything, and in that instant the dome above came alive with a twinkling starscape that banished all walls and ceilings and opened up the universe to her. It was an illusion, but she loved it no less for that.

Joslyn closed her eyes and was instantly asleep.

*

In another instant someone awoke. It was Joslyn, and yet it wasn't. The same name bound them, but this Joslyn did not always think or feel or want the same things as the Joslyn asleep in the Chamber of True Dreaming. Of all the knowledge in Joslyn's dreamer training, that particular bit of awareness had been one of the last things to come.

Joslyn looked around and found her world covered with a fine gray mist, like a curtain waiting to rise.

Nightstage
, Joslyn thought,
Where's the lead actor
?

Joslyn saw the glow of dreams in all directions, but none close by, and the man in the brown robe was nowhere in sight. That made no sense; even if the man was not dreaming

and only a trained dreamer knew how
not
to dream

his Nightsoul had to be nearby. The dreams were distant; Joslyn didn't even have their light to work by, but she made a very thorough search of the area that corresponded to the chamber in the waking world. Nothing. The stage was truly bare.

I have to find him
.

The whys and wherefores of that certainty were a little vague to Joslyn now, and the memories of that other Joslyn so much less her own. But the certainty remained, and the purpose was too strong to fight. Reluctantly. Joslyn started to search.

*

In the Chamber of True Dreaming the shadows spoke in whispers. A hooded lantern threw its faint glow on the oracular couches.

"Is he asleep?" the Dream Master asked.

"Without question. He should be taking his place on the Nightstage even now."

Tagramon's frown was invisible in the darkness. "I'll wager a gold Imperial that the stage is empty."

Belor chuckled softly. "I will not take that wager. I wonder what the girl will say?"

"What Ter and Alyssa said, if she's wise. It'll mean a week of rest, too. Unfair as that is."

"It's a question of necessity," Belor said, "not fairness."

The High Priest of Somna closed the lamp shield and once more the chamber was covered with starry night.

*

A curtain of mist parted and Joslyn found another Play. The stage was one vast bed, and on that bed a handsome, powerfully-built man made love to a monster. It had the body of a supple young woman and the head of a red viper. The lovers moved together and the snake-head hissed with delight. Joslyn remained at the edge of the mist and studied the dreamer.

That isn't him

Joslyn was almost gone before she realized that it wasn't anyone else, either. The man's features were too perfect, his body too well formed, as if molded from clay by a master sculptor. When Joslyn looked into his eyes she understood. There was no affection there, or even pleasure. Merely a fierce pride in his mastery over the monster. The lovely, deadly, not-quite-human woman. Every caress an attack, every sigh a victory.

Is that how he sees us
? Joslyn thought.
I wonder if he sees himself any clearer
.

Joslyn knew her own frustration at the search was causing her anger, but there it was. Temple-trained will lashed out, and the play changed. The monster's glittering eyes suddenly mirrored, catching the man's delusion and throwing it back in his face. The contrast was too much; Joslyn could almost hear the dreamer groan in his sleep as the truth emerged

a balding, paunchy, middle-aged man with weak blue eyes. He seemed confused until he looked down; then he understood exactly what was happening. He screamed.

Joslyn hugged herself to keep from laughing as the dreamer's cool mastery wilted, along with everything else. Venom oozed from the snake-woman's fangs as she hissed with frustration. The Nightsoul scrambled off the bed and fled shrieking into the mist as the light of the dream went out.

It will be a long time before that one dares Flowering Succubus again. Poor Musa has lost a customer
.

THAT WASN'T VERY KIND, CHILD.

Joslyn turned, sending her thought out into the mist.
Musa
?

There was only the grayness of the curtain, marked with the light of dreams in the distance. They looked a little like fireflies on a nighted meadow. Moth-like, Joslyn flitted toward the nearest and the light grew...

And she was on stage. The scene pulled her in before she could resist and she stood on the beach of a dark sea. The sand was stark white and pierced by black granite spires taller than trees.

Whose dream is this
?

"Yours, for now. Welcome."

"Musa? Where are you?"

Harsh laughter, more cackle than humor. "A trained dreamer, mistress of illusion and the Nightstage, and you have to ask? Small wonder you can't find your client."

Other books

Heart of a Stripper by Harris, Cyndi
Milkweed Ladies by Louise McNeill
Powdered Murder by A. Gardner
Sweet Tea: A Novel by Wendy Lynn Decker
The Tide Knot by Helen Dunmore
Time Out by Leah Spiegel, Megan Summers