Read The Haunted Wizard - Wiz in Rhym-6 Online
Authors: Christopher Stasheff
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Fantasy Fiction, #Fantasy - General, #American Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Fantasy Fiction; American, #Wizards, #Fantasy - Series
Light blinded him for a moment, and he felt a tingling all over his body. Then the room was clear again, and he was gasping.
"The lightning flowed down over him and into the stone!" Orizhan cried. "Yet he still stands!" John screamed again, still in the arcane tongue, hands rolling as though molding clay, then hurling something unseen that leaped into burning light, a fireball sizzling straight at Mart's chest.
"The fire returns unto its source!" Matt shouted.
"Ball, retrace along your course!"
He held up a hand, and the ball of fire bounced off without touching his palm, arrowing back toward John.
But John was already shouting another spell, even as he held up his own left hand, darkening the fireball to a cinder. His right hand snapped down, pointing at Matt. Silver streaks flashed.
"Let fire shroud the ice of hate!" Matt called.
"The strength of frost in flames abate!"
Flame blazed up about the icicles. With an explosive hiss, the ice sublimed into steam and the fire went out.
"You may be a powerful magus by the standards of your fellow aristocrats, Your Highness," Matt said,
"but compared to a real wizard, you're not even a squire." John stared, his eyes wild. "But… but Niobhyte feared my magic!"
"He let you think so, as long as it served his purpose," Matt said, "but you saw how quickly he turned his back on you when you outlived your usefulness. I'm afraid you weren't as much in control as you thought."
"So much for magic." Brion drew his sword and strode toward his brother. "Now we shall test your swordsmanship."
"My curse upon you all!" John screamed, and threw down his own blade. Then his nose and chin bulged outward, his whole body swelled, his purple robes turned into maroon and scaly skin, and a dragon
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stretched its neck ten feet above Brion to blast fire down at him.
Matt's first instinct was to call on Stegoman—but he realized that the dragon couldn't fit through the windows or the door, and by the time he'd have knocked down the wall, John the Dragon would have fried them.
Brion, undaunted, swung his sword back and waded in.
The dragon blasted flame down at him, but Brion leaped forward and stabbed at its chest. The beast slid aside like a snake and blasted again, but Brion pivoted, graceful and quick even in armor, and as he swung around, his sword slashed high at the base of the dragon's neck. It writhed aside with a shriek of anger and fear, then blasted flame at Brion. He started to dodge, but the dragon blasted again, a little ahead of the knight. Brion howled with pain but sprang through the flame to stab blindly. His sword pierced scales and struck into the dragon's shoulder.
The dragon roared in fear and anger and leaped back, one clawed forefoot coming up to press over the wound. It stared down wild-eyed at its own blood leaking out, then stared again at Brion, in shock that any mere man could actually hurt a dragon.
"I doubt that I could kill my own brother," Brion told him, "but a dragon is another matter." The dragon body seemed to melt like hot wax, reforming until it was John again, right hand pressed to left shoulder, blood leaking through the fingers. "Curse you, Brion!" he screamed.
"I have not cursed you," Brion said grimly, "but for that, I shall chastise you most sorely." He raised his sword and strode forward.
John howled and stooped, snatching his sword from the floor.
Brion halted, mixed emotions warring in his face. "It need not come to this, little brother. Repent, and I shall spare you for a life of atonement and prayer, though you shall be imprisoned in a hermit's cell."
"You call that life?" John screeched. "Fifty years in a barred stone room, when all that stands between me and a kingdom is you?"
Then he sprang at Brion, hammering blows at him from every direction, and the perfect chivalrous knight was suddenly on the defensive, parrying madly to keep up with the storm of John's strokes. Finally the usurper slowed a little, and Brion swung a counterstroke, but John parried it easily and slashed at Brion's helmet without even riposting. Again Brion staggered back, barely managing to parry, and one blow in five struck through to his armor.
I cannot be proud of his deeds, said a deep old voice inside Mart's head, but I may boast of how well I taught him to fight.
"Yeah, but he's fighting with the fury of a cornered rat," Matt muttered. Brion managed to beat John's sword aside long enough to aim a blow at his shoulder, but the sword rang off steel, and armor showed through the tear.
Armor under his robes! Gaheris sneered inside Malt's" head. Ever the coward!
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John leaped back with a shout of rage and jabbed his sword straight at Brion—but it was the rash movement big brother had been waiting for. His sword blurred, spinning in a bind, and John's sword flew across the room to crash into the wall. John shrank back, but Brion followed him closely, sword centered unwaveringly on John's eyes. Still screaming, the usurper backed away and backed some more, until he jarred against the stone wall.
"He has the blood of thousands on his hands!" Brock cried in agony. "Strike, my liege lord, strike!" Yes, strike! Gaheris said with vicious glee inside Matt's head.
Not my son! Drustan's ghost groaned.
"I cannot," Brion said, his voice agonized. "He is my brother." John shouted with triumph and stepped away from the wall, then struck the flat of Brion's sword blade with his fist and kicked with all his might. Brion fell like a tree, his armor clanging hideously on the stone floor.
With a howl of delight, John leaped on him and wrenched the sword from his hand. He held it like a dagger and swung it high, point straight above Brion's face.
"No!" howled Sergeant Brock, and threw himself forward, diving to shield Brion's head with his own body. The sword plunged down, stabbed through the sergeant's leather armor, and bit deep into Brock's shoulder blade. He screamed with pain, and John, howling curses, wrenched at the blade, but it was stuck fast. John set his foot on the man and wrenched again.
In the shadows, the bowman with the furry leggins drew his arrow to his ear and loosed. The arrow stabbed through John's eye. John screamed, clawing at the shaft, then fell—and for a moment silence held the room.
Then John's screams came again, but somehow not in the chamber itself, but distant, fading, fading…
Downward.
Inside Matt's head Drustan groaned in grief, and Gaheris, for a wonder, had the courtesy to remain silent.
Brion wrenched himself up, managed to flip over, and shoved himself to his knees. Walking on them, he went to John's body, pressed a frantic hand over his heart. "There must be a heartbeat! There must!"
"I'm afraid not, Your Majesty." Matt stepped up beside him, face somber. "Your younger brother is dead."
Brion howled, throwing his head back, a long and grief-laden keening. Then he caught his breath and looked about him, wild-eyed. "Where is he that shot the arrow! Where is the commoner who dared to slay a prince!"
They looked about them, but the archer was gone.
"Where could he have sped?" Sir Orizhan asked, his voice muted.
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"He disappeared, period, and flatly." Matt gazed down into Brion's face and spoke with the full authority of a master wizard and student of mythology. "It was no common soldier who loosed that arrow, Your Majesty, but a spirit of the land. Bretanglia itself chose to save the life of its true king, at the expense of the life of a usurper."
He sent for Rosamund, and she came quickly, kneeling before Brion, holding his hands in hers, while noblemen bore away the body of Prince John, and jailors hauled Niobhyte off to a cell, already deep in a coma induced by the sleep-spell that had held Brion in stasis, recited by Matt but provided by the true druids. Then Matt went outside to pace across the meadow that could have been a battlefield, and into the trees at its edge.
There he stopped and said aloud, "It occurs to me that you can never have too many friends, but you sure can have too many enemies."
"So it would seem." Buckeye stepped forward from the shadows. "And so John has proved."
"I thank you for stepping in at the last moment." Matt frowned at the bauchan. "I have to say I'm surprised, though. Glad, mind you, but surprised. I thought you had left me."
"Not quite yet." The bauchan shrugged. "Once I do, life will be dull, and for a very long time. It is far more interesting around you."
"But much more dangerous?"
"There is some truth in that," Buckeye admitted.
"One thing I don't understand, though," Matt said. "Don't get me wrong—I appreciate your loyalty—but I would have thought John was just the kind of man to delight you."
"He was indeed," the spirit agreed. "I understood John's pleasure in caprice perfectly."
"Then why did you help kill him?"
"Ah!" The bauchan grinned, and his teeth looked to be very sharp. "Because I, too, am a creature of caprice, Lord Wizard."
Matt shivered for the rest of the day.
Matt and his parents stayed around to see Brion's coronation—under the circumstances, they wanted to make sure he was well and thoroughly established in power. They needn't have worried, if the cheering of the London crowd was any indication.
Sir Orizhan led the way, bearing the scepter on a purple cushion. Rosamund rode next, bearing the orb. The crowd knew she was their future queen, and cheered her every bit as loudly as the tall, regal young man who rode behind her, in a purple robe trimmed with ermine—Brion, their rightful king. Behind him rode all the lords who had ridden with his army on his march from the coast. After them marched the leaders of the peasant army, all in new royal livery.
Inside the cathedral, the dukes and earls waited, even those who had been loyal to John, but who had declared for Brion as soon as they could. The younger sons took their places among the older
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men—dukes and earls themselves now, in place of fathers or elder brothers who had been attainted in the bloodless civil war, and who had not had a chance to declare for Brion in time. They had taken up with the synthodruids and enforced John's edicts with relish and zest. Some of them sat in prison on this day, others had retired to monasteries, but most were simply exiled to their lands at home and barred from any further use of power.
As many of the London crowd as could, followed Brion's homespun army into the cathedral. As the archbishop set the crown on his head, they rocked the rafters with their shouts of approval. Then, though, a hush fell over the great church, for the new king commanded, "Let the assassin be brought forward!"
Two soldiers led the way with halberds, two followed, and between them came Sergeant Brock in chains, his wounded shoulder bandaged—but also dressed in new livery of fine cloth. He knelt before Brion, bowing his head.
"Did you slay my brother Gaheris?" Brion demanded in a voice that all could hear.
"Your Majesty, I did!" Brock's voice was as loud as Brion's, but still held the anguish of a man who bitterly regretted his actions. "I was fool enough to believe the lies that Niobhyte preached, thrice more foolish to do his bidding and slay your brother with a silver sickle!"
"Have you confessed your sins?" Brion demanded.
The archbishop stepped forward. "Your Majesty, he has. No matter what you do to his body, his soul will go to God—eventually."
The whole crowd shuddered at the vision of Purgatorial tortures that "eventually" conjured up.
"I have repented, and am once again a Christian, and more devout than ever for my having strayed," Brock called out. "But no confession or repentance can change the fact of what I have done! Do with me as you will! Send me naked into the forefront of battle or smite my head off here and now! It shall be as you wish, and I'll not resist, nay, not even in the slightest!" So saying, he bowed his head again, stretching out his neck.
The crowd murmured in awe and apprehension.
"To slay the heir apparent warrants a traitor's death," Brion told him, face grim, "hanging, drawing, and quartering. But you have guarded the body of your rightful king, and saved my life at the risk of your own. What the one action has lost, the other has gained, and I have no doubt of your loyalty or good faith. Rise, good sergeant, and live!"
The crowd cheered, and Brock stood up, dazed, looking about him, seeming almost sad to be alive, so ready had he been to die.
When the clamor slackened, Brion said, "But such an action cannot go completely unpunished." Brock braced himself.
"You shall be exiled now and again," Brion pronounced. "You have served the good Sir Orizhan as squire in battle— so may you serve him on your travels." He turned to the knight, drawing his sword. "Sir
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Orizhan, kneel."
Completely confused, the knight stepped forward and knelt at the king's feet Brion laid the flat of his blade on one shoulder, then the other. "For your service to your princess and to the crown, I create you Earl of Orkney, and mine own vassal!" He sheathed his sword. "Rise, my lord!" Sir Orizhan stood up, dazed.
Brion turned to Sergeant Brock. "An island off the coast of Scotland should be far enough to be counted as exile."
Brock finally understood. A grin a yard wide broke out on his face; he fairly glowed.
"But before Lord Orizhan goes to take up the rule of his new domain, I shall require one further service of him." Brion turned back to the new earl. "I bid you go, my lord, to Toulenge, to your homeland, and tell the princess-mother, the regent of Princess Rosamund, and all her people, that by the time you arrive there the princess shall be Queen of Bretanglia, and that if any wrong them, they shall have redress not only from the Queen of Merovence, but also from the King of Bretanglia." The crowd cheered, and Rosamund lowered her eyes, blushing modestly. Then Brion turned and bowed to his fiancee. "Highness, have I your leave to send your liegeman to bear word to your home?"