Authors: Will Elliott
âHave you seen illusions like this?' something with Blain's head and black bat wings asked Far Gaze. âDid your dragon do
this?
' said something akin to a deer. Dozens of creatures flew, trotted, pranced in a wide circle, all at the same turgid pace. Blain's bitter laugh clattered on and on in the background. Beams of light flashed through the white mist, like the colours from the Strategist's robe.
Far Gaze crouched low by the window, staring hard through the mist. He sprang forward, driving his fist into the neck of a four-legged creature with a cream-coloured hide. Its flesh shattered like glass.
âAnswer me, you idiot shape-shifter!' said the thing's half-broken head on the floor. âDid your dragon do these tricks for you?'
3
âHold!' cried an officer, perhaps the First Captain himself.
The men held, talking among themselves about the strange foulness which had filled the air. It was late, they had eaten and were supposed to be enjoying tales among themselves, or stealing a few hours' sleep. The sky behind them was red, redder than normal.
There was a hissing sound. A strange light bloomed. Then a cloud fell on them, blotting out sight and sound.
For a time there was silence along the line, broken by coughing, then the air filled with screams.
4
Across by the window, in the mist filling the room, Far Gaze crouched like a hunter. Now and then he sprang up to strike at a passing illusion. His fist shattered something with feathered wings and Blain's head. It fell in plastic-like chunks of flesh.
Eric trained the Glock on the creatures circling the room, trying to find the one that was really Blain, if indeed he was among them at all. He did not wish to fire. Each bullet was now rare and precious.
Loup appeared at the top of the steps. âWhere'd Stranger go?' he said, his voice barely audible above Blain's bitter laugh.
âDown here. She's knocked out,' Eric called back. âShe tried to kill Blain.'
âI don't blame her!' said Loup. âBut someone's done a handy bit of casting down there and we had a rule. Who was it?' Loup came down the steps, took a look at the surreal parade. âWhat in Inferno's blazes?!'
Loup stepped out of the way of something twice his height, with hooves and six thin legs. Blain's face peered down at him from a long neck. It paused and left the circle, sniffing the folk magician, till he gave its hanging beard a hard tug and slapped its rump. In slow motion it rejoined the circle. Blain's laugh went on.
Loup said, âFool illusionist! What's he done? Oh, you have to be
careful
with this kind of thing! They get lost in their own trickery if they're not careful, lad. Well, now what?' Loup stepped down and yelled above the noise of Blain's laugh: âNow remember who you were! A fool old man in worse shape than me. Come on back! No need for all this, we're not going to fight you. Just talk's all we want.'
A goat with Blain's head said, âPut away your little weapon, Pilgrim. Tell me of Shadow. And I'll tell you of Shadow.'
âTell us, then!' said Loup.
âVous made him real,' answered a flying thing with bat wings. âHe is Vous's fear, come to life. Vous made him with the belief Shadow would be his ruin. And so he may. Shadow alone can do the task we need to do.'
âWhat task?' Eric said. Across the room Far Gaze pulled the head from the goat they'd spoken to. It shattered into pieces. Blain's laughter clattered on.
Something small as a seagull left the slow circular parade and perched on the stairway banister. From its head Blain's hateful eyes glared. âWhen Vous and Avridis are gone, the tools to create a god will lie about the castle.' It flew back into the ring of mist. A huge shaggy dog ran at them in slow motion with a long wet tongue flopping through Blain's bearded mouth. âThe knowledge is recorded in tomes and journals. The artefacts are all still there. On parchment, the spells are written. Will you create a god if you find those tools?'
âWill you?' said Eric. The hound laughed Blain's laugh and joined the circle of illusions. âHow do we destroy Vous? Tell us that!'
Something in the mist: âI know less than you of Shadow. You refuse to tell. Is he a sword to be drawn? A great sorcerer? A toy of the dragons or the Spirits, or neither? Is he from beyond World's End? You know, not I! I tell you this. Vous fears him! Vous made him real! Vous changed the past to house him in history. Take Shadow to Vous! Take him there! Take him!'
Far Gaze kept seizing and breaking apart individual parts of the parade, but new creatures always appeared in the mist to replace them. âHe cannot be found,' Far Gaze called across to them.
âI'll bet by now he can't find himself!' Loup replied. âCome on back now, Blain you old fool. Come back! You're lost in there. You proved your point, you can cast a pretty spell. But now the spell's casting
you!
Come on back, Blain. Just follow my voice. Gaze! Leave the illusions. We just have to let the spell burn out.'
Behind them Eric was certain he'd caught a glimpse of someone heading down the steps. It took a moment for him to recall the stranger he'd seen standing waist-deep in the tower's waters, when he returned to the tower with Stranger.
Unnoticed by Loup, Eric dashed down after the stranger. âWait!' he called.
The man turned about, his head nearly beneath the whirlpool's surface. He wore a robe of drab brown cloth. Slowly he raised one finger to his lips: âShh.'
Eric did not understand at first why he was being hushed; but then the background murmur of the winds' voices quietened. âBlain is a skilled illusionist,' the man said ponderously. âBut the best ones are themselves never seen. I have seen Blain many, many times. He has not yet seen me.'
âYou're the strange wizard the villagers talked about. You're the one who hid the tower and the village with spells. Aren't you?'
âDoes it matter?' said the magician, seemingly to himself.
âYou did that to Blain up there, didn't you? You made his spell go out of control.'
âIt was not hard to do,' the magician said slowly. âA little push. He will recover soon. It was necessary. But I heard the words Blain spoke to you, when you asked his counsel. Now you have run to me for more. Is this so?'
âYes.'
The man's body rose out of the water. His robe did not look wet. âBlain's words held some truth. You should get to what they call the castle. It could be reclaimed. You will probably fail. Take Aziel. Take the drake. He is your friend. He will go where you ask him.'
âWhen? When should we do this?'
The man considered the question carefully, then said, âYou are far too late. It is no matter. Go back now before the winds down here speak again. They will say things to drive your young mind mad. The waters delight in such things.'
The magician cocked his head, listening, then a look of pain shot across his face. âThey come,' he said, then the water swallowed him. Eric watched the swirling current for a moment, then ran back up the steps. On the lower floor Blain's spell still wound out of control. A mass of broken illusions littered the floor.
There was the sound of screams from upstairs. Breaking glass. The whole tower seemed to shudder, as though in pain or fear. Loup pointed up the steps. âGet up there, Eric! You're no use here, you can see the airs but never bothered to learn to use em!'
There wasn't time to correct the record. A second scream; suddenly the air was filled with inhuman shrieks. Eric knew the sound well. He'd heard it as soon as he'd regained consciousness after falling through the door, from his old world into this one. He sprinted up the steps with the Glock in hand.
At the two front and two back windows, glass had been sprayed inward across the floor. Shaggy-bearded heads peered in, eyes wide and wild, each of them rasping babble, sniffing hard at the tower's potent airs. Aziel was beneath a bed, screaming in fright, hands over her ears. Case the drake sat with her as though to shield her from any attack but he shivered in fear.
Siel loosed an arrow through a war mage's chest. It fell back, was quickly replaced by another. Gorb rushed in a blur of movement, shoulder-barging three of them from a window, driving them into the night sky with broken bones. Out that window they could briefly see a sky filled with flying shapes circling the tower. The southern sky behind them was a backdrop of dim red.
Two war mages came through the western window. Gorb was there quickly as they crouched low and began to cast. He shoulder-slammed them into the wall. They fell limp, a horrible streak of gore on the wall behind them.
At the window Gorb had left another war mage peered its shaggy head inside. Eric spent a precious bullet to dispatch it. The noise of the shot brought all the creatures' eyes to him.
âEric! Free me. I'll fight for you!' Kiown yelled, pulling at his bonds.
Eric hesitated, then ran to him. âI shoot you at the first signâ'
âYes, yes, of course,' said Kiown as his hands were freed. âMy blade? Where?'
Eric pointed to the work bench. Kiown rushed for his confiscated sword. There was a thump as Gorb crushed two more of the creatures into the wall, then blurred across the room to crush another. The half-giant was growing tired, panting. A war mage leaped up on his shoulders and scratched at him with its clawed feet. Gorb swung it by the feet twice about his head then flung it onto the floor. It didn't get up.
Eric fired another precious bullet. He had lost count how many were left. âKiown, help us!' But Kiown had rushed down the steps. Eric trained the gun on him for a moment, then cursed himself.
Too many of the creatures were now inside. A blast of heat rippled through the air at Siel. She threw herself down and out of the spell's path.
âStop!' Eric yelled. âI am Shadow!' All rasping voices ceased their talk. The silence was complete but for Aziel's whimpering and Gorb's panting breath.
âEnemies among us, Shadow,' said a war mage, bowing. Its voice was deep as a machine's.
âYour word, Shadow?' said another.
âLeave this place!' he said, overcoming his shock that it had worked. âCease this attack.'
âEnemies among us, Shadow,' a war mage repeated, curled clawed fingers gesturing at Gorb and Siel. The windows filled with more of the creatures crawling inside, staring from wild bearded faces, their clawed feet scratching at the floor.
âYou must leave this place!' Eric said in as commanding a voice as he could.
âA servant,' said dozens of rasping throats. Those at the window fell back into the night sky.
âLeave this place!' he yelled again. âLeave!'
âA servant.'
âYour wordâ¦'
The others climbed back through the windows till they'd all gone. Still they circled the tower, now and then one of the flock swooped closer and let loose its awful cry.
âWhy do they obey you?' said Gorb, pulling a bandage over where the war mage claws had scratched him.
âI can't answer that,' said Eric.
The tower creaked and seemed to moan with pain. There was a ringing sound like metal being struck. Siel nocked an arrow to her bow and rushed down the steps. He followed her.
No war mages had come to the lower floor, perhaps forsaking it for the upper one where the thick ribbon of potent magic was drawn. Blain's spell was still in play. Loup conversed with several of the creatures near the staircase. Far Gaze, having seen the war mages outside, had begun shifting form to the wolf. He writhed on the floor making guttural sounds.
Kiown crept through the mist of Blain's spell. Eric saw a sword raise then fall upon one of the twisting structures of black flowing metal. The tower groaned as though in pain. Kiown severed one of the winding arms.
âStop!' Eric yelled at him.
Kiown ran for the window, cutting at several more of what Blain had called the tower's âorgans'. He leaped out the window, caught hold of the tree branch, and slid down fast.
With each chop of Kiown's blade chunks of the tower's exterior fell away. Dark fluid edged with fire sprayed through the air like blood from wounds. Then as though the tower itself coughed to clear its lungs, there was a rush of expelled air. Blain's mist plumed out a window, causing a stir among the circling war mages. The creatures bearing Blain's face hurtled through the sky; the whole illusion was expelled. The force of it knocked everyone else off their feet.
The wolf rose, shook itself, then bounded up the steps, but the fight was over.
5
Bald throughout this tumult had been tending to his guns, muttering and glaring about as though the noise of it all was quite a nuisance. Now he went to a window, set the barrel of one of his odd creations on the sill, aimed and pulled a little lever near the handle.
Ssss-thunk!
With a shriek, one of the flying war mages dropped from the sky. Bald grunted in satisfaction, set the gun down and replaced it with another. He pulled its trigger, nothing happened. The third gun fired successfully. A war mage shrieked in pain and surprise as it fell.
Eric ran to the Engineer. âHoly shit,' he whispered, examining the sharpened rocks Bald had shaped for bullets. âYou did it.'
Far Gaze in wolf form came to the window, put his paws upon the sill, sniffed the air and howled in dismay. A chorus of shrieks went up from the circling war mages. Some wheeled closer. Eric yelled: âI am Shadow! Back! Leave this place!'
The wolf whined and immediately began to change back to his human form. âWhat's wrong with him?' said Siel.
Loup jogged over. âHe's smelled something. Changing back to tell us, so it must be serious. The air's gone a bit funny or I'm no judge of it. The rest of you, stop firing those guns! Leave the war mages alone and they might go away.'
6
On the lower floor Stranger got slowly to her feet. For a minute or so she saw double, could not even remember what had knocked her out. She blinked until her vision righted itself, sifted through sludgy memories.