Read The Night of the Solstice Online
Authors: L.J. Smith
Morgana was a compelling speaker, and when she finished the room was charged with tension. But Cadal Forge still stood at his ease, and when the eyes of the Society turned to him he unfolded his arms, made a small gesture, and smiled.
“I think she's inviting you to leave,” he said dryly,
and the tension was broken by laughter. But the master sorcerer held up his hand for quiet. “My friends,” he said, “by all means leave. Yes, leaveâif you do not wish to hold your own land, unquestioned, untaxed, far away from the danger of Chaotic Zones. Leave if you relish the Council forever looking over your shoulder. Leave if you do not want to see a new world, perfect, there for the taking, inhabited only by those barbarians who unlawfully drove us out.” He paused, looking at them. “What? Not one of you going?” Then to Morgana: “Stand aside.”
Morgana's shoulders sagged, and she turned slowly back toward the mirror. “Cadal, Iâ
told you I couldn't allow you to do this!
” She whirled back on the last words, and in her hands was the Gold Staff, dazzlingly bright. Out of the head of the staff shot a golden ball which plummeted to the ground, only to erupt upward as a tree of living crystals which grew with lightning speed. Needle-sharp branches burst out in all directions, transfixing sorcerei on every side.
As quickly as that the battle was joined.
Cadal Forge reacted almost instantly, striking the
floor a blow with his own staff that opened a fissure beneath the tree, and it shattered. But to do this he had to turn his back on Morgana. Her staff jerked back.
“Hold your hand, Mirror Mistress.” The melodious voice of Thia Pendriel rang out in the great hall. The councillor stood directly below Alys. With one hand she held Claudia, who was limp with fear. The other hand pressed the Silver Staff to Claudia's throat.
Morgana's lips drew back from her teeth but she lowered the Gold. A faint tinkling of crystal could be heard as fragments of the tree fell to the ground.
Alys saw Thia Pendriel's jeweled circlet winking far below her, and then her mind simply turned off and her body took control. With a single fluid motion she swung herself over the gallery railing and dropped on the councillor.
The jolt as she hit drove the breath from her body, then she was rolling on the floor, with Claudia in her numbed arms. Thia Pendriel's staff had flown from her hand.
With a terrible, dissonant curse, Cadal Forge threw something toward Alys and Claudia. But at the same
time Morgana shrieked something even more high-pitched and hideous, and the bolt from her staff reached them first. It struck the ground in front of them and whizzed around to enscribe a circle from which a racing point of light spiraled up faster than the eye could follow. The spiral became honeycombed, enclosing the children in a glowing lacelike bell jar. Cadal Forge's scarlet sphere impacted with this cage and the lace flooded with red as if absorbing a bucket of blood. The cage then showered sparks from the top and for three heartbeats Alys knew what it was like to be inside a Tower of Gold firecracker.
Then it was gone, but both Thia Pendriel and Cadal Forge had turned their attention back to Morgana, striking simultaneously. The councillor's attack came in the form of a jet stream of silver-blue which Morgana deflected with her staff; the sorcerer's was a bolt of something solid and sharp which grazed Morgana before exploding in the mirror. Before she could recover, they both struck again. The tiny sorceress staggered and fell.
Charles crouched on the gallery, hands white-knuckled
against the railing. He was desperately trying to think of something he could do.
A voice spoke by his shoulder. “Here,” said Janie. “Take this and use it.”
“You! You came back!”
“Of course I came back. I've been whipping up a few spells with the vixen, is all. Take it.”
He snatched the object she was offering. “What is it?”
“An incendiaryâan explosive powder.”
“In a salt shaker?”
“I had to improvise.”
Spotting a knot of Cadal Forge's followers below, Janie swung the censer by its chains, releasing a spray of powder.
The effect was spectacular. As each grain was set in motion it exploded into hundreds of tiny pieces, which in turn exploded into thousands of still tinier pieces, and so on. The result was an expanding nimbus of violence.
Even the most expert sorcerei had to turn from the battle to deflect this powder, or else be scorched
with myriad painful burns. Joyfully, Charles and Janie raced up and down the gallery, launching hit-and-run attacks on the enemies below.
At first the minor sorcerei had stood back, allowing their leaders to deal with Morgana. But now, the room lit with fitful color as, one by one, the members of the Society entered the battle. Morgana, on her feet again, began to reel under the barrage, unable to defend herself. A shaft of green light opened a cut on her face from cheekbone to ear; a purple bolt, deflected, set the tapestries afire.
Thia Pendriel's staff spat spongy globs of something which smelled like rotten meat. One of these struck Morgana's robe and began to crawl up it. With a gasp that was almost a sob Morgana beat it off, was hit by a lazily rolling scarlet ball as she straightened, and screamed.
Her staff swung in an arc of violence and hit the ground, releasing a flash like electricity. This sped across the floor, ricocheted from the wall, tore back at an angle, and ricocheted again. In its wake it left a line of fire which, as the flash continued its journey, divided
the room in a zigzag pattern. Sorcerei leaped out of the way as the flash passed, then stood trapped between the fiery lines. Alys heaved Claudia onto the safety of the turret staircase, looked up, and was shocked to find she shared her refuge with Thia Pendriel. The woman smiled faintly, nudged her aside, and mounted the stairway, leaving Alys gaping.
In the hall, the flash went rocketing on and the lines glowed more brightly than ever. As it struck the wall for the last time, completing the pattern, the ground began to shake. Out of the lines welled molten lava. Cracks splintered up the walls where the bars of fire touched them, and lava spewed out of these clefts, faster and faster. Morgana paused in her renewed attack on Cadal Forge to look at her handiwork in alarm.
“This is out of control,” she breathed. “Children, fly!”
Hearing this, seeing the rising waves of molten rock which rolled slowly across the floor, setting fire to whatever they touched, Alys gripped Claudia under the arms and dragged her up the stairs toward Charles and Janie.
“Up!” she cried as she reached them. Claudia no longer had her amulet and they could not leave the Wildworld without her. There was nowhere to go but up the turret stairway.
In the hall bedlam had broken out. Screams and roars of pain, shouting, spells, and curses swelled into an indistinguishable babble. The three of them carried Claudia higher and higher, to the third-floor level. They reached it just as Cadal Forge succeeded in breaking through the lines of fire. The sorcerei surged past him in pursuit of Morgana, who had taken to the stairs herself.
In an instant Morgana was beside Alys, throwing open the trapdoor in the turret's roof.
“Climb!”
Lifting Claudia through, the others scrambled up.
“This is my houseâand doors, at least, will obey my will,” said Morgana, shutting the door, and bringing her staff down hard on it.
“Not if they fall to pieces before your spell is done,” said Thia Pendriel, appearing out of the shadows. The Silver Staff spat a burst of fire even as Morgana's Gold
began to trace the outlines of the door. There was a silver light and a searing heat. The extent of Morgana's weariness was made clear when, instead of protecting the children by sorcery, she simply shoved them out of the way. And, through the hole in the floor of the turret, the sorcerei arrived.
“Behind me,” said Morgana quietly, and they obeyed.
The tide of the battle had turned. Morgana, bleeding from a dozen wounds, faced the staffs of two dozen murderous sorcerei. Cadal Forge, at the front, slowly lifted the Red Staff to the level of her heart.
“Surrender,” he said, simply.
The Mirror Mistress was silent.
The sorcerer spoke softly. “I did not kill you before,” he said, “and I would not kill you even now. Submit to me, yield me your staff, and you may liveâyou may even go from here in peace. Otherwise ⦔
He made a small, eloquent gesture.
“Face me alone,” the tiny sorceress burst out hoarsely. “Fight me without that herd of slavering sheep at your back, and if I am defeated you may take my staff in honor.”
“I will accept that challenge.” Thia Pendriel stepped away from the others. “Our quarrel is an old one, Renegade, and I welcome the chance to settle it.”
“Pendriel, you're a fool,” said Morgana. Her hands had clenched convulsively on her staff and her voice shook despite her control. “What would you do with the Gold, after all these years? And where can you go with it, now you have openly betrayed the Council?”
The tall sorceress smiled enigmatically.
“To the Stillworld? Would you really enjoy lording it over a land of wretched, short-lived slaves? Or perhaps you, too, have some other purpose⦠.”
“Enough,” said Cadal Forge. “There will be no single combat and no more debate. You have wasted too much of my time already. Look at me, Morgana. The Red is your death.”
To Alys's unspeakable horror the griffin's head on his staff came alive. The eyes rolled, the mouth gaped open with a lionlike roar, and out poured a cloud of red vapor which swept toward Morgana against the wind. As if at a signal all the other sorcerei struck at
once. There was a light like a rainbow, and Alys saw the floor rush up toward her.
She regained her senses to feel a stinging pain in her arm. At her back the turret wall was in ruins. In front Morgana had fallen with the Gold Staff under her body, and Cadal Forge stood above her, preparing to finish it.
Out of the griffin's mouth, from which thornbranches had once sprung to trap a Quislai, long, fibrous tendrils now emerged. They wrapped themselves around Morgana's body almost caressinglyâand then they began to tighten.
Alys watched, unable to look away. The whole scene was like a nightmare, and it reminded her vividly of another nightmare, when she had lain helpless with fear and watched a friend face death alone. But now, somehow, she was not lying still. She was on her feet, dizzy, with the gannelin dagger in her hand.
No one bothered to cry a warning to Cadal Forge as she sprangâwhat could a mere human do to a master sorcerer? But the sorcerer was not Alys's target. One sweep of her arm brought the dagger across the
writhing tendrils, cutting through them as if they were cobwebs. Morgana drew a tortured breath as they fell from her throat, and lay still.
Alys turned to meet the crystal gray eyes of Cadal Forge. Once before she had met that searing gaze in a mirror and had panicked. Now she kept her grip on the dagger and stuck at him with all her force.
And then the Red Staff itself lifted high, whistling down to meet the gannelin knife. The dagger shivered into a thousand fragments and the shock sent the hilt flying from Alys's hand and Alys herself staggering backward. She stumbled as a piece of rubble turned beneath her foot. For a moment she swayed on the edge of the turret, trying to regain her balance, then the stone gave way beneath her and she fell.
Alys's scream was snatched from her lips by the shrieking air as she fell. The full moon lit the ground below in terrifying detail. And then suddenly some great shape surged between her and the ground and she shut her eyes and hit it, and it dropped with her, so that they skimmed Fell Andred's outer wall before rising steeply.
She opened her eyes and gasped, clutching wildly. The castle was far below, a toy, and she was circling and wheeling up somewhere near the stars, and the huge head which looked over its shoulder at her inquiringly ⦠was the head of a snake.
A voice by her ear said, “My lady Alysâ”
Streaking through the air beside her was the serpent, her own serpent, its blue and coral body supported
by six pairs of velvety blue wings. Dumbfounded, she looked back and forth from it to the monstrous creature which bore her up.
“I told you I was only an infant of my kind,” the serpent reminded her gently. “The others are larger.”
The others were larger. For the first time Alys realized that the night was filled with giant wheeling shapes, crimson and black in the moonlight, even now beginning to dive toward the castle.
“Your wingsâ” she shouted into the roar of the wind, as the creature she was riding swooped downward.
“The Eldreth's pool!” the serpent shouted back, plummeting beside her. “Be ready to jump off, my lady!”
The turret seemed suddenly to blossom below her, and the next thing she knew she had leaped off her seat and Charles and Janie were beating her on the back in a frenzy of joy.
Another kind of frenzy had broken out among the sorcerei. As the great serpents, the guardians of the Weerul Council, descended, the braver of the Society
launched many-hued flares of sorcerous power at them. But the enormous creatures seemed impervious to such attack. They continued to dive, striking like the great snakes they were, until the turret shook under the blows, and the sorcerei trampled one another as they fled. It was a rout.
Alys laughed and cried and clapped her hands. Morgana, guarded by two serpents the size of eagles, slowly sat up.
“The day that I should accept my life from the Council!” she commented, white-lipped, to no one in particular.
Above them, a sweet wild voice rang out. “'Way for the emissary of the Council! Clear the ground for the Council's elect!”
Charles, who had been dancing about in exuberance, now turned his face up in shock. “It's Elwyn!”
“Elwyn?”