Beyond the Blue Moon (Forest Kingdom Novels) (59 page)

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Authors: Simon R. Green

Tags: #Forest Kingdom, #Hawk and Fisher

BOOK: Beyond the Blue Moon (Forest Kingdom Novels)
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“Poor little Tiffany. So sure in her power that she never thought to wonder where it might be coming from. Ever since you came to the Castle, little witch, you have been channeling another’s power. You’re quite gifted in your own right, and someday you might be powerful indeed. But right now you’re just another witch, and I always knew there was no way you could wield the power you showed without burning yourself up in the process. Only a sorcerer could have driven the killing shadows from the Court that day. Once I realized that, it was easy to uncover the hidden link connecting you to the Mother Witch of your Academy. The sorceress who founded it and runs things from her hidden cell. It was her magic you were channeling, all unknowingly, and now that I have severed that link, you’re just another witch. And your little magics aren’t nearly enough to stop a creature like me. So be a good little girl and sit this one out. Or I’ll hurt you.”

Chappie was suddenly there, standing defiantly between Tiffany and the Magus, showing all his teeth in a terrible grin. “Don’t touch her, you bastard.”

“Oh, please,” said the Magus. “I don’t have time for this.”

“I swore to protect her,” said Chappie. “And I will. To get to her, you have to get past me.”

“I have always found you a very tiresome animal,” said the Magus. “Pets should know their place.”

A bolt of black lightning blasted from his hand, only to fade away to nothing before it could get anywhere near the dog. Chappie laughed nastily.

“I’m the High Warlock’s dog, idiot. You might wield magic, but I
am
magic. And now I’m going to bite your balls off.”

“What an edifying spectacle to come across in a Royal Court,” said Duke Alric. “You really have let things go to the dogs, Felicity.”

Everyone looked around sharply as the Starlight Duke walked slowly toward them. Behind him the double doors stood wide open, and a small army of soldiers filed quickly through, fanning out past the Duke to take up strategic positions covering the whole Court. There were dozens of them, all wearing Forest uniforms, but they all looked to the Duke of Hillsdown for their orders. By the time they were all in, they filled half the Court, swords and axes at the ready in their hands, silently watching the Duke as he made his painful way across the Court to confront his daughter, the Queen. He stopped a respectful distance short of the people clustered before the Throne, and ignored them all to fix his daughter with a steady gaze. The creaks and shiftings of his metal and leather bracings sounded loud in the strained quiet of the Court.

“You see, Felicity?” asked the Duke. “I told you it would come to this. You’re not in control anymore. Even your closest defenders squabble amongst themselves. These armed men were once your soldiers, but now they are mine. They’re all mercenaries, you see, serving the Forest Throne for money, not loyalty, and I have made them a substantially better offer.”

“You’ve turned my own people against me?” the Queen asked.

“They were never really yours. A mercenary will always go where the money is. And they’ve rather lost faith in your ability to pay them. So I am now taking over for the good of everyone. I never intended to launch an invasion from outside the Forest Kingdom. Far too many people would have died—on both sides. No, I came here into the hands of my enemies and simply waited for the right moment. And now my newly bought army will put me into the seat of power with a minimum of bloodshed. Get off that Throne, Felicity. I need to sit down. My back’s killing me.”

“Not all my army are mercenaries,” said the Queen. “Most are still loyal to the Throne and to me.”

“By the time they discover what’s happened, it will all be over,” said the Duke easily. “And I will be installed as the new King of the Forest and Hillsdown. Technically I’ll just be Regent here, ruling in Stephen’s name until he comes of age, but it all amounts to the same thing. I shall rule here and make the Kingdom strong again.”

“The people will never accept this,” said Chance. “They’ll never accept you.”

“Which people?” queried the Duke. “The Forest people or the Hillsdown immigrants or the Redhart communities? They might have risen up in support of Harald, that hero of the Demon War, but not, I think, for a foreign-born Queen. In the end the people will do what the army tells them. And the army will follow whoever’s in charge. That’s their job. Of course, certain subversive elements will have to be purged from my army; there are always a few fools determined to be heroes or martyrs. But my mercenaries will weed them out quite efficiently. A few mass public executions should make my position quite clear. And after that, things will go on as they did before for most people, and they will learn to do as they’re told by a strong King. Bring the child forward.”

One of the soldiers came to stand beside the Duke. In his arms he carried a sleeping child, his small form wrapped in a blanket, and the Queen cried out and half rose from her Throne as she recognized the child.

“Stephen! That’s my son! What have you done to him?”

“Calm yourself, daughter. And sit down. You don’t want to make my mercenaries jumpy, do you? That’s better. The child is fine. Do you think I would harm my own grandson? He’s just been given a little something so he’ll sleep till this is over.”

“But I left him guarded! How … ?”

“The gentleman at my side with my grandson in his arms is called Snare. My very own personal magic-user. Not actually a sorcerer, but well on his way. I brought him here disguised as just another soldier, and no one noticed. He killed your guards with a single spell and took your son away. And now he guards Stephen against any physical and magical attempt to retrieve him. Stephen is mine now, and I will raise my grandson to be a real King. A true ruler of the Forest and Hillsdown, united again into one great country as it was always meant to be.”

“You didn’t do such a good job of raising your daughters, did you?” asked Cally. “They all turned against you in the end. What makes you think you’ll do any better with a boy?”

“I have learned from my mistakes,” said the Duke. He looked coldly at Felicity. “You couldn’t protect Stephen; that in itself is enough to prove you are not worthy to be Queen. You should have had all my people checked out for hidden treachery. Did you really think I would deliver myself into the hands of my enemies unprotected? You’re not fit to rule, Felicity. It’s as simple as that. I will silence all the squabbling in your Court and put an end to all this democracy nonsense. Power belongs to those strong enough to take and hold it. My grandson will be King, and by the time he comes into his power, I will have seen to it that his enemies are dead.”

All the people before the Throne, who had been at each other’s throats only moments before, now stood shoulder to shoulder facing the Duke, united in a common cause against a common enemy. Whatever their varying beliefs, causes, or intentions, none of them had any intention of bowing down to the Starlight Duke. Everything else could wait. A few quick looks among them was all it took to confirm that, but politician that he was, Sir Robert still felt the need to put it into words.

“This is our Court and our Land, Duke Alric, and we will all fight to the death in their defense.”

There was a general murmur of agreement from the other defenders. The Shaman stepped forward to glare directly at the Duke. “This is my home, and I will not see it threatened. Stand down, Alric, or I swear I’ll see your head stuck on a pike.”

The Starlight Duke just sniffed briefly. He looked unhurriedly from one determined face to the next, settling at last on the Magus. “Well, sorcerer? Do you have no brave speech to make? No last words of defiance? No? I thought not. I never did believe all the things they said about you. But then, I’ve always known the value of a good bluff. You’ve done nothing of note since you opened the Rift. My spies’ reports were very clear on that. Could it be you burned yourself out casting such a magnificent spell? It doesn’t matter. I am protected from all magical attacks by the Candlemass Charm. And I have enough armed men here to drag even you down. So.” The Duke looked back at his army of mercenaries, poised and waiting for his word. “Kill them. Except for my errant daughter Felicity, kill them all.”

The mercenaries surged forward, hundreds of armed men yelling battle chants and war cries. And Allen Chance went forward to meet them, his father’s great double-headed war axe in his hands. He swung the massive blades as though they were weightless, and the first mercenaries to reach him died immediately, thrown back bloody and broken. Chance swung his axe with both hands, and the blades sheared through flesh and bone and armor, killing every man who came against him. The sound of steel chopping through flesh was the sound of simple butchery, and the floor ran thick with blood. The Questor’s eyes and his wide smile were both very cold now, and to those there who remembered, he looked very much like his late father indeed.

But he was only one man, and the tide of mercenaries swept past him like the sea crashing past a stubborn rock. Chappie stayed with Tiffany. His heart ached to be with his friend, but he had sworn to protect the witch. Tiffany’s faith in her magic had been crushed by the Magus’ casual words, but faced with an immediate threat to all she held dear, her old Academy training reasserted itself, and she forced a calm upon her thoughts. She reached deep inside for her magic, her old familiar power, and it responded immediately. Not nearly the powerful force she had grown used to wielding, but a sharp and potent magic all the same.

Tiffany sent out her will against the advancing mercenaries, and those nearest fell immediately asleep, crashing to the floor. More and more fell as they entered her field of influence, piling up before her. A sharp stabbing pain began in Tiffany’s left temple, and a thin trail of blood ran from one nostril. Cut off from her unexpected power source, she was just a witch now, and the forces she was wielding took a harsh toll from her. It didn’t matter. She had a job to do, and she would not be found wanting.

A handful of mercenaries stopped outside the reach of her spell, and drew throwing daggers. Chappie charged forward and hit them like a battering ram, scattering the soldiers and throwing them to the floor. And then he was among them, ripping out their throats with his terrible jaws. He glared about him, shaking his head angrily, blood drops flying from his crimson mouth as he looked for more threats. A dozen mercenaries came at him with swords and axes, and he howled happily as he danced among them, tearing at their legs and bellies, moving impossibly quickly for a dog of his great size.

Tiffany called to the Magus to restore her link to the Mother Witch, but he was standing to one side, still and silent, watching the bloody fury about him but not interfering. His cloak stirred restlessly, but the Magus cast no spells, even as the first mercenaries drew near him. His thoughts seemed to be elsewhere, concentrating on something else, something that mattered more to him than the simple struggle of humans.

Cally and Sir Vivian fought side by side, wielding their swords with the deadly skills of long experience. They worked well in concert, as though they belonged together. Hardened mercenaries came at them in waves, and not one of them could get anywhere near the warrior woman and the hero of Tower Rouge. Cally and Sir Vivian stamped and thrust, their blades whirling in shining arcs too fast for the human eye to follow, and no one could stand against them. The dead and the dying piled up around them, and still they fought, cutting down their enemies with terrible ease. Cally grinned fiercely as she fought, happy to be doing what she was born to do, and even Sir Vivian was smiling. It had been a long time since they’d faced a threat worthy of their expertise, and after struggling with the shadowy enemies of politics for so long, simple violence like this was a relief and a happy release. For all the odds against him, Sir Vivian felt strangely at peace. It had been far too long since he’d fought beside someone he could count on to match his skill. Not since his brother, Gawaine, in fact. He glanced across at Cally, and she grinned back.

“So, Vivian, what are you doing after the massacre?”

“Taking you out for a very large drink,” said Sir Vivian, surprising himself.

“Sounds like a plan to me,” said Cally. “And afterward, I’ll jump your bones till they rattle.”

“Where have you been all my life?” asked Sir Vivian, and they both laughed as they slaughtered more mercenaries.

Two soldiers burst past the defenders and threw themselves at the preoccupied Magus. The Duke had armed them with ancient silver arthames, long, slender witch daggers with powerful runes etched into the blades. But before they could reach the Magus, his huge black cloak detached itself from his shoulders and flapped through the air like a bat. It fell upon the mercenaries, enveloping them in its dark folds. The two men screamed as the cloak crushed the life out of them with one powerful constriction. Blood and other things dropped out of the bottom of the cloak as it briefly fed, and then it dropped the ruined bodies on the scarlet floor and flapped back to hover beside the Magus, ready for more prey to approach.

Sir Robert Hawke swung his sword with unmatchable skill and cut a wide path through the mercenaries. In his younger days he was literally unbeatable with a sword in his hand, and with his strength and health restored there wasn’t a man in the Court who could stand against him. The mercenaries tried to bring him down through sheer force of numbers, but his sword was seemingly everywhere at once, parrying and thrusting and cutting, beating down the most powerful defenses as though they weren’t even there. He was laughing as he fought, even in the face of such appalling odds. It felt good to be himself again, fighting a clear enemy for obvious reason; and these odds were nothing to those he’d faced in the Demon War. And Ennis Page, young and strong and whole again, guarded Sir Robert’s back and cut down those few who managed to get past him.

“Just like old times,” Page said cheerfully. “Overwhelming odds, an impossible situation, and the whole fate of the Kingdom in our hands. I love it!”

“Hell, this is amateur hour,” said Sir Robert. “We fought demons in those days.”

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